Gentlefolk,
This post describes our main activities during the month of May 2023.
The contents of this post are in the following sequence:
Photos of our activities during May 2023.
Covid 19 pandemic - good riddance!
Some news items which caught my eye in May 2023.
Winter arrived in mid-May. The first half of May was good: clear blue skies, temperatures between 2C and 18C, but little wind so pleasant. Then winter arrived: temperatures from minus 5C to 14C, often cloudy with a biting wind, so unpleasant. The Bureau of Meteorology said the mean temperature (average of max & min) for Canberra in May was 7.8C, the coldest in years.
Our highlight of the month was a visit to Sydney. The main purpose was to see our friend Angie Zhang who is undergoing chemo - she is bearing up well so far - we also saw Andrew & Caroline and the two grandkids.
Here are some puzzling questions to brighten your day:
Photos of our activities in May.
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| Vera with Ketut Nanik. Their mothers were sisters from Singaraja, Bali. Ketut and her husband Adrian Clynes moved to Canberra a few years ago. | 
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| President of ACT AIIA Heath McMichael with Ambassador Araya. | 
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| Betsy Phillips' birthday party (the number on the balloon was kind!). | 
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| Vera's cousin, Maggie and her husband Joop, visited from Sydney. | 
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| We went to a Shortis and Simpson concert at Smith's Alternative Cafe. | 
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| John Shortis and Moya Simpson in convert with Nigel and Beth who run Smith's. It was another wonderful night of entertainment. | 
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| Tony Maple led a guided tour of Queanbeyan for a group from the Australia China Friendship Society. | 
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| The group in Strawberry Lane, Queanbeyan. In the 18902 Bill Tankey managed The Queanbeyan Leader newspaper which had offices here. | 
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| A photo of the Volunteer Guides of the Museum of Australian Democracy at Old Parliament House. Difficult to see, but I am in the centre at the back. | 
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| My mother with her sister Magda, photo taken in 1950. We emigrated to Australia at the end of that year; brave new world! | 
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| Jen sent this framed family photo to Vera for Mother's Day. It was taken in Bali last month. | 
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| Andrew and I watched the South Sydney v Parramatta Rugby League game at the new Stadium in Sydney. Souths were the favourites, but Parra blitzed them. | 
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| We watched Jay (6) play soccer for Easts Football Club. James (holding the ball) scored a good goal. | 
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| The games are at Queens Park, just 10 mins walk from their home. | 
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| Here is Eddie's soccer team (also Easts) getting advice from their coach at half time. | 
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| Dinner with Sydney friends, from left: me, Vera, Howard, Angie, Nikki, and Charles. | 
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| Angie Zhang; she is undergoing chemo at present. Brave girl! | 
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| Andrew's team played students from the University of NSW - oldies v youngsters - but they acquitted themselves well, with a final score of 3-all. | 
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| We saw this play at the Belconnen Community Theatre. Good fun, entertaining. | 
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| After the play we met some of the actors. From left: Kim Wilson (lead actor in the play), Vera, Robin & Tieke Brown, and Noel Cock. | 
......
Covid 19
pandemic, January 2020 to May 2023.
Is it really over???
In May 2023 the WHO declared the Covid 19 pandemic was no
longer a global health emergency. It was still around, but the number of new cases and deaths had fallen sharply and were being managed effectively.
Could this cursed pandemic, which has dominated our lives for the last 3 years, really be over?
The following table shows the top ten countries by number of
cases, and deaths. The figures are taken from the Worldometers website, based on
statistics from individual country government sources. But The Economist thinks these official figures are "rubbery" and that the real figures could be two or even  three times more.
Covid 19 Pandemic, Top 10 countries (ranked by number of
cases). Figures have been rounded.
Source: www.worldometers.info accessed 26 May 2023
| 
   Country  | 
  
   Cases of Covid 19 Millions  | 
  
   Deaths attributed to Covid 19 Thousands  | 
 
| 
   | 
  
   | 
  
   | 
 
| 
   Global  | 
  
   689  | 
  
   6.9M  | 
 
| 
   USA  | 
  
   107  | 
  
   1.2M  | 
 
| 
   India  | 
  
   45  | 
  
   532  | 
 
| 
   France  | 
  
   40  | 
  
   167  | 
 
| 
   Germany  | 
  
   38  | 
  
   174  | 
 
| 
   Brazil  | 
  
   38  | 
  
   703  | 
 
| 
   Japan  | 
  
   34  | 
  
   75  | 
 
| 
   South Korea  | 
  
   32  | 
  
   35  | 
 
| 
   Italy  | 
  
   26  | 
  
   190  | 
 
| 
   UK  | 
  
   25  | 
  
   225  | 
 
| 
   Russia  | 
  
   23  | 
  
   399  | 
 
| 
   | 
  
   | 
  
   | 
 
| 
   Australia  | 
  
   12  | 
  
   21  | 
 
| 
   China  | 
  
   0.5  | 
  
   5  | 
 
 
......
News items which caught my eye during May 2023.
| 
   Global 
  | 
  
   World Health Organization said
  that “Covid 19 is no longer a global heath emergency”; 765 million confirmed
  cases, 7+ million dead. Coronation of King Charles 3rd
  in London. Thousands attended including PM Albanese and GG Hurley. A grand spectacle, the British do it well. The Americans nominated Ajay Banga
  to be the next President of the World Bank. He is an Indian-American who was
  CEO of Mastercard.  Two mass shootings in Serbia; gun controls introduced.  Imran Khan was arrested on corruption charges; freed on
  bail. Big protests. Israel – Gaza heavy fighting.  The annual Eurovision song contest
  held in Liverpool was won by Loreen from Sweden. Womens soccer: Chelsea beat Man
  United to win the FA Cup for the 3rd time; Sam Kerr scored; record
  crowd 77,390. Turkiye: Recep Erdogan (52%) narrowly
  beat rival Kilicdaroglu to win a 3rd term of 5 years as President. Thailand: the Opposition ‘Move
  Forward’ Party defeated the Govt (will end 9 years of military rule). Cyclone Mocha devastated Myanmar
  and Bangladesh. Europe’s Champions League final
  next month will be between Inter Milan and Manchester City. Although Arsenal led most of the
  season, Man City won England’s Premier League (3rd successive
  win). Leicester City (The Foxes) relegated to second division (they won the
  Premier League in 2016). Luton promoted. Bayern Munich pipped Borussia
  Dortmund to win the German Bundesliga for the 11th time. In
  France, Paris St Germain won its 11th championship; Messi scored
  giving him a total of 496 goals, one more than Ronaldo. The G7 (USA, UK, Canada, France,
  Germany, Italy, and Japan) met in Hiroshima, Japan. President Biden cut short
  his overseas trip and returned to Washington to resolve the debt ceiling
  stand-off. Greek election won by Centre-right
  New Democracy Party  (new PM
  Mitsotakis). Syrian President Bashar al Assad
  attended the Arab League summit in Saudi, first time since 2011. To combat emissions, France banned
  domestic short-haul flights of less than 2.5 hours, where train options
  exist.  Brazil declared a 6 monthly animal
  health emergency to contain the spread of avian flu (H5N1). A Canadian report accused China of
  interfering in the last two federal elections (2019 and 2021). Denied by
  China. Netflix began stopping the free
  sharing of passwords / access outside the subscriber’s home.  Germany has experienced two
  quarters of negative growth (Q4 2022 -0.5%; Q1 2023 -0.3%) which is the
  technical definition of recession.  The EU Digital Services Act
  obliges companies to tackle false/illegal online content. 350 leading academics and technocrats signed an open letter warning Govts of the potential dangers of unregulated Artificial Intelligence (AI). 
  | 
 
| 
   Russian invasion of Ukraine  | 
  
   According to the BBC major
  military aid donors to Ukraine so far: USA $47B, UK $7B, Germany $4B, Poland
  $3B. President Zelensky visited several countries during May to shore up support: Vatican, Germany, UK, Arab League
  summit in Saudi, and the G7 meeting in Hiroshima. Russia extended the Ukrainian
  grain export agreement for 2 months. USA agreed to allow supply of F16
  jets to Ukraine. Two separate drone attacks on Moscow were blamed on Ukraine (denied). A Russian anti-Putin group attacked installations in Belograd. Russia fired missiles and drones at Kyiv for 3 consecutive nights; most were shot down, little damage. Everyone says the Ukrainian counter-offensive is imminent.  | 
 
| 
   USA 
  | 
  
   Talks to increase the “debt
  ceiling” (set to expire on 5 June) dominated the media during the second half
  of May. Some House Republicans wanted big spending cuts, but Biden disagreed.
  A provisional agreement was reached on 29 May which still needs to pass Congress. Wall Street was volatile but steadied.  A Manhattan jury found that former
  President Trump sexually abused (but did  not rape) E. Jean Carroll and awarded her
  $5M for battery and defamation. Trump will appeal. Florida Governor Ron DeSantis
  declared that he will contest the Republican nomination for the 2024
  Presidential election. Trump is way ahead as the preferred GOP candidate at
  present.  The Federal Reserve raised
  interest rates by 0.25% (to 5.25%); the 10th hike since March
  2022. US GDP increased 1.1% in Q1 2023;
  inflation rate was 4.9% in April, falling. The FIDC accepted a bid of $10.6B
  by JP Morgan to purchase First Republic Bank (14th largest lender
  in the USA) which became insolvent.  In Q1 2023 a record 32 million
  passengers passed through NY airports (Kennedy, Newark and La Guardia). Writers strike in Hollywood demanding
  better conditions. Tests on two new drugs by Eli
  Lilly, Lecanemab and Donanemab, appear to slow Alzheimer’s Disease. Richard Branson’s space coy Virgin
  Orbit filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. Goldman Sachs paid $215M to settle
  a sex discrimination case (offered female staff lower pay and conditions).  Elon Musk announced Linda Yaccarmo
  as the new CEO of Twitter. Warren  Buffett sold his stake in Taiwan’s TSMC. California, Arizona and Nevada
  agreed to reduce extraction of water from the Colorado River, in exchange for
  $1.2B in Fed Govt aid. Queen of Rock & Roll, Tina
  Turner, died in Switzerland aged 83. Florida passed a new law
  prohibiting citizens of certain countries from owning property within 10
  miles of critical infrastructure such as water plants and power stations:
  China, Russia, Iran, Cuba, Venezuela, and Syria. Texas may follow suit. South Carolina law banning
  abortion after 6 weeks. President Biden appointed Air
  Force General Charles Brown Jr as new Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
  He is the second Black American (after Colin Powell) to lead the military. 
  | 
 
| 
   Australia  | 
  
   The Reserve Bank raised interest
  rates by 0.25% (to 3.85%). Unemployment rate edged up, from 3.5% to 3.7% in
  April. Inflation rate also rose, to 6.8%. The CEO of Qantas for 15 years,
  Alan Joyce, announced that he will be replaced by Vanessa Hudson (current
  CFO). The Federal Govt said it would
  contribute $240M towards a new stadium in Hobart, which was a provision of
  the AFL to approve a Tasmanian team in the competition. The stadium has been
  controversial in Tassie. The Federal Govt banned
  recreational vaping; sales thru pharmacies allowed.  Rents in Australia increased by an average of 11.7%
  over the last 12 months. Westpac Bank announced half-year
  profit of A$4B (up 22% on year earlier). Australian Trade Minister Don
  Farrell visited Beijing for talks with counterpart Wang Wen Tao. NSW banned political donations
  from clubs with slot machines (similar bans on property developers, tobacco
  and liquor companies).  ASIC figures: there were 828 company
  insolvencies in March 2023, almost twice as many as in March 2022. The Govt offered the APS a 10% pay
  increase over 3 years. Erstwhile super star entertainer, then
  convicted child molester, Rolf Harris, died in England aged 93. The Victorian budget raised
  charges on large companies and rich individuals to raise funds to pay off the
  A$31B spent during the Covid pandemic. PwC investigated for misuse of
  confidential govt information. Premier of Western Australia, Mark
  McGowan (55), resigned from parliament citing exhaustion. He became Leader of
  the WA Labor Party in 2012, and Premier in 2017. Labor won the 2021 State
  election with a huge majority. 
  | 
 
| 
   China  | 
  
   About one-third of China’s 2M
  military personnel are conscripts serving for 2 years; their focus is on space and
  cyber-warfare. Chinese comedian fined $3M for
  joke about the military and Xi Jin Ping. Q1 2023 China (1.07M) passed Japan
  (1M) as world’s biggest motor vehicle exporter. China’s exports of MVs in
  2022 totaled 3.2M; big jump in exports of new energy vehicles. China banned the use of Micron computer
  chips from infrastructure projects, citing network security risks. First Chinese-built airliner, C919
  starts commercial flights; single aisle, twin engine, 164 seats, range
  5,500km. Orders for 1,035 aircraft received. 
  | 
 
......
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
My 30 year career as an Australian Trade Commissioner gave me an interest in matters related to international trade. I subscribe to Bloomberg's excellent daily newsletter "Supply Lines - tracking Covid-19's impact on trade" (former title 'Trade Matters').
......
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...
That's it for another month, folks.
Our best wishes, stay healthy and keep smiling.
Vera & Alex Olah
Canberra, Australia
Wednesday 31 May 2023.











































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