THE OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT The President of Malta visits the Caritas Tal-Ibwar Therapeutic Centre

President George Vella and Mrs Miriam Vella visited the Tal-Ibwar Therapeutic Centre for adolescents struggling with substance use (drugs or alcohol). There are currently 26 adolescents benefitting from the services offered at this centre run by Caritas Malta.

At the end of a private meeting with the five adolescents following the residential programme, President Vella reflected on the sense of love that these youths are receiving from the professionals following their progress. He stated that their caregivers are first and foremost respecting their dignity and making these youths realise that they should not be marginalised. “They still have many good qualities, and we must help them regain their self-respect. They can do so once they see the society respecting them”, said the President.

The youths, whose average age is sixteen and a half, explained to the President and Mrs Vella the programmes they are pursuing at the Tal-Ibwar Centre. They also talked about the help they receive from the workers to overcome the difficulties they face, often due to the substance use problem. The President acknowledged the fact that some of the youths, despite their relatively young age, felt the need to ask for help, which they are receiving, at this centre.

Dr Daniel Mercieca, programme coordinator at Tal-Ibwar, said that the residential programme was built on a plan called the “seven challenges” involving various therapeutic and educational interventions.

Since May last year, 44 cases have been referred to the Tal-Ibwar Centre, 25% of which were referred by the Agenzija Appogg. At this centre, Caritas Malta offers a holistic assistance through therapeutic, residential, and day services with the aim of helping youths reaching their full potential. This is done by collaborating with their families and those involved in the lives of these youths.

Source: Office of the Prime Minister

THE MINISTRY FOR PUBLIC WORKS AND PLANNING Art in Public Spaces programme launched

Minister for Public Works and Planning Stefan Zrinzo Azzopardi announced details on the programme ‘Art in Public Spaces’ with an investment of €180,000, which will be financed by the Department of Public Works within the Ministry of Public Works and Planning.

Minister Stefan Zrinzo Azzopardi said that, “Through the programme we are announcing today, we are continuing to provide our artists with more ways in which they can continue to express their talent.” Minister Zrinzo Azzopardi explained how, due to this programme, artistic projects by various artists will be installed in the local communities.

The Minister stated that as a result of this programme, six works of art will be selected and placed in six different localities. This will enhance open spaces within our localities for the enjoyment of residents and families, as part of the government’s effort to continue to improve the public’s quality of life.

“I encourage artists to apply for this ‘Art in Public Spaces’ programme, so that their works can be enjoyed by the public,” concluded Minister Zrinzo Azzopardi.

Chairman of the Selection Board Perit Ray Farrugia said that, “This programme is intended for collaboration between artists and local councils. In fact, in every project the artist is encouraged to involve as much as possible the local council and the community.”

From the applications submitted, a maximum of six projects by six different artists or groups of different artists will be selected. Each project is eligible for a maximum allocation of €30,000 inclusive of VAT, which will cover a variety of costs artists might face with regards to the project.

Those interested can attend an information session on Thursday, 12th May 2022 at 18:00 p.m., in Studio B at St James Cavalier, Castille Square, Valletta. The deadline for submissions is Friday 24th June 2022.

Source: Office of the Prime Minister

THE MINISTRY FOR THE NATIONAL HERITAGE, THE ARTS AND LOCAL GOVERNMENT: Restoration works completed on St Anne’s Chapel in Attard

The Restoration Directorate has completed restoration works on St Anne’s Chapel in Attard. The project is part of a series of restoration interventions carried out by the Restoration Directorate in various localities around Malta as part of the Local Council Restoration Scheme. The chapel, which was built in the 17th century, was donated to the male section of M.U.S.E.U.M back in 1968, for religious functions.

During an on-site visit, Minister for the National Heritage, the Arts and Local Government Owen Bonnici thanked the staff of the Restoration Directorate for their hard work towards our built heritage. “Such projects will demonstrate the government’s commitment towards cultural heritage in various localities. Restoring historic buildings is essential for our children and those who visit us to enjoy our ancestor’s legacy so that we can revitalize our historical heritage”, Dr Bonnici said.

Parliamentary Secretary Alison Zerafa Civelli said that now that the restoration works on the Attard chapel are ready, one must admire the dedication of the Directorate for Restoration for their cooperation to implement the Local Council Restoration Scheme. She mentioned that another fifteen local councils have submitted their proposals, which will be processed accordingly, to continue year after year on this ambitious restoration project.

Architect Audrey Anne Bonnici from the Restoration Directorate explained that the restoration works on the Chapel included a number of interventions. All three exposed façades and the roof were cleaned from biological growth, and the defective joints of the three facades were restored. The render of the main façade was removed, and a new, breathable render was applied, whilst existing, severely deteriorated stone blocks from the main façade were replaced. Repairs were carried out on the roof and structural consolidation works were carried out on the entrance of the central doorway.

Source: Office of the Prime Minister

Pfizer: COVID Treatment Paxlovid Fails to Prevent Infection of Household Members

Pfizer Inc. on Friday said a large trial found that its COVID-19 oral antiviral treatment Paxlovid was not effective at preventing coronavirus infection in people living with someone infected with the virus.

The trial enrolled 3,000 adults who were household contacts exposed to an individual who was experiencing symptoms and had recently tested positive for COVID-19. They were given either Paxlovid for five or 10 days or a placebo.

Those who took the five-day course were found to be 32% less likely to become infected than the placebo group. That rose to 37% with 10 days of Paxlovid. However, the results were not statistically significant and thus possibly due to chance.

Pfizer said safety data in the trial was consistent with that of previous studies, which had shown the pills to be nearly 90% effective at preventing hospitalization or death in COVID-19 patients at high risk of severe illness when taken for five days shortly after symptom onset.

“While we are disappointed in the outcome of this particular study, these results do not impact the strong efficacy and safety data we’ve observed in our earlier trial for the treatment of COVID-19 patients,” Pfizer Chief Executive Albert Bourla said in a statement.

Pfizer said Paxlovid, which consists of two different antiviral drugs, is currently approved or authorized for conditional or emergency use in more than 60 countries to treat high-risk COVID-19 patients.

Sales of Paxlovid, part of a class of drugs known as protease inhibitors, are projected to reach $24 billion this year, according to Wall Street forecasts compiled by Refinitiv.

Shares of Pfizer, which fell 3% in regular trading, were down another 1%, at $48.53, after hours.

Source: Voice of America

Foreign Businesses Consider Leaving China Amid Lockdowns

Chris Mei has been stuck in his Shanghai flat for a month save for PCR testing and occasional volunteer work delivering food to neighbors. That will change in a couple of days when he boards his flight for a long-scheduled trip home to Portland, Oregon.

He uses Zoom to do factory inspections for his 2-year-old import-export firm, Shanghai Fanyi Industry, but he can’t complete all the orders for clients overseas. He’s locked down like most of the 26 million people in the city, along with some of the factories where he normally sources goods, such as artificial plants and solar lights.

“In terms of how’s business, it’s definitely affected us,” Mei said. “Clients abroad always have deadlines, especially for some of our products.” He continued, “For example, for a shipment that recently went out, we had a portion of the order canceled due to the fact that the factory, they were on lockdown as well, so we basically could only produce what they could, and then the remaining part of the order basically passed the client’s deadline in South America.”

Leaving a city in lockdown has become an expensive, multistep process. Mei, a U.S. citizen, applied for permission to leave Shanghai by getting a pass from his neighborhood committee. He then found a driver with special permission to take him to the airport during lockdown – for about six times the usual price of that ride.

Shanghai’s residents have been ordered to stay home since early April in response to a spike in COVID-19 infections. Last week, authorities began easing restrictions in parts of the city to restore economic activity.

Mei’s case is typical, analysts who follow China say. Large numbers of foreign businesspeople in China are planning on leaving the country, for now or for good. The lockdowns have hammered an economy already hobbled by the 4-year-old Sino-U.S. trade dispute, capital outflows and last year’s crackdown on tech giants.

On March 18, That’s Shanghai, a local magazine, reported the results of an online survey saying 85% of foreigners in the city would “rethink their future in China” because of the lockdowns. The survey found that 48% of respondents plan to leave China over the next year and that 37% would wait in case anti-pandemic measures improve.

Risk seems to be increasing

Shipments through seaports in Shanghai and the Chinese tech hub Shenzhen, which locked down in March, have slowed because of a lack of workers and a shortage of truckers who are allowed to move imports and exports around the country.

Larger businesses can afford to wait in case lockdowns ease and China resumes its robust economic growth, said Doug Barry, communications vice president with the U.S.-China Business Council, a 265-member advocacy group in Washington.

Smaller companies are having more trouble because they depend on China’s advanced contract manufacturing ecosystem and cannot easily relocate, Barry said. He said some businesses have closed temporarily because so many workers can’t report to their jobs.

Others have spent money to help feed workers and even let them stay overnight at workplaces so they can report to their jobs the next day.

Overseas-based company leaders are staying away from their China projects because of quarantine rules, he said.

“Business in some cases has come to a complete stop,” Barry said. “The risk seems to be increasing, and the unknowns are also increasing and you’re looking at bottom lines and the future of things, and you’re wondering what to do.”

While foreign businesspeople are thinking of leaving, the significance of China to outside companies can be seen in the numbers. Foreign businesses invested $173.5 billion in China last year, up from $163 billion in 2020 and $140 billion a year earlier, according to the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development’s latest report.

Just more than 1 million foreign companies were registered in China at the end of 2020.

Companies normally relocate in China for contract manufacturing – which is seen as professional yet inexpensive – or to sell cars, coffee, phones and fashion apparel to the massive consumer market.

Incentives to stay

Mei will be back in Shanghai after a couple of months at home. By then, he expects there will be a “more solid” response to COVID-19 with clarity about people’s mobility.

Some people he knows have been called back to work in May, he said.

William Frazier, a 58-year-old U.S.-born owner of a business advisory firm in Shanghai, has lived in the city continuously since 2002. He has no plans to leave the city even though he’s been locked down since March 16. Frazier has a spacious flat in a high-end compound, making life tolerable as he works though emails, phone and video conferences. The economic chaos has caused more clients to call him for information.

“No real significant impact, I would say, not for me,” Frazier said. “I don’t see hiccups. I see opportunities.”

Local officials in China want foreign investors to stay in the country, the U.S.-China Business Council has found. They are willing to meet and hear out American businesspeople, Barry said, though no government body has offered them any economic stimulus.

Sticking around will keep companies competitive after China returns to normal, he said.

If lockdowns in Shanghai end in May, more businesspeople are likely to stay in the city, said Yan Liang, professor and chair of economics at Willamette University in Salem, Oregon. Local and central government policymakers have the economic aftershocks of COVID-19 “on their radar,” she said.

“It’s just so important to be able to have a foothold in a large market like this,” Liang said. “And I think some of the sentiments (are) also that even though there are some maybe temporary or maybe more permanent slowdowns, the Chinese economy is still a really bright spot when you compare with other countries in the world.”

That makes the lure of the largest market in the world worth waiting for, for businesses that can afford to hold out until cities open again.

Source: Voice of America

Delphix Accelerates Growth, Profitability for Second Consecutive Year at Scale

Data Security, Compliance Drive Urgent Adoption of Delphix DevOps Test Data Management Platform

REDWOOD CITY, Calif., April 28, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Delphix, the industry leader in DevOps test data management (TDM), today announced closing fiscal year 2022 with a second consecutive year of accelerated revenue growth and profitability at a scale well over $100M in annual recurring revenue (ARR).

With increasing activity from hostile nation states and ransomware gangs, companies around the world need a solution to automate and secure test data for enterprise applications. As a result, the company also reported 36% faster year-over-year growth of its large, enterprise customer base driven by increasing data risks.

Delphix’s growth comes as companies around the world continue to invest in innovative DevOps solutions to accelerate application delivery, modernize legacy infrastructure, and move applications across the multicloud. Delphix offers the only DevOps TDM platform that automates the delivery of secure, compliant data for test and development, enabling up to 10x faster innovation.

“Enterprise applications all need test data for fast, quality releases,” said Jedidiah Yueh, Delphix Founder and CEO. “But test data has traditionally been slow, complex, and filled with risk. Delphix helps companies like Banco Carrefour, The University of Manchester, and BNP Paribas release applications quickly while improving data security and compliance.”

Banco Carrefour in Brazil utilizes the Delphix DevOps Data Platform to accelerate application releases while ensuring data security and compliance with privacy regulations such as Brazil’s General Data Protection Law (LGPD). Delphix empowers development teams with 320x faster data availability for financial reporting and analytics, enables faster application releases, and helps save 70% on storage.

Delphix delivers an innovative API-first data platform that transforms application delivery with comprehensive data controls. By automating data delivery into test environments, Delphix helps software developers innovate faster while reducing compliance and security risk.

Delphix also helps companies recover faster from ransomware attacks by continuously protecting data and making historical data immutable.

“We selected Delphix, because we like the technology as a tool to move data efficiently from one place to another, to reconstruct, to travel to the past,” said Yves Caseau, Group Chief Digital & Information Officer at Michelin. “If we look at what we’ve done, we used Delphix to move data from our Exadata server legacy to community Linux servers to get more scalability and lower cost.”

“We are also using Delphix as a way to accelerate innovation and set up new test and development environments faster. We can get all the appropriate data very fast with a few pointers and a few clicks and have a virtual transfer of the data as opposed to a physical one,” Caseau added.

Test data management is a critical component of application development but is often slow and manual. The Delphix DevOps Data Platform enables teams to create, manage, and automate hybrid cloud-based data environments to support CI/CD pipelines and train AI/ML algorithms.

“Compliant test data is the lifeblood of DevOps and ensuring continuous access to it is key for enterprises to accelerate application delivery,” said Jim Mercer, Research Director of DevOps and DevSecOps at IDC. “With digital transformation becoming increasingly essential for enterprises to compete across today’s marketplaces, we continue to see the need for modern TDM solutions across multiple industries.”

Delphix Growth Highlights

Delphix also introduced multiple innovations across the company’s product offerings in last fiscal year, including:

About Delphix

Delphix is the industry leader for DevOps test data management.

Businesses need to transform application delivery but struggle to balance speed with data security and compliance. Our DevOps Data Platform automates data security, while rapidly deploying test data to accelerate application releases. With Delphix, customers modernize applications, adopt multi-cloud, achieve CI/CD, and recover from downtime events such as ransomware up to 2x faster.

Leading companies, including Choice Hotels, Banco Carrefour, and Fannie Mae, use Delphix to accelerate digital transformation and enable zero trust data management. Visit us at www.delphix.com. Follow us on LinkedIn, Twitter, and Facebook.


Josh Harbert     
Chief Marketing Officer   |   Delphix
913.972.6180