Author: Chris Kodo

  • Greek health workers demonstrate over coronavirus conditions

    Hundreds of Greek healthcare workers demonstrated on Tuesday to protest at working conditions and lack of manpower and equipment in public hospitals during the Coronavirus pandemic.

    The demonstrations were staged to coincide with World Health Day, according to the federation of hospital personnel.

    “You only saw us when we covered our faces,” proclaimed a poster printed by hospital trade unions, bearing a picture of doctors wearing anti-coronavirus masks.

    Demonstrators at the large Evangelismos hospital in central Athens held up signs demanding job hiring, virus testing and hospital equipment.

    Police tried to enter the hospital courtyard where the rally was taking place before being forced back by demonstrators, an AFP photographer said.

    A similar protest was held at the main hospital in Larissa in central Greece, according to images from public television ERT.

    Despina Tossonidou, president of the doctors’ union at Voula hospital in southern Athens, said that in addition to the hiring of medical staff, intensive care units in private clinics should be requisitioned “to overcome the shortcomings of the public sector” during the virus crisis.

    Health care in Greece was drastically affected by the country’s 2010-2018 financial crisis and tough austerity required by creditors in exchange for bailouts.

    As part of its measures to deal with the pandemic, the government has offered clinics 30 million euros ($32.6 million) and announced the hiring on short-term contracts of 2,000 doctors and 2,000 nursing staff.

    “These measures are just a drop in the ocean,” said Tossonidou, a radiologist.

    “The hospital system needs 30,000 additional permanent doctors,” she said, also citing the lack of protective equipment and COVID-19 testing in hospitals.

    “The majority of tests are currently carried out in private hospitals at costs ranging from 150 to 300 euros ($163-326),” said Tossonidou.

    Greece, a country of around 10.7 million people, has suffered relatively less than other European nations in the pandemic, recording 81 deaths out of 1,755 cases.

    Source: AFP

  • WhatsApp restricts spread of coronavirus misinformation

    The messaging app WhatsApp has moved to limit the increasing spread of misinformation through its platform. The WHO has identified an “infodemic” of false medical advice and conspiracy theories around COVID-19 online.

    Facebook’s popular messaging service WhatsApp tightenend message forwarding limits on Tuesday to stop the spread of misinformation about the novel coronavirus pandemic.

    The messaging app saw a jump in message forwarding since the start of the COVID-19 crisis. Users will now be restricted to sharing content that has already been forwarded numerous times just one chat at a time. Until now, it has been possible to share information simultaneously in five chats.

    The World Health Organization (WHO) has identified an “infodemic” of misinformation triggered by the pandemic. Governments around the world have urged social media companies to attempt to curb the spread of misinformation through tighter regulations.

    “We believe it is important to slow the spread of these messages down to keep WhatsApp a place for personal conversation,” the company said in a statement. WhatsApp has over two billion users worldwide.

    WhatsApp works with WHO

    Misinformation that has been spread on WhatsApp often relates to miracle cures and so-called “treatments” to cure patients of COVID-19 and to conspiracy theories regarding government or private involvement in the outbreak. There is currently no cure for COVID-19, the disease caused by the SARS-CoV-2 virus.

    The new limits are in place indefinitely. WhatsApp already put some measures in place on message forwarding in 2018 after viral rumors on its platform led to mass beatings and violence in India.

    However, WhatsApp cannot directly monitor content or stop misinformation from being spread altogether.

    The app has enabled the WHO and national health authorities to share relevant facts about the pandemic to the population at large through automated accounts.

    Source: dw.com

  • Boris Johnson receives oxygen treatment in ICU amid questions about who’s running the UK

    British Prime Minister Boris Johnson has been receiving oxygen treatment for coronavirus in intensive care, a senior member of the Cabinet confirmed.

    Cabinet Office minister Michael Gove said in an interview with the BBC that the Prime Minister was “not on a ventilator” but had “received oxygen support.”
    He told BBC Radio 4’s Today program that Johnson was “receiving the very best care” at St. Thomas’ Hospital in London, after being taken into intensive care at 7 p.m. local time (2 p.m. ET) on Monday.
    “And of course, one of the reasons for being in intensive care is to make sure that whatever support the medical team consider to be appropriate can be provided,” he said.
    Johnson’s hospitalization has highlighted the lack of a formal line of succession in the UK government. Johnson nominated the Foreign Secretary, Dominic Raab, who also holds the title of First Secretary of State, to deputize for him “where necessary.”
    Few formal powers are invested specifically in the UK prime minister and key decisions are taken collectively by the Cabinet or its sub-committees. Many statutory powers are held by individual secretaries of state. But in recent decades, holders of the UK’s top political office have adopted a more presidential style, and the sweeping nature of the ruling Conservative Party’s most recent election victory was attributed to Johnson’s personal appeal with voters.
    “The Prime Minister has a team around him who ensure the work of government goes on,” Gove told the BBC. He said Johnson had a “stripped-back diary” last week to make sure he could follow the medical advice of his doctors.
    Gove confirmed that Raab was now in charge of seeing through Johnson’s plan to tackle the novel coronavirus. “Dominic [Raab] takes on the responsibilities of chairing the various meetings the PM would’ve chaired but we’re all working together to implement the plan that the PM has set out,” he said.
    But Gove sidestepped a question about who held the “nuclear codes,” saying he would not discuss national security issues.
    Conservative MP Tobias Ellwood, who chairs the House of Commons defense select committee, tweeted good wishes to Johnson but added: “It is important to have 100% clarity as to where responsibility for UK national security decisions now lies. We must anticipate adversaries attempting to exploit any perceived weakness.”

    Johnson was taken to hospital on Sunday evening. At the time, Downing Street said the decision was a precaution because the Prime Minister continued to suffer from a cough and a fever ten days after testing positive for the coronavirus. But his condition deteriorated on Monday, Downing Street said, and he was moved to the intensive care unit at St. Thomas’ Hospital.

    Gove told Sky News on Tuesday morning that Cabinet ministers were not told about the Prime Minister’s deteriorating condition until nearly an hour after Johnson was taken into intensive care.
    Asked whether the government had been up front with the public about Johnson’s condition, and whether the Cabinet had been taken by surprise, he replied: “Yes we were. The [daily coronavirus] briefing that was given at 5 o’clock was given at a time when we didn’t know about the deterioration in the Prime Minister’s condition.”
    “We were informed subsequently. The Prime Minister was admitted to intensive care at 7 o’clock, and that information wasn’t given to us in government — to those in the cabinet — until just before 8 o’clock.”
    Source: cnn.com
  • COVID-19: Five local companies to produce over 3 million face masks – Health Minister

    The Minister for Health Kwaku Agyemang Manu says some five local companies have been tasked to produce some 3.6 million face masks for the public and health workers as well.

    There has been agitation from health workers over the lack of Personal Protective Equipment (PPEs).

    Some have even threatened to withdraw their services if the government fails to supply them with these PPEs which include gloves, nose masks, gowns among others.

    But at a press briefing today, the Health Minister said the Minister for Trade and Industries, Alan Kyerematen has selected some five companies to produce a large number of PPEs.

    “The Minister for Trade has selected some five companies to provide 3.6 million nose mask, we will take delivery of some 100 thousand very soon. It will be everywhere in the country, so health workers must exercise some patients. We are working hard so we don’t get tob the situation of other countries, as the President said this too shall pass”

    As at 6th April 2020, 23:30 hr, a total of 287 cases of COVID-19 with five (5) deaths have been recorded in Ghana.

    The regional distribution of the cases are as follows: Greater Accra Region has most cases (258) followed by the Ashanti Region (18), Northern Region (10), Upper West Region (1), Eastern Region (1) and Upper East Region (1).

     

    Source: primenewsghana.com

  • Coronavirus: Government announces food request hotlines for needy households

    As part of measures to ensure that members of the public within the restriction of movement areas Accra, Kumasi, Tema and Kasoa live comfortably, Government has announced hotlines for needy communities and households to reach them for food items.

    They are 0800800800 and 0800900900.

    The distribution of food followed the restriction of movement within some areas and the suspension of social gatherings, which had made it impossible for some people to continue to earn a living through their petty businesses and trading activities.

    Mrs Cynthia Mamle Morrison, the Minister of Gender, Children and Social Protection who announced the hotlines while the Sector and the Ministry of Finance were offloading food items to faith-based organisations to share to needy individuals and communities in the affected areas.

    Government, she said, since the restriction of movement distributed between 400,000 and 450,000 packs of food every day to needy people including persons with disability in affected areas.

    Government also secured a 500 seater-capacity hostel for kayaye, she said, and gave assurance that they would be transported into the facility on Monday April 6, 2020 to ensure they lived comfortably without fear.

    Mrs Morrison explained that government collaborated with faith-based organisations through the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding, as they had demonstrated a commitment towards promoting the wellbeing of vulnerable people, to enable them to ensure that they lived fulfilled lives.

    She advised the public to observe the COVID-19 preventive measures, drink more water with lime, and build their immune systems with healthy diets to resist the virus infection.

    He appealed to individuals who benefit from move, to discipline themselves not to strive to take another one which could have been given to another person in dire need.

    Mr Ken Ofori-Atta, the Minister of Finance, said if government prolongs the restriction of movement and suspension of social gathering, government would be left with no option than to continue to support the needy and vulnerable with basic necessities. He believed this pandemic period, called for sacrifice from all bodies including the government to ensure that there was availability of social justice and fairness for everyone.

    “Government recognises the economic impact that this partial lockdown has had on families in low income communities who are mostly dependent on their daily income for sustenance; and this is well described by the Akan expression Ankor a, endidi”.

    “Fortunately, the Ghana Buffer Stock Company has a significant amount of food stock that can alleviate some of the difficulties within our low-income communities in Accra and Kumasi,” the Minister said.

    Most Reverend Dr Paul Kwabena Boafo, the Presiding Bishop of the Methodist and Chairman of the Christian Council of Ghana, expressed gratitude to government and religious bodies for the support rendered to control the effects of the pandemic in the country.

    What the nation was facing with the world, he said, was an opportunity to deepen the relationship that existed between faith based organisations and governments to address the challenges of people from the grassroots.

    He gave an assurance that the church would identify the most needy households and individuals and distribute the food items to them.

    He also said leadership of the churches in the country would continue to pray for leaders of the nation, front liners, borders and entire nation to ensure that the nation emerged victorious in the fight against the pandemic.

     

    Source: GNA

  • Zoom admits calls got ‘mistakenly’ routed through China

    Zoom has admitted that some call data was routed through China for non-China users.

    • CEO Eric Yuan said the calls were routed “mistakenly” after the company ramped up capacity to cope with a huge increase in demand.
    • Separately, researchers at Toronto’s Citizen Lab found Zoom used encryption keys issued by servers in China, raising further surveillance worries.
    • China does not enforce strict data privacy laws and could conceivably demand that Zoom decrypt calls, they said.
    • Visit Business Insider’s homepage for more stories .

    Zoom’s ongoing security woes just won’t let up.

    The video conferencing provider has admitted that some non-China users had their calls routed through China.

    “In our urgency to come to the aid of people around the world during this unprecedented pandemic, we added server capacity and deployed it quickly starting in China, where the outbreak began,” Yuan said. “In that process, we failed to fully implement our usual geo-fencing best practices. As a result, it is possible certain meetings were allowed to connect to systems in China, where they should not have been able to connect.”

    He did not say how many users were affected.

    During spells of heavy traffic, the video-conferencing service shifts traffic to the nearest data center with the largest available capacity but Zoom’s data centers in China aren’t supposed to be used to reroute non-Chinese users’ calls.

    This is largely due to privacy concerns: China does not enforce strict data privacy laws and could conceivably demand that Zoom decrypt the contents of encrypted calls.

    Separately, researchers at the University of Toronto also found Zoom’s encryption used keys issued by servers in China, even when call participants were outside of China.

    They wrote: “During a test of a Zoom meeting with two users, one in the United States and one in Canada, we found that the AES-128 key for conference encryption and decryption was sent to one of the participants over TLS from a Zoom server apparently located in Beijing, 52.81.151.250.”

    They added: “A companyprimarily cateringto North American clients that sometimes distributes encryption keys through servers in China is potentially concerning, given that Zoom may belegally obligated to disclose these keys to authorities in China.”

    The researchers noted that Zoom has some 700 employees in China, across several Chinese subsidiaries.

    Zoom has faced multiple high-profile security issues in recent weeks as it struggles to cope with an unprecedented surge in traffic and new users.

    Zoom did not immediately respond to Business Insider’s request for comment and clarification.

    Source: www.pulse.com.gh

  • Sarkodies wife, Tracey Sarkcess jabs Asem & others harder as she reacts to his “Sub Zero” diss track

    Tracy Sarkcess has just doubled the fire her husband, Sarkodie decided to pour on the heads of Asem and other musicians who have been unnecessarily jabbing him on social media recently.

    Reacting to the diss track titled “Sub Zero” on Twitter, Tracy stated that all the rappers who got their fair share of the heat from her husband deserved it perfectly.

    She wrote in the tweet : “if you keep poking a lion“.

    Source: zionfelix.net

  • Coronavirus and sex: What you need to know

    If I have sex can I catch coronavirus? You might have thought about it but been too embarrassed to ask. To separate the facts from myths, we’ve put your questions to health experts.

    Dr Alex George is an A&E doctor and former Love Island contestant. Alix Fox is a sex journalist, presenter of BBC Radio 1’s Unexpected Fluids show, and co-host of The Modern Mann podcast.

    Alix Fox and Dr Alex George answered some of the questions around sex and coronavirus that are being searched for online

    Is it safe to have sex during the coronavirus outbreak?

    Dr Alex George: If you’re in a relationship… living with that person, and sharing the same environment, it shouldn’t change your situation. However if one of you is displaying symptoms of coronavirus then you should maintain your social-distancing and isolate, even within your home. In an ideal world everyone would stay two metres apart – even in their own house, but we realise this may not be realistic.

    Alix Fox: It’s also really important not to assume that if you are experiencing mild symptoms of coronavirus it will be the same for your partner. So, if you’re showing any symptoms whatsoever do try and stay away from your lover.

    What about sex with new people?

    Dr Alex: I certainly wouldn’t advise having new sexual partners at the moment, because the risk is you could pass on the virus.

    Alix Fox: Don’t forget as well, some people who are carriers of the virus won’t have any symptoms. So even if you feel absolutely fine… you could still pass on the infection to someone and they could pass it on to other people via close contact and kissing.

    I kissed someone I recently met, and they’ve gone on to develop symptoms. What should I do?

    Dr Alex: If you’ve kissed or been in contact with someone who you think has gone on to develop coronavirus, make sure you self-isolate. Keep an eye on your symptoms. If you are developing symptoms, then be extra careful. Go online to the nhs.uk website. Only call the 111 service if your symptoms are so bad that you need medical support from us.

    Alix Fox: We should be responsible with each other, and for ourselves in our relationships. If you’re somebody who has developed symptoms, and you know that you’ve kissed people recently, you should let them know. And even if you’ve kissed someone and they’ve got symptoms and you haven’t, you should also self-isolate.

    I wasn’t using condoms with my partner before coronavirus, should I start now?

    Alix Fox: The answer depends on why you weren’t using condoms.

    If you weren’t using condoms because you have both been tested for STIs, or you’re in a heterosexual relationship prior to menopause and are using another kind of contraception to prevent an unplanned pregnancy, then that’s fine. But if you weren’t using condoms because you were relying on something like the pull-out method – or you were taking chances with STIs – then it’s even more important that you use condoms now.

    Can I get coronavirus by touching someone else’s vagina or penis?

    Dr Alex: If you are going to touch each other’s genitals it’s likely that you will potentially be kissing at the same time – and we know the virus is passed through saliva. Essentially, any possibility of transfer of coronavirus – from your mouth to your hands, to genitals, to someone else’s nose or mouth – increases the risk of passing on coronavirus. We want to cut this back to the absolute minimum. So, no contact between a partner that you’re not living with is really important.

    How can I maintain a relationship at a time like this? I don’t want to be single now.

    Alix Fox: This whole pandemic is prompting a lot of people to rethink what a good sex life is and what constitutes as an enjoyable, pleasurable exchange. I’ve heard of people writing erotic stories to each other, and people who are dating but quarantined in different places taking advantage of the time and the distance. A lot of people have been getting really creative. If you use your imagination a little bit there are lots of ways you can have a sexy time without being face-to-face with somebody.

    It’s also important to remember that right now… some people might be discovering that they or their partners have different libidos. You might find yourself in a situation where you were only going on a date once a week, and suddenly you’re living under the same roof. You might find that you want sex when your partner doesn’t, or vice versa. It’s important to communicate this in a respectful, compassionate manner. Living together does not mean that you’re entitled to sex whenever you want. And for anybody who is in a situation where they’re with a partner and they’re not having a good time, because they feel like they’re being forced into sex, there are helplines available for that.

    Am I more at risk of catching coronavirus if I have HIV?

    Alix Fox: Dr Michael Brady at the Terrence Higgins Trust has provided some really great advice on this. If you are already on regular medication to manage HIV, and you have a good CD4 count (number of white blood cells to fight infection) and an undetectable viral load (the amount of HIV in the blood) then you’re not considered to have a weakened immune system. This means you run no additional risk of contracting coronavirus. So, if you’re HIV positive, continue taking your meds as you would do. Make sure that you follow the same rules as everybody else when it comes to things like isolation.

    SOURCE:www.graphic.com.gh

  • I’m not comfortable going naked in movies – Ellen White

    Kumawood screen goddess Ellen Kyei White has for the first time disclosed the discomfort she goes through when her role suggests she goes naked on screen.

    According to the ‘Fake Feelings’ movie star, she’s always comfortable playing any character assigned by the directors but with the exemption of romance.

    “I am comfortable with all the roles but one thing that I’m not comfortable with is going naked and revealing sensitive parts on the screen. and also engage in sexual roles with men. Apart from that, I am okay”.

    She told Abeiku Santana on his Atuu Show monitored by GhanaWeb.

    “What if you are paired with a very nice and handsome male actor on set, does that still make you uncomfortable?” Abeiku queried her.

    She answered in the negative, adding that she’s just not comfortable playing such roles on screen.

    When pushed further to know if she has ever kissed in her movies, Ellen responded:

    ” We have kiss and kiss, we have tongue tongue. I have only done kiss kiss but not tongue tongue.”

    Watch the video below:

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • China kick-starts development of 6G technology less than a week after rolling out its superfast 5G network

    China has officially begun the research and development of 6G technology.

    The news came less than a week after the country rolled out its superfast 5G network.

    The country’s Technology Bureau has formally set up a team of experts to work on the next-generation mobile internet connection, state media said today.

    A total of 37 telecommunication specialists drawn from universities, institutions and corporations are on the panel, which is tasked with laying out the development of 6G and proving the scientific feasibility of it

    The news was announced during a 6G launch ceremony in Beijing on Sunday, according to a report by Chinanews.com.

    Wang Xi, deputy minister of the Technology Bureau, said at the conference that the bureau was set to work with the experts to design a specific research plan for 6G and carry out preliminary research.

    China’s three state-owned telecommunication carriers – China Mobile, China Unicom and China Telecom – launched their 5G data plans just last Thursday.

    The country is due to activate more than 130,000 5G base stations by the end of this year to support the network, which is one of the world’s largest 5G deployments.

    Chinese engineers have already built a ‘5G smart town’ near Shanghai, where residents will be able to download TV series, movies or games at an impressive speed of 1.7GB per second.

    China has named Wuzhen the country's first '5G town' which has which boasts super-fast internet connection in every corner of the place. Wuzhen (pictured) is an ancient water town

    China has named Wuzhen the country’s first ‘5G town’ which has which boasts super-fast internet connection in every corner of the place. Wuzhen (pictured) is an ancient water town

    5G signal is sent out to the nooks and crannies of the 27-square-mile town of Wuzhen by more than 140 transmitters, which went into service recently.

    The country is also on its way to completing a 5G-equipped high-speed train station, in collaboration with Chinese tech giant Huawei.

    The ‘super-fast’ 5G network will be fitted to the existing Shanghai Hongqiao Railway Station, which is one of Asia’s busiest traffic hubs and handles some 60 million passengers a year .

    Visitors to the station will be able to download a 2GB high-definition film in less than 20 seconds, according to Huawei.

    In comparison, it would take three minutes and 20 seconds to download the same film on a standard 4G network.

    The evolution of the G system started in 1980 with the invention of the mobile phone which allowed for analogue data to be transmitted via phone calls.

    Digital came into play in 1991 with 2G and SMS and MMS capabilities were launched.

    Since then, the capabilities and carrying capacity for the mobile network has increased massively.

    More data can be transferred from one point to another via the mobile network quicker than ever.

    5G is expected to be 100 times faster than the currently used 4G.

    Whilst the jump from 3G to 4G was most beneficial for mobile browsing and working, the step to 5G will be so fast they become almost real-time.

    That means mobile operations will be just as fast as office-based internet connections.

    Potential uses for 5g include:

    • Simultaneous translation of several languages in a party conference call
    • Self-driving cars can stream movies, music and navigation information from the cloud
    • A full length 8GB film can be downloaded in six seconds.

    5G is expected to be so quick and efficient it is possible it could start the end of wired connections.

    By the end of 2020, industry estimates claim 50 billion devices will be connected to 5G.

    The evolution of from 1G to 5G. The predicted speed of 5G is more than 1Gbps – 1,000 times greater than the existing speed of 4G and could be implemented in laptops of the future

    Source: www.dailymail.co.uk

  • Lockdown: I’m left with GHC10, no food for my family – Man cries out

    A man has shared a touching story of what he and his family are currently experiencing after the government placed parts of the country under lockdown as part of measures to contain the spread of the coronavirus pandemic.

    Currently, people in Greater Accra, Tema, Kasoa and Greater Kumasi have had their movements restricted by the President, Nana Akufo-Addo for a period of 14days.

    The man, whose identity cannot be revealed has earnestly asked the President to cut short the lockdown period as according to him, “some of us cannot go the two weeks restrictions”.

    He said the only money left on him as a family man with wife and children is GHC10.00 without gas, foodstuffs or snacks.

    “Am left with GHC10 with no gas, no foodstuffs, no snacks for the kids. My little son is ill and I don’t even know what to do. We are hustlers”, he said.

    According to him, his GHC600.00 monthly salary is yet to hit his account and all efforts by his wife to also go to the market to reach out to her customers to raise some money to support the family has proved futile due to the lockdown.

    “The frustration is just too much to bear”, he sadly revealed.

    Below is the man’s full story:

     

    Source: ghanaguardian.com

  • Apply for jobs – MoH to 2017 batch of graduate nurses and midwives

    The Ministry of Health (MoH) is recruiting 2017 trained Diploma and Degree Nurses and Midwives from accredited public and private health training institutions.

    The process starts on Tuesday, 14 April 2020.

    The deadline for submission of application is Friday 15 May 2020.

    Qualified nurses and midwives are to apply on the MoH online application portal by logging in onto https://hr.moh.gov.gh and follow the instructions to select the preferred agency under the ministry for posting.

    The 2017 batch of unemployed nurses and midwives have been staging a series of demonstrations to mount pressure on the government for employment.

    The leadership of the group were arrested in October 2019 for picketing the MoH.

     

    Source: classfmonline.com

  • Follow coronavirus protocols religiously – Ursula Owusu to constituents

    Member of Parliament for Ablekuma West Constituency, Ursula Owusu-Ekuful has urged her constituents to religiously follow the partial lockdown directives issued by President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo.

    According to the legislator, matters concerning Coronavirus is paramount to her heart, the reason she’s calling on them to prioritize their safety and steadily follow the laid down protocols.

    The Communications Minister on Sunday, April 5, 2020, toured her constituency to assess how her constituents were adhering to the ‘partial lockdown’ directives issued by President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo.

    At the tour, the minister educated her constituents about how deadly the Coronavirus disease is.

    She added that the government will only be successful in curbing the spread of the global pandemic if citizens comply with the laid down protocols.

    “I encourage my constituents to religiously follow the social distancing rules and observe all safety precautions outlined in fighting this pandemic.” The minister reiterated.

    On the back of that, she donated food items and other essentials to the aged to help them survive the lockdown period.

     

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • Men wash their hands much less often than women and that matters more than ever

    Handwashing with soap and warm water for 20 seconds — along with staying home and standing six feet apart from others — is the best weapon we have against the novel coronavirus that has infected almost 800,000 people around the world.

    However, there’s one big yet little discussed difference when it comes to this essential personal hygiene habit: Women are hands down better handwashers than men.

    Years of surveys, observations and research have found that women are more likely to wash their hands, use soap and scrub for a longer period of time than men after using the restroom. However, there’s still a surprisingly large portion of both sexes who don’t wash their hands at all.

    People lie about washing their hands

    Researchers have had to come up with clever ways to collect this data, since most people will tell you that they think handwashing after using the bathroom is important. That’s even if they don’t actually do it.

    Carl Borchgrevink, director of the School of Hospitality at Michigan State University in East Lansing, takes this kind of survey data with a pinch of salt.

    “If you’re at a restroom at an airport, for example, and when you come out someone [asks] you ‘Did you wash your hands?’ And what are you going to say? Yes, of course,” said Borchgrevink.

    When researchers only ask about people’s handwashing habits, “we found that the data that people were reporting seemed to be too high,” he said.

    To dig deeper into what people really do after using the bathroom, Borchgrevink tasked 12 research assistants at Michigan State University with the job of surreptitiously hanging out in four different restrooms on and off campus to record what 3,749 men and women actually did. The results of the 2013 study were shocking to the researchers.

    Few people wash their hands correctly

    Some 15% of men didn’t wash their hands at all, compared with 7% of women. When they did wash their hands, only 50% of men used soap, compared with 78% of women.

    Overall, only 5% of people who used the bathroom washed their hands long enough to kill the germs that can cause infections.

    A bigger study published in 2009 that used more high tech methods at a busy highway rest stop in the UK was equally, if not more, damning.

    With the use of wireless devices to record how many people entered the restroom and used the pumps of the soap dispensers, researchers were able to collect data on almost 200,000 restroom trips over a three-month period.

    The found that only 31% of men and 65% of women washed their hands with soap.

    It’s a big gap — clearly twice as many women as men were washing their hands,” said Susan Michie, health psychology professor and director of the Centre for Behaviour Change at the Department of Clinical, Educational and Health Psychology at University College London.

    “Another interesting result was that the more people were in the toilet area the more they were likely to wash their hands,” said Michie, who was an author of the study. “If there were no people around, people tended to zap out with no one noticing.”

    There’s little to suggest that men in the UK and US are unsual in their handwashing (or lack thereof).

    A review published on the subject in 2016 looked at research from dozens of different countries, and found that women were 50% more likely than men to practice, or increase, protective behavior like proper hand-washing, mask-wearing and surface cleaning in the context of an epidemic, like flu.

    Why is there a gender gap?

    There’s been far less research done on why there is such a gap between the sexes when it comes to hand-washing. Michie said it was likely socially programmed behavior, not genetic.

    “Women are more focused on care than men — childcare, household care, personal care,” she said.

    Similarly, Borchgrevink said that while his study didn’t look at why men didn’t wash their hands as much as women, he suggested that it could be down to a sense that men were too macho to fear germs.

    “We did talk to some of (the men) and ask, ‘why didn’t wash your hands?’” Borchgrevink said. “And they would look at us indignantly and say, ‘I’m clean, I don’t need to wash my hands.’ They had a sense of invincibility.”

    Nancy Tomes, a history professor at Stony Brook University and the author of “The Gospel of Germs: Men, Women and the Microbe in American Life,” says the hand-washing gender gap has a long history dating back to when the germ theory of disease took hold in the public consciousness in the Victorian era — that certain diseases were caused by microorganisms that invaded the body rather than bad air or miasma.

    “This changed the definition of cleanliness,” she said, and women especially were told their family’s health depended on the highest level of hygiene.

    “Of course, there had been definitions of what was clean and unclean before the germ theory came along, but it injected a level of specificity and also upped the ante. If you made a mistake in your cleanliness, you could die, your family could die.

    “And that message of, ‘make a mistake and your kid will die’ resonates like a megaphone in the lives of mothers (even today),” Tomes said.

    Motivating men to wash their hands

    Michie’s research at the highway rest stop in the UK looked at what kind of public health messaging would improve handwashing rates by using a sign that illuminated with different messages as people entered the restroom.

    While the findings weren’t conclusive, the study suggested that men and women responded to different types of messaging around handwashing. Messages that triggered disgust (“Soap it off or eat it later”) resonated with men, while women were more motivated to wash by messages that activated knowledge, such as “Water doesn’t kill germs, soap does.”

    Michie said she wasn’t aware of any public health campaigns that had focused their efforts on men in light of their handwashing lapses, but said this was the perfect moment to try.

    “It’s an excellent idea to target men. It could be really helpful. If women knew men weren’t doing it, they’d get on to them.”

    Source: ww.graphic.com.gh

  • Coronavirus: Tech firms summoned over ‘crackpot’ 5G conspiracies

    The culture secretary is to order social media companies to be more aggressive in their response to conspiracy theories linking 5G networks to the coronavirus pandemic.

    Oliver Dowden plans to hold virtual meetings with representatives from several tech firms next week to discuss the matter.

    It follows a number of 5G masts apparently being set on fire.

    The issue will test the companies’ commitments to free speech.

    Earlier in the week, blazes were reported at masts in Birmingham, Liverpool and Melling in Merseyside.

    A spokesman for Vodafone’s mobile network told the BBC there had been a total of four further incidents over the past 24 hours at both its own sites and those shared with O2, but did not identify the locations.

    “We have received several reports of criminal damage to phone masts and abuse of telecoms engineers apparently inspired by crackpot conspiracy theories circulating online,” a spokeswoman for the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport told the BBC.

    “Those responsible for criminal acts will face the full force of the law.

    “We must also see social media companies acting responsibly and taking much swifter action to stop nonsense spreading on their platforms which encourages such acts.”

    DCMS has yet to confirm which tech companies are being summoned.

    ‘Complete rubbish’

    False theories are being spread on smaller platforms such as Nextdoor, Pinterest and the petitions site Change.org as well as larger ones including Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and TikTok.

    Scientists have said the idea of a connection between Covid-19 and 5G is “complete rubbish” and biologically impossible.

    Several of the platforms have already taken steps to address the problem but have not banned discussion of the subject outright.

    Pinterest, for example, limits its search results for coronavirus and related terms to showing pinned information from recognised health organisations but does not have a comparable restriction for 5G.

    Facebook said it had also removed a number of groups that were encouraging attacks on 5G masts.

    However, a post entitled “burn baby burn – it’s begun”, which accompanied videos of telecoms equipment ablaze, was only taken down about six hours after it was flagged to the company’s press office.

    YouTube bans some types of bogus posts about Covid-19, but classes conspiracy theories linking the virus to 5G as “borderline content”. As a result, it said it tries to reduce the frequency its algorithms recommend them, but does not delete the videos from its platform.

    A spokeswoman for the Google-owned service said it intended to “evaluate the impact” of this approach. It did, however, remove one video flagged by the BBC that featured threatening language.

    Change.org said its open nature allowed anyone to set up a petition about any issue they cared about, but added they must comply with its guidelines to stay online.

    “We have removed a number of petitions making unsubstantiated health claims about 5G from the platform,” a spokeswoman added.

    Vodafone has said the attacks are “now a matter of national security”.

    “It beggars belief that some people should want to harm the very networks that are providing essential connectivity to the emergency services, the NHS, and rest of the country during this difficult lockdown period,” wrote UK chief executive Nick Jeffery.

    “It also makes me angry to learn that some people have been abusing our engineers as they go about their business.

    “Online stories connecting the spread of coronavirus to 5G are utterly baseless. Please don’t share them on social media – fake news can have serious consequences.”

    The GSMA – a trade body that represents the wider mobile industry – also urged social media and other content-hosting providers to “accelerate their efforts to remove fake news” relating to the problem.

    The campaign against 5G has been flourishing on social media for the last year.

    Facebook in particular has been full of groups claiming the technology is dangerous, with many of them also pushing anti-vaccine messages.

    Until recently, apart from the odd fact-checking message alongside posts, the companies have done little to combat this trend. Neither Twitter nor YouTube, for instance, has an option in their reporting systems to flag misinformation.

    Even on Friday, complaints to Facebook moderators about a group that appeared to encourage arson attacks on 5G masts received replies saying the page did “not violate our community standards” – although after the BBC contacted Facebook’s press office it was taken down.

    In normal times, social media platforms are very reluctant to curb what they regard as an essential part of their mission: giving people the right to free expression, however outlandish or unscientific their views.

    But these are not normal times.

    The government is effectively waging a war against a deadly virus, and keyworkers looking after vital infrastructure are facing abuse, possibly inspired by these social media campaigners.

    That means there is now intense pressure on the likes of Facebook, YouTube, TikTok and Twitter to combat what one minister has called “dangerous nonsense” – and they will want to be seen to be acting responsibly, even if some of their users cry censorship.

    Source: bbc.com

  • PLAYBACK: Government gives COVID-19 update, support for poor and vulnerable, transport services

    Government will this morning update the nation on what it is doing to support the poor and vulnerable as parts of the country observe a 14-day lockdown to curb the spread of Covid-19.

    Led by Kojo Oppong Nkrumah, the Information Minister, he will also speak to issues of water relief services as well as give details on transport services in Greater Accra, Kumasi and Tema.

    Watch the live stream below:

  • Italian nurse strangles doctor girlfriend, claims she gave him coronavirus

    A nurse who strangled his doctor girlfriend told police he did it because she gave him coronavirus.

    Newly qualified medic Lorena Quaranta, 27, was found dead by cops after her partner Antonio De Pace called them to say he had murdered her.

    Both had been working in a local hospital in Messina, on the Italian island of Sicily, and were drafted in to help out with the coronavirus pandemic.

    Cops burst into their apartment after De Pace, 28, called to confess that he had murdered Lorena.

    Paramedics were called when the police found him on the floor of his apartment having cut his wrists.

    Lorena’s colleagues at the hospital were able to save her boyfriend’s life.

    De Pace was later taken to local prosecutor Maurizio de Lucia where he told stunned investigators: “I killed her because she gave me coronavirus.”

    A police source said: “She was a doctor who was working hard to save others. It’s such a tragedy.”

    Tests were last night being carried out on both but early indications were neither Lorena or De Pace had the virus.

    Just days before she died, Lorena had told of her anguish at how 41 doctors had died during Italy’s coronavirus epidemic that has left more than 12,000 dead.

    Posting a news report on the figures which highlighted how doctors had died from lack of personal protection equipment, she wrote online: “Unacceptable”.

    She added: “Now more than ever we need to demonstrate responsibility and love for life. You must show respect for yourselves, your families and the country.

    ”You must think and remember those that dedicate their lives daily to looking after our sick.

    “Let’s stick together everyone staying at home. Let’s avoid the next one falling sick is a loved one or ourselves.”

    Last month De Pace had posted a tribute to her after she qualified and said: “To reach our dreams you have to work hard with determination and you are proof.

    “I wish you to keep chasing your dreams, always live the life you always imagined. Well done!

    “Congratulations on your brilliant graduation doctor.”

    Source: www.graphic.com.gh

  • Ahmed Adams kicks against salary cuts

    Berekum Chelsea defender Ahmed Adams says implementing salary cuts for Ghanaian premier league players is unadvisable as it will affect them and their respective families.

    The impact of coronavirus on the global sports economy means clubs will have to take measures to cut down on expenses. Top European clubs like Juventus and Barcelona have all implemented salary cut measures to survive.

    In Ghana the debate continues as to whether local clubs can also do same. Ahmed Adams is the latest to add his voice to the discourse.

    According to him, slashing the scrimpy salary of the Ghanaian premier league player will lead to drastic effects on him and his family and should not be encouraged.

    He told local station Nhyira FM “the pay cut is a good idea in some way but the players will be affected a lot since we also have families to take care of. At this moment the price of gari has even increased”

    “How much are our salaries even? None of the clubs in Ghana even pay more than €1000” he noted.

    Ghana has so far recorded 214 cases of CoronaVirus with 5 deaths confirmed.

    Football activities have been halted as a result of the outbreak of the disease.

    Source: footballmadeinghana.com

  • Coronavirus: New UK car registrations plunge by more than 40%

    New car registrations for March saw a steeper fall than during the financial crisis, according to the motor industry.

    Data from the Society for Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT) show a drop of 44.4% compared with last year.

    March is usually one of the strongest months of the year for the car industry.

    But the Covid-19 outbreak has taken a heavy toll, forcing potential customers to stay at home for the past fortnight.

    New number plate registrations are released in March and September every year.

    But last month new registrations dropped by about 200,000 compared with the same period last year.

    They fell to the lowest level in March for more than two decades.

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

    The coronavirus outbreak has also halted car production.

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

    In total, 254,684 new cars were registered in March according to the SMMT, a fall of 203,370 compared with March 2019.

    Demand from private buyers and larger fleets fell by 40.4% and 47.4% respectively.

    At the same time, the numbers of petrol and diesel cars reaching the country’s roads were down 49.9% and 61.9% respectively.

    However, registrations of battery electric vehicles rose almost threefold to 11,694 units, accounting for 4.6% of the market, while plug-in hybrids grew by 38%. Hybrid electric vehicles fell 7.1%.

    The SMMT said it now expected car sales of 1.73 million in 2020, 25% lower than last year.

    ‘Stark realisation’

    Larger falls in new car registrations have been reported in other European countries, with Italy down -85%, France -72% and Spain down -69% in March, the SMMT said.

    SMMT chief executive Mike Hawes said, “With the country locked down in crisis mode for a large part of March, this decline will come as no surprise.

    “Despite this being the lowest March since we moved to the bi-annual plate change system, it could have been worse, had the significant advanced orders placed for the new 20 plate not been delivered in the early part of the month.

    “We should not, however, draw long-term conclusions from these figures, other than this being a stark realisation of what happens when economies grind to a halt.”

    Mr Hawes added that it was uncertain how long the market would remain stalled, but it would reopen and the products would be there.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: ‘Under-25s and women financially worst-hit’ – IFS

    Young workers, the worst-paid and women will be most affected economically by the coronavirus, a study has found.

    A “remarkable concentration” of those groups are employed in sectors that have shut down, the Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) discovered.

    It said its research raised serious worries” about the longer-term effect of the crisis on young people especially and inequality.

    Those with the lowest earnings were particularly hard hit, the IFS said.

    The research comes as the UK’s confidence in the economy has fallen to its lowest in 12 years as the COVID-19 crisis drains consumer confidence.

    The last time such a decline happened was during the 2008 economic downturn.

    Market research firm GfK’s consumer confidence gauge dropped to -34, a decline of 25 points compared to just two weeks earlier.

    It suggested record grocery sales were not enough to counteract the “stark” outlook for the retail industry.

    Two problems

    The IFS found that the virus lockdown was likely to hit younger workers the hardest, being nearly two-and-a-half times more likely to work in a shutdown area.

    But it also found that the virus was likely to have a bigger effect on women’s earnings because of a disproportionate amount of women working in retail and hospitality, with 17% of female employees working in shutdown sectors compared with 13% of men.

    However, it was also found that the majority of the affected younger workers and lower earners live with parents, or other household members, whose earnings are not directly affected by the lockdown.

    In mitigation, “in the short run, many will have the cushion of the incomes of parents or other household members,” it said.

    IFS director Paul Johnson told the Today programme said young people aged 25 years old and under tend to work in the leisure, retail and hospitality sectors, which have been heavily impacted by the COVID-19 lockdown.

    Looking ahead to the future, he said there were two particular problems facing young people.

    “There are those young people who are in those jobs at the moment or were in those jobs before COVID hit, and if they’re not able to get back into work then there may be longer term consequences for them.

    “We know that periods of unemployment when you’re young can have long-term effects,” he said.

    The second problem is younger people coming into the labour market after finishing school or university. Mr Johnson said they are making their entry “in probably the most difficult time in living memory”.

    “Traditionally you’re going to be looking to start work in September, [but] now couldn’t be a worse moment to be doing it.”

    ‘Falling confidence’

    GfK asked people in mid-March and at the end of March how confident they were about a number of areas such as personal finance and the general economic situation.

    Data showed that many are now expecting their personal and household’s financial position to worsen over the next 12 months.

    “Our falling confidence in our personal financial situation and the wider economy reflects the new concern for many across the UK,” said Joe Staton, GfK’s Client Strategy Director.

    The UK’s supermarkets had their best month on record as shoppers rushed to stockpile ahead of the coronavirus lock-down.

    Market data provider Kantar revealed last week that overall sales were up 20.6% in March.

    It said that the average household spent £63 more than usual during this period.

    However, Mr Staton warned the latest data shows that consumers plan on withholding from making many unnecessary purchases during the current period of economic uncertainty.

    He suggested it could spell disaster for many high-street chains which are already under pressure due to the forced closure of stores.

    Universal Credit spike

    “Despite record grocery sales, and recent peaks for purchases of freezers, TVs and home office equipment as people prepared for a long period in the home, the Major Purchase Index is down 50 points – a stark picture for some parts of the retail industry in the short to medium term,” added Mr Staton.

    It was claimed this week that that 20% of small businesses could fold in April due to the collapse in consumer demand, despite unprecedented government intervention to support jobs.

    The Department for Work and Pensions revealed a record number of people had applied for universal credit benefits in the past fortnight as a result of the coronavirus pandemic.

    It said 950,000 successful applications for the payment were made between 16 March, when people were advised to work from home, and the end of the month.

    The department said it would normally expect around 100,000 claims in a two week period.

    Meanwhile, thousands of people are calling on the government to close a loophole in its plans to help workers during the coronavirus outbreak.

    Chancellor Rishi Sunak announced help for companies to pay staff – but only those on the payroll on 28 February.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Parliament approves GH¢6.7 billion Supplementary Appropriation for 2019

    Parliament on Friday evening approved GH¢6.370 billion to be issued from the Consolidated Fund, and granted authorisation for withdrawal from other funds to provide additional financing for Government operations during the 2019 Financial Year.

    This follows the passage of the Supplementary Appropriation Bill, 2020.

    Finance Minister Ken Ofori-Atta moved the motion for the passage of the Bill, which was seconded by Minority Leader, Haruna Iddrisu.

    According to a report of the Finance Committee on the Bill, when passed, the Bill shall “be deemed to have come into effect on the 29th day of July, 2019.”

    The Committee said the introduction of the Bill in 2020 to provide for the appropriation of the sum approved as supplementary estimate in 2019 was in pursuant of provisions in the 1992 Constitution of Ghana.

    In a background to the report on the proposal for the Bill, the House learned that after the approval of the 2019 Budget, there arose significant domestic and global developments, which posed fiscal risks to the economy.

    Those developments mainly related to the upward adjustments of interest payments resulting from the effect of a higher exchange rate than the programmed exchange rate and a higher domestic borrowing in the first half of the year as well as an upward adjustment in Goods and Services in the second half of the year to meet critical security expenses and other expenses.

    “Additionally, the crystallisation of contingent liabilities of the energy sector in respect of take-or-pay contract obligations with Independent Power Producers increased the requirements for external amortization above the amount provided for in the Budget for the Year 2019,” the report said.

    “These developments led to supplementary estimates being approved to support government operations for the year,” it added.

    The report said much of the supplementary vote for 2019 were channelled into the energy sector, with the rest going into Goods and Services.

    Source: GNA

  • Myron Boadu on Barcelona’s radar

    Barcelona are among a host of top clubs linked with Ghana and AZ Alkmaar striker Myron Boadu as Quique Setién weighs up his options in attack heading into 2020/21.

    Boadu has been one of the young players in Europe that has made the headlines this season.

    He has scored 20 goals and provided eight assists in 39 games so far in all competitions for AZ Alkmaar.

    His fine form in the Dutch Eredivisie this term has reportedly attracted interest from Arsenal, Barcelona Real Madrid, AC Milan and Ajax.

    Barcelona are looking at signing the 19-year-old together with two promising Dutch prodigies namely Calvin Stengs of AZ Alkmaar and PSV’s Donyell Malen as a cheaper alternative to other marque signings like Inter Milan star Lautaro Martinez.

    The Spanish champions already have a Dutch player in their squad, Frenkie de Jong who joined the club from Ajax last summer.

    Neymar is Barcelona’s main interest this summer but Barça are juggling several options in the search for a star player next season.

    Source: footballghana.com

  • Sister Deborah starts ‘Sweet Ex Challenge’ to spite Fella Makafui

    Model and Musician Deborah Vanessah also known as Sister Derby has started sweet ex challenge on social media meant to spite Fella Makafui

    This comes after her wish to Medikal on his birthday caused Fella Makafui to share a photo of her wearing the ring to prove she has control over the man.

    This comes after her wish to Medikal on his birthday caused Fella Makafui to share a photo of her wearing the ring to prove she has control over the man.

    But Sister Deborah reacting to what Fella Makfui did, the model has started a challenge on social media.

    According to her, she has recorded an acapella which producers are supposed to produce a beat for.

    The winner of the challenge will be given GHC 1000.

    Source: MyNewsGh.com

  • George Pell: Court quashes cardinal’s sexual abuse convictions

    Cardinal George Pell has been freed from jail after Australia’s highest court overturned his convictions for child sexual abuse.

    The ex-Vatican treasurer, 78, was the most senior Catholic figure ever jailed for such crimes.

    In 2018, a jury found he abused two boys in Melbourne in the 1990s.

    But the High Court of Australia quashed that verdict on Tuesday, bringing an immediate end to Cardinal Pell’s six-year jail sentence.

    The Australian cleric had maintained his innocence since he was charged by police in June 2017.

    His case rocked the Catholic Church, where he had been one of the Pope’s most senior advisers.

    A full bench of seven judges ruled unanimously in Cardinal Pell’s favour, finding that the jury had not properly considered all the evidence presented at the trial.

    It was the cardinal’s final legal challenge after his conviction was upheld by a lower court last year.

    “I have consistently maintained my innocence while suffering from a serious injustice,” Cardinal Pell said in a statement on Tuesday before he left prison.

    Why was Pell jailed?

    In December 2018, a jury found him guilty of sexually abusing two 13-year-old choir boys in private rooms of St Patrick’s Cathedral in the mid-90s – when the cleric was Archbishop of Melbourne.

    The convictions included one count of sexual penetration and four counts of committing indecent acts.

    The trial heard testimony from a man alleged to be the sole surviving victim. Dozens of other witnesses provided alibis and other evidence.

    Cardinal Pell appealed against the verdict in Victoria’s Court of Appeal last year, but three judges upheld the decision by a 2-1 majority.

    Why did his appeal succeed this time?

    The cardinal argued that the jury relied too heavily on one person’s evidence. The judges agreed, saying the jury did not properly assess other information.

    “The jury, acting rationally on the whole of the evidence, ought to have entertained a doubt as to the applicant’s guilt,” said the court in its judgement.

    What’s been the reaction?

    Cardinal Pell said an injustice had been “remedied”, and said he held “no ill will to my accuser”.

    “I do not want my acquittal to add to the hurt and bitterness so many feel; there is certainly hurt and bitterness enough,” he said in a statement before.

    “However my trial was not a referendum on the Catholic Church; nor a referendum on how Church authorities in Australia dealt with the crime of paedophilia in the Church.”

    The father of the deceased choir boy was in shock at the decision, his lawyer said.

    “He says he no longer has faith in our country’s criminal justice system,” said Lisa Flynn.

    Victoria Police said it respected the court’s decision, adding: “Victoria Police remains committed to investigating sexual assault offences and providing justice for victims no matter how many years have passed.”

    Who is George Pell?

    Cardinal Pell was among the highest-ranking figures in the Church’s global hierarchy.

    Made a cardinal in 2003, he was summoned to Rome in 2014 to help clean up the Vatican’s finances.

    He forged a reputation as a disciplined Church leader who held strict conservative views against same-sex marriage, abortion and contraception.

    Source: bbc.com

  • UN Security Council expected to hold first coronavirus talks Thursday

    The UN Security Council will on Thursday hold its first meeting on the coronavirus pandemic by video conference after weeks of divisions among its five permanent members, diplomats said Monday.

    Last week, exasperated by the back-and-forth that has paralyzed the council, including between China and the United States, nine of the 10 non-permanent members formally requested a meeting featuring a presentation by Secretary-General Antonio Guterres.

    “Meeting confirmed for Thursday,” one diplomat told AFP on condition of anonymity. It was to be held behind closed doors at 3:00 pm (1900 GMT).

    It’s not yet clear what form the meeting will take, or what could be accomplished: will the member nations show unity in the fact of a global crisis and a willingness to cooperate, or proceed with a settling of scores?

    The New York-based Security Council has been teleworking since March 12 as the new coronavirus spreads rapidly in the city.

    Last week, the UN General Assembly adopted by consensus a resolution calling for “international cooperation” and “multilateralism” in the fight against COVID-19, the first text to come out of the world body since the outbreak began.

    Russia has tried to oppose the text, but only four other countries backed its parallel draft.

    The United States has long demanded that any meeting or text specify that the virus first emerged in China, to Beijing’s consternation.

    Diplomats said Monday that opposition to holding a council meeting was coming from the Chinese and the Russians.

    Moscow and Beijing say they only believe the council should consider the pandemic when they are talking about a country experiencing conflict, the diplomats said.

    According to several diplomats, France been trying since last week to organize a video conference with leaders of the five permanent member countries to try to iron out differences, and would prefer that is done before a meeting of the 15-member council.

    Along with France, the permanent members are Britain, China, Russia and the US.

    The nine countries that requested the meeting are Germany, which spearheaded the effort, Belgium, the Dominican Republic, Estonia, Indonesia, Niger, St Vincent and the Grenadines, Tunisia and Vietnam.

    The final non-permanent member, South Africa, did not support the move, saying the council’s remit was peace and security, not health and economic issues.

    For those nine countries, it’s “really irresponsible to block” a council meeting and to “paralyze” the institution since the start of the crisis, a diplomat from one of them said.

    Source: France24

  • Oil prices rebound on hopes for output cut deal

    Oil prices rebounded Tuesday on fresh hopes an OPEC-led meeting this week will reach an agreement to reduce oversupply and shore up the market.

    Prices have fallen sharply since expectations for a quick deal to cut output levels were dashed, but the rescheduling to Thursday of a meeting of major crude producers boosted sentiment.

    US benchmark West Texas Intermediate was up 3.83 percent to $27.08 a barrel in Asian morning trade.

    A barrel of Brent crude, the international benchmark, was trading 2.81 percent higher at $33.98.

    Prices fell to 18-year lows last week as the market wallowed in oversupply arising from a price war between Saudi Arabia and Russia, which have ramped up production.

    “Prices recovered some of the early losses, as both Russia and Saudi Arabia suggested they would be willing to cut production but only if the rest of the world followed suit,” ANZ Bank said in a note.

    “The stumbling block appears to be the US, which is reluctant to join an agreement.”

    But with US Energy Secretary Dan Brouillette holding talks with Saudi Arabia and Russia, “the market is hopeful of some sort of agreement,” the bank added.

    OPEC is the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries of which Saudi Arabia is the biggest producer, while Russia is not an OPEC member.

    “Ultimately there is hope that cooler heads will prevail, and producers will reconcile and formulate a response that puts a floor under oil prices,” said AxiCorp global market strategist Stephen Innes.

    “Still, the challenge remains to the extent which producers are willing to cut.”

    Source: France24

  • Public urged to restock food from community markets

    Mohammed Adjei Sowah, the Mayor of Accra, has appealed to the public to desist from overcrowding market centers within the Accra metropolis all in the quest of restocking food.

    Rather, he urged them to restock food from markets within their communities to ensure the social distancing protocol outlined were adhered to in a bid to stem the COVID-19 pandemic.

    Mr Sowah made the appeal in a media briefing after he accompanied the Military hierarchy, led by Lieutenant-General Obed Boamah Akwa, Chief of Defence Staff to tour some markets and principal streets in Accra being cleaned to assess the progress of work.

    The Mayor said he was baffled by the many who continued to travel several distances to some major markets in the city centre, particularly to Agbogbloshie, a major foodstuff market to purchase foodstuffs even though they could do so within their localities to avoid overcrowding.

    “There are markets in almost every community, but people for one reason or the other would like to come to Agbogbloshie. If you want to buy tomatoes you can still get tomatoes in your community markets, any foodstuff you want is available in your community markets.”

    The Mayor, therefore, urged the security at the various checkpoints to ensure strict enforcement of the lockdown directive, including; discouraging people from coming into the city center to avoid any unforeseen circumstances.

    “That is the essence of the lockdown so when an exemption is given for the food it does not mean that you should travel from Amasaman to Agbogbloshie to come and buy foodstuff and go away because from Amasaman to Accra there are lots of markets. We are activating all community markets so people can go there,”he added.

    On the clean-up exercise, Mr Sowah said the Assembly was leveraging on the opportunity presented it by the COVID-19 outbreak to improve the sanitation situation in the metropolis.

    He said aside the desilting of choked drains and the cleaning of all public open places, the Assembly was also encouraging households to bring out their waste for proper disposal.

    The exercise is being organised by the Ministry of Sanitation, through the Accra Metropolitan Assembly in collaboration with the Ghana Armed Forces, Zoomlion Ghana and other sanitation partners.

    The three-day exercise is to rid open public places in the capital of filth.
    Colonel Eric Aggrey-Quarshie, the Director of Public Relations at the Ghana Armed Forces said the exercise was a reinforcement of the services’ relentless contribution to national development.

    The Ghana Armed Forces has deployed 400 all rank officers to participate in the exercise, which started on Friday, to rid public places in the metropolis of filth.

    He urged city authorities to sustain the cleaning activities to maximise the health benefits and ensure food and public safety.

    On Monday, March 30, some parts of the country including; Accra, Tema, Kumasi and Kasoa in the Awutu-Senya East Municipality, entered into 14 days partial lockdown as part of measures to contain the spread of COVID-19.

    Source: GNA

  • China reports no new coronavirus deaths for first time since January

    China on Tuesday reported no new coronavirus deaths for the first time since it started publishing figures in January, the National Health Commission said.

    Cases in mainland China have been dwindling since March, but the country faces a second wave of infections brought in from overseas, with health officials reporting nearly 1,000 imported cases in total.

    Mainland China had 32 new confirmed cases of the coronavirus on Monday, down from 39 cases a day earlier, the National Health Commission said.

    All of the 32 confirmed cases involved travellers arriving from overseas, compared with 38 imported cases a day earlier. The overall number of imported infections so far stands at 983, the health authority said.

    Imported cases and asymptomatic patients have become China’s chief concern after draconian containment measures succeeded in slashing the overall infection rate.

    China has shut its borders to foreigners as the virus spread globally, though most imported cases have involved Chinese nationals returning from overseas. International flights have been slashed to around 3,000 a day in April from the tens of thousands previously.

    It has also started testing all international arrivals for the virus this month.

    The total number of confirmed cases in mainland China stood at 81,740 as of Monday, according to the authority.

    China reported 30 new asymptomatic cases on Monday, nine of which involved incoming travellers. Of the new asymptomatic cases, 18 were in central Hubei province.

    As of Monday, 1,033 asymptomatic patients were under medical observation.

    The National Health Commission reported no new deaths in Wuhan, capital of Hubei and epicentre of the outbreak in China, for the first time since the outbreak started.

    Wuhan is due to allow people to leave the city on Wednesday for the first time since it was locked down on Jan. 23 to curb the spread of the epidemic.

    To date, 81,740 people have been infected and 3,331 have been killed by the deadly virus in China, with the vast majority in Wuhan and the surrounding Hubei province.

    Meanwhile, the global death toll from the pandemic has surpassed 70,000 as the virus ravages numerous countries in Europe and the US.

    Source: France24

  • Coronavirus severs Brazilian Amazon from world

    Deep in the Amazon rainforest in northern Brazil, where rivers are the only highways, the coronavirus pandemic is sharply limiting boat traffic, leaving villages even more cut off from the world than before.

    Canoes, motor boats and ferries are the cars, trucks and buses of the Amazon, bringing people and goods to remote communities that can only be reached by river, sometimes with a journey of more than a week.

    But because of the pandemic, authorities in Amazon state have restricted river traffic to essential travel, seeking to stop the spread of the virus in a region that could be particularly vulnerable to it.

    Cargo transport is operating normally, but passenger transport is restricted to exceptional circumstances such as medical emergencies and essential services like paramedics and police, said Jerfeson Caldas, regional coordinator for national health agency Anvisa.

    Even those trips are bound by special rules: boats can only operate at 40 percent of their passenger capacity, and must supply water, soap and hand sanitizer.

    The restrictions amount to the jungle equivalent of the isolation measures now in place for around half the world’s population.

    “Amazonas depends on rivers for more than 85 percent of the transport we survive on. Unfortunately, people here are now living a sad reality because of this crisis,” said Alessandra Martins Pontes, a transportation planning expert at Amazonas Federal University.

    Hammock distancing

    Passengers usually make the trip on “regionals,” big diesel-engine ferries that replaced the steam-powered paddle boats of the 19th century.

    Travelers typically sleep on hammocks they bring themselves, slung one above the other like bunk beds.

    But not in the time of COVID-19. The authorities have ordered all hammocks be placed a minimum of two meters (yards) apart.

    Amazonas is the biggest state in Brazil, a densely forested expanse of more than 1.5 million square kilometers (600,000 square miles), equal to about the size of Peru and Ecuador combined.

    It has registered 532 cases of the new coronavirus so far — mostly in the state capital, Manaus — with 19 deaths.

    The fear is what will happen if the virus progresses into the rainforest, particularly the indigenous communities that live there.

    Indigenous peoples are particularly vulnerable to imported diseases, as they have been historically isolated from germs against which much of the world has developed immunity.

    Remote indigenous communities have been decimated in the past by diseases including smallpox and flu.

    Authorities reported last week that a first indigenous woman had tested positive for the new coronavirus in Amazonas, a health worker from the Kokama ethnic group who came into contact with an infected doctor.

    Natural isolation

    The transport restrictions affect hundreds of families, indigenous or not, that live from fishing and gathering in stilt-house villages along the Amazon and its tributaries.

    “Movement is very limited now. Outsiders can’t even go to the protected nature reserves” where most of those families live, said Edervan Vieira, a technical adviser to an association of farmers and fishermen in Carauari, a week’s trip upriver by boat from Manaus.

    No COVID-19 cases have been reported here yet. But he says he worries about the economic effects of the transport restrictions on families that depend on sales of their surplus produce to buy whatever they cannot make locally.

    “We have what we need to survive here: fruit, fish, cassava flour,” said Maria Cunha, 26, who lives in the protected nature reserve of Medio Jurua.

    “But living in the forest also brings its challenges…. What worries us is if we have to go to the city for an emergency, because that’s when we would risk bringing the virus back home.”

    Source: France24

  • Spanish deaths fall for fourth consecutive day

    The daily number of coronavirus deaths has fallen in Spain for a fourth consecutive day, boosting hopes the country has passed the outbreak’s peak.

    Monday’s increase of 637 deaths means 13,055 have died in total.

    Spain’s population has been living under severe restrictions for more than three weeks, with lockdown measures now extended toward the end of April.

    The nation has more than 135,000 confirmed cases, the most in Europe, but new infections have been slowing.

    Spanish officials plan to widen coronavirus testing to include those without symptoms.

    “It is important to know who is contaminated to be able to gradually lift Spanish citizens’ lockdown,” Foreign Minister Arancha González said in a TV interview.

    Slowing death rates in a number of the worst-hit European countries, including Italy, France and Germany, are raising hope that strict social distancing measures are curbing the spread of Covid-19 – the disease caused by the virus.

    Austria’s chancellor announced on Monday plans to start easing some of the restrictions in place because of the pandemic.

    There have been more than 1.2 million cases and 70,000 deaths confirmed around the world since the virus emerged in China in December, according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Yaa Pono reacts to comments from fans to have a lyrical battle with Strongman

    Uptown energy boss Yaa Pono after calls from his fans and that of Strongman to meet for a lyrical battle, has finally commented on the matter.

    According to Yaa Pono, a battle between him and Strong Empires Strongman would be a very nice idea but he belives people should rather come together and promote Ghana music.

    He shared: “good rappers are hot, but smelling and mockery rap makes battle unfair,,#promote gh music sameway,,,UPNESS album STREAMING live 04 14 20”

    See screenshot below:

    Source: ghpage.com

  • Hydroxychloroquine: Can India help Trump with unproven ‘corona drug’?

    India is reportedly “considering” a request by Donald Trump to release stocks of a drug the US president has called a “game-changer” in the fight against Covid-19.

    Mr Trump called India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Sunday, a day after the country banned the export of hydroxychloroquine, which it manufactures in large quantities.

    The two leaders are on friendly terms, and Mr Trump recently made a high-profile trip to India.

    But is India really in a position to help the US? And does hydroxychloroquine even work against the coronavirus?

    What is hydroxychloroquine? Hydroxychloroquine is very similar to Chloroquine, one of the oldest and best-known anti-malarial drugs.

    But the drug – which can also treat auto-immune diseases like rheumatoid arthritis and lupus – has also attracted attention over the past few decades as a potential antiviral agent.

    President Trump said that the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) had approved it for treating coronavirus, something the organization has denied. Mr Trump later said that it had been approved for “compassionate use” – which means a doctor can give a drug that is yet to be cleared by the government to a patient in a life-threatening condition.

    Doctors are able to prescribe chloroquine in these circumstances as it’s a registered drug.

    So, can India really help President Trump? Hydroxychloroquine could be bought over the counter and is fairly inexpensive. However, its purchase and use has been severely restricted ever since it was named as a possible treatment for Covid-19.

    On Saturday, India banned the export of the drug “without any exception”. The order came even as the number of positive cases of Covid-19 spiked in the country. India has now recorded 3,666 active cases of the virus with more than 100 deaths, according to the latest data released by the ministry of health.

    But now it seems the government could be reconsidering this stance, possibly following Mr Trump’s call to Mr Modi. Local media quoted government sources as saying that a decision on this could be taken as early as Tuesday after considering what domestic requirements could look like in the near future.

    But does India – one of the world’s largest manufacturers of the drug – have the capacity to actually supply other countries as well?

    Yes, according to Ashok Kumar Madan, of the Indian Drug Manufacturer’s association.

    “India definitely has capacity to cater to both global and local markets. Of course, domestic considerations must come first, but we have the capacity,” he told the BBC.

    Mr Madan also denied reports that China had severely limited the export of the active pharmaceutical ingredient (API) that is used to manufacture hydroxychloroquine. He acknowledged that 70% of all the APIs needed by India to manufacture drugs come from China, but said that supplies from China had steadily continued “by both sea and air”.

    But does it work? Many virologists and infectious disease experts have cautioned that the excitement over hydroxychloroquine is premature.

    “Chloroquine seems to block the coronavirus in lab studies. There’s some anecdotal evidence from doctors saying it has appeared to help,” James Gallagher, BBC health correspondent, explained.

    But crucially there have been no complete clinical trials which are important to show how the drug behaves in actual patients, although they are under way in China, the US, UK and Spain.

    Even so, some are sceptical about how successful they will prove to be.

    “If it truly has a dramatic effect on the clinical course of Covid-19 we would already have evidence for that. We don’t, which tells us that hydroxychloroquine, if it even works at all, will likely be shown to have modest effects at best,” Dr Joyeeta Basu, a senior consultant physician, told the BBC.

    Raman R Gangakhedkar, a senior scientist with the Indian Council of Medical Research, said the policy at the moment is that the drug is not to be used by everyone.

    “It is being given to doctors and contacts of lab confirmed cases. When their data will be complied only then a call can be taken whether it should be recommended to everyone,” he told reporters last week.

    Despite the fact trials are yet to conclude, people have begun to self-medicate – with sometimes disastrous consequences.

    There have been multiple reports in Nigeria of people being poisoned from overdoses after people were reportedly inspired by Mr Trump’s enthusiastic endorsement of the drug.

    An article in the Lancet medical journal also warns hydroxychloroquine can have dangerous side-effects if the dose is not carefully controlled.

    This lack of certainty has prompted social media sites like Facebook and Twitter to delete posts that tout it as a cure – even when they are made by world leaders.

    Source: bbc.com

  • IGP, fetish priest arrested over lockdown extortion in Kumasi

    A fetish priest and three others who posed as officers enforcing movement restrictions in Kumasi have been arrested by the police.

    The three are Kingsley Baafi aged 29 alias IGP, Justice Gyan, aged 27 and Eben Kofi Yawson, 35 alias Stone.

    They were picked at the Bantama Market in Kumasi by a team of police officers after they failed to comply with the restriction order imposed by the government.

    The suspects face charges of extortion after they unlawfully arrested and detained one Michael Asamoah in their Toyota Sequoia vehicle with registration number GN 6061-18.

    Though it is not clear why Asamoah was detained by the suspects, Dailymailgh.com gathered that they demanded an amount of ¢100 for flouting the lockdown regulations.

    “They were dressed like police personnel and they had unlawfully arrested and detained the victim who was wearing a boxer shorts in the vehicle and demanded the amount of money before his release”, police documents made available to Dailymailgh.com said.

    He had come out to urinate and was unlawfully arrested in front of his house where the suspects parked their car and was “detained at the back seat of their car”, the report further stated.

    The victim has since been rescued and brought to the Suntreso Police Station where he lodged an official complaint. The suspects have since been detained and assisting police in their investigations.

    The government of Ghana had tightened human traffic as part of measures to prevent the spread of the deadly Coronavirus.

    Dubbed, “Operation Covid Safety”, a joint police and military contingent has been deployed to affected areas to enforce the directive.

    Parts of the national capital Accra, Kumasi, Kasoa and Tema have been affected by the directive. Some miscreants have, however, been exploiting the directive to perpetrate crime.

     

    Source: dailymailgh.com

  • Coronavirus: Boris Johnson moved to intensive care

    Prime Minister Boris Johnson has been moved to intensive care in hospital after his coronavirus symptoms “worsened”, Downing Street has said.

    Mr Johnson has asked Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab to deputise “where necessary”, a spokesman added.

    The prime minister, 55, was admitted to St Thomas’ Hospital in London with “persistent symptoms” on Sunday.

    The spokesman said he was moved on the advice of his medical team and is receiving “excellent care”.

    A statement read: “Since Sunday evening, the prime minister has been under the care of doctors at St Thomas’ Hospital, in London, after being admitted with persistent symptoms of coronavirus.

    “Over the course of this afternoon, the condition of the prime minister has worsened and, on the advice of his medical team, he has been moved to the intensive care unit at the hospital.”

    It continued: “The PM is receiving excellent care, and thanks all NHS staff for their hard work and dedication.”

    Source: bbc.com

  • West Brom to swoop for Andre Ayew

    English Champions leaders West Brom have made Ghanaian skipper Andre Ayew their number one transfer target ahead of the coming season.

    Manager Slaven Bilic is keen to add more fire power upfront with EPL football almost secured and has penciled the Swansea talisman as a player who can help his course.

    Ayew has been the heartbeat of Swansea this season netting twelve Championship league goals as they also continue to chase a place in the playoff.

    Ghanacrusader.com can confirm that should Swansea fail to grab one of the topflight tickets, Ayew will likely join the Baggies for 2 million Pounds in June.

    Source: Ghanacrusader.com

  • Nollywood actress Funke Akindele and husband sentenced to 14-days community service (VIDEO)

    Nollywood actress Funke Akindele and her husband, Abdulrasheed Bello popularly called JJC Skillz, have been sentenced to 14-days community service for violating the social distancing order in Lagos State.

    According to several Nigerian media outlets, the couple, who had earlier pleaded guilty, were also fined a hundred thousand naira each by the court and are to be isolated for fourteen days in a place to be determined by the Lagos State Ministry of Health.

    The court equally ruled that the Nollywood Actress and her husband must submit the names of all the guests that attended their birthday party to the court.

    The Actress and her husband were dragged before the Samuel Ilori Courthouse of the Magistrate Court in Ogba area of Lagos, on a one-count charge of hosting a party of over 20 guests, in violation of the social distancing order of the Lagos State Government.

    The persecution was led by the Attorney-General of Lagos, Moyo Onigbanjo.

    Journalists were barred from the court room due to law on social distancing.

    Watch her court appearance video below.

    Source: pulse.com.gh

  • ‘I will be the first person to accept pay cut at Aduana Stars’ – Yahaya Mohammed

    Aduana Stars striker, Yahaya Mohammed says he will be the first person to accept pay cut at the club should management decide to slash down their salaries.

    There have calls on local players to emulate the European stars as they take pay cut to help reduce the financial crisis for their various clubs amid Coronavirus storm.

    The outbreak of the disease has caused for the suspension of football related activities as club owners and administrators begins to take drastic decisions.

    It is uncertain whether the 2019/2020 league will continue or not due to the Coronavirus outbreak.

    This has generated a heated argument in the country as to whether the salaries of local players must be slash or not.

    “Per my relationship with the Aduana Stars, if management decide to reduce our salaries I will be the first person to accept it because I know the club do not have any sponsorship apart from Betway”

    “The club only depend on gate proceeds and in Ghana, apart from Kotoko and Hearts of Oak who have the highest fan base the rest struggle to even get much from gate proceeds. So we will do that to help the club owner for him know that he is dealing with reliable people who can help in difficult time” he told Bryt FM.

    Citing Cristiano Ronaldo as example, he said, “What I know is that, Ronaldo has his own sponsors including several Europeans players and so in this difficult times they can accept pay cut, but in the case of local players there is no single sponsor and that makes it difficult to cope with pay cut. So I will entreat Ghanaians to stop making comparison”

    Source: Footballghana.com

  • Akufo-Addo’s daughter Akua Addo drops stunning COVID-19 inspired photos

    International model, Nana Akua Addo, has once again taken the fashion world by storm with lovely outfits.

    In the photos that have surfaced online, she is seen in a lovely outfit apparently inspired by the outbreak of the coronavirus.

    The outfit, which is predominantly green, appears to cover her entire body and is complemented with a black skirt and a handbag.

    Social media users could not help but admire her figure in the beautiful outfit:

    @jemima.arthur.39794: No Nigerian fashionista can compare to u

    @jemima.arthur.39794: U are indeed the show stopper

    @tkeener_77: You’re classy though

    @baah_florence: Nana u do all

    @adjoasaltpod: A good dressing for covid 19

    @arkorfuldede: all the way.. pave ways..

    @everythingomonene: First time I saw this, thought it was a mannequin till I read the caption. You litty AF, I said what I said

    @rinothesinger: This the best thing to wear during the COVID-19 era.️

    Meanwhile, YEN.com.gh has learned that nine more cases of infection of the coronavirus have been recorded in Ghana.

    This has increased the total number of infected people in Ghana to 214, out of which three have recovered and 18 cases are being managed at home.

    96 out of the 214 patients are responding to treatment and two of them are moderately ill, according to the report.

    So far, Ghana has recorded five deaths since the epidemic began spreading in the country.

     

    View this post on Instagram

     

    Stop asking me who aabi!!! Ebi Me Now 🥴

    A post shared by Nana Akua Addo. (@nanaakuaaddo) on

     

    View this post on Instagram

     

    It was a Fashion prophecy for Cardi and i , we saw 🦠 it ooo

    A post shared by Nana Akua Addo. (@nanaakuaaddo) on

     

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    Ghana 🇬🇭 Meet Nigeria 🇳🇬 @ceolumineeofficial Africa To the World 🌎

    A post shared by Nana Akua Addo. (@nanaakuaaddo) on

    source: yen.com.gh

  • Coronavirus: Government manipulating public opinion with figures – Asiedu Nketia

    The General Secretary of the National Democratic Congress (NDC) Asiedu Nketia is accusing the government of engaging in public opinion manipulation with figures of the coronavirus

    According to the politician popularly called General Mosquito, the government has over the period not painted the right picture of the issues to the good people of Ghana.

    To him, the periodic updates from the Ghana Health Service are not the real numbers.

    General Mosquito was speaking on Accra-based Asempa FM monitored by MyNewsGh.com when he made this known

    He noted that the President in his fifth update mentioned that the country had tested over fifteen thousand people through contact tracing and their results will determine the future plans for the country; a piece of information which should have been communicated long ago.

    He called on the government to be forthright with information because that will also help people comply with the protocols set aside for the partial lockdown.

    “Figures of daily infection rate is very critical in the fight because it will help in compliance of the lockdown regulations.”

     

    Source: mynewsgh.com

  • Coronavirus: We want free electricity too – Ghanaians tell Akufo-Addo

    A section of the Ghanaian public have expressed varied views on the decision by the government that Ghanaians will for the next three months enjoy free water supply.

    Whereas some believe the move is a good one, others opined that Ghanaians will later pay back through taxes and other means.

    The respondents generally commended the president but felt it would have been best electricity was added.

    “The announcement is good. We appreciate it but it would have been amazing if electricity was added. Even if we get it for two months we would appreciate it,” one of the respondents said.

    Another said: “this is good news, but I hope they will not make us pay back through different means.”

    “I am glad we are going to enjoy free water supply for the next three months. The news is great. However, I feel he could have added electricity to it. We also enjoy free electricity,” another also said.

    President Akufo-Addo on Sunday announced to Ghanaians they will enjoy free and interrupted water supply for the next three months i.e April, May and June.

    Ghana Water Company Ltd and the Electricity Company of Ghana have been directed to ensure the stable supply of water and electricity during this period.

    In his fifth address to the nation, the president instructed all water tankers [publicly and privately owned] to mobilised to ensure that there is constant water supply all vulnerable communities.

    He noted that “the Ghana Water Company Ltd and the Electricity Company of Ghana have been directed to ensure the stable supply of water and electricity during this period. In addition, there will be no disconnection of supply.”

    Source: rainbowradioonline.com

  • Coronavirus: 1,836 blood samples collected in Ashanti Region

    The Ashanti Regional Health Directorate has so far collected 1,836 blood samples through routine surveillance, community screening, contacts of confirmed cases and travellers, as part of efforts to contain COVID-19 in the region.

    Ninety out of the figure are contacts of confirmed cases, 1,251 were collected during community screening, 372 through routine surveillance with 123 being travellers.

    Regional Director of Health Services Dr. Emmanuel Tinkorang, who announced this, said confirmed cases in the region stood at 12 with two deaths.

    Speaking at the weekly media briefing on COVID-19 in Kumasi on Monday, Dr. Tinkorang, said eight of the cases had a history of recent travel from affected countries.

    He said the directorate was following 389 contacts, out of which two had tested positive with 58 being those picked from the Juaso case.

    “So far we have 389 contacts and out of that 220 have completed their 14 days observation”, he emphasized.

    The Regional Director further disclosed that the last three cases, including a couple who had recently returned from France were recorded on April 04 and were all responding to treatment.

    He said the region had also received several donations that were being used to procure Personal Protective Equipment (PPEs) including non-contact thermometers and medical goggles.

    “The Ministry of Health has given us GHC400,000.00 to manage the contacts as well as the 351 health staff that we have trained to do the contact-tracing”, he noted.

    He said apart from the contacts being traced, the directorate was also screening people living in high-risk areas.

    “High-risk areas are areas where we have isolated cases. So all inhabitants who live within a one-meter radius of isolated cases would go through voluntary testing”, he explained.

    Source: dailyguidenetwork.com

  • Bees kill man at drinking spot

    A swarm of bees that besieged a drinking spot around the Kasoa areas in the Central Region has reportedly killed one man and left two others battling for their lives.

    The bizarre incident happened at Gomoa Nyanyano Sun city in the Gomoa East District.

    The deceased has been identified as Ebo Wilson popularly called “Bronya” who went to a drinking spot in the area to have some drinks.

    An eyewitness, Ebeneezer Okyere, said the bees were on a tree close to the drinking spot and as Bronya and his friends were entering the spot, they attacked them.

    They then started running helter-skelter but in the process, Bronya fell heavily into an abandoned manhole but nobody detected he was stuck inside.

    The witness said it took two days for the residents to realize Bronya was inside the manhole and when they checked he had been bitten to death by the bees.

    The body has been retrieved from the manhole by the Gomoa Nyanyano Police and sent to police mortuary for autopsy.

    Source: dailyguidenetwork.com

  • Coronavirus hunters zero in on a possible culprit

    A vacuum of knowledge about the origins of the new coronavirus ravaging the world has provided fertile ground for all manner of theories — from the fantastic, to the dubious to the believable.

    It was a bioweapon manufactured by the Chinese. The US Army brought the virus to Wuhan. It leaked — like a genie out of a bottle — from a lab in an accident. It took root at a wildlife market in Wuhan.

    Scientists have banded together across international borders to condemn the nationalist-tinged conspiracy theories. And yet, they are divided on what was once widely thought the most likely culprit: a so-called wet market in Wuhan, where wild animals are kept in cages and sold as pets or food. It is believed that a bat-infected animal — perhaps a pangolin — infected the first human.

    The truth of how this began remains elusive. But CNN spoke to more than half a dozen virus experts about the origins of the outbreak, and all of them say anyone who claims to know the source of Covid-19 is guessing. The scientists say there is zero evidence the Chinese or American government purposefully introduced the new coronavirus — SARS-CoV-2 — to the public.

    To date, one thing seems likely: It came from bats.

    Experts at odds over wet-market theory

    It’s “the most simple, obvious and likely explanation,” said Dr. Simon Anthony, a professor at the public health grad school of Columbia University and a key member of PREDICT, a federally funded global program investigating viruses in animal hosts with pandemic potential. PREDICT has discovered 180 coronaviruses over a decade.

    Though the scientists discount conspiracy theories about bioweapons, on other questions they are divided.

    The experts are at odds over the once widely accepted theory that the virus originated at a wet market.

    Proponents believe the gory nature of these crowded markets packed with people and wild animals slated for slaughter make them the most likely culprit; the doubters cite a peer-reviewed study indicating that many of the first known patients had no direct exposure to the so-called wet market.
    Another potentially explosive theory — first posed by two Chinese researchers in early February and amplified by Fox News host Tucker Carlson on March 31 — holds that the origin traces back to an accident in one of two labs near the Wuhan market that work with bats.
    Most of the experts interviewed for this story discounted the theory — whose progenitors reportedly withdrew their paper — saying it wasn’t supported by evidence.

    The theory has also been strenuously denied by the Chinese government and one of the labs.

    But one expert, a chemical biology professor and bioweapons expert at Rutgers University, has suggested to several media outlets that the lab-accident theory has credence.

    “The possibility that the virus entered humans through a laboratory accident cannot and should not be dismissed,” Dr. Richard Ebright told CNN in an email Sunday.

    Virus hunters zeroing in on bats

    In any case, researchers agree that the coronavirus jumped from an animal to a human, a phenomenon known as “zoonotic spillover.”

    In early February, Chinese researchers published an article in Nature — a top science journal — that concluded the “2019-nCoV is 96% identical at the whole-genome level to a bat coronavirus.”
    Questions raised over China’s coronavirus transparency 04:43
    Later that month, 27 public health scientists from across the United States and the world wrote a letter in The Lancet condemning the conspiracy theories.

    “Conspiracy theories do nothing but create fear, rumours, and prejudice that jeopardise our global collaboration in the fight against this virus,” they wrote.

    In the Lancet piece, the experts cited scientific evidence that support the theory that “overwhelmingly conclude that this coronavirus originated in wildlife, as have so many other emerging pathogens.”

    One of those scientists is Peter Daszak, a preeminent virus hunter who has been working in China for 10 years.

    “We’re very confident that the origin of Covid-19 is in bats,” said Daszak, president of EcoHealth Alliance, a health nonprofit that tracks zoonotic spillover. “We just don’t know where exactly it originated — which bat species exactly. And we don’t know how many others there are out there that could emerge in the future.”

    It is a genetic detective story.

    Did it jump from bat to human, or to another animal first?

    Researchers hope to trace the virus that is killing tens of thousands to a yet-to-be captured bat in the wild.

    Another source of debate is whether the virus that causes Covid-19 transferred directly from bat to human, or whether there was an “intermediate” animal between.

    Daszak believes a bat infected a farm animal that was brought to market alive, and kept with people in one of the most perfect incubators for viral infection: the Chinese wet market.

    “The first time you go into China as a Westerner, it is a bit of shock to go to a wildlife market and see this huge diversity of animals live in cages on top of each other with a pile of guts that have been pulled out of an animal and thrown on the floor,” he said. “As you walk towards the stalls, you slip on the feces and blood. These are perfect places for viruses to spread. Not only that, people are working there … kids are playing there. Families almost live there.”

    Professor Andrew Cunningham of the Zoological Society of London says wet markets are a prime candidate for causing zoonotic spillover events from wildlife, which he said have become more common over the past 30 years.

    “If you bring wild animals — you catch them in the wild, you bring them together in large numbers,” he said. “They’re stressed and then they can become virus factories, and they’re in close contact with human beings in the markets and they’re butchered in the markets, and by people in relatively unhygienic conditions.”

    But an article in Lancet has cast some doubt on the theory. The study shows that about a third of the first 41 confirmed infected patients had no direct exposure to the wet market. Among them was the first known patient, whose symptoms reportedly began appearing December 1.

    “No epidemiological link was found between the first patient and later cases,” the report states.

    The market was shuttered January 1, two days after the Wuhan authorities issued a public health alert about it.

    (An article in the South China Morning Post puts the date of the first case as early as November 17.)

    “I think people went into the fish market who were already infected,” Vincent Racaniello, a microbiology professor at Columbia University, told CNN.

    Most experts push back on lab leak theory

    Racaniello offers yet another theory: The source of the outbreak is a farmer.

    “In bats, these viruses are intestinal viruses, and they are shedding the bat feces, which we call guano,” he said. “And if you go into a bat cave, it is littered with guano. And farmers in many countries harvest the guano to fertilize their fields.”

    Racaniello speculates that, after getting infected, a farmer or an associate came into Wuhan and started infecting other people.

    “We do know that in China you can eat bats — that’s another scenario,” he said. “But I don’t think it’s any more likely than a farmer harvesting guano or a farmer encountering a bat in his barn.”

    Anthony, also of Columbia, echoed Racaniello’s skepticism of the wet-market theory.

    “Early in the outbreak … everyone was talking about the thing having emerged from the wet market,” he said. “And now I think the data calls into question whether or not that’s really true.”

    Anthony noted that not even the mystery of the 2003 SARS outbreak is settled.

    For many years, it was widely believed that the SARS virus jumped from a bat to an intermediate host — a cat-like civet — that infected a person at a food market in China. But a study in 2013 — backed by a followup in 2017– suggested that the 2003 coronavirus could also have jumped straight from a bat into a human.

    “We don’t know which of those is actually true,” Anthony said.

    Perhaps, the most forceful rejection of the wet-market theory came from Ebright of Rutgers.

    “It is absolutely clear the market had no connection with the origin of the outbreak virus, and, instead, only was involved in amplification of an outbreak that had started elsewhere in Wuhan almost a full month earlier,” he told CNN.

    Ebright also isn’t ready to rule out the theory of the two Chinese researchers that the virus may have “leaked” from one of two labs near the Wuhan market, although one of the authors told The Wall Street Journal they withdrew the paper because it “was not supported by direct proofs.”

    While Ebright said he did not believe the genome sequence of the virus shows any “signatures of human manipulation,” he said there is a risk that a lab worker could have accidentally been infected.

    CNN was not able to independently verify the points made by Ebright, and the main author of the study — Botao Xiao — did not respond to CNN’s emails and phone calls requesting comment.

    US-China tensions slowing down the virus hunters

    But one of the labs cited in the paper, the Wuhan Institute of Virology, issued a statement on February 19 that strongly rejected any suggestion that the virus originated from its lab.

    The statement said the theory that the virus leaked from the lab was one of the false rumors that had “great damaged our frontline researchers and seriously disrupted our urgent scientific research.” Other rumors it rejected include “virus was man-made,” “Patient Zero came from the institute” and “Chinese military took control of the institute.”

    Officials in the Chinese government say the source of the virus remains unknown, and that others should stop “smearing” the country.

    “As a matter of fact, the source of Covid-19 is a scientific issue,” Luo Zhaohui, a vice minister of foreign affairs, said in late March. “We need to listen to professional and scientific opinions. The WHO has stressed many times that linking viruses to specific races, skin colors or geographical areas should be avoided. This is also the international consensus.”

    Other researchers contacted by CNN were skeptical of the lab accident theory.

    “I think it has no credibility,” said Racaniello, who hosts a podcast called “This Week in Virology.”

    “I think it’s part of human nature to think that we’re doing the worst things, as opposed to nature.”

    Anthony, who had not heard about the paper when reached Friday, said “it all feels far-fetched.”

    “Lab accidents do happen, we know that, but … there’s certainly no evidence to support that theory,” he said.

    Meanwhile, tensions between the US and China over the origins of the virus — compounded by accusations of misinformation from both sides — are slowing the work of the virus hunters, who are grounded by the same travel restrictions that have crippled the world.

    “If there was a so-called intermediate host, an animal that the bat virus got into and then allowed it to get into people, the virus might still be in that host,” said Daszak, the virus hunter working in China. “And there are hundreds, thousands of these animals and farms and maybe the virus is still there. So even if we get rid of the outbreak, there’s still a chance that that virus could then re-emerge and we need to find that out quickly.”

    CNN’s Jenny Friedland, Dan Logan and Zac Leja contributed to this report.

  • We have capacity to test for coronavirus – UDS

    Rapid testing for COVID-19 is one of the challenges facing the country as there are only two known centres in Ghana that have the capacity to test for the virus.

    The Management of the Department of Biotechnology of the University for Development Studies, UDS, Nyankpala campus, say they have the capacity to test for the virus.

    Head of the Biotechnology Department, Dr Nelson Opoku, said the department have the human resource and expertise to test for COVID-19, however, they need fifty thousand dollars to procure some equipment and expand the current laboratory to enable them to undertake the tests.

    The Department is therefore appealing to the government, benevolent individuals and organizations to support the Department to procure the equipment to serve the northern sector of the country.

    Dr Opoku made this known when officials from the Regional Health Directorate visited the Biotechnology Department to ascertain the suitability of the centre for a COVID-19 testing laboratory.

    The Regional Laboratory Scientist, Dr Abass Abdul-Karim, who led the delegation to the UDS, expressed satisfaction with the department.

    He said already the government is looking at how to set up a COVID-19 testing centre in the northern region and potentially will be looking at collaboration with Institutions such as the UDS.

     

    Source: gbcghanaonline.com

  • Coronavirus: Suspected case in Keta tests negative

    A reported case of the deadly Covid-19 in the Keta Municipality in the Volta region has tested negative, a test result from the Noguchi Memorial Institute of Medical Research has revealed.

    According to the Municipal Chief Executive of Keta, Godwin Edudzi Effah, authorities of the assembly have been informed about the test results by the Volta regional health directorate on Monday, April 6.

    The case is of a 41-year-old man and a resident of Tema, who was on board a Korean-owned fishing vessel called Sankofa for 37 days, as a cook.

    Information available indicates that the man was ditched and handed over to local fishermen from Abutiakorpe in the municipality, on Thursday, April 2, by the crew on board the vessel after a heated argument with his boss.

    The vessel was said to have 35 Ghanaians, a Chinese and a Korean on board.

    But upon getting to the shore, he showed symptoms similar to the novel coronavirus thus was handed over to health authorities in the municipality, where he was put under quarantine.

    The five other local fishermen were also directed to self-quarantine, while blood samples of the man was taken and forwarded to Accra for testing.

    The incident, however, triggered fear and panic among residents of Keta and Anloga but the test results has since proved negative.

    At a press briefing in Keta today, the MCE noted that the municipality has since taken steps to calm the fears of the public.

    He noted that public education within the municipality would be intensified, while screening points would be mounted on the major roads leading to the municipality in order to minimize the possible importation of the virus into the area.

    Meanwhile, the victim who is still in isolation is expected to complete the 14-day mandatory quarantine.

    Source: starrfm.com.gh

  • COVID-19: Provide PPE for Laboratory Scientists Association to health facilities

    The Ghana Association of Medical Laboratory Scientists has emphasized the need for various health facilities to provide enough Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) for laboratory scientists amid an outbreak of COVID-19 in Ghana.

    The Association has also cautioned laboratory scientists across the country to take the necessary steps to avoid being infected with the disease.

    “GAMLS re-iterates that the employer and managers of our health facilities MUST ensure adequate provision of the required PPEs in line with the Labour Act, 2003 Act 651, Article 118:1 and 3 to enable Medical Laboratory Professionals to offer their services routinely to patients and for the management of COVID-19 cases in our various places of work.

    “It is important that laboratory scientists who collect, package, transport and analyze samples in various units of the laboratories across the country take every sample they encounter as a suspected positive sample for COVID-19 irrespective of the tests being requested. They are also advised to take the necessary precaution to prevent possible infection.ection. There is the need to, therefore, identify the precautionary needs and strictly adhere to them.”

    Their call comes a day after Government indicated that it will, from Tuesday, begin the local production of PPE.

    President Nana Akufo-Addo said this has become necessary because of the shortage of the already procured PPE which are essential for the protection of frontline health workers risking their lives every day to battle the virus.

    Addressing the nation on Sunday, President Akufo-Addo said the government has placed a high priority on the procurement of PPE.

    He added that the Ministry of Health was spearheading the distribution of the PPEs from the national level to the regional and district levels.

    “This, notwithstanding, Government is aware that more needs to be done, especially in the face of the global shortage of PPEs. It is for this reason that Government is actively engaged with local manufacturing companies to assist them in the domestic production of PPEs, and I am encouraged by the response from the Ghanaian private sector. Domestic production of face masks, head covers, surgical scrubs and gowns will commence from Tuesday. For example, three million, six hundred thousand face masks will be produced domestically, with an output of one hundred and fifty thousand (150,000) per day.”

    Nana Akufo-Addo announced that thus far, 350,000 masks, 558,650 examination gloves, 1,000 reusable goggles, 20,000 cover-alls, 7,000 N-95 respirators, 500 waterproof gumboots, 2,000 reusable face shields, 2,000 gallons of hand sanitizers, 10,000 100ml pieces of hand sanitizers, and five 500 shoe covers will soon be dispatched to the various health facilities.

  • Keta, Anloga residents relieved as suspected coronavirus case tests negative

    A suspected Covid-19 patient in Keta in the Volta Region, has tested negative to the relief of residents in Keta and Anloga districts.

    Municipal Chief Executive for Keta , Godwin Edudzi Effah, confirmed the news to JoyNews in an interview.

    Residents had been sitting on tenterhooks as the sample taken from a cook on a Korean vessel was sent to the laboratory.

    At least, five fishermen who are believed to have come into contact with him, have been quarantined.

    The Keta Municipal Health Taskforce as part of its routine surveillance, identified the cook who had been ill and brought to Abutiakope by five local fishermen.

    The task force then prompted the Municipal Rapid Response Team for further investigations.

    The five contacts who were later identified by the task force, were quarantined and had their conditions monitored whilst awaiting laboratory results from Noguchi Memorial Institute for Medical Research (NMIMR).

    Checks revealed the man, a resident of Tema, has been on the sea for 37 days where he had been working as a cook for a Korean fishing vessel owned by Panophin Company based in Tema community Two GBC.

    Meanwhile, Mr Effah also announced 20 Personal Protective Equipment have been handed over to the Keta District Hospital as the assembly awaits similar support from central government and other benevolent organisations.

    He also announced movies on Cvid-19 would be screened in the area to help create public awareness, especially, among market women and traders to promote strict adherence to social distancing.

    Mr. Effah also announced the Covid-19 screening exercise for residents at some designated checkpoints to check the spread of the virus.

     

     

  • COVID-19 Lockdown: Man narrates how he was allegedly assaulted by military men

    There have been several reports of unprovoked abuse being meted out to people in some lockdown areas by security personnel.

    Although authorities have come out to deny these allegations, videos of such acts continue to hit social media.

    One such victim, Ismaila recounts his alleged brutal experience at the hands of military men whilst returning from the market after shopping for foodstuff for his evening meal.

    Watch the video below;

    Source: myjoyonline 
  • W/R DVLA introduces queue management system to avoid infection

    The Western Regional office of the Driver Vehicle and Licensing Authority (DVLA) has introduced a queue management system to stop crowding which characterized their activities.

    The introduction according to Mr. Emmanuel Narh, Regional Director of DVLA, was to minimize the risk of contracting and or spreading the coronavirus infection at the premises.

    He said since the DVLA was also a home for many insurance companies, there was the need for management to introduce the strategic measure in preparation of any unforeseen challenges.

    The Regional Director said the management of queues coupled with social distancing had further enhanced compliance with the physical distancing protocols at the office.

    Mr Narh said sitting arrangements at their client waiting room was structured such that a meter distance is observed between clients.

    Meanwhile, Veronica buckets with soaps and tissue papers have been placed at the entrance of the premises, including; the insurance providers, and other retail shops.

    Mr Narh said, “We are fully aware of the risk associated with our operations as a transport service provider and have therefore put in place strict measures to curtail any such events”.

    Source: GNA

  • No medical product approved as cure for coronavirus FDA warns public

    The Food and Drugs Authority (FDA) has called on the public to disregard any medical products including in-vitro diagnostic purported to prevent, detect, treat or cure Covid-19.

    The Authority warned all actors in the medical product supply chain to conduct due diligence on all products intended for the diagnosis or treatment of Covid-19.

    This was contained in a statement signed by Mrs Delese A.Darko, the Chief Executive Officer, FDA and copied to the Ghana News Agency in Accra.

    The statement said the Authority received a notification through the World Health Organisation Rapid Alert system on falsified medical products including the in-vitro diagnostics.

    The statement urged all actors in the medical product supply chain to clarify with the Authority any suspicious product intended for diagnosis or treatment of Covid-19.

    It said medicinal products should be registered with the FDA before usage and imported only through Tema Habour and Kotoka International Airport.

    “We wish to assure the public that our officers in the regions are working to ensure that the products do not get into our supply chain”, it said.

     

    Source: myjoyonline