Jumat, 20 Maret 2020

China's new imported coronavirus cases at record; no domestic transfers for second day - Reuters

BEIJING/SHANGHAI (Reuters) - China’s coronavirus infections from abroad hit a new daily record while infected travelers reached an unprecedented number of Chinese provinces, pressuring authorities to hold the bar high on already tough custom rules and public-health protocols.

FILE PHOTO: March 17, 2020 picture of staff in protective suits accompanying a passenger outside a centralized facility for screening and registration near the Beijing Capital International Airport in Beijing as the country tries to contain imported cases of the coronavirus. REUTERS/Thomas Peter

China has intensified measures to guard against infections arriving from abroad as the coronavirus spread around the world, concerned that travelers might trigger a second wave of domestic infections just as the outbreak was controlled at home.

Mainland China had 39 new confirmed cases on Thursday, the country’s National Health Commission said, all of which were imported cases. There were no locally transmitted cases for the second day.

Of the new imported infections, 14 were in Guangdong, eight in Shanghai and six in Beijing, the health authority said in a statement on Friday.

Big transport hubs like the Chinese capital, Shanghai, Guangdong, including Shenzhen, have been the main points of entry for cases involving infected travelers.

But on Thursday, imported cases were also reported in Tianjin, Liaoning, Heilongjiang, Shandong and Gansu in the north, as well as in Zhejiang, Fujian, Guangxi, Sichuan.

That brings the total number of imported infections in China to 228 as of Thursday.

The imported travelers, many of whom are Chinese nationals returning from overseas, have yet to pass their illness on to local communities so far, thanks to 14-day quarantine periods and isolation either at home or at designated venues.

But authorities are acutely aware of the dangers.

China must not allow the improving trend in the containment of the virus to reverse, President Xi Jinping warned on Wednesday, as the pandemic sickened more than 200,000 people around the globe.

Wuhan, capital of central Hubei province and epicenter of the outbreak in China, saw zero new cases for the second day, the National Health Commission said.

That brings the total accumulated number of confirmed cases in mainland China so far to 80,967.

The death toll from the outbreak had reached 3,248 as of the end of Thursday, up by three from the previous day.

Reporting by Ryan Woo and Brenda Goh; Editing by Tom Hogue and Stephen Coates

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2020-03-20 09:54:48Z
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2012 Delhi gang rape: Four men to be executed Friday - The - The Washington Post

NEW DELHI — India executed four men convicted in a brutal 2012 rape and murder case early Friday, closing a painful chapter in the country’s history but raising difficult questions about how far the nation has progressed in tackling violence against women.

Dozens gathered outside the Delhi jail where the hangings took place even as the country has asked citizens to remain indoors because of the coronavirus pandemic. The executions marked the first use of capital punishment in India in five years.

“Today, the women of this country have got justice,” Asha Devi, the victim’s mother, told reporters after the hanging.

For many women in India’s capital, the memory of the December night when the crime took place is vivid. Maitri Deb had just finished eating dinner with her family when the news came on the television: A young woman — in her 20s, just like Deb — had been viciously raped and her body dumped on the side of a road in south Delhi.

“Something broke inside me,” said Deb, now 33. She went to a protest for the first time in her life, part of a surge of anger against sexual violence in India. But in the following years, Deb’s hopes for change faded.

Nicky Loh

Getty Images

Women march during an anti-rape rally in June 2013 in Kolkata, to urge the government to act faster.

In the wake of the fatal rape, India ushered in landmark legal reforms. Lawmakers expanded the definition of rape to include oral sex and the insertion of any object into a woman’s vagina. Stalking and voyeurism became criminal offenses. Jail terms were increased for sexual crimes, and the death penalty was introduced in some cases. Fast-track courts were set up to expedite trials that often took years.

Yet gruesome rapes continue to take place. The number of reported rapes has risen nearly every year since 2012. In 2018, the most recent year for which data was available, 33,356 rapes were reported, or one every 15 minutes.

Experts say it is not clear whether the increase is because of a higher incidence of such crimes or better reporting — or both. The vast majority of such attacks in India remain unreported, they say. (In the United States, about 101,000 rapes were reported in 2018.)

Meanwhile, the fast-track courts have failed to deliver. Nearly half of Indian states hadn’t even set up such tribunals as of December. Interviews with lawyers and prosecutors indicate that where they do exist, their impact has been limited.

“I didn’t feel safe then, and I don’t feel safe now,” said Neha Chabbra, a 32-year-old living in Delhi. “I’m a married woman with a 5-year-old daughter. Now, I worry about her.”

Women’s rights activists and lawyers in India warn that harsher punishments, like the death penalty, may do little to stem the tide of sexual crimes against women. They also point to a damning statistic: Nearly 94 percent of reported rape cases in India are by people known to the victim, not stranger rape like the 2012 Delhi case. 

“Things haven’t progressed the way they should have,” said Kalpana Sharma, an Indian journalist who has covered gender violence for three decades and recently published a book on the topic. “The mind-set hasn’t changed — women are not your property.”

Kamla Bhasin, a Delhi-based feminist activist, said the focus should be on preventive measures instead of punishment. “They are all coming from our homes,” she said.

The 2012 rape that spurred India into action stood out for its grisly nature.

On a cold December night, Jyoti Singh, known in India as “Nirbhaya” or “fearless,” and a male friend, boarded a private bus on their way home after watching a movie.

Six men were on board, drunk and cruising the city. They beat Singh’s male friend and dragged her to the back of the bus. The men took turns raping her and one ruptured her intestines with a metal rod. Then they dumped her by the roadside. Two weeks later, Singh died at a hospital in Singapore where she had been flown for treatment.

The next year, four of the accused were sentenced to death after a nine-month trial. (One juvenile accused was tried separately, and the sixth accused committed suicide in jail). The judge wrote that the crime had “shocked the collective conscience” and deserved “exemplary punishment.”

Prakash Singh

AFP/Getty Images

Hangman Pawan Kumar, right, says he feels zero remorse for the four men executed Friday for the 2012 crime.

It took more than six years for various appeals to wind their way through the system. The convicts’ lawyers argued that all possible legal challenges should be exhausted, but Singh’s parents decried what they call delaying tactics.

The executions of the four men — Akshay Thakur, Pawan Gupta, Vinay Sharma and Mukesh Singh — have also reignited a debate over whether capital punishment deters such crimes. The hangings are the first in a rape-and-murder case since 2004.

Last year, the Indian government also instituted the death penalty for those convicted of raping children under the age of 12.

An analysis of murder rates for three decades in the United States by the Death Penalty Information Center found no evidence of a deterrent effect of the death penalty on the incidence of murders. Researchers who did a comparative study of murder rates in Hong Kong, which abolished the death penalty, and Singapore, where murderers are sentenced to death, found little difference in homicide trends.

But despair that not enough has changed in India has fueled a thirst for revenge. In December, after the gruesome rape and murder of a veterinarian in the city of Hyderabad in south India, many celebrated after the four suspects were shot and killed in police custody. Activists decried the shootings as a case of extrajudicial killings, but city residents showered police officers with rose petals and fed them sweets.

Nishtha Das, 24, works at a publisher in Delhi and said that safety remains a constant worry. “I have to notify people that I am going here, going there,” she said, and reassure them that she has arrived at her destination. “I would feel safer if laws were more strict and action was more swift.”

For many women in Delhi, the 2012 rape and murder was a moment that still circumscribes their lives. Garima Pradhan, 31, a video editor, said she stopped traveling by bus after the crime and prefers to be home by 8 p.m. Even now, she said, “there is always a sense of fear and a feeling of helplessness.”

Tania Dutta contributed to this report.

Read more:

India’s female college students are fighting for their right to stay out after dark

Suspects in rape and murder case that shocked India are shot and killed by police

A woman interviewed 100 convicted rapists in India. This is what she learned.

Today’s coverage from Post correspondents around the world

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2020-03-20 08:35:25Z
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India executes four men for brutal 2012 Delhi bus rape and murder - Reuters

NEW DELHI (Reuters) - India hanged four men on Friday who were convicted for the rape and murder of a young woman on a bus in New Delhi in 2012, in a case that shocked the world and shamed the country over its appalling record for crimes against women.

The men were executed at dawn in Tihar jail, on the outskirts of the capital, four television news channels reported. India’s president had rejected pleas for clemency from the condemned men, after the Supreme Court dismissed their pleas for a review of the death sentences.

Attacked on a moving bus and left for dead on roadside, the victim, a 23-year-old physiotherapy student, clung to life for two weeks before succumbing to her injuries. She died in a hospital in Singapore, where she had been transferred in a desperate attempt to save her.

Outrage over her death led to India passing tough new laws against sexual violence, including the death penalty for rape in some cases.

Reporting by Rupam Jain; editing by Lincoln Feast.

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2020-03-20 08:26:35Z
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India hangs four men over 2012 Delhi bus gang rape and murder - Al Jazeera English

India has executed four men for the gang rape and murder of a woman on a Delhi bus in 2012 that sparked huge nationwide protests and international revulsion.

The four were hanged before dawn on Friday at Tihar jail in the Indian capital, the head of the prison, Sandeep Goel, told AFP news agency, in India's first use of capital punishment since 2015.

More:

The four hung on Friday were gym instructor Vinay Sharma, bus cleaner Akshay Thakur, fruit seller Pawan Gupta and Mukesh Singh, unemployed. They were all sentenced to death by a fast-track court in 2013.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi in a Twitter post said, "Justice has prevailed."

"It is of utmost importance to ensure dignity and safety of women," he said.

Today, justice has been done after seven years

Victim's mother

Hundreds of police were deployed outside the jail to control a crowd that waited to celebrate the execution. Some held placards that read "Justice for women" and "Hang the culprits", Reuters news agency reported.

The crime, which happened on the night of December 16, 2012, sparked enormous protests and global outrage. The victim was dubbed Nirbhaya - the fearless one - by the Indian press, as she could not be named under Indian law.

"Today, justice has been done after seven years," the victim's mother told reporters outside the prison. "I salute Indian judiciary and thank God for hearing our prayers ... my daughter's soul can now rest in peace."

Asha Devi (C), the mother of a gang-rape victim, India

The victim's mother reacts after the convicts were hanged in New Delhi [AFP]

Six men were arrested for the brutal attack. One suspect, Ram Singh, was found dead in his jail cell in March 2013, having apparently taken his own life.

Another, who was aged 17 at the time, was released in 2015 after serving three years in a reform facility - the maximum term possible for a juvenile in India.

In 2017, the Supreme Court upheld death sentences for the four men, with judges ruling the crime met the "rarest of the rare" standard required to justify capital punishment in India.

India's president rejected pleas for clemency from the condemned men, after the Supreme Court dismissed their pleas for a review of the death sentences.

Sexual violence

Many activists in India have opposed the death penalty saying it does not act as a deterrent.

"Justice is not served only by death sentence and dangerous offenders who pose threats to the society can be condemned to isolation from society till the end of natural life without resorting to execution," said Suhas Chakma, the coordinator of the National Campaign Against Torture, in a statement.

In India, 426 prisoners were on death row by the end of 2018, but the country has carried out only three executions since 2008.

In the most recent case of capital punishment, Yakub Memon, convicted of taking part in the 1993 bombings in Mumbai, was hanged in July 2015.

Justice is not served only by death sentence.

Suhas Chakma, coordinator of the National Campaign Against Torture 

Attacked on a moving bus and left for dead on the road side, the victim, a 23-year-old physiotherapy student, clung to life for two weeks before succumbing to her injuries. She died in a hospital in Singapore, where she had been transferred in a desperate attempt to save her.

Outrage over her death led to India passing tough new laws against sexual violence, including the death penalty for rape in some cases.

Still, one woman reported a rape every 15 minutes on average in India in 2018, according to government data released last month, underlining the country's reputation as one of the worst places in the world to be female.

Women reported almost 34,000 rapes in 2018, a figure barely changed from the previous year. Just over 85 percent led to charges, and 27 percent to convictions, according to the annual crime report released by the federal home ministry.

Activists say the government statistics understate the number of rapes as it is still considered a taboo by conservative Indians to report sexual violence.

"Things can change only by reforming the social attitude and building awareness," Angana Guha Roy, a Delhi-based researcher, told Al Jazeera.

"Patriarchy is instrumental in wrongly validating masculine superiority that looks down upon women's rights.

"Secondly, I think social awareness campaigns can educate society and slowly but steadily bring change."

Bilal Kuchay contributed to this report from New Delhi

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2020-03-20 07:01:06Z
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Kamis, 19 Maret 2020

Italy's death toll from the coronavirus overtakes China's - CNBC

A medical worker wearing a face mask talks on her mobile phone inside the new coronavirus intensive care unit of the Brescia Poliambulanza hospital, Lombardy, on March 17, 2020.

PIERO CRUCIATTI

The number of people who have died from the coronavirus in Italy has hit 3,405, according to Reuters, meaning the country has now reported more deaths than China as a result of the pandemic.

The death toll in China, where the coronavirus started in Wuhan, in Hubei province late 2019, currently stands at 3,249, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University. 

Health officials in Italy said Thursday that the death toll had risen by 427 in the last 24 hours, with 475 deaths recorded the day before. 

After sweeping through China in early 2020, the virus spread to Europe where Italy — and particularly the northern Lombardy region, which is home to financial hub Milan — became the epicenter.

The country, like many others in Europe, remains under lockdown as authorities attempt to stem the human cost of the virus. And closures will have to be extended beyond the current end-date of April 3, Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte confirmed earlier in the day.

Speaking to Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera, Conte said measures taken to close schools and universities and to restrict movement throughout Italy would have to be prolonged.

"The total blockade will go on," Conte said. "The measures taken, both the closure of (public) activities and the ones concerning schools, can only be extended," he told the paper.

Under the lockdown rules, people can only leave their homes to get food or medicines (grocery stores and pharmacies are the only stores that remain open), or to perform other essential services or to go to work. Most shops had been forced to close until March 25 but that deadline also looks set to be extended.

Meanwhile on Thursday, China said that there were no new domestic transmissions of the coronavirus in the country for the first time since its outbreak, although 21 "imported" infections were confirmed in Beijing as people returned from trips abroad.

There are over 230,000 confirmed cases of the virus worldwide and at least 9,325 lives have been taken by the disease, according to the latest data from Johns Hopkins University.

—CNBC's Holly Ellyatt contributed to this article.

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2020-03-19 17:57:12Z
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Italy's death toll from the coronavirus overtakes China's - CNBC

A medical worker wearing a face mask talks on her mobile phone inside the new coronavirus intensive care unit of the Brescia Poliambulanza hospital, Lombardy, on March 17, 2020.

PIERO CRUCIATTI

The number of people who have died from the coronavirus in Italy has hit 3,405, according to Reuters, meaning the country now has reported more deaths than China as a result of the pandemic.

The death toll in China, where the coronavirus started in Wuhan, in Hubei province late 2019, currently stands at 3,249, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University. 

After sweeping through China in early 2020, the virus spread to Europe where Italy — and particularly the northern Lombardy region, which is home to financial hub Milan — became the epicenter.

The country, like many others in Europe, remains under lockdown as authorities attempt to stem the human cost of the virus.

Meanwhile, on Thursday, China said that there were no new domestic transmissions of the coronavirus in the country for the first time since its outbreak, although 21 "imported" infections were confirmed in Beijing as people returned from trips abroad.

Health officials in Italy said Thursday that the death toll had risen by 427 in the last 24 hours, after 475 deaths recorded the day before. 

There are over 230,000 confirmed cases of the virus worldwide and at least 9,325 lives have been taken by the disease, according to the latest data from Johns Hopkins University.

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2020-03-19 17:38:23Z
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Coronavirus: China reports the first day of no new cases - BBC News - BBC News

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  1. Coronavirus: China reports the first day of no new cases - BBC News  BBC News
  2. Wuhan, Hubei report zero new cases of coronavirus  Fox News
  3. Coronavirus live updates: CDC issues warning to young people, Italy nears China's toll, US deaths at 150  USA TODAY
  4. Coronavirus: Maybe I should have stayed in China  New York Daily News
  5. China’s Ill-Timed Attack on the Free Press  The New York Times
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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2020-03-19 15:36:34Z
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