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19 Deaths, 331 New Virus Cases in Victoria on Aug. 11

  • World

‘Worst Fears’: Arrest of Hong Kong Media Mogul Jimmy Lai Draws International Condemnation

Hong Kong police’s arrest of media tycoon Jimmy Lai under the city’s new national security law has drawn condemnation from officials and activists around the world, who say the move was an attack on press freedom and snuffed out the territory’s dwindling autonomy. Lai, a strident critic of the Chinese communist regime, was arrested on Aug. 10, along with his two sons, on allegations of collusion with foreign forces. Later that day, more than 200 police officers raided the newsroom of Lai’s newspaper Apple Daily, the largest pro-democracy outlet in the city. Several other media and pro-democracy figures were also arrested Monday, including prominent activist Agnes Chow. Police later said 10 people—nine men and one woman—were arrested, without naming them. Lai’s arrest “bears out the worst fears that Hong Kong’s…

19 Deaths, 331 New Virus Cases in Victoria on Aug. 11

Another 19 Victorians have died and 331 new cases of COVID-19 have been recorded.

It’s the second day in a row of a record 19 deaths and the details of the victims have not yet been released.

Tuesday’s deaths brings the state’s toll to 247 and the national figure to 332.

The Department of Health and Human Services tweeted the figures moments before Premier Daniel Andrews was due to face a parliamentary inquiry over his government’s handling of Victoria’s second coronavirus wave.

Andrews is the first witness called at the second sitting of the Public Accounts and Estimates Committee’s COVID-19 Inquiry on Aug 11.

He last appeared at the hearing on May 12, when the state’s total number of coronavirus cases was 1509 and 18 people had died.

Andrews faced immediate questioning from PAEC deputy chair Richard Riordan on the botched hotel quarantine program, which is being blamed for the second wave.

The Herald Sun on Tuesday reported a leaked video of bureaucrats from the Department of Jobs, Precincts and the Regions congratulating themselves on pulling together the program and the efforts made to make guests comfortable.

There is no discussion of the health restrictions put in place.

“Did the crisis Cabinet, think hotel quarantine would be better run by people who fix roads and run an art gallery than your own health department?” Riordan asked.

“The answer to your question is no. At no point did people make a decision like that,” Andrews responded.

Also appearing on Tuesday are Health Minister Jenny Mikakos, Chief Health Officer Brett Sutton and Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Kym Peake.

Benita Kolovos in Melbourne

Focus News: 19 Deaths, 331 New Virus Cases in Victoria on Aug. 11

ByteDance Takes Step Toward Entering Online Stock Brokering in Hong Kong

BEIJING/SHANGHAI—Beijing-based ByteDance, the owner of popular short video app TikTok, is taking steps to move into the online stock brokerage and wealth management business in Hong Kong, trademark registration documents show. ByteDance applied last December to register a trademark called Songshu Zhengquan, which translates to Squirrel Securities, in Hong Kong, the city’s online intellectual property database shows. The trademark application is being “examined,” according to the database, and areas of business it applied for include “computerized financial information services, stock trading, brokerage services, and stock exchange quotations.” The business is still in its infancy, and ByteDance currently has just one full-time employee assigned to it, according to a person familiar with the situation. The company has obtained a license, but any official launch of the online stockbroker business is not…