US Appeals Court Freezes Biden’s Vaccine Rule for Companies

WASHINGTON — A U.S. federal appeals court issued a stay Saturday freezing the Biden administration’s efforts to require workers at U.S. companies with at least 100 employees be vaccinated against COVID-19 or be tested weekly, citing “grave statutory and constitutional” issues with the rule.
The ruling from the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit comes after numerous Republican-led states filed legal challenges against the new rule, which is set to take effect on January 4.
The White House declined to comment on the ruling, and referred questions to the Labor Department, where spokespeople did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The stay comes two days after the Biden administration unveiled the rule, which was immediately met with vows of legal action from Republican governors and others, who argued it overstepped the administration’s legal authority.
The action on the private-sector vaccinations was taken under the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration’s (OSHA) emergency authority over workplace safety, officials said. The rule applies to 84.2 million workers at 1.9 million private-sector employers, according to OSHA.
Saturday’s court order came in response to a joint petition from several businesses, advocacy groups, and the states of Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, South Carolina and Utah. The rule is also facing separate legal challenges before other courts.
The two-page order directs the Biden administration to respond to the request for a permanent injunction against the rule by 5 p.m. Monday.

Source: Voice of America

‘It’s Our Lives on the Line’, Young Marchers Tell UN Climate Talks

Thousands of young campaigners marched through the streets of Glasgow on Friday, chanting their demand that world leaders at the U.N. climate conference safeguard their future against catastrophic climate change.
Inside the COP26 conference venue in the Scottish city, civil society leaders took over discussions at the end of a week of government speeches and pledges that included promises to phase out coal, slash emissions of the potent greenhouse gas methane and reduce deforestation.
“We must not declare victory here,” said former U.S. Vice President Al Gore, who shared the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize for his work informing the world about climate change. “We know that we have made progress, but we are far from the goals that we need to reach.”
Campaigners and pressure groups have been underwhelmed by the commitments made so far, many of which are voluntary, exclude the biggest polluters, or set deadlines decades away.
Swedish teenage activist Greta Thunberg joined the marchers on the streets, who held placards and banners with messages that reflected frustration with what she described as “blah-blah-blah” coming from years of global climate negotiations.
“You don’t care, but I do!” read one sign, carried by a girl sitting on her father’s shoulders.
Sixteen-year-old protester Hannah McInnes called climate change “the most universally devastating problem in the world,” adding: “It’s our lives and our futures that are on the line.”
Promises
The talks aim to secure enough national promises to cut greenhouse gas emissions – mainly from fossil fuels – to keep the rise in the average global temperature to 1.5 degrees Celsius.
Scientists say this is the point at which the already intense storms, heatwaves, droughts and floods that the Earth is experiencing could become catastrophic and irreversible.
To that end, the United Nations wants countries to halve their emissions from 1990 levels by 2030, on their way to net-zero emissions by 2050. That would mean the world would release no more climate-warming gases than the amount it is simultaneously recapturing from the atmosphere.
The summit on Thursday saw 23 additional countries pledge to try to phase out coal – albeit over the next three decades, and without the world’s biggest consumer, China.
A pledge to reduce deforestation brought a hasty about-turn from Indonesia, home to vast and endangered tropical forests.
But a plan to curb emissions of methane by 30% did appear to strike a blow against greenhouse gases that should produce rapid results.
And city mayors have been working out what they can do to advance climate action more quickly and nimbly than governments.
The Glasgow talks also have showcased a jumble of financial pledges, buoying hopes that national commitments to bring down emissions can actually be implemented.
But time was running short. “It is not possible for a large number of unresolved issues to continue into week 2,” COP26 President Alok Sharma said in a note to negotiators published by the United Nations.
Efforts to set a global pricing framework for carbon, as a way to make polluters pay fairly for their emissions and ideally finance efforts to offset them, are likely to continue to the very end of the two-week conference.
The new normal
U.S. climate envoy John Kerry said on Friday it was possible to reach a deal at the summit settling the final details of the rulebook for how to interpret the 2015 Paris Agreement.
He said the United States was in favor of “the most frequent possible” assessments of whether countries were meeting their goals to reduce emissions.
In Washington, President Joe Biden’s mammoth “Build Back Better” package, including $555 billion of measures aimed at hitting the 2030 target and adapting to climate change, looks set to pass eventually. It hit snags on Friday, however, as the House of Representatives was due to vote on it.
Gore, a veteran of such battles, offered conference-goers a scientific video and photo presentation filled with images of climate-fueled natural disasters, from flooding to wildfires.
“We cannot allow this to become the new normal,” Gore said.
One schoolchild’s placard put it just as well.
“The Earth’s climate is changing!” it read, under a hand-painted picture of a globe on fire. “Why aren’t we?”

Source: Voice of America

Report on Cambodia Indigenous People Officially Launched

A report to improve the situation of Cambodia’s indigenous people has been officially launched.
The launching ceremony took place on Nov. 4 under the auspices of H.E. Chhay Than, Senior Minister and Minister of Planning, also with the presence of H.E. Ouk Rabun, Minister of Rural Development.
About 450 officials from the Ministries of Planning and Rural Development as well as representatives from Cambodia Ethnic Minority Coalition (SIPA), foreign embassies in Cambodia, development partners, Civil Society Organisations, concerned national and subnational authorities, as well as university students and indigenous people in the event both online and in-person.
Speaking on the occasion, H.E. Chhay Thorn underlined the importance of the historic report detailing the demography, socio-economy and living conditions of indigenous people in Cambodia.
Considering it as a big achievement through the collaboration between the government, development partners and SIPA, the senior minister said the report will serve as a basic data for necessary support, and future development plans, and researches about the population groups.
He also called for a systematic intervention by concerned institutions to promote the living conditions of the ingenious people in Cambodia through provision of education, employment, health care, gender equality, rights to protection and benefits from socio-economic development.
According to H.E. Chhay Than, there are at least 22 groups of indigenous people in Cambodia, and only six of them (Tum Poun, Phnong, Kreung, Kouy, Jaray and Prov) have the population of over 100,000 each.
The total number of Cambodia indigenous peoples was estimated at 179,193 – about 1.34 percent of Cambodia’s 2008 total population and 1.25 percent or 183,831 of the 2013 total population.

Source: Agency Kampuchea Press

Live Pounding of Fresh Ambok in Preah Dak

Preah Dak village of Siem Reap province is showcasing live pounding of fresh Ambok — Cambodia’s traditionally well-known seasonal rice flakes or flattened rice — from Nov. 5-7.
This event is organised by the Preah Dak Village Community with the support from its Banteay Srei District Governor Mr. Khim Finan to welcome the up-coming Ambok season, normally from November to December to go along with the Water Festival.
During the event, Ambok is made live of the rice paddies harvested instantly from area in the biggest, tourist-oriented roundabout of Banteay Srei district for visitor to see, said the district governor.
He added that visitors can buy Ambok at the event and are also allowed to experience pounding the rice flakes by themselves.
The event, he continued, means to demonstrate the process of making the traditional Ambok as well as to attract visitors to Banteay Srei district.
While wanting more visitors again to his area after COVID-19 driven travel restriction, Mr. Finan reminded of health safety measure as the foremost priority, and affirmed that his local authority is strictly ensuring the practice during the event.
Banteay Srei, a name taken after one of the most beautiful Khmer ancient temples, is a district of Siem Reap, located about 30 kilometres from the provincial town, and home to temples, stunning landscapes, friendly people, traditional livelihoods and foods, and eco-tourism sites.

Source: Agency Kampuchea Press

COVID-19: 73 New Infections, but 78 New Recoveries

Only 73 new cases of COVID-19 were reported in Cambodia; bringing the tally to 119,021, according to a press release of the Ministry of Health.
These are PCR test results, the same source underlined, adding that 10 of the new infections were imported while the rest were connected to the Feb. 20 Community Event.
Meanwhile, there were 78 new recoveries, but 6 new deaths (4 of them have not been vaccinated); the total cured and death cases in the Kingdom thus rose to 115,367 and 2,824, respectively.
The first COVID-19 case was detected in Cambodia in late January 2020 in Preah Sihanouk province. The confirmed cases have surged quickly this year due to the Feb. 20 incident.

Source: Agency Kampuchea Press