Category: Covid-19

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Man who deserted NS post since 1992 and came back because of COVID-19 …

July 26, 2023

SINGAPORE:A man who had deserted his national service post with the Singapore Civil Defence Force in 1992 and left for the United Kingdom returned to Singapore more than 20 years later because of the COVID-19 situation.

Soh Choon Wee, now 50, was sentenced to six-and-a-half years' jail by a district court on Monday (Jul 24) for three counts of desertion under the Civil Defence Act.

This is believed to be the longest jail term meted out for such an offence. Soh is also too old now to fulfil his NSF obligations.

The court heard that Soh enlisted as a full-time Construction Brigade national serviceman in December 1990.

He was posted to the Construction Brigade Monitoring Unit at Jalan Bahar Camp to continue his NS in October 1992.

Soh did not report for NS duty on Nov 16, 1992. He was arrested by the police at his registered address in March 1993 and instructed to report back to camp about a week later.

However, Soh did not report at camp and did not turn up for his court mention. Instead, he avoided arrest and stayed at a rental flat instead of his official address.

SCDF officers made multiple visits to Soh's address in March 1993 but could not find him.

According to Soh's lawyer, he worked part-time as a handyman until 1998, when he left Singapore and went to Malaysia via the causeway.

He then moved to the United Kingdom where he lived and worked in a Chinese restaurant.

In January 2021, 23 years after he had left the country, Soh returned to Singapore.

His mother had advised him to do so, as the COVID-19 situation in the United Kingdom was bad, the court heard.

Defence lawyer Wee Hong Shern also said that Soh returned because he "really missed his family" and his parents were getting old.

Soh was placed on stay-home notice for a few weeks before being arrested by SCDF for desertion from NS.

The prosecution had asked for seven-and-a-half to eight-and-a-half years' jail for Soh, pointing to a previous conviction for being absent without official leave.

She also highlighted the length of the desertion period, Soh's evasion of arrest by not living at his registered address, and the fact that his current age prevents him from fulfilling his NSF obligations.

Mr Wee asked instead for four to five years' jail. He said his client had thought that the authorities had "given him a chance" when he encountered no problems leaving Singapore for Malaysia in 1998.

He worked as a "wash-up crew" member for 150 (S$257) a week in a Chinese restaurant in the UK.

Mr Wee said Soh suffered a stroke that required an operation in March 2021. He also has kidney failure, requiring dialysis treatments three times a week.

The judge noted that Soh had remained crime-free in the period of desertion and returned home voluntarily.

However, he noted that Soh was not only unable to fulfil his NSF obligations, but also his NS ones.

He said he did not find the personal circumstances cited by the defence "compelling", as they do not amount to a strong mitigating factor.

"NS is vital to the security of Singapore and requires sacrifice from NSmen and their families," said the judge.

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Man who deserted NS post since 1992 and came back because of COVID-19 ...

False claim nattokinase dissolves COVID-19 spike protein | Fact check

July 26, 2023

The claim: Nattokinase dissolves the spike protein found on the COVID-19 virus

A July 14 Instagram post (direct link) includes a quote from a controversial cardiologist known for spreading COVID-19 misinformation.

The video's caption quotes Dr. Peter McCullough as saying a supplement called nattokinase is the only enzyme were aware of right now that dissolves the spike protein.

McCullough says in the video that the spike protein is loaded in the body with the COVID-19 infection and definitely with the vaccines.

The post was liked more than 2,000 times in five days.

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Experts have consistently said there is no evidence spike proteins from the vaccines pose any danger to the public or that nattokinase dissolves those proteins in the body. Public health officials have taken action against those making false claims about the supplement in advertisements.

Nattokinase is an enzyme found in natto, a meal made from fermented soybeans that is popular in Japan. It is not authorized by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration or by Health Canada as a COVID-19 treatment.

The post claims the supplement is effective at counteracting the COVID-19 spike protein, which is how the virus enters healthy cells and is the first step in infection. Experts say those proteins found in the vaccines are harmless.

Dr. Amesh Adalja, a senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins University Center for Health Security, said claims of nattokinase dissolving spike proteins are in defiance of evidence.

The Federal Trade Commission has sent letters to companies and people promoting nattokinase as a COVID-19 treatment. Health Canada spokesperson Anne Genier said the agency is investigating complaints it has received about advertisements for the supplement. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The Instagram post identified itself as a paid partnership between Rebel News and The Wellness Company Canada. One of the products for sale on the companys website is Spike Support, a supplement that contains nattokinase and retails for roughly $66 in the U.S.

McCullough, a cardiologist who has previously promoted COVID-19 misinformation, is listed as the organizations chief scientific officer. USA TODAY reached out to him for comment through the research foundation that bears his name but did not immediately receive a response.

Fact check: No, thousands of doctors weren't indicted for pandemic-related crimes

A Feb. 21 essay McCullogh posted to Substack about nattokinases effect on the spike protein included a reference to a study by 10 researchers in Japan. That study, published in August 2022, found the enzyme exhibits potential for inhibiting COVID-19 infection by degrading that protein.

But the study was conducted in vitro, not in the body, and looked only at those spike proteins from an infection, not an mRNA vaccination. USA TODAY reached out to its lead author, researcher Takashi Tanikawa, but did not immediately receive a response.

Experts consistently say the results produced by studies in labs are not always the same as those observed in clinical trials in people.

USA TODAY reached out to Rebel News for comment but did not immediately receive a response.

AFP also debunked the claim.

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False claim nattokinase dissolves COVID-19 spike protein | Fact check

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