PublishTime:2021-02-07 On February 7, the Central Epidemic Command Center (CECC) announced three new confirmed imported cases of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) in Taiwan. Those three new cases (Case #926-928) arrived in Taiwan from Indonesia, Ghana, and the United States.
Case #926 is an over 20-year-old man from Indonesia. The Indonesian man traveled to Taiwan for studies on February 4. Upon arrival, he voluntarily notified airport quarantine officers that he experienced symptoms of COVID-19. Quarantine officers then arranged his COVID-19 test. Infection with COVID-19 was laboratory-confirmed in the case on February 7.
Case #927 is a Taiwanese man in his 30s. He worked in Ghana for an extended period of time and returned to Taiwan on February 3. When he arrived in Taiwan, the Taiwanese man showed coughing. Quarantine officers then arranged his COVID-19 test. Infection with COVID-19 was laboratory-confirmed in the case on February 7.
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The legislation was hailed by tech leaders as a milestone for the ‘governing the digital industry according to the law’. Zhejiang’s new regulations come amid a countrywide focus on data and digital infrastructure. SCMP
Legislators in China’s eastern Zhejiang province, home to tech giants like Alibaba Group Holding and NetEase, have introduced regulations dedicated to the development of the digital economy in the first such regional law for the burgeoning industry.
Titled “Regulations of Zhejiang Province on Promoting Digital Economy”, the document lays out guidelines for the development of data sharing, digital infrastructure and the digitalisation of its industries. The law, which takes effect in March 2021, also clarifies how city governments in Zhejiang should handle data collected by city-level administrative agencies.