Ministry of Health Denies AstraZeneca Behind Indonesia’s All England Open Exit
The Indonesian Ministry of Health has denied allegations by the country’s netizens which assumed that Indonesia’s forced exit from the All England Open was related to AstraZeneca, and the doubts which arose about the British pharmaceutical companies’ Covid-19 vaccine.
“[Online rumors] insinuating that Indonesia’s withdrawal from the All England Open was punishment for the country’s reluctance to use AstraZeneca’s Covid-19 vaccine are hoaxes,” said Ministry of Health spokesperson Siti Nadia Tarmizi to Kompas TV on Friday.
“Indonesia never ruled out [AstraZeneca’s Covid-19] vaccine, as the vaccine is still under review by the Food and Drug Agency [BPOM].”
Last Monday, Indonesian Minister of Health Budi Gunadi Sadikin said Indonesia is still deferring use of the AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccine, though the World Health Organization and the European Medical Authority has cleared the vaccine for use since.
The Indonesian Ministry of Health maintained their stance, after netizens such @Dhipo_aS speculated that “[Indonesia’s exit] from [the] All England [Open] was caused by Indonesia’s doubts over the vaccine.”
Another user, @39pipi, assumed that “[Great Britain] is angry at Indonesia for refusing to use their [AstraZeneca] vaccine. If [the Indonesian Badminton team] used their vaccine prior to their participation in the All England Open, [the British government] would have been more welcoming.”
Indonesia is one of 17 countries, along with the Netherlands, Ireland and Thailand and other nations, to suspend use of the AstraZeneca vaccine following reports that it causes blood clots.
Source:
Indonesia’s President Jokowi Urges Peaceful End to Myanmar Crisis
Indonesian President Joko Widodo has expressed his strongest statements yet on the Myanmar crisis, which left hundreds dead since the country’s military or Tatmadaw overthrew Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi’s civilian government last February.
“On behalf of the Indonesian people, I expressed my deepest condolences and sympathy to the victims of the violence in Myanmar and their loved ones,” said the president, who is also popularly known as Jokowi, on Friday.
“I call on [the military junta] to immediately desist from using violence. The safety and wellbeing of [Myanmar’s] people should be prioritized,” he maintained.
“Indonesia also urged the conflicting parties [in Myanmar] to hold dialogue and reconciliation to restore democracy and stability.” Jokowi added that he will bring up the Myanmar crisis to the regional level.
“I will highlight the situation in Myanmar with Brunei Darussalam’s Sultan [Hassanal Bolkiah] in his capacity as this year’s ASEAN chairman in ASEAN’s regional summit later this year,” he said.
The Tatmadaw overthrew Suu Kyi’s government, after the democracy icon’s National League for Democracy or NLD party beat the military sponsored parties by a landslide during the country’s elections in November 2020.
The Tatmadaw charged that the race was marred by voter fraud, and pledged that they will hold democratic elections a year after the coup. Indonesia was dragged deep into the crisis after a Reuters report alleged that Jakarta supported the Tatmadaw’s proposal.
The announcement incurred the wrath of the opposition to the Tatmadaw and generated protests in front of the Indonesian Embassy. Indonesia has denied the allegations.
Source:
Simak breaking news dan berita pilihan kami langsung di ponselmu. Pilih saluran andalanmu akses berita Kompas.com WhatsApp Channel : https://www.whatsapp.com/channel/0029VaFPbedBPzjZrk13HO3D. Pastikan kamu sudah install aplikasi WhatsApp ya.