Author: Chris Kodo

  • Coronavirus: US to borrow record $3tn as spending soars

    The US has said it wants to borrow a record $3tn (£2.4tn) in the second quarter, as coronavirus-related rescue packages blow up the budget.

    The sum is more than five times the previous quarterly record, set at the height of the 2008 financial crisis.

    In all of 2019, the country borrowed $1.28tn. The US has approved about $3tn in virus-related relief, including health funding and direct payouts.

    Total US government debt is now near $25tn.

    The latest spending packages are estimated to be worth about 14% of the country’s economy. The government has also extended the annual 15 April deadline for tax payments, adding to the cash crunch.

    The new borrowing estimate is more than $3tn above the government’s previous estimate, a sign of the impact of the new programs.

    Discussions are under way over further assistance, though some Republicans have expressed concerns about the impact of more spending on the country’s skyrocketing national debt.

    The US borrows by selling government bonds. It has historically enjoyed relatively low interest rates since its debt is viewed as relatively low-risk by investors around the world.

    But even before the coronavirus, the country’s debt load had been climbing toward levels many economists consider risky for long-term growth, as the country spent more than it took in.

    The US Congressional Budget Office last month predicted the budget deficit would hit $3.7tn this year, while the national debt soared above 100% of GDP.

    Last week, the chair of America’s central bank, Jerome Powell, said he would have liked to see the US government’s books be in better shape before the pandemic.

    However, he said spending now was essential to cushion the economic blow, as orders to shut businesses to slow the spread of the virus cost at least 30 million people their jobs.

    “It may well be that the economy will need more help from all of us if the recovery is to be a robust one,” he said.

    As part of its own relief efforts, the Federal Reserve has bought more than $1tn in treasuries in recent weeks.

    Investors from foreign countries are also historically significant holders of US debt, with Japan, China and the UK at the top of the pack as of February.

    Increased tensions between the US and China in recent years have renewed scrutiny of America’s debt position. According to the Washington Post last week, Trump administration officials had discussed canceling debt obligations to China, but US President Donald Trump reportedly played down the idea, saying “you start playing those games and it’s tough”.

    For now, continued low rates suggest investor appetite for US debt remains, allowing for a borrowing increase, Alan Blinder, a professor of economics and public affairs at Princeton University, told the BBC last month.

    “So far, the answer has been everything is fine, as to how much borrowing the United States government can do before investors start to feel satiated with US debt,” he said. “But there is a legitimate question.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Ali Jarra football academy to give young footballers scholarship

    Ali Jaraa played in three juvenile FIFA World Cups, 1989, 1991, 1993 and one African Cup of Nations and won one juvenile World Cup in 1991, two silvers medals and one African cup of nations.

    He also played for Accra Hearts of Oak and won Ghana League Best Goalkeeper’s awards in the 1991/ 1992/1993 season.

    He won the Toyota Most Exciting Player award but mysteriously got paralyzed in 1993 which shocked the whole nation.

    He was taken abroad for medical treatment, and he returned home alive, but could not play his most loved game again, and his dreams of playing professional football in Europe was dashed.

    The Ghana National Fire Service (GNFS) officer decided to impart his knowledge and opened the Ali Jarra Soccer Academy at the Mamprobi Indafa Park and produced both male and female goalkeepers.

    Ghana has appointed him as coach of the national amputee team, who have been performing well as some players are now playing in Europe.

    Last year, he was honoured by the UN with the Kofi Annan Gold Star Award for his contribution to sports development and promotion.

    Arguably he is one of Ghana’s finest Juvenile Goalkeepers ever and wishes to leave a legacy.

    The Ali Jarra Football Academy is different from other academies because their focus is on education and want all players to be educated to the highest level they can go.

    Located at Dansoman in Accra, they have a hostel to lodge the players and have come into agreement with some of the popular schools in the community.

    He said footballers must be educated so that they can have other careers and developed skills after their playing days, in order to contribute to the economy of Ghana.

    He started coaching only goalkeepers, then moved on to add outfield players, because he wanted to expand and do total football and support footballers.

    According to the manager of the Academy, Jason Jarra who happens to be his son, they were supposed to organize a justification exercise at the Ajax Park at Legon and the Indafa Park at Mamprobi but was postponed due to the Coronavirus pandemic.

    Source: footballghana.com

  • Thomas Partey keen on Arsenal move

    Atletico Madrid midfielder Thomas Partey wants a move to Arsenal and is hopeful that an agreement will be reached with his club, footballghana.com can exclusively report.

    The 26 year old has told his friends that he believes he is ready to prove himself in the Premier League and Arsenal is the right club for him.

    Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta identified the Black Stars man as the key to improving his midfield ahead of next season and is desperate to sign him.

    Footballghana.com understands that Arsenal are willing to part ways with Alexandre Lacazette in order to land the former Mallorca loanee. They want to do a swap deal and Atletico Madrid like the idea due to the outbreak of the coronavirus.

    The La Liga club are also admirers of Lacazette and that could make a potential deal easy.

    Partey has been key for Diego Simeone this season, playing 38 matches in all competitions.

    Source: footballghana.com

  • Alhassan Wakaso trains with Vitoria Guimaraes teammates after coronavirus

    Ghanaian international Alhassan Wakaso has returned to training this week with his Vitoria Guimaraes teammates following moths of being on the sidelines.

    The Portugal-based player suffered an injury setback in 2019 and could not enjoy the playing time he wanted after he was forced to spend a lengthy spell to nurse the injury.

    After significantly regaining fitness from the nasty knee injury, Alhassan Wakaso took advantage of the suspension of the top-flight league in Portugal to continue his rehabilitation.

    Following the lowering of restrictions in the European country in the midst of the Coronavirus (Covid-19) crisis, football is expected to gradually make a return in Portugal.

    As teams return to training this week, midfielder Alhassan Wakaso has joined his Vitoria Guimaraes teammates to have light training today.

    The exercise will continue throughout the week as football authorities draw up a plan in hopes of seeing to a conclusion the 2019/2020 football season in Portugal.

    Wakaso is confident of regaining his full fitness to ensure he gets to enjoy some minutes when the Portuguese government and health experts give the clear for the season to continue.

    Source: footballghana.com

  • Diamond diggers trapped after Liberia mine collapse

    At least 25 people in western Liberia who were searching for diamonds have been trapped and are feared dead after a hole that they had dug collapsed, official sources in the area have said.

    The incident took place in the town of Masakpa, near the border with Sierra Leone.

    Aaron Vincent, superintendent of Grand Cape Mount county, told the BBC he was rushing to the scene to see for himself.

    “It is a serious matter but I have to get there first to know what the actual situation is,“ he said on phone almost going out of breath.

    There have been conflicting reports of the number of people involved, with some putting the figure at 50.

    A relief worker speaking to OK FM, a radio station in the capital, Monrovia, said about 25 people were trapped and about three bodies had been recovered. A search operation was on going, the interviewee added.

    Police spokesman Moses Carter told the BBC that he authorities had instructed the regional police to move in and restore order as the search continued.

    Grand Cape Mount County is rich in minerals including iron ore, diamonds and gold, but the region is among the most economically inactive and underdeveloped in Liberia.

    In 1982, a landslide in an old iron ore mining town, No-Way Camp, killed hundreds of people.

     

    Source: BBC 

  • Pretty in Pink, Princess Shyngle smiles for the first following her boyfriend’s arrest – Photo

    The not so often loved Gambian Doll Princess Shyngle is looking beautiful in these new pictures.

    The hips are back, tiny waist intact, flat tummy standing in ovation and the gracious behind in its fullness.

    The Truth be told, it is hard not to like this picture.
    The actress a few weeks ago revealed the hell she has been through.

    From what she said on her YouTube page, she has been battling with loneliness and struggling with bills all because the love of her life, Frederic Badji has been in prison for months now.

    Although she claimed none of them was for clout chasing, it is not something we would move past her.

    All the same, we are glad to see her smile through this tumultuous phase she is in now.

    Source: GhanaCelebrities.Com

  • Rapid Diagnostic Test (ROT) kits not registered for diagnosing COVID-19 – FDA

    The Food and Drugs Authority (FDA) says it has not registered any Rapid Diagnostic Test (ROT) kits for screening and diagnosing COVID-19 in Ghana.

    A statement issued by the FDA on  May 4, 2020, said there are serology tests marketed globally that require a validation process due to the inaccurate results it may provide.

    “There are dozens of serology tests being marketed globally that are not providing accurate information and that are not comparable to each other. Ensuring that tests are comparable and accurate requires a validation process overseen by the Food and Drug Authority (FDA).”

    The statement added that “the use of such unregistered Rapid Diagnostic Test (RDT) Kits could lead to inaccurate results which may have adverse health repercussions; false positive or negative results can have devastating impacts on the current efforts to contain the COVID-19 outbreak and spread.”

    The statement said information will be announced when evaluation on these kits are ready for the hospital laboratory and not home use.

    The FDA urged the public to adhere to the recommended COVID-19 preventive measures announced by the Ministry of Health to help fight the coronavirus pandemic.

    These include;

    • Frequent washing of hands with soap under running water
    • The use of alcohol-based hand sanitizers
    • Wear face/nose masks at all public places
    • Maintaining social distancing
    • Avoid touching eyes, nose and mouth, and
    • Stay home and only go out if necessary.

    Source: Graphic.com.gh 

  • Stolen millions are returned to Nigeria

    Nigeria has received more than $300m (£241m) that were stolen by the former military ruler, Sani Abacha.

    The money was returned from the US and the British dependency of Jersey.

    Under a repatriation agreement it is to be spent on infrastructure projects.

    Gen Abacha ruled Nigeria from 1993 until his death in 1998.

    The anti-corruption agency Transparency International estimates he stole as much as $5bn during his time in office.

    Switzerland is believed to have returned around $1bn over the last decade

    Source: bbc.com

  • 4 reasons why Sarkodie deserves to win 2020 VGMA Artiste Of The Year

    The best thing to happen to Ghana music in recent times is the name Sarkodie.

    The Tema based musician has been tagged as Africa’s most decorated rapper with over 80 awards to his credit.

    Sarkodie is still relevant in the music game since he released his debut album, ‘Makye’ in 2009. The former Samsung ambassador is regarded by many as Ghana’s most influential music export for the many international awards and performances he has been associated with.

    Sarkodie till date is the only solo artiste to have won Ghana Music Awards – Artiste of the Year twice, in 2010 and 2012. Fans of Sarkodie are hoping their artiste makes history at this year’s Vodafone Ghana Music Awards (VGMA) after Charter House, the organisers, announced in February that he has been nominated alongside Kuami Eugene, Medikal, Kofi Kinaata and Diana Hamilton.

    With 10 nominations at this year’s event, Sarkodie will rewrite history as the best Ghanaian rapper ever if he is crowned with the ultimate award for the 3rd time.

    Charter House has clearly defined the Artiste of the Year category as the artiste adjudged by the Academy, Board and the General Public as the artiste with the highest Audience Appeal and Popularity, and must have released a hit Single/Album during the year under review.

    By breaking the category definition down, here are my 4 simple simple reasons why Sarkodie should be honored with the grand award.

    1. Highest Audience Appeal

    Currently Sarkodie is rated as one of the best stage performers in Ghana. Even though he raps, Sarkodie’s live performances over the years has attracted a lot of music fans, young and old, here in Ghana and abroad. King Sark on August 2015 had a historic sold out concert at the Apollo Theater in New York. Again, in 2016 Sarkodie successfully headlined his first ever UK concert at Indigo at the 02.

    In 2019 alone, which is the year under review, Sarkodie had amazing performances at many high budget shows including Afrochella 2019, MMCLIVE 2019, 2019 VGMAs, 2019 TINA Festival and his own star studded show Rapperholic 2019.

    2. Popularity

    Sarkodie is still rated among the 3 top artistes currently in Ghana alongside Shatta Wale and Stonebwoy. Sarkodie’s popularity in 2019 increased when he was awarded the Best International Flow at the BET Hip Hop Awards in October. He climaxed his legendary status in 2019 when BET released visuals of his incredibly amazing vintage flow on BET Cypher with French rapper Kalash to the delight of many hip hop fans around the world.

    3. Hit Single

    2019 will be seen as one of the best years in Ghana music and for Sarkodie in particular. This is because the 2014 MTV MAMAs winner released one of the biggest songs in the year titled, Oofeetso.

    4. Hit Album

    The ‘Black Love’ album, which has been reviewed by many music critics as one of the best studio albums by Sarkodie so far was released in 2019.The album after its release peaked at No. 1 on Top Albums iTunes – Ghana and No. 16 on Top Rap/Hip Hop Albums on iTunes – Worldwide.

    Disclaimer : “Opinions expressed in this article are the sole responsibility of the author(s) and do not in any way reflect those of backend.theindependentghana.com. Our outfit will hereby not be liable for any inaccuracies contained in this article.”

    Source: Eben Owurachy, contributor

  • Buy masks for your neighbours – Health Minister appeals to Ghanaians

    The Minister of Health, Mr Kwaku Agyemang Manu has appealed to all those who have the means to help buy masks for their neighbours who could not afford one.

    That, he believes, would help the national efforts in the fight against the coronavirus pandemic in the country by ensuring that everyone wears a mask.

    He noted that although mask wearing could help stop the spread of the disease, many people are not wearing it because they cannot afford them.

    Mr Manu made the appeal at the Ministers’ Weekly Briefing on COVID-19 in Accra Tuesday, May 5, 2020.

    He said the country could win the coronavirus fight if everyone gets involved in the fight, adding that getting everyone masked was one of the collective ways by which we can fight the virus together.

    According to him, helping one another has been the way of life of Ghanaians and that this is the time such virtues are most needed.

    Mr Manu noted that although masks are now available on the streets at affordable prices, not everyone will have the means to buy one, hence thwarting the national efforts of getting everyone masked at risk.

    “I know if it (mask) is GHC1, some of us may not get the money to buy”, he said.

    He has, therefore, called on churches, companies and other benevolent organisations and individuals to help procure masks for those who could not afford one.

    Mr Agyeman Manu also encouraged everyone to wear masks, saying “when you are having your devotion, wear mask because wherever two or three people meet, there should be a mask.”

     

    Source: Grapric.com.gh 

  • McBrown’s daughter rides in her Ferrari after as she gets signed as a brand ambassador (video)

    Nana Ama McBrown’s daughter, Maxin Mawushie Mensah, popularly known as Baby Maxin, has been signed as a brand ambassador.

    The one-year-old got signed by Amalena Children Haven, a shop in Accra which wholesales and retails baby products.

    Baby Maxin’s new deal with Amalena was announced on the little girl’s official Instagram page on Monday, May 4, 2020.

    The announcement was made with a video of Baby Maxin riding around a room in her toy Ferrari car.

    McBrown could be heard in the background playing with Baby Maxin as she went on the ride.

    It was while sharing the video that it was indicated Maxin had been signed as a brand ambassador.

    “Good morning from OhemaaBa. The New Brand Ambassador for Amalena Children Haven #GodisGood #BabyMaxin ❤️ #Brimm,” the caption to the video read.

    The announcement got many of Baby Maxin’s followers to congratulate and encourage her.

    @juliet_atrikesale_122 urged Maxin to keep going on: “Good morning princess keep doing your things .”

    @sammy_highcourt sent big congrats: “Yaasssss❤️❤️ congrats to ma baaaaaby❤️.”

    @iam_babymaxin_fanpage expressed love for Maxin: “Eiiiiiiii swagger baby, Angel will k*ll us oooo. You looking outstanding darling, we love you so much❤️ #brimm.”

    @nanaadjoa13 prayed for more wins: “Yeaaaaaa ambassador Maxin more wins.”

    @charismasandra_molloy was looking for a lift from Maxin: “Can I get a lift please?❤️God bless you beautiful .”

    The announcement comes after McBrown’s daughter recently melted hearts on social media with a new photo in which she dressed in kaba and headgear.

    Looking like an adult, many of Baby Maxin’s followers hailed the little girl’s cuteness in the photo.

    Earlier, she dazzled in a new photo which had her looking gorgeous as she stepped out in style.

    In the photo sighted by YEN.com.gh, Baby Maxin could be seen dressed in a black mini dress over a black and white pair of leggings.

    Completing Baby Maxin’s look was a cute pair of black and white shoes which looked so fine on her feet.

    With these kinds of swag and fashion styles, it is no wonder that she has been signed as an ambassador for a clothing company.

    source: yen.com.gh

  • Popular actor recounts near-death experience a year after accident

    Nollywood Actor, Yul Edochie, has expressed his heartfelt gratitude to God for a second chance to life after a gory accident a year ago.

    The movie star has taken to instagram to share a photo from the accident scene as he narrated how it all happened on that fateful day.

    He recounted how his life flashed before his very eyes only to be saved by the Grace of God.

    Read the post below:

    Source: Adomonline.com

  • Thousands evicted in Kenya slum demolitions

    Thousands of people have been made homeless in Kenya’s capital, Nairobi, after a government excavator flattened their tin-sheet houses in the Kariobangi area.

    The demolition was supervised by armed police officers from Monday dawn.

    Residents told journalists that they had not been notified to leave.

    The Daily Nation newspaper has shared a video on Twitter of the demolitions:

    The newspaper reports that there had been a court order to stop the demolition yet it went ahead.

    The government has been urging people to stay at home during the coronavirus pandemic. The country has so far confirmed 490 cases and 24 deaths.

     

  • Joey B cant have enough of Efia Odos sexy photo

    Controversial media personality and actress, Andrea Owusu, popularly known as Efia Odo, has once again set the internet on fire with a hot photo of herself.

    In a photo posted on her Twitter page, the actress could be seen seated in a black stretch and a tiger-like brown top rocking her designer face mask.

    Her fans have since been reacting to the photo but one person who cannot have enough of the it was Daryl Paa Kwesi Bannerman, known by his stage name, Joey B.

    As soon as Efia Odo posted the photo with the caption, Stay protected, Joey B reacted, saying “herh” with eyes emoji.

    Check out his post:

    Source: Adomonline.com

  • UK car sales plunge to lowest level since 1946

    New car registrations almost ground to a halt in April after coronavirus lockdown measures were introduced, the motor industry has said.

    Figures from industry body the SMMT show only 4,321 cars were registered, the lowest monthly level since 1946.

    April’s figure marked a 97% plunge in sales from the same month last year.

    The closure of car dealerships as part of measures to try to combat the disease has hit consumer registrations.

    The Society for Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT) said that of the registrations made last month, 70% were by companies buying for their fleets. The cars would most likely have been on order before the lockdown, said Mike Hawes, SMMT chief executive.

    “If you are told to close all your car showrooms for the entirety of April it’s no surprise sales are almost non-existent,” he told the BBC.

    Many of the 4,000 cars sold last month were needed to support key workers and for those who had a pressing need for them, an SMMT spokesman said.

    Those cars would not have been bought from dealerships, but instead, for example, from wholesalers, or directly from manufacturers.

    The 4,000 figure for April compares to 161,064 new cars that were registered in same month last year.

    The industry body said it now expects 1.68 million new car registrations in 2020 compared with 2.3 million in 2019.

    Staff at some UK car manufacturers began returning to work this week, although the start of full production is a long way off, Mr Hawes said. The supply chain is also starting to re-open.

    “Manufacturers are trying to figure out how to start operations in a safe environment,” he said. “But it will be slow and production will be ramped up very slowly.”

    The coronavirus crisis has come at what was already a difficult time for the motor industry, which had been struggling with falling sales and a collapse in demand for diesel vehicles, while struggling to meet tough new emissions targets.

    The figures are certainly dramatic, expected to be the lowest sales since February 1946.

    But since virtually the entire motor industry ground to a halt when the lockdown was introduced, they are not entirely unexpected.

    What matters now is what happens when the restrictions are eased and customers are allowed back into the showrooms.

    You would expect there to be some pent-up demand – after all, dealerships began to close in mid-March, traditionally one of the strongest months of the year for new car sales.

    However, since then harsh economic realities have come into play. Huge swathes of the workforce have been furloughed, and the signs are the country is heading into a deep recession.

    Under those circumstances, with so much uncertainty and so many jobs at risk, how many people will really be willing to buy a new car?

    We can expect a wave of incentive programmes – and quite possibly a wave of new scrappage schemes – as car companies start fighting tooth and nail for every single sale.

    The coronavirus outbreak also halted car production.

    All of the UK’s major car factories suspended work in March, and it is not yet clear when they will reopen.

    Ian Plummer, commercial director at online marketplace Auto Trader, said: “With retailers forced to close the doors to their physical forecourts, it’ll come as no surprise to anyone to see just how dramatic an impact it’s had on the new car market.

    “Some brands have been able to sell remotely, but uncertainty in the government’s guidelines or a lack of the required infrastructure to operate home delivery in a safe way, has limited it to all but a handful of retailers.”

    However, he said Auto Trader data indicated that the market had been paused, rather than stopped.

    He added that there would be a chance “for the industry to accelerate the adoption of low emission vehicles” when restrictions lift.

    “However, it’ll be essential for manufacturers to push more electric vehicles into their UK networks along with greater financial incentives,” such as scrappage schemes, he said.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Ghana at the peak of coronavirus crisis- Ghana Health Service

    Ghana is at the peak of its coronavirus crisis.

    This is according to the Director of Public Health at the Ghana Health Service (GHS), Dr Badu Sarkodie.

    At a press briefing at the Ministry of Information in Accra today [Tuesday, May 5, 2020], Mr Sarkodie in answering a question as to where Ghana is on the bell curve, he said, “So to answer directly to the question, we are at the peak of the curve.”

    More to follow….

    Source: Graphic.com.gh 

  • Coronavirus: Key workers to trial NHS tracing app

    An NHS app that aims to track the spread of coronavirus is being rolled out for the first time, as part of a trial on the Isle of Wight.

    Council and healthcare workers will be the first to try the contact-tracing app, with the rest of the island able to download it from Thursday.

    If the trial is successful, it could be available nationwide within weeks.

    Concerns have been raised over privacy, though ministers say the app has been designed with this “front of mind”.

    The app aims to quickly trace recent contacts of anyone who tests positive for the virus.

    It is part of the government’s strategy for coming out of lockdown, which aims to have widespread testing and contact tracing in place to monitor and reduce any future outbreaks.

    If the trial is successful, the app will be rolled out nationwide by the middle of May, Health Secretary Matt Hancock said.

    Meanwhile, Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer has called for a “national consensus” on tackling the virus when the UK begins to move out of lockdown.

    It comes as the the number of coronavirus-related deaths in the UK reached 28,734, an increase of 288.

    The daily increase in deaths is lower than at any point since the end of March, but the figures reported at the weekend tend to be lower and are expected to rise, Mr Hancock said.

    How does the app work?

    The new app – published on Apple and Google’s app stores – works by using a Bluetooth connection.

    It records when two people who have the app are within a certain distance of each other for longer than a specified amount of time.

    If one of those people later reports having symptoms, all the other app users they came into significant contact with over recent days will be alerted and, if judged necessary, told to self-isolate.

    “The exact advice on what you should do will depend on the evolving context and approach,” the NHS has said.

    Mr Hancock urged everyone on the Isle of Wight to download the app when it was available to them. Social distancing rules would still be in place during the trial, he said.

    “By downloading the app, you are protecting your own health, you are protecting the health of your loved ones and the health of your community,” he said.

    “Where the Isle of Wight goes, Britain follows.”

    The island was chosen for the trial because it has a lower number of new infections, is covered by a single NHS trust and because travel to and from the island is quite restricted.

    Mr Hancock told BBC Breakfast the app would be an “incredibly important part” of the fight against the virus and the more people who downloaded it, the more lockdown restrictions could be eased.

    Source: bbc.com

  • WHO warns against untested COVID-19 cures

    The World Health Organization (WHO) has urged people not to put their faith in local untested remedies for coronavirus.

    The advice comes at a time when at least three African heads of state have said they are importing large quantities of a herbal tonic which the president of Madagascar claims can cure the virus.

    But its efficacy has not been proven by scientific peer reviews, and even Madagascar’s own national medical academy has cast doubt on it.

    In a statement, the WHO says it welcomes the use of traditional medicines in the search for potential treatments but it warns that they must first be robustly tested.

    Madagascar’s President Andry Rajoelina launched a product based on the artemisia plant last month when it had been tested on fewer than 20 people.

    He says clinical trials will start next week.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Stop gagging GRIDCo employees Minority demands

    The Minority in Parliament has condemned an alleged decision by the Ghana Grid Company (GRIDCo) to get its employees to sign an oath of secrecy which will bar them from speaking on issues affecting the company.

    Ranking Member on the Mines and Energy Committee of Parliament, Adam Mutawakilu in a statement accused the New Patriotic Party (NPP) government of orchestrating the move to prevent employees from expressing their views on issues affecting the operations of GRIDCO.

    The Damango legislator believes the move is “inimical to the growth of the company and an affront to the Right to Information Act.”

    He further pointed out that the oath of secrecy is “alien to the conditions of service and the conventions as practised in the company over the years.”

    Mr. Mutawakilu thus demanded that the Minority halts the oath of secrecy since it breaches freedom of speech.

    The full statement from the Minority

     

    Source: citinewsroom 

  • Coronavirus: Chinese state media take aim at US ‘lab theory’

    Chinese state media has accused US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo of lying, after he said there was “enormous evidence” the coronavirus emanated from a laboratory in Wuhan.

    Mr Pompeo made the claim on Sunday, without going into specifics.

    In an editorial on Tuesday, the hawkish Global Times newspaper said Mr Pompeo was “degenerate”.

    The World Health Organization says the US claims are “speculative”, and that it has seen no “specific evidence”.

    What did Chinese media say?

    Editorials in Chinese state media often given an insight into the direction of government thinking, but there has been no official response to Mr Pompeo’s comments as yet.

    On Monday, the Global Times accused Mr Pompeo of “absurd theories and twisted facts”, and on Tuesday the attack continued.

    “Pompeo aims to kill two birds with one stone by spewing falsehoods,” it said.

    “First, he hopes to help Trump win re-election this November…second, Pompeo hates socialist China and, in particular, cannot accept China’s rise.”

    The editorial admitted there were “initial problems” in China’s response to the outbreak, but claimed “the overall performance is bright enough to outweigh the flaws”.

    It also said it was “conceivable that the virus first contacted humans in other places [than Wuhan]”.

    The Global Times is not the only Chinese outlet to take aim at Mr Pompeo and the US.

    The People’s Daily said Mr Pompeo had “no evidence”, while a piece on the CCTV site accused US politicians of “nefarious plotting”.

    What did Mike Pompeo say?

    In an interview with ABC on Sunday, Mr Pompeo said there was “enormous evidence” that the virus had emerged from the Wuhan Institute of Virology.

    “Remember, China has a history of infecting the world, and they have a history of running sub-standard laboratories,” he said.

    Mr Pompeo – a former director of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) – said he did not think the virus was man-made or genetically modified.

    The Wuhan laboratory is known to study coronaviruses in bats. In April, President Trump was asked whether “lax safety protocols” allowed such a virus to escape via an intern and her boyfriend.

    Mr Trump did not confirm the theory, but said: “More and more we’re hearing the story.”

    Last week, he was asked if he had seen evidence that gave him a “high degree of confidence” that the virus emerged in the Wuhan laboratory.

    “Yes I have,” he replied – but said he could not go into specifics.

    Last month, the Washington Post reported that US officials visited the laboratory in January 2018, and reported back their safety concerns.

    What do the experts say?

    On Monday, World Health Organization emergencies director Michael Ryan said it had received “no data or specific evidence” from the US about the virus origins.

    “So from our perspective, this remains speculative,” he said.

    Last week, the US intelligence community said it “concurred” that the virus “was not man-made or genetically modified”.

    But it said it would “continue to examine” whether the outbreak began via “contract with infected animals, or if it was the result of an an accident at a laboratory in Wuhan”.

    Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison said on Tuesday that the most likely source of the virus was a wildlife market. However he said he would not rule out the theory that it originated in a lab.

    “What’s really important is that we have a proper review, an independent review which looks into the sources of these things in a transparent way so we can learn the lessons,” he told reporters.

    Meanwhile, Western “intelligence sources” have told several news outlets there is “no evidence” to suggest the virus leaked from a laboratory.

    Source: bbc.com

  • You will die early if you marry an ugly woman Counselor Lutterodt (+Video)

    Controversial self-acclaimed marriage and relationship expert, Counselor George Lutterodt has dropped another bombshell about about the type of women men should marry.

    According to Counselor Lutterodt in a video sighted by GhBase.com, if a man marries an ugly woman, he is likely to die prematurely.

    Explaining his point, Counselor Lutterodt bemoaned that men who marry beautiful women love showing them off to their friends, and loved ones.

    Watch video below for more;

    Source: ghbase.com
  • Check out the cute name Mercy Johnson and husband gave to their new born baby – Photos

    Mercy Johnson successfully gave birth to her fourth a child with hubby Prince Okojie which was officially announced on Instagram by the husband.

    The couple named their beautiful angel, Divine-Mercy Ehinomen Okojie.

    An excited Prince shared photos of his wife and the baby along with this caption: “Every Good and Perfect gift is from God. The wait is finally Over, Please share in Our Joy as we announce the arrival of Our Daughter. Divine-Mercy Ehinomen Okojie.” 

    Source: ghbase.com

  • Coronavirus: France’s first known case ‘was in December’

    A patient diagnosed with pneumonia near Paris on 27 December actually had the coronavirus, his doctor has said.

    This means the virus may have arrived in Europe almost a month earlier than previously thought.

    Dr. Yves Cohen said a swab taken at the time was recently tested and came back positive for Covid-19.

    The patient, who has since fully recovered, said he had no idea where he caught the virus as he had not been to any infected areas.

    Knowing who was the first case is key to understanding how the virus spread.

    What do we know about the new case? Dr Cohen, head of emergency medicine at Avicenne and Jean-Verdier hospitals near Paris, said the patient was a 43-year-old man from Bobigny, north-east of Paris.

    He told the BBC’s Newsday program that the patient must have been infected between 14 and 22 December, as coronavirus symptoms take between five and 14 days to appear.

    He was admitted to hospital on 27 December exhibiting what later became to be known as the main coronavirus symptoms, including a dry cough, a fever and trouble breathing.

    This was four days before the World Health Organization’s China country office was informed of cases of pneumonia of unknown cause being detected in the Chinese city of Wuhan.

    The patient, Amirouche Hammar,told French broadcaster BFMTV that he had not travelled before falling sick.

    Dr Cohen said two of the patient’s children had also fallen ill but that his wife had not shown any symptoms. But Dr Cohen pointed out that the patient’s wife worked at a supermarket near Charles de Gaulle airport and could have come into contact with people who had recently arrived from China.

    The patient’s wife said that “often customers would come directly from the airport, still carrying their suitcases”.

    “We’re wondering whether she was asymptomatic,” Dr Cohen said. He called for the potential link to be investigated further.

    What does it tell us?

    Could coronavirus have been circulating in Europe in late 2019, many weeks before it was officially recognised and declared a threat there? That is the suggestion being made after a French doctor has revealed that he treated a patient in Paris with all of the symptoms of coronavirus just after Christmas.

    How does this change what we know about the pandemic? It might be that the test result is an error and so does not change a thing.

    But it if is correct, it could mean spread of the disease was going unchecked in Europe while all eyes were on the East in Wuhan.

    Certainly, any laboratories in Europe with samples from patients sick with similar symptoms around that time might want to run a test for coronavirus to see what it reveals so that we can learn more about this new disease.

    Why does it matter?

    Until now, what were thought to have been the country’s first three cases of coronavirus were confirmed on 24 January.

    Of those, two had been to Wuhan – where the outbreak was first detected – and the third was a close family member.

    This positive test result suggests the virus was present in France much earlier and will change the understanding of how it spread.

    “This case will allow us to better understand the evolution of the virus on French soil,” Dr Cohen told the BBC.

    Rowland Kao, a professor of veterinary epidemiology and data science at the University of Edinburgh, said that if confirmed, this case highlighted the speed at which an infection starting in a seemingly remote part of the world could quickly seed infections elsewhere.

    “It means that the lead time we have for assessment and decision-making can be very short, emphasising the need for preparedness, planning and rapid global communication of disease threats,” Prof Kao said.

    Jonathan Ball, professor of molecular virology at the University of Nottingham, urged further research: “Sequencing any virus in the sample might give you insight into whether or not the virus truly was an early isolate or likely contamination.”

    Prof Ball said that sequencing the virus could be prove difficult, however, as it looked from the data that the amount of virus in the sample was low.

    The first human-to-human transmission within Europe had until now thought to have been a German man who was infected by a Chinese colleague who visited Germany between 19 and 22 January.

    The United States also recently had to revise its coronavirus timeline. A post-mortem examination carried out in California revealed that the first coronavirus-related death in the country was almost a month earlier than previously thought.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Kwame Owusu Ansah and Bishop Bernard Nyarko died on the same day

    On May 2, 2008, 12 years ago, Ghana lost a great actor, the late Kwame Owusu Ansah. Exactly twelve years from then and on the same day, (May 2, 2020) the Ghanaian movie industry has again lost one of its finest actors, Bishop Benard Nyarko.

    What sets the two instances slightly apart is the fact that Kwame Owusu Ansah died from a car accident on the Accra-Tema Motorway.

    But these two actors possessed two similar qualities, that is, they were both good at their jobs and were loved by many.

    Another similarity was that they both died at the peak of their career.

    Meanwhile, news of the sudden demise of the actor and man of God, Bishop Bernard Nyarko has highly affected a lot of Ghanaian movie lovers and his colleagues in the showbiz industry.

    The whole country, especially his fans have since been thrown into a state of mourning. The cause of his death is yet to be known.

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • New Zealand PM: No open borders for ‘a long time’

    New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern says the country will not have open borders with the rest of the world for “a long time to come”.

    Ms Ardern was speaking after attending part of Australia’s cabinet meeting via video link.

    The meeting discussed a possible “trans-Tasman bubble”, where people could go between Australia and New Zealand freely, and without quarantine.

    But she said visitors from further afield were not possible any time soon.

    Both Australia and New Zealand have closed their borders to almost all foreigners as part of their Covid-19 response.

    What did Jacinda Ardern say?

    Ms Ardern said New Zealand and Australia were discussing a “bubble of sorts between us, a safe zone of travel”.

    She stressed there was “a lot of work to be done before we can progress…but it’s obviously been floated because of the benefits it would bring”.

    But, in response to a question about the country’s tourism sector, Ms Ardern said: “We will not have open borders for the rest of the world for a long time to come.”

    Tourism is one of New Zealand’s biggest industries, directly employing almost 10% of the country’s workforce, and contributing almost 6% of GDP.

    Most visitors are from Australia, followed by China, the US, and the UK.

    What is the virus situation in Australia and New Zealand?

    Ms Ardern said any “trans-Tasman bubble” was only possible because of “the world leading actions” of both countries.

    On Tuesday, New Zealand reported no new cases for the second day in a row.

    It has had fewer than 1,500 confirmed cases in total, and only 20 deaths. Last week it eased its lockdown from Level 4 to Level 3.

    Australia – which has a population of around 25 million, five times that of New Zealand – has had almost 7,000 cases and 96 deaths.

    But it, too, has “flattened the curve” of infections, and various states and territories have also eased their lockdowns.

    Source: bbc.com

     

  • Coronavirus: Chinese state media take aim at US ‘lab theory’

    Chinese state media has accused US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo of lying after he said there was “enormous evidence” the coronavirus emanated from a laboratory in Wuhan.

    Mr. Pompeo made the claim on Sunday, without going into specifics.

    In an editorial on Tuesday, the hawkish Global Times newspaper said Mr Pompeo was “degenerate”.

    The World Health Organization says the US claims are “speculative”, and that it has seen no “specific evidence”.

    What did Chinese media say?

    Editorials in Chinese state media often given an insight into the direction of government thinking, but there has been no official response to Mr Pompeo’s comments as yet.

    On Monday, the Global Times accused Mr Pompeo of “absurd theories and twisted facts”, and on Tuesday the attack continued.

    “Pompeo aims to kill two birds with one stone by spewing falsehoods,” it said.

    “First, he hopes to help Trump win re-election this November…second, Pompeo hates socialist China and, in particular, cannot accept China’s rise.”

    The editorial admitted there were “initial problems” in China’s response to the outbreak, but claimed “the overall performance is bright enough to outweigh the flaws”.

    It also said it was “conceivable that the virus first contacted humans in other places [than Wuhan]”.

    The Global Times is not the only Chinese outlet to take aim at Mr Pompeo and the US.

    The People’s Daily said Mr Pompeo had “no evidence”, while a piece on the CCTV site accused US politicians of “nefarious plotting”.

    What did Mike Pompeo say? In an interview with ABC on Sunday, Mr Pompeo said there was “enormous evidence” that the virus had emerged from the Wuhan Institute of Virology.

    “Remember, China has a history of infecting the world, and they have a history of running sub-standard laboratories,” he said.

    Mr Pompeo – a former director of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) – said he did not think the virus was man-made or genetically modified.

    The Wuhan laboratory is known to study coronaviruses in bats. In April, President Trump was asked whether “lax safety protocols” allowed such a virus to escape via an intern and her boyfriend.

    Mr Trump did not confirm the theory, but said: “More and more we’re hearing the story.”

    Media captionDonald Trump was recently asked if the virus emanated in a laboratory, rather than a market Last week, he was asked if he had seen evidence that gave him a “high degree of confidence” that the virus emerged in the Wuhan laboratory.

    “Yes I have,” he replied – but said he could not go into specifics.

    Last month, the Washington Post reported that US officials visited the laboratory in January 2018, and reported back their safety concerns.

    What do the experts say?

    On Monday, World Health Organization emergencies director Michael Ryan said it had received “no data or specific evidence” from the US about the virus origins.

    “So from our perspective, this remains speculative,” he said.

    Last week, the US intelligence community said it “concurred” that the virus “was not man-made or genetically modified”.

    But it said it would “continue to examine” whether the outbreak began via “contract with infected animals, or if it was the result of an an accident at a laboratory in Wuhan”.

    Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison said on Tuesday that the most likely source of the virus was a wildlife market. However he said he would not rule out the theory that it originated in a lab.

    “What’s really important is that we have a proper review, an independent review which looks into the sources of these things in a transparent way so we can learn the lessons,” he told reporters.

    Meanwhile, Western “intelligence sources” have told several news outlets there is “no evidence” to suggest the virus leaked from a laboratory.

    Source: bbc.com

  • US family ‘murdered shop guard for enforcing mask policy’

    A woman has been charged along with her husband and son with killing a security guard who refused her daughter’s entry to a shop because she was not wearing a face covering.

    Calvin Munerlyn, 43, was shot in the back of the head on Friday at the Family Dollar store in Flint, Michigan, one of the US states hardest hit by the pandemic.

    He was attacked after telling 45-year-old Sharmel Teague’s daughter she could not come into the shop without a state-mandated mask.

    The mother’s husband, Larry Teague, 44, and son, Ramonyea Bishop, 23, are accused of going to the store shortly afterwards and fatally attacking Mr Munerlyn.

    Sharmel Teague has been arrested, but the two other suspects remain at large. All three face first-degree premeditated murder and firearms charges.

    Larry Teague is also charged with violating the governor’s order requiring face coverings inside stores in order to prevent coronavirus transmission.

    Her daughter has not been charged.

    After the initial verbal altercation at the store, Genesee County Prosecutor David Leyton told a news conference on Monday, Sharmel Teague shouted at and spat on Mr Munerlyn before driving away in a red GMC Envoy.

    She returned a short while later with her son and husband before the fatal confrontation ensued, according to officials.

    It was the son who allegedly pulled the trigger.

    The prosecutor told reporters: “The death of Calvin Munerlyn is senseless and tragic, and those responsible will be held accountable to the fullest extent of the law.”

    Mr Munerlyn’s mother, Bernadett, told the Associated Press news agency: “All my baby was doing was his job.”

    A GoFundMe page set up for Mr Munerlyn’s funeral has raised nearly $100,000 (£80,000). According to the page, he leaves behind eight children.

    Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer has ordered all residents in the Midwestern state to wear face coverings when inside business premises in order to fight Covid-19. Stores can refuse service to anyone who does not comply with this rule.

    As of Monday the number of confirmed coronavirus cases in Michigan stood at 43,950, including 4,135 deaths, state officials said.

    Last week, hundreds of protesters, some of them armed, converged on the statehouse in Lansing and demanded an end to the governor’s stay-at-home order.

    There has been angry resistance elsewhere in the US to rules imposed to deter the virus’ spread.

    An order that went into effect on Friday in an Oklahoma town requiring the use of face masks in business premises was rescinded within hours amid a furious backlash from customers.

    Store employees in Stillwater reported threats of violence, including one involving a gun. Mayor Will Joyce swiftly amended the order to strongly encourage, but not mandate, the wearing of face masks.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Efya hints on a possible collaboration with Wizkid

    Sensational Ghanaian songstress, Jane Awindor who is widely known as Efya has hinted that a collaboration with Nigerian music superstar, Wizkid is on the cards.

    The singer revealed this in a recent question and answer session with her fans on Twitter.

    One of her fans asked;

    “@EFYA_Nokturnal
    I wish you had a collaboration with
    @wizkidayo”

    And Efya replied saying;

    “Soon come 🙏🏽 #TimeWithEfya”

    Source: www.ghgossip.com

  • John Dumelo promises to support students at GIMPA with 2 terabyte of data to help them study online

    Ghanaian actor who is now a full-time politician, John Dumelo has promised to support some students at GIMPA with internet data to help them study online.

    This comes after these students complained about their inability to buy data for their online class as the government of Ghana has placed a ban on social gatherings including schools and churches in the wake of the Coronavirus outbreak in Ghana.

    Taking to his Twitter handle, John Dumelo promised to bless the lives of these people with some internet data bundle to ease their burden.

    Read his tweet below;

    Source: www.ghgossip.com

  • Besiktas end Kevin-Prince Boateng’s loan deal

    Besiktas have cut their losses after deciding against signing Kevin-Prince Boateng on a permanent basis from Fiorentina, GHANAsoccernet.com ca exclusively report.

    The Turkish side have made the final decision on the long-term future of the Ghanaian and will not keep the forward.

    Besiktas will go down economically due to the coronavirus pandemic and will not have the financial muscle to keep the former AC Milan star.

    Boateng joined the side on a loan deal from Italian side Fiorentina but will end his association with the the side this summer.

    Despite insisting he’s happy at Besiktas,it confirmed the Turkish side won’t have the fiances to purchase the forward on a permanent basis.

    The Black-and-White are suffocating under financial stress due to the outbreak of the coronavirus -after Liverpool goalkeeper Loris Karius terminated his contract with the side.

    Ghanaian star Kevin-Prince Boateng will return to parent club Fiorentina after the coronavirus crisis.

    Source: Ghana Soccernet

  • UK media claims Thomas Partey is open to Arsenal move

    Atletico Madrid midfielder Thomas Partey has decided he wants to join Arsenal at the end of the protracted season, according to The Telegraph.

    Partey is hoping a deal can be struck between the two clubs.

    The Ghana international, 26, has told those close to him he has ambitions of proving himself in the Premier League with a move to the Emirates Stadium.

    Partey has a release clause of around £45million and Atletico are braced for approaches but also have an interest in Arsenal striker Alexandre Lacazette.

    The report claims Arsenal could consider a swap deal, offering Alexandre Lacazette to Atletico with Partey arriving at the Emirates Stadium.

    Source: footballmadeinghana.com

  • Hong Kong to lift major social restrictions as virus fades

    Hong Kong on Tuesday announced plans to ease major social distancing measures, including reopening schools, cinemas, bars and beauty parlours after the Chinese territory largely halted local transmission of the deadly Coronavirus.

    The relaxation, which comes into effect Friday, will be a boost for a city mired in a deep recession following months of virus restrictions as well as anti-government protests that have battered the economy.

    Authorities also unveiled plans to hand out reusable face masks to all 7.5 million city residents.

    Hong Kong recorded some of the earliest confirmed COVID-19 cases outside of mainland China but despite its close proximity and links with the mainland it has managed to keep infections to around 1,000 with four deaths.

    There have been no new confirmed infections in 10 of the last 16 days and the cases that have been recorded came from people arriving from overseas who are quickly quarantined.

    “I hope these measures will be a silver lining for citizens,” the city’s leader Carrie Lam told reporters Tuesday as she spelled out the easing of curbs.

    Older secondary students will start returning to classes from May 27 while younger children will resume school in the first half of June.

    But a ban on more than four people gathering in public or eating together in restaurants will be stepped up to eight.

    Many businesses that were ordered to close will be allowed to open once more, albeit with restrictions in place.

    Bars and restaurants will be permitted to operate but must ensure a distance of 1.5 metres between tables. Live music performances and dancing however will remain banned.

    Cinemas can start showing films to reduced crowds while gyms, beauty, massage and mahjong parlours will re-open with hygiene protocols in place such as the use of masks, hand sanitiser and temperature checks.

    Nightclubs and karaoke bars must stay closed.

    Lam and other officials sported a new type of mask made of fabric Tuesday that they said would be distributed to all residents in the coming weeks.

    When the virus first emerged, Hong Kongers started panic-buying masks as anger grew against the government for failing to stockpile enough supplies.

    Since then local production has been ramped up and masks are plentiful in pharmacies and shops.

    Source: france24.com

  • The wait is finally over as Mercy Johnson delivers baby number 4 Husband confirms

    Celebrated Nigerian actress Mercy Johnson has finally delivered her fourth child (a girl), husband Prince Odianosen Okojie confirmed the wonderful news.

    She successfully delivered the baby abroad after weeks of speculation about her delivery. Last week, congratulatory messages poured out on social media after reports that she had given birth.

    However, Mercy Johnson and her husband denied the news while urging people to keep them in prayers.

    On Monday, Prince took to his Instagram page to make the announcement and also reveal the girl will be called Divine-Mercy Ehinomen Okojie.

    Every Good and Perfect gift is from God. The wait is finally Over, Please share in Our Joy as we announce the arrival of Our Daughter.
    Divine-Mercy Ehinomen Okojie.

    Source: www.Ghgossip.com

  • Global coronavirus death toll surpasses 250,000

    Global Coronavirus fatalities exceeded the 250,000 mark on Monday, according to a running tally by the US-based Johns Hopkins University.

    The university’s figures counted 250,134 deaths, while the numbers of cases and recoveries stand at 3,562,919 and 1,144,454, respectively.

    The US is the country hardest-hit by the global pandemic with over 1.1 million cases and more than 68,300 fatalities.

    Italy has the second-highest death toll with 29,079, followed by the UK’s tally of 28,809.

    Since last week, China did not register a single fatality and its death toll continues to stand at 4,637. These figures continue to raise questions in and outside China.

    Overall, the virus has spread to 187 countries since it first emerged in China in December.

    Despite the rising number of cases, most who contract the virus suffer mild symptoms before making a recovery.

     

    Source: aa.com.tr

  • Dont push for release of quarantined COVID-19 cases; Families, relatives advised

    The Bono East Regional Director of Health, Dr Fred Adomako Boateng, has advised family members to desist from mounting pressure on health workers and the Rapid Response Teams to release their relatives who have been put under mandatory quarantine on suspicion of having contracted the COVID-19 disease.

    He said that health workers, the response teams, and other stakeholders frequently received requests of release and threats from relatives of persons suspected to have contacted the virus.

    Dr Boateng was speaking to the Daily Graphic at Nkoranza during a four-day tour by the Bono East Regional Minister, Mr Kofi Amoakohene, to the 11 municipalities and districts to monitor the preparedness of the assemblies towards the fight against COVID-19.

    He said the Ghana Health Service (GHS) had been taking good care of the suspected COVID-19 patients and ensuring that they did not encounter any problem while under the mandatory quarantine, explaining that it was important to isolate such persons to prevent them from spreading the virus should they be found to be carrying it.

    Compulsory testing

    Dr Boateng disclosed that plans were far advanced for compulsory COVID-19 tests for all food vendors and drivers of commercial vehicles in the region, explaining that those groups had been penciled for the exercise because they rendered services to a large number of people.

    “The GHS, in collaboration with political heads and traditional leaders in the region, has decided to enhance its surveillance by testing all food venders, trotro and taxi drivers in the region.

    It is a kind of innovation we are introducing in the region,” he stated.

    Dr Boateng said the GHS was working hard to get the list of all the food vendors, trotro, and taxi drivers in the region and as soon as the resources were released, they would commence the testing.

    Face mask

    Speaking at Kajeji in the Sene East District, the Deputy Bono East Regional Minister, Mr Martin Oti Gyarko, charged the assembly and other stakeholders not to allow persons from the Oti Region without face masks to enter the region.

    He also directed the district health directorates to screen and get contacts of persons from the Oti Region before allowing them to enter the region.

    At Busunya in the Nkoranza North District, the District Chief Executive (DCE), Mrs Gifty Akosa Arthur, said all the tourist centres in the district had been closed down in a bid to halt the spread of the virus and cited the Buabeng-Fiema Monkey Sanctuary and Manso Water Falls as facilities that had been closed down.

    She said the assembly had trained 160 health workers to improve their knowledge and skills on how to handle COVID-19 cases when the need arose.

    At Techiman, the Municipal Chief Executive (MCE), Mr John Donyina, mentioned the influx of people from other regions and the lack of means of transport for COVID-19 activities as some of the challenges the assembly faced.

    He said the assembly had procured and distributed 5,000 nose masks, 50 gallons of hand sanitisers, 20 thermometer guns and boxes of hand gloves to some market women and some community members to help fight the virus.

    Recommendation

    For his part, Mr Amoakohene commended the chiefs and people in the region for adhering to the ban on all public gatherings, including festivals, religious activities, funerals, political rallies, and nightclubbing, among other events.

    According to him, no case had been reported by the police in the region on persons flouting the orders. He, therefore, expressed gratitude to the chiefs and people for their preparedness to assist in the fight against the disease.

    “Let us continue to provide support for the government and I am confident that the Almighty God will surely heal our land and this too shall pass”, he stated.

    Source: graphic.com.gh

  • English Premier League considering under 45-minute halves

    Professional Footballers’ Association chief executive Gordon Taylor says halves of less than 45 minutes are being considered when football resumes.

    Discussions about the Premier League’s return are ongoing but Taylor says players are “concerned about their own safety”.

    “They are not stupid,” he told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme. “They will put safety first.”

    The Premier League is hopeful of a potential 8 June resumption.

    Source: goal.com

  • Messi won’t retire until he is nearly 40 – Xavi

    Lionel Messi could play until he is almost 40, according to long-time Barcelona team-mate Xavi.

    The six-time Ballon d’Or winner, 32, was in typically stellar form for Barca this season, scoring 24 goals in all competitions before the coronavirus pandemic brought a halt to proceedings.

    Messi has arguably never been so important to the Blaugrana’s overall chances of success and Xavi feels the Argentina superstar has plenty left in the tank both at club and international level.

    “He’s still got five or seven very good years left in him,” Xavi said of Messi during an Instagram chat with another ex-Barca forward, Samuel Eto’o.

    “He takes good care of himself and he can keep playing until he’s 37, 38 or 39. He’ll play at the Qatar World Cup, I’m sure.”

    If Messi reaches those levels of longevity, Xavi will seemingly hope to have taken charge of him as head coach.

    The Al Sadd boss held talks with his former employers earlier this year before Quique Setien was appointed as Ernesto Valverde’s successor.

    “In January, it wasn’t the right moment,” Xavi said, echoing comments made on the matter earlier this year.

    “I had conversations with Eric Abidal [Barcelona’s sporting director] and Oscar Grau [Barcelona chief executive] and a big offer, but it wasn’t the right moment. I need a bit more experience. Coaching Barcelona is my dream. I’d like to do it one day. I’ve said that many times.”

    Ideally, Xavi would also see Neymar return from Paris Saint-Germain and be part of any prospective squad of his.

    The Brazil forward has frequently been linked with a move back to Camp Nou since his record transfer to the French capital in 2017.

    “Footballing wise, he’s in the top three or five players in the world, no doubt,” Xavi added. “He can make the difference. Let’s hope he returns to Barcelona. I’m a Barcelona fan and I want the best players there.”

    However, the presence of Neymar at Camp Nou next season seems unlikely due to the financial crisis caused by Covid-19.

    In an interview earlier this week, Setien admitted he believed there wouldn’t be any mega transfers this summer.

    Source: goal.com

  • Coronavirus: France’s first known case ‘was in December’

    A patient diagnosed with pneumonia near Paris on 27 December actually had the coronavirus, his doctor has said.

    Dr Yves Cohen told French media a swab taken at the time was recently tested, and came back positive for Covid-19.

    The patient, who has since fully recovered, said he had no idea where he caught the virus as he had not been to any infected areas.

    This news means the virus may have arrived in France almost a month earlier than previously thought.

    What do we know about the new case?

    Dr Cohen, head of emergency medicine at Avicenne and Jean-Verdier hospitals near Paris, said the patient was a 43-year-old man from Bobigny, north-east of Paris.

    He was exhibiting what later became to be known as the main symptoms of coronavirus, including a dry cough, a fever and trouble breathing.

    He was admitted to hospital on 27 December, four days before the World Health Organization’s China country office was informed of cases of pneumonia of unknown cause being detected in the Chinese city of Wuhan.

    The French patient told French broadcaster BFMTV that he had not travelled before falling sick.

    Dr Cohen said two of the patient’s children had fallen ill but that the wife had not shown any symptoms. But Dr Cohen pointed out that the patient’s wife worked at a supermarket near Charles de Gaulle airport and could have come into contact with people who had recently arrived from China.

    The patient’s wife said that “often customers would come directly from the airport, still carrying their suitcases”.

    “We’re wondering whether she was asymptomatic,” Dr Cohen said. He called for the potential link to be investigated further.

    Why does it matter?

    Until now, the country’s first three cases of coronavirus were confirmed on 24 January.

    Of those, two had been to Wuhan – where the outbreak was first detected – and the third was a close family member.

    This positive test result suggests the virus was present in France much earlier and will change the understanding of how it spread.

    The first human-to-human transmission within Europe had until now thought to have been a German man who was infected by a Chinese colleague who visited Germany between 19 and 22 January.

    The United States also recently had to revise its coronavirus timeline. A post-mortem examination carried out in California revealed that the first coronavirus-related death in the US was almost a month earlier than previously thought.

    How was the new case found?

    Dr Cohen told BFMTV that he recently went over the files of patients admitted with flu-like symptoms in December and January.

    In total he tested the swabs of 14 patients, he said.

    “We re-tested the nasal swabs which were conducted at the time in relation to another diagnosis, to try and find traces of coronavirus,” he said.

    “Out of 14 patients, one tested positive. We tested it two more times to make sure there was no mistake. And twice, it came back positive.”

    Dr Cohen said he had alerted the National Health Agency (ARS), and was urging other virologists to re-test swabs in their hospitals for Covid-19.

    A full report is due later this week, and will be published by the International Journal of Antimicrobial Agents, he added.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Green investment ‘best way to revive coronavirus-hit economies’

    Sweeping investment in “green” projects – ones that reduce emissions – are the most cost-effective way to boost economies hit by coronavirus, top economists have suggested.

    Co-authors of the study, published in the Oxford Review of Economic Policy, include Nobel laureate Joseph Stiglitz and prominent British climate expert Lord Nicholas Stern.

    The group looked at over 700 economic stimulus policies launched during or since the 2008 financial crisis, and surveyed 231 experts, including officials from central banks and finance ministries.

    The study found that projects like boosting renewable energy or energy efficiency created higher short-term returns, created more jobs and gave more long-term cost savings compared with traditional economic measures focused on fossil fuels.

    “The Covid-19-initiated emissions reduction could be short-lived,” said Cameron Hepburn, lead author of the study. “But this report shows we can choose to build back better, keeping many of the recent improvements we’ve seen in cleaner air, returning nature and reduced greenhouse gas emissions.”

    Source: bbc.com

  • Australia: No support for US lab claim

    Australia, along with the US, has been one of the loudest voices calling for an investigation into the virus’ origins and spread in China.

    US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has claimed the virus originated in a Chinese lab – a claim rubbished by Beijing.

    Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison says his country is working closely with the US, but it isn’t endorsing the lab theory.

    “We can’t rule out any these arrangements… but the most likely has been in a wildlife wet market.”

    He reiterated: “But what really is important is that we have a proper review that looks into the sources of these things.”

    Source: bbc.com

  • Global coronavirus deaths pass 250,000

    he number of deaths related to Coronavirus around the world has passed 250,000, according to Johns Hopkins University, which is tracking the disease globally.

    The US is the country with the highest number of fatalities, with nearly 69,000. Italy has over 29,000 deaths while the UK has almost 29,000.

    Comparisons are difficult though because of different methods employed by countries in reporting their figures – such as including only the deaths that happened in hospitals. Lack of testing, a problem in many nations, may also hide the true extent of the outbreak.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Beyoncé joins virus testing initiative in Texas

    Pop star Beyoncé has teamed up with her mother, Tina Knowles Lawson, to support a mobile virus testing initiative in their hometown of Houston, Texas.

    The #IDIDMYPART campaign, taking place this weekend, aims to bring awareness of the daily testing available at a local medical centre.

    It will also provide free masks, gloves, household supplies and 1,000 free tests “administered under safe conditions,” according to a statement.

    “The virus is wreaking havoc on the Black community so we need a movement to prioritize our health,” Ms Knowles Lawson said.

    Data from the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention suggest that 33% of people who’ve been taken to hospital with the virus are African-American, yet only 13% of the US population is African-American.

    “Testing is crucial because it helps find hot spots and saves lives,” local Congresswoman Sheila Jackson-Lee said in the statement. “Texas has a very low COVID-19 test rate, second lowest in the nation.”

    Source: bbc.com

  • Dee Bwoy releases single ‘Against Fuo’

    Highlife musician Dee Bwoy has released a single titled ‘Against Fuo’.

    The singer was influenced by his life’s experience, tribulations and would want this song to be an inspiration to people who may relate to such experience.

    The song was produced by the masterful MOG beats. It was recorded and finally mixed and mastered by Quophi Okyeame at his Emklan Music Studio in Kokomlemle.

    Daniel Nana Yaw Fosu, as the musician is known in real life, was born on June 05, 1997 at Amansie Jacobu in the Ashanti Region.

    Growing up without knowing his biological father, Dee Bwoy was raised by a single mother who was a singer at their local church choir. He took a liking in singing at a very young age.

    At the age 15, he started singing in this church choir and quickly became popular for his gospel-tinged vocal mastery. At the age 19, Dee Bwoy reunited with his biological father and after only three years of knowing each other, his father passed away.

    He was fond of Ghanaian music legends such as Daasebre Dwamena (late), Daddy Lumba, Kwabena Kwabena, Amakye Dede and Kojo Antwi. No wonder he is being lauded as the “Young Daasebre!”

    Currently in his final year at Apostle Kwadwo Safo Senior High School, Dee Bwoy also runs his own music band at his school, where he plays live music concerts at school events.

    Listen to ‘Agains Fuo’ – the soothing sound which is bound to be the favourite of many below:

    Source: Quophi Okyeame, Contributor

  • Iranian airline fuelled virus spread in Middle East

    An Iranian airline with links to the country’s Revolutionary Guards fuelled the spread of the virus in the Middle East, a BBC investigation has found.

    Mahan Air flew infected passengers from Iran to Lebanon and Iraq – leading to the first official cases in both countries.

    Sources within Mahan Air told the BBC that cabin crew were silenced by the airline when they tried to raise concerns about its handling of the virus and the lack of protective equipment.

    Flight tracking data also shows that the airline repeatedly flew to China despite a flight ban by Tehran.

    Mahan Air has refused to comment.

    Source: bbc.com

  • 22-year-old man stabbed to death in Nigeria over face mask

    Tragedy struck at the Coca Cola Market in Onitsha, Anambra State, yesterday, when a 22-year-old man, Mr Cletus Chisom, was reportedly stabbed to death by a security guard monitoring the use of face mask in the market.

    The suspect, Ibuchi Nwoju, who hails from Abia State, but resides in Onitsha, allegedly committed the offence following an altercation with the deceased.

    An eye witness said the sister to the deceased was at the market with her mother to purchase some items when the suspect stopped her from entering the market for failure to put on a facemask.

    Her mother was said to have later bought the facemask for her daughter after the suspect insisted she would only be allowed access to the market with a facemask.

    However, trouble was said to have ensued after the girl reportedly rushed home and returned with her elder brother, who confronted the suspect. The witness said it was during their argument that the suspect drew a knife and stabbed the deceased in the chest, leading to his death.

    Anambra State Police Public Relations Officer, PPRO, Mr Haruna Mohammed, who confirmed the incident, said the Commissioner of Police, Mr John Abang, has ordered for immediate transfer of the case to the State CID, Awka for investigation.

    He said: “Today (yesterday) at about 8:45 am, Police operatives from Okpoko Division in Onitsha arrested a private security guard attached to Coca-Cola Market, Onitsha, one Ibuchi Nwoju, aged 26 years, of Asa village, Abia State, but resides in Onitsha, Anambra State.”

    “Suspect allegedly had an altercation with one Cletus Chisom, aged 22 years, of Ekekwe Street, Awada and stabbed him with a knife in his chest.”

    “Consequently, the victim became unconscious and was rushed to Goodnews Hospital, Onitsha where he was confirmed dead on arrival by a medical doctor.”

    “The corpse has been deposited at Toronto Hospital Mortuary, Onitsha for autopsy.”

    Source: vanguardngr.com

  • Almost third of Australians have tracing app

    That’s five million people of the targeted 16 million mobile phone users in Australia, says Prime Minister Scott Morrison.

    He said this was a good response, but “we would like to see a bit more”. The government had previously said a 40% uptake is needed.

    The app, released just over a week ago, shares users’ codes with each other via a Bluetooth signal. It’s designed to speed up the contact-tracing process and quickly isolate at-risk people.

    “The first job of the COVIDSafe app is to keep you safe and that is its best reason why I would encourage people to continue to do that,” Mr Morrison said.

    “The more people we get, the better protection we all have as we go back to work.”

    Mr Morrison has stressed that wide usage is almost a prerequisite to the nation exiting lockdown. A review of freedoms is due this Friday. For over a month now, Australia has reported very low daily case numbers after success in containing the spread.

    Source: bbc.com

  • WHO warns against untested coronavirus cures

    The World Health Organization (WHO) has urged people not to put their faith in local untested remedies for coronavirus.

    The advice comes at a time when at least three African heads of state have said they are importing large quantities of a herbal tonic which the president of Madagascar says can cure the virus.

    But its efficacy has not been proven by scientific peer review, and even Madagascar’s own national medical academy has cast doubt on it.

    In a statement, the WHO says it welcomes the use of traditional medicines in the search for potential treatments but it warns that they must first be robustly tested.

    Madagascar’s President Andry Rajoelina launched a product based on the artemisia plant last month when it had been tested on fewer than 20 people.

    He says clinical trials will start next week.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Green investment ‘best way to revive coronavirus-hit economies’

    Sweeping investment in “green” projects – ones that reduce emissions – are the most cost-effective way to boost economies hit by Coronavirus, top economists have suggested.

    Co-authors of the study, published in the Oxford Review of Economic Policy, include Nobel laureate Joseph Stiglitz and prominent British climate expert Lord Nicholas Stern.

    The group looked at over 700 economic stimulus policies launched during or since the 2008 financial crisis, and surveyed 231 experts, including officials from central banks and finance ministries.

    The study found that projects like boosting renewable energy or energy efficiency created higher short-term returns, created more jobs and gave more long-term cost savings compared with traditional economic measures focused on fossil fuels.

    “The COVID-19-initiated emissions reduction could be short-lived,” said Cameron Hepburn, lead author of the study. “But this report shows we can choose to build back better, keeping many of the recent improvements we’ve seen in cleaner air, returning nature and reduced greenhouse gas emissions.”

    Source: bbc.com

  • Korle Bu records 100% COVID-19 recoveries

    The COVID-19 treatment centre at the Korle Bu Teaching Hospital has successfully treated and discharged all seven patients who were on admission, a statement from the hospital said.

    The release copied to DGN Online and signed by Chief Executive Officer (CEO), KBTH, Dr. Daniel Asare, said the patients were discharged after a series of confirmatory tests returned negative.

    The patients, the release said, were from Korle Bu and Bolgatanga Regional hospitals.

    “The professional categories of the discharged patients are a nurse, an orderly, a doctor and a security officer, ” it added.

    It indicated that the patients were impressed with the level of care and the contributions of the multidisciplinary team that the Hospital has assembled and tasked with the treatment of the patients.

    “The team reiterated its commitment to help in the fight against the Covid-19 pandemic. The discharged patients were urged to be ambassadors in the campaign to dispel the stigma around Covid-19,” according to the release.

    The teaching hospital is being used as one of the treatment centers in the fight against COVID-19 in Ghana.

    So far 2719 cases of COVID-19 have been confirmed in Ghana with 18 deaths.

    Also, 294 patients have recovered from the infection as at May 2.

    Source: Daily Guide Network

  • Government expands COVID-19 test centres

    The government has expanded the number of COVID-19 testing facilities with two more laboratories within few weeks, Deputy Minister of Health, Dr. Bernard Okoe-Boye, has disclosed.

    The additions are the Korle-Bu Public Health Reference Laboratory and the University of Health and Allied Sciences Laboratory in the Volta Region.

    In a statement delivered in Parliament on Thursday, Dr. Okoe-Boye said the Navrongo Reference Laboratory in the Upper East Region had been earmarked for an upgrade to be added to the centres for testing Covid-19.

    According to him, the Navrongo Reference Laboratory and other facilities will be equipped to add on to the diagnostic capacities not only for COVID-19, but also for CSM and other disease conditions regarding modern sophisticated laboratories with the capacity to do Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) tests.

    The Deputy Minister explained that the government was facilitating speedy testing of Covid-19 samples that were yet to be done following the stepping up of the contact tracing efforts to identify possible cases of the virus in the country.

    Until the new additions, the Noguchi Medical Research Institute in Accra and the Kumasi Center for Collaborative Research were the only testing centres in the country.

    “I am happy to say that apart from Noguchi Memorial Institute for Medical Research in Accra and KCCR in Kumasi, the Akufo-Addo government has worked hard to ensure that, within these few weeks, Korle-Bu Public Health Reference Laboratory and the UHAS Laboratory in the Volta Region, have been added to the centres for testing COVID-19.”

    “Very soon, Navrongo Reference Laboratory and other facilities will be equipped to add on to our diagnostic capacities for CSM, COVID-19 and other disease conditions regarding modern sophisticated laboratories with the capacity to do Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) tests.”

    Source: Daily Guide Network