Asian airlines are reporting high vaccination take-up rates among pilots and cabin crew as they wait for the region’s tight pandemic-related border controls to be relaxed.International travel in the Asia-Pacific region remains down about 95 per cent from pre-pandemic levels, and concerns about the Delta variant have led to even stricter quarantines or flight caps in some places, leaving many aircrew members idle and hoping for a recovery.Singapore Airlines, Malaysia Airlines, Australia’s Qantas…
Singapore to temporarily loosen hiring rules for foreign workers
Singapore’s Ministry of Manpower (MOM) is temporarily lifting some work permit renewal and other conditions to ease labour shortages due to Covid-19 related border closures.
Malaysia’s king says soon-to-be named PM must face confidence vote, warns against ‘winner takes all’ mentality
Malaysia’s king on Wednesday said the country’s soon-to-be-appointed new prime minister must immediately test his support in parliament, a move that could prolong the political crisis that led to Muhyiddin Yassin’s resignation this week.The royal statement from the office of Sultan Abdullah Sultan Ahmad Shah came hours before a 4pm deadline for the country’s 220 MPs to each submit a single nominee for prime minister.The secret ballot will help the monarch make a decision on who is most likely…
Coronavirus: Southeast Asia needs help securing vaccines, Red Cross says; Qantas makes shots mandatory for staff
Southeast Asian countries need more help securing Covid-19 vaccines, as the region struggles to contain record infections and deaths driven by the Delta variant, the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies said.The region escaped the worst when the pandemic erupted last year, but in recent weeks has seen the highest deaths globally, as soaring infections push fragile health care systems to the brink and expose sluggish vaccination roll-outs.“This Covid-19 surge driven…
Covid to impact construction claims ‘until at least 2023’
Construction projects continue to be impacted by the global coronavirus pandemic, with a knock-on effect on claims.
Australia will not be able to help all Afghans who worked with military, PM says
Australia will not be able to help all Afghans who worked with its military, Prime Minister Scott Morrison said on Tuesday, as it prepares its evacuation plan after the Taliban seized control of the country.Australia said on Monday it would send 250 military personnel to Kabul to evacuate it citizens and an unspecified number of Afghans who had been given visas after working with Australia.US forces in control of Kabul’s airport resumed evacuation flights on Tuesday, a day after chaos there as…
Coronavirus: New Zealand will enter lockdown after community case detected; Singapore may allow vaccinated travellers
New Zealand will go into a hard lockdown within hours as it deals with its first community case of Covid-19 in almost six months.Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said a case had been detected in Auckland on Tuesday.As a result, the entire country will be placed in a hard lockdown for at least three days – meaning all schools and non-essential businesses must close. People are only able to leave their homes to visit the supermarket, for solo exercise, or for medical care.“We’ve seen the dire…
Legal framework for Early Access to Medicine Scheme planned
The UK government plans to introduce a legal framework for the Early Access to Medicine Scheme (EAMS) and has launched a consultation on it.
Indonesia’s Joko Widodo seeks to balance health and economy during coronavirus pandemic
Indonesian President Joko Widodo said on Monday in his annual state-of-the-nation speech that there was a need to strike a balance between health and economic interests amid a surge in Covid-19 cases in Southeast Asia’s biggest country.“The pandemic has indeed significantly slowed down our economic growth, but it must not hinder the process of structural reforms of our economy,” the president told parliament.Struggling with a jump in infections driven by the Delta variant, Indonesia has become…
Malaysia’s political crisis: PM Muhyiddin Yassin finally quits, but question mark over successor remains
Malaysia’s Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin resigned on Monday after weeks of turmoil in his government, ending a 17-month stint in power during which his legitimacy came under constant scrutiny and amid seething public anger over his handling of the Covid-19 crisis.The 74-year-old’s departure was expected, after a key minister revealed over the weekend that the prime minister would meet the country’s king, Sultan Abdullah Sultan Ahmad Shah, to tender his resignation and end an impasse triggered…
