151 Malls, Supermarkets & More Labelled COVID-19 High-Risk Areas To Be Closed For Sanitation thesmartlocal.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from thesmartlocal.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
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The list serves as a guide to premise operators to take proactive measures to prevent and protect their outlets from becoming a virus hotbed.
SHOPPING malls and LRT stations are among more than a hundred Covid-19 hotspots identified under the Health Ministry’s new Hotspot Identification for Dynamic Engagement (HIDE) system which aims to prevent virus clusters from forming.
According to HIDE data dated May 8, the Bangsar Shopping Centre, Bangsar Village 2, Pavillion and MidValley in Kuala Lumpur were among the group of malls on the list.
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KUALA LUMPUR - Specific Malaysian malls, hypermarkets and grocery stores were identified as potential Covid-19 hot spots by the government on Saturday (May 8) in a list containing 150 locations which were pinpointed using a new big data analytics and artificial intelligence (AI) system.
These locations, which were monitored over a seven-day period, were identified by name in the maiden list, and 80 per cent of them are in densely populated Kuala Lumpur and Selangor state.
They include popular shopping locations such as Bangsar Shopping Centre, Suria KLCC, Mid Valley Megamall, the Sogo complex and Selayang Mall, Malay Mail online news reported.
Science, Technology and Innovation Minister Khairy Jamaluddin said the early warning system is aimed at helping members of the public to plan their movements, in order to prevent contracting the Covid-19 virus.
Birds Of Malaysia: An Artist’s Love features some 130 prints of Yeow Teck Chai’s artworks. It is intended to highlight the rich varieties of birds in Malaysia across diverse habitats such as highlands, lowlands, coasts and wetlands.
In his days as a happy-go-lucky youth, my friend Yeow Teck Chai was struck by the harmonious tweeting of birds emanating from the rainforests around Kuantan.
As his inquisitiveness intensified, he became so absorbed that he began to impersonate his feathered friends by answering them with different bird calls. His interest in birds kindled, he reared a few species, like the common myna, spotted doves and zebra doves, at his home.
THE Covid-19 pandemic has changed the way we live our lives, even how we eat and dine outside.
What people mostly remember as a bustling, chock-a-block food court in Kuala Lumpur’s Suria KLCC mall has been revamped, with a bigger, brighter and spacious ambience to suit the new normal of maintaining physical distancing.
The original Signatures Food Court on Level 2 at the mall dates back to 1998, when Suria KLCC opened for business.
Its latest renovation incorporates the space formerly occupied by Parkson department store and can accommodate over 1,500 seats, while giving customers room to adhere to standard operating procedures (SOP).