【縛雞之見】
I cite this news release because it was released by AIT, which sees Taiwan as a close party to the former TTPI, which transformed into the FAS, the Freely Associated States to the U.S. in the 1980s. The U.S. has responsibilities under the Compact of Free Association to support the related countries in many fields, especially in security.
Esper, the Secretary of DoD, visited Palau and received the request from
the Prime Minister that Palau urged the U.S. military base.
In many circumstances, the U.S. put Taiwan into the circle of FAS,
including Alex Azar invited the ambassadors of FAS countries to show when he
gave an address at the National Taiwan University.
Let’s see what happens further.
The United
States Is Assisting Pacific Island Countries To Respond to COVID-19 AIT 20200421
OT-2011
April 21, 2020
The United
States Is Assisting Pacific Island Countries To Respond to COVID-19
FACT SHEET
As the leader in global health and humanitarian response to COVID-19, the
United States has acted swiftly to monitor, respond to, and mitigate the
ongoing COVID-19 pandemic in Pacific island countries. The
Department of State is closely coordinating with U.S. interagency partners
including the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Department of
Health and Human Services (HHS), U.S. Agency for International Development
(USAID), Department of the Interior (DOI), Department of Defense (DOD), and U.S.
Indo-Pacific Command (INDOPACOM). While the U.S. response for the U.S.
Freely Associated States—Federated States of Micronesia, Republic of the
Marshall Islands, and Palau—is based on our unique, historic, and special
relationships underpinned by our Compacts of Free Association, we will continue
to support all the Pacific island countries. We are coordinating closely
with Australia, New Zealand, Japan, Taiwan, and other like-minded partners on
COVID-19 assistance to the Pacific.
New Funding
to Support the Pacific in Responding to COVID-19
As of April
17, the U.S. Government has provided over $32 million in funding to support the
COVID-19 response in Pacific island countries, including:
- Over $27.5 million from a variety of federal
agencies (DOI, CDC, HHS, USAID) to the Federated States of Micronesia,
Marshall Islands, and Palau.
- $3.3 million from USAID to the Pacific islands
region.
- $1.2 million from USAID to Papua New Guinea.
Regional
Coordination with Like-Minded Partners
At the regional level, CDC, USAID’s Office of U.S. Foreign Disaster
Assistance, U.S. Embassy Suva, and the Pacific Islands Health Officers’
Association (PIHOA) are coordinating with the Fiji-based Pacific Joint Incident
Management Team, which is leading the regional response to COVID-19. The
U.S. Government is also participating in the newly expanded coordination forum
led by the UN Resident Coordinator Office—the Pacific Humanitarian Team—that
convenes all active sectors responding to the COVID-19 crisis, including health,
water, sanitation, hygiene, logistics, food security, protection, and emergency
telecommunications. We have been coordinating closely with partners
including Australia and New Zealand on delivery of medical and other
humanitarian supplies to the Pacific islands.
U.S.
Response in the Pacific Islands
On March 18, the U.S. Government announced the release of $62 million
from the Emergency Reserve Fund for Contagious Infectious-Disease Outbreaks at
USAID to address the global COVID-19 pandemic. On March 27, USAID
announced it will provide $1.2 million for Papua New Guinea and $2.3
million for the Pacific islands to provide expert help to these
governments. Funded activities will include lab preparation, infection
control, case and contact tracing, and public-health communications.
- Of the $2.3 million for the Pacific islands,
$600,000 has gone to the International Organization for Migration (IOM) to
support water, sanitation, hygiene, and communications activities in the
Federated States of Micronesia and Marshall Islands.
On April 16, the U.S. Government announced the release of additional
humanitarian assistance from USAID’s International Disaster Assistance
(IDA). The Pacific islands will receive $1 million in IDA
humanitarian assistance to support risk communication, infection prevention and
control, logistics, coordination efforts, and more.
U.S.
Response in Papua New Guinea
On April 13, the U.S. Embassy in Port Moresby announced that the USAID
commitment of $1.2 million (4.2 million PGK) will be used to prepare
laboratory systems, activate case-finding and event-based surveillance, support
technical experts for response and preparedness, risk communication, infection
prevention and control, and more.
U.S.
Response in the Freely Associated States
The U.S.
CDC is the lead agency on COVID-19 response in the Freely Associated States. To determine needs and provide guidance and assistance, CDC
communicates regularly with health departments in the Marshall Islands,
Federated States of Micronesia, and Palau. The CDC also leads a weekly
call with healthcare professionals in the Freely Associated States and U.S.
Pacific territories, and a separate weekly call with U.S. agencies, including
State, DOI, HHS, INDOPACOM, and USAID.
For many years, CDC has engaged with the Freely Associated States to
develop and refine emergency response plans, including response plans for
pandemic influenza, through the Public Health Emergency Preparedness
Program. CDC is collaborating with regional partners to
help the Freely Associated States adapt and apply their existing national
response plans for the current COVID-19 threat. CDC is providing
technical assistance and exploring funding options to support established
regional mechanisms, such as the Pacific Islands Health Officers’ Association
(PIHOA), for infectious disease response.
Supplemental
Funding: Fifty-five
million dollars has been made directly available to the U.S. territories and
the Freely Associated States in the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic
Security (CARES) Act passed by Congress and signed by President Trump on March
27. Funding provided under the CARES Act will address impacts of the
COVID-19 pandemic in the islands through the DOI Office of Insular
Affairs’ Technical Assistance Program.
- Federated
States of Micronesiareceived $7,737,390
- Marshall
Islandsreceived $3,894,720
- Palaureceived $1,592,945
The
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) received
a share of the U.S. Government’s recent $8.3 billion supplemental funding
package for coronavirus-related research and assistance. It has allocated
some of these funds to a CDC program assisting U.S. states,
territories, and the FAS. Initial awards were announced on March 16 and
supplemented on April 1.
- Federated
States of Micronesiareceived $1,261,207.60
- Marshall
Islandsreceived $1,103,263.40
- Palaureceived $1,010,380.50
HHS Office
of the Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response (ASPR) announced on March 24 that it will provide $100 million to aid U.S.
healthcare systems in preparing quickly for a surge in COVID-19 patients.
On March 30, ASPR awarded $42 million to the 62 Hospital Preparedness
Program cooperative agreement recipients and their 59 state or jurisdiction
special pathogen treatment centers. The funds may be used for planning,
staffing, purchasing PPE, enhancing existing surveillance systems, training,
and enhancing hospital or health care capacity.
- Federated
States of Micronesiareceived $27,663
- Marshall
Islandsreceived $26,168
- Palaureceived $25,650
On March 24, HHS Health Resources and Services Administration
(HRSA) awarded $100 million to 1,381 health centers in the United
States and the Freely Associated States with funding provided by the CARES Act,
2020. On April 8, HRSA awarded more than $1.3 billion to 1,387 health
center grantees in all U.S. states, territories, and the FAS. HRSA-funded
health centers may use the awards to address screening and testing needs,
acquire medical supplies, and boost telehealth capacity in response to the
COVID-19 pandemic.
- Federated
States of Micronesiareceived $3,110,629 to support 5 health
center grantees in Chuuk (1), Kosrae (2), Pohnpei (1), and Yap (1).
- Marshall
Islandsreceived $926,857 to
support 1 health center grantee in Ebeye.
- Palau received $1,248,903to support 1 health
center grantee.
Compact
Funding: The Joint
Economic Management Committee, comprised of U.S. and Micronesian government
representatives, approved $1,650,000 for Yap and $1,403,800 for Chuuk in
prior-year unallocated Compact sector grant funding to be used for
health-related COVID-19 preparedness and planning. For Kosrae, $1,205,922
in Compact infrastructure sector grant assistance was approved for construction
of a 24-unit COVID quarantine facility. In addition, $416,918 in
prior-year Compact Infrastructure Maintenance Fund assistance has been provided
to Chuuk to assist with hospital infrastructure preparedness.
Personal
Protective Equipment (PPE): The HHS
Office of the Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response (ASPR) and
Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Federal Emergency Management Agency
provided allocations of PPE to the Freely Associated States on April 9.
Testing: The United States is supporting COVID-19 testing for the Freely
Associated States and U.S. territories. CDC Atlanta and the public health
labs of Hawaii and Guam have been serving the testing needs for the Freely
Associated States.
- The
Department of the Interior (DOI)provided a $858,924 Technical Assistance
Program grant to the Pacific Islands Health Officers’ Association (PIHOA)
to equip the U.S. territories and the Freely Associated States for
on-island COVID-19 testing. The grant will cover purchase of a GeneXpert
machine, over 4,600 sample test cartridges, and additional testing
supplies.
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