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Dielli | The Sun

Albanian American Newspaper Devoted to the Intellectual and Cultural Advancement of the Albanians in America | Since 1909

What Happens if US Declares a Coronavirus National Emergency

March 12, 2020 by dgreca

Workers from a Servpro disaster recovery team wearing protective suits and respirators are given supplies as they line up before entering the Life Care Center in Kirkland, Wash., to begin cleaning and disinfecting the facility, Wednesday, March 11, 2020. The nursing home is at the center of the coronavirus outbreak in Washington state. For most people, the virus causes only mild or moderate symptoms. For some it can cause more severe illness, especially in older adults and people with existing health problems. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren)

By Masood Farivar/Voanews/

WASHINGTON – With the World Health Organization classifying the global coronavirus outbreak a pandemic, U.S. President Donald Trump announced late Wednesday a series of emergency measures, including an unprecedented 30-day suspension of all flights from Europe.

But Trump, who spoke from the Oval Office, stopped short of resorting to an even more dramatic measure urged by some members of Congress: a national emergency proclamation under the 1976 National Emergencies Act.  

The administration already has declared the coronavirus outbreak a public health emergency, giving local health officials greater flexibility to respond to the crisis.  A national emergency declaration would put a vast reservoir of additional powers at the president’s disposal by triggering sweeping authorities contained in more than 100 statutes, according to Elizabeth Goitein, director of the Brennan Center for Justice’s Liberty & National Security Program. 

“When a president declares an emergency declaration, he at that moment has access to all of the laws that say in a national emergency the president can do X, whether or not those powers relate to the emergency at hand,” Goitein said.  

Some of the additional authorities allow for a “reasonable and very measured” response to an emergency, according to Goitein. For example, hospitals could receive regulatory waivers in order to set up off-site facilities.  

At the same time, a national emergency declaration also empowers a president to take draconian measures in the name of national security. For example, a president could invoke a 1941 law to shut down the internet and even freeze people’s bank accounts.

Last year, Trump was criticized for declaring a national emergency in order to divert military funds to finance construction of a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border.

A national emergency declaration can only be overturned by an act of Congress.   More than 30 national emergency declarations made over the past four decades remain in effect.    

Although presidents often have a legitimate need to exercise emergency powers, they’ve also faced criticism for using emergencies to curtail civil liberties and civil rights.

History of national emergencies 

During the American Civil War, President Abraham Lincoln famously suspended the writ of habeas corpus, a guarantee against unlawful detentions. During World War II, President Franklin Roosevelt put more than 100,000 Japanese Americans in internment camps. And after the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, President George W. Bush expanded the government’s surveillance and other national security powers, some of which were later rolled back by Congress.

“The question will be in this moment, how far does the president go or the Congress go, and what is the fallout in the pushback,” said Kimberly Wehle, a visiting law professor at the American University Washington College of Law. “These are areas where the law isn’t clear.”

In addition to exercising emergency powers, the president has certain nonemergency powers he has used during the coronavirus crisis. For example, Trump invoked the Immigration and Nationality Act 1952 in suspending travel from Europe. Another non-emergency power Trump has exercised: the federal quarantine authority, which was last used in 1963. 

“The president doesn’t have to declare an emergency in order to avail himself of that, but we know the president has already done that,” Goitein said.

Locking down communities or otherwise restricting the movements of large groups can conflict with constitutional rights of due process, according legal scholars. 

“The due process clause basically says the government can’t restrict your liberty, which would be your ability to move around without some kind of process,” Wehle said. “That’s the first constitutional provision that will come to mind if we’re talking about quarantining people in their homes.”

As of Wednesday, 22 states representing 196 million Americans have declared some type of COVID-related emergency, according to James Hodge, director for public health law and policy, at Arizona State University.

New York state on Tuesday created a “containment zone” around the town of New Rochelle, the epicenter of the outbreak in the state. Schools, places of worship and other large public spaces within 1.6 kilometers of the town of nearly 80,000 residents will shut down for next two weeks, Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced.

An emergency declaration allows federal and state authorities to put in place a host of so-called “social distancing measures,” including restricting travel, imposing curfews, dismissing schools, restricting public gatherings and implementing quarantines.

The emergency measures raise constitutional questions. While quarantining individuals or groups suspected of exposure to COVID-19 is constitutional, creating “cordon sanitaire” or lockdown of groups of communities within or outside “hot zones,” is not, according to Hodge.

Filed Under: Fejton Tagged With: Contravirus, Coronovirus

KORONOVIRUSI- Qeveria shqiptare shpall “shtetrrethim”

March 12, 2020 by dgreca

Policia e Shtetit ka publikuar masat që do të aplikohen qysh nga dita e nesërme në lidhje me parandalimin e përhapjes së koronavirusit.

Në kuadër të këtyre masave, policia bën me dije se nuk do të lejohet qarkullimi i mjeteve si më poshtë:

1. Nga dita e premte, datë 13.03.2020, ora 06:00, deri të dielën, datë 15.03.2020, ora 00:00, të mos lejohet të qarkullojnë automjete të transportit ndërurban, automjetet private drejt Tiranës dhe Durrësit apo anasjelltas, nga Tirana dhe Durrësi, në drejtim të zonave të tjera të vendit.
2. Nga dita e premte, datë 13.03.2020, ora 06:00, deri të dielën, datë 15.03.2020, ora 00:00, të mos lejohet qarkullimi i automjeteve private brenda në qytetin e Tiranës, Durrësit, Shkodrës, Lezhës, Elbasanit, Lushnjës, Fierit dhe Vlorës.
3. Qarkullimi i automjeteve në këto territore do të jetë i hapur vetëm për autoambulancat dhe automjetet që kryejnë funksione shërbimi shtetëror (personeli shëndetësor dhe social dhe shërbimet mbështetëse në strukturat e kujdesit shëndetësor, publike dhe jopublike, personeli i farmacive publike dhe jopublike, personeli që ofron shërbimet e furnizimit me ushqime, medikamente, shërbimet e kateringut, shërbimet postare, zjarrfikëse, funerale, energjisë, ujësjellës kanalizime, shërbimet private të ruajtjes së sigurisë së objekteve, shërbimet aeroportuale dhe personeli i linjave ajrore), duke dërguar pranë adresës së email: policiarrugore@asp.gov.al, listën e personave të autorizuar dhe duke i paraqitur punonjësve të Policisë një kopje të këtij email-i.
4. Qarkullimi i automjeteve të personave me sëmundje kronike që kanë të planifikuara terapi mjekimi në spitale, duke provuar përmes një dokumenti nevojën për trajtimin e tyre, do të jetë i hapur.
5. Do të lejohen të qarkullojnë automjete të personelit të medias, duke paraqitur dokumentin e tyre të punësimit ose kartën e gazetarit.
6. Për qarkullimin vajtje – ardhje nga aeroporti i Rinasit, drejtuesi i automjetit duhet t’i tregojë punonjësit të policisë, biletat e fluturimit të personave që do të largohen apo foton e biletave të personave që do të mbërrijnë.
7. Marrja në automjetin e punës, e personave të familjes apo personave të tjerë që s’kanë lidhje me detyrën shtetërore është rreptësisht e ndaluar dhe do të ndëshkohet me sanksione të rënda të parashikuara në legjislacionin përkatës.
Policia e Shtetit kërkon mirëkuptimin e të gjithë drejtuesve të automjeteve që të respektojnë këto kufizime me rigorozitet, me qëllim parandalimin e përhapjes së COVID-19, duke kontribuuar të gjithë për sigurinë e jetës.

Kryeministri Rama: Do mbyllen qendrat tregtare, por jo furrat e bukës, ushqimoret dhe farmacitë

Kryeministri Edi Rama ka dhënë shpjegime të reja për 3 ditët e shtetrrethimit për të parandaluar përhapjen e koronavirusit.

Rama qetësoi të gjithë qytetarët se nuk do të mbyllen furrat e bukës, ushqimoret dhe farmacitë. Ndërsa shpjegoi se do të mbyllen qendrat tregtare që nuk ofrojnë shërbime ushqimi.

“Do të pezullohen aktivitetet brenda qendrave të mëdha tregtare që nuk janë të lidhur me shërbimin për ushqim apo farmaceutike. Dyqane rrobash, parfumesh do të mbyllën në mënyrë që të ruhen të gjithë. Ndërkohë që çdo shërbime për ushqime do të jetë hapur. Është dëmshme që të shkojmë të marrim me radhë furrat e bukës. Për blerjen e ushqimeve, medikamenteve do të jetë gjithmonë e mundur që të lëvizet. I gjithë zinxhiri ekonomik do të mbahet për këtë fazë këtu ku jemi. Nesër paradite ushqimoret, furrat e bukës, farmacitë do të jenë hapur”

Kush do të qarkullojë?

Qarkullimi do të jetë i hapur për ambulancat, makinat që kryejnë shërbim shëndetësor dhe social, për farmacitë, për personelin që furnizon me ushqime, me shërbime kateringu, shërbime postare, zjarrfikës, funeral dhe të gjithë personelin që është i lidhur me sistemet e furnizimit me energji apo ujësjellës kanalizime, plus personeli i policive private të ruajtjes së objekteve, gjithashtu personeli i shërbimeve të internetit“.

Rama sqaroi si duhet vepruar për tu akredituar për qarkullim

“Për të gjitha këto ka një metodë shumë të thjesht, në adresën policia rrugore asp.gov.al administratori i kompanisë duhet të dërgojë listën e personelit emër mbiemër, nr telefoni, nr e targës  se makinës. Është një mënyrë fare e thjeshtë për këtë shpejtësi dhe do të shohim si do të funksionojë. Do të ndiqet e njëjta mënyrë për mediat. Mediat duhet ti drejtojnë në adresën asp.gov.al kërkesën me të gjithë emrat me të njëjtin sistem. 

 Edhe qarkullimi i makinave të personave me sëmundje kronike, me dokumenton e nevojshëm për trajtimin e tyre është i hapur, siç është i hapur qarkullimi për persona që bëjnë kujdes sopcial për të moshuar”

Rama: Nëse numri rritet më shpejt sesa masat, do jemi në vështirësi

“Nëse numri do të na rritet më shpejt sesa masat atëherë do të jemi në një pozitë shumë të vështirë, por askush nuk i di të gjitha në këtë situatë. Këto që po ju them janë të konfirmuara nga burimet e ekspertizës. Kjo nuk është një shaka, ku secili mund të japë opinionet e veta “

Çfarë do të ndodhë pas të dielës?

“Para se të vija këtu po dëgjoja kryeministrin britanik i cili shpjegoi pse në Britania nuk do mbyllë shkollat dhe universitet. Është një qasje, por përsa na takon ne do ndjekim qasjen e përshkallëzimit strikt sipas planit për të ngadalësuar shpërndarjen e virusit”. 

Jo fluturime në Itali dhe SHBA, kompanive i kemi kërkuar garantimin e fluturimit ne një datë tjetër

“Patjetër nuk ka kufizim për fluturimet, përveç Italisë dhe Amerikës. Pra kush ka biletë për në Itali apo SHBA duhet të presë momentin kur do të rihapet fluturimi dhe rimbursimi apo më shumë sesa rimbursimi që s’ka për të ndodhur, kompanitë duhet të garantojnë fluturimin në një datë tjetër. Kjo është gjëja që i kemi kërkuar kompanive.

Të gjitha ata që kanë bileta për në Itali me air albania do të kenë të rezervuar vendin në momentin kur të hapen fluturimet.

Masat janë dinamike dhe progresive. Masat nuk ndalojnë ardhjen e virusit, por ta ngadalësojmë shpërndarjen.”

Filed Under: Politike Tagged With: Coronovirus, shqiperi, shtetrrethim

World Health Organization Declares Coronavirus Outbreak a ‘Pandemic’

March 11, 2020 by dgreca

The World Health Organization determined Wednesday that the fast-spreading coronavirus outbreak is now a pandemic and warned that the worst is likely yet to come.

“In the past two weeks, the number of of COVID-19 infections outside China has increased 13-fold, and the number of affected countries has tripled,” WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said Wednesday.

Tedros said WHO is “deeply concerned both by the alarming levels of spread and severity, and by the alarming levels of inaction.

“In the days and weeks ahead, we expect to see the number of COVID-19 cases, the number of deaths, and the number of affected countries to climb even higher,” he said.

Governments around the world are trying to take steps to address the ever-changing outbreak of the new coronavirus, which, since December, has infected more than 118,000 people and killed about 4,300 in 114 countries.

Tedros said his organization has “rung the alarm bell loud and clear,” and that countries “can still change the course of this pandemic.”

He said 90% of all coronavirus cases are limited to only four countries, and that two of them, China and South Korea, “have significantly declining epidemics.”

The virus, known officially as COVID-19, first emerged in China, where health officials Wednesday reported 24 new cases.

While the increase represents a sustained decline from the height of the outbreak in China, the country where the government puts cities on lockdown to prevent inter-community spread is now dealing with an increase in the number of cases arriving from other nations.

That prompted officials in Beijing to order anyone arriving to go into a 14-day quarantine.

Italy follows China’s playbook

Italy has followed China’s playbook after becoming a secondary center of the outbreak with more than 10,000 reported cases so far and cases in numerous other countries linked to people who traveled from Italy.  Italians were under a second day of a nationwide lockdown Wednesday with people only able to move around for urgent health and work reasons.

The coronavirus threat prompted German Chancellor Angela Merkel to warn Wednesday that up to 70-percent of Germany’s population could eventually be infected if current conditions continue. Nearly 1,300 people have been infected so far in Germany and two others have died.

Officials in the United States are showing increased concern as the number of cases there surpassed 1,000.  

When asked at a congressional hearing Wednesday if the worst of the outbreak has yet to materialize, U.S. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Director Anthony Fauci responded, “I can say we will see more cases and things will get worse than they are right now.”

The congressional hearing was cut short when President Donald Trump called an emergency meeting at the White House, Democratic Congresswoman Carolyn Maloney announced before opening the hearing.

US outbreak pockets

There are pockets of outbreaks in the western state of Washington, where the governor is expected to announce a ban on gatherings of more than 250 people, and across the country in New York where that state’s governor is instituting an isolation zone around a community with more than 100 reported cases.

U.S. President Donald Trump’s national security adviser Wednesday blamed China for squandering a chance to get ahead of the outbreak.

“I think we could have dramatically curtailed what happened both in China and what’s now happened across the world,” Robert O’Brien told an audience at an event in Washington.  “Unfortunately, rather than using best practices, this outbreak in Wuhan was covered up.” 

“It probably cost the world community two months to respond,” he added.

The U.S. Treasury Department is reportedly considering an extension to the April 15 tax filing deadline, as part of a broader proposed government plan to provide financial relief to taxpayers and businesses.

Most people who contract the new coronavirus experience mild or moderate symptoms, but some, mainly older people and those with existing health problems, are at risk for more serious illness.

The World Health Organization recommends people wash their hands, avoid touching their face, maintain distance from anyone who is coughing or sneezing, and stay home if they feel ill.

Recommendations to avoid large gatherings of people have led to numerous event cancellations around the globe.

Vatican live-streams mass

Pope Francis gave a live-streamed mass from inside the Vatican on Wednesday, and the Vatican’s representative in East Timor said the pope would not be making an expected trip there later this year.

A Premier League match between British football clubs Manchester City and Arsenal set for Wednesday night was postponed after several Arsenal players and staff members went into self-quarantine linked to contact with the owner of another club who tested positive for the virus.

Popular Coachella festival canceled

In the United States, organizers of the Coachella music festival moved the April event to October.  And a Sunday debate between Democratic presidential candidates Joe Biden and Bernie Sanders will go on without anyone in attendance.

Filed Under: Kronike Tagged With: Coronovirus, Pandemic

President Trump Signs $8 Billion COVID-19 Legislation

March 6, 2020 by dgreca

President Donald Trump takes part in a FOX News Channel Town Hall, co-moderated by FNC’s chief political anchor Bret Baier of Special Report and The Story anchor Martha MacCallum, in Scranton, Pa., Thursday, March 5, 2020. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)

U.S. President Donald Trump has signed legislation Friday releasing $8.3 billion in emergency spending to combat the COVID-19 outbreak, including money for developing a vaccine.  The legislation passed through the Senate and the House almost unanimously.

Senate Appropriations Committee Chairman Richard Shelby said, “In situations like this, I believe no expense should be spared to protect the American people and in crafting this package none was.”

The U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary said Thursday a million test kits for the COVID-19 are expected to arrive this weekend at U.S. labs.  

Alex Azar said the coronavirus tests are shipping from a private manufacturer.

The Trump administration has received criticism about the short supply of test kits.  

Vice President Mike Pence said in Washington state Thursday, “We don’t have enough tests today to meet what we anticipate will be the demand going forward,” but added that “real progress” had been made “in the last several days.”

Pence met Thursday with Washington Governor Jay Inslee.  Washington is the site of 11 of the 12 U.S. deaths from the virus.  Most of the deaths in Washington took place in a nursing home near Seattle.

National Nurses United said its members have not been given the resources, supplies, protections and trainings they need to do their jobs properly.  Executive Director Bonnie Castillo said, “It is not a successful strategy to leave nurses and other health care workers unprotected.”  Castillo, who is a registered nurse, said when nurses are quarantined, “We are not only prevented from caring for COVID-19 patients, but we are taken away from caring for cancer patients, cardiac patients and premature babies.”

US states affected

Five U.S. states – Maryland, California, Florida, Washington and Hawaii – have declared states of emergency because of the virus.

Maryland joined the roster Thursday after three Montgomery County residents – a husband and wife in their 70s and a woman in her 50s – were diagnosed with the coronavirus.  All three were reported to have contracted the virus while on an overseas cruise.  Montgomery County is a Maryland suburb located next to Washington, DC.

Colorado has announced its first two cases – a man and a woman – of of the coronavirus.  Both had traveled internationally, but officials say the cases are not related.

U.S. Forces Korea said Friday that one of its workers in South Korea has tested positive for the virus.  She is the seventh USFK employee to test positive for the coronavirus.  Authorities say she is in quarantine at her off-base residence in Cheonan.

Vatican, Cameroon

The Vatican reported its first coronavirus case Friday.  Spokesman Matteo Bruni said its health clinic has been closed for a deep cleaning, but its emergency room remains open.

Cameroon also has its first coronavirus case.  The minister of health said in a statement  Friday the victim is a 58-year-old French male who arrived in Yaounde on February 24.  “The active surveillance put in place by the country since the occurrence of the Covid-19 outbreak has made it possible to detect this case,” the statement said.  The French citizen has been placed in “solitary confinement.”

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas declared a state of emergency Thursday, shutting down schools for 30 days and closing the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem after seven coronavirus cases were confirmed in the city. These are the first cases in the Palestinian territories.

Closing the church in the town that worshipers say was Jesus’s birthplace will devastate Bethlehem’s vital tourism industry and comes just weeks before Easter.

China

The threat appears to be waning in China, where the outbreak erupted in December. The WHO said Thursday there are about 17 times as many new cases outside China now than inside China itself.

On Friday, however, China reported that the number of new cases had risen from 139 on Thursday to 143.  

Hundreds of patients are being released from Chinese hospitals and shuttered factories are starting to reopen. But Chinese President Xi Jinping has called off a scheduled state visit to Japan, where Tokyo has declared that all visitors from China and South Korea will be placed under quarantine. South Korea has the largest number of coronavirus cases outside China.

Travel bans

Australia joined China and Iran in banning travel from South Korea.

Indonesia is also restricting travel from parts of South Korea as well as two other hard-hit nations — Iran and Italy. Both of those nations have shut down schools.

The United Nations said the virus has disrupted classes for nearly 300 million students worldwide from preschool through 12th grade. That number does not include colleges that have also been shuttered.

The U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights called on governments to find a holistic approach in their efforts to stop the spread of the virus.  Michelle Bachelet, who is also a medical doctor, said in a statement Friday that “efforts to combat this virus won’t work unless we approach it holistically, which means taking great care to protect the most vulnerable and neglected people in society, both medically and economically.”

She said the measures to halt the spread of the coronavirus will likely “disproportionately affect women” and that people “who are already barely surviving economically may all too easily be pushed over the edge by measures being adopted to contain the virus.”  

The High Commissioner added, “Being open and transparent is key to empowering and encouraging people to participate in measures designed to protect their own health and that of the wider population, especially when trust in the authorities has been eroded.  It also helps to counter false or misleading information that can do so much harm by fueling fear and prejudice.”  
 
Fake news

President Trump took some heat Thursday from health experts after he told Fox News that the World Health Organization is sending out false information, and he suggested infected patients are safe going to their jobs in offices and stores.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said the coronavirus is highly transmissible and that people who are sick must stay home.

Asian markets tumbled again Friday over apprehensions about the virus.

Thursday, global markets took another beating with investors nervous about the coronavirus outbreak and uncertain about exactly which way the situation is going.

Experts say the roller coaster ride in the markets is likely to continue as long COVID-19 spreads to more countries, with investors acting out of fear over where the next state of emergency, quarantine or business shutdown will be declared.

At his daily virus briefing Thursday, WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus again stressed the seriousness of the virus about which scientists still know little.

“This is not a drill. This is not the time for giving up, this is not a time for excuses,” Tedros said. “Countries have been planning for scenarios like this for decades, Now is the time to act on those plans.”

As of late Thursday, there were more than 98,000 COVID-19 cases worldwide and at least 3,300 deaths.(Courtesy VOA NEWS)

Filed Under: Opinion Tagged With: Coronovirus, President Trump

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