Global Alarm Grows over China's Covid Surge

Hospitals across China are overwhelmed by an explosion of Covid cases following Beijing's decision to lift restrictions that kept the virus at bay but tanked its economy and sparked mass protests. Noel CELIS / AFP
Hospitals across China are overwhelmed by an explosion of Covid cases following Beijing's decision to lift restrictions that kept the virus at bay but tanked its economy and sparked mass protests. Noel CELIS / AFP
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Global Alarm Grows over China's Covid Surge

Hospitals across China are overwhelmed by an explosion of Covid cases following Beijing's decision to lift restrictions that kept the virus at bay but tanked its economy and sparked mass protests. Noel CELIS / AFP
Hospitals across China are overwhelmed by an explosion of Covid cases following Beijing's decision to lift restrictions that kept the virus at bay but tanked its economy and sparked mass protests. Noel CELIS / AFP

The United States is the latest in a growing number of countries to impose restrictions on visitors from China after Beijing abruptly removed a major impediment to overseas travel despite surging Covid cases at home.

Hospitals across China have been overwhelmed by an explosion of Covid cases following Beijing's decision to lift strict rules that had largely kept the virus at bay but tanked its economy and sparked widespread protests, AFP said.

On Monday, the country said it would bring an end to mandatory quarantine on arrival -- prompting many jubilant Chinese citizens to make plans to travel abroad.

In response, the United States and a number of other countries announced they would require negative Covid tests for all travelers from mainland China.

"The recent rapid increase in Covid-19 transmission in China increases the potential for new variants emerging," a senior US health official told reporters in a phone briefing.

Beijing has provided only limited data about circulating variants in China to global databases, the official said, and its testing and reporting on new cases has also diminished.

The US move came after Italy, Japan, India and Malaysia announced their own measures in a bid to protect against importing new Covid variants from China.

Beijing has hit out against "hyping, smearing and political manipulation" by the Western media concerning its Covid response.

"Currently China's epidemic situation is all predictable and under control," foreign ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin told a briefing Wednesday.

China still does not allow foreign visitors, however, with the issuance of visas for overseas tourists and students still suspended.

But the lifting of mandatory quarantines sparked a surge in interest in overseas travel by Chinese citizens, who have been largely confined to their country since Beijing pulled down the drawbridge in March 2020.

Italy Wednesday said it would make coronavirus tests for all visitors from China mandatory.

The measure was "essential to ensure the surveillance and identification of any variants of the virus in order to protect the Italian population", health minister Orazio Schillaci said.

France's president, too, said it had "requested appropriate measures to protect" its citizens, with Paris noting it was closely monitoring "the evolution of the situation in China".

The European Commission is set to meet Thursday to discuss "possible measures for a coordinated approach" by EU states to the explosion of Covid cases in China.

- Bodies piling up -
On the frontlines of China's Covid wave, hospitals are battling surging cases that have hit the elderly and vulnerable hardest.

In Tianjin, around 140 kilometers (90 miles) southeast of the capital Beijing, AFP visited two hospital wards overwhelmed by patients sick with the virus.

Doctors are being asked to work even if they are infected, one said.

AFP saw more than two dozen mostly elderly patients lying on gurneys in public areas of the emergency department, and at least one dead person being wheeled out of a ward.

"It's a four-hour wait to see a doctor," staff could be heard telling an elderly man who said he had Covid.

"There are 300 people in front of you."

China's National Health Commission (NHC) last week said that it would no longer release an official daily Covid death toll.

But with the end of mass testing -- and China's decision to reclassify Covid deaths in a move analysts said would dramatically downplay the fatalities -- those numbers were no longer believed to reflect reality.



Swedish Fighters Intercept Russian Jets near Border

A general view of the Swedish capital Stockholm (Reuters)
A general view of the Swedish capital Stockholm (Reuters)
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Swedish Fighters Intercept Russian Jets near Border

A general view of the Swedish capital Stockholm (Reuters)
A general view of the Swedish capital Stockholm (Reuters)

Sweden said Saturday it had scrambled two pairs of JAS 39 Gripen fighter jets a day earlier to intercept two Russian combat aircraft flying over the Baltic Sea near its airspace, reported AFP.

The two incidents occurred Friday in the southern and northern parts of the Baltic Sea. NATO fighter jets also took off "to maintain security in the shared airspace," Sweden's military said in a statement.

Swedish airspace was not violated in connection with the incidents, it said.

"The Russian actions are serious and constitute a recurring pattern of behavior that threatens both our territorial integrity and security," Vice Admiral Ewa Skoog Haslum, the armed forces' chief of joint operations, said in the statement.

Sweden joined NATO in March 2024.

Tensions over the Baltic Sea have risen sharply since Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022.


Military Transport Plane Crashes in India, Casualties Unknown

Military Transport Plane Crashes in India, Casualties Unknown
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Military Transport Plane Crashes in India, Casualties Unknown

Military Transport Plane Crashes in India, Casualties Unknown

A Russian-made Indian military transport plane crashed on Saturday while landing at an air force station in the country's remote northeast, the military said in a statement.

"An IAF An-32 aircraft met with an accident today while landing at Jorhat. A court of inquiry is being constituted, to ascertain the cause of the accident," the statement said, without giving any details about causalities.

News channel NDTV broadcast images of the crash site, showing a thick black plume of smoke and the aircraft apparently broken into pieces, said AFP.


US Deports Iranian Pro-democracy Activist to Central African Republic

A general view shows a part of the capital Bangui, Central African Republic, February 16, 2016. REUTERS/Siegfried Modola Purchase Licensing Rights
A general view shows a part of the capital Bangui, Central African Republic, February 16, 2016. REUTERS/Siegfried Modola Purchase Licensing Rights
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US Deports Iranian Pro-democracy Activist to Central African Republic

A general view shows a part of the capital Bangui, Central African Republic, February 16, 2016. REUTERS/Siegfried Modola Purchase Licensing Rights
A general view shows a part of the capital Bangui, Central African Republic, February 16, 2016. REUTERS/Siegfried Modola Purchase Licensing Rights

The United States has deported an Iranian pro-democracy activist to Central African Republic, her lawyer said on Friday, describing it as a "super dangerous" transfer to a country with which the activist has no connection.

The Iranian American Legal Defense Fund (IALDF) said on Thursday that three Iranian women who fled persecution were at risk of deportation, including one who had converted to Christianity.

In the end, only the activist was on the flight which took off from Louisiana on Thursday night, said her lawyer, Emily Trostle, while not ruling out that the others could potentially be deported later.

The plane landed in Bangui, the capital of Central African Republic, shortly before 10 p.m. local time (2100 GMT), after a stop in Ghana's capital Accra, according to the ICE Flight Monitor managed by ‌Human Rights First.

It ‌was not immediately clear where the deportees would be housed or how long ‌they ⁠would be able ⁠to stay in Central African Republic.

"They have absolutely no connection to this place. In all of my filings I submitted tons of information about how this was super dangerous," Trostle told Reuters.

"These individuals are being removed from the United States and abandoned in a country where they have no status, no connection and no support network. We fear they will ultimately be forced to return to the countries they originally fled," Trostle said. 

The US State Department and Central African Republic's presidency did not immediately respond to requests for comment about the deportations to Central African Republic.  

⁠The US Department of Homeland Security said last week that all deportees would receive ‌full due process.  

Ghana and Central African Republic have signed deals ‌with President Donald Trump's administration to take in third-country deportees who in many cases secured legal protections from US courts so that ‌they could not be repatriated.  

The United States has used the deals — including with Central African Republic's ‌neighbor Democratic Republic of Congo, which is facing an Ebola outbreak — to deport people it cannot legally send home. 

The Trump administration has said the deals are lawful. Rights groups and advocates have said that the details of the deals are opaque and many of the deportees are ultimately repatriated. 

RISK OF REPATRIATION 

The IALDF said the Iranians facing deportation had their asylum claims denied ‌because of a rule requiring that asylum seekers first apply in countries they transit through before reaching the US. A federal court in California vacated that rule ⁠in May. 

The group said ⁠deporting Iranians to Central African Republic was "a potentially fatal action," citing security issues in the country and the risk that they would be sent back to Iran. 

President Faustin-Archange Touadera signed peace deals last year with several rebel groups. Others were weakened as Russian mercenaries and troops from Rwanda were deployed to shore up Touadera's government as well as UN peacekeepers. 

Ali Rahnama, interim executive director at the IALDF, said the Russian presence in Central African Republic was concerning because Russia had close intelligence ties with Iran. The US and Israel launched strikes on Iran on February 28, starting a now three-month-old war. 

Trump said in April that he thought that the Iranian people should rise up against the government in Tehran if a ceasefire were declared, but understood that it was too dangerous for them to do so. 

It was unclear how many people would be deported to Central African Republic on the first flight. 

An official briefed on the matter told Reuters on Thursday it was expected to transport about 20 people, including Syrians and Afghans. The official said hundreds of migrants could ultimately be deported there under the deal.