Author: Chris Kodo

  • Isolated and afraid: How the pandemic is changing pregnancy

    Jamie Chui has been a virtual prisoner in her Hong Kong home for most of her nine-month pregnancy.

    Trapped intially by violent pro-democracy protests and tear gas, and then by the coronavirus — she now faces giving birth alone, with her husband unlikely to see his child until days later.

    Asia is facing a second wave of Coronavirus infections and as cases spiral globally with one million confirmed positive and half the planet on lockdown, women are having to give birth in unprecedented circumstances.

    Hong Kong and China have imposed some of the world’s strictest measures to prevent infections in maternity units: birthing partners are banned from labour units, delivery rooms and post-natal wards in public hospitals.

    That has left many women struggling not only with normal pregnancy anxieties and infection fears, but also the new reality of hospital deliveries, at a time when experts warn resources are more stretched than ever.

    “The most stressful part for me is that hospitals have suspended the visiting arrangements and accompanied labour,” says Chui, adding: “I will need to fight alone.”

    “I’m nervous, to be honest. But I don’t know what else I could do.”

    Hong Kong’s protests began as Chui fell pregnant.

    Fearful of the violence and tear gas might do to her unborn child, she stayed indoors. Now she is doing the same thing because of the coronavirus.

    “I have been staying at home for almost my whole pregnancy,” the 33-year-old photographer explains.

    – Women should have choices –

    Banning labour companions goes against the World Health Organization’s ‘Safe Childbirth Checklist’ recommendations that women should have a trusted person with them during the process.

    A similar move was attempted by some hospitals in New York but governor Andrew Cuomo issued an executive order to ensure ‘no woman would give birth alone’, after a huge public outcry and 600,000-strong petition.

    In China and Hong Kong, women are instead left having to choose between spending upwards of HKD 100,000 (US$10,000) for private hospital delivery, where partners are still allowed to attend, or going it alone in the public system.

    “I have had to mentally and physically prepare to deliver without my husband’s support,” says 36-year-old Lidia Inês Cardoso Ribeiro, adding that she has written to the Hospital Authority to urge them to reconsider.

    “I believe all women should have the choice to have a person they trust to empower and support them through labour,” she explains.

    Christina Kimont, a Canadian midwife and public health researcher, now in Macau, which operates similar restrictions, agrees the situation could be problematic.

    “The human body cannot easily do what it is designed to do while in a state of stress,” she says.

    She warned that adding extra anxiety to people already worrying about their baby contracting the virus or exhausted medical teams, could make labour “longer, more difficult and likely to end up in unplanned surgical procedures.”

    Irma Syahrifat, a trained doula in Indonesia, says women there have had to attend appointments with physicians in full-suited hazard gear — an instantly distressing situation.

    Currently, Indonesian hospitals allow one birth support person but, with rules constantly changing as cases spike, she insists “mental preparedness” for delivery without an advocate is a necessary addition to ante-natal classes.

    There has been little research into the impact of COVID-19 on pregnant women, but the WHO says current evidence suggests that while vulnerable to respiratory infections, they are no more at risk of serious illness than the general population.

    A small Chinese study following 33 expectant mothers in Wuhan found it was possible, though rare, to pass the infection in utero after three newborns tested positive for the virus.

    While infants and children account for a low proportion of documented infections and deaths, a six-week-old baby in the US died this week from complications relating to the disease.

    – Begging for help –

    Across Asia, it has become the norm for routine pregnancy check-ups to be replaced with telehealth consultations, while traditional ante-natal group sessions have been replaced by online courses.

    As infections soar in America and Europe the knock-on effects for maternity and postpartum care are already visible, with wards in California being used for virus cases instead.

    Britain’s Royal College of Midwives reported that one in five midwife posts are now empty in maternity units — double the figure before the virus crisis started as staff fall sick, self-isolate, or are redeployed to care for COVID-19 patients.

    WHO has warned dwindling supplies of personal protective equipment (PPE) for frontline workers will put lives at risk.

    At Manila’s Jose Fabella Memorial Hospital, where women are sometimes three to a double bed, doctors now worry about a lack of isolation units and rely on donations for protective gear.

    Cynthia Anzures, who chairs the obstetrics department, says: “If we don’t have enough donations, like for our n95 masks, we reuse them. We use raincoats if we don’t have PPEs.”

    There are fears this will soon be the reality in many more Asian cities, as a recent surge in cases creates fresh waves of panic-buying, while new country-wide lockdowns could impact supply chains.

    Chui says she has no choice but to stay inside even after delivery to protect her newborn.

    “I think it is better to just stay at home. Just like what I’m doing right now.”

    Source: AFP

  • Corona beer producer halts brewing over virus

    The Mexican brewer of Corona beer said Thursday it was suspending production because of the health emergency in the country over the Coronavirus pandemic.

    Grupo Modelo — whose brands also include Pacifico and Modelo — said the measure was in line with the Mexican government’s order to suspend all non-essential activities until April 30 to slow the spread of coronavirus.

    “We are in the process of lowering production at our plants to the bare minimum,” the company said in a statement, adding it would complete the suspension in the following days.

    Mexico’s government has said that only key sectors such as agribusiness will be able to continue to function.

    Grupo Modelo said it was ready to operate with 75 percent of its staff working remotely to guarantee the supply of beer, if the government agreed.

    Mexico’s other major beer producer Heineken — which makes the Tecate and Dos Equis brands — could also stop activities on Friday, the Reforma newspaper said, although the company did not confirm the report.

    On Wednesday, the northern state of Nuevo Leon, where Heineken’s Mexican operations are based, said it would stop the production and distribution of beer, which led to panic buying.

    Since the start of the virus crisis, Corona beer has been the punchline of jokes and memes, and an online rumour said sales in the US dropped by around 40 percent after the outbreak.

    However, in late February, Constellation Brands, which owns the Corona label, denied the rumour and said sales had stayed strong in the US even as the virus has spread internationally.

    Mexico has so far registered over 1,500 confirmed cases of coronavirus and 50 deaths.

    Source: AFP

  • Coronavirus vaccine which can neutralise virus could be approved for human trials ‘within months’

    A new COVID-19 vaccine that fires proteins in the body that destroy the virus within two weeks is just a few months from human trials.

    The ‘highly scalable’ vaccine is the first peer-reviewed antidote to the coronavirus that currently has much of the world in lockdown or isolation.

    Researchers from the University of Pittsburgh say the new treatment would be delivered through a ‘painless jab’ similar to the annual flu vaccine.

    The team from the US have tested the vaccine on mice and estimate that it should be able to neutralise the deadly virus for at least a year.

    It will be between 12 and 18 months before the test is publicly available but when it is approved tens of thousands of doses could be produced every day.

    The vaccine is delivered into the skin through a fingertip-sized patch of microscopic needles made from sugar - which scientists describe as 'painless' and feeling like velcro

    The vaccine is delivered into the skin through a fingertip-sized patch of microscopic needles made from sugar – which scientists describe as ‘painless’ and feeling like velcro

    An industrial-style production process has been used to produce the Pittsburgh Coronavirus Vaccine – PittCoVacc – making it ‘highly scalable’.

    This is the first COVID-19 candidate vaccine that’s been scrutinised by independent scientists. The findings are published in The Lancet’s EBioMedicine journal.

    The researchers are now applying for approval from the US Food and Drug Administration and aim to start the first human trial and hope to be able to begin those trials within months.

    Senior study author Professor Louis Falo, from the University of Pittsburgh, said getting to human tests stage would usually require at least a year or more.

    ‘This particular situation is different from anything we’ve ever seen, so we don’t know how long the clinical development process will take.

    ‘Recently announced revisions to the normal processes suggest we may be able to advance this faster.’

    The Pittsburgh team were able to act quickly because they had already laid the groundwork during earlier coronavirus epidemics.

    Senior study author Professor Andrea Gambotto, also at Pittsburgh, said they knew exactly where to go in terms of ways to fight the virus.

    ‘We had previous experience on SARS-CoV in 2003 and MERS-CoV in 2014,’ the study author said.

    ‘These two viruses, which are closely related to SARS-CoV-2, teach us that a particular protein, called a spike protein, is important for inducing immunity against the virus.’

    Source: www.dailymail.co.uk

  • Stonebwoy drops “Understand” featuring Alicai Harley Check out video + audio

    Ghanaian dancehall artiste Stonebwoy has released the third single Off his Anloga Junction album.

    The Burniton Music boss, Stonebwoy features Jamaican artist Alicai Harley on the jam titled “Understand”

    Produced by N2theA, Understand was mastered by  Mix Master Garzy with the video directed by Jay Parpworth.

    Stream and Watch Understand from below…

  • Wuhan doctor among first to alert medics of coronavirus spread ‘goes missing’, fears she has been detained

    A Wuhan doctor who was among the first to alert other medics to the spread of coronavirus has disappeared sparking concerns that she has been detained, reports suggest.

    Dr Ai Fen said she faced ‘unprecedented, extremely harsh reprimanded’ by officials at Wuhan Central Hospital after she shared a picture of a patient report labelled ‘SARS coronavirus’.

    The image was widely circulated and made its way to whistle-blower Li Wenliang who raised the alarm about the bug, which has killed more than 41,000 people worldwide.

    Dr Li was reprimanded by authorities for ‘illegally spreading untruthful information online’.

    Dr Ai Fen - who went public over the spread coronavirus in Wuhan - has disappeared sparking concerns that she has been detained, reports suggest
    Dr Ai said she faced 'unprecedented, extremely harsh reprimanded' by officials at Wuhan Central Hospital

    Dr Ai Fen – who went public over the spread coronavirus in Wuhan – has disappeared sparking concerns that she has been detained, reports suggest

    A woman wears a face mask while riding a scooter along the street in Wuhan after the government relaxed lockdown rules

    A woman wears a face mask while riding a scooter along the street in Wuhan after the government relaxed lockdown rules

    Officials wearing hazmat suits control an entrance to Biandanshan Cemetery in Wuhan

    Officials wearing hazmat suits control an entrance to Biandanshan Cemetery in Wuhan

    After the show’s investigation aired, a post on the doctor’s Weibo account – a social media platform similar to Twitter – shared a picture with the caption: ‘A river. A bridge. A road. A clock chime,’ RFA reports.

    Her rumoured disappearance comes after criticism was levvied at the Chinese government for lying and covering up key information during virtually every stage of its coronavirus response.

    Beijing initially tried to cover up the outbreak by punishing medics who discovered it, denying it could spread person-to-person and delaying a lockdown of affected regions – meaning early opportunities to control the spread were lost.

    Then, once the virus began spreading, the Communist Party began censoring public information about it and spread disinformation overseas – including suggesting that US troops could have been the initial carriers.

    A man is seen in a protective mask overlooking the Yangtze River in Wuhan after the city was partially reopened

    A man is seen in a protective mask overlooking the Yangtze River in Wuhan after the city was partially reopenedDr Ai Fen said she faced 'unprecedented, extremely harsh reprimanded' by officials at Wuhan Central Hospital after she shared a picture of a patient report labelled 'SARS coronavirus'

    Dr Ai Fen said she faced ‘unprecedented, extremely harsh reprimanded’ by officials at Wuhan Central Hospital after she shared a picture of a patient report labelled ‘SARS coronavirus”

    Even now, prominent politicians have warned that infection and death totals being reported by the regime are likely to be wrong – with locals in the epicenter of Wuhan suggesting the true tolls could be ten times higher.

    In the interview prior to her alleged dissapearance, Dr Ai admitted ‘feeling regretful about not speaking out more’ after four of her colleagues, including Dr Li, had contracted the virus and died while fighting the outbreak.

    ‘If I had known what would have happened today, I wouldn’t have cared about the reprimand. I would have told whoever and wherever I want,’ said Dr Ai.

    Dr Fen criticised the hospital bosses for dismissing the early warnings of the coronavirus in a feature article published online yesterday by Chinese magazine People

    Dr Fen criticised the hospital bosses for dismissing the early warnings of the coronavirus in a feature article published online yesterday by Chinese magazine People

    The interview was posted on Tuesday but quickly retracted from social media by its publisher People (Renwu) Magazine.

    On 30 December, Dr Ai received a patient’s report labelled ‘SARS coronavirus’.

    She said she broke out into a cold sweat after reading the lab results several times.

    The SARS epidemic 17 years ago infected more than 8,000 people worldwide and killed over 800, according to the World Health Organisation.

    The medic circled the word ‘SARS’ and sent a picture of the report to one of her former classmates and a group chat within her department.

    Dr Ai said she alerted hospital authorities about the case.

    ‘Later that evening, the stuff was shared all over the place with screenshots of the report bearing my red circle,’ she said.

    She added: ‘[These platforms] included the chatting group, which Li Wenliang shared the information with. I thought something bad is going to happen.’

    Two days later, the Wuhan medic was summoned by the head of the hospital’s disciplinary inspection committee.

    Dr Ai said she faced ‘unprecedented, extremely harsh reprimanded’ and was accused of ‘spreading rumours as a professional’ by the hospital’s officials.

    Source: www.dailymail.co.uk

  • Take advantage of lockdown to clean your homes – Sanitation Minister

    Sanitation Minister Cecilia Dapaah has urged Ghanaians to take advantage of the lockdown and clean their homes.

    The Sanitation Ministry today begins a 3-day clean-up exercise of Accra and Kumasi.

    Ms Dapaah speaking at a press briefing said this will be the best time for many Ghanaians to clean their streets and gutters since they are home.

    According to her, the Ministry will take advantage of people being home to clean up our streets and gutters, She says now that the streets have been cleared of hawkers a nationwide cleanup exercise can be held.

    “The Ministry will undertake a cleanup exercise in the Greater Accra with effect from today till Sunday and we expect individuals to do same in their various houses”

    This cleanup exercise is being spearheaded by the Sanitation and Water Resources Ministry but they will work hand in hand with the Metropolitan and Municipal Assemblies and members of the Environmental Service Providers Association “led by Zoomlion Ghana Limited.”

    There have been numerous calls from a section of the public for a clean-up exercise to be done due to the heaps of rubbish that one sees anytime they are in town.

    Recently there was a fumigation exercise done at Accra and Kumasi markets and that was part of measures to help curb the spread of COVID-19.

     

    Source: primenewsghana.com

  • COVID-19: 6,000 samples taken for testing throughout the country – GHS

    The Ghana Health Service (GHS) says it has as of yesterday, April 2 taken 6,000 samples across the country to be tested as part of a contact tracing and enhanced testing exercise.

    According to the Director-General of the GHS, Dr. Patrick Aboagye, some 300 teams are carrying out a contract tracing and enhanced testing exercise to identify persons who may have come into contact with a Coronavirus infected person.

    “As at 6pm yesterday, over 6,000 samples had been taken for testing throughout the country and testing is still ongoing. We’re testing all people who have been identified through contact-tracing,” Patrick Aboagye disclosed this in a press briefing on Friday, April 3.

    On April 2, 2020, Ghana recorded 9 new cases of coronavirus – shooting the number of cases from 195 to 204.

     

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • We’re rotating staff of Local Government to ensure social distancing – Dr. Nana Ato Arthur

    Head of the Local Government Service, Dr. Nana Ato Arthur has reiterated that, critical staff of the service are being asked to rotate on weekly basis in order to ensure that they can adhere to social distancing as announced by President Nana Addo-Danquah Akufo-Addo.

    He said this in an interview with Benjamin Tetteh Nartey on GBC Radio Central, Central Morning Show(CMS) today Wednesday, 1st April, 2020.

    He explained that, the rotational principle works in a situation where there are about 5 or more people in an office, 2 of the staff should come to work for three days in a week while the remaining colleagues come for two days and then reverse the trend the following week. He said all these are being done to ensure social distancing and to protect the staff against coronavirus.

    He further added the clogging machine has been put on hold till further notice and and his office has directed that, Veronica buckets with water, soap and hand sanitizers must be provided for both staff and any other person who comes to various assemblies to do business.

    He continued by explaining further that, the rationale behind why all Regional, Metropolitan, Municipal and District coordinating directors must be at post in Lockdown areas was to help the executive officers who would be at post to work for government. He added that even situations where these officers cannot be at the office, they must make themselves available whenever they are called upon or needed at the office.

    When he was asked that, was he aware that his kit and kin from Elmina normally mass up at the beaches to buy fish, he bemoaned that practice and cautioned that “no one is saying they shouldn’t do their fish business but must try hard to observe social distancing”.

    Dr. Nana Ato Arthur ended his conversation by admonishing Ghanaians to strictly adhere to all the protocols as given by government in order to stay safe

    He concluded his interview by saying that all of us should be very careful and stay safe because “covid-19 is no respecter of person and that in some countries prominent citizens has been infected with the virus”.

     

    Source: D. C. Kwame Kwakye

  • Ghana has more coronavirus cases than whats been reported John Dumelo reveals

    Ghanaian actor, philanthropist and farmer, John Dumelo believes the number of coronavirus cases in Ghana is more than what has been recorded.

    In a post on Twitter sighted by Zionfelix.net, the aspiring Member of Parliament on the ticket of the opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC) at Ayawaso West Wuogon Constituency bemoaned the number of test kits in the country currently.

    He, therefore, called on the government to get more test kits and increase the capacity of facilities designated for testing.

    John Dumelo wrote: “The gov shld as a matter of urgency get more test kits and Increase d capacity of facilities doing d actual testing. Cases are Increasing in bits because our testing capacity is small. Increase d testing capacity & u will realize we actually have more cases than being reported.”

    According to Ghana Health Service, As at 2nd April 2020, the country has recorded 204 cases COVID-19 with five (5) deaths. The number of regions reporting cases remain five (5) (Greater Accra, Ashanti, Northern, Upper West and Eastern). The Greater Accra Region has most of the cases (183) followed by the Northern Region (10), Ashanti Region (9), Upper West Region (1) and Eastern Region (1).

    GHS says most of the cases are reported from routine/enhanced surveillance activities. Cases from travellers under mandatory quarantine remain 89.

    Source: zionfelix.net

  • Coronavirus: Amasaman NPP Parliamentary Candidate donates items to aid fight

    The Parliamentary Candidate of the New Patriotic Party for Amasaman Constituency, Akwasi Afrifa-Mensa, has donated assorted items to several communities and public places in the Constituency to help fight against the spread of COVID-19.

    The move is a gesture to aid in the fight against the spread of the disease in his constituency and also help in sensitizing and educating the public on the measures taken by the government.

    Akwasi Afrifa-Mensa is undertaking the exercise with support from the Constituency Executives led by Chairman Ofori-Asante, Constituency Secretary, Samuel Acquah-Young and other top party functionaries in the constituency.

    Items distributed included over 70 Veronica buckets with their metal stands, water receptacles as basins (bowls), tissue papers, large size liquid soaps as well as over 1,000 hand sanitizers.

    Public areas visited included the Ga-West Municipal Hospital, main Amasaman Lorry Station & Taxi Ranks, Amasaman Divisional and District Police Stations, main Amasaman markets and markets along the Nsawam-Accra road, Amasaman Fire Service Station, most Okada Stations and Taxi Ranks across the 17 electoral areas of the constituency.

    In his address, the PC stated that the fight against the pandemic was a shared responsibility and encouraged the public to spread the message of calm and hope, and not fear. He reiterated government’s e effort in managing the situation and admonished all to stick strictly to the directives and measures taken by the Nana Addo government.

    He gave the assurance that several other initiatives which impact directly on the lives of people were his concern and he would do even more when given the mandate to represent the people as their Member of Parliament come December 7.

    The exercise is still ongoing and expected to end only when all major “spots” have been served.

     

    Source: Opeimu Woyome

  • ‘Contagion’ vs. coronavirus: The film’s connections to a real life pandemic

    As we live through a developing pandemic, some of us can’t help but compare it to the 2011 American thriller which some claim predicted Covid-19: “Contagion.”

    Directed by Steven Soderbergh and written by Scott Z. Burns, the film follows the spread of a virus transmitted when sick humans touch surfaces and leave virus behind that others can catch. Next comes the frantic attempts by public health officials to identify and contain the disease, the anarchy that unfolds amid a pandemic, and the ultimate introduction of a vaccine to stop the spread. Sound like a plot we’re in the middle of?
    Its prescience was bolstered by Burns consulting with representatives of the World Health Organization on the ins and outs of infectious diseases, and by Kate Winslet working with the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to understand the lifestyle and character of an epidemiologist charged with leading the world through crisis.
    The filmmakers also consulted medical experts including Dr. W. Ian Lipkin and Lawrence “Larry” Brilliant. Lipkin is the director of the Center for Infection and Immunity at Columbia University Mailman School of Health. He recently contracted the novel coronavirus.
    Laurie Garrett also served as a consultant on the film because she wrote the 1994 book “The Coming Plague” and reported on multiple pandemics. In a 2001 article she wrote for CNN, Garrett described “Contagion”as “part fantasy, part reality and totally possible.”
    Here is how the virus and drama of “Contagion” compares with the real life coronavirus pandemic as it currently stands.

    Virus origins

    The final scene in “Contagion” reveals that the fictional “MEV-1″virus originated from a pig that ate a piece of banana dropped by an infected bat escaping the destruction of its palm tree forest habitat in China.
    That pig is then slaughtered and prepared by a chef who, without washing them first, shakes hands with Beth Emhoff (played by Gwyneth Paltrow), thus transmitting the virus to her. Emhoff becomes the “index case,” meaning she was the first identified case.
    The origin of the novel coronavirus terrorizing us today is still a mystery to scientists. It will only be solvedif they’re able to isolate the live virus in a suspected species (like in the movie), which can be difficult.
    However, like “Contagion,” bats are considered by some epidemiologiststo be the possible source of the coronavirus.
    Zoologists, ecologists and disease experts have told CNN that human behaviors — such as destroying natural habitats — might be to blame for the transfer of the disease.
    When bats are stressed, which can occur from destruction of their habitats, their typically strong immune system is challenged, which makes it harder to cope with pathogens they could usually fight off. This allows an increase in infections and the shedding of them.
    One theory on the origin of the current coronavirus is that the initial epicenter was likely a “wet market” in Wuhan, China.In “wet markets,” wild animals that also may be infected and stressed are held together and sold as food or pets, leading to a mix of viruses and species.
    Any “zoonotic spillover,” or the transfer of disease from animals to humans, is exacerbated by population density and public transport, which make it easy for a virus to spread rapidly.
    Scientists studying the spread of the coronavirus have provided another theory: It may have spread into humans from animals in a less deadly form and circulated at low levels in humans for years before adapting to us and becoming seriously infectious, according to recent research published in the journal Nature Medicine.
    If the “Contagion” bats were under stress from the palm tree destruction, the origin of the “Contagion” virus could mirror the potential origin of the current coronavirus.

    Similar symptoms

    Sick people in the film experienced fevers and profuse sweating, pounding headaches, sore throat and cough but also had seizures, dizziness and frothed at the mouth when they passed.
    The signs of the disease caused by the novel coronavirus, Covid-19 are similar, but there haven’t been any reports of seizures or frothing at the mouth. Covid-19 symptoms include primarily a fever of at least 100 degrees Fahrenheit (37.7 degrees Celsius), cough or trouble breathing, according to the CDC.
    Emergency warning signs of Covid-19 include “persistent pain or pressure in the chest,” “bluish lips or face” — indicating a lack of oxygen — and sudden mental confusion, fatigue or inability to rouse.
    Less commonsymptoms of Covid-19 include those typically experienced during flu and cold: headaches, digestive issues, body aches and fatigue, and a runny nose, sore throat and sneezing.
    Anosmia, a lack of sense of smell, and dygeusia, a lack of taste, are symptoms that might flag Covid-19 in its early stages among patients with a mild case.

    Transmission

    Like Covid-19, the film’s MEV-1 is a respiratory disease, carried in expelled droplets of saliva from a sneeze or cough or other secretions. It spreads directly between people when those droplets reach the eyes, nose or mouth of an uninfected person.
    The film’s virus is also transmitted by fomites, or surfaces that have been contaminated with infections after sick humans touch them.
    The spreading of MEV-1 is exacerbated by the average person touching their face a few thousand times per day — while in between, they’re touching door handles, elevator buttons, subway poles and each other.
    Evidence shows that the novel coronavirus transmits through the same mechanisms, according to the World Health Organization.
    What is coronavirus and Covid-19? An explainer
    Actors from “Contagion” recently urged people to “control the contagion” by washing their hands, practicing social distancing and following the advice of health experts In a series of PSAs from Columbia Public Health.

    Can you be immune to the virus?

    The fictional Mitch Emhoff (played by Matt Damon), husband of index case Beth, is found to be immune to the virus. He dodges the deliberately targeted coughs of strangers in grocery stores and survives through the film physically unscathed.
    Today, there are no reports of people biologically immune to getting the novel coronavirus. But can one be immune to the novel coronavirus after recovering from it? Scientists aren’t sure yet.
    In the March 26 CNN Global Town Hall: Coronavirus Facts and Fears, CNN anchor Anderson Cooper asked physician Dr. Leana Wen whether a person can be immune to the virus via antibodies they developed after having and recovering from the disease.
    Masks can’t stop the coronavirus in the US, but hysteria has led to bulk-buying, price-gouging and serious fear for the future
    “This is what we want to get to,” she responded. “We don’t have that test yet. It’s being developed. But that would be great. It would be so helpful for people to know whether they have immunity.”
    And if someone could be immune, we don’t yet know how long it could last for.
    “There are some people who speculate that one might have immunity for a long time, even forever, but we just don’t know yet,” she added.

    The R0

    The number of people a sick person is likely to infect is called the R0, or R-naught, of a virus. The R0 of the fictional MEV-1 virus was 4, while the R0 of coronavirus is 2.2, according to a recent study of data from the first cases of Covid-19 in Wuhan and investigations conducted by Chinese and American health officials.
    They found the epidemic doubled about every seven days. In other words, on average, each Covid-19 patient transmits the infection to an additional 2.2 people.

    The mortality rate

    The mortality rate of the “Contagion” virus, or the percentage of those that die among an infected population, was estimated to be about 25% to 30%.
    As of March 26, the mortality rate among patients with Covid-19 is between 1.8% to 3.4%,according to the CDC.

    An unproven remedy: Forsythia vs. chloroquine

    In “Contagion,” blogger Alan Krumwiede (Jude Law) pushes forsythia, a floral homeopathic tincture, as the cure for the virus, although studies hadn’t proved it worked.
    He appeared to have recovered from the virus shortly after taking forsythia, and anxious customersclamored for prescriptions of the remedy from their local pharmacies as well as on Krumwiede’s blog. He attracted more 12 million followers and severalmillion dollars from the false claim, according to the film.
    Law, in the production notes for the film, described his character as the “‘index patient’ for what becomes a parallel epidemic of fear and panic” based on mistrust of news media, the government and health officials.
    There are currently no cures or vaccines for Covid-19, yet the drugs chloroquine and its analog hydroxychloroquine have been called “game changers” by President Donald Trump. Both drugs are approved by the US Food and Drug Administration to treat malaria and other conditions such as rheumatoid arthritis and lupus.
    A man living in Phoenix died and his wife was in critical care after the two took a non-pharmaceutical version of chloroquine in an attempt to prevent contracting the virus. His wife said he heard Trump tout the drug in a news conference.
    On March 29, the FDA issued a limited emergency use authorization for chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine to treat patients hospitalized with Covid-19.
    Despite limited evidence on the efficacy of the drugs for Covid-19,the US Department of Human Health Services said in a statement that anecdotal reports suggest they may be beneficial in the treatment of hospitalized patients. The FDA saidthe benefits outweigh the risks.

    A path toward a vaccine

    In “Contagion,” CDC research scientist Dr. Ally Hextall (Jennifer Ehle) stresses that it can take months, maybe a year, to be able to distribute a vaccine after testing, clinical trials, manufacturing and distribution. However, Hextall speeds up the process by inoculating herself with the final experimental vaccine, then is able to provide doses for human use in just several months.
    In reality, leading infectious disease experts say the typical vaccine takes between 8 and 10 years to develop. American health officials are trying to fast track that time frame, as are laboratories around the world.
    Currently a year to 18 months is an optimistic time window for a possible coronavirus vaccine,Dr. Peter Hotez, a leading expert on infectious disease and vaccine development at Baylor College of Medicine, previously told CNN.
    That said, a novel coronavirus vaccine Phase I trial in the US gave the first dose to test the safety of the vaccine to a participant in March. This trial is meant to establish that the vaccine is safe and that participants immune systems respond well, but proving the vaccine effectively prevents infection will take many more months.

    Life as we haven’t known it

    In “Contagion,” civil unrest rips at the fabric of society, leaving banks and grocery stores ransacked.Police seemed unable to respond to crime, as martial law prohibited travel between states to stop the spread of the virus.
    That hasn’t happened in real life. But, as in the film, a lot of us have spent weeks separated from friends, family and places we love, wondering when the pandemic will end so we can get back to life as we’ve known it. People are under variations of restrictions on movement, including social distancing guidelines, shelter-in-place and stay-at-home orders. On March 29, Trump extended social distancing guidelines to April 30.
    In one of the final scenes of the film, after successful distribution of vaccines, people wait in an airport to board their flight. Some still wear masks, but when a man in line drops something, the man behind him touches his shoulder to catch his attention, then leans down to pick the item up for him. The man seems grateful. Naivety? Or, maybe it’s a sign that the worst is behind them.
    Fictional CDC head Dr. Ellis Cheever(Laurence Fishburne)gives the son of a CDC custodian his own intranasal vaccine near the end of the film. The boy hesitantly shakes Cheever’s hand, expressing his gratitude.
    “You know where this comes from, shaking hands?” Cheever asked. “It was a way of showing a stranger that you weren’t carrying a weapon in the old days. You offered your empty right hand to show that you meant no harm.”
    If there are any concrete takeaways “Contagion” offers us, it’s a reminder to stop touching your face, and a beacon of hope that this too shall pass.
    We can only hope we will one day be able to reach out and touch again, thankful that our pandemic is over.
    Source: cnn.com
  • ‘Shoot them dead’: Duterte warns against violating lockdown

    Warning from Philippine president comes after slum dwellers stage protests over lack of food amid coronavirus crisis.

    Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte has warned he would order the country’s police and military to shoot dead anyone “who creates trouble” during a month-long lockdown of the island of Luzon enforced to halt the spread of the coronavirus.

    “Let this be a warning to all. Follow the government at this time because it is critical that we have order,” he said in a late-night televised national address on Wednesday.

    Duterte’s warning came after residents of a slum in Manila’s Quezon City staged a protest along a highway near their shanty houses, claiming they had not received any food packs and other relief supplies since the lockdown began more than two weeks ago.

    Village security officers and police urged the residents to go back to their homes, but they refused, a police report said.

    Police broke up the protest and arrested 20 people, the report added.

    Health authorities in the Philippines have recorded 2,311 cases of COVID-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus as of Wednesday. At least 96 people have died.

    Jocy Lopez, 47, who led the group of residents, said they were forced to stage the protest because they did not have any food due to the lockdown.

    “We are here to call for help because of hunger. We have not been given food, rice, groceries or cash. We have no work. Who do we turn to,” she said before being arrested.

    Another resident complained that with the arrest of her husband and other male residents, many families would be struggling even further to find food.

    Activist groups condemned the arrest and urged the government to fast track the release of cash assistance promised under a 200 billion peso ($4bn) social protection programme to help poor families and those who lost work amid the lockdown.

    “Using excessive force and detention will not quell the empty stomachs of Filipinos who, up to this day, remain denied of the promised … cash aid for the poor,” said women’s rights group Gabriela.

    Other residents later held a rally to demand the release of those arrested, holding posters that read “mass tests not mass arrests”.

    The main northern Philippine region of Luzon is home to more than 57 million people and under a month-long lockdown. Provincial and town executives from others parts of the country have also rolled out similar measures in their communities, virtually putting more than 100 million people under quarantine.

    more than 100 million people under quarantine.

  • Coronavirus: Fear Allah, Jesus and stop patronizing prostitutes – Minister cries to male Tamale residents

    Chairman of the Northern Regional Security Council (REGSEC) Salifu Saeed is pleading men within the Tamale Metropolis who have an insatiable desire for prostitutes to hold their fire in the meantime until the fight against the deadly coronavirus is succeeded.

    “I am pleading with the young men we know that sometimes you want to satisfy your desires in way or the other. But at this crucial moment, everybody is hot in this country, is hot in this region. I am pleading people should fear the God, fear the almighty Allah, our Lord Jesus Christ and stop this prostitution”, he begged while speaking to the press covered by MyNewsGh.com.

    According to him, the time is ripe for men who have unbridled libido to shelve their interest as the country is dangerous times and the possibility of such persons endangering the lives of their families is high.

    “It is very dangerous because you will expose your families to dangers, you will expose so many people to dangers and this disease there is no drug to cure it. I am calling you to support me to deal with the situation”, Mr Sa-eed stressed.

    The Minister earlier this week banned prostitution which is already outlawed within Tamale following the escape of a Guinean national who has tested positive for the deadly coronavirus.

    A statement issued and signed by the Minister copied to MyNewsGh.com on Wednesday [April 1, 2020] reveal that the ban affects activities related to prostitution warning that anyone caught shall face the full rigours of the law.

     

    Source: mynewsgh.com

  • Coronavirus: Restaurants experiencing 60% average drop in patronage Ofori-Atta

    Restaurants in Ghana are said to be experiencing an average drop in patronage of 60 percent following the outbreak of the novel Coronavirus in Ghana.

    This is according to the Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta who says even before the impact of the partial two-week lockdown directive by President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, restaurants in the country, were already experiencing a significant drop in patronage.

    “Even before the impact of the current lockdown, restaurants were already experiencing an average drop in patronage of 60 percent,” Ken Ofori-Atta said this in a briefing in Parliament on Monday, March 30.

    The Finance Minister adds hotel occupancy rates are also down from 70 percent to under 30 percent due to the pandemic in Ghana.

    “Hotel occupancy rates are down from 70% to under 30% and staff are being sent home.” he stressed.

    Due to low patronage of their services as a result of the outbreak, some businesses in the hospitality industry; hotels, restaurants and car rental services, have began laying off some staff, particularly, contract staff.

    Ken Ofori-Atta also stressed transportation services, have been among the worst hit, due to social distancing, closure of schools and the ban on mass gatherings by government.

    Meanwhile, an impact assessment of the coronavirus outbreak conducted by the Ghana Tourism Authority (GTA) has revealed the hospitality industry is likely to lose US$130 million in the formal sector.

    The informal sector of the hospitality industry, according to the sector minister, is likely to also lose US$41 million.

    This makes a total loss of US$171 million for both sectors.

     

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • COVID-19: Fisherfolks snub Akufo-Addos social distancing order to seek for daily bread

    As part of measures to contain the deadly coronavirus which is fast spreading, Ghanaians have been urged by the President, Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, to practice social distancing to avoid contracting the disease from infected persons.

    This directive has been defied by people living within the Tema enclave, as thousands of people thronged to the Tema fishing harbour, on Thursday, April 2, 2020, to wait on fishermen to sell their catch to them.

    As early as 6 am, the seashore was filled with fisherfolks who were ready to go about their normal duties; selling and buying of fishes for either personal use or for marketing purposes.

    A bystander who spoke to GhanaWeb indicated that “most of these buyers come around 6 am to make a purchase and about 11 am, everything returns to normalcy as almost all have dispersed to either their homes or markets to sell their fishes”.

    One of the fishmongers, however, noted that she needed to be at the shore to buy directly from the fishermen, go to the market and sell in other to feed both her husband and children who are home because of the partial lockdown.

    She said, “we cannot sleep at home just like that because we have children at home. To make it worse, they are not going to school and they will eat. Their fathers are not working so we are the source of livelihood and since the directive said we could work, we can have to work to feed our husbands and children.”

    Though fisherfolks have been exempted from the partial lockdown declared by President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, the practice of social distancing still applies to them.

     

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • Ill still be an underground artist if not for songs like enjoyment – KiDi fires critics

    A conversation about classic Ghanaian songs ave been sweeping through social media and KiDi has been dragged into in an unfriendly manner.

    The first leg of the #BehindDaHitz challenge Sarkodie has called for, happened last night between Jay Q and Appietus, who thrilled fans with classic throwback songs they produced for the likes of Buk Bak, VIP, MzBel, Ofori Ampongsah and others years back.

    Amidst conversation surrounding Ghanaian music, a fan fingered KiDi for also drifting away from making classical songs to following trends.

    The fan with the handle @Shadyy_ wrote “Kidi went from dropping songs like Never Again to Enjoyment. Anyway, that’s what we love over here. DJ take us awaayyy at Serallio”.

    Responding to the tweet, the “Gyal Dem Sugar” singer called out Ghanaians, to be honest. Stating that should he be doing such classical songs, he would have been an undeAmidst conversation around Ghanaian music, a fan fingered KiDi for also drifting away from making classical songs to following trends. The fan with the handle @Shadyy_ wrote “Kidi went from dropping songs like Never Again to Enjoyment. Anyway, that’s what we love over here. DJ take us awaayyy at Serallio”.rground artiste by now with his music only reaching some few people.

    See his tweet below.

    Source: Pulse.com.gh

  • Speaker donates half of his three month salary to COVID-19 Fund

    The Speaker of Parliament, Prof Aaron Mike Oquaye, has donated half of his monthly salary for three months to the COVID-19 National Trust Fund.

    Prof Oquaye announced his gesture shortly after the Bill was passed in Parliament on Thursday.

    He also announced that Parliament would donate GH₵200,000 to set the fund rolling.

    Making the donation, the Speaker urged all Members of Parliament and other workers to contribute to the fund to help the fight against the corona virus pandemic.

    Parliament yesterday passed the COVID-19 National Trust Fund Bill under a certificate of urgency.

    The Bill is to establish the fund to complement the efforts of the government in the fight against the COVID-19 pandemic.

    It will also support the needy and the vulnerable who have been afflicted or impacted on by the pandemic and for related matters.

    The passage of the Bill came after the Attorney-General and Minister of Justice, Ms Gloria Akuffo, had moved the motion for it to be read for the third time, and it was seconded by the Minority Leader, Mr Haruna Iddrisu.

    Source: Graphic.com.gh 
  • Coronavirus not an Akufo-Addo problem; we must unite and fight it Empress Gifty

    Award-winning Ghanaian gospel musician and fashionista Empress Gifty has commended President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo for the commitment he has shown in dealing with the coronavirus outbreak in Ghana.

    She said the posture and utterances of the president regarding the COVID-19 outbreak show he is a leader who is going all length to deal with the pandemic.

    She has, therefore, asked all Ghanaians to decouple politics from the fight against the pandemic and support the president.

    Empress Gifty told Nana Romeo on the AyekooAyekoo show on Accra 100.5FM Wednesday, April 1 that COVID-19 is no respecter of persons, hence the need to come together, as a nation, to fight it.

    She also explained that if all Ghanaians play their respective roles effectively, this problem will be dealt with in no time.

    “The fast and prayers that were instituted by the president last week was a good decision and surely, by the grace of God, we shall overcome this problem,” she said.

    She added: “At this juncture, we must all come together and help the president, who has shown enough commitment at dealing with the problem.

    “This problem is not a problem for Akufo-Addo alone, it is all of us, so, we need to come together.”

    Source: classfmonline.com

  • Governance expert Yvonne Nelson diagnose Ghanas problems, proffers solutions

    Actress, Yvonne Nelson seems to be well abreast with the problems facing Africa as a continent and especially Ghana.

    The actress has always complained about the various governments across Africa on the lives of their citizens and the fact that they are not enjoying the ‘national cake’.

    She has always insisted that the continent is enslaved although on paper it is independent of colonial control.

    In a series of tweets, the actress who is a known activist poured her heart out about the failures of African leaders and the fact that the continent has failed its people.

    She said, “Africa, they bring us up not to speak, not to create, they use the word ‘respect’ to control us even when we know they are wrong, a young person is never right! Whiles the world is creating, inventing and giving younger ones the platforms, they still spend millions on independence celebrations when we are still slaves! We control nothing! They are still controlling us! We cant think for ourselves,” she said.

    “Creating opportunities for all Ghanaians … incentives for the youth to start businesses! How can a kid in a village, who has to walk, cross a river and walk again to get to school (under a tree, no chairs) with no breakfast have a sound mind to invent anything?,” she quizzed.

    “This is gonna be tough here! What we are seeing on social media isn’t whats happening out there. People are actually out! Still in crowded places … well, they have to eat … some cant stop working. They wont have food on their tables! Sigh,” she concluded.

    Source: mynewsgh.com

  • Scrap obnoxious, ‘nuisance’ increment of LPG Jinapor

    The Member of Parliament for Yapei Kusawgu Constituency in the Northern Region, John Abdulai Jinapor has described the decision by the National Petroleum Authority (NPA) to implement a Cylinder Recirculation Margin of GHp13.5 per kilogram for LPG at time some parts of the nation are under lockdown due to the fear of spread of the coronavirus as “utter wickedness and the highest level of insensitivity to the plight of the ordinary Ghanaian.”

    Mr Jinapor has also alleged that the National Petroleum Authority (NPA) has further increased the Fuel Marking Margin from GHp3/ltr to GHp4.5/ltr.

    “The imposition of the Cylinder Recirculation Margin coming at a time of Government’s declaration of a partial lockdown of Accra, Tema, Kumasi and parts of the Central Region will only exacerbate the plight of the ordinary Ghanaian,” Mr Jinapor said in a Facebook post.

    He said as a result of the lockdown and the enforcement of the social distancing directives by the President, “Ghanaians are already experiencing very difficult moments as they are unable to generate sufficient income to offset the rising cost of living.”

    In the light of the current happenings Mr Jinapor noted that “rather than burdening the citizenry with such insensitive and draconian policies, the Akuffo-Addo Government must rather demonstrate compassion by initiating policies and programmes that will alleviate the suffering of the ordinary Ghanaian.”

    The lawmaker has, therefore, called on the NPA, as a matter of urgency to “immediately scrap this obnoxious and nuisance increments at this difficult moment.”

     

    Source: classfmonline.com

  • Prayer is a weapon that changes God’s mind – Apostle Eric Nyamekye

    The Chairman of The Church of Pentecost, Apostle Eric Nyamekye, has called on Christians to continuously engage in the act of prayer since it has the potency to change situations and circumstances.

    He said this in a live televised sermon on Pent TV, the official television station of the church, during a Special Evening Service held on Sunday, March 29, 2020.

    Speaking on the topic, “The Relevance Of Prayer,” he underscored that prayer is relevant in all situations.

    According to the Chairman, prayer is one of the most central activities of religious life and central to religious activities. He, however, expressed concern about the fact that prayer is under attack because the world today does not appreciate prayer.

    “People think that prayer is an irrational activity. This is because philosophy deals with mind trying to uncover the truth through reasoning. However, religion receives truth from the deity so people who reason with the mind cannot understand why we are receiving God from without questioning,” he deplored.

    Reading from Luke 11:1, 5:15-16, 6:12, Mark 1:35, Luke 21:34-36, among other texts, Chairman Nyamekye emphasized that Jesus Christ lived prayerful life whilst on earth, saying, “Jesus was and is still a prayer warrior because He is at the right hand of God interceding for believers.”

    As a prayer warrior, Apostle Nyamekye explained that Jesus did not just teach His disciples how to pray but how to engage in the act of prayer as well.

    He stated: “If Jesus, who is God, could pray like this, then men ought to pray as well because there is something in prayer.” He, therefore, called on Christians to pray without ceasing.

    The Chairman defined prayer as communication of a worshipper or supplicant with his or her deity.

    Making reference to a quote by Origen, an Egyptian theologian, who once said: “If everything happens in accordance with the will of God and His decrees stand fast and nothing of what He wills can be reversed, then prayer is absurd,” the Chairman explained that, “It is true that the decree of God stands, however, it is also true that the prayer of the saint can cause God to review what He had decreed.”

    To buttress his assertion, Apostle Nyamekye cited an instance in Isaiah 38:1-8, when King Hezekiah, on his sickbed, prayed fervently to God and had his life prolonged by fifteen years after God Himself, through Prophet Isaiah had told him to put his house in order because he was going to die and would not recover.

    Chairman Nyamekye expounded that, though God decreed and someone also prayed and God changed His mind, averring that, “prayer is that kind of weapon that changes God’s mind and it can always make the difference.”

    He further stated that prayer changes the immutable laws, seasons and time and it can also do the impossible and unthinkable (Joshua 10:12-14, 1 Kings 17:1, 18:1, James 5:17-18, Acts 12:1ff). He added that when Christians pray something happens.

    Touching on contemporary and scientific worldviews that refute the existence of God and His relationship with mankind, the Chairman read Daniel 4:20-26 and refuted those claims and theories, emphasizing that, “God, the Most High, still rules the kingdom of mankind and mankind cannot live independent of Him.”

    Apostle Eric Kwabena Nyamekye concluded by urging Christians to pray because prayer is very relevant in the life of the believer.

    “The value of prayer none can measure. Prayer was relevant then and now it is relevant. I want to call the Church to prayer and to pray fervently in these times as never before. Where now are the Elijahs of God? May men of prayer arise, may women of prayer arise. We have to pray as individuals; we have to pray as family, we have to pray as Ghanaians, we have to pray as Christians, we have to pray as Church because prayer works and prayer is relevant.”

     

    Source: Emmanuel Nana Nsiah

  • Ghana Water Company rolls out strategic plan to keep taps flowing at critical facilities

    The Ghana Water Company says it has put in place measures across the country to ensure constant water supply to essential service providers and critical facilities.

    These facilities, the water company said in a press release,  include hospitals, clinics, airports, Metropolitan, Municipal and District Assemblies (MMDAs) and hotels.

    This is to “ensure that these facilities are adequately served to enable them to store to meet their 24/7 water demand,” the Ghana Water Company explained in the release.

    The utility company said a strategic water supply-demand management plan has been rolled in acknowledgement of the importance of water supply in combating the coronavirus pandemic in Ghana.

    GWCL also said it was essential for these institutions to store water and also urged the public to have adequate water storage facilities.

    This will ensure that they have enough water so that in the event of interrupted water supply, which could be due to power challenges, emergency repair works etc. they can still be served from their storage tanks,” the Ghana Water Company emphasised in the release.

    Read the full release below.

     

    Source: myjoyonline 

  • COVID-19: Avoid unnecessary video calls, limit browsing Telcos Chamber to Ghanaians

    The Telecommunications Chamber is urging Ghanaians to be guided by the way they use mobile internet data as they stay home in compliance to lockdown directives due to the COVID-19 outbreak.

    Among other specific appeals, the Chamber said citizens must avoid unnecessary video calls and also limit the amount of data they use within digital rush hours such as 9am and 11am as well as 7pm and 11pm.

    In a 10-point guidance document, the Chamber made suggestions for the adherence to what it calls that “ten commandments” for internet or data use within the COVID-19 period.

    It indicated that the suggestions are to enable telcos to meet the demands of professional office teams and people undertaking distance learning while they at home.

    “Avoid the use of online entertainment services during digital traffic rush-hours ( 9am-11am and 7pm -11pm), to allow telecommunications networks to meet the most demanding needs of communication applications, professional office teamwork and distance learning, which are crucial to a large number of Ghanaian citizens and businesses and critical to the functioning of the entire economy. If you are using service like Netflix, YouTube reduce the quality of the videos from high to standard definition to conserve bandwidth,” the Chamber noted.

    Read the full statement below:

    MTN Data usage up by nearly 20%

    The outbreak of COVID-19 in Ghana has disrupted the operations of many companies with most staff now working from home.

    The development, according to mobile telecom giant MTN has led to about 20% increase in data usage on its network.

    While the company said it has room to accommodate the growth, it hinted that it may not be able to continue to do so if the growth is exponential.

  • 49 Ghanaian students on their way to study in elite USA universities

    Every year, in the month of March, American colleges release their much-anticipated admission decisions to millions of eager college-bound students from all over the world. These colleges look for high school students from across the globe who are going to accomplish world-changing feats; those who are poised to contribute to their communities and society in general.

    This year, 2020, once again, 49 Ghanaians were admitted into elite universities in the USA on scholarships. The admit rates for these schools range from 4.5% to 11%. Some of these schools include Harvard, Princeton, Yale, Columbia, Caltech, Cornell, Williams, Dartmouth, and others. For instance, the consistently ranked Best University according to the US News and World Report, Princeton received 32, 836 applications for 1822 spots.

    These Ghanaian students gaining admissions had very impressive academic records and showed a strong commitment to their extracurricular activities. What stood out for many of them was that they really want to make things better in their communities as well as high SAT scores with 15 of them scoring Top 1 % out of 2.2 million test-takers worldwide. Quite a number had excellent Wassce, or IB or A level scores. They also had leadership roles in their schools and achieved Honors in the Head of State Awards for example. In effect, they have activities in and outside of school spanning from sports, debates, robotics, music, hiking, and varied activities impacting their communities.

    Young Reuben Agogoe (St. Thomas Aquinas SHS), Adams Anaglo (Achimota School), Michael Ahenkorah (Akosombo International School) and Schuyler Seyram (Mfantsipim School) for example emerged victorious booking their places at Princeton, Columbia, Caltech, and Cornell respectively. Their stellar student profiles included extensive community service, innovative programs they spearheaded, commitment to academic excellence, and SAT scores in the top 1% all test takers on the SAT in the world.

    With the help of AFEX Test Prep, an educational enhancement agency that specializes in preparing students for standardized tests like the SAT, SSAT, GRE, TOEFL, and GMAT located in East Legon with branches in Kumasi and Nairobi, Kenya, these young bright students were adequately prepared to excel in their SAT exams and the college applications preparations. Over the past ten years, AFEX has been successfully assisting African students to secure spots at the very best US and Canadian colleges. In the 2019-2020 application cycle, over 68 Ghanaian and Kenyan students received acceptances with generous scholarships at Harvard, Yale, MIT and other top colleges with the assistance of AFEX Test Prep.

    In this difficult time as educational institutions transition operations online, AFEX is excited to announce its online summer classes for the many students home due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The online classes are taught by Stanford and Yale graduates along with other seasoned tutors who all scored within the top 1% of all SAT test-takers worldwide, with options for Live Class Sessions, One-on-One tutoring, or a Recorded Video package.

    With the remarkable success of AFEX students in this application cycle, the organization is even keener to guide more students through the college application process.

    Source: Cedric Kekeli, Contributor

  • COVID-19: Avoid unnecessary video calls, limit browsing Telcos Chamber to Ghanaians

    The Telecommunications Chamber is urging Ghanaians to be guided by the way they use mobile internet data as they stay home in compliance to lockdown directives due to the COVID-19 outbreak.

    Among other specific appeals, the Chamber said citizens must avoid unnecessary video calls and also limit the amount of data they use within digital rush hours such as 9am and 11am as well as 7pm and 11pm.

    In a 10-point guidance document, the Chamber made suggestions for the adherence to what it calls that “ten commandments” for internet or data use within the COVID-19 period.

    It indicated that the suggestions are to enable telcos to meet the demands of professional office teams and people undertaking distance learning while they at home.

    “Avoid the use of online entertainment services during digital traffic rush-hours ( 9am-11am and 7pm -11pm), to allow telecommunications networks to meet the most demanding needs of communication applications, professional office teamwork and distance learning, which are crucial to a large number of Ghanaian citizens and businesses and critical to the functioning of the entire economy. If you are using service like Netflix, YouTube reduce the quality of the videos from high to standard definition to conserve bandwidth,” the Chamber noted.

    Read the full statement below:

    MTN Data usage up by nearly 20%

    The outbreak of COVID-19 in Ghana has disrupted the operations of many companies with most staff now working from home.

    The development, according to mobile telecom giant MTN has led to about 20% increase in data usage on its network.

    While the company said it has room to accommodate the growth, it hinted that it may not be able to continue to do so if the growth is exponential.

     

    Source: citinewsroom 

  • Coronavirus: Ghana Immigration Service officials arrest 44 foreign nationals

    Officials of the Ghana Immigration Service (GIS) have arrested 44 foreign nationals, who attempted using unapproved routes from Tatale in the Northern Region to Togo.

    The foreigners are made up of 37 Nigeriens, four Togolese, two, Beninois and one Nigerian.

    Speaking in an interview with the Ghana News Agency on the telephone, Mr Sumaila Seidu Hudu, GIS Commander in charge of Tatale-Sangule and Zabzugu districts said, the foreigners were fleeing from Tamale and Yendi, where they claimed residents were harassing them for allegedly spreading the Coronavirus disease.

    Commander Hudu told the GNA that all of them have been tested negative for the coronavirus disease, and their fate would within the day be determined by the Tatale District Assembly.

    Meanwhile, both Ghana and Togo have closed down their borders, and quarantining or returning them to where they were travelling from could be the next options.

     

    Source: GNA

  • Coronavirus: One million cases, 53,000 deaths globally

    More than a million cases of coronavirus have been registered globally, according to the latest figures from Johns Hopkins University – another grim milestone as the world grapples with the spreading pandemic.

    Nearly 53,000 people have died and more than 210,000 have recovered, according to the US university’s figures.

    The US has the most cases, and about 1,000 died there in the past day.

    The disease, Covid-19, first emerged in central China three months ago.

    Though the tally kept by Johns Hopkins records one million confirmed cases, the actual number is thought to be much higher.

    It took a month and a half for the first 100,000 cases to be registered. A million was reached after a doubling in cases over the past week.

    Nearly a quarter of cases have been registered in the United States, while Europe accounts for around half.

    What’s the latest?

    On Thursday, Spain said 950 people had died in the previous 24 hours – thought to be the highest number of deaths of any country in one day.

    The number of confirmed Spanish cases rose from 102,136 on Wednesday to 110,238 – an 8% rise that is similar to the rate recorded in previous days. Authorities believe the virus is now peaking and say they expect to see a drop in figures in the days ahead.

    “We continue with an increase of around 8%. This points, as we have already seen, to a stabilisation in the data that we’re registering,” María José Sierra, from the Spanish health ministry’s emergency co-ordination unit, said at a news conference.

    Spain, the second-worst hit nation in terms of deaths, has also lost nearly 900,000 jobs.

    The US on Thursday said it saw a record 6.6 million new unemployment benefit claims.

    How did we get here?
    In China at the end of December, a 34-year-old ophthalmologist named Dr Li Wenliang tried to send a message to other medics warning them about a new virus in the city of Wuhan in Hubei Province.

    He was later visited by the police and accused of scaremongering. Dr Li died on 6 February after contracting the virus while treating patients in Wuhan.

    Source: The BBC

  • CHRAJ urges public to respect lockdown protocols

    The Commission on Human Rights and Administrative Justice (CHRAJ) on Thursday advised members of the public in the lockdown areas to respect the lawful directives relating to the restriction of movement to curtail the spread of COVID-19.

    The Commission said in order not to occasion any misunderstanding with the lawfully constituted Operation COVID Safety Security Taskforce Force as it carries out its legal duties, people in the lockdown enclaves should adhere to the restrictive protocols.

    In a statement signed by Mr Joseph Whittal, CHRAJ Commissioner and copied to the Ghana News Agency in Accra, it lauded efforts by both the Government and the Operation COVID Safety team in protecting public safety during the lockdown.

    The Commission, however, noted that, it was equally imperative that the efforts at enforcing the law to safeguard public health and public safety should not be oblivious of the limitations imposed by the Constitution and International Human Rights Instruments.”

    The Commission commended the initiative so far taken by government in combating the COVID -19 pandemic in the interest of public health and safety.

    It recounted that the initiative has culminated in the enactment of the Imposition of Restrictions Act, Act 1020 of 2020, which is anchored on Article 21(4) (c) (d) and (e) of the 1992 Constitution.

    CHRAJ said the Act gives legal effect to the restriction or curtailment of fundamental rights and freedoms in circumstances of national emergency or disaster to safeguard public health and public safety.

    “We will therefore be remiss of our duty if we fail to call on the Government and all who have the duty to enforce the lockdown to do so in a manner that would protect the dignity of the public, including those found to have breached the Executive Order,” CHRAJ stated.

    CHRAJ said it was mindful of the logistical and operational constraints being faced by security personnel generally, but they owe it a duty to all to act proportionately in the performance of their duties, particularly regarding arrests and assaults.

    In this regard, CHRAJ, therefore, advised the High Command of the Security Services to take necessary steps to strengthen the professional standards and behaviour of the security personnel to ensure that they operate within the ambit of the Constitution as well as within International Human Rights Instruments.

    The statement said while the excesses reported on may not be widespread, the nation risks sliding into the slippery ground if they are not held in check immediately and hold accountable those who may indulge in excesses.

    In addition, it is imperative for the authorities to improve operational standards based on benchmarks set out, in the UN Basic Principles on the use of force and firearms which are aimed at guiding security personnel to act proportionately to avoid torture and abuse of power even in war and emergency situations.

    source: GNA

  • Protect yourself first – Kennedy Agyapong tells frontliners

    Kennedy Ohene Agyapong, Member of Parliament (MP) for Assin Central Constituency has advised front liners in the fight against the global pandemic Coronavirus (COVID-19) to always protect themselves as they take care of patients.

    The Assin Central legislator gave the advise after he donated Personal Protective Equipment (PPEs) and other sanitary items to the Assin Fosu Health Directorate with Assin South and North district health facilities being the beneficiaries.

    The items included 30 gallons of alcohol-based hand sanitizers, 10 Hospital Beds, 100 Veronica Buckets, 14,500 face masks, 12,000 gloves together with tissues and Soaps.

    He pledged to add more beds and other equipment in the coming days and pleaded with the citizenry to donate in their own small way to support the fight against the disease in the Country.

    The MP asked the health workers to make good use of the PPEs to meet the targeted purpose.

    Mr. Nicholas Fiifi Baako, Assin Fosu Municipal Chief Executive said no COVID-19 case has so far been recorded in the Municipality and thanked the MP for his relentless effort towards the fight against coronavirus in the country as a whole.

    Mr. George Asumadu, the Assin North Director of Health for the three Assin Districts thanked Mr. Agyapong for the kind gesture.

    He pleaded with churches, non-governmental Organizations and well to do individuals to support the health sector with the little they could to protect health workers and all and promised to make judicious use of the equipment.

    He also pleaded with the public to stay at home if they have no serious business to do outside as well as observe all the precautionary measures given by the Ghana Health Service.

    “Let everyone take their health into their own hands in order to support the effort of the government”.

    Source: GNA

     

  • GCB Bank speaks on death of a client in the Banking Hall

    GCB Bank Limited has reacted to allegations that a client died in their Banking hall due to the negligence of some staff at the Boundary Road Branch.

    There was a post by one Raymond Andre Paadoshkash alleging that the negligence of staff at the Boundary Road Branch led to the untimely death of their mother.

    But responding to the allegations, GCB in a statement said, “The Branch of GCB Bank Ltd in question is the Boundary Road Branch and not Adabraka as erroneously published.

    Approximately around 11.15 am on that fateful day, 26th March 2020, Madam Patience Esther Kuma, a customer of our Boundary Road Branch, entered the Branch accompanied by a lady, who was subsequently identified as her daughter.

    The door was duly opened for the duo to enter the Banking Hall. Madam Patience was assisted by her daughter to sit in the Security woman`s chair inside the Banking hall.

    Hardly had she sat in the chair than she slumped to her left in the chair and remained motionless.

    The daughter started shaking her frantically in an attempt to resuscitate her. Two customers and two GCB staff, who were in the banking hall at the time and saw what was happening, were the first to rush to the aid of Madam Patience. The GCB staff were actively involved in fetching water in cups to use for the resuscitation whilst the deceased`s daughter went out to call the taxi driver, who brought them to the Branch, to take the distressed woman to the hospital.

    Whilst a GCB staff asked that the deceased be taken to the Bob Freeman clinic, which was very close to the Boundary Road Branch, the deceased`s daughter insisted that the deceased be taken to the Ridge Hospital to see her regular Medical Doctor.

    When the taxi arrived, three officers of the Bank and two customers carried Madam Patience into the waiting taxi to be conveyed to the Ridge Hospital. It is instructive to note that all these incidents happened within a spate of 5 minutes. The deceased and the daughter entered the banking hall at 11.15 am and by 11.20 am, she was carried into the taxi cab, headed for the Ridge Hospital.

    The allegation that Madam Patience Kuma died in the banking hall could not have been accurate. It is trite knowledge that a declaration that one is brain stem dead could only be made by a certified Medical Practitioner. Pronouncing people dead is a medical function and cannot be determined in a banking hall by one who is not a Medical Practitioner, and more so not by one who was not present when the incident occurred. Available evidence has it that at the time the deceased was carried into the taxi, it was obvious she was alive but had difficulty in breathing.

    From the facts as narrated, it is clear that the Branch staff acted very responsibly and did what they could have done under the circumstance as Bankers, and not medical practitioners, to assist in saving Madam Patience`s life. This show of concern by the staff of the Boundary Road Branch is consistent with the Bank`s renewed customer-centric paradigm.

    The staff, at the peril of their own lives in these days of the rampaging highly-debilitating COVID-19, threw caution out of the window and carried the collapsed Madam Patience into the taxi cab when they were not wearing protective clothing. They did all these in an attempt to save the life of a customer so dear to them.

    We believe the staff deserve praise, rather than the opprobrium and public ridicule to which the Facebook post has exposed them. May the soul of Madam Patience Esther Aku rest in perfect peace”.

    The Bank said it can make CCTV Footage available for any further investigation into the matter.

    Read GCB Bank’s full post below.

    Source: mynewsgh.com

  • Health workers to be honoured at 2021 Grand National

    The first day of next year’s three day Grand National meeting is to be named “Liverpool’s NHS Day” to honour National Health Service workers combating the coronavirus pandemic, The Jockey Club announced on Thursday.

    This year’s meeting which usually climaxes with the world’s greatest steeplechase on Saturday has been cancelled due to the pandemic which as of Tuesday had claimed 2,352 lives in the United Kingdom.

    NHS staff are battling to deal with thousands of other patients who have the virus.

    The Jockey Club, the largest commercial group in British horseracing which operates 15 racecourses including Aintree, which hosts The Grand National, said they would also be donating 10,000 tickets — which usually cost £40($50)each — to local NHS staff and social care workers.

    The 10,000 tickets would be on top of the normal Thursday crowd of around 30,000.

    “The day, which is due to take place on Thursday 8th April 2021, will also be re-named Liverpool’s NHS Day in honour of the dedicated NHS staff and volunteers across Merseyside who are working tirelessly to care for COVID-19 patients,” read the Jockey Club statement.

    “In recognition of the hard work and commitment of carers who are providing support for vulnerable people in the community through this crisis, The Jockey Club will ensure professional carers from the social care sector will also benefit from the initiative.”

    Dickon White, the Jockey Club’s regional director, said it was great to be able to offer something in appreciation of their sterling work.

    “We understand just how hard the NHS and professional carers are working right now and this is our way of showing our gratitude,” he said in a statement.

    “The ticket process and distribution will begin at the start of next year.”

    Jan Ledward, chief officer at NHS Liverpool Clinical Commissioning Group (CCG), the organisation which plans NHS care for the city, warmly welcomed the gesture.

    “Across local health and care, staff are working tirelessly to keep services running and give people the care they need, often in the face of significant challenges,” she said.

    “Whether in GP (General Practitioners) practices, hospitals, community and mental health services, care homes, social care or the many other areas that make up our local system – teams are showing incredible resilience and dedication.

    “We’re delighted to see this enormous effort recognised.”

    Source: France24

  • Spain’s coronavirus death toll tops 10,000

    Spain’s death toll from coronavirus surpassed the 10,000 threshold after a record 950 people died overnight, the country’s Health Ministry said on Thursday.

    The country’s total death toll caused by the coronavirus outbreak was 10,003 while the number of cases registered rose to 110,238 from 102,136 on Wednesday, according to the country’s health ministry.

    The massive jump in toll figures came as Spain’s Social Security Minister Jose Luis Escriva warned the country’s 2020 budget deficit would widen “significantly but temporarily” as a result of the measures taken to halt the spread of coronavirus.

    Speaking at the same conference, Labour Minister Yolanda Diaz said 2.3 million people are currently receiving unemployment benefits, costing the state around 1.22 billion euros ($1.33 billion) a month.

    Spain has recorded the world’s second-highest tally of deaths from Covid-19, after Italy.

    Source: France24

  • Philippines ambassador to Lebanon dies of coronavirus

    The country’s total death toll caused by the coronavirus outbreak was 10,003 while the number of cases registered rose to 110,238 from 102,136 on Wednesday, according to the country’s health ministry.

    Over 6,000 people were in intensive care, the data showed.

    Burials via video calls a grim reality for coronavirus-hit Spain

    The massive jump in toll figures came as Spain’s Social Security Minister Jose Luis Escriva warned the country’s 2020 budget deficit would widen “significantly but temporarily” as a result of the measures taken to halt the spread of coronavirus.

    Speaking at the same conference, Labour Minister Yolanda Diaz said 2.3 million people are currently receiving unemployment benefits, costing the state around 1.22 billion euros ($1.33 billion) a month.

    Spain has recorded the world’s second-highest tally of deaths from Covid-19, after Italy.

    Source: France24

     

  • Tacha cant hide her excitement after being verified on facebook – Screenshoots

    Former Big Brother Naija star Tacha is on cloud nine after being verified by social networking site Facebook.

    This means all her three accounts on popular social networking sites Twitter, Instagram and Facebook have been verified.

    The verification process of her Facebook account was completed on Thursday afternoon.

    She was compelled to get the account verified as fraudsters had created similar accounts and were duping people.

    For clarity sake, celebrities with verified accounts are always A-listers with huge influence beyond their native country. Verification means you have been recognized in your career and as such people should be able to distinguish your posts from parody accounts.

    Source: www.Ghgossip.com

  • Man jailed for stealing face masks

    A man has been jailed for six months for stealing personal protective equipment, including face masks, from an ambulance, police in London said on Thursday.

    Mark Manley, 35, pleaded guilty to theft, public order offences and assaulting a security guard who challenged him about the incident near a south London hospital last Saturday evening.

    The Metropolitan Police said he took a bag containing items including masks, paper suits and hand gel from the ambulance but some of the items were unusable because of contamination.

    He was sentenced at a court hearing in Croydon, south London, on Monday, it added in a statement.

    Another six-month jail sentence was given in London on Wednesday to a 55-year-old man who coughed on a police officer and threatened to infect him with COVID-19.

    Both incidents were classed under a specific law governing assaults on emergency workers, which was introduced in November 2018 and carries a maximum jail term of 12 months.

    Source: punchng.com

  • Trump warns of ‘horrific’ weeks ahead as US virus death toll tops 5,000

    President Donald Trump gave another dire press conference warning of ‘horrific’ weeks to come as the US reported its highest one-day Coronavirus death toll of 884 people.

    “Difficult days are ahead for our nation,” US President Donald Trump told reporters at the White House on Wednesday.

    “We’re going to have a couple of weeks, starting pretty much now, but especially a few days from now, that are going to be horrific.”

    Trump had initially played down the virus’ severity, but White House medical experts now forecast that even if Americans follow unprecedented stay-at-home orders, some 100,000 to 240,000 people could die from the respiratory disease.

    The World Health Organisation said the global case count will reach 1 million and the death toll 50,000 in the next few days. It currently stands at 43,412.

    US has its highest one-day death toll

    The coronavirus has killed 884 people over the past 24 hours in the US, a new one-day record for the country with by far the highest number of reported cases anywhere in the world, Johns Hopkins University said Wednesday evening.

    That took the total death toll in America to 5,116 people.

    The number of reported cases rose by 25,200 over the past 24 hours to 216,772, said the university’s coronavirus tracker.

    The grim record for deaths in one day is held by Italy with 969 on March 27.

    Connecticut Governor Ned Lamont announced what he called a tragic milestone as the virus claimed its youngest known US victim to date, a six-week-old baby.

    “It just is a reminder that nobody is safe from this virus,” Lamont said at a field house at Southern Connecticut State University in New Haven, where more than 200 hospital beds have been set up.

    New York Governor Cuomo turns the thumbscrews

    New York Governor Andrew Cuomo on Wednesday clamped down harder on public gatherings in the face of the coronavirus, calling residents “selfish” for refusing to stay home as California’s governor warned his state may run out of intensive care beds and ventilators next month.

    New York Governor Andrew Cuomo told New York City police to more aggressively enforce rules for social distancing as deaths in the state shot up to nearly 2,000.

    “Young people must get this message, and they still have not gotten the message, you still see too many situations with too much density by young people,” said Cuomo in imposing new rules to close playgrounds, swing sets, basketball courts and similar spaces.

    The Democratic governor sounded vexed by reports of crowds gathering at a Manhattan pier to watch the arrival of the US Navy hospital ship, the Comfort.

    “How reckless and irresponsible and selfish for people not to do it on their own,” he said.

    Source: France24

  • Global virus cases near million as US records youngest death

    A six-week-old baby died of Covid-19 and global agencies warned of food shortages as coronavirus infections around the world neared one million Wednesday.

    Governments expanded lockdowns to affect about half of the planet, with funeral parties banned in the Democratic Republic of Congo, New York locking up its famed street basketball courts and hard-hit Italy extending its economically-crippling lockdown until April 13.

    More than 900,000 people have been infected by the coronavirus and nearly 46,000 have died since it first emerged in the Chinese city of Wuhan late last year, according to an AFP tally.

    HIT A MILLION

    World Health Organisation (WHO) Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said the number would hit one million “in the next few days.”

    “I am deeply concerned about the rapid escalation and global spread of infection,” he said.

    “The entire world is shut down,” said US President Donald Trump. “It’s very sad.”

    Cases in the United States soared, rising to more than 213,000, and deaths neared 4,800, according to the Johns Hopkins University database.

    SIX-YEAR-OLD DEAD

    Among the victims was a six-week-old in Connecticut who was brought unresponsive to a hospital late last week, believed to be the youngest victim yet of the virus.

    “Testing confirmed last night that the new-born was Covid-19 positive,” Governor Ned Lamont wrote on Twitter. “This is absolutely heart-breaking.”

    The victims of the coronavirus have been disproportionately elderly, but a number of recent cases have highlighted that the disease can befall even youngsters with seemingly strong immune systems.

    The dead have included a 13-year-old in France, a 12-year-old in Belgium, and 13-year-old Ismail Mohamed Abdullah in Britain, whose family said the “gentle and kind” boy had no underlying health issues.

    US NUMBERS RISE

    The US numbers continued to outpace the rest of the globe, though Washington made clear it believes China, with a reported 82,000 cases, is deliberately masking its figures.

    “How do we know” if they are accurate, Trump asked at a press conference, not denying a Bloomberg report that US intelligence has concluded China is concealing the extent of the coronavirus pandemic there.

    “Their numbers seem to be a little bit on the light side,” Trump said.

    Densely populated New York continued to be the US epicentre.

    REFRIGERATED TRUCKS

    Across the city refrigerated trucks grimly parked outside hospitals to deal with the surge in bodies.

    New York Governor Andrew Cuomo announced he was closing all playgrounds and basketball courts to enforce “social distancing” to halt transmission.

    “You still see too many situations with too much density by young people,” he said. “No density, no basketball games.”

    In Florida, Governor Ron DeSantis ordered all 21 million residents of the Sunshine State to stay inside for one month, after having resisted a lockdown for weeks.

    Germany extended to April 19 its bans on gatherings of more than two people outdoors, with Chancellor Angela Merkel warning that families may not be able to visit during Easter celebrations.

    “A pandemic does not recognise holidays,” she said.

    CHURCHES CLOSED

    In Greece, too, the Orthodox Church’s Holy Synod said all churches are to remain closed over the Easter period, the biggest celebration of the year which culminates on April 19.

    The global crisis wiped more major events off the calendar with Wimbledon, the signature event of tennis, cancelled for the first time since World War II.

    And in a sign of shifting focus, Britain said that UN climate talks due in November in Glasgow were being postponed.

    Lockdowns have been especially challenging in developing countries, with some of the world’s poorest fearing they could lose their livelihoods entirely.

    SOUTH AFRICA

    Dwellers of South Africa’s townships say it is simply impossible to stay at home.

    “We don’t have toilets… we don’t have water, so you must go out,” said Irene Tsetse, 55, who shares a one-bedroom shack in Khayelitsha township with her son.

    The Food and Agriculture Organisation, WHO and the World Trade Organisation warned in a joint statement that panic buying already seen in parts of the world could threaten food supplies.

    “Uncertainty about food availability can spark a wave of export restrictions, creating a shortage on the global market,” they said.

    ITALY

    In Italy, half a million more people require help to afford meals, adding to the 2.7 million already in need last year, according to the country’s biggest agricultural union Coldiretti.

    “Usually we serve 152,525 people. But now we’ve 70,000 more requests,” said Roberto Tuorto, who runs a food aid association.

    It is crucial to “ensure that the economic crisis unleashed by the virus doesn’t become a security crisis,” he warned.

    BRITAIN, FRANCE

    Britain and France both reported their highest daily death tolls from Covid-19, although there were signs that the epidemic could be peaking in Europe.

    Italy’s death toll, the highest in the world, climbed past 13,000 and the government extended its lockdown until April 13.

    “If we start loosening our measures now, all our efforts will have been in vain,” Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte told the nation in a televised address.

    In Spain, deaths passed 9,000 on Wednesday, but the rate of new cases continued to slow.

    Fernando Simon, head of the health ministry’s emergency coordination unit, said it appeared the country may have passed the peak.

    Source: allafrica.com

  • How Dua Lipa released an album from lockdown

    Four weeks ago, Dua Lipa flew back to London after playing Sydney’s Mardi Gras to discover her flat had flooded.

    The singer-songwriter rented an Airbnb while the repairs were carried out. Now, she and her boyfriend are stuck there for the duration of the lockdown.

    “I’m really enjoying it,” she tells the BBC over the phone. “I’m doing stuff that I don’t normally get the chance to do, just sleeping in and reading a book and catching up on TV shows.”

    Sleeping in wasn’t supposed be on the agenda this month.

    Dua’s second album, Future Nostalgia, was primed for release at the start of April, and her diary for the rest of 2020 was packed – with a world tour, a Glastonbury slot and an appearance on Saturday Night Live all scheduled for the coming weeks.

    But while artists like Lady Gaga, Sam Smith and Haim have delayed their albums due to the coronavirus, Dua chose to bring hers forward, giving it to fans a week earlier than planned.

    It wasn’t an easy decision. The star was in tears as she announced the news in a YouTube livestream, not least because the album had leaked online (a situation she later described as “a pain in the arse”).

    Ultimately, she thinks it was better to set the record free instead of worrying about the “perfect” release strategy.

    “I made this album to get away from any pressures and anxieties and opinions from the outside world,” she says.

    “Yes, it was made to be listened out in the clubs and at festivals – but at the same time, I wanted to give people some happiness during this time, where they don’t have to think about what’s going on and just shut off and dance.

    “Maybe it had to just come out now, rather than later.”

    Future Nostalgia is currently heading to number one in the UK and the top five in the US. It’s also one of the highest-rated albums of 2020 so far, with an average score of 88 on Metacritic.

    As the title suggests, it sounds like a throwback record from the year 2050 – its laser-gun pop melodies fused with squelchy funk basslines and disco grooves.

    Dua dreamt up the concept in late 2018 as she walked around the strip in Las Vegas.

    “I’d already started working on the record and I knew I wanted it to reflect my childhood influences, but I hadn’t quite figured out what direction I wanted to go,” she recalls.

    “I had my headphones in and was out walking to clear my head, when I was like, ‘Oh, I know, Future Nostalgia could work.’

    “At first I worried it was too on the nose, too literal, but by the time I’d gone back to my hotel, I’d solidified it in my head.

    “I messaged my manager and said, ‘I’ve got my album title, I’m going to start working backwards from there.’”

    The first song to capture the essence of that idea was Levitating, a euphoric roller-skating jam that clocks in at 103bpm, the same sweet spot as the Bee Gees’ Night Fever.

    “It was the song that helped shape the record,” says Dua, who got “so excited” in the studio that the recording session became an impromptu party.

    “We ate so many doughnuts that we were literally levitating because we were so high on sugar,” she told fans in a Q&A session last week.

    ‘People see you as manufactured’ Unlike her self-titled debut album, she has a writing credit on every song. As a result, you get a clearer picture of the star’s personality – smart, strong-willed, passionate and really, really committed to dancing.

    “With my first record, I was lucky to get songs like New Rules and Be The One that I didn’t write, but which were also massive parts of my career,” she says. “But I also felt like I had a lot of proving to do.

    “For a pop artist, people can see you as manufactured, and that you just get a writing credit for turning up. But, for the songs I did write, I was in those sessions and they are my personal experiences. And that’s something I wanted to get across in every interview I did.”

    This time, Dua says she didn’t go in with an attitude that she’d reject other people’s songs. It just turned out that she was “very inspired and knew exactly what I wanted to say”.

    That’s clearest on the two songs that bookend the album. Both look at different aspects of feminism, with the agenda-setting title track declaring: “I know you ain’t used to a female alpha.”

    “I’m not suggesting that’s what I am,” she says. “But when you sing that song, you want to feel stronger and more empowered.”

    Closing the album is the more reflective Boys Will Be Boys, which voices the everyday fears women face but men rarely have to think about – from being ignored and treated as inferior to the threat of violence.

    One striking line about “putting your keys between?your?knuckles” was borne of real-life experience.

    “I remember walking home, especially in the winter time, when I was getting off my bus and just trying to get to my flat, which was a three minute walk from the bus stop, and just being petrified of boys on bikes cat-calling around the estate,” recalls the singer.

    She included that line to speak directly to her female fans “so they feel seen and feel heard and know that we all go through the same things”.

    Stepping up The song is the fulfilment of everything Dua has been saying about feminism since New Rules catapulted her to global fame three years ago.

    She’s spoken out about abortion rights, criticised the treatment of women in Saudi Arabia, and presented a “five-point plan for the music industry to evolve” at the Cambridge Union.

    Even at the Grammys, where she won best new artist in 2019, she used her time at the podium to criticise former Recording Academy president Neil Portnow, who said women needed to “step up” if they wanted fairer representation at award shows.

    “I get a lot of backlash for speaking out, but these are things I’m passionate about – and that’s that,” she says. A lot of other pop stars would bite their tongue or shy away from such confrontation.

    Source: bbc.com

  • EU chief ‘concerned’ about Hungary virus emergency law

    European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen expressed concern Thursday over a Coronavirus emergency law in Hungary that has given nationalist premier Viktor Orban sweeping powers.

    While saying EU countries may need extraordinary measures to tackle the pandemic, she added: “I am concerned that certain measures go too far — and I’m particularly concerned with the situation in Hungary.”

    Hungary’s parliament, dominated by Orban’s ruling party, handed the prime minister the power from Tuesday to rule by decree until his government decides the virus crisis is over.

    The emergency law also threatens journalists with prison if they publish what it deems “falsehoods” about the virus or the government’s actions to slow it.

    The law has sparked alarm among rights groups, media organisations and several EU countries, with fears it was a power grab by Orban, who has ruled Hungary for the past decade.

    Thirteen EU nations, including heavyweights France and Germany, issued a joint statement on Wednesday that — without explicitly naming Hungary — said they were “deeply concerned about the risk of violations of the principles of rule of law, democracy and fundamental rights arising from the adoption of certain emergency measures”.

    Von der Leyen up to now had been similarly circumspect, avoiding singling Hungary out by name. On Tuesday, she emphasised that coronavirus emergency measures in EU countries must be limited, proportionate and cannot last indefinitely.

    EU threatens ‘action’

    As part of her response to questions on Thursday specifically on Hungary, von der Leyen said that where EU countries’ measures do no meet those criteria “we will take action as necessary as we have already done in the past”.

    Her Commission, she added, was “mapping the whole situation” and weighing them against those standards.

    Orban’s government argues that it is upholding EU values and press freedom with the emergency law.

    His spokesman for international relations tweeted on Wednesday that “the Hungarian state of emergency and extraordinary measures are congruent with the treaties and Hungarian constitution and targeted exclusively at fighting the coronavirus”.

    Orban, frequently in hot water with the Commission over his anti-EU stances, is worried about his Fidesz party remaining part of an EU-wide conservative political grouping, the European People’s Party (EPP).

    Orban contacted leading EPP figures — including, in a letter obtained by AFP, the head of Germany’s powerful CDU, Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer — appealing for support, party figures said.

    EPP head Donald Tusk, former president of the European Council representing EU leaders, has written his own letter to EPP member party chiefs calling Hungary’s emergency measures “disproportionate and inadequate”.

    Source: AFP

  • 6.6 million Americans unemployed – a record high as coronavirus takes its toll

    The last three weeks have marked one of the most devastating periods in history for the American job market, as first-time claims for unemployment benefits have surged more than 3,000% since early March.

    Businesses continue to lay off and furlough workers amid the coronavirus outbreak.
    6.6 million US workers filed for their first week of unemployment benefits in the week ending March 28 — a new historic high.

    That was far greater than economists had expected, and more than 3,000% the pre-pandemic levels. Unemployment claims at this level suggest a severe job market decline hardly any American alive has ever seen in their lifetimes.

    Economists characterized the increase as “monstrous,” “stunningly awful,” and “a portrait of disaster.”
    Including the prior week’s 3.3 million initial claims, Americans have filed nearly 10 million jobless claims in the last two weeks alone.

    That corresponds to roughly 6% of America’s 165 million strong work force, which in turn implies a 9.5% unemployment rate, according to Citi economist Andrew Hollenhorst.

    “Further job loss expected in coming weeks is very likely to push unemployment above 10%, even taking account of a potential steep decline in the labor force participation rate, as some displaced workers are neither furloughed nor looking for work,” Hollenhorst wrote in a note.

    The rules of who can file for unemployment benefits vary by state. But in the face of the coronavirus outbreak, the government has waived some restrictions. Independent contractors and self-employed people, for example, who don’t usually qualify, can now temporarily receive benefits through a pandemic unemployment assistance program Congress created.

    Whether this week’s massive claims number was the worst of it remains to be seen. Ahead of the coronavirus outbreak, weekly first-time claims had been hovering in the low 200,000s.

    This “tectonic shift” in the US labor market “implied a real-time unemployment rate of 10.1% at a minimum,” said Joseph Brusuelas, chief economist at RSM.

    As companies continue to close their doors and shed workers to limit the spread of coronavirus throughout the population, more workers will need government aid to make ends meet.

    What you need to know about the stimulus bill
    Brusuelas said in his view, the Trump administration should work on a next-phase fiscal aid package to “target plugging the holes that are being blown in state and local budgets, in addition to Federal Reserve purchases of state and municipal debt.” The government passed the CARES Act to combat the effects from the coronavirus outbreak last week.
    The March jobs report, which is due Friday at 8:30 am ET, is not expected to look quite as dire. The Refinitiv consensus estimate is for a loss of 100,000 jobs, with the unemployment rate inching up to 3.8%, from its historic low of 3.5%.

    The March report will be more muted because the survey it is based on concludes around the middle of the month — which was before millions of Americans filed for unemployment benefits for the first time.

    source: CNN

  • Peter Okoye releases stay at home challenge video with his children

    Peter Okoye and his two kids Cameron and Aliona have released a video that is fast travelling on the net.

    In the video, Liona and Cameron are seen given their own version of the stay at home challenge.

    The kids dropped a ball that travelled through obstacles, hitting a collection of books to a specific location without missing!

    This challenge comes after countries are observing a lockdown to control the spread of Coronavirus.

    Watch the video below;

    Source: GhanaCelebrities.Com

  • Government begins processes to expand coronavirus testing centers

    Government has begun processes to expand the number of COVID-19 testing centres in the country.

    The move according to the government will facilitate speedy testing of COVID-19 contacts that have been traced so far.

    The two existing facilities, Noguchi Memorial Institute and Kumasi Centre for Collaborative Research are the only testing centres currently

    Information Minister Kojo Oppong Nkrumah in a radio interview said processes are underway with the supervision of Noguchi to expand the testing centres.

    “What we have to do is bring on board other labs that have similar facilities mostly used for tuberculosis and other respiratory issues, and I am informed that there is a third lab that is currently able to process which has been added. Then the number of them across the country……… there are a number of labs with the PCR machines that can be used and there are going through the process with the supervision of Noguchi to calibrate the machines so the can assist us…… ”

    Bishop Titi-Ofei rescinds decision to offer his facility as COVID-19 isolation centre

    Bishop Titi-Ofei has rescinded his decision to allow his facility to be used as an isolation Centre for COVID-19 patients.

    This was after some residents in Tema Community 18 protested his decision to offer the facility as COVID-19 isolation centre.

    They argued that this decision was not the best as it poses a threat to the rest of the community folks.

    They asked him to rescind his decision or they were going to use legal means to stop him.

     

    Source: primenewsghana.com

  • UK reports daily death toll of 563 in worst day of coronavirus crisis

    Britain reported 563 daily coronavirus deaths on Wednesday, the first time the national toll has exceeded 500, bringing the total fatalities to 2,352, according to official figures.

    “As of 5pm (1600 GMT) on 31 March, of those hospitalised in the UK who tested positive for coronavirus, 2,352 have sadly died,” the health ministry said on its official Twitter page.

    Some 29,474 people have now tested positive, an increase of 4,324 over the previous day, it added.

    Britain locked down last week in an attempt to combat the virus, but Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who himself has tested positive, warned that it would “get worse before it gets better”.

    The virus has also hit the royal family, with Prince Charles only coming out of isolation on Tuesday after displaying mild symptoms of the disease.

    On Wednesday he released a video message praising the “remarkable” state-run National Health Service. “None of us can say when this will end, but end it will,” he said.

    “Until it does, let us all try and live with hope and, with faith in ourselves and each other, look forward to better times to come

    Source: AFP

  • Storm rips off Asankragwa SHS roofing, five kids hospitalised

    The roof of the Wassa Amenfi West Municipal Education Office and the Asankragwa Senior High School have been ripped off by a rainstorm that hit the municipality Wednesday afternoon.

    The rainstorm, which started at 12 noon and lasted for close to three hours, also rendered more than 100 people homeless.

    Properties running into several thousands of cedis for residents of Patakro, Woman No Good, Odumasi, Breman, Asuoshiam and Amoaku were heavily affected.

    The roof of the new school building for the Patakro and the Woman No Good communities were ripped off.

    Trees that were knocked off when the storm hit have fallen on some high-tension cables supplying power to large portions of the municipality thereby affecting power supply.

    Five children who were injured at Amoaku are receiving treatment at the Samatex Hospital.

    “This morning when I went around with the MCE, we visited a 7-year-old resident of Kwabin at the Asankragwa St. Thomas Catholic Hospital who was affected when the storm hit. A falling wooden bar caught him in the leg. Doctors told us he will need operation as his leg has broken,” Samuel Kakyire Obuobi of Ahobrasi FM in Asankragwa told 3news.com.

    Municipal Chief Executive George Agyiri and the Municipal NADMO Director, John Osway, have since been touring the municipality to assess the level of destruction and also commiserate with the victims.

    Some of the affected have been relocated to one of the schools in the municipality while the assembly works to provide them with relief items.

     

    Source: 3news.com

  • Fire guts factory, houses at Agbogba

    Three semi-detached houses and a factory at Agbogba, a suburb of Accra, have been gutted by fire.

    The incident occurred a few minutes before midday.

    Even though the cause of the fire is not yet known, residents suspect an industrial gas leakage.

    When UTV correspondents reached the scene, personnel from the Ghana National Fire Service and National Disaster Management Organisation (NADMO) were still scrambling to completely put out the fire.

     

    Source: peacefmonline.com

  • Royal Senchi temporarily closes its doors amid coronavirus outbreak

    The Royal Senchi Hotel has temporarily closed its doors to the public as a measure to prevent a spread of coronavirus and to protect its staff and guests.

    After much deliberation with consultants and experts, the hotel will be closed down from April 1, to June 30, 2020.

    For any inquiries, contact management of the hotel via email; info@theroyalsenchi.com or through their social media channels; @theroyalsenchi.

     

    Source: myjoyonline 

  • Bishop Titi-Ofei withdraws building offer for coronavirus isolation centre

    The leader of the Titi-Ofei Ministries, Bishop Gideon Titi-Ofei has withdrawn his offer of a 100-bed capacity to be used as an isolation centre for Covid-19 patients.

    This follows protests by neighbours to the facility in Tema-West who say they were not consulted on the decision.

    The residents expressed concern that the disease being fought is highly contagious and using the facility which is not isolated an isolation centre could expose residents to the dreaded pandemic.

    Reacting to the developments, Bishop Titi-Ofei, in a statement said he would look at other options of helping fight the new coronavirus.

    “I wish to assure my cherished neighbours that the offer was done in good faith. However in the spirit of good neighborliness I have decided to offer other forms of assistance in the fight against Covid-19,” he wrote.

     

    Source: myjoyonline 

  • New ‘Coronavirus’ budget: ‘We’re pushing for reliefs, postponements’ Ofori-Atta

    Finance Minister Ken Ofori-Atta has said the government is relooking at all the fundamental assumptions it made for the 2020 budget and come out with a new one in July this year in view of the economic havoc being caused by the COVID-19 outbreak.

    He told Accra-based Citi TV in an interview that: “It is a time of sacrifice and understanding. Sometimes, I wonder if people have divorced themselves from the reality that this could lead to some serious debt. We will be uncomfortable running a system with a lot of inefficiencies but ours is to find ways of mitigating that. A lot of things come to play depending on the severity we are going to experience. But one has to keep the eye on the ball to make sure we do not derail all that we are doing.”

    He revealed that “a number of meetings we have had with the Finance Ministers in Africa are aimed at trying to reposition this whole global architecture to see if this is the most fit-for-purpose architecture. We are pushing for reliefs; we are pushing for postponement and that will allow us to make fiscal pace for us in order not to wipe out of the season”.

    “Fortunately,”, he noted, “We are beginning to build a consensus globally, as to how to manage this. We are just going to have to relook all the fundamental assumptions for the budget and signal to Parliament that come July, we should come with some more information and analysis so that we address the base”.

    A few days ago, Mr Ofori-Atta told Parliament that the total estimated fiscal impact, as a result of the coronavirus pandemic, is GHS9.5 billion (2.5% of revised GDP).

    This is from the shortfall in petroleum receipts, shortfall in import duties, shortfall in other tax revenues, the cost of the preparedness plan, and the cost of Coronavirus Alleviation Programme.

    A recalibration of the 2020 Fiscal Framework underpinning the approved 2020 Budget to reflect the fiscal impact of the coronavirus, without incorporating measures, shows that the overall fiscal deficit will increase from the programmed GHS18.9 billion (4.7% of GDP) to GHS30.2 billion (7.8% of revised GDP).

    Also, the primary balance will correspondingly worsen from a surplus of GH?2.811 billion (0.7% of GDP) to a deficit of GHS5.6 billion (1.4% of GDP).

    According to Finance Minister, measures are, therefore, required to close the fiscal gap of GHS11.4 billion (2.9% of revised GDP).

    “Since we are faced with extraordinary circumstances which require extraordinary measures, we would like to propose the following measures for the consideration and support of the House”, Mr. Ofori-Atta revealed.

    The measures include to lower the cap on the Ghana Stabilisation Fund (GSF) from the current US$300 million to US$100 million in accordance with Section 23 (3) of the Petroleum Revenue Management Act (PRMA).

    This measure, he believes, will enable the excess amount in the GSF account over the US$100 million cap to be transferred into the Contingency Fund, consistent with Section 23 (4) of the PRMA.

    The amount transferred into the Contingency Fund will be used to fund the Coronavirus Alleviation Programme (CAP). Through this process, an estimated GHS1.250 billion will be transferred into the Contingency Fund to Fund the CAP.

    Others are an arrangement with the Bank of Ghana to defer interest payments on non-marketable instruments estimated at GHS1.22 billion to 2022 and beyond, as well as adjust expenditures on Goods & Services and Capex downwards by GHS1.248 billion, secure the World Bank DPO of GHS1.71 million and obtain the IMF Rapid Credit Facility of GHS3.145 billion.

    Source: classfmonline.com

  • 3 more firms want new dates to submit financial report

    Three more companies have sought for permission from the Ghana Stock Exchange to submit their 2019 Audited Financial Statements to latter dates.

    The companies are Quantum Terminals Plc, Mega African Capital and Bayport Savings and Loans Company.

    They are asking for 15 May 2020; 30 April 2020 and 3rd April 2020 as the new dates for submission of their financial statements.

    The Listing Committee of the GSE is however yet to take a decision on their request.

    Already, the GSE has granted approval to six companies for an extension in the deadline for the submission of their 2019 audited financial statements.

    The firms are Enterprise Group Limited, Intravenous Infusions Limited, Fan Milk Limited, Total Ghana Limited, Aluworks Limited and GOIL Company Limited.

    The new dates for the submission of their 2019 audited financial statements are; April 30, 2020 for Enterprise Group Ghana; April 14, 2020 for Intravenous Infusions Limited and April 30, 2020 for Fan Milk Ghana Limited.

    Total Petroleum, Aluworks and GOIL are also to submit their 2019 audited financial statements by April 30, 2020; August 31, 2020 and April 30, 2020.

    Source: classfmonline.com