Tag: Coronavirus

  • Ghana and Gabon confirm their first coronavirus cases

    Ghana has confirmed its first two confirmed cases of coronavirus as Gabon confirmed its first case.

    Ghana’s Health Minister Kwaku Agyemang Manu said two people who’d arrived from Norway and Turkey tested positive for the virus.

    In Gabon, Government Spokesman Edgard Anicet Mboumbou Miyakou said the patient was a Gabonese man who’d arrived from France.

    Ghanaian authorities have said their two patients are being kept in isolation and are in a stable condition.

    They have also started the process of tracing everyone who was in contact with the two patients.

    Gabon’s spokesman said the patient who had tested positive was feeling better – having displayed symptoms of cough, sore throat and breathing problems earlier.

    He said the patient was in an isolation facility and the government was tracing those who had come into close contact with him.

    On Wednesday, Ghanaian President Nana Akufo-Addo announced the release of $100m (£80m) to enhance coronavirus preparedness and response nationwide.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Tunisia announces six more coronavirus cases

    In a news conference on Thursday evening Tunisia’s health ministry announced six new cases of coronavirus – bringing the the total of confirmed cases in the country to 13.

    A mandatory self-quarantine period of two weeks has also been imposed for all travellers arriving from China, Iran and the worst-affected European countries.

    On arrival in Tunisia’s airports, travellers must also register their details using an online form with a QR code, in addition to a paper form.

    Tunisia has gradually been testing more in recent days, and has applied tighter controls and prevention measures including:

    • Closing the national theatre
    • Cancelling most festivals and concerts scheduled for this month
    • Postponing many conferences, lectures and workshops
    • Daily cleaning of inter-city buses with antiseptic solutions.

    Source: Rana Jawad | BBC North Africa correspondent, Tunis |bbc.com

  • ‘Family and contacts’ of Senegal patient contract virus

    Senegal’s health ministry has confirmed that five more people in the country have tested positive for coronavirus – all of whom had come into contact with an existing patient who’d traveled home from Italy before testing positive this week.

    Some of the newly infected patients are said to be family relations of that man – a Senegalese national who was diagnosed on Wednesday – but the ministry’s statement doesn’t say how many.

    It brings the total number of coronavirus cases in the country to 10.

    Two of those contracted but survived the virus, the health ministry says, while the eight others are “still receiving treatment”:

    The statement from Senegal's health ministry
  • Canadian PM Trudeau’s wife tests positive for coronavirus

    Sophie Grégoire Trudeau, wife of Canadian PM Justin Trudeau, has tested positive for coronavirus, a statement from the prime minister’s office says.

    “She will remain in isolation for the time being. She is feeling well, is taking all the recommended precautions and her symptoms remain mild,” it read.

    The couple is now self-isolating.

    Mr Trudeau is in good health and has no symptoms, according to his office, but he will remain in isolation for 14 days.

    There are no plans at present for Mr Trudeau to be tested for coronavirus.

    “The prime minister will continue to fully assume his duties and will address Canadians tomorrow (Friday),” his office said.

    There are currently approximately 103 confirmed cases of the coronavirus in Canada.

    Meetings postponed

    Ms Grégoire Trudeau began to show mild flu-like symptom including a low fever on late on Wednesday night after returning from London.

    After she tested positive for Covid-19, she said: “Although I’m experiencing uncomfortable symptoms of the virus, I will be back on my feet soon.

    “We will get through this situation together. Please share the facts and take your health seriously.”

    Health workers will contact people whom Mrs Grégoire Trudeau has recently met.

    However, those who have been in contact with the prime minister are deemed not to be at risk, as Mr Trudeau has shown no symptoms.

    A number of politicians around the globe have been self-isolating in recent days after coming into possible contact with the virus, including five senior US Republicans and a Canadian cabinet minister.

    Mr Trudeau was scheduled to hold meetings over the next two days in Ottawa with provincial premiers and First Nations leaders.

    Those meetings have been postponed.

    Mr Trudeau will now be speaking with those provincial counterparts over the phone, with the topic focusing on Canada’s response to the pandemic, said the prime minister’s office in a statement on Thursday morning.

    Another federal party leader, the NDP’s Jagmeet Singh, said on Thursday he was also staying at home because he was feeling unwell, though doctors have told him that his symptoms are not consistent with the coronavirus.

    “Their advice is for me to limit contact with the public until I am feeling better,” he said on Twitter.

    What is the situation in Canada?

    There are currently approximately 103 confirmed cases of the coronavirus in Canada, in the provinces of British Columbia, Ontario, Alberta, Quebec, and Manitoba. There has been one death linked to the disease.

    Canada announced on Wednesday a C$1bn ($728m; £562m) coronavirus response fund to deal with the pandemic.

    The funding package will help the country address the domestic impact of the virus and to support further research, including vaccine development.

    Mr Trudeau said his government was ready to do more if the situation warranted.

    Speaking to reporters on Wednesday, the prime minister urged Canadians to follow the recommendations of public health officials in order to help slow the spread of the disease and to avoid overburdening the health care system.

    Source:bbc.com

  • Mount Everest: Nepal’s government shuts off mountain amid virus outbreak

    Mount Everest has shut down for the rest of the expedition season because of the coronavirus outbreak.

    Nepal’s government announced that it would cancel all climbing permits from 14 March until 30 April.

    China had already cancelled expeditions from the northern, Chinese-controlled, side of the mountain.

    According to the Kathmandu Post, the Nepal earns $4m (£3.1m) by issuing Everest climbing permits every year, aside from wider tourism revenue.

    “We have decided to halt all tourist visas until 30 April,” said Narayan Prasad Bidari, Secretary of the Prime Minister’s Office.

    “As of now, all issued permits and permits yet to be issued for the 2020 Everest season will be cancelled.”

    It also advised foreigners who were unable to avoid coming to Nepal from 14 March to stay in quarantine for 14 days.

    Most climbers come from the US, India, China, UK, Japan, and South Korea – and are a major source of revenue for the Nepalese government.

    Typically, anyone who wants to climb Everest needs to pay the government $11,000 (£8,700), though there were talks by the government to raise this figure.

    And that’s not including fees that are typically paid to the travel companies, which can also run up tens of thousands.

    Local sherpas who work as mountain guides will also be affected.

    “My nine Chinese clients and a Japanese client have cancelled already. Many trekking teams are not coming, which is a big loss for sherpas like us who make most of our money during this time,” Lakpa Sherpa, managing director of Pioneer Adventure, told BBC Nepali.

    There is currently one confirmed virus case in Nepal, but the country borders India which has more than 70 cases.

    Nepal’s government has asked its citizens to avoid mass gatherings including marriages and public functions.

    More than 125,000 people have been diagnosed with Covid-19 in 118 countries around the world, according to the World Health Organization. The total number of deaths is more than 4,600.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: Kuwait Airport closing; all commercial flights to Ghana to be affected

    Starting from Friday, 13 March 2020, Kuwait International Airport will close for passenger service indefinitely, meaning commercial flights to and from the airport are canceled.

    There will be some exceptions only for Kuwaiti nationals looking to go home, so, there may be some charter flights.

    It is not yet known how long the airport closure will last.

    The airport ordinarily sees nearly 500 daily flights and serves nearly 16 million passengers in 2019.

    So far, Kuwait has seen 72 coronavirus cases.

    A few days ago, it was announced that the country would be closing down academic institutions for two weeks, and would suspend all sporting events until further notice.

    The country has now also announced that all malls, restaurants, and cafes will be closing through the end of the month.

    Kuwait may be the first country in the world to completely ban commercial flights as a precautionary measure.

    Kuwait Airlines fly to Ghana, and, therefore, the closure of the Kuwait Airport will affect flights to Ghana.

    Source: onemileatatime.com

  • Govt officials empowered foreigners to encroach our land – Association International School

    Authorities at the Association International School (AIS), are suspecting some officials in the Akufo-Addo/Bawumia led government of being behind the construction of the controversial 22-storey building adjacent premises at the Airport Residential area.

    In a strong-worded statement issued and signed by Mrs Audrey Doryumu [Headmistress of Association International School], stated that the ongoing construction by KASS Plus Company Limited has negatively affected the school.

    She said the construction activities have negatively and heavily impacted the health, services and operations of our school owing to reasons including poor engineering practices.

    “We have good reason to believe that these new developments are not merely coincidental. We further reasonably believe that the manner the officials have conducted themselves raises genuine suspicion of harassment of me and my staff and indeed the entire Association International School family due to our avowed goal to seek justice in ensuring that our concerns are addressed and for stoppage of the ongoing damage we are suffering due to the ongoing construction works. Our resolve for all risks posed to us to be addressed cannot be broken…,” she added.

    “Should my suspicion be confirmed, this will amount to the unfair use of state and other governmental authorities by connected persons, which is an abuse and the use of state authority against a private citizen who is simply trying to protect her business and ensure that the right thing is being done,” Mrs Doryumu noted.

    Background

    The Turkish contractor made the headlines when the Roads Minister stormed the site where the 22-storey structure was being put up, close to the Association International School in the Airport Residential Area, and ordered the arrest of the CEO of the construction company, a certain Abdulkadir Yadigar, who, according to the minister, had put up a barricade on the road which created a traffic logjam.

    Meanwhile, the Association International School filed an interim injunction against the Turkish contractor at the centre of the controversial 22-storey building at the Airport Residential area but was dismissed by an Accra High Court presided over by Justice Afua Novisi Aryene.

    The court after hearing lawyers of the Association International School, the applicant, and the Kess Plus Construction Limited, respondent, ruled that the applicant has not been able to substantiate its claims of nuisance and other health concerns to warrant the grant of the injunction.

    It was the ruling of the court that, the respondent stands to suffer irreparable damages should the application be granted.

    The court subsequently dismissed the application.

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • Coronavirus: Ministry of Information to brief the public on Sunday

    Kojo Oppong-Nkrumah, the Information Minister, will on Sunday, conduct its first update on governments preparation for the prevention and management of the novel coronavirus.

    President Akufo-Addo announced that he has tasked the Information Ministry to provide a weekly update on all government activities related to the fight against COVID-19.

    But Mr Oppong-Nkrumah to Accra based Citi FM that, he together with the Director of Public Health of the Ghana Health Service will be addressing the media in the first weekly briefing.

    He also revealed that per the directive of the President, parts of the $100 million announced for the fight is already being put to use.

    He said the money is being used for the procurement of logistics needed to fight novel coronavirus.

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • COVID-19: We’ve initiated processes for contact tracing Health Minister

    The Health Minister, Kwaku Agyemang-Manu, has announced processes to trace persons who might have come in contact with the two victims of coronavirus in Ghana.

    The two persons who returned to Ghana from Norway and Turkey tested positive to coronavirus after laboratory results from the Noguchi Memorial Institute for Medical Research.

    The Minister, however, stated that the Patients have been kept in isolation and in stable condition.

    “Both patients are currently being kept in isolation and are stable. We have initiated processes for contact tracing,” he said.

    Mr Agyemang-Manu assured “Ghanaians that the Government of Ghana together with all Health Partners will continue to work assiduously to ensure the situation is contained.”

    Ghana confirmed two cases of the novel coronavirus on Thursday.

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • Parliament constitutes ad hoc committee to appoint auditor to audit Auditor Generals Office

    Parliament on Thursday adopted a motion for the House to constitute an ad hoc committee, to be chaired by Deputy Majority Leader Sarah Adwoa Safo to recommend to the House the appointment of an auditor to audit the accounts of the Office of the Auditor-General.

    Members of the committee would be Public Accounts Committee Chairman James Klutse Avedzi, who is also the Deputy Minority Leader and MP for Ketu North Constituency; and Mr Kofi Okyere-Agyekum, MP for Fanteakwa South Constituency.

    The motion, moved by Mr Kwame Anyimadu-Antwi, MP for Asante-Akim Central Constituency, was seconded by Alhaji Mohamed Mubarak Muntaka, Minority Chief Whip and MP for Asawase Constituency.

    Article (187) (15) states that: “The accounts of the Office of the Auditor-General shall be audited and be reported upon by an auditor appointed by Parliament.”

    Seconding the motion, Alhaji Muntaka commended the members, who he said, have been members of the committee, for having worked and doing a good job on behalf of the House, over the years.

    Source: GNA

  • BREAKING NEWS: Ghana confirms two cases of Coronavirus

    Ghana has confirmed two cases of COVID-19 on March 12, 2020, being the first cases to be reported in the country.

    The Ministry of Health disclosed in a statement on Thursday that the two confirmed cases were received at the same time from the Noguchi Memorial Institute for Medical Research.

    The two individuals returned to Ghana from Norway and Turkey. So they are imported cases of COVID-19, the statement said.

    Both patients are currently under isolation and are stable, it added.

  • Assemblies of God Church urges pastors to pray against coronavirus

    The General Council of the Assemblies of God Church, Ghana has urged pastors to pray against the deadly coronavirus pandemic plaguing the world.

    In a communique signed by the General Superintendent, Paul Frimpong-Manso stressed the need for the pastors to seek the face of the Lord in these times.

    “It is in this light that I want all Ministers to lift up prayer to the Most High God to intervene in our affairs calling on God to open the understanding eye of pastors, health professionals, and scientists, to find a lasting solution to the menace,” Rev. Prof. Frimpong-Manso said.

    Read the full statement below:

     

    Source: myjoyonline 

  • Coronavirus: 3 Leicester City players in isolation after showing symptoms

    Three Leicester City first-team players have self-isolated after showing symptoms of coronavirus and “have been kept away from the rest of the squad”, manager Brendan Rodgers has said.

    Rodgers did not specify which players had been quarantined but added that the club had “followed procedures”.

    The Foxes are due to play Watford at Vicarage Road in the Premier League on Saturday at 12:45 GMT.

    “We had a few players that have shown symptoms and signs,” Rodgers said.

    “It would be a shame [if the Watford game were postponed], but the public’s health is the most important in all of this.”

    Asked if the game could be played behind closed doors, Rodgers said: “The game is all about the players and the fans and if you have one of those not there, it’s obviously not the same.”

    Source: BBC
  • Euro 2020: Uefa to discuss possibility of postponing tournament by one year

    Uefa has called an emergency meeting for Tuesday in which the possibility of postponing Euro 2020 by one year is an option being discussed.

    European football’s governing body will hold video conference meetings to discuss its response to the coronavirus outbreak.

    Those discussions will cover all domestic and European competitions, including Euro 2020.

    Euro 2020 is due to take place from 12 June-12 July at venues across Europe.

    Uefa has invited representatives of its 55 member associations, plus the boards of the European Club Association, the European leagues and a representative of world players’ union Fifpro.

    The Women’s Euros are due to take place in England from 11 July-1 August 2021.

     

    Source: BBC

  • Coronavirus: Man City v Real Madrid and Juventus v Lyon called off

    The second leg of Manchester City’s last-16 second leg Champions League tie against Real Madrid, scheduled for Tuesday 17 March, has been postponed.

    The decision, confirmed by Uefa, comes after the Real Madrid squad went into quarantine because of coronavirus.

    The second leg of Juventus’ last-16 tie against Lyon has also been postponed on the same date.

    Juve’s squad will spend two weeks in quarantine after defender Daniele Rugani tested positive for the virus.

    A Uefa statement said: “Following the quarantine imposed on players of Juventus and Real Madrid, the matches will not take place as scheduled.”

    City’s Premier League game with Arsenal was postponed on Wednesday as a precautionary measure.

    Pep Guardiola’s side hold a 2-1 lead from the first leg against Real in Spain on 26 February, while Juventus trail Lyon 1-0 after the first leg in France.

     

    Source: BBC 

  • UCC suspends all International Conferences in bid to prevent coronavirus

    The University of Cape Coast has currently suspended all International Conferences both on campus and outside the country in a bid to prevent coronavirus.

    The PRO Vice-Chancellor of UCC Prof. Dora Francisca Edu-Buandoh says this new directive is part of measures to prevent any form of contacting the coronavirus.

    “The University is an international institution, so we have international partners, visiting us every now and then, so one of the decisions we have taken suspending all international conferences that we are supposed to host and we are also suspending travels for our own staff, some are expected to leave for conferences outside and tickets and accommodation has already been sorted out but we have put a hold on all that. We have not recorded any case on campus but we are being proactive”.

    President Akufo-Addo during the 63rd Independence day speech disclosed that the government is discouraging all foreign travel.

    He followed that with a directive to suspend foreign travels for all public officials.

    Yesterday he addressed the nation on the virus and called on churches, universities and other groups that organize events that host large gatherings to put in mechanisms to protect people in the face of the outbreak of the novel coronavirus.

    He also disclosed that the government has committed a whopping $100 million to improve its preparedness and response to a possible outbreak of coronavirus disease (COVID-19).

    Ghana has so far tested 54 cases but all turned out negative.

    In West Africa, Nigeria, Burkina Faso, Togo and recently Cote D’Ivoire have all recorded cases.

     

    Source: primenewsghana.com

  • Death toll in Italy from coronavirus jumps to 827

    The death toll in Italy from the coronavirus surged to 827 on Wednesday, as 196 more fatalities were confirmed over the past 24 hours, according to an official.

    Civil protection chief Angelo Borelli said the number of confirmed coronavirus cases rose to 10,590, while the total number of affected — including deaths and recoveries — reached 12,462.

    Borrelli said that 196 more deaths were recorded over the past 24 hours.

    To contain the virus, the Italian government has implemented a nationwide lockdown with schools and universities closed, and all events and gatherings cancelled.

    The novel coronavirus emerged in Wuhan, China, last December and has now spread to 114 countries.

    The global death toll is now almost 4,300, with around 118,000 confirmed cases, according to the World Health Organization (WHO), which has declared the outbreak “a global pandemic.”

    Source: www.aa.com.tr

  • US restricting all travel from Europe over coronavirus

    The U.S. will restrict all travel from Europe with the exception of the U.K. starting later this week in an effort to curtail the spread of the new coronavirus, President Donald Trump announced Wednesday evening.

    Addressing the nation from the Oval Office, Trump said the restrictions, which will go into effect on Friday, “will be adjusted subject to conditions on the ground,” and exemptions would be made for U.S. nationals “who have undergone appropriate screenings.”

    “We made a life-saving move with early action on China. Now we must take the same action with Europe. We will not delay,” he said.

    The announcement comes on the same day the World Health Organization officially termed the spread of COVID-19 a global pandemic and as the U.S. capital declared a state of emergency.

    Source: www.aa.com.tr

  • WHO declares COVID-19 outbreak as pandemic

    The coronavirus outbreak has been labelled a pandemic by the World Health Organization (WHO).

    WHO chief Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said the number of cases outside China had increased 13-fold over the past two weeks.

    He said he was “deeply concerned” by “alarming levels of inaction” over the virus.

    A pandemic is a disease that is spreading in multiple countries around the world at the same time.

    However, Dr Tedros said that calling the outbreak a pandemic did not mean the WHO was changing its advice about what countries should do.

    He called on governments to change the course of the outbreak by taking “urgent and aggressive action”.

    “Several countries have demonstrated that this virus can be suppressed and controlled,” he said.

    “The challenge for many countries who are now dealing with large clusters or community transmission is not whether they can do the same – it’s whether they will.”

    Governments had to “strike a fine balance between protecting health, minimising disruption and respecting human rights”.

    “We’re in this together to do the right things with calm and protect the citizens of the world. It’s doable,” he said.

    Earlier, Germany’s Chancellor Angela Merkel warned that up to 70% of the country’s population – some 58 million people – could contract the coronavirus.

    She said since there was no known cure, the focus would fall on slowing the spread of the virus. “It’s about winning time,” she said.

    Some German virologists dispute the high figure. Former federal government adviser on disease control, Prof Alexander Kekulé, told German media he saw a worst case scenario of 40,000 cases.

    to Iran but there was still a shortage of ventilators and oxygen.
    “Iran and Italy are suffering now but I guarantee you other countries will be in that situation very soon,” he said.

    What else is happening?

    In the western US, Washington state is banning some large gatherings in certain areas and has told all school districts to prepare for possible closures in the coming days. The governor of Seattle’s King County said he expected a serious coronavirus outbreak within weeks.

    In the eastern US, New York’s governor announced that troops would be sent into New Rochelle, in an attempt to contain an outbreak of the virus, as the total number of US cases passed 1,000 on Wednesday.

    A one-mile (1.6km) containment zone was in force around the town north of Manhattan. Some individuals have been quarantined.

    A number of countries have imposed sweeping travel restrictions. India has suspended most visas for foreigners until 15 April. Guatemala is banning European citizens from entering from Thursday.

    Several countries – including Sweden and Bulgaria, as well as the Republic of Ireland – have recorded their first deaths, while the number of confirmed cases in Qatar jumped from 24 to 262.

    China – where the virus was first detected – has seen a total of 80,754 confirmed cases and 3,136 deaths. But it recorded its lowest number of new infections, just 19, on Tuesday.

    According to worldometers.info, hosted by the American Library Association, the infectious disease has spread to more than 121 countries and territories and infected more than 124,000 people. More than 4, 580 people have died, while there have been about 67, 050 cases of recovery.

    Source: GNA

  • Italy confirms almost 200 deaths in 24 hours

    Almost 200 people died from the coronavirus in 24 hours, Italy’s Civil Protection Agency confirmed Wednesday — the highest daily increase in absolute terms registered anywhere in the world since the respiratory illness emerged in China at the end of last year.

    In response, the country’s prime minister, Giuseppe Conte, told reporters the government would allocate 25 billion euros ($28.3 billion) to help mitigate the impact on the fragile economy. Only a week ago, he estimated it would need just 7.5 billion.

    From Tuesday to Wednesday, 196 people died, bringing the total number of deaths to 897, the Civil Protection Agency said in a statement. Confirmed cases across the country rose to 12,462 from a previous 10,149.

    After an initial lockdown in the north failed to prevent the spread, the government on Monday banned all nonessential travel and public gatherings throughout Italy until April 3, halted all sports events and extended a shutdown of schools.

    Source: NBCnews.com

  • UK interest rates cut in emergency move

    The Bank of England has announced an emergency cut in interest rates to shore up the economy amid the coronavirus outbreak.

    Policymakers reduced rates from 0.75% to 0.25%, taking borrowing costs back down to the lowest level in history.

    The Bank said it would also free up billions of pounds of extra lending power to help banks support firms.

    It comes as the chancellor is expected to announce further measures to support growth and jobs in the Budget later.

    ‘Maximum Impact’

    Mark Carney, the outgoing governor of the Bank of England, said policymakers had seen a “sharp fall in trading conditions”, including spending on non-essential goods.

    “The Bank of England’s role is to help UK businesses and households manage through an economic shock that could prove large and sharp, but should be temporary,” he said.

    He said the Bank’s co-ordinated action on Budget day was designed to have “maximum impact”.

    Mr Carney stressed that the economic damage caused by the coronavirus remained unclear. However, he suggested that the UK economy could shrink in the coming months.

    He said early evidence from China suggested that the world’s second-largest economy was on course to contract in the first quarter.

    Other nations were experiencing a “similar shift”, he said.

    “I would emphasize the direction is clear, though the orders of magnitude are still to be determined.”

    While the Bank’s last emergency rate cut was in October 2008, Mr Carney said the virus was unlikely to inflict the damage seen during the financial crisis.

    “There is no reason for it to be as bad as 2008 if we act as we have, and if there is that targeted support,” he said.
    Virus spread

    The emergency rate cut comes as a sixth person who died from the virus in the UK, which has a total of 382 cases.

    The latest person to die was a man in his early 80s who had underlying health conditions.

    Meanwhile, Manchester City’s Premier League match against Arsenal on Wednesday has been postponed as “a precautionary measure” because of the outbreak.

    A number of Arsenal players are in self-isolation after coming into contact with Olympiakos owner Evangelos Marinakis, who tested positive for the virus..

    Chancellor Rishi Sunak has pledged to help the UK battle the impact of the coronavirus, saying the NHS will get “whatever resources it needs” during the crisis, while he is also expected to unveil measures to boost the self-employed and small businesses who are left out of pocket.

    Meanwhile, NHS England said it was scaling up its capacity for testing people for the infection, with the number of cases set to rise.

    How will the rate cut affect your finances?

    The sudden cut in the Bank rate will immediately reduce the mortgage bill of a minority of homeowners. Others will have to wait to see how their home loan provider reacts at a time when mortgage rates are already at very low levels.

    Little will change for savers, who have had to endure years of low returns anyway. They may take heart from the fact this is a temporary measure from the Bank.

    Most people are, of course, savers and borrowers.

    As well as concern over their physical health from coronavirus, their financial health will primarily depend on their job.

    This emergency action is clearly designed to help protect businesses, particularly small and medium-sized ones, and in turn the employment of millions of people.

    Extra lending

    The interest rate cut was part of a package of measures introduced by the Bank to support the economy.

    It also announced a new £100bn scheme to help ensure households and businesses – particularly small and medium-sized firms – benefit from the reduction in interest rates.

    The Bank of England said other changes would free up an additional £190bn for banks to lend.

    It said the package of measures would “help UK businesses and households bridge across the economic disruption that is likely to be associated with Covid-19”.

    The Bank said it expected UK economic activity to “weaken materially” over the coming months, but it was ready to take “all further necessary steps to support the UK economy”.

    “These measures will help to keep firms in business and people in jobs and help prevent a temporary disruption from causing longer-lasting economic harm.”

    Initially, the pound fell against both the euro and the dollar in reaction to the rate cut, but then rebounded.

    Share markets reacted positively, with the FTSE 100 rising more than 2% in early trading.

    Separate data published by the Office for National Statistics (ONS) showed the UK economy stagnated in the three months to January.

    The dramatic emergency rate cut will dominate the headlines, but it is the overall package of measures which the departing Bank of England governor Mark Carney will stress as a support for the economy in this extraordinary coronavirus crisis.

    The key target of this move is the cash flow of small and medium-sized businesses, which could be hit by a combination of slumping demand, trade difficulties and staff absence.

    The Bank and Treasury agree that this will be a temporary shock. The aim, therefore, is to prevent unnecessary permanent economic scars. Alongside Budget measures, it is designed as a bridge beyond the virus.

    So the Bank’s base rate is slashed to its record low, first reached in the aftermath of the EU referendum. But as important is the new TFSME – the “Term Funding scheme with additional incentives for Small and Medium-sized Enterprises”.

    This proved rather successful after the EU referendum, and the aim is to get the banks to pass on the rate cut in full to businesses, particularly small and medium-sized firms, which face the greatest pressure to cut staff or hours in a crisis.

    Cutting the amount of money that banks are required to squirrel away when the sun is shining so they can spend the cash during this sort of rainy day should provide the firepower for banks to boost lending well above current lending levels.

    To be clear, coronavirus is unique and highly unpredictable. There is a fundamental problem of people and businesses not being able to function because of the measures to contain the virus. The message from the Bank is that the banking system is fully padded up to help businesses get through this.

    Source: bbc.com

  • South America asks FIFA to delay World Cup qualifiers because of virus

    South America’s football federations asked FIFA on Wednesday to delay their qualifying matches for the 2022 World Cup in Qatar because of the global new coronavirus pandemic.

    “The South American teams risk not being able to count on players they have picked and who play in Europe because they, arriving from countries with a high level of contagion, could be placed in quarantine,” said a letter from CONMEBOL, South American football’s governing body, to FIFA Secretary General Fatma Samoura.

    Qualifying matches are due to begin on March 26.

    The letter said it expressed the position of its 10 members: Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay and Venezuela.

    The letter said they “have asked CONMEBOL to place for consideration by FIFA the request to postpone the start of the World Cup qualifiers.”

    Many of the South American players selected for their national sides play in Europe, where the deadly new coronavirus is rapidly spreading.

    Argentina’s coach Lionel Scaloni has picked six players based in Italy, where the virus has killed at least 827 people in just over two weeks.

    The new coronavirus has already disrupted numerous major sporting events worldwide, including Italy’s Serie A football whose matches are suspended.

    Source: AFP

  • Tokyo governor says cancelling Olympics ‘unthinkable’

    Doubts are increasingly being raised over whether the Olympics can be held as scheduled from July 24 to August 9.

    Cancelling the 2020 Olympics is “unthinkable” although the classification of the coronavirus as a pandemic will likely have some impact on the Games, the Tokyo city governor said on Thursday.

    “It can’t be said that the announcement of a pandemic would have no impact… But I think cancellation is unthinkable,” Yuriko Koike told reporters.

    Doubts are increasingly being raised over whether the Olympics can be held as scheduled from July 24 to August 9.

    Organisers have insisted the Games will go ahead as planned and the International Olympic Committee (IOC), with whom the final decision rests, has said there has not yet been any talk of cancellation or postponement.

    The IOC has said it will coordinate closely with the World Health Organization, which has now officially classified the outbreak as a pandemic.

    Koike vowed to work with the IOC and Tokyo 2020 organisers on what she described as a “global issue”, promising to devote her “utmost efforts” to hold the Games.

    But coronavirus has already taken a huge toll on sport across the globe with a long list of competitions affected.

    US basketball was the latest sport to be hit, as the NBA said it would suspend the season starting on Thursday after a preliminary test on a Utah Jazz player came back positive for COVID-19.

    In Italy, the hardest-hit European country, all sporting events including Serie A football have been suspended until April 3.

    Arsenal’s game at Manchester City on Wednesday was the first Premier League football fixture to be called off, while Champions League matches have been played behind closed doors and Indian Wells, one of the biggest events of the tennis season, was cancelled.

    ‘Global problem’

    Coronavirus has already had some impact on the Games, as the traditional flame-lighting ceremony in Olympia, Greece is expected to be held without spectators after dozens tested positive for the virus nearby.

    The torch is due to arrive in Japan on March 20 but the arrival ceremony has also been downscaled, with some 200 children originally scheduled to attend now expected to miss it.

    Olympic qualifying tournaments in several different sports have also been cancelled, postponed or moved to different countries.

    Tokyo 2020 president Yoshiro Mori said on Wednesday that the Games would go ahead as scheduled although he admitted organisers are “concerned” about the virus, which has infected 124,000 people with 4,500 deaths.

    Mori made the comments after a member of the organisers’ executive board sounded the alarm, warning postponing the Games for two years might be the best option under the circumstances.

    But Mori dismissed that option, as did Japanese Olympic minister Seiko Hashimoto, who told a parliament committee that postponing or cancelling the Games was “inconceivable”.

    Executive board member Haruyuki Takahashi had told Japan’s Asahi Shimbun daily it would be ideal to hold the Olympics as planned but “there has to be an alternative plan”.

    “Coronavirus has become a global problem. We can’t just hold it (the Olympics) because Japan is OK,” he told the daily on Wednesday.

    Takahashi said the summer two years from now “offers the best possibility” for a postponement, given the international sporting calendar, adding that “preparation must start now” if a delay is on the cards.

    He insisted that it would be “impossible” to cancel the Games altogether, and said he was speaking out as “a warning bell” for the organising committee, adding that he would raise the issue at a board meeting later this month.

    Source: AFP

  • ‘Don’t panic’ says US woman who recovered from coronavirus

    An American woman who has recovered from the novel coronavirus has a simple message for people who are worried: Don’t panic but do think about high-risk individuals and stay home if you feel ill.

    Elizabeth Schneider lives in Seattle, the biggest city of Washington state, which has the most deaths in the United States from the disease sweeping the globe.

    The 37-year-old, who has a PhD in bioengineering, said she was sharing her story “to give people a little bit of hope” through her own relatively mild experience with the infection, which she treated herself from home.

    But, she added, “obviously, it’s not something to be completely nonchalant about, because there are a lot of people who are elderly or have underlying health conditions.

    “That means that we need to be extra vigilant about staying home, isolating ourselves from others.”

    This week, US health authorities citing Chinese data said 80 percent of cases have been mild, while the remaining serious cases that required hospitalization affected mainly people over 60 and those with conditions like diabetes, heart disease or lung disease.

    The party

    Schneider first began experiencing flu-like symptoms on February 25, three days after going to a party that was later identified as the place where at least five other people also got infected.

    “I woke up and I was feeling tired, but it was nothing more than what you normally feel when you have to get up and go to work, and I had been very busy the previous weekend,” she told AFP in an interview Wednesday.

    By midday, however, she felt a headache coming on, along with a fever and body aches. She decided to leave the office of the biotechnology company where she works as a marketing manager and went home.

    After waking up from a nap, Schneider found she had a high temperature, which peaked at 103 degrees Fahrenheit that night (39.4 Celsius).

    “And at that point, I started to shiver uncontrollably, and I was getting the chills and getting tingling in my extremities, so that was a little concerning,” she said.

    She turned to over-the-counter flu medications to treat the symptoms and called a friend to be on standby in case she needed to be taken to an emergency room — but the fever began to recede in the coming days.

    Schneider had been following news reports about the novel coronavirus. The first US case was detected in Washington in late January.

    The state has since gone on to become the epicenter of the disease in the country, with more than 260 cases and at least two dozen deaths. Nationwide, there have been more than 1,100 cases and 30 deaths.

    Because she didn’t have the most common symptoms like a cough or shortness of breath, “I thought, okay, well that’s definitely why I don’t have coronavirus,” said Schneider.

    She had gotten a flu shot but assumed her illness was a different strain. A visit to the doctor would only result in her being asked to go home, rest and drink plenty of fluids.

    ‘Pleasantly surprised’

    A few days later, however, she discovered through a friend’s Facebook post that several people from the party had all developed similar symptoms, and she began to get more suspicious.

    Several of these people went to their doctors, where they were found to be negative for the flu, but they were not offered coronavirus tests because they too were not coughing or having breathing trouble.

    Knowing that she would also likely be turned down for the test, she decided to enroll in a research program called the Seattle Flu Study, hoping it might provide an answer. The team behind the study sent her a nasal swab kit, which she mailed back and waited several more days.

    “I finally got a phone call from one of the research coordinators on Saturday (March 7), telling me that ‘You have tested positive for COVID-19,’” she said.

    “I was a little bit pleasantly surprised, because I thought it was a little bit cool,” Schneider admitted, laughing, though her mother cried when she told her.

    “Granted, I probably would not have felt that way if I was severely ill,” she said. “But from a scientific curiosity perspective, I thought it was very interesting. And also the fact that I finally got confirmation that that’s what I had.”

    By this time, her symptoms had already subsided, and she was told by local health authorities to remain at home for at least seven days after the onset of symptoms or 72 hours after they subsided.

    It’s now been a week since she’s felt better. She has started going out for errands but is still avoiding large gatherings and continuing to work from home.

    Schneider said she hoped her example, which will probably be typical of the high majority of cases, could comfort others.

    “The message is don’t panic,” said Schneider. “If you think that you have it, you probably do; you should probably get tested.”

    “If your symptoms aren’t life-threatening, simply stay at home, medicate with over-the-counter medicines, drink lots of water, get a lot of rest and check out the shows you want to binge-watch,” she said.

    Source: AFP

  • Quarantined foreigners declared virus-free in Kenya

    Health authorities in eastern in Kenya have given the all-clear to 12 foreigners who had been quarantined for 15 days as a precaution against coronavirus.

    All 12 arrived in Machakos county, east of the Kenyan capital Nairobi, from China last month and were required to self-isolate on arrival.

    Kenya has no confirmed cases of coronavirus.

    Machakos Governor Alfred Mutua confirmed the news in a tweet:

    Source: bbc.com

  • El Salvador bans foreigners entering country over coronavirus fears

    El Salvador will ban entry to all foreigners for a period of 21 days in a bid to curb the spread of the coronavirus, the Central American country’s president announced Wednesday.

    President Nayib Bukele said on state television that immigration authorities would prohibit entry “of any foreigner who is not a resident or diplomat in Salvadoran territory.”

    Bukele made clear, however, that Salvadorans arriving from countries where coronavirus has been declared would have to be quarantined for 30 days.

    The president also announced the suspension of school and university classes for 21 days, as well as the prohibition of gatherings of more than 500 people.

    El Salvador is among a handful of Latin American countries yet to declare a confirmed case of the coronavirus.

    Source: AFP

  • US restricting all travel from Europe over coronavirus

    The U.S. will restrict all travel from Europe with the exception of the U.K. starting later this week in an effort to curtail the spread of the new coronavirus, President Donald Trump announced Wednesday evening.

    Addressing the nation from the Oval Office, Trump said the restrictions, which will go into effect on Friday, “will be adjusted subject to conditions on the ground,” and exemptions would be made for U.S. nationals “who have undergone appropriate screenings.”

    “We made a life-saving move with early action on China. Now we must take the same action with Europe. We will not delay,” he said.

    The announcement comes on the same day the World Health Organization officially termed the spread of COVID-19 a global pandemic and as the U.S. capital declared a state of emergency.

    Source: www.aa.com.tr

  • Death toll in Italy from coronavirus jumps to 827

    The death toll in Italy from the coronavirus surged to 827 on Wednesday, as 196 more fatalities were confirmed over the past 24 hours, according to an official.

    Civil protection chief Angelo Borelli said the number of confirmed coronavirus cases rose to 10,590, while the total number of affected — including deaths and recoveries — reached 12,462.

    Borrelli said that 196 more deaths were recorded over the past 24 hours.

    To contain the virus, the Italian government has implemented a nationwide lockdown with schools and universities closed, and all events and gatherings cancelled.

    The novel coronavirus emerged in Wuhan, China, last December and has now spread to 114 countries.

    The global death toll is now almost 4,300, with around 118,000 confirmed cases, according to the World Health Organization (WHO), which has declared the outbreak “a global pandemic.”

    Source: www.aa.com.tr

  • Ivory Coast confirms first case of COVID-19

    Ivory Coast has recorded its first case of the flu-like Coronavirus (COVID-19).

    The case was reported in the capital Abidjan.

    The country becomes the eight in the region to record a case after Burkina Faso, Nigeria, Togo, Senegal, Cameroon, DR Congo and South Africa.

    The affected patient is a 45-year-old Ivorian man, officials have disclosed.

    The government has called for calm stressing preparedness for the disease.

    Ivory Coast in January was the first country on the continent to record a suspected case, which turned out negative.

    The country, like many others, received testing capacity from the World Health Organisation (WHO).

    According to worldometers.info, hosted by the American Library Association, more than 124,775 cases have so far been recorded 121 countries and territories.

    There have been 4,855 deaths and 67,050 recovered cases

    Source: GNA

  • COVID-19: Port Health intensifies screening at Aflao Border

    Officials of Port Health Authority at the Aflao-Lome border have intensified screening of travellers to prevent Coronavirus (COVID-19) from entering Ghana after Togo recorded its first case last week.

    The officials were seen screening travellers at both arrival and departure routes to neighbouring Togo with Thermal Walkthrough Thermometers when the Ghana News Agency (GNA) visited the Aflao border.

    The GNA observed that apart from the intensive screening, personnel of the Authority were also sensitising travellers and hawkers on the virus and safety measures.

    It was also observed that the officers were using only four Thermal Walkthrough Thermometers, with some travellers complaining about having to wait in long queues for long periods.

    As a result, a few travellers were spotted using some detours on the blindsides of Port Health officials to beat the waiting time, claiming they were safe.

    One traveller was heard screaming, “I don’t have any Coronavirus so don’t put that machine on my head, I’m healthy, nothing is wrong with me, I’ve never been to China,” as he moved towards Togo.

    As of March 9, more than 111,000 people have been infected with the virus in more than 80 countries, according to the Johns Hopkins University Center for Systems Science and Engineering.

    It said there were over 3,800 deaths globally. Just over 3,000 of those deaths occurred in mainland China with 62,000 people having recovered from the coronavirus.

    Common signs of infection of COVID 19 include; respiratory symptoms, fever, cough, shortness of breath and breathing difficulties.

    In more severe cases, the infection can cause pneumonia, severe acute respiratory syndrome, kidney failure and even death.

    Standard recommendations to prevent infection spread include regular hand washing, covering mouth and nose when coughing and sneezing, thoroughly cooking of meat and eggs.

    It is also recommended that people avoid close contact with anyone showing symptoms of respiratory illness such as coughing and sneezing.

    Officials of Port Health Authority at the border including an inspection team from Accra declined to speak to the media and only said, “We have put the necessary measures in place to deal with the situation.”

    Source: GNA

  • Suspected coronavirus case at Abura Dunkwa tests negative – Regional Minister

    A suspected coronavirus (COVID-19) case at the Abura-Dunkwa hospital in the Central Region has tested negative, the Central Regional Minister, Kwamena Duncan has revealed.

    According to the Minister, the case involved a white couple who returned to Ghana a few days ago.

    Speaking during a radio programme on Accra based Peace FM Wednesday morning and monitored by Graphic Online, Mr Duncan said it involved a lady who reported sick to the Abura-Dunkwa hospital with another person.

    When the medical personnel screened her, the symptoms fitted the profile of the virus and also had a very high temperature.

    Mr Duncan said whilst screening her she even collapsed and so all the people she had been in contact with within the period were immediately traced and isolated.

    He said the medical personnel reported to him that a blood sample was taken from her and sent to the Noguchi Memorial Institute for Medical Research (NMIMR) on Tuesday and turned out to be negative.

    Mr Duncan was speaking Wednesday morning as a studio panel member on the Kokrokoo morning show hosted by Kwami Sefa Kayi.

     

    Source: peacefmonline.com

  • Coronavirus cases reach over 100 across Africa

    South Africa on Wednesday reported six new confirmed cases of Covid-19, the respiratory disease caused by the new coronavirus all involving people who had travelled to Europe.

    Thirteen people have now tested positive in South Africa, according to the National Institute for Communicable Diseases.

    The new cases are a 33-year-old woman who had been in Italy; a 34-year-old man and a 33-year-old woman who had been in Germany.

    Others are a 57-year-old man who had been in Austria and Italy; a 40-year-old man who had been in Portugal; and a 36-year-old man who had been in multiple countries including Germany, Austria, Switzerland and Turkey.

    “Some of these patients are already in hospital, while some, specifically those who are asymptomatic, are in self-quarantine,” the institute said in a statement.

    Experts consider Africa to be at high risk due to its close links with China the epicentre of the coronavirus epidemic and the weak health systems that many African countries have.

    But outbreaks have been rather limited on the continent so far.

    More than 110,000 people have been infected worldwide so far.

    By Tuesday, the World Health Organisation had recorded 99 confirmed Covid-19 cases in nine African countries: Algeria, Cameroon, Egypt, Morocco, Nigeria, Senegal, South Africa, Togo and Tunisia.

    Authorities in Burkina Faso and Congo have also announced their first confirmed cases, all involving people who had been in Europe.

    Egypt and Algeria have had the highest number of cases. Only one death has been reported so far, in Egypt.

    Source: punchng.com

  • Wuhan rescue plane flies from South Africa

    A plane has left South Africa headed to China’s coronavirus epicentre of Wuhan to repatriate more than 120 citizens stranded there since the outbreak began in January.

    “Go with speed, with God and bring our children back home,” President Cyril Ramaphosa reportedly told the dozens of military staff and health officials boarding the flight at Johannesburg’s main airport on Tuesday night.

    The plane is due to stop over in the Philippines first to refuel, before heading to China.

    It is scheduled to leave China on Friday and land in South Africa later that day.

    The mission will cost almost $1.6m (£1.2m), according to a letter President Cyril Ramaphosa wrote to parliament.

    A total of 122 South Africans are to be repatriated, authorities say. That’s fewer than the 180 people who originally said they wanted to be brought back.

    Those who dropped out decided to “stay on at their respective commitments”, according to a government statement.

    None of the people being repatriated have showed any signs of coronavirus infection, South African authorities said in a statement, but they will all be subject to a 21-day quarantine period.

    South Africa currently has seven confirmed cases of the virus.

    News24 tweeted this footage of soldiers boarding the flight

    Source: bbc.com

     

  • Suspected case of coronavirus at Berekum tests negative

    A suspected case of coronavirus at Berekum in the Bono Region has tested negative. The case involved a Ghanaian who had returned from Spain which has recorded 1,700 reported cases with 37 deaths.

    The Bono Regional Director of the Ghana Health Service, Dr. Kofi Issah said the patient reported to the Berekum community hospital with symptoms of the virus.

    “He came with the symptoms which have been suggestive of the virus to one of the health facilities there, so normally the health staff has been taught to check if someone fits into the case but he has also traveled from Spain three days prior to when he came with the symptom. So once they check and he fits in the case definition, they then inform the rapid response team and they meet with the patient take his sample from him and manage to get him to a place where they can actually quarantine him, it is his own house..”

    But series of test conducted on the blood sample has tested negative.

    “The result was taken, someone had to travel throughout the night and then send the sample to Kumasi and Accra, and we got the result which was negative.”

    Akufo-Addo suspends foreign travels for public officials

    President Akufo-Addo has suspended temporarily foreign travels for all public officials.

    According to the government, this constitutes measures it has taken to prevent the outbreak of the Coronavirus (COVID-19) in the country.

    In a statement issued by the Chief of Staff at the Office of the President, Akosua Frema Osei-Opare, and addressed to all sector Ministers and their deputies, Regional Ministers and their deputies, all Metropolitan, Municipal, and District Chief Executives, and all Heads of Government Agencies, the Chief of Staff stressed that only essential and critical foreign travels will be considered and, thereafter, approved.

    “The directive, together with other measures being put in place by Government, is intended to protect the general public from contracting the virus. Please take note and ensure compliance,” the statement added.

     

    Source: primenewsghana.com

  • Coronavirus: GIS tightens security at Ghana-Burkina Faso border

    The Head of Public Affairs of the Ghana Immigration Service (GIS), Supt. Amoako Atta, has said following the outbreak of coronavirus in Burkina Faso, security on the borders with that country has been tightened to detect suspected cases of the disease among people entering Ghana through her northern neighbour.

    Speaking to Kwabena Prah Jnr (the Don) on Ghana Yensom on Accra 100.5FM, Mr Amoako Atta said that Ghanaians should not panic because surveillance at the northern borders is at an “all-time high.”

    Already, he explained, the security along that border was tightened following the threat of terrorism attacks in Burkina Faso.

    “Even before the coronavirus outbreak in Burkina Faso, we had enhanced our security visibility along the border between Ghana and Burkina Faso because of the threat of terrorism,” he said.

    He further revealed that the immigration officers have been trained by the Ghana Health Service and also retooled to enable them detect suspicious cases.

    “We have also been trained so that when we meet suspicious people, we can do appropriate profiling”, he said, adding: “The leadership of the Ghana Immigration Service has also provided sanitisers and protective clothing” for its personnel.

    Source: classfmonline.com

  • UK health minister contracts novel coronavirus

    The U.K.’s health minister confirmed Tuesday that she has contracted the novel coronavirus.

    “I can confirm I have tested positive for the coronavirus. As soon as I was informed, I took all the advised precautions and have been self-isolating at home,” Nadine Dorries said in a statement.

    Dorries, 62, has served as Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Health and Social Care since 2019.

    “Really sorry to hear Nadine has tested positive for coronavirus. She has done the right thing by self-isolating at home. We all wish her well as she recovers,” Secretary of State for Health Matt Hancock said on Twitter.

    Dorries was at a recent reception attended by Prime Minister Boris Johnson and was together with hundreds of parliamentarians in parliament last week.

    The number of cases of the coronavirus in the U.K. has risen to 373, while the country has confirmed its sixth death.

    The novel coronavirus, officially known also COVID-19, was first detected last December in Wuhan, China.

    The global death toll from the virus is now over 4,260, with more than 118,100 confirmed cases, according to Johns Hopkins University in the U.S.

    The virus has since spread to six continents and more than 100 countries.

    Source: www.aa.com.tr

  • Sensitization about the deadly coronavirus should increase Dr. Joseph Donkor

    Medical Director at the Manhean Polyclinic, Dr. Joseph Donkor, has urged the major stakeholders in health within the country to keep educating the public about the deadly coronavirus.

    In an interview with GhanaWeb, Dr. Donkor stated that educating the public about the virus will enable them to take the right steps to avoid spreading it if cases are reported in Ghana.

    “We need to educate the public, so we need to do a lot of sensitization at churches, in schools and public gatherings in the aim of trying to empower the people for them to know what they are supposed to do if they should come across any of these signs and symptoms,” he said.

    According to him, the rate at which the disease is spreading is very alarming, and as such more people should be given the opportunity to learn about the best ways to prevent being infected as well as infecting others.

    “What is happening is that the disease is spreading so fast, more education needs to be done, people are unaware, and so we need to do more sensitization. More churches are supposed to be involved, and more traditional leaders are supposed to be involved,” he said.

    Dr. Joseph Donkor counselled that, anyone showing signs of the virus should quickly go to the nearest medical centre for aid.

    “The signs and symptoms are like common cold. With this disease, these symptoms show up and then it gets worse, so you start to have difficulty in breathing, your kidney fails, you have diarrhoea and the person can die. If anyone shows any of these symptoms like cough, cold, sneezing, headaches, and fever, the person should quickly report to the facility as soon as possible for further clarification and assessment to be done, and especially people who have travelled outside the country,” he concluded.

    He however strongly debunked some myths about the virus, such as claims that the use dettol and chewing of garlic can help prevent it, cautioning the public to desist from following those wrong instructions.

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • Coronavirus: Virgin Atlantic admits flying near-empty planes

    Virgin Atlantic has confirmed it has been forced to operate some near-empty flights after bookings were dented by the coronavirus outbreak.

    It is operating the flights to try to retain take-off and landing slots at major airports such as Heathrow.

    Under European law, if flights are not operated, slots have to be forfeited.

    UK Transport Secretary Grant Shapps has written to the European Commission, asking for rules on slot allocation to be relaxed during the outbreak.

    Other carriers are thought to be taking similar steps – even reportedly flying so-called “ghost planes” with no passengers on board at all in order to safeguard their presence at major hubs.

    ‘Use it or lose it’

    Airline passenger numbers have fallen dramatically in recent weeks due to the coronavirus outbreak. On some routes, they have halved and carriers have been cancelling services.

    However, this could cause them a serious problem, particularly if they fly out of large or heavily congested airports. Under international guidelines, which are enshrined in European law, take-off and landing slots at these airports are limited.

    In the UK, the rules apply to Heathrow, Gatwick, Stansted, Manchester, London Luton and London City.

    Slots are granted according to historical rights at these airports. If, for example, a carrier operated a particular schedule through the summer season last year, it retains the right to those same slots this summer.

    But there is a catch. Under the “use it or lose it” rule, slots have to be used at least 80% of the time. If an airline fails to reach that threshold, the slots are put back into a pool and allocated to other carriers.

    Although they are technically granted for free, there is a thriving secondary market on which the most desirable slots can change hands for significant sums – tens of millions of pounds across a season. So airlines are very reluctant to lose them.

    The rule has already been suspended on routes to China and Hong Kong, but still applies elsewhere.

    “Passenger demand for air travel has dramatically fallen due to Covid-19 and in some instances we are being forced to fly almost empty planes or lose our valuable slots”, said Shai Weiss, chief executive of Virgin Atlantic.

    One UK carrier has said that unless the rules change, it will have to operate 32 flights over the next two weeks with only 40% of the aircraft occupied. That would leave more than 5,000 seats empty.

    ‘Wasting money and fuel’

    Airlines are now lobbying hard for the rules to be relaxed.

    Tim Alderslade, chief executive of the industry body Airlines UK, said: “It makes no sense whatsoever under these unique and challenging circumstances to force airlines to fly empty aircraft, wasting money and fuel and creating carbon emissions”.

    He added: “We urgently need a temporary suspension of the rule – as happened during the financial crisis – to allow airlines to respond to demand and use their aircraft efficiently.”

    However, if the rules are to be relaxed, the decision will have to come from Brussels. Although the UK has officially withdrawn from the European Union (EU), an EU regulation on slot allocation still applies.

    On Monday the Transport Secretary Grant Shapps wrote to the European Commission. He asked it to introduce “practical and proportionate measures” to address the situation, possibly including “flexibility with the 80% threshold, implemented on a market-by-market basis or more broadly”.

    The body directly responsible for slot allocation in the UK, Airport Coordination Limited, has joined other organisations from across Europe in calling for the “use it or lose it” measure to be suspended from mid-February until the end of June.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Israel announces two-week quarantine for all everyone entering the country

    Israel will impose a two-week quarantine on all travellers entering the country, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Monday, toughening already significant travel restrictions.

    “After a day of difficult discussions, we have taken a decision: all those coming to Israel from abroad will be placed in isolation for 14 days,” Netanyahu said in a video broadcast on his Twitter account.

    “This is a difficult decision but it is essential to maintaining public health, which takes precedence over everything,” he added, according to a statement.

    He noted that the measure would be implemented for two weeks and promised steps to support the Israeli economy.

    Israel had already imposed major restrictions on travellers arriving from several countries.

    On Wednesday, the Jewish state had barred entry to almost all non-residents arriving from France, Germany, Spain, Austria and Switzerland, declaring that arrivals from those nations could only enter if they could prove they had a place to stay in quarantine.

    Those measures had come on top of restrictions previously imposed on arrivals from mainland China, Hong Kong, Thailand, Singapore, Macau, South Korea, Japan and Italy.

    But restrictions had not until now extended to travellers from the United States, which last year contributed nearly 890,000 tourist arrivals to Israel — more than double that of France, in second place.

    Israel has so far recorded 50 cases of the illness.

    The Palestinian Authority, which on Thursday declared a 30-day state of emergency in parts of the West Bank it administers, has reported 25 cases.

    The latest measures come a month ahead of the Passover festival, which usually sees tens of thousands of Jews head to Israel to celebrate.

    Since the novel coronavirus first emerged in late December, 113,255 cases have been recorded in 101 countries and territories, killing 3,964 people, according to an AFP toll based on official sources on Monday around 1700 GMT.

    Source: AFP

  • Coronavirus: Italians barred from Austria to stop spread

    Austria has announced a ban on Italians entering the country unless they carry a medical certificate, in an attempt to stop coronavirus spreading.

    Speaking after the Italian government-imposed travel restrictions across the country, Chancellor Sebastian Kurz said Austrians returning from Italy would have to self-isolate for two weeks.

    Austria has seen 158 cases of coronavirus so far.

    Mr. Kurz said the number was still very low but the disease was deadly.

    Austria and Italy share a border north of Italy’s South Tyrol region. On Tuesday, South Tyrol, in common with the rest of Italy, closed all cultural centers and restricted access to bars and cafes to daytime hours.

    Italy’s nationwide lockdown limits travel to those with “proven work requirements or situations of necessity”. All sporting events have been suspended, and schools and universities have been shut until 3 April. Employees have been urged either to work from home or take annual leave.

    Hotel and tourist accommodation operators in South Tyrol have ended their winter holiday season early and agreed to delay the spring tourist season.

    “Regarding Austrians in Italy, we are currently organizing repatriation of these Austrians,” Mr. Kurz told reporters in Vienna.

    Five mobile teams began health checks on the Brenner Pass as well as two other routes between the two countries on Tuesday.

    Austria is introducing further restrictions. University teaching is being suspended, as well as indoor events involving more than 100 people and outdoor events with more than 500.

    “The fewer social contacts there are, the better prepared the hospitals will be,” said Mr. Kurz.

    Source: bbc.com

  • La Liga matches to be played behind closed doors for the next two weeks

    Matches in Spain’s top two divisions will be played behind closed doors for at least the next two weeks because of coronavirus concerns.

    The change will take effect from Tuesday, with fans now banned from the game between Eibar and Real Sociedad.

    La Liga acted on guidance from Spain’s ministry of health and the country’s sports council.

    Barcelona’s Champions League match against Napoli on 18 March will also be played at an empty Nou Camp.

    “The decision has been made strictly for health reasons,” said Joan Guix, Catalunya government’s health chief.

    It is the second Spanish-Italian Champions League fixture at which supporters have been banned, following Valencia versus Atalanta on Tuesday.

    Sevilla’s match against Roma and Getafe’s game with Inter Milan in the Europa League have suffered the same fate.

    Paris St-Germain’s Champions League match against Borussia Dortmund on Wednesday will also be closed to fans.

    All sport in Italy has been suspended until at least 3 April because of coronavirus. The ruling includes Serie A matches but not Italian clubs or national teams participating in international competitions.

    Manchester United’s Europa League last-16 first leg match at LASK Linz in Austria on Thursday could also be played without fans being admitted.

    Source: bbc.com

  • China to ease travel curbs within locked-down province

    Hard-hit Hubei, the epicentre of the coronavirus outbreak in China, will relax travel restrictions to allow healthy people to move within the province, officials said Tuesday.

    Hubei has been under lockdown since January with some 56 million people under quarantine, but the number of cases has declined in recent weeks.

    According to the provincial government, a mobile app will be used to give residents a coloured health code, and people labelled “green” in medium and low-risk areas will be allowed to travel within the province.

    There is no indication that people can leave the province, and the measures also did not appear to loosen restrictions in Hubei’s capital, Wuhan.

    Chinese President Xi Jinping on Tuesday made his first visit to the city since it emerged as the epicentre of the coronavirus crisis in January.

    Only green code holders — meaning no contact with any cases — will be allowed to travel, and only if they are from low or medium risk areas, officials said.

    Confirmed or suspected cases will get a red code, while a yellow code indicates close contact with a confirmed case.

    Anyone given a red code must be quarantined.

    Cities, counties and districts with no newly confirmed cases in the last two weeks are classified as low-risk regions.

    On Tuesday there were only 17 new cases reported in Hubei province, all in Wuhan.

    Most of China’s 3,136 coronavirus deaths and 80,754 cases came from Hubei, with the majority in Wuhan.

    Source: France24

  • Coronavirus outbreak: Prices of spare parts to shoot up

    Ghana in the next three months is likely to experience shortage and increases in the prices of spare parts if the Corona Virus (CODVID 19) disease is not contained, Co-chairman of the Abossey Okai Spare Parts Dealers Association, Clement Boateng has said.

    According to him, spare parts dealers in the country could no longer travel to buy spare parts due to the outbreak of the Corona Virus disease there.

    In an interview with the Ghanaian Times on the impact of the outbreak of the Corona Virus disease on the spare parts industry in Ghana, Mr Boateng said the spread of the disease was having a serious toll on the spare parts business in the country.

    He said players in the industry could not replenish their dwindling stocks as they could not travel to China and other Asian markets such as Korea and Japan, which are major markets for spare parts.

    He said the auto factories in the major spare parts producing markets in Asia have shut down their plants and this could cause shortage in spare parts in those markets.

    “Players in the auto manufacturing industry in China and other Asian countries such as Japan and Korea have been closed down their factories due to the outbreak of the Corona Virus disease,” he said.

    Mr Boateng who is also the National Organiser of the Ghana Union Traders Association (GUTA) warned that if in the next two to three if the disease was not contained, it could create shortage in spare parts and increase prices as well.

    The Coronavirus disease was detected in Wuhan in China and is said to cause a respiratory (lung) infection.

    Thousands of people have been affected, killed and others quarantined due to the infection.

    COVID 2019 which has been a health emergency of international concern has spread to over 50 countries and still spreading.

    Meanwhile, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) has announced a $50 million package to help emerging markets to cope with the outbreak of the COVID-19, after warning that the disease posed a serious threat to global growth.

    The World Bank on the other hand has pledged $ 2bn.

    Source: Ghanaiantimes.com.gh

  • Nigerian tests positive to coronavirus in U.S.

    A Nigerian has tested positive to Covid-19 (coronavirus) in Washington, US, the Mayor of Washington DC, Muriel Bowser, said on Saturday.

    Today News Africa reported that Ms Bowser said the Nigerian man spent time in Washington DC and tested positive for Covid-19 at a hospital in neighbourhood Maryland.

    She said the Nigerian does not live in DC, but travelled to the area from Nigeria where he had been staying with relatives before he fell ill. She, however. did not give further details.

    Ms Bowser gave the information when updating the public on the first presumptive case in Washington.

    She said there were two cases in Washington – the first one was a Nigerian who spent time in Washington DC and tested positive in Maryland, while the second case was that of a DC resident in his 50s who tested positive and has been hospitalized in the district.

    The DC resident is the first to test positive for Covid-19 in Washington.

    Meanwhile, the U.S. has also been recording increasing numbers of cases in the last weeks.

    The U.S. recorded the first confirmed death from coronavirus on February 29.

    The man in his 50s had underlying health conditions, and there was no evidence he had close contact with an infected person or a relevant travel history that would have exposed him to the virus.

    Now the rapidly-spreading virus has killed 19 people in the U.S. and affected more than 30 states and the District of Columbia, turning into a health crisis.

    Federal health officials announced the first case of coronavirus in the U.S. on January 20. The patient was in Washington state, and had just returned five days prior from Wuhan, China, where the outbreak started.

    The outbreak in the U.S. has been raising alarms among its citizens as many of them are not happy with the way the Trump administration was handling the outbreak.

    However, the U.S. Secretary of State, Mike Pompeo, said Friday that he was “confident” that the United States would handle the novel coronavirus “better than any nation in the world.”

    Mr Pompeo expressed the optimism during an interview with CNBC, in response to a question about whether the U.S. response could as good as that of China without interfering with people’s civil liberties. China imposed severe restrictions on travel in an effort to contain the virus.

    “I’m confident we can handle it here. I’m confident we’ll handle it better than any nation in the world,” Mr Pompeo said.

    Source: allafrica.com

  • Burkina Faso confirms first two cases of coronavirus

    Burkina Faso has confirmed its first two cases of the novel coronavirus, local media reported Monday.

    The two patients are a couple, the wife having recently returned from France, a report said, quoting Health Minister Claudine Lougue.

    Lougue added that the patients were quarantined in a local hospital in the capital Ouagadougou.

    A third person who was in close contact with the couple is under observation, according to the report.

    At least 109,578 confirmed cases of the novel coronavirus, officially known as COVID-19, have been reported worldwide as of Monday, an increase of 3,994 infections from the previous day, according to a coronavirus update released by the World Health Organization (WHO).

    Of the 3,994 new infections, 3,949 were outside China, according to the WHO.

    Besides Burkina Faso, Bangladesh, Albania and Paraguay reported cases of COVID-19 for the first time as of Monday, bringing the total number of countries and regions affected by the coronavirus to around 105.

    Burkina Faso has become the latest African country to report coronavirus cases after Cameroon, Senegal, South Africa, Nigeria, Algeria, Togo and Egypt, which on Sunday reported the first coronavirus fatality on the content.

    Source: www.aa.com.tr

  • Man flees Zimbabwe hospital before coronavirus test

    Zimbabwe has no confirmed cases of coronavirus, but the health ministry has confirmed that a man who was due to be tested in a hospital “absconded before testing was done”.

    In a statement on Monday it added that the 26-year-old entered Zimbabwe in February from Thailand, and was referred from a private clinic to Wilkins Infectious Disease Hospital in Harare on 8 March complaining of a fever and sneezing.

    According to Zimbabwe’s health ministry:Quote Message: He did not meet the [World Health Organization] definition of a suspected case but was still earmarked for a Covid-19 test due to intensified surveillance that the country has adopted.”

    He did not meet the [World Health Organization] definition of a suspected case but was still earmarked for a Covid-19 test due to intensified surveillance that the country has adopted.”

    After the man fled the hospital “follow-up efforts to his home address were initiated and a police report was made”, the statement added.

    Latest figures indicate there are 100 confirmed coronavirus cases across Africa.

    They are as follows:

    • Egypt – 55
    • Algeria – 20
    • South Africa– 7
    • Tunisia – 5
    • Senegal – 4
    • Morocco – 2
    • Cameroon – 2
    • Burkina Faso – 2
    • Nigeria – 2
    • Togo –

    Source: BBC

     

  • Coronavirus: US Republicans self-quarantine amid outbreak

    Five senior US Republicans have quarantined themselves after coming into contact with a person who tested positive for coronavirus.

    The members of Congress, who include Texas Senator Ted Cruz, self-isolated after they shook hands with an infected individual at a conference.

    President Donald Trump, who was also at the event last month, insists he is in good health and has not taken a test.

    One Democrat has also self-isolated after she met someone with the virus.

    There are more than 700 confirmed cases in the US and 26 people have died so far.

    Mr Cruz, Arizona Congressman Paul Gosar, Georgia Congressman Doug Collins and Florida Congressman Matt Gaetz are all self-quarantining for the recommended 14-days after they met the same infected person at CPAC, a conservative political conference, at the end of February.

    Republican Representative Mark Meadows, President Donald Trump’s newly appointed chief of staff, also met the person and is in self-quarantine. He is not exhibiting any symptoms and a precautionary test came back negative, a spokesman said.

    Mr Trump and Vice-President Mike Pence attended the same event in Maryland but neither of them interacted with the individual. Mr Trump did shake hands with the conference chairman who had had contact with the patient.

    But, on Monday, the White House announced that Mr Trump had not been tested for the virus. “He has neither had prolonged close contact with any known confirmed Covid-19 patients, nor does he have any symptoms,” a spokeswoman said.

    “President Trump remains in excellent health, and his physician will continue to closely monitor him,” she added.

    What else did the White House say?

    The White House announcement came as it warned the number of cases in the US was likely to rise. “There will be more cases,” Mr Pence told reporters. “But we simply ask today for the American people to engage in the common sense practices.”

    The vice-president, who also confirmed he had not been tested for the virus, said the administration was consulting Congress on providing paid sick leave to workers.

    US President Donald Trump and VP Mike Pence are pictured at Monday's press briefing
    President Trump and Vice-President Mike Pence have not been tested for the virus

    Separately, in brief remarks, Mr Trump said he would take “major” steps to protect the economy against the impact of the outbreak. “We’ll be discussing a possible payroll tax cut or relief, substantial relief,” he told reporters.

    He did not provide further details on his plans, but said there would be a news conference on Tuesday.

    “This blindsided the world, and I think we’ve handled it very, very well,” he said of the virus.

    The president’s comments came as stock markets plunged. Shares around the world had their worst day since the financial crisis on Monday, and analysts described the market reaction to the coronavirus as “utter carnage”.

    What’s the latest in the US?

    Cases of the virus have been recorded in 34 states plus Washington DC.

    There have been 738 confirmed cases and 26 deaths, according to Johns Hopkins University.

    Meanwhile, passengers aboard a virus-hit cruise liner in California have begun disembarking after being kept off the coast of San Francisco for five days.

    Grand Princess cruise ship
    The Grand Princess has 21 cases of coronavirus on board

    Nineteen crew members and two passengers on the Grand Princess have tested positive for Covid-19. Most of the passengers will go into quarantine at military bases or, if they require more immediate medical attention, nearby hospitals.

    Several hundred foreign passengers, including 140 Britons, will be repatriated to their home countries.

    The ship’s crew members will remain quarantined on board, which will depart from Oakland as soon as the passengers have disembarked, officials said.

    The cruise ship came to the attention of the authorities when a previous voyager on the vessel died last week after being stricken by the coronavirus.

    The 71-year-old, who had an underlying health condition, had been on a round trip from San Francisco to Mexico.

    What about elsewhere?

    In neighbouring Canada, as of Monday morning, there were 76 confirmed or presumptive cases of people carrying the coronavirus disease. There was one confirmed death in North Vancouver, British Columbia.

    Most of the cases are in the provinces of Ontario and British Columbia, though some have also been discovered in Quebec and Alberta.

    Canadian public health officials are advising against all cruise ship travel. Just last week, Canadian passengers of the Diamond Princess cruise ship were released from quarantine.

    Italy now has the highest number of confirmed infections outside China, where the outbreak originated in December. It has confirmed 7,375 cases and overtaken South Korea, where the total number is 7,313.

    Source: BBC

  • Taiwan students fight virus with Lego disinfectant dispenser

    Students at an elementary school in the southern Taiwanese city of Kaohsiung have found their own unique way to fight the coronavirus and stay ahead of the curve in epidemic prevention – an automated disinfectant dispenser built from Lego.

    Children ranging from six to 12 years old use every school break and any chance they can get to line up to use their self-built alcohol disinfectant robot that some of their peers have assembled under the guidance of their robotics coach.

    “Washing hands is super,” shouts a recorded voice after the dispenser senses a pair of hands in front of its ultrasonic sensor and dispenses alcohol disinfectant from a spray bottle by pulling back its handle with a motor and gearwheel mechanism.

    Next to the robot, there are scenes crafted by the younger students showing various situations that require the washing of hands: an operating table in a hospital, a toilet and a flower garden.

    One year after the Fukushima nuclear disaster in Japan in 2011, teachers at the Linyuan Elementary School decided the students should learn about the basic principals of robotics.

    The school is situated in an industrial area, dominated by the petrochemical sector.

    Teachers wanted to teach the children to be able to solve problems in their hometown in the future – such as fire, air pollution and gas explosions.

    Since then, the school has represented Taiwan in many international competitions abroad and won several prizes with its robotics club.

    While Taiwan has only recorded 45 cases of the coronavirus, compared with more than 80,000 on the other side of the Taiwan Strait in China, the island is on high alert to prevent further infections.

    Source: reuters.com

  • Trump has not been tested for coronavirus – White House

    President Donald Trump has not been tested for coronavirus, the White House said Monday, despite indirect contact through at least two lawmakers.

    White House officials announced late Monday that the president had not been tested after a series of encounters with lawmakers who had contact with others who had tested positive for the virus. Top among those was Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., who announced he was placing himself in quarantine less than an hour after getting off Air Force One.

    “The president has not received COVID-19 testing because he has neither had prolonged close contact with any known confirmed COVID-19 patients, nor does he have any symptoms,” White House press secretary Stephanie Grisham said. “President Trump remains in excellent health, and his physician will continue to closely monitor him.”

    During a briefing at the White House on Monday, Vice President Mike Pence said he didn’t know whether or not the president was tested. Pence said he was not tested.

    “I’ve had no recommendation that I will be tested,” Pence said.

    “The White House physicians, their directive is to see to the health and well-being of the president of the United States.”

    Though there is zero indication the president has been exposed to the virus there have been several circumstances in which it has come close to him. Gaetz said Monday that he had come into contact with a person who tested positive at the Conservative Political Action Conference in Maryland late last month. He flew with Trump aboard Air Force One from Florida back to Joint Base Andrews outside of Washington, D.C., on Monday.

    Days before Rep. Doug Collins, R-Ga., announced he had placed himself in quarantine, he was seen meeting with Trump at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, shaking the president’s hands on the tarmac before the visit.

    Both Collins and Gaetz said they had no symptoms.

    A self-acknowledged germophobe who is said to frequently slather his hands with sanitizer, Trump recently told Fox News there is no way to politely avoid shaking hands.

    “You can’t be a politician and not shake hands,” Trump said at the town hall in Scranton, Pa., on Thursday. “The bottom line is, I shake anybody’s hand now. I’m proud of it.”

    Source: usatoday.com

  • Burkina Faso confirms two coronavirus cases

    Burkina Faso on Monday reported its first two coronavirus cases in a local couple who returned from France last month.

    Burkinabè Health minister Claudine Lougue told a press conference that the two, a 73-year-old man and a 57-year-old woman, had been quarantined following positive tests for the virus.

    A third person who is suspected to have been in direct contact with the couple is also under observation.

    Burkina Faso becomes the sixth country in sub-Saharan Africa to record at least one positive case of the virus after Cameroon, Morocco, Nigeria, Senegal, South Africa and Togo.

    Algeria, Egypt and Morocco have also confirmed positive cases of the coronavirus in North Africa.