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Search Result for “Mers”

Showing 1 - 10 of 17

OPINION

Smart tax move

Postbag, Published on 24/05/2025

» Re: "Department to amend tax on foreign income remittance", (Business, May 19).

OPINION

What pandemic preparedness would look like

Oped, Joseph E Stiglitz, Published on 06/10/2023

» Humanity was caught off guard by the Covid-19 pandemic, even though we had effectively been warned by smaller-scale outbreaks -- of Sars, Ebola, Mers and avian flu -- for decades.

OPINION

South Korea: an example for Asean

Oped, Thanapat Pekanan, Published on 12/08/2021

» In late January 2020, the World Health Organization (WHO) announced the outbreak of a new and deadly form of coronavirus in China, marking the pandemic as a global health emergency. Because of its close proximity to China and the contiguous nature of the regional landscape, the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) was among the first regions of the world to be affected by the freely-moving virus.

OPINION

Bolsonaro must quarantine Brazil -- now

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 11/03/2021

» If I were a world dictator, I would immediately place Brazil under total quarantine: nobody gets in, nobody comes out. And I would keep it isolated until they (a) arrest and jail President Jair Bolsonaro; (b) impose a strict countrywide lockdown for at least two months; and (c) vaccinate everybody in the country (all 213,584,556 of them). And then we'll see.

OPINION

Whose post-pandemic century?

Oped, Bill Emmott, Published on 05/01/2021

» In the early stages of the Covid-19 pandemic, it was common to divide countries and their responses according to their political systems, with many attributing China's success in controlling the virus to its authoritarianism. As of late 2020, however, it is clear that the real dividing line is not political but geographical. Regardless of whether a country is democratic or authoritarian, an island or continental, Confucian or Buddhist, communitarian or individualistic, if it is East Asian, Southeast Asian, or Australasian, it has managed Covid-19 better than any European or North American country.

OPINION

This could get worse before it improves

Oped, Chartchai Parasuk, Published on 16/07/2020

» This is not the first time the world has faced economic dangers but the Covid-19 outbreak is by far the most devastating. I have a feeling that it could beat the legendary 1930s Great Depression. There are many questions to ask, particularly about the future of the world and the Thai economy. I'd like to raise three questions as follows:

OPINION

Back to bad habits

News, Postbag, Published on 07/05/2020

» Re: "Is this crisis really a turning point?" (Opinion, May 1).

OPINION

It's time to face grim Covid-19 reality

News, Chartchai Parasuk, Published on 07/05/2020

» At the onset of the coronavirus outbreak, there emerged an outbreak containment option called "Hurt and then ending" which in Thai is jeb tae jop. The complete lockdown of Wuhan was a prime example of that. In Thailand, the lockdown measure was first implemented in Buri Ram before it become a standard practice nationwide. The effectiveness of the measures varies across the globe -- from a seemingly complete success story in Wuhan to a not-yet sustained success in Spain, to a success and then failure in Singapore. I do not think anybody doubts the effectiveness of the lockdown on controlling the outbreak, but many, including myself, are starting to come out and question the cost of lockdown, which I have previously mentioned.

OPINION

Donald Trump and the 'Yellow Peril'

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 06/05/2020

» It was completely predictable that Donald Trump would try to blame China for the fact that at least 30 million Americans are unemployed and that 70,000 Americans have already died of Covid-19. His polling numbers are down and the election is only seven months away. What else was he going to do? Blame himself?

OPINION

A vaccine against outbreaks: Ban wildlife trade

News, Steven R Galster, Published on 21/03/2020

» As Thailand and its neighbors scramble to contain the pandemic and panic, we urgently need to start building a response to the source of Covid-19, or risk having new outbreaks hit us even harder. There is good reason to believe that we know the source -- global wildlife trade -- and that there is a solution.