COVID-19 Infections Reach Record High in Tokyo

Tokyo’s metropolitan government said new coronavirus infections surged to a record high Saturday as the city hosts the Olympic Games.

The government reported 4,058 new cases, topping 4,000 for the first time.

The new record was set one day after Japan, with a population of more than 126 million, extended a state of emergency for Tokyo through the end of August to contain the spread. The extension also applies to three prefectures near Tokyo and the western prefecture of Osaka.

A new record for infections also was set nationwide Saturday. Public broadcaster NHK reported 12,341 new cases, 15% higher than the day before.

Since the start of the pandemic, Japan has reported 914,718 confirmed cases of COVID-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus, and 15,197 deaths, according to the Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center.

Protests related to the coronavirus pandemic occurred Saturday in countries including France, Italy and Israel.

In France, more than 200,000 people protested around the country to voice opposition to President Emmanuel Macron’s recent COVID-19 measures, media reported.

While most protests were peaceful, in Paris, where more than 14,000 people gathered, three police officers were injured in clashes with demonstrators, according to Reuters.

The French government has instituted a mandatory coronavirus health pass in an effort to control the highly contagious delta variant of the coronavirus. It has pushed the number of COVID-19 cases in the country from a few thousand each day in early July to 24,000 new cases on Friday, health officials said.

The health pass will be needed for people to be able to enter most public spaces, such as restaurants, museums and movie theaters. The pass, which takes effect Aug. 9, requires a vaccination or a quick negative test or proof of a recent recovery from COVID-19 and mandates vaccine shots for all health care workers by mid-September, the AP reported.

France, a country of 67 million, was hit hard in the early stages of the pandemic and has recorded 6.1 million confirmed cases of the disease and 112,011 deaths, according to Johns Hopkins.

For a second week, thousands of protesters in Italy, also opposed to the use of a vaccine pass, demonstrated in cities including Rome, Milan and Naples.

 

In Tel Aviv, several hundred Israelis protested against new coronavirus restrictions and vaccines as the country sees a dramatic rise in COVID-19 cases because of the delta variant.

On Saturday, the health ministry recorded 2,435 new COVID-19 cases, the highest number since March.

To battle the outbreak, Israel rolled out a booster shot for older citizens, reimposed mask requirements indoors and restored “green pass” restrictions requiring vaccine certificates for entering enclosed spaces such as gyms, restaurants and hotels, according to Agence France-Presse.

Nearly 60% of Israel’s 9.3 million people have gotten two shots, mostly with the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine, according to AFP, but about 1 million Israelis still refuse to be vaccinated.

Israel has had 871,343 confirmed cases of the coronavirus and 6,469 deaths, according to Johns Hopkins.

Vietnam said Saturday it would extend travel restrictions in Ho Chi Minh City and 18 other southern cities and provinces for another two weeks to contain its worst outbreak to date, according to Reuters.

 

The extension begins Monday in a country that contained the virus for much of the pandemic but reports a total of 141,000 cases and more than 1,100 deaths, according to Johns Hopkins, 85% of which were reported in the last month.

The White House announced on Friday that U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris would travel in August to Singapore and Vietnam.

Symone Sanders, a White House senior adviser and chief spokesperson, said in a statement released Friday that Harris would engage with the leaders of both countries on issues of mutual interest, including the global response to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The White House did not give specific dates for the trip.

A weekend lockdown has been imposed in India’s southern state of Kerala as it grapples with about 20,000 new cases daily, Reuters reported. Federal authorities sent experts to the area to monitor developments in the state that accounts for more than 37% of the nearly 32 million cases reported by India’s health ministry.

Australia’s third-largest city of Brisbane said it would begin a COVID-19 lockdown on Saturday, amid rising case numbers. Neighboring areas will also be subject to the stay-at-home orders.

In London, a four-day “vaccine music festival” was under way Saturday. The event was to encourage people to take the COVID-19 vaccine. Already, more than 72% of people older than 18 in the United Kingdom have received two doses of vaccine, according to government figures reported by the AP.

Great Britain, which recently lifted most of its COVID-19 restrictions, said starting Monday, fully vaccinated visitors from the European Union or the United States would no longer need to quarantine upon arrival.

As of Saturday, there were 197.7 million cases of COVID-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus, and 4.2 million deaths globally, according to Johns Hopkins. The U.S. leads the world in number of COVID-19 cases, nearly 35 million cases, and 613,113 deaths, according to the university.

Some information for this report comes from The Associated Press, Agence France-Presse and Reuters.

 

Source: Voice of America

 

Virus Pass Protesters March in France, Clash With Police in Paris

 

 

PARIS – Thousands of people protested France’s special virus pass by marching through Paris and other French cities on Saturday. Most demonstrations were peaceful but some in Paris clashed with riot police, who fired tear gas.

About 3,000 security forces deployed around the French capital for a third weekend of protests against the pass that will be needed soon to enter restaurants and other places. Paris police took up posts along the Champs-Elysees to guard the famed avenue.

With virus infections spiking and hospitalizations rising, French lawmakers have passed a bill requiring the pass in most places as of August 9. Polls show a majority of French support the pass, but some are adamantly opposed. The pass requires a vaccination or a quick negative test or proof of a recent recovery from COVID-19 and mandates vaccine shots for all health care workers by mid-September.

For anti-pass demonstrators, liberty was the slogan of the day.

Hager Ameur, a 37-year-old nurse, said she resigned from her job, accusing the government of using a form of blackmail.

“I think that we mustn’t be told what to do,” she told The Associated Press, adding that French medical workers during the first wave of COVID-19 were quite mistreated. “And now, suddenly we are told that if we don’t get vaccinated it is our fault that people are contaminated. I think it is sickening.”

Tensions flared in front of the famed Moulin Rouge nightclub in northern Paris during what appeared to be the largest demonstration. Lines of police faced down protesters in up-close confrontations during the march. Police used their fists on several occasions.

 

Tear gas, water cannon, injuries

As marchers headed eastward and some pelted police with objects, police fired tear gas into the crowds, and plumes of smoke filled the sky. A male protester was seen with a bleeding head and a police officer was carried away by colleagues. Three officers were injured, the French press quoted police as saying. Police, again responding to rowdy crowds, also turned a water cannon on protesters as the march ended at the Bastille.

A calmer march was led by the former top lieutenant of far-right leader Marine Le Pen, who left to form his own small anti-EU party. But Florian Philippot’s new cause, against the virus pass, seems far more popular. His contingent of hundreds marched Saturday to the Health Ministry.

Among those not present this week was Francois Asselineau, leader of another tiny anti-EU party, the Popular Republican Union, and an ardent campaigner against the health pass, who came down with COVID-19. In a video on his party’s website, Asselineau, who was not hospitalized, called on people to denounce the “absurd, unjust and totally liberty-killing” health pass.

French authorities are implementing the health pass because the highly contagious delta variant is making strong inroads. More than 24,000 new daily cases were confirmed Friday night, compared with just a few thousand cases a day at the start of the month.

The government announcement that the health pass would take effect August 9 has driven many unvaccinated French to sign up for inoculations so their social lives won’t be shut down during the summer holiday season. Vaccinations are now available at a wide variety of places, including some beaches. More than 52% of the French population has been vaccinated.

About 112,000 people have died of the virus in France since the start of the pandemic.

 

 

Source: Voice of America

 

UL collabore avec WIZZIT Digital pour faire progresser les paiements de détail en Afrique subsaharienne avec le lancement d’une solution de paiement mobile SoftPOS avec PIN

UL et WIZZIT Digital contribuent à accélérer le déploiement des paiements sans contact pour favoriser l’inclusion financière et permettre aux commerçants de toutes tailles de réaliser leurs ambitions.

JOHANNESBURG, le 31 juillet 2021 /PRNewswire/ — UL, le leader mondial des sciences de la sécurité, a annoncé que WIZZIT Digital, une société de paiements numériques, a lancé une solution logicielle de point de vente (SoftPOS) Tap2Pay avec prise en charge de la saisie du numéro d’identification personnel (PIN). Cette solution permet de transformer des appareils commerciaux (COTS) en terminaux de paiement de point de vente (POS). Tap2Pay est la première solution SoftPOS développée en Afrique du Sud qui prend en charge la saisie du code PIN et est reconnue par Visa et Mastercard. WIZZIT Digital est désormais opérationnel avec un premier client de lancement, l’une des plus grandes banques commerciales panafricaines.

UL has announced that WIZZIT Digital has launched a Tap2Pay software point-of-sale (SoftPOS) solution with personal identification number (PIN) entry support. This solution transforms commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) devices into point-of-sale (POS) payment terminals. Tap2Pay is the first SoftPOS solution developed in South Africa that supports PIN entry and is recognized by Visa and Mastercard. (PRNewsfoto/UL)

Pour surmonter les difficultés liées à la mise sur le marché d’une solution SoftPOS, UL a soutenu la solution Tap2Pay depuis son développement jusqu’à son entrée sur le marché. Dans un premier temps, UL a fourni des services de conseil pour aider WIZZIT Digital à s’orienter dans le paysage réglementaire des paiements et à répondre aux exigences des systèmes de paiement. Lorsque Tap2Pay a été prêt pour les tests fonctionnels, UL l’a testé avec une série d’outils accrédités par le système afin de fournir un retour sur les problèmes potentiels. Après le débogage et le dépannage, UL a fourni des services de tests fonctionnels et a aidé WIZZIT Digital à obtenir l’approbation du type pilote Visa. Après l’approbation fonctionnelle, les laboratoires de sécurité d’UL ont évalué la solution pour les programmes pilotes de sécurité de Mastercard et de Visa. Ces tests et évaluations par rapport aux exigences du projet ont permis à WIZZIT de mettre la solution sur le marché.

L’évaluation d’UL a confirmé que la solution Tap2Pay répondait aux principales exigences de sécurité avant d’entrer sur le marché. Il s’agissait notamment d’aider à affirmer la sécurité des données de paiement obtenues par une interface de communication en champ proche (NFC) et un noyau sans contact du dispositif COTS. Les mécanismes de sécurité, les contrôles et les mesures d’atténuation de la solution protègent les données du compte du consommateur et d’autres actifs.

Tap2Pay entre sur le marché à un moment où la demande de solutions de paiement sans contact augmente. Selon Deloitte, la pandémie de COVID-19 a rendu le besoin de numérisation des paiements plus critique que jamais. Cependant, de nombreux marchés émergents sont confrontés à des problèmes d’acceptation des cartes. Deloitte a également noté qu’en Afrique du Sud, environ 90 % des 100 000 magasins du secteur informel n’acceptent que des espèces. Pour répondre à la demande des clients et accroître l’acceptation des cartes par le marché des petites entreprises, y compris les commerçants des zones rurales, il faut une solution abordable.

UL Logo (PRNewsFoto/UL) (PRNewsFoto/UL)

Jako Fritz, conseiller principal en matière de sécurité chez UL, a déclaré : « SoftPOS est une approche entièrement nouvelle des paiements numériques qui réduit la barrière d’entrée pour les commerçants afin d’accepter les transactions par carte sans contact. L’informatique cloud, ainsi que le protocole Europay, MasterCard et Visa, permettent de passer du traditionnel point de vente physiquement sécurisé au traitement des transactions par logiciel COTS. Ces solutions aideront les propriétaires de micro-entreprises et de petites entreprises ainsi que les commerçants du monde entier à répondre aux exigences d’une société de plus en plus dépourvue de numéraire, de manière plus sûre et avec un investissement minimal. »

Expliquant comment Tap2Pay répond à un besoin non satisfait du marché, Brian Richardson, PDG et cofondateur de WIZZIT Digital, a déclaré : « Depuis près de deux décennies, nous travaillons avec des banques et des institutions financières sur les marchés émergents, y compris de nombreux pays d’frique. Notre expérience nous a appris deux choses. Tout d’abord, les consommateurs et les banques veulent la protection d’un code PIN lorsqu’ils effectuent des transactions sans contact. Dans un contexte de cyberfraude croissante, le code PIN offre un niveau de sécurité universellement accepté et auquel les gens font confiance. Deuxièmement, les solutions traditionnelles de paiement sans espèces sont trop coûteuses pour les micro et petits commerçants.

« Pour les petits commerçants, l’investissement initial dans les terminaux et les coûts de maintenance permanents sont tout simplement trop élevés. Tap2Pay SoftPos with PIN supprime cette barrière, permettant aux commerçants de toute taille d’accepter les paiements sans espèces. Cela leur permettra en fin de compte d’attirer davantage de clients, y compris ceux qui ne veulent pas payer en liquide des biens et des services, pour une fraction du coût », a déclaré M. Richardson.

À propos d’UL
UL est le leader mondial des sciences de la sécurité. Nous fournissons des services de test, d’inspection et de certification (TIC), de formation et de conseil, des solutions de gestion des risques et des informations commerciales essentielles pour aider nos clients, basés dans plus de 100 pays, à atteindre leurs objectifs de sécurité et de durabilité. Notre connaissance approfondie des produits et notre intelligence des chaînes d’approvisionnement font de nous le partenaire de choix des clients confrontés à des défis complexes. Découvrez-en davantage sur UL.com.

Pour en savoir plus sur le développement des normes et les autres activités à but non lucratif, visitez le site UL.org.

Contacts avec la presse :
Steven Brewster
UL
ULNews@UL.com
+1.847.664.8425

Christina Bostock
IHC
christina@ih-c.com
971.55.887.3054

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