(HBO) - Authorities declared a state of emergency across a broad swath of Australia’s east coast on Monday, urging residents in high risk areas to evacuate ahead of looming "catastrophic” fire conditions.
A cluster of burnt out cars sit at a property at
Rainbow Flat, Australia, November 11, 2019.
Bushfires
burning across New South Wales (NSW) and Queensland states have already killed
three people and destroyed more than 150 homes. Officials expect adverse heat
and wind conditions to peak at unprecedented levels on Tuesday.
Bushfires are a common and
deadly threat in Australia’s hot, dry summers but the current severe outbreak,
well before the summer peak, has caught many by surprise.
"Everybody has to be on alert
no matter where you are and everybody has to be assume the worst and we cannot
allow complacency to creep in,” NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian told reporters
in Sydney.
The country’s most populous
city has been designated at "catastrophic fire danger” for Tuesday, when
temperatures as high as 37 degrees Celsius (98.6 degrees Fahrenheit) are
forecast to combine with powerful winds for potentially deadly conditions. It
is the first time Sydney has been rated at that level since new fire danger
ratings were introduced in 2009.
Home to more than 5 million
people, Sydney is ringed by large areas of bushland, much of which remains
tinder dry following little rain across the country’s east coast in recent
months.
Source: NDO
The danger from the COVID-19 pandemic is still latent, threatening people’s health and lives in the context that the immunity provided from the COVID-19 vaccine has decreased. Many other dangerous diseases are also likely to break out when the global vaccination rate slows down, due to inequality in access to health services, vaccine hesitancy, and consequences of economic recession.
The Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) is witnessing a rise in the sales of electric vehicles (EVs) in Vietnam, Malaysia and Indonesia, according to Maybank Investment Bank Research (Maybank IB Research).
The respect paying ceremony for Party General Secretary Nguyen Phu Trong continued on the morning of July 26 at the National Funeral Hall in Hanoi, with high-level delegations from foreign countries and international organisations paying their last respects and expressing deep condolences.
A wave of condolences have poured in from world leaders, international organisations, rulling parties, Communist parties and partner parties following the death of Vietnamese Party General Secretary Nguyen Phu Trong.
President of the Australian Senate Sue Lines has expressed her deepest sympathy over the passing of General Secretary of the Communist Party of Vietnam Central Committee Nguyen Phu Trong and affirmed that he is a revered leader both in Vietnam and across the world.
Ambassador Dang Hoang Giang, Vietnam’s Permanent Representative to the United Nations (UN), on June 5 had a meeting with UN Secretary-General’s Special Envoy on Myanmar Julie Bishop during her working visit to New York.