måndag 31 januari 2022

Chonburi announces 466 new and confirmed cases of Covid-19 and one new death - The Pattaya News

Chonburi announces 466 new and confirmed cases of Covid-19 and one new death

Highlights:

  • 466 new confirmed cases of Covid-19 in Chonburi today

  • 481 people recovered and were released from medical care

  • One new death

The Chonburi Department of Public Health announced 466 new and confirmed cases of Covid-19 today with one new death, January 31st, 2022.

This makes a total of 17,332 cases of Covid-19 in the current round of infections, with 3,838 people still under medical care/supervision, and with a total of 21 recorded deaths in Chonburi since the start of this recent round of infections at the beginning of this year, January 2022.

Additionally, 481 people were also released and recovered yesterday in Chonburi. 13,473 people in total have now been released from medical care and recovered in Chonburi since this current wave of Covid-19 began at the beginning of this year, January 2022.

The one new death was at the age of 77 with personal health problems and pre-existing conditions. The person received a double dose of a Covid-19 vaccine.

In total, 1,946,115 people in Pattaya and Chonburi have received their first dose of a Covid -19 vaccine which is 83.56 percent of the total Chonburi population. Of those, 301,511 have received their first dose and are what the Thai government calls 608 groups (elders, have chronic health problems, and pregnant) which is 81.50 percent of those in these risk groups in Chonburi.

The district-level new cases were as follows today:

Mueang Chonburi 87, Si Racha 126, Banglamung (Pattaya) 129, Panat Nikhom 10, Sattahip 33, Ban Bueng 16, Phan Thong 19, ฺBor Thong 2, and 44 people transferred from other provinces for medical care.

The details on the cases are as follows:

  1. Work and stayed in Rayong, transferred from other provinces for medical care, 43 cases
  2. Cluster, Fujitsu General company in Si Racha, 7 cases
  3. Risky occupations meeting many people, 15 cases
  4. 10 medical personnel
  5. 4 back from other provinces from Chanthaburi, Nonthaburi, Pathum Thani, and Roi-Et
  6. Close contacts from previously confirmed cases in families – 115 cases, in workplaces –57 cases, close personal contacts – 28 cases, and joined a party – 2 case
  7. Close contacts of a confirmed patient (under investigation), 12 cases
  8. 173 cases close contacts of a confirmed patient (under investigation)


Notice: Applicants on Thailand Pass who have received the following email, DO NOT‼️ scan the QR Code or follow the instructions described. The email does not come from Thailand Pass, and could compromise the security and privacy of your personal information. Source: กรมการกงสุล กระทรวงการต่างประเทศ The Department of Consular Affairs. PRD


Analysis: What Sunday's by-election means for the Thai political landscape - The Pheu Thai Party’s victory in by-elections in Bangkok on Sunday will send shockwaves throughout Thai politics from the ruling coalition to the members of the opposition. Thai Enquirer

Analysis: What Sunday's by-election means for the Thai political landscape

The Pheu Thai Party's victory in by-elections in Bangkok on Sunday will send shockwaves throughout Thai politics from the ruling coalition to the members of the opposition.

Suchart Thienthong victory in Bangkok's 9th Constituency 9 was by a landslide with nearly 10,000 more votes than his nearest rival from the Move Forward Party.

Former Finance Minister Korn Chatikavanij's Kia party also surprised many with candidate Atawit Suwannapakdee taking third place, just a few hundred votes behind the more progressive Move Forward Party. Atawit was a former MP for the Chatuchak district under the Democrat party's banner in 2008 and 2011 elections.

The ruling Palang Pracharat party's candidate – Saralrasmi Jenjaka, came in fourth with just 7,906 votes. The ultra-royalist Thai Pakdee Party, running candidate Panthep Chatnarach, came in fifth with 5,987 votes

The unofficial results are as follows, although the certification of the win by the Election Commission will take about 60-days as per the law.

Fading Fortunes of PPRP

Palang Pracharat poor showing is especially astounding. That the party managed to get 7,906 votes when compared to the 34,907 votes they received in the 2019 elections is a clear indication that not all is well with the military-backed party. This is the same party that lost the earlier January 16 by-elections in Songkla and Chumphon provinces to its coalition partner, the Democrat party.

The PPRP which has made headlines over the last fortnight for infighting and schisms will now have to seriously introspect and look closely at its electability.

The loss of yet another by-election in what is supposed to be a conservative stronghold should send alarm bells ringing to its conservative and powerful backers – and draw into question whether it will perform in the next general elections.

Let us remind ourselves that this constituency is located in the heart of Bangkok with military barracks aplenty. Logic dictates that these areas would vote for the military-backed party and their former military leadership. If these preliminary results are to be believed, none of these things happened.

Others will point to the entry of Thai Pakdee splitting up the conservative vote. But even if one were to combine the votes of the PPRP and Thai Pakdee, they wouldn't be able to challenge the Pheu Thai Party.

Reflection Time for Move Forward

Move Forward, which came in third in the 2019 elections with 25,735 votes, managed to move into second place in the by-election. But its lower voting share will worry some inside the party.

The debate will rage between now and the next election whether or not the party will have to 'tone down' its progressive message to appeal to more moderate voters.

The youth vote, which is the backbone of the party, will be key to the party's electoral success. But with the voting rules changed to favor local constituencies and large parties in the last round of constitutional amendments, the party will be hard pressed to regain the success that they saw during the 2019 elections.

The party will also have to analyze why its vote share was so close to the Kia Party and their conservative message. It is too early to tell if the party needs to moderate its progressive message but it is a conversation that should be had sooner rather than later.

Governor Elections

One possible side effect from the ruling party's poor showing in Sunday's election could be a postponement of the Bangkok gubernatorial election.

With both main opposition parties doing significantly better than the ruling party, Prime Minister Prayut Chan-ocha may choose to pause the polls until his party regained some sentiment and were in a better position to contest for the leadership of the kingdom's largest and most important city.

Remember that the PPRP is alone among the major parties that has not revealed its candidates for the gubernatorial elections, there may be more cloak and daggers play from the ruling party in this regard. Watch this space.

Caught Between a Rock & Hard place

When former PPRP Secretary General Thammanat Prompao up and left the ruling party with 20 other MPs, many predicted that Prayut's days as prime minister were numbered. (Thammanat said that as many as 10 more MPs were ready to jump ship at his bidding)

Many analysts said that an early house dissolution was only a matter of time, the PPRP and the ruling coalition did not have enough votes to effectively govern.

But with the results of Sunday's by-election now clear, polls maybe the last thing from Prayut's minds given how unelectable the PPRP have become. While not able to govern effectively with its loss of MP, Prayut may find staying in a limp government preferable to calling elections in which he has no chance of winning (despite having 250 senators hand-picked by his cronies).

Revenge is sweet

Thammanat on his social media late yesterday came out to he was glad to see people coming out to use their rights in the by-elections and that such a civic duty is what 'Democracy' is about. He ended his statement saying, 'the enemy of my enemy is my friend.'

It may indicate that the Pheu Thai party is Thammanat's friend.

Though there is a non-voting no-confidence debate set to take place in the first quarter of the year, General Prayut may be worried about the possibility of a motion-voting no-confidence debate that could happen as early as May.

Remember that Prayut scraped by the last no-confidence vote in August 2021.

With the statement 'the enemy of my enemy is my friend', Thammanat has openly declared that he and his backers are not likely to back the 'enemy' Prayut in any no-confidence debate.


Rayong Oil Spill Cleanup Done, But Koh Samet Now Under Threat - Bangkok Herald

Rayong Oil Spill Cleanup Done, But Koh Samet Now Under Threat

The oil is gone from Rayong's Mae Ram Phueng Beach but now idyllic Koh Samet is under threat.

Natural Resources and Environment Varawut Silpa-archa said the oil-spill cleanup went quickly at on the Muang District beach.

Satellite images from Sunday morning showed no signs of oil on Mae Ram Phueng Beach or in the sea close to Khao Laem Ya-Moo Koh Samet National Park, but that may change.

Varawut said oil-stained sand was removed, the normal condition of the beach was restored and officials would be watching for the remaining oil slicks that were moving towards Ao Phrao Bay at Koh Samet.

Mae Ram Phueng Beach was safe as winds were blowing oil slicks to the east, but they were moving toward

Officials planned to lay containment booms at a 500-meter-wide channel to protect the coastline of Rayong.

Varawut asked provincial authorities to suspend local fishing for about a month and give assistance to affected people. He said Star Petroleum Refining Plc., the owner of the undersea oil pipeline that leaked crude oil last week, would be sued for damage to marine resources.

The Pollution Control Department would report the quality of seawater until situations returned to normal, Varawut said.



Hoping for a return to normalcy. While the WHO urges caution, the public health sector is eager to turn the page, but politics is clouding the outlook. Bangkok Post

Hoping for a return to normalcy
People use the skytrain in Bangkok. The World Health Organization says it may be too soon to label Covid-19 as endemic this year. (Photo: Arnun Chonmahatrakool)
People use the skytrain in Bangkok. The World Health Organization says it may be too soon to label Covid-19 as endemic this year. (Photo: Arnun Chonmahatrakool)

The first local transmission of Omicron confirmed in Thailand on Dec 20 last year prompted the government to abruptly suspend new registrations for quarantine-free entry into the country and raise the Covid-19 alert to level 4 amid fears over the highly contagious variant.

The Public Health Ministry in late December predicted the worst-case scenario for Thailand would be a surge in cases to 30,000 per day, surpassing the peak for the Delta variant of more than 23,000 infections last year.

However, new daily Covid-19 infections lingered below 10,000 for most of January, less than the best-case scenario from the ministry.

The government then announced a plan to loosen all curbs and declare an ambitious goal to make Covid-19 endemic based on its own academically acceptable criteria by the end of this year.

The World Health Organization (WHO) stated it is too early to play down the Covid-19 threat by tagging it as endemic this year, but the Department of Disease Control insisted different countries have varying roadmaps.

The department said Thailand is ahead of WHO guidelines and other countries in certain respects.

Playing in the background of the endemic debate is yet another political brouhaha following the expulsion of 21 MPs from the ruling camp -- the Palang Pracharath Party.

The stability of the coalition government is on the line as it now has 254 seats, which could be an obstacle when it needs to command a majority in the House.

Even though the government insists there will be no dissolution, wavering political confidence remains another factor to keep an eye on as this situation could prevent the country from reaping the benefit from improvements in the virus situation in the months ahead.

NO MORE TRAVEL RESTRICTIONS

If the government is confident enough to declare Covid-19 endemic by the end of this year, most or all travel restrictions must be lifted because it means the pandemic is under control, said Association of Thai Travel Agents president Sisdivachr Cheewarattanaporn.

He said entry registrations on the Thailand Pass system should be terminated to pave the way for normal entry regulations, as used prior to the pandemic.

Foreigners should be able to apply for visas or those from nations granted visa exemptions must be allowed to enter the country without encountering any hassles, said Mr Sisdivachr.

However, as health safety measures remain necessary, some requirements such as RT-PCR tests or vaccine certificates are acceptable, he said.

The government should adopt travel regulations based on academic research regarding effective disease control to convince local communities of practical safety procedures, said Mr Sisdivachr.

"We don't have suggestions on disease control as this is up to the experts," he said.

"But we hope to see the entry process simplified to nearly pre-Covid rules if by the end of this year Covid-19 is recognised as a kind of seasonal flu."

Mr Sisdivachr said the Test & Go scheme, which has minimum requirements for travellers, is a good effort.

Yet problems are still regularly occurring with the scheme, and the tourism industry has not seen a significant recovery, he said.

Bang Sue Grand Station in Bangkok has been transformed into a vaccination centre where people can receive Covid-19 jabs. Pornprom Satrabhaya

VICIOUS CIRCLE

The recent political turbulence in the Palang Pracharath Party made an impression upon Supant Mongkolsuthree, chairman of the Federation of Thai Industries (FTI), with a repeat of the familiar instability in Thai politics which has been haunting the country's political and economic development for decades.

The expulsion of Thamanat Prompow, the former deputy agriculture and cooperatives minister, and 20 MPs under his wing from the ruling party raises questions regarding the government's stability, similar to previous situations. However, there is a distinct difference this time, said Mr Supant.

"The business sector is not confident the government can smoothly continue its work at a time when the country needs an enormous effort to drive an economy ravaged by Covid-19," he said.

The conflict inside the party has left the coalition government with a slim majority of MP seats, which can pose problems when the government wants some legislation to be passed by the House.

It is the latest event in a series of political conflicts that threatens to deal a blow to the government while it struggles to ease the impact of the pandemic.

Concerns over political problems, including anti-government protests, were reflected in a FTI survey of 1,395 enterprises in 45 industries in August, which was conducted to calculate the Thailand Industry Sentiment Index (TISI).

The prolonged Covid-19 outbreak and the government's decision to impose strict lockdown measures, including a nighttime curfew, in 29 provinces in August were the major causes behind a drop in the TISI to 76.8 points, the lowest level in 16 months.

Though political conflicts were ranked third on a list of worries raised by respondents during the survey, following the economic downturn and Covid-19 outbreak, the squabbles remain a risk factor in the minds of manufacturers.

People wear face masks while enjoying Benjakitti Park Phase 3 in Bangkok. The Thai government wants to label Covid-19 endemic by the end of this year.  Arnun Chonmahatrakool

The Prayut Chan-o-cha administration has been trapped in an "instability mode" for a long time because of many coalition parties, leading to inconsistency in implementing some policies, said Mr Supant.

"The economy can move forward, but it seems to proceed unsteadily," he said.

Luckily, Mr Supant said, foreign investors have a greater understanding of Thai politics. They have seen coups, House dissolution and resignations of prime ministers before, but continue to make investments in Thailand.

MOST VITAL RECOVERY

Sanan Angubolkul, chairman of the Thai Chamber of Commerce, said the current economic situation including people's income prospects, higher prices of consumer goods, rising oil prices, the Covid-19 pandemic, as well as political stability are being monitored by the private sector.

"The country's economic recovery is the most important issue right now," he said.

"No matter whether the government changes, the ongoing efforts and measures to address the Covid-19 outbreaks, economic stimulus measures and employment need to be continued."

According to Mr Sanan, if the country can effectively contain the Omicron variant quickly and continue to roll out fast and accurate measures to stimulate the economy, the economy should recover as quickly as in many other countries.

Watchai Vilailuck, executive vice-chairman of SET-listed tech and ICT solution provider Samart Corporation, has accepted that politics can affect all businesses in the current climate.

"I have no idea whether or when a general election would be held, even the planned Bangkok gubernatorial election," he said.

The most critical factor for the country's economy is political volatility, said Mr Watchai.

"All enterprises have no choice as political movements are out of their control, but enterprises must adapt to the situation and diversify their sources of income," he said.

The country's economy faces various risks, such as the pandemic, economic volatility, political uncertainty and a decline in purchasing power, said Mr Watchai.

DIFFERENT CONCERNS

Boonkiet Chokwatana, chairman of I.C.C. International Plc, the fashion and beauty marketing arm of Saha Group, said the country's economic problems do not stem from political instability, but rather the slow pace of infrastructure development.

"The Thai government still lacks initiatives to develop new things and remains relatively slow in developing the country's promising infrastructure projects, which is a top priority for foreign investors when they are deciding whether to invest here," Mr Boonkiet said.

He said having proper infrastructure would help the country's economy grow as rapidly as China's economy has developed.

Mr Boonkiet said I.C.C.'s business is not related to political factors.

"Political risks and instabilities affect companies that do business related to politics, such as construction," he said.

Chamnan Srisawat, president of the Tourism Council of Thailand, said the key factor to reboot the domestic market is dependent on health and safety more than political confidence.

This means any government, no matter how power may have shifted, must continue with appropriate stimulus and lend support to help the private sector maintain health and safety standards, said Mr Chamnan.

For the international arena, the crucial factor to revive the market is each country's border policies, as many nations still have broadly divergent stances, he said.