Results 521 to 530 of 836
Thread: Á
-
04-11-2021, 09:39 PM #521
Tai vách mạch mạng:
China launches hotline to report ‘illegal’ comments about Communist party
https://www.theguardian.com/world/20...ommunist-party
China’s cyber regulator has launched a hotline to report online criticism of the ruling Communist party and its history, vowing to crack down on “historical nihilists” ahead of the party’s 100th anniversary in July.
The tip line allows people to report fellow internet users who “distort” the party’s history, attack its leadership and policies, defame national heroes and “deny the excellence of advanced socialist culture” online, said a notice posted by an arm of the Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC) on Friday.
The notice did not specify what punishments would be handed to those who are reported through the hotline, but netizens in China already face jail time and other legal punishments for posting content that is critical of the county’s leadership, policies and history.
Thời của bọn nâng bi.
-
04-12-2021, 09:20 AM #522
Nguyên lý "Sâm-bổ-lượng".
Trung Quốc nghiên cứu kết hợp nhiều vac-xin để nâng cao hiệu quả
Sau khi thừa nhận vac-xin chống Covid-19 của Trung Quốc kém hiệu quả, giám đốc Trung Tâm Kiểm soát dịch bệnh của Trung Quốc, Cao Phúc (Gao Fu) nêu lên khả năng kết hợp nhiều loại thuốc khác nhau « nhằm nâng cao khả năng đề kháng » chống lại virus corona chủng mới.
Hiện tại hai tập đoàn dược phẩm Trung Quốc SinovacBioTech và Sinopharm sản xuất bốn loại vac-xin đang được sử dụng. Thuốc của Trung Quốc đã được dùng để tiêm chủng chống Covid-19 tại 25 quốc gia trên thế giới trên tổng số gần 50 quốc gia đã đặt hàng vac-xin « made in China » theo tổng kết của hãng tin Mỹ AP.
Hãng tin Anh, Reuters trong ngày 12/04/2021 nhắc lại cách nay hai ngày tại Thành Đô nhân một cuộc hội thảo, giám đốc Trung Tâm Kiểm soát dịch bệnh của Trung Quốc nhìn nhận thuốc của Trung Quốc « hiệu quả không cao » như các loại vac-xin thế hệ mới dùng công nghệ ARN. Chuyên gia này cho biết Trung Quốc đang hướng tới khả năng kết hơp nhiều loại vac-xin khác nhau nhằm « điều chỉnh » mức độ hiệu quả đề kháng.
Chỉ vài giờ sau tuyên bố gây chấn động trong giới y khoa Trung Quốc, giám đốc Cao Phúc trả lời Hoàn Cầu Thời Báo trong số ra ngày Chủ Nhật 11/04/2021 tỏ ra mập mờ hơn : kết quả các nghiên cứu trên thế giới về tính hiệu quả của thuốc Trung Quốc « vừa cao vừa thấp » vấn đề đặt ra là « làm thế nào để có được hiệu quả tối ưu ».
Cũng chuyên gia này bác bỏ tin báo chí quốc tế loan tải theo đó ông ghi nhận « hiệu quả thấp » của thuốc Trung Quốc. Ngoài ra cũng trên tờ Hoàn Cầu thời báo, giám đốc Cao Phúc nêu lên khả năng điều chỉnh số liều thuốc tiêm, điểu chỉnh thời hạn tiêm chủng giữa hai đợt chích và thậm chí là « kết hợp các loại vac-xin với các công nghệ khác nhau ». Lãnh đạo Trung Tâm Kiểm Soát Dịch Bệnh Trung Quốc tin rằng đó sẽ là « giải pháp tốt nhất »
Reuters nhắc lại hiện nay thời gian giữa hai mũi tiêm vac-xin của tập đoàn Sinovac BioTech được ấn định là ba tuần. Một nghiên cứu của Brazil cho thấy mức độ hiệu quả đạt chưa đầy 50 % tức là không đáp ứng tiêu chuẩn của Tổ Chức Y Tế Thế Giới.
Giới khoa học không được cung cấp thông tin và dữ liệu về mức độ hiệu quả của vac-xin do tập đoàn Sinopharm sản xuất. Thống kê chính thức của Bắc Kinh cho biết hai loại vac-xin của Sinovac và Sinopharm, theo thứ tự hiệu quả đến 79,4 và 72,5 %.
/* src.: https://www.rfi.fr/vi/ch%C3%A2u-%C3%...BB%81u-vac-xin
Puck Futin
-
04-13-2021, 08:46 AM #523
"....
Releasing into the ocean is done elsewhere. It's not something new.
There is no scandal here,"
IAEA Director General Rafael Mariano Grossi said in 2021.
Vài năm tới còn ai dám đi Á Châu ăn Sushi và tắm biển nữa?
Fukushima: Japan approves releasing wastewater into ocean
Japan has approved a plan to release more than one million tonnes of contaminated water from the destroyed Fukushima nuclear plant into the sea.
The water will be treated and diluted so radiation levels are below those set for drinking water.
But the local fishing industry has strongly opposed the move, as have China and South Korea.
Tokyo says work to release water used to cool nuclear fuel will begin in about two years.
The final approval comes after years of debate and is expected to take decades to complete.
Reactor buildings at the Fukushima power plant were damaged by hydrogen explosions caused by an earthquake and tsunami in 2011. The tsunami knocked out cooling systems to the reactors, three of which melted down.
More than a million tonnes of water have been used to cool the melted reactors.
Currently, the radioactive water is treated in a complex filtration process that removes most of the radioactive elements, but some remain, including tritium - deemed harmful to humans only in very large doses.
It is then kept in huge tanks, but the plant's operator Tokyo Electric Power Co (TepCo) is running out of space, with these tanks expected to fill up by 2022.
About 1.3 million tonnes of radioactive water - or enough to fill 500 Olympic-sized swimming pools - are currently stored in these tanks, according to a Reuters report.
Is there opposition?
Environmental groups like Greenpeace have long expressed their opposition to releasing the water into the ocean.
The NGO said Japan's plans to release the water showed the government "once again failed the people of Fukushima".
The country's fishing industry has also argued against it, worried that consumers will refuse to buy produce from the region.
The industry was hit extremely hard after the 2011 disaster, with many countries banning the import of sea food caught off Japan's north-eastern coast.
The decision has also prompted criticism from Japan's neighbours. Ahead of the decision, South Korea's foreign minister on Monday expressing "serious regret".
Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian also urged Japan to "act in a responsible manner".
"To safeguard international public interests and Chinese people's health and safety, China has expressed grave concern to the Japanese side through the diplomatic channel," Mr Zhao said.
The US appears to support Japan's decision, however, saying it seemed to have "adopted an approach in accordance with globally accepted nuclear safety standards".
How safe is this water?
Japan argues that the release of the waste water is safe as it is processed to remove almost all radioactive elements and will be greatly diluted.
The plan has the backing of the International Atomic Energy Agency, which says the release is similar to the disposal of waste water at other plants around the world.
"Releasing into the ocean is done elsewhere. It's not something new. There is no scandal here," IAEA Director General Rafael Mariano Grossi said in 2021.
The 2011 tsunami overcame the sea wall and hit the plant
Scientists argue that the elements remaining in the water are only harmful to humans in large doses. With dilution the treated water poses no scientifically detectable risk, they say.
While the tritium is radioactive, it has a half-life of around 12 years, meaning it will disappear from the environment over a period of decades rather than centuries.
Radiation from tritium can be ingested, however, which is why fishing industry groups are concerned about the risk of it getting into the food chain and being consumed through sea food.
The risk of this happening is not zero, but the scientific consensus is that it does not pose a threat to human health .
Scientists also point out that vastly more radiation has been released into the pacific by nuclear weapons tests carried out by the US, UK and France during the 1940s, 50s and 60s.
What happened in Fukushima?
On 11 March 2011, a 9.0 magnitude earthquake struck off the north-eastern coast of Japan, triggering a 15-metre tsunami.
While the back-up systems to prevent a meltdown at the Fukushima nuclear plant survived the initial quake, further damage was inflicted by the tsunami.
As the facility's cooling systems failed in the days that followed, tonnes of radioactive material were released. The meltdown was the worst nuclear accident since Chernobyl in 1986.
Around 18,500 people died or disappeared in the quake and tsunami, and more than 160,000 were forced from their homes.
/src.: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-56728068
Puck Futin
-
04-15-2021, 11:55 AM #524
Trả thù biển cả?
Japan scraps mascot promoting Fukushima wastewater dump
https://www.theguardian.com/world/20...astewater-dump
The Japanese government has been forced to quickly retire an animated character it had hoped would win support for its decision this week to release more than 1m tonnes of contaminated water from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant into the sea.Although the water will be treated before being discharged, it will still contain tritium, a radioactive hydrogen isotope represented on a government website by a cute fish-like creature with rosy cheeks.
The character’s appearance in an online flyer and video on the reconstruction agency’s website angered Fukushima residents.
Local fishing communities say the water’s release will destroy a decade of hard work to rebuild consumer confidence in their seafood.
Work to release the diluted water will begin in about two years, the government has said, and the process is expected to take decades.
“Nuclear power plants are highly specialised and difficult to understand,” an agency official told Kyodo, adding that the tritium mascot would be redesigned to take into account public sentiment.
Japan’s decision to discharge the water also angered neighbouring countries. South Korea said it was considering taking the issue to the international tribunal for the law of the sea, possibly to seek an injunction, according to a spokesperson for the president, Moon Jae-in.
The Chinese foreign ministry said releasing the water would set a bad precedent for the disposal of wastewater. “The ocean is not Japan’s rubbish bin, the Pacific Ocean is not Japan’s sewers,” said Zhao Lijian, a foreign ministry spokesperson.
Zhao invited Japan’s deputy prime minister, Taro Aso, to drink some of the treated water, after Aso said it was harmless enough to consume. “A Japanese official said it is OK if we drink this water, so then please drink it,” Zhao said.
-
04-18-2021, 10:02 PM #525
-
04-19-2021, 12:50 AM #526
- Join Date
- Jan 2017
- Posts
- 1,431
Hổng sao đâu anh Joe. Chuyện nhỏ mà!
Cà-Ri chịu khó "tranh thủ" "nằm đôi" và "ho đôi" vài hôm, là Thiên Sứ sẽ giải quyết mọi sự đâu vào đó thôi. Tin hông? Hổng tin thì nghe Thiên Sứ phán nè:
__ "America loves India, America respects India, and America will always be faithful and loyal friends to the Indian people." (<= Bớ người ta! Cái mớ văn phạm Tiếng Anh "cao cấp" này là của Thiên Sứ à nha bà con. Ngài phán sao thì tui viết lại y chang vậy, đừng bắt lỗi tui à)
Chú thích: Trong mớ chữ của Vượn có vụ "nhảy đôi" (khiêu vũ) và "hát đôi" (song ca) nên khi thấy hai thằng Cà-Ri nằm cùng giường ho sù sụ thì tui phang luôn là "nằm đôi" & "ho đôi" cho nó đúng trường hợp vậy mà.
-
04-19-2021, 08:21 AM #527Puck Futin
-
04-19-2021, 09:32 PM #528
- Join Date
- Jan 2017
- Posts
- 1,431
.
__ Trời thần ơi! Cái này phải gọi là "hãi hùng đôi" hả anh Joe?
Originally Posted by chuyện Xứ Vệ"Các bệnh viện phải rà soát, nếu bệnh nhân còn phải nằm ghép thì không dành quá nhiều giường cho dịch vụ" - ông Liên nói.
Thiệt tình! Bệnh viện mà "rà soát" (rột rột) cứ như là đang dò mìn ngoài mặt trận vậy há. Từ trước đến nay, XXG chưa thấy qua mấy chữ "nằm cáng" "nằm ghép" này bao giờ...
__ Bởi, ta nói "quê hương tui ra ngõ gặp anh hùng 'tiến hoá' đều đều" là vậy nè!
Dạ thưa, "tiến" kiểu này thì tớ xin được làm người "lạc hậu" với mớ chữ của Bố tớ để lại, cho nó chắc ăn nha (ai mà rủ tui đi ăn "khế ngọt tiến hoá," tui bóp cổ kêu ặc ặc ráng chịu à!).
-
04-19-2021, 09:55 PM #529
-
04-23-2021, 09:04 PM #530
Indonesia: Time running out for submarine crew as air supply dwindles
The deadline to locate a missing Indonesian submarine before its oxygen runs out passed early Saturday with no sign of the vessel. Five nations are now participating in a massive search operation in the Bali Sea.
The frantic search for a missing Indonesian submarine with 53 crew members on board continued on Saturday as hope for a rescue wanes as the vessel's oxygen reserves are estimated to be almost depleted.
Hundreds of military personnel were battling against time to find the German-built KRI Nanggala 402, which disappeared in the Bali Sea on Wednesday as it prepared to conduct a torpedo drill.
Oxygen on the submarine is estimated to last only three days after losing power, a deadline that passed early Saturday.
"We will maximize the effort today, until the time limit tomorrow at 3 am,'' military spokesperson Major General Achmad Riad had told reporters on Friday. A press conference is scheduled for later Saturday.
An oil spill was spotted during an aerial search in the area where the craft is believed to have submerged, indicating a possible fuel leak.
There were also concerns that the vessel could have broken apart as it sunk to depths as low as 700 meters (2,300 feet) — well beyond the depth it is designed to withstand.
The 44-year-old submarine is one of five in the island nation's fleet.The commander of the Indonesian submarine fleet is also on board.
Five countries, including Australia, India, Malaysia, Singapore and the United States have sent specialized ships and aircraft to aid the search.
/* src.: https://www.dw.com/en/indonesia-time...les/a-57320239
Puck Futin