A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Saturday, February 1, 2020
Gobal Health: Who Officially Declares Coronavirus A “Global Health Emergency”
In designating 2019-nCoV a global public health emergency, WHO officials took into account the evidence that the rate of human-to-human transmission outside China is increasing.
by James Cogan-2020-01-31
The
World Health Organisation (WHO) yesterday decided to formally declare
the outbreak of 2019-nCoV, the new coronavirus first identified in the
Chinese city of Wuhan, as a “Public Health Emergency of International
Concern (PHEIC).” The PHEIC classification was only established by WHO
in 2005 following the 2002–2003 SARS pandemic. It has been declared on
five occasions since, in response to the 2009 Swine Flu, the outbreaks
in 2014 of Ebola and polio, the 2016 Zika virus and the 2019 resurgence
of Ebola in central Africa.
Chinese authorities reported last night that the number of confirmed
cases of 2019-nCoV has reached at least 8,100. The virus has spread from
its source in Wuhan across mainland China and now around the world. At
least 100 cases—predominantly people either from or who had visited
Wuhan—have been diagnosed in Taiwan, Hong Kong, Macao, Singapore, Nepal,
India, Sri Lanka, Thailand, Vietnam, Cambodia, Malaysia, the
Philippines, Australia, South Korea, Japan, the United Arab Emirates,
Germany, France, Finland, the United States and Canada. Dozens of
suspected cases are under investigation in other countries.
The number of deaths directly linked to 2019-nCoV infection, which can
lead to severe pneumonia that cannot be treated with antibiotics or
existing antiviral drugs, currently stands at 171. All of the fatalities
were in China and, according to Chinese authorities, were mainly older
people with existing medical conditions. The fatality rate, at around
2.7 percent, is low in comparison with other coronavirus outbreaks such
as SARS and the Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS). As with any
virus, there is the possibility that as it spreads it could mutate into a
far more deadly strain.
Like SARS and MERS, 2019-nCoV is an animal virus that has migrated to
infect humans, most likely originating in either bats or snakes. At
present, scientists postulate that it is being transmitted between
people via respiratory “droplets” spread by coughing, so most likely can
only be contracted if someone is in close and protracted proximity to
an infected individual. By way of comparison, the common influenza
virus, which spreads between people far more easily, has infected at
least 15 million Americans and caused at least 8,200 deaths just in the
2019–2020 flu season.
In designating 2019-nCoV a global public health emergency, WHO officials
took into account the evidence that the rate of human-to-human
transmission outside China is increasing.
WHO director general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told a press conference
last night: “The main reason for this declaration is not because of what
is happening in China, but because of what is happening in other
countries. Our greatest concern is the potential for the virus to spread
to countries with weaker health systems, and which are ill-prepared to
deal with it.”
The media has generally interpreted this statement as a reference to
so-called underdeveloped or “Third World” countries. In fact, the United
States—where there is now one reported case of human-to-human
transmission in Chicago—would be high on the list of concern. Tens of
millions of people live in extreme poverty and lack any health
insurance, while the public health system is drastically
under-resourced. If several thousand patients sought treatment at the
same time for severe respiratory illnesses in a major American city, it
would completely overwhelm the medical system. A comparable situation
exists in virtually all the so-called “advanced” capitalist countries.
The dangers are heightened by the likelihood that a vaccine for
2019-nCoV will not be developed for at least four months and would most
likely not be available for roll-out to the general population for well
over a year. One factor in the time length is the lack of collaboration
between dozens of rival medical clinics internationally, which will be
striving to patent a vaccine so their corporate owners can profit from
its sale.
The international unpreparedness for serious pandemics—in terms of
adequate medical facilities, dedicated quarantine wards and coordinated
research teams—is reflected in the panicked responses to the coronavirus
being announced around the world.
In China, health workers have reportedly had to deal with insufficient
testing kits to diagnose the virus and shortages of protective suits to
guarantee their own safety. In one Wuhan hospital, a nurse told CNN that
at least 30 of the 500 staff are now infected. Hospitals have run out
of beds and are telling people to go home unless they are displaying
severe symptoms. Chinese authorities have rushed 1,800 additional
doctors and specialists to Hubei province, while two temporary hospitals
with a combined 2,300 beds are being rapidly built to cope with the
number of patients.
Since January 22, the Chinese government has attempted to seal off Wuhan
and other cities in Hubei province to try and stem the spread the
virus. In total, some 50 million people are living under travel bans. As
with all such blanket measures, however, those with wealth and power
easily circumvent them. Moreover, 2019-nCoV was first identified in late
December. By the time the quarantine was declared, as many as five
million people had moved in and out of Wuhan, the largest city in
central China, including thousands who travelled overseas. A factor in
the spread of the virus was that people travelled elsewhere in China
because they could not get treatment in the city.
Long after the virus has well and truly gone global, most airlines have
now suspended or reduced their flights in and out of China. Airports
internationally have erected elaborate screening measures to try and
identify potential carriers of the virus, though infected people do not
exhibit any symptoms for as long as seven to 10 days. Russia and North
Korea have sealed their borders with China. In Italy, panicked
authorities refused to allow thousands of people aboard a cruise ship to
disembark due to suspicion that two passengers may have been infected.
Test results came back negative.
A number of countries have organised flights to evacuate their citizens
from the Wuhan region, but then placed them in quarantine in often
substandard conditions. The Australian government stands out for its
callousness. It is seeking to charge hundreds of Australian nationals
$1,000 to be evacuated and intends to isolate them on the remote
Christmas Island in the Indian Ocean and house them in the bleak
facilities built to imprison so-called illegal refugees.
Amid the geostrategic and economic tensions between the United States
and its allies with China, various demagogues are seizing the
opportunity presented by the virus outbreak to stoke anti-Chinese
xenophobia and sing nationalist praise of their own countries.
The Washington Post lambasted the Chinese government in the headline of
an editorial yesterday for having “put everyone at risk” due to the lag
between when the virus was identified and health warnings and drastic
quarantine measures were announced. The Post implied that in the US, the
“free press” would have ensured that information emerged more quickly.
In fact, as has emerged time and again, the major American newspapers
and networks collaborate just as intimately to censor information, on
behalf of the government and the corporate ruling class, as their
Chinese counterparts.
The Rupert Murdoch-owned Australian published today a particularly
obscene piece by right-wing academic Salvatore Babones. He implied that
the reason why coronaviruses have migrated from animals to humans in
China and not in Australia was because Chinese—due to Confucianism and
“communism”—relied on the state and did not “self-organise” to ensure
sanitation and public health.
Babone wrote: “Australian civil society accomplishes what 100 million
bureaucrats cannot—it ensures good public health by promoting safe
practices broadly, across every niche of the economy, nearly all of the
time.”
The utter stupidity of such nationalist assertions can be seen in the
way that decades of Australian government indifference and inaction have
left the population totally unprepared for the devastating impact of
climate-change linked droughts, fires and floods. People have had to
“self-organise” in fire-affected towns and regions over recent weeks
because the emergency services and social support networks have been so
deprived of resources that they are unable to provide the needed
assistance.
The virus outbreak, like the climate change-linked natural disasters
wreaking havoc on the lives of millions of people, starkly poses the
necessity of international scientific planning and organisation and the
investment of hundreds of billions of dollars into health and safety
infrastructure, emergency services and preventative measures. The
obstacle is the capitalist system, which subordinates economic and
social life to the accumulation of private profit for a minority and
maintains the division of the integrated and interdependent global
economy into competing national states.