Saturday, 25 September 2021

U.S. Agrees to Release Huawei Executive in Case That Strained Ties With China

 

U.S. Agrees to Release Huawei Executive in Case That Strained Ties With China


Meng Wanzhou, a senior executive of Huawei Technologies, 
outside court in Vancouver, British Columbia, on Friday.

WASHINGTON — The Justice Department reached an agreement on Friday clearing the way for a senior executive of Huawei Technologies, the Chinese telecommunications giant, to return to China after admitting some wrongdoing in a sanctions violation case, removing one major irritant between the two superpowers.

Within hours, China reciprocated, releasing two Canadians whom it had held since shortly after the executive, Meng Wanzhou, was detained, and who had appeared to be jailed as hostages to Ms. Meng’s case.

The resolution of the criminal charges against Ms. Meng, the daughter of Huawei’s founder, came in the midst of a downward spiral in military, technological and trade competition between Washington and Beijing.

In China, Ms. Meng is considered a member of the new Chinese royalty — technology executives who have used their power to expand China’s influence across the globe. In Washington, she became a symbol of the Cold War-like atmosphere in relations between Beijing and Washington — and the near simultaneous releases also had echoes of that era.

Saturday, 18 September 2021

F.D.A. Advisory Panel Recommends Pfizer Boosters for Older People and Others at High Risk

 

F.D.A. Advisory Panel Recommends Pfizer Boosters for Older People and Others at High Risk




A dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech coronavirus vaccine was prepared to be 
administered in Reading, Pa., this week.

A key advisory panel to the Food and Drug Administration overwhelmingly rejected recommending Pfizer booster shots for most recipients of the company’s coronavirus vaccine, instead endorsing them only for people who are 65 or older or at high risk of severe Covid-19, and received their second dose at least six months ago.

The vote — the first on boosters in the United States — was a blow to the Biden administration’s strategy to make extra shots available to most fully vaccinated adults in the United States eight months after they received a second dose. The broader rollout was to start next week.

Committee members appeared dismissive of the argument that the general population needed booster shots, saying the data from Pfizer and elsewhere still seemed to show two shots protected against severe disease or hospitalization and did not prove a third shot would stem the spread of infection. Some also criticized a lack of data that an additional injection would be safe for younger people.

“It’s unclear that everyone needs to be boosted, other than a subset of the population that clearly would be at high risk for serious disease,” said Dr. Michael G. Kurilla, a committee member and official at the National Institutes of Health.

U.S. Agrees to Release Huawei Executive in Case That Strained Ties With China

  U.S. Agrees to Release Huawei Executive in Case That Strained Ties With China Meng Wanzhou, a senior executive of Huawei Technologies,  ou...