Tag: Coronavirus

  • Coronavirus: US has ‘serious problem’, says Fauci

    US infectious disease chief Dr Anthony Fauci says the nation has a “serious problem” as 16 states reel from a spike in Covid-19 cases.

    At the first White House task force briefing in two months, Dr Fauci said: “The only way we’re going to end it is by ending it together.”

    As health experts said more must be done to slow the spread, Vice-President Mike Pence praised US “progress”.

    More than 40,000 new cases were recorded across the US on Friday

    The total of 40,173, given by Johns Hopkins University, was the highest daily total so far, exceeding the record set only the previous day.

    There are over 2.4 million confirmed infections and more than 125,000 deaths nationwide – more than any other country.

    During Friday’s briefing, the White House task force also urged millennials to get tested, even if they are asymptomatic.

    Mr Pence said the president requested the task force address the American people amid surges in infections and hospital admissions across southern and western states.

    In Texas, Florida and Arizona, reopening plans have been paused due to the spike.

    While some of the increase in daily cases recorded can be attributed to expanded testing, the rate of positive tests in some areas is also increasing.

    Health officials in the US estimate the true number of cases is likely to be 10 times higher than the reported figure.

    What was said at the White House briefing?
    Dr Deborah Birx, coronavirus response coordinator, thanked younger Americans for heeding official guidance on testing.

    “Whereas before we told them to stay home, now we are telling them to get tested.”

    She noted this “great change” in testing guidance would allow officials to find “the asymptomatic and mild diseases that we couldn’t find before”.

    Following Dr Birx’s presentation of the recent data, Dr Fauci said: “As you can see we are facing a serious problem in certain areas.”

    He added: “So what goes on in one area of the country ultimately could have an affect on other areas.”

    Dr Fauci said the current rises were due to everything from regions “maybe opening a little bit too early”, to opening at a reasonable time “but not actually following steps in an orderly fashion”, to the citizens themselves not following guidance.

    “People are infecting other people, and then ultimately you will infect someone who’s vulnerable,” he said.

    “You have an individual responsibility to yourself, but you have a societal responsibility because if we want to end this outbreak, really end it… we’ve got to realise that we are part of the process.”

    Dr Fauci added that if the spread was not stopped, eventually even the parts of the country doing well now would be affected.

    The vice-president, meanwhile, praised the nation’s headway in handling the pandemic, noting “extraordinary progress” in former virus hotspots, like New York and New Jersey.

    “We slowed the spread, we flattened the curve, we saved lives,” he said.

    Mr Pence also appeared to deny any link between states reopening and the increase in cases.

    Responding to a reporter’s question, he said the southern states that have reopened did so months ago, when new cases and rates were low.

    Mr Pence instead blamed much of the rise on positive test results from asymptomatic young people, adding that while they may be at lower risk of serious symptoms, they should “take countermeasures” and listen to state governors’ advice.

    Source: bbc.com

  • South Africans call for school closure as students test positive for coronavirus

    Calls for the closure of South African schools are growing as 204 people, mostly learners, tested positive at a boarding school in the Eastern Cape.

    Makaula Senior Secondary School in KwaBhaca has since been closed, bringing to 132 the number of Eastern Cape schools that are currently shut.

    Forty were reopened after being disinfected.

    This comes just over two weeks after the reopening of schools in South Africa, with the number of infections in the country rising to 106,108 with a death toll of 2,102.

    The Educators Union of South Africa (Eusa), a vocal labour union, says the reopening of schools was poorly timed.

    “Our appeal is for the Government to review its decision to reopen schools. We opine with great conviction that the decision to reopen primary and high schools was the wrong one,” Eusa said in a statement.

    “We contend that the timing is bad as wintry weather brings with it seasonal illness such as influenza.

    The Coronavirus thrives under cold conditions and will also augment and exacerbate the onset of the flu and tuberculosis.

    “Our children and teachers are terrified of contracting the Coronavirus. The anxiety around Covid-19 is palpable. School is about community.

    There is great concern about the contagious nature of the disease and how this will lead to more suffering of our people in broader society.

    “The extra workload with regards to health screening, now foisted onto the teachers, is adding to the anxiety. We ask that schooling be suspended countrywide.”

    The National Association of School Governing Bodies said it intends to petition the Department of Education to close schools.

    The National Teachers Organisation of South Africa, through their Eastern Cape leader Loyiso Mbinda, said it “warned them the virus thrives in winter.”

    Basic Education Minister Angie Motshekga said they “will continue to work hard in schools to make sure that we protect our learners, teachers and employees within schools.

    It is important to work together to ensure that we beat the virus.”

    Source: allafrica.com

  • Coronavirus: Tourism revival requires stern enforcement of safety protocols

    To revive the ailing tourism industry from the doldrums of coronavirus, amidst the new normal business climate, it is imperative for industry players to brace themselves for stern enforcement of precautionary health measures and safety protocols, Mr. Joseph Appiagyei, Acting Manager of Ghana Tourism Authority (GTA), in charge of Bono, Bono East and Ahafo Regions, has stated.

    He said once an end to COVID-19 impact on the tourism industry is not in sight now, any tourism recovery strategy must incorporate strict supervision and adherence to COVID-19 safety protocols to protect tourists and guests, indicating that this would be the surest way to revive the troubled industry by boosting public confidence that hospitality facilities and attraction sites are not infectious grounds for the deadly virus.

    Globally, the tourism industry has weathered tumultuous times since the outbreak of the pandemic. Resultant precautionary measures such as border closures, restrictions on public gatherings and conferencing among others have crippled the industry.

    According to the Tourism Worldwide Statistics and Facts, projected travel and tourism revenue from 2019 to 2010 declined by a whopping US$264.53 billion. As at 2018, global hotel industry was valued at US$600.49 billion.

    The situation at some hospitality facilities in the Bono Region epitomizes the devastating impact of COVID-19 in the country. Eusbett Hotel, a 3-Star facility in Sunyani with 150 rooms and ten (10) conference centres has had its occupancy reduced from 88 percent to two percent.

    Management of the Hotel responded to the situation by cutting down staff strength from 150 to 60. Tyco City Hotel, a 2-Star facility on the other hand has suffered a sharp occupancy drop to between 5-2 percent, accounting for 50 percent workers laidoff.

    To support hospitality facilities and tourist attraction sites in the country to adjust to the new normal business environment, Mr. Appiagayei in an interview with the B&FT said the GTA had distributed sanitary items such as veronica buckets and liquid soap, adding “the Authority is also making provision to assist those who did not benefit from the initial supply.”

    On his part, the Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Tyco City Hotel, Nana Kwame Aning, stated that hoteliers are prepared to adjust to the new normal to help the revival of the tourism industry. “Sanitary items like veronica buckets, and sanitizers will be stationed at vantage points, nose masks will be provided at guest rooms, temperatures of guests will be checked at entry points and receptions. Emergency contacts will be displayed at various places of our facilities for swift response. We are also prepared to enforce wearing of face mask around our facilities,” he said.

    The Regional GTA Boss therefore urged managers of hospitality facilities to institute crisis management plan based on COVID-19 model outlined by the World Health Organization (WHO) and Ghana Health Service to ensure that they can put their head above water in the current difficult times.

    To make also make attraction sites safe for patrons again, he shared the view that effective implementation of the new Tourism Legislative Instrument (L.I) would be the magic wand to turnaround the dwindled fortunes of various sites across the country. The Tourism Act, 2011 (Act 817) seeks to among others encourage standardization by promoting good sanitation, safety and security for both visitors and workers at the sites.

    “With the new L.I, the GTA will only issue license to operators of attraction sites based of their compliance to requirements such as adherence to safety protocols. This and other factors will inform classification of attraction sites. We have started with public awareness campaign and sensitization to educate operators on the modalities of implementation as well as requirements including safety protocols,” he said.

    Source: B&FT Online

  • Coronavirus: Companies with more than 29 staff must have standby nurse Government

    To check the spread of COVID-19 at workplaces, the government of Ghana has issued a directive to factories/enterprises with more than 29 employees to provide a registered nurse on site.

    These industries and factories, according to the government guidelines announced by Trades Minister Alan Kyerematen on Thursday, 25 June 2020, must dedicate one room within the factory premises as a holding room to immediately house or quarantine anyone who is suspected to be showing symptoms and signs of COVID-19 and be isolated from others while making arrangements for evacuation.

    The measures, Mr Kyerematen noted, feed into the general guidelines and protocols for easing of restrictions such as the use of face masks by all employees, provision of washing stations at vantage points within working areas and regular cleaning and disinfection of surfaces.

    Below are the guidelines

    Social Distancing Protocols:

    Company buses and public transport for workers to and from work; Workflow adjustments including staff rotation at the factory and shop floor; and Customer service protocols including floor markings to enforce social distancing protocols.

    Sanitary Protocols:

    Provision of handwashing stations, with running water and soap; provision of hand sanitisers; and Enhanced regular cleaning and disinfection of regular use surfaces.

    Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) and clothing, and other protocols:

    Use of face masks (No Face Mask, No Entry) and gloves for workers who previously did not require protective gear; replacement of safety gear with COVID-19 compliant PPE; and checking of temperature of all employees and customers.

    Factories and other industrial processing establishments:

    Stop employees with mild cough or low-grade fever from coming to work and seek medical care.

    Stagger work schedules by breaking the workforce into shifts. Limit in-house meetings as much as possible and use online conference platforms.

    If unavoidable, sitting arrangements should follow social distance protocols. Employers should allow staff to work virtually, if feasible.

    Factories/enterprises with more than twenty-nine (29) employees to provide a registered nurse on site.

    Implement-stigma policy (No employee should be discriminated against, stigmatised, or sacked because they have tested positive for COVID-19).

    Employers must engage the services of experts to provide psychological and emotional support for COVID-19 positive employees and their families.

    Employers must ensure workplace confidentiality for employees.

    Carry out periodic fumigation of premises, machines and equipment.

    Industries and factories with more than 29 employees must dedicate one room within the factory premises as a holding room to immediately house or quarantine anyone who is suspected to be showing symptoms and signs of COVID-19 and be isolated from others while making arrangements for evacuation.

    Follow established evacuation procedures (as outlined in Annex 1) to enable evacuation if a worker becomes sick and has to be evacuated.

    Display approved health promotion materials on COVID-19 at vantage points to remind workers to keep to social distancing protocols, wear masks, regularly wash hands, and maintain coughing and sneezing etiquette.

    Work canteens must adhere to the protocols and preventive measures outlined in Annex 2.

    Enforce a No-handshake, No-hugging, and No-Spitting policy at all times.

    Form a COVID-19 in-house inspection taskforce.

    Members should be trained in health promotion and prevention measures, and evacuation protocols.

    If a person is confirmed positive for COVID-19, the workplace COVID-19 taskforce must link up with the local health authorities to ensure all contacts are traced, tested, and treated.

    Employers must have staff attendance monitoring mechanisms, either electronic or manual.

    Source: Class FM

  • Coronavirus has affected development of housing sector Atta Akyea

    The advent of COVID-19 has adversely impacted the housing sector in the fight to reduce the national housing deficit, Mr Samuel Atta Akyea, Minister of Works and Housing, has said.

    He said foreign-investor engagements with the Ministry in the critical area of affordable housing roll-outs which has a real likelihood of boosting national efforts at reducing their deficit of two million housing units has stalled in the wake of the international travel ban; due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

    He said added to this, redevelopment undertakings in the Roman Ridge and Labone enclave comprising 444 housing units which were scheduled to commence in the first quarter of this year are yet to commence.

    Mr Atta Akyea said this on Wednesday in Accra when he took his turn at the Meet the Press Series, which was organised by the Ministry of Information.

    The Minister said the programme would be implemented in two lots with Lot one entailing the construction of 176 four-bedroom executive townhouses and 150 three-bedroom apartments; while Lot two entails the construction of 22 four-bedroom executive townhouses, 84 three-bedroom apartments and 12 two-bedroom apartments.

    “The Ministry is, however, hopeful that as the restrictions that have come with the global pandemic are gradually eased, these critical housing undertakings will resume in bringing the necessary relief to the housing subsector of the country,” Mr Atta Akyea said.

    He said housing is very important in any economy as it provides core security to families, societies and communities.

    Without doubt, housing is vital and the nation cannot ignore its provision in our development, Mr Atta Akyea said.

    He said its overall importance to sustainable health and livelihood has been further heightened during this period of the novel coronavirus pandemic.

    He said the unfortunate inability of the housing delivery system via the private sector underpinned by the requisite support from government to meet effective demand over the years has created a huge housing deficit in Ghana, currently estimated to be in excess of two million units.

    He said with the extrapolation that in Ghana’s cultural set-up, a household is made up of five individuals, over 10 million Ghanaians do not have access to safe, secured and decent dwelling homes.

    He said with a population close to 30 million, a staggering 1/3 of Ghanaians have accommodation challenges; adding that furthermore, statistics reveal that 60 per cent of Ghana’s urban population would need some form of Government intervention to support them get access to safe, secured and affordable shelter.

    He said 35 per cent would not be able to access housing even with Government support in terms of subsidy, with only the remaining five per cent of the population being able to support themselves in accessing housing.

    Mr Atta Akyea said this calls for a massive drive to provide for housing targeted at the 60 per cent urban population in the short to medium term and the remaining 35 per cent in the long term.

    He said it was against this background that the New Patriotic Party (NPP) Government in 2006 initiated the Government of Ghana Affordable Housing Programme with the objective of providing accommodation for the low-to-middle income workers of the country, creating jobs and improving incomes.

    He said the project commenced in six locations namely: Borteyman – Accra, Kpone – Tema, Asokore Mampong Kumasi, Koforidua, Tamale and Wa; these projects however stalled in 2008.

    The Minister said arrangements put in place by the previous government for the completion of the stalled affordable housing units had seen Social Security and National Insurance Trust (SSNIT) completing the 1,464 housing units at Borteyman and most recently, the 1,027 housing units at Asokore Mampong.

    Adding that similarly, the TDC Development Company Limited had continued the construction of 312 housing units out of the 1,584 units at Kpone-Tema.

    “Currently, the 312 housing units are 90 percent complete and plans are far advanced towards completing the remaining 1,272 housing units by TDC Development Company Limited. That notwithstanding, no arrangements were put in place for the completion of the 686 housing units at Koforidua, Tamale and Wa by the previous government.”

    Source: GNA

  • Coronavirus: Factories to implement anti-stigma policy

    Alan Kyerematen, the Minister of Trade and Industry, on Thursday urged all factories and other industrial processing establishments to implement an anti-stigma policy for COVID-19, stating “that no employee should be discriminated against”.

    “Employees should not be stigmatized or be sacked if they test positive to COVID-19. Employers must engage the services of experts to provide psychological and emotional support for COVID-19 positive employees and their families,” Mr Kyerematen stated in Accra

    The Trade Minister said this at the meet the press series, which was organised by the Ministry of Information to give an update on COVID-19.

    The Minister said: “Employers must ensure workplace confidentiality for employees”.

    Mr Kyeremanten said factories and other industrial processing establishments must stop employees with mild cough or low-grade fever from coming to work and seek medical care.

    He also encouraged employers to stagger work schedules by breaking the workforce into shifts.

    The Trade Minister said factories and other industrial processing establishments must limit in-house meetings as much as possible and use online conference platforms; adding that; “If unavoidable, sitting arrangements should follow social distance protocols”.

    He said if possible employers should allow staff to work virtually if feasible.

    He said factories and enterprises with more than 29 employees must provide a Registered Nurse on site.

    Mr Kyeremanten said as part of efforts to contain the spread of COVID-19, factories and industrial processing establishments must carry out periodic fumigation of premises, machines and equipment.

    He said also that industries and factories with more than 29 employees must dedicate One Room within the factory premises as a holding room to immediately house or quarantine anyone who was suspected to be showing symptoms and signs of COVID-19 and be isolated from others while making arrangements for evacuation.

    He urged them to follow established evacuation procedures if a worker becomes sick and has to be evacuated.

    He said factories and industrial processing establishments must form COVID-19 in-house Inspection taskforce and that members should be trained in Health Promotion and Prevention Measures, and Evacuation Protocols.

    “If a person is confirmed positive for COVID-19, the workplace COVID-19 taskforce must link up with the local health authorities to ensure all contacts are traced, tested, and treated,” he said.

    The Trade Minister said employers must have Staff Attendance monitoring mechanisms, either electronic or manual.

    Source: GNA

  • Coronavirus: Factories to implement anti-stigma policy

    Mr Alan Kyerematen, the Minister of Trade and Industry, on Thursday urged all factories and other industrial processing establishments to implement an anti-stigma policy for COVID-19, stating “that no employee should be discriminated against”.

    “Employees should not be stigmatized or be sacked if they test positive to COVID-19. Employers must engage the services of experts to provide psychological and emotional support for COVID-19 positive employees and their families,” Mr Kyerematen stated in Accra

    The Trade Minister said this at the meet the press series, which was organised by the Ministry of Information to give an update on COVID-19.

    The Minister said: “Employers must ensure workplace confidentiality for employees”.

    Mr Kyeremanten said factories and other industrial processing establishments must stop employees with mild cough or low-grade fever from coming to work and seek medical care.

    He also encouraged employers to stagger work schedules by breaking the workforce into shifts.

    The Trade Minister said factories and other industrial processing establishments must limit in-house meetings as much as possible and use online conference platforms; adding that; “If unavoidable, sitting arrangements should follow social distance protocols”.

    He said if possible employers should allow staff to work virtually if feasible.

    He said factories and enterprises with more than 29 employees must provide a Registered Nurse on site.

    Mr Kyeremanten said as part of efforts to contain the spread of COVID-19, factories and industrial processing establishments must carry out periodic fumigation of premises, machines and equipment.

    He said also that industries and factories with more than 29 employees must dedicate One Room within the factory premises as a holding room to immediately house or quarantine anyone who was suspected to be showing symptoms and signs of COVID-19 and be isolated from others while making arrangements for evacuation.

    He urged them to follow established evacuation procedures if a worker becomes sick and has to be evacuated.

    He said factories and industrial processing establishments must form COVID-19 in-house Inspection taskforce and that members should be trained in Health Promotion and Prevention Measures, and Evacuation Protocols.

    “If a person is confirmed positive for COVID-19, the workplace COVID-19 taskforce must link up with the local health authorities to ensure all contacts are traced, tested, and treated,” he said.

    The Trade Minister said employers must have Staff Attendance monitoring mechanisms, either electronic or manual.

    Source: GNA

  • GH¢21m distributed to institutions towards coronavirus fight National COVID-19 Trust Fund

    The Communications Officer of the National COVID-19 Trust Fund has revealed an amount of GH¢21 million from the fund has been distributed to some key institutions towards the coronavirus fight.

    According to Kwame Owusu Bempah, an amount of GH¢8 million has been released to government towards the purchase of Personal Protective Equipment (PPEs) for final year students who have returned back to school.

    “The total is about GH¢21,080,329.90. We are giving the National and Schools Reopening Committee chaired by Yaw Osafo-Maafo an amount of GH¢8 million to assist in reopening of schools, provision of PPE, hand sanitizers, thermometer guns and others,” Mr Bempah told Citi News.

    He added; “We have also released a cheque of GH¢2.5 million to National Commission for Civic Education (NCCE) to embark on awareness creation, education and sensitization programs on COVID-19. We are also giving GH¢10 million to the private sector medical facility at Ga East Municipal Hospital.”

    The Chairperson of the Fund, Lady Chief Justice (Rtd) Sophia Akuffo had earlier disclosed an amount of GH¢50 million was accrued in donations made by institutions and individuals.

    President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo in a broadcast to the nation on March 27, 2020, announced the creation of a COVID-19 Fund with three months of his salary as a seed fund support.

    According to him, the fund will serve as a support system for the well-being of individuals who will be adversely affected by the novel Coronavirus pandemic.

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • Senegalese president goes into quarantine

    Senegal’s President Macky Sall has quarantined himself after coming in contact with someone who tested positive for coronavirus.

    The president tested negative but will self-isolate for two weeks as a precaution, his office said in a short televised statement.

    A Senegalese lawmaker, Yeya Diallo, announced earlier on Wednesday that she had tested positive for the virus.

    She called on people to take essential personal measures such as maintaining hygiene and social distancing.

    Senegal has so far confirmed 6,129 cases including 93 deaths.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Lisbon lockdown tightening with fines on illegal gatherings

    Portugal’s government has tightened the lockdown in the Lisbon Metropolitan Area in an effort to bring a series of coronavirus outbreaks under control.

    From today the limit on outdoor gatherings is back down to 10, from the national maximum of 20.

    All shops must close by 20:00 and restaurants may not serve alcohol after that hour, while drinking in all other public places is banned.

    The measures were approved at an online cabinet meeting last night, after a meeting between the Prime Minister António Costa and Lisbon area mayors.

    The government says the outbreaks can mostly be traced to particular workplaces or crowded neighbourhoods.

    But police have also been called to a number of illegal parties in recent days, some of them very large.

    Fines of up to 350 euros (£318) are to be introduced from Sunday for people taking part in illegal gatherings.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Human trials for coronavirus vaccine start in South Africa

    Human trials for a Covid-19 vaccine developed by Oxford University are beginning in South Africa and in Brazil.

    Some 2,000 people in South Africa will be involved in what is widely considered to be one of the earliest and most advanced trials for a vaccine to tackle the pandemic.

    The first doses of the vaccine are being administered in Johannesburg this week.

    South Africa has been chosen, not just for its expertise in this field, but because Covid-19 is now spreading fast here.

    That makes it far easier for scientists to find a community at immediate risk of infection, and to then tell whether this British vaccine is effective.

    Similar tests are already underway in the UK, but the infection rate there is slowing. Hence the move, not just to South Africa, but to Brazil too, where 5,000 people will be involved in the vaccine trial.

    Source: bbc.com

  • PLAYBACK: Government update on coronavirus case count and management

    Government on Tuesday, June 23, 2020 is expected to update the nation on measures it is putting in place to fight the coronavirus pandemic.

    Ghana recorded its first two COVID-19 infections on March 12, 2020. Since then, the nation has so far recorded over 13,000 cases with 10, 074 recoveries, and 85 deaths.

    The government over the period has since been implementing measures to curb the spread of the virus and manage existing cases.

    The Ministry of Information in a bid to keep Ghanaians updated on these measures has been conducting press briefings scheduled for Tuesdays and Thursdays every week.

    Below is the live video

    Source: Ghanaweb

  • Grigor Dimitrov: Bulgarian tests positive for coronavirus after Adria Tour events

    Bulgaria’s Grigor Dimitrov, who played in both of Novak Djokovic’s recent Adria Tour events, says he has tested positive for coronavirus.

    Dimitrov, 29, withdrew from the second tournament in Zadar, Croatia on Saturday with sickness after his opening loss to Borna Coric.

    The world number 19 also played in the first event in Belgrade last week.

    In a statement on Instagram, Dimitrov wrote: “I am so sorry for any harm I might have caused.”

    He added: “I tested positive back in Monaco for Covid-19. I want to make sure anyone who has been in contact with me during these past days gets tested and takes the necessary precautions.

    “I am back home now and recovering. Thanks for your support and please stay safe and healthy.”

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

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: Government urged to support informal sector

    Mr Kofi Oppong, the Manager of Cosby 1 Fashion College at Madina in Accra, has called on the government to streamline existing policy measures to support the informal sector.

    That, he said, would provide the private sector the needed assistance to grow and contribute to the national Gross Domestic Product (GDP) to enhance development.

    Mr Oppong, in an interview with the Ghana News Agency on Friday, said the COVID-19 had added on to the relevance of the informal sector, which had produced protective items such as nose masks, hand sanitizers, and veronica buckets.

    “The pandemic has brought to the fore the need for industries to be given support in order to reduce unemployment in the country to achieve some of the Sustainable Development Goals,” Mr Oppong said.

    He urged government not to relent in its efforts at promoting skills training through technical, vocational education and training.

    Mr Oppong said the Cosby 1 Fashion College, since its inception, had churned out graduates poised to use their knowledge to enhance the wellbeing of society.

    “Until the COVID-19, the school was in the process of rolling out a fee-mitigation schemes for the underprivileged who want to enrol but not in a position to pay fees.”

    He advised the public to learn one vocation or the other, which could boost their incomes.

    Mr Oppong commended government for purchasing large consignments of locally-made protective gears and other health products for domestic use.

    He said that should be sustained to keep the private sector in business and create job opportunities for the citizenry.

    Source: GNA

  • Government urged to support informal sector

    Mr Kofi Oppong, the Manager of Cosby 1 Fashion College at Madina in Accra, has called on the Government to streamline existing policy measures to support the informal sector.

    That, he said, would provide the private sector the needed assistance to grow and contribute to the national Gross Domestic Product (GDP) to enhance development.

    Mr Oppong, in an interview with the Ghana News Agency on Friday, said the COVID-19 had added on to the relevance of the informal sector, which had produced protective items such as nose masks, hand sanitizers, and veronica buckets.

    “The pandemic has brought to the fore the need for industries to be given support in order to reduce unemployment in the country to achieve some of the Sustainable Development Goals,” Mr Oppong said.

    He urged government not to relent in its efforts at promoting skills training through technical, vocational education and training.

    Mr Oppong said the Cosby 1 Fashion College, since its inception, had churned out graduates poised to use their knowledge to enhance the wellbeing of society.

    “Until the COVID-19, the school was in the process of rolling out a fee-mitigation scheme for the underprivileged who want to enrol but not in a position to pay fees.”

    He advised the public to learn one vocation or the other, which could boost their incomes.

    Mr Oppong commended government for purchasing large consignments of locally-made protective gears and other health products for domestic use.

    He said that should be sustained to keep the private sector in business and create job opportunities for the citizenry.

    Source: GNA

  • Ghanas coronavirus case count is fourth highest in Africa

    Data released by the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC) on Friday, June 19, 2020, shows that Ghana has the fourth-highest recorded coronavirus cases on the continent.

    So far, Africa has reported 275,327 confirmed cases of COVID-19 as of June 19, 2020.

    According to the Africa CDC figures, there have been 7,395 deaths and 125,316 recoveries in the region.

    Ghana is fourth after South Africa, Egypt and Nigeria with regards confirmed cases.

    Ghana has recorded 12,929 cases of Friday, June 19.

    However, Ghana has one of the lowest case fatality ratios on the continent.

    South Africa has recorded 83,890 cases, followed by Egypt and Nigeria with 50,437 and 18,480 cases respectively.

    Top 8 countries with confirmed cases

    South Africa – 83,890

    Egypt 50,437

    Nigeria 18,480

    Ghana 12,929

    Algeria 11,385

    Cameroon 10,140

    Morocco 9,074

    Sudan 8,020

    Case-Fatality ratios

    Ghana Case-Fatality Ratio: 0.51%

    South Africa Case-Fatality Ratio: 2.07%

    Morocco Case-Fatality Ratio: 2.30%

    Nigeria Case-Fatality Ratio: 2.57%

    Cameroon Case-Fatality Ratio: 2.65%

    Egypt Case-Fatality Ratio: 3.84%

    Sudan Case-Fatality Ratio: 6.07%

    Algeria Case-Fatality Ratio: 7.12%

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • NBSSI extends stimulus package application deadline by six days

    The National Board for Small Scale Industries, managers of the Government stimulus package, has announced a six-day extension of the deadline for applications from June 20 to June 26, 2020.

    The decision, taken in consultation with the Coronavirus Alleviation Programme (CAP) Business Support Steering Committee, was to give trade and business associations more time for members with specific challenges who are yet to submit applications to do so.

    At a media briefing in Accra on Friday, Mrs Kosi Yankey-Aryeh, the Executive Director of NBSSI, said the grace period would present an opportunity to rectify complaints and errors of applicants with wrong credentials recorded on the digitised application portal.

    The extension will also provide eligible businesses the chance to acquire the Tax Identification Number to complete their applications and allow for mop up of paper applications from communities and rural areas with no internet for processing into the digitised system.

    “We are currently analysing the data to get a better understanding of the challenges,” Mrs Yankey-Aryeh said.

    As at June 18, more than 450,000 applicants, representing micro, small and medium enterprises had registered on the programme of which 337,000 had successfully completed their applications.

    Applicants who registered via the USSD Code on the various mobile networks represent 58.8 per cent while the remaining 41.2 per cent registered directly on the portal.

    Mrs Yankey-Aryeh said so far 66 per cent females and 34 per cent males had submitted applications.

    She said the online portal had also detected over 5,200 fraud alerts such as multiple applications with same mobile money or bank details.

    She said to ensure that the six-day extension was well utilised, the NBSSI had intensified collaboration with the Ghana Revenue Authority to facilitate TIN acquisition for applicants.

    Also, the NBSSI had undertaken to train IT personnel engaged by the Business and Trade Associations to facilitate data entry for members into the digitised system.

    In addition, the NBSSI was deploying additional IT personnel to support applicants with wrong credentials based on specific needs.

    The Coronavirus Alleviation Programme Business Support Scheme was instituted by government to provide support to MSMEs negatively impacted by the pandemic.

    It was launched on May 19, 2020 by President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo to ensure the MSMEs access the fund to sustain their businesses.

    Source: GNA

  • HSBC to press on with 35,000 job cuts

    HSBC, the UK’s largest bank, is to resume its plans to cut 35,000 jobs.

    New chief executive Noel Quinn gave the news to his 235,000 staff around the globe in a memo seen by the BBC and confirmed as authentic by the bank.

    The lender had originally announced the plan in February, but put it on hold amid the coronavirus pandemic.

    HSBC said it would try to find internal jobs for those affected but that redundancies were likely.

    In April, the bank had said it would hold fire on the cuts, explaining that it did not want to leave staff unable to find work elsewhere during the coronavirus outbreak.

    The move is part of a restructuring programme which aims to achieve $4.5bn (£3.6bn) of cost cuts by 2022.

    Some cuts are likely to come from merging support roles in the commercial bank and investment bank.

    The bank will also review less-profitable areas of business.

    ‘Why now?’ At its peak, the bank employed more than 300,000 people, but since the global financial crisis around 2008, HSBC has sold businesses and left some countries, including Brazil in 2016.

    Various chief executives have aimed to make HSBC a simpler business, especially after the bank agreed to pay $1.9bn to regulators in 2012 over poor money laundering controls.

    Trade union Unite said the news would cause apprehension with many lockdown measures still in place.

    “The question that must be asked today is why now HSBC?” Dominic Hook, Unite national officer said.

    “At present vast numbers of HSBC staff are making massive sacrifices working from home or taking risks travelling into offices and bank branches to help customers.

    ” “Unite will continue to oppose any compulsory job losses within HSBC and work vigorously to ensure staff are heard and their jobs protected,” he said.

    The bank also faces political challenges.

    It is reliant on China’s attitude towards its massive home market of Hong Kong, and on the US to be able to bank in dollars, the currency of choice for many commodity markets.

    Earlier this month, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo criticised HSBC for supporting China’s move to impose new security legislation in Hong Kong.

    Mr Pompeo also said the US stood with its allies against China’s “coercive bully tactics”.

    The Trump administration has repeatedly attacked Beijing for what it says is an attempt to end Hong Kong’s autonomy.

    HSBC, which is UK-based but was formed in Hong Kong in 1865, declined to comment on Mr Pompeo’s remarks.

    Last month, China’s parliament approved a resolution that would impose legislation on Hong Kong that criminalises criticism of the city’s government.

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

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: Queen to honour Ghanaian war hero for walking to raise funds

    A 95-year-old Ghanaian World War II veteran is to be honoured by Queen Elizabeth for his fundraising efforts.

    Private Joseph Hammond walked two miles (3.2km) a day for a week in May, raising $35,000 (£28,000) for frontline health workers and veterans in Africa.

    “I was overwhelmed and filled with joy,” he said on hearing he was to get a Commonwealth Point of Light award.

    He said he had been inspired by fellow veteran Capt Tom Moore, who raised more than £32m in the UK to fight Covid-19.

    Capt Moore completed 100 laps of his garden in the run-up to his 100th birthday in April for NHS charities.

    This prompted Pte Hammond to start his own campaign to raise money to buy personal protection equipment (PPE) for health workers and to protect vulnerable veterans on the African continent.

    He started each day’s walk in the capital, Accra, early in the morning so he could complete his two miles before the heat and humidity of the day peaked.

    He wants to raise about $600,000 in total, so the former Ghanaian soldier, who like Capt Moore fought in Burma, hopes donations will continue to be made, our reporter says.

    ‘He is a force of nature’

    Iain Walker, the UK high commissioner to Ghana who joined Pte Hammond on his walk, said the Queen presented Points of Light awards to outstanding volunteers across the Commonwealth who changed the lives of their community.

    “Pte Hammond exemplifies these qualities. It has been a privilege to get to know Pte Hammond and to experience his selflessness,” he said.

    “He is a force of nature and an inspiration to many, including me.”

    Pte Hammond, who was drafted into the Royal West African Frontier Force at the age 16, will receive the award at the UK High Commission in Accra at a date still to be decided.

    “This is marvellous, this is wonderful, it’s beyond my comprehension,” he tweeted in a video produced by the Guba Foundation and Forces Help Africa, the two non-governmental organisations helping him in his fundraising efforts.

    “Surprises keep coming – I’m short of words, I don’t know what to say,” he said.

    Earlier this month, he had received a letter from Prince Harry, the Queen’s grandson, commending him on his walk.

    Pte Hammond had met Prince Harry, who works to support veterans, during an event at the Field of Remembrance in the grounds of Westminster Abbey in London last year.

    Three years after the end of World War II, Ghana, then the Gold Coast, was rocked by riots following the killing of three Ghanaian veterans who had been demanding compensation for their service during the conflict.

    It became a milestone in Ghana’s struggle for independence from the UK, which was achieved in 1957.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Government yet to give out coronavirus equipment

    Basic schools in the country, have reminded government to honour it promise to equip them with necessary COVID-19 tools as they feverishly prepare for the reopening for final year students.

    According to the school heads, they are set to reopen except that they are yet to receive equipment and materials for the management of the killer virus as promised them by government for smooth stay of students and teachers.

    The authorities, who spoke in turns to the media during a disinfection exercise by waste management company Zoomlion, financed by the Ghana Education Service (GES), said they are set for the task ahead as the fight against COVID-19 continues, but said their job would be smoother when government fulfills its part of the bargain.

    Meanwhile, the leadership of the Conference of Assisted Secondary Schools (CHASS) yesterday expressed similar concern, when it met President Akufo-Addo at the seat of government, Jubilee House.

    But the President allayed their fears assuring by Sunday, the promised materials will be delivered to the various schools nationwide.

    Government on announcing the resumption of schools for final year students, disclosed plans to provide schools with items such as Veronica Buckets, thermometer guns, sanitizers, facemasks among others at no cost to parents and students.

    But barely a week to the reopening of these schools, there is been no sign of these important items from neither the Education Ministry nor the Ghana Education Service, though the schools say they are in constant touch with them to have the items supplied.

    Speaking in separate interviews with journalists during the disinfection exercise on Wednesday in Ho in the Volta Region, the headmasters and headmistresses expressed concern about the near delay and called on those in charge to hasten the process to forestall any setback.

    The nationwide exercise has seen basic and Senior High Schools in the Volta and Oti Regions disinfected to rid the schools of any bacteria or virus causing diseases, including the novel coronavirus.

    It is the second time in two months, second cycle institutions for instance, are being disinfected since the outbreak of the virus in Ghana in March.

    The one week exercise has seen several schools, including the Dome A.M.E Zion Basic School, Fiavi SDA Basic School, Fiavi M.A /Global Basic School, and the Fiavi E. P Basic School all in the Volta Region benefitting.

    In the same vein, the Holy Spirit College of Education, Sacred Heart Senior High School, Prosper College Senior High School, Wallahs Academy Senior High School, all in Ho and many others in Volta and Oti regions also disinfected on Tuesday.

    Assistant Headmaster of Dome A.M.E Zion Basic School, Ernest Adrator, thanked government for the initiative, adding the school was fortunate to have been provided with sanitizers before it was closed down, but are looking forward to what government has promised.

    “For my colleague teachers, they are ever ready, they want to come because they want to prepare the final year students. Now seeing that the government has sent another group to come and fumigate the classrooms for us, we are very grateful to the government for that particular one also.

    But we already heard also that government will provide Veronica Buckets, sanitizers and face masks, that one has not yet come, but we are hoping that they will live up to expectation so that when they come things will move on well”.

    With the final year student population of just 20, Mr Adrator, said they are sure to follow the safety protocol measures outlined by the government to the latter.

    While applauding government for the disinfection programme, Fiavi S.D.A Basic School headmaster, Lona Kodzotse, said the school is going to ensure the 51 final year students follow strictly, the protocol measures.

    He said, anyone who flouts the directive by the president, would be punished to serve as a deterrent to others.

    “What we are saying is that we are appealing to the government to send the things that are needed for the smooth resumption of school, i.e. the hand sanitizers, facemasks and Veronica Buckets and everything that is needed to bring confidence to both students and teachers”.

    Headmistress of Ho Fiave E. P School Complex, Lenna Evelyn Abena Ackah, was appreciative of the initiative to disinfect the schools by the government, as the virus continues to spread in the midst of the resumption of schools.

    She assured, school authorities are committed to do their part, so that the final year students can complete their examination with success.

    She also added her voice to calls to government to release the promised COVID-19 materials on time.

    Source: The Herald

  • Coronavirus: Ghanaians attitude ‘alarming’, President must introduce strict measures – Atik Mohammed

    Atik Mohammed has called on President Nana Akufo-Addo to introduce strict measures to curb the Coronavirus pandemic.

    According to Atik Mohammed, looking at the rapid case count of the disease in the country, it is advisable for the President to escalate the measures to ensure all Ghanaians adhere to the preventive health protocols.

    Ghana’s COVID-19 case count now stands at 12,929 after 339 new cases were added, according to the Ghana Health Service (GHS) on Thursday.

    The number of recoveries now stands at 4,468 and death toll, 66.

    This brings the total number of active cases to 8,395.

    4 of the cases are critical and on ventilators and 14 severe.

    Speaking to host Kwami Sefa Kayi on Peace FM’s ‘Kokrokoo’, Atik Mohammed was worried about the unperturbed attitude of many Ghanaians towards the pandemic.

    “I think its about time we re-escalated some of the measures. The President de-escalated some of the measures and removed some of the restrictions but it appears the outcome is becoming more worrisome. For me, we need to re-escalate some of the measures because now people are acting like there’s nothing in town. They’re walking as if life is normal or they do business as usual but we’re not out of the woods yet.”

     

    Source: Peace FM

  • Post Coronavirus: Strengthen local production base – Policy Analyst

    Mr Maudo Jallow, Policy Analyst at the Tony Blair Institute for Global Change has said “if we are to make any progress in the post COVID-19, there is the need for the African continent to strengthen its local production base.

    He said that would create employment and contribute to the continent’s economy.

    Mr Jallow speaking at the Ghana Young Entrepreneurs Roundtable (GYER) on the Sustainable Development Goals’ (SDGs) Virtual Conference on Zoom said the COVID-19 pandemic had refocused attention to local production, which was laudable.

    The Virtual Conference was on the theme: “Post-COVID 19 and SDG Targets: Re-sharpening strategies to Match the Goals.”

    The conference brought together representatives in government, private sector, development and advocacy setting to discuss how achievement of SDGs can still be realised.

    He said with the pandemic, there was the need to think about opportunities based on sectors including; Fintech, Digital Education and Digital Health.

    The Policy Analyst said even as entrepreneurs look at the SDGs and aspire to them, they should not forget that “this is the time to restructure our economies to reduce the inequalities and create jobs.

    “We have seen high growth figures in economies yet citizens do not realize these growths”.

    He said it was an opportunity to work together as entrepreneurs to collaborate on things, while restructuring for a brighter future.

    He said collaboration would continually enable entrepreneurs to find solutions better to most of their challenges and problems they encounter in their line of work.

    Madam Alima Bawah, Co-founder Cowtribe Inc said, “If we approach the SDGs as we are approaching COVID-19, we will attain higher heights.”

    She said the SDGs were a pandemic on its own as even hunger kills more.

    Madam Bawah called on the Ministry of Business Development to develop a strong startup ecosystem to support young entrepreneurs in the country.

    She urged Governments to consciously invest and expand access telecommunications infrastructure to rural communities.

    She said the country needed to commercialise agriculture and open at various parts of the country with more infrastructure at farm gates, especially at the Northern Ghana.

    She urged NGOs to provide skills training and capacity of people than rather giving them free things to support them.

    Mr Dela Gadzanku, Regional Chair, Association of Ghana Industries (AGI), (Eastern/Volta Region) said the Association was available to assist any startup to formalise their business.

    “We cannot do any meaningful business without formalising our businesses,” he said.

    He urged them to take advantage of Government’s stimulus package to support their businesses and advised them to utilise the resources well.

    Source: GNA

  • Black Queens coach hopes injured players recover during coronavirus break

    Head Coach for the Black Queens of Ghana, Mrs. Mercy Tagoe-Quarcoo is taking positives from the Coronavirus (Covid-19) break as she notes that it will give injured players the time to recover.

    Football in Ghana and Africa has been on suspension for the past 3 months as a measure to curb the spread of the deadly Covid-19 disease.

    Despite the enormous effects it is having on clubs, Coach Mercy Tagoe-Quarcoo says it has presented a good opportunity for some players who are nursing various injuries.

    According to the gaffer, injured players can use the period to continue their road to recover and hope they are back to full fitness when the football season resumes.

    “The only benefit derived from this pandemic period is that those that are injured will have ample time to recover while I also keep in touch with the Doctor to see to their health. Currently, all the ladies who traveled to Turkey are aware of how competitive the team has become and want to retain their position by trying hard to keep up. I make them take videos while training, the technical team accumulates all the program so that we make corrections”, the coach said in an interview with the Communication team of the Ghana FA.

    Source: footballghana.com

  • Honduras President tests positive for virus

    Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernández has said that he, his wife two of his two aides have tested positive for Coronavirus.

    In a televised address, said he began feeling unwell over the weekend, and his condition was confirmed yesterday.

    Mr. Hernández said he was feeling better and would continue to work remotely.

    “I feel enough strength and energy to continue forward and beat this pandemic,” he said. “We are going to get ahead of this. I trust in God, Honduran doctors and medicine.”

    Honduras has confirmed more than 9,600 cases of coronavirus and 330 deaths, according to Johns Hopkins University in the US.

    Its economy began to reopen last week after nearly three months of lockdown measures including border closures and curfews.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: Prince Charles’s sense of smell and taste still not back

    Prince Charles has still not fully regained his sense of smell and taste after having Coronavirus in March, he revealed on a visit to NHS staff.

    The prince discussed his personal experience with the virus as he met workers at the Gloucestershire Royal Hospital – at a 2m distance.

    He was accompanied by his wife, the Duchess of Cornwall, who said the staff had showed “Britain at its best”.

    It was the couple’s first face-to-face public engagement since lockdown began.

    They met frontline staff and key workers from several NHS trusts, including consultants, nurses and cleaners, at the hospital near Prince Charles’s Highgrove estate.

    Social distancing rules were observed, with those waiting to meet them standing on yellow dots to ensure they were 2m apart.

    Prince Charles greeted some of those he met with a “namaste” – clasping his hands together – instead of a handshake.

    Jeff Mills, 47, a healthcare assistant from Cheltenham General Hospital, said: “He did speak of his personal experience, so first-hand experience for him.

    “He also spoke about his loss of smell and taste and, sort of, still felt he’s still got it now.”

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: Dexamethasone proves first life-saving drug

    A cheap and widely available drug can help save the lives of patients seriously ill with coronavirus.

    The low-dose steroid treatment dexamethasone is a major breakthrough in the fight against the deadly virus, UK experts say.

    The drug is part of the world’s biggest trial testing existing treatments to see if they also work for coronavirus.

    It cut the risk of death by a third for patients on ventilators. For those on oxygen, it cut deaths by a fifth.

    Had the drug had been used to treat patients in the UK from the start of the pandemic, up to 5,000 lives could have been saved, researchers say.

    And it could be of huge benefit in poorer countries with high numbers of Covid-19 patients.

    The UK government has 200,000 courses of the drug in its stockpile and says the NHS will make dexamethasone available to patients.

    Prime Minister Boris Johnson said there was a genuine case to celebrate “a remarkable British scientific achievement”, adding: “We have taken steps to ensure we have enough supplies, even in the event of a second peak.”

    Chief Medical Officer for England Prof Chris Whitty said it would save lives around the world.

    About 19 out of 20 patients with coronavirus recover without being admitted to hospital.

    Of those who are admitted, most also recover but some may need oxygen or mechanical ventilation.

    And these are the high-risk patients dexamethasone appears to help.

    The drug is already used to reduce inflammation in a range of other conditions, including arthritis, asthma and some skin conditions.

    And it appears to help stop some of the damage that can happen when the body’s immune system goes into overdrive as it tries to fight off coronavirus.

    This over-reaction, a cytokine storm, can be deadly.

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

    Source: bbc.com

  • U.S. bank profits plunge 70% on coronavirus loss provisioning

    U.S. bank profits fell by 69.6% to $18.5 billion in the first quarter of 2020 from the year prior as banks felt the economic impact of the novel coronavirus pandemic, according to new data from a banking regulator.

    The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation reported that “deteriorating economic activity” caused lenders to write off delinquent debt and set aside billions of dollars to guard against future losses. Over half of all banks reported a profit decline, and 7.3% of lenders were unprofitable.

    The new report, the first government survey of the industry since the pandemic shut down large parts of the economy, shows banks set aside $38.8 billion to cover potential loan losses in the future, up nearly 280% from the year prior. The number of loans banks charged off as delinquent was up nearly 15%, driven by an 87% increase in charge-offs for commercial and industrial loans.

    The noncurrent loan rate rose 7.3% from the previous quarter, the biggest increase since 2010.

    Despite the setbacks, FDIC Chairman Jelena McWilliams said banks had been able to effectively serve clients in the downturn, and were a “source of strength for the economy.”

    “Bank capital and liquidity levels remain strong,” she added in a statement.

    As many investors cashed out of the stock market, banks saw a $1.2 trillion, or 8.5%, spike in deposits from the previous quarter.

    Loan balances also jumped as companies tapped credit lines with banks, led by a 15.4% increase in commercial and industrial loans.

    The total number of “problem banks” monitored by the FDIC increased for the first time since 2011, growing from 51 to 54 firms in the first quarter.

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

    Source: reuters.com

  • The future of media: more digital and more economic pain, Reuters Institute says

    The coronavirus outbreak has prompted a significant increase in news consumption but the economic turmoil is forcing news businesses to accelerate their move to digital, The Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism said.

    The coronavirus lockdowns prompted a global rise in viewing of television and online news though concerns about misinformation remain high, with Facebook and WhatsApp seen as the main channels for spreading so called “fake news”.

    The broader picture is that the outbreak is accelerating the trends wrought by the technological revolution, including the rise of smartphones as an interface of news consumption, The Reuters Institute said in its annual Digital News Report (www.digitalnewsreport.org).

    “The headline is that we see an accelerated move to digital media and mobile media and various kinds of platforms,” Rasmus Kleis Nielsen, director of the Reuters Institute, said by telephone.

    “This is accompanied by a continued decline in trust in news and growing concerns over misinformation, in particular on social media and from some politicians.”

    The biggest increase in concern over media misinformation was in Hong Kong where anti-government protesters have opposed attempts by China to tighten its control of the former British colony.

    The business of news remains bleak. Media across the world are cutting staff to cope with a dramatic fall in advertising revenue.

    But a ray of hope may be that increasing numbers of people are willing to pay for news online, though that may also increase informational inequality as many cannot afford top quality journalism.

    And a “winner takes all” process can be seen: Around half of those that subscribe to any online or combined package in the United States use the New York Times or the Washington Post, the Reuters Institute found.

    A similar trend can be seen in the United Kingdom with The Times or the Telegraph.

    And for those predicting the dominance of video news, the Reuters Institute found that in a number of countries including the United Kingdom, Australia, France, and South Korea, people under 35 preferred to read rather than watch news online.

    The Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism is a research centre at the University of Oxford that tracks media trends.

    The Thomson Reuters Foundation, the philanthropic arm of Thomson Reuters, funds the Reuters Institute.

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

    Source: Reuters Institute

  • Do not self-medicate newly found life-saving coronavirus drug – Physician Anesthesiologist warns

    The discovery of the common steroid dexamethasone as a treatment for coronavirus has been hailed as a “major breakthrough” but a Ghanaian Physician Anesthesiologist has warned against self-medicating the cheap and widely available drug.

    Having been available for decades, relatively cheap and readily available, Dr Nana Dadzie Ghansah of the Anesthesia Associates of Lexington says even though dexamethasone has been said to help save the lives of patients who are seriously ill with the new coronavirus disease (Covid-19), the drug should not be used in mild cases either.

    To him, doing so might weaken the immune system and make one more susceptible to getting a severe form of the disease.

    The cheap and widely available dexamethasone drug according to a report by the BBC can help save the lives of patients who are seriously ill with coronavirus.

    According to the report, the low-dose steroid treatment is a major breakthrough in the fight against the deadly virus as it cuts the risk of death by a third for patients on ventilators, while it cuts deaths by a fifth for those on oxygen.

    It said the drug was part of the world’s biggest trial testing existing treatments to see if they also work for coronavirus.

    It said the drug was already being used to reduce inflammation in a range of other conditions, and it appeared to help stop some of the damage that could happen when the body’s immune system goes into overdrive as it tries to fight off coronavirus.

    The body’s over-reaction is called a cytokine storm and it can be deadly.

     

    Reaction

    But reacting to the development, Dr Nana Dadzie Ghansah explained that preliminary data from the Recovery Trial in Oxford, UK, shows that Dexamethasone reduces mortality in patients with severe COVID-19 significantly and “That is great news.”

    “With COVID-19, it is only useful during the cytokine-storm stage of the disease,” he explained.

    “So do not self-medicate with dexamethasone as a pre – or post-exposure prophylactic,” he added.

    He also advised that it should not be used in mild cases either.

    “Doing so might weaken the immune system and make one more susceptible to getting severe form of the disease.”

    He explained that treatment is guided by inflammatory markers that are measured in a hospital.

    Moreover, after taking it for a while, it cannot be stopped abruptly since that might lead to a life-threatening condition called an Addisonian Crisis, he added.

    “So be wise! Do not self-medicate with dexamethasone or any steroid for that matter to prevent or self-treat Covid-19,” he cautioned.

    Nana Dadzie Ghansah is a former Assistant Professor of Anesthesiology at the University of Kentucky and also a former Resident Physician at Emory University School of Medicine. He studied Medicine at the University of Leipzig, Germany.

    Oxford trial

    Meanwhile, according to the BBC report, in the trial, led by a team from Oxford University, around 2,000 hospital patients were given dexamethasone and were compared with nearly 4,000 who did not get the drug.

    For patients on ventilators it cut death risk from 40% to 28%. For patients needing oxygen it cut death risk from 25% to 20%.

    Chief investigator Prof Peter Horby said: “This is the only drug so far that has been shown to reduce mortality and it reduces it significantly. It’s a major breakthrough.”

    Lead researcher Prof Martin Landray says the findings suggest that for every eight patients needing ventilators that you treat, you could save one life.

    In patients on oxygen, you save one life for every 20-25 or so treated with the drug.

    “There is a clear, clear benefit. The treatment is up to 10 days of dexamethasone and it costs about £5 per patient. So essentially, it costs £35 to save a life. This is a drug that is globally available.”

    Prof Landray said, when appropriate, hospital patients should now be given it without delay, but people should not go out and buy it to take at home.

    Dexamethasone does not appear to help people with milder symptoms of coronavirus – people who don’t need help with their breathing.

    The Recovery Trial has been running since March and included the malaria drug hydroxychloroquine that has now been ditched amid concerns that it increases fatalities and heart problems.

    Another drug called remdesivir, an antiviral treatment that appears to shorten recovery time for people with coronavirus, is already being made available on the NHS in the UK.

    What is dexamethasone and what has it been used for until now?

    A report by Sky News has been explaining the history of the drug, what the research around its effectiveness in COVID-19 patients actually find, and what are its possible side-effects?

    It is a widely used steroid drug, known as a corticosteroid, which works to reduce inflammation.

    In use since the early 1960s, it treats a range of conditions, including rheumatoid arthritis and asthma.

    The drug can work to prevent the immune system from destroying blood platelets in people with blood disorders and is also used in end-of-life care

    People with a brain tumour may also be prescribed dexamethasone to reduce swelling around the tumour.

    What did the study on coronavirus patients find?

    A total of 2,104 patients received 6mg of dexamethasone once a day by mouth or intravenous injection for 10 days.

    Researchers then compared their outcomes with those of a control group of 4,321 patients.

    They found that – over a 28-day period – the death rate among patients requiring ventilation was 41%, and for those needing oxygen it was 25%.

    The figure was 13% among those not requiring respiratory intervention.

    However, there was no change in deaths among patients who did not require respiratory support.

    How much does it cost?

    It is relatively cheap, with researchers putting the cost of a course of treatment for eight people seriously ill with coronavirus at £40.

    Dexamethasone is also available globally at cheap prices, allowing lower income countries to benefit.

    What are the potential side-effects?

    The UK’s National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) lists the following conditions as common or very common side-effects of all corticosteroids, including dexamethasone:

    Anxiety; behaviour abnormal; cataract subcapsular; cognitive impairment; Cushing’s syndrome; electrolyte imbalance; fatigue; fluid retention; gastrointestinal discomfort; headache; healing impaired; hirsutism; hypertension; increased risk of infection; menstrual cycle irregularities; mood altered; nausea; osteoporosis; peptic ulcer; psychotic disorder; skin reactions; sleep disorders; weight increase.

    More uncommon side-effects include increased appetite, eye disorders, heart failure, seizure, tuberculosis reactivation and vertigo.

    Further warnings around side-effects centre on increased risks associated with prolonged therapy with corticosteroids, which is unlikely to be the case with patients suffering from COVID-19.

    However, those taking corticosteroids are advised to take special care to avoid exposure to chicken pox – unless they have previously had the illness – and measles, both of which are believed to place a patient at greater risk.

    The NICE guidance also says systemic corticosteroids, particularly in high doses, are linked to “psychiatric reactions including euphoria, insomnia, irritability, mood lability, suicidal thoughts, and behavioural disturbances”

    Additional files for this report is from the BBC and Skynews

    Source: Graphic.com.gh 

  • Coronavirus: Nigeria records 403 new cases, total now 16,085

    The Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) has announced 403 confirmed new coronavirus cases in the country on Sunday.

    The 403 cases announced by the Centre for Disease Control takes the total number of confirmed cases to 16085.

    The NCDC also announced the discharge of 119 patients from isolation centres across the country with 13 new deaths reported.

    “On the 14th of June 2020, 403 new confirmed cases and 13 deaths were recorded in Nigeria No new state has reported a case in the last 24 hours.”

    Till date, 16085 cases have been confirmed, 5220 cases have been discharged and 420 deaths have been recorded in 35 states and the Federal Capital Territory.

    The 403 new cases are reported from 20 states- Gombe(73), Lagos(68), Kano(46), Edo(36), FCT(35), Nasarawa(31), Kaduna(17), Oyo(16), Abia(15), Delta(13), Borno(13), Plateau(8), Niger(7), Rivers(7), Enugu(6), Ogun(6), Kebbi(3), Ondo(1), Anambra(1), Imo(1)

    Source: vanguardngr.com

  • Coronavirus: Face masks mandatory for Uber passengers and drivers

    Ride-sharing giant Uber is to make it mandatory for passengers and drivers to wear face coverings from Monday in the UK.

    The minicab app firm said it was taking measures “to help everyone stay safe” and had introduced measures to give drivers access to protective equipment.

    Face coverings will become compulsory on public transport and in hospitals in England from Monday.

    It comes after a study suggested masks could cut Covid-19 spread by up to 40%.

    Uber drivers in London will have to submit a picture of themselves to verify they are following the new rules before they can begin working.

    Other measures include trialling in-car partitions in Newcastle, Tyne and Wear, distributing more than two million masks to drivers and sending out 54,000 units of cleaning spray and hand sanitiser.

    Uber’s regional general manager for northern and eastern Europe, Jamie Heywood, said: “For months we’ve been urging people to stay home, for their safety and the safety of drivers who make essential trips.

    “Now, as cities begin to reopen and people start moving again, we’re taking measures to help everyone stay safe and healthy every time they use Uber.

    ” ‘Potentially useful tool’ Research on face coverings has been described as “slim” by many authorities, and for health professionals there’s always been the fear of a rush to snap up medical-grade masks.

    But studies in laboratories have shown not only how far droplets can be spread by coughs but also how various kinds of materials can dramatically reduce how many of those droplets do get through.

    A homemade mask will not do a great job of protecting you but may reduce the chances of you infecting others.

    And if enough people follow that advice, the risks of the infection spreading are brought down.

    There have been passionate disagreements over this within the world of science.

    And even advocates would agree that the public wearing masks will not defeat the virus on its own; but it’s a potentially useful extra tool as we come out of lockdown.

    From Monday, face coverings will be compulsory on public transport in England.

    Scotland already recommends wearing coverings in shops and on public transport.

    People in Wales are asked to wear three-layer face coverings on public transport and other situations where social distancing is not possible.

    Face coverings on public transport are also recommended in Northern Ireland.

    According to government figures, the average person in England made 10 taxi or private hire vehicle trips last year with an average duration of 20 minutes per trip.

    More than a third of all licensed vehicles in England are registered in London.

    Uber said its platform was used to complete 10 billion trips worldwide in 2018.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Kenya president’s staff test positive for coronavirus

    Four staff members working in the office of Kenya’s President Uhuru Kenyatta have tested positive for coronavirus, a statement from the presidency says.

    All four have been referred to a nearby hospital for treatment, it adds.

    The president and his family are “safe and free from Covid-19”, the statement says.

    All staff, including the president and his family, are tested on a regular basis.

    But to ensure that the spread is contained there will now be “extra access protocols” for those staff members who live outside state house.

    Kenya currently has more than 3,000 confirmed cases of the virus and more than 80 people have died after catching Covid-19.

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

    Source: bbc.com

  • Nigeria develops three-year coronavirus response plan

    The Nigerian government says it is developing a three-year action plan for its response to the pandemic.

    It also said it is not yet safe to reopen schools and other places where large gatherings could take place.

    Health Minister Osagie Ehanire told journalists that the pandemic “will be with us for a long time and we shall keep learning as we go along”.

    He said the response plan covers the short, middle and long term effect of the pandemic.

    Tracing, testing and case management will also be driven by data and evidence.

    The minister decried what he described as an escalation in the level of non-compliance with social distancing and wearing of face masks especially in markets and motor parks.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Nigeria’s police arrests 799 rape suspects in 5-months – IGP Adamu

    The Inspector-General of Police, IGP, Mohammed Adamu has said that there has been an upsurge on sexual-based violence as a result of the lockdown imposed by the government to contain the spread of the ravaging Coronavirus pandemic.

    IGP Adamu, who was flanked by the Ministers of Women Affairs, Dame Pauline Tallen and the Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, said within five months, the Police have recorded 717 rape incidents, arrested 799 rape suspects, 631 of the cases investigated and charged to court, while investigations are ongoing on 52 of the cases.

    The Police boss, who said that some people indulge in rape for ritual purposes, assured that all those involved in the criminal act will not go scotched free.

    According, “We are here to brief you on sexual and gender-based violence and the action that the government has been taking, particularly the Nigeria Police. “It has come to the public knowledge now that because of the COVID-19 restrictions, we have surged in cases of rape and gender-based violence. These are cases that are now coming up but we want to let members of the public know that, rape and gender-based violence have been there.

    “The law enforcement agents have been dealing with these cases, in most cases, members of the public are not aware of the actions that the law enforcement agents have been taking.

    “The Nigeria police so far from January to May 2020, we have recorded about 717 rape incidents that were reported across the country, about 799 suspects have been arrested, 631 cases conclusively investigated and charged to court and 52 cases are left and under investigation.

    “The police and other security agencies and other Non-Governmental Organizations have been collaborating, to see to it that these cases of rape and gender-based violence are dealt with.

    The NGOs and CSOs (Civil Society Organizations) that have the capacity to deal with this kind of offenses, have been cooperating with law enforcement agencies in capacity building, management of victims of rape and similar offenses and procedures for collecting evidence, towards successful prosecution.”

    IGP Adamu said the upsurge of rape cases in recent times has made the government take a more drastic approach towards curbing the menace. He called on every Nigerian that has or comes across to any victim of sexual offences or rape or gender-based violence, to quickly report to law enforcement agents.

    He said, “Keeping it without reporting it will give room for the perpetrators to continue to commit the offenses. It is a very wicked offense, it is a very serious offense, it is very wicked of an individual to engage in rape or defilement.

    “And there are a lot of causes, some are doing it for ritual purposes, some are doing it because they are within the family and they see the victims and have the urge to go into it and do it. But such people should not be allowed to go scotch free.

    “I am just to inform you that the government is doing something about it and you can see me with the Ministers of Information and Culture, Lai Mohammed and Women Affairs Development, Pauline Tallen.

    “From now onward, a national partnership with every stakeholder is what we are going into. It will not only be within the country but within the sub-region. We have to partner with organizations that are involved in this.”

    IGP Adamu said the Police and the government have been working with UNODC (United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime) and other civil society organizations to curtail sexual-based violence in the country.

    Source: vanguardngr.com

  • Kenya probes ‘disappearance’ of Jack Ma’s donation

    Kenya’s health ministry is investigating the alleged disappearance of coronavirus medical equipment and testing kits donated by Chinese billionaire Jack Ma.

    The shipment comprising of protective gear, testing kits, face masks and equipment arrived in the capital, Nairobi, on 24 March.

    Health Minister Mutahi Kagwe confirmed to journalists about the investigation, amid reports of a shortage of protective gear for health workers and testing kits.

    “We know there was something like that, there is an ongoing investigation and therefore I can’t talk about it any more than that,” he told a media briefing on Sunday.

    Local television station shared a video of the minister’s comments:

    Kenya’s has so far confirmed about 3,500 coronavirus cases and has imposed a ban on travel in and out of Nairobi and the coastal town of Mombasa.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Virus-hit India’s overwhelmed health workers brace for monsoon

    With hospitals already severely stretched, coronavirus-hit India is now bracing for the monsoon and its deadly annual onslaught of mosquito-borne illnesses, with an overwhelmed army of public health workers the only defence.

    Every year illnesses such as dengue fever and malaria infect more than half a million people and kill hundreds in India as the monsoon brings much-needed rain but also devastation and disease.

    With more than three decades of experience as a doctor in India’s chronically underfunded public healthcare system, Vidya Thakur – medical superintendent at Mumbai’s Rajawadi Hospital – is used to managing “heavy burdens”.

    But now, she says, “COVID-19 has left us helpless… and the monsoon will make things even more difficult”.

    Every bit of space at the 580-bed state-run hospital where she works is already devoted to dealing with the pandemic. Beds crowd corridors, storage rooms function as wards and staff are overworked.

    At Mumbai’s massive Lokmanya Tilak Municipal General Hospital, better known as Sion, undergraduates have been drafted into service, medical resident Shariva Ranadive told AFP.

    Many experienced doctors and nurses are staying on the sidelines because they are vulnerable to the virus due to their age or pre-existing conditions such as diabetes.

    “Everyone is working constantly… we are overwhelmed,” Thakur told AFP.

    And now with the monsoon has arrived in Mumbai on its months-long journey northwards, she is readying for the usual rush of seasonal ailments.

    A particular problem is that many season illnesses have symptoms that are virtually indistinguishable from coronavirus, such as fever, breathing difficulties and loss of appetite.

    This means more testing, more isolation beds and more protective equipment will be needed to ensure that patients are diagnosed correctly and not exposed to coronavirus too.

    “We will need to treat everyone as if they were a COVID-19 patient,” said Thakur. “Every precaution will have to be taken.”

    Delayed efforts, double shifts

    Healthcare workers are not the only ones battling exhaustion.

    A months-long lockdown to prevent the epidemic from spreading left Mumbai with an acute shortage of sanitation workers.

    Thousands of public health workers who fumigate neighbourhoods to kill disease-carrying mosquitoes had to delay those crucial efforts for two months to focus on sanitation instead.

    “Many of our men are doing double shifts, working 14 hours straight,” said Rajan Naringrekar, the head of the city’s insecticide department.

    With nearly 60,000 infections, Mumbai accounts for around a fifth of India’s coronavirus cases.

    As teams fumigated a slum and cleared out stagnant water – a potent breeding ground for mosquitoes – from sagging tarpaulin roofs, storage bins and bottles, Naringrekar told AFP many of them were afraid of contracting the virus.

    The risks will increase exponentially with the rains, with workers required to inspect homes and offices in case of a dengue outbreak.

    “We are obviously worried but we have to do our job and take as many precautions as we can,” he said, pointing to the gloves and masks worn by the workers.

    Monsoon trauma

    Their fears are shared by millions living in slums across India, who say their homes offer little protection against coronavirus or other diseases.

    For Mumtaz Kanojia, who lives in a small one-room house with her son and daughter, the memory of her bone-chilling three-week-long bout with malaria still haunts her 10 years on.

    “My daughter and I were severely ill, we had a fever, we couldn’t eat anything. She even fainted at one point,” the 53-year-old told AFP.

    Kanojia is already fearful of contracting coronavirus, and the onset of the monsoon prompts further dread – of flooding outside her front door, a leaking ceiling, contaminated drinking water and deadly diseases.

    “The water gets everywhere… and the mosquitoes follow,” she said, adding that she and her neighbours had little choice but to use tarpaulins as makeshift coverings despite the risk they could become breeding grounds.

    “Without it, the roof leaks every time there’s a heavy downpour,” she said.

    “Each time, we have to take care of it ourselves. No one from the government ever comes to help.”

    Source: france24.com

  • Grand reopening? France 24 and Deutsche Welle at France-Germany border

    A new phase begins: on the day when many EU nations are lifting coronavirus travel restrictions, The FRANCE 24 Debate host François Picard is in Schoeneck and Deutsche Welle’s Melinda Crane in Sarrebrücken at the common border between France and Germany. There, locals on the French side are still bitter about Berlin’s unilateral decision to erect barriers they hadn’t seen in decades. As Emmanuel Macron and Angela Merkel now join forces to propose EU-wide stimulus plans, what do citizens want?

    To answer this and many more questions, the hosts will interview Rainer Hoffman, President of the Confederation of German Trade Unions; and Ludovic Subran, Chief Economist, Allianz Insurance and Asset Management.

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

    Source: france24.com

  • Widow of Wuhan whistleblower doctor Li Wenliang gives birth to their son

    The wife of Li Wenliang, the Wuhan whistleblower doctor who died of coronavirus in February, has given birth to their son, according to the Chinese state-run Litchi News.

    Li’s wife told Litchi News early Friday morning local time that she gave birth to a baby boy in a Wuhan hospital.

    “Can you see it from heaven? The last gift you gave me was born today. I will definitely take good care of them,” she wrote on the Chinese social media platform WeChat.

    Li was a doctor in the Chinese city of Wuhan, which was ground zero for the coronavirus pandemic.

    In late December, when reports emerged of a dangerous new virus in the city, he texted fellow medical school alumni warning them of the news.

    “I only wanted to remind my university classmates to be careful,” he told CNN in February.

    Soon after, he was targeted by Wuhan police, who accused him of rumor-mongering.

    He was made to sign a statement acknowledging his “misdemeanor” and promising not to commit further “unlawful acts.”

    On February 1, he tested positive for the virus. He died less than a week later, aged 34 – sparking a rare online wave of grief, fury, calls for freedom of speech and government accountability.

    Source: cnn.com

  • Sports Check: Godwin Attram discusses impact of coronavirus on football, Great Olympics, Black Stars, others

    In this edition of Sports Check, Godwin Attram, a former Black Stars player and co-owner of Attram De-Visser Academy shares his thoughts on the resumption or termination of the football league season.

    The suspension of sporting activities in the country has had an adverse effect on the Ghana Premier League and football in general in the country.

    Club administrators have had to pay player salaries despite their not playing active football.

    The situation has led to calls for a special fund to support clubs in the country.

    However, contrary to the thoughts shared by other club administrators that government must provide financial support to clubs, Coach Godwin Attram thinks financial assistance is not the ideal help they need from government.

    To him, government can support football clubs in terms of testing players before matches and granting free access to stadiums instead.

    The former Ghanaian international reminisced his time with the Black Stars, and missing the 2006 World Cup among others.

    Attram, who is the assistant coach for Black Stars B also shared insights on why Ghana flopped at the 2006 Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON) in Egypt.

    To Godwin Attram, the decision to cancel this season’s Ghana Premier League is a non-starter considering the investments made so far.

    Attram was optimistic that Accra Great Olympics (Oly) where he was both player and coach – the team known by many accolades including Accra Landguards – will avoid relegation when the league resumes.

    Watch Attram’s full interview below.

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • Coronavirus: India to use 500 train carriages as wards in Delhi

    India is to convert another 500 railway carriages to create 8,000 more beds for coronavirus patients in Delhi, amid a surge in infections.

    Home Minister Amit Shah announced a package of new emergency measures for the capital, including a rapid increase in testing for COVID-19. Nursing homes will also be requisitioned.

    He met Delhi’s Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal to address the crisis.

    India’s daily number of confirmed new cases has reached almost 12,000.

    The total number of 320,922 officially confirmed cases puts India fourth in the world – after the US, Brazil and Russia – in the pandemic.

    The death toll in India stands at 9,195, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University from official sources.

    The Hindustan Times reports that Delhi is the third worst-hit state in India after Maharashtra and Tamil Nadu.

    It reports that Delhi’s bed capacity across private and government hospitals for COVID-19 patients stands at 9,698, of which 4,248 beds are vacant.

    Mr Kejriwal’s government plans to use 40 hotels and 77 banquet halls as makeshift hospitals.

    India began converting railway carriages into quarantine or isolation wards in April, when large parts of the railway network were suspended owing to the pandemic.

    Last month the national government announced plans to end a national lockdown that began on 25 March.

    Road and plane traffic increased as restrictions started to ease, and many businesses and workplaces reopened. Markets are crowded again.

    The lockdown has imposed huge economic costs on India, throwing millions of people out of work, especially migrant workers in precarious, meagrely-paid jobs. Food supply chains were also put at risk.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Sekondi-Takoradi MCE died of coronavirus – Akufo-Addo confirms

    President Nana Addo Danquah Akufo-Addo has revealed the cause of death of the Municipal Chief Executive (MCE) of Sekondi/Takoradi Metropolitan Assembly, Anthony Kobina Kurentsir Sam.

    According to President Nana Addo, his late appointee died after being infected with the novel coronavirus disease.

    Mr. Sam reportedly died Friday afternoon after a short illness weeks after his driver reportedly tested positive for COVID-19.

    News went viral that he died of the virus but family sources debunked the assertion.

    However, President Akufo-Addo, while addressing the country for the 11th time on measures his administration is putting in place to fight Covid-19, said the statesman died of the virus.

    He eulogised the late Sekondi/Takoradi MCE and commended him for ensuring social distancing in markets under his jurisdiction.

    “Permit me to pay brief tribute to the memory of an old and valiant colleague in the struggle of the New Patriotic Party and in the work of the Akufo-Addo government, the Mayor of Sekondi-Takoradi Metropolis, the Chief Executive of the Sekondi-Takoradi Metropolitan Assembly, Hon. K.K Sam, Egya Sam to me and many, whose efforts in enforcing social distancing protocols at the Sekondi and Takoradi markets were, recently, highly commended by me, and who sadly passed away on Friday, as a result of a COVID-related death.

    May his soul rest in perfect peace in the bosom of the Almighty until the Last Day of the Resurrection, when we shall all meet again,” he said.

    Source: Peace FM

  • We’ll not let coronavirus pandemic undermine our future – President

    President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, Sunday, announced that finalists of educational institutions will return to school as scheduled to prepare for their exit examinations, saying the COVID-19 pandemic should not be allowed to undermine the survival and future of the nation.

    “Education, indeed, is the key to the future of our country. The quality of education that our educational institutions produce, ultimately, will determine the success or otherwise of our nation.

    “We, therefore, have to find a way of guaranteeing the prospects of the generation of young people who are the objects of education today, and who represents our future,” the President emphasised.

    Consequently, finalists of tertiary institutions will resume on Monday, June 15, followed by those in Senior High School, with the second-year students under the Gold Track, on June 22, while Basic School finalists will go on June 29.

    The President was updating citizens on measures to contain the COVID-19 pandemic, in his 11th national broadcast on Sunday.

    Responding to criticisms that the reopening of schools would endanger the lives of teachers and students as had happened elsewhere, the President stated that the Government would not let the COVID-19 pandemic undermine the country’s survival, progress and future generation.

    The President explained that there was no ‘one-size-fits-all approach’ to the resolution of the pandemic, therefore, Ghana had to chart its unique course, while learning from best practices.

    However, he emphasised that saving the lives, jobs and livelihoods of citizens had been at the centre of the Government’s interventions.

    “We can’t say that because of the pandemic, we are no longer interested in issues of social justice, such as education and health,” the President explained.

    The Government would, therefore, do everything possible to protect and preserve the potential of the future generation.

    He, thus, entreated teachers and non-teaching staff as well as the finalists, who would be in school for six weeks, to be more disciplined, than ever before, and observe the social distancing directives, wear face masks and comply with other safety and hygiene protocols, to curb the spread of the respiratory disease.

    Government started airlifting quantities of Personal Protective Equipment, alcohol-based hand sanitizers, Veronica Buckets, packets of soap and tissue rolls to 234 tertiary educational institutions in the 16 regions, ahead of re-opening on Monday, June 15.

    The items include 600,000 units of reusable face masks, 200,000 millilitres of hand sanitizers, 1,700 Veronica Buckets, 34,000 tissue papers and 34,000 packets of soap, as well as 900 thermometer guns.

    About 200,000 staff and students are supposed to benefit from the logistics, comprising 44,000 teaching and non-teaching staff and 128,000 students.

    Each person is supposed to receive three sets of reusable face masks, alcohol-based hand sanitizers and tissue papers to help prevent the spread of the virus.

    Personnel of the Ghana Airforce airlifted the items to the regional capitals on Saturday, June 13.

    The Government, through the Ministry of Education and the Ghana Education Service, has disinfected both public and private tertiary educational institutions.

    Universities with their own hospitals and clinics have been equipped with the necessary PPE, and have isolation centres to deal with any positive cases.

    All other institutions without their own clinics and hospitals have been mapped to health facilities.

    The distribution of the logistics is being undertaken by a special task force of the Government, under the supervision of the Senior Minister, Mr Yaw Osafo-Maafo.

    The regional breakdown of the tertiary educational institutions are as follows: Greater Accra-57; Ashanti-31; Eastern-22; Northern-14; and Central-18.

    The rest are; Volta-17; Western-11; Upper East-11; Upper West-11; Bono-14; Ahafo- nine; Bono East- six; Western North-57; Oti- three; Savannah- four and North East-one.

    Source: GNA

  • Coronavirus continues to spread; 254,331 tested Akufo-Addo

    President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has indicated that Coronavirus cases in Ghana continue to spread.

    He stated that so far the country has tested 254,331 with the country now recording 11,964 confirmed cases.

    He stated that active cases are 7,652.

    He added that six persons critically ill, three persons on ventilators.

    According to him, Ghana has one of the highest testing rates in Africa.

    He noted however that the increase in cases indicate that the virus has spread and continue to spread.

    Source: Daily Guide Network

  • FULL TEXT: Akufo-Addos 11th address to the nation on measures to fight coronavirus

    Fellow Ghanaians, good evening.

    Exactly two weeks ago, I came again into your homes to outline a roadmap for easing the restrictions put in place to help contain the spread of the Coronavirus pandemic in our country. I indicated that it would be a phased approach, involving a selected list of public gatherings, based on their risk profile, socio-economic impact, and, most importantly, our capacity to enforce and to respond, in the event of a flair up in our number of infections.

    Since then, we have had some of our religious institutions opening their doors to worshippers, whilst respecting the limits on numbers, and maintaining the strict protocols announced; others have decided to remain closed until further notice. Private burials are taking place, market places, public transport, including domestic air transport, restaurants, hotels, individual and non-contact sports, and our constitutional and statutory bodies are conducting their activities in accordance with social distancing and the relevant hygiene protocols.

    From tomorrow, Monday, 15th June, the last batch of institutions in this phased approach, our educational institutions, will begin to re-open, with final year students in our tertiary colleges and universities returning to school to prepare for and take their exit examinations. As has been stated, final year senior high school (SHS 3) students, together with SHS 2 Gold Track students, will resume on 22nd June; and final year junior high school (JHS 3) students, the week after, on 29th June.

    The decision to include our schools in phase one of the easing of restrictions was taken advisedly. Some argue that we are putting the lives of our students, teachers and non-teaching staff in danger by this re-opening, citing the examples of other countries, who have done so and recorded spikes in their infection case counts. I have stated, on several occasions, that there is no one-size-fits-all approach to the resolution of this pandemic. We have our own unique situation in the country, and we have always taken that it into account in dealing with this disease, much as we are prepared to learn from the examples of others.

    Fellow Ghanaians, over the last three (3) months, every aspect of our national life has been affected by this virus. We have had to take deliberate steps to ensure that our society, in the face of the pandemic, is able to function, and continues to strive to deliver the results of progress, prosperity and development, for which we all yearn. Saving lives, jobs and livelihoods, revitalising our economy, and safeguarding the future of our country have been at the heart of this endeavour. We cannot say that, because of the pandemic, we are no longer interested in issues of social justice, such as education and health.

    Education, indeed, is the key to the future of our country. The quality of education that our educational institutions produce, ultimately, will determine the success or otherwise of our nation. We, therefore, have to find a way of guaranteeing the prospects of the generation of young people who are the objects of education today, and who represent our future.

    We have to do everything within our power to protect their potential, and, thereby, help preserve our future. We cannot afford to let the pandemic undermine our chances for survival and progress. We have to confront our present and future with confidence, knowing fully well that we must remain, at all times, vigilant and careful.

    So, from tomorrow, operating with half the class size, final year students will begin a six-week period of learning to finish their respective programmes. Subsequently, for a period of four weeks, they will sit for their exit examinations. It must be put on record that some final year University students will not be returning to school, as some of them, through virtual means, have already sat their exit examinations.

    Prior to their return to school, Government, through the Ministry of Education and the Ghana Education Service, has ensured that all tertiary institutions, public and private, have been disinfected. Universities, with their own hospitals and clinics, have been equipped with the necessary personal protective equipment, and have isolation centres to deal with any positive cases. All other institutions, without their own clinics and hospitals, have been mapped to health facilities. There will be no mass gatherings and no sporting activities. Religious activities, under the new protocols, will be permitted. Social distancing and the wearing of face masks must become the norm on campus. To aid in this effort, a total of six hundred thousand (600,000) face masks has been distributed to the tertiary institutions. This is to enable every student, teaching and non-teaching staff to have three (3) reusable face masks. In addition to this, one thousand seven hundred (1,700) Veronica buckets, two hundred thousand (200,000) litres of hand sanitisers, three thousand, four hundred (3,400) litres of liquid soap, and nine hundred (900) thermometer guns have been distributed, with the transportation and delivery of these items being overseen by the special logistics team of the Government Committee, chaired by the sagacious, experienced politician, the Senior Minister, Hon. Yaw Osafo Maafo, that is supervising the re-opening of the schools.

    I met with the Vice Chancellors of the universities, both public and private, last Tuesday, who pledged that they would co-operate to ensure that this exercise is effectively undertaken, and I thank them very much for their co-operation. Our intention is to secure the lives of the nearly two hundred thousand (200,000) students, lecturers and non-teaching staff, who will be returning to campus from tomorrow, and I appeal to them also to do their bit to help us succeed. I urge them to adhere to enhanced personal hygiene and social distancing protocols, wash their hands with soap under running water, refrain from shaking hands, and wear their masks to, in and from the lecture halls, and on the campus, generally.

    Fellow Ghanaians, I have to address a matter which has to do with our case count, especially in recent weeks, and which has given cause for anxiety. The increase in numbers indicates that the virus has spread and continues to spread. We have to bear in mind, at all times, that the more people we test for the virus, the more people we are likely to discover as positive, and, thus, have the opportunity to isolate and treat them. If we do not test people for the virus, we will not find the persons who are positive, let alone isolate them from the population and treat them, and prevent them from spreading the virus.

    For example, the total number of tests that we have conducted in Ghana, with a population of thirty-one million, two hundred and fifty-four thousand three hundred and thirty-one (254,331), is one of the highest on the African continent. Furthermore, many countries in the world, including several of the developed economies, are not implementing a policy of enhanced contact tracing, and this makes our data qualitatively different and more effective in the fight against COVID-19. Indeed, the success of our tracing, testing and treating will lead, in the end, to a reduction in the number of cases. That is what we are working for.

    Understandably, much focus has been placed on the rise in the total number of confirmed cases. As at midnight of 13th June, the total number of positives, cumulatively, stands at eleven thousand, nine hundred and sixty-four (11,964), out of the two hundred and fifty-four thousand three hundred and thirty-one (254,331), tests conducted. We have a total of four thousand, two hundred and fifty-eight (4,258) patients who have fully recovered, have been discharged, and are now free of the virus. So, our scrutiny, in effect, must be on the number of active cases, i.e. people who remain on our books as still positive. Hence, as things stand now, the total number of people with the virus, that is active cases from our tests, is seven thousand, six hundred and fifty-two (7,652). Our positivity rate, i.e. the ratio of positive cases to total tests conducted, stands at 4.7%. In our hospitals and isolation centres, we currently have thirteen (13) persons severely ill, six (6) persons critically ill, with three (3) persons on ventilators.

    Mercifully for us, by the grace of God, the number of COVID-19 related deaths, sad though each death is, continues to remain very low, one of the lowest in Africa and the world. With fifty-four (54) deaths currently reported by the Ghana Health Service thus far in Ghana, the ratio of deaths to positive cases stands at 0.4%, compared to the global average of 5.5%, and the African average of 2.6%. The number of severe and critically ill also continues to be low. I am relating all these figures not to engender any false, feel-good factor, but as statements of fact that must provide the context for us, when we examine our figures. If, indeed, we are to be guided by the data, then we must look at the data in all its ramifications, not just one particular aspect of them. That is the proper way to do justice to the data.

    I am, thus, in no way suggesting that we should let our guard down, and throw out of the window the efforts we have made in bringing us this far, where we have become a reference point for many in the handling of this pandemic. On the contrary, as we begin to ease the restrictions, we must be even more disciplined in our adherence to the personal hygiene and social distancing measures we have become accustomed to, we must keep fit, and we must continue to eat our local foods to boost our immune systems. This is how we can prevent our healthcare services and our heroic healthcare workers from being overwhelmed, due to an increase in demand for hospital care.

    Nevertheless, I implore you to pay attention to your health, when you begin to experience symptoms such as fever, persistent cough, bodily pains, loss of taste and smell, and difficulty in breathing, seek immediate medical attention at the nearest health facility. I remain concerned about the stigma associated with this disease. Stories of persons who have recovered from this disease, and being shunned by their own relatives and communities, are a source of considerable worry to me, because they undermine our efforts to fight it. There is nothing shameful about testing positive. We do not have to lose our sense of community because of this pandemic.

    Government, through the Ghana Health Service, continues to monitor, on a daily basis, the spread of the virus, and has benchmarks of health outcomes, which define the mitigation measures that must be pursued to curb the spread of the disease, and enable us to reassess the easing of restrictions.

    It is important for me to remind residents of the Greater Accra and Ashanti Regions, where the great majority of cases have been recorded, and in the Western and Central Regions, where we are seeing an increase in infection cases, to continue to adhere strictly to the social distancing and enhanced hygiene protocols announced. With the doctors and scientists telling us that the virus is transmitted from human contact, through talking, singing, coughing and sneezing, which results in sending droplets of the virus from one person to another, residents of these four regions, and, indeed, all Ghanaians, must remember that the wearing of masks is now mandatory. Leaving our homes without a face mask or face covering on is an offence. The Police have been instructed to enforce this directive, which is the subject of an Executive Instrument.

    Let me repeat: our survival is in our own hands. If we are lax and inattentive, we will continue to have serious challenges with the virus. If we are mindful and self-disciplined, we have it in us to defeat this pandemic, and help return our lives to normalcy. I appeal to each and every one of you for your help in this regard. That is the surest way to realising our collective vision of building a new Ghanaian civilization where the rule of law is not a slogan, but a directive principle of state development; where we deliver social and economic transformation that has a meaningful impact on the lives of all our people; where a strong and vibrant economy creates jobs for the masses of our young people, and, in the process, creates a society of opportunities and aspirations for all; where we are no longer pawns nor victims of the world order; and where the vision of our founding fathers of a free, progressive and prosperous Ghana is attained. Let us, together, rise to the occasion, and fulfill our common destiny. We can do it!

    In conclusion, permit me to pay brief tribute to the memory of an old and valiant colleague in the struggle of the New Patriotic Party and in the work of the Akufo-Addo government, the Mayor of Sekondi-Takoradi Metropolis, the Chief Executive of the Sekondi-Takoradi Metropolitan Assembly, Hon. K.K Sam, Egya Sam to me and many, whose efforts in enforcing social distancing protocols at the Sekondi and Takoradi markets were, recently, highly commended by me, and who sadly passed away on Friday, as a result of a COVID-related death. May his soul rest in perfect peace in the bosom of the Almighty until the Last Day of the Resurrection, when we shall all meet again. Let us also wish our hardworking Minister for Health, Hon. Kwaku Agyeman Manu, MP for Dormaa Central, a speedy recovery from the virus, which he contracted in the line of duty, and is a stable condition.

    May God bless us all, and our homeland Ghana, and make her great and strong.

    I thank you for your attention.

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • Coronavirus: Ensure equity in distribution of COVID-19 funds – Prof. Gatsi

    The Dean of University of Cape Coast Business School, Professor John Gatsi, is calling for equality in the distribution of the COVID-19 funds to support businesses that have been badly hit by the coronavirus pandemic.

    According to him, the coronavirus pandemic has increased the risk of access to finances by entrepreneurs and small businesses, thus urging small businesses to do cost restructuring.

    He explained that available and affordable access to different sources of finances to incentivise entrepreneurs and enterprises to create new businesses lines and expand existing ones have become crucial, demanding innovative and sustainable funding solutions.

    Speaking at the Third Session of the e-seminar series on the topic; Coronavirus Pandemic: Implications for Entrepreneurs and Enterprise Development organised by the USS, Professor Gatsi said some small and medium scale enterprises are not in the position to meet their repayment obligations to financial institutions, thereby contributing to rising non-performing loan profile of financial institutions.

    He said “before the coronavirus pandemic, SMEs and entrepreneurs were facing challenges in accessing financing including trade finance from various sources to finance their creativity, ideas and businesses”.

    This he said requires the creation of the right business environment to stimulate business growth.

    He encouraged all stakeholders in the entrepreneurial space to reduce their risk averse position and increase investment in innovation and opportunities.

    The Director of the Centre for Entrepreneurship and Small Enterprise Development at the School of Business, Dr Mavis Serwah Benneh- Mensah advised micro and small business owners and entrepreneurs to be practical and join hands with other entrepreneurs as a strategy to overcome the difficulties of the coronavirus pandemic

    She explained that the mandate of CESED is to provide entrepreneurial training and strengthen SMEs to play a critical role in the economy.

    Bfore COVID-19, she said SMEs were vulnerable and needed protection in terms of financing, markets, and business development strategies.

    She further advised small businesses to engage in cost restructuring and embrace continuous entrepreneurial education to survive and remain relevant.

    On his part , an entrepreneur, Saka Addo-Mensah, highlighted the challenges he and his colleagues in the property business were facing.

    According to him, rental properties are now empty because foreigners have lost money and cannot travel to the country as a result of closure of borders and airports, coupled with social distancing protocols.

    He said before the coronavirus pandemic face-to face tour of the rental properties was the norm but because of the experience of the COVID-19 they have to invest in virtual tour of their properties to attract investors.

    Mr. Saka Addo- Mensah emphasised that the nature of his business requires that he develops a new payment schedule and delivery date and re-negotiate with various stake holders to stay safe in business.

    Professor Ogo Nzewi, the Head of Department of Public Administration from the University of Fort Hare, South Africa provided policy perspective to entrepreneurship and small enterprises.

    She explained that globally tax reliefs, social reliefs and small business funds have been provided as intervention.

    However, in many cases these interventions have been slow in coming and discriminate against the very people and businesses that are in dire need of the support.

    Source: Class FM

  • Lufthansa to offer coronavirus testing at German airports

    German airline group Lufthansa (LHAG.DE) plans to offer coronavirus tests at airports in Frankfurt and Munich, a spokesman said on Friday.

    The tests would be conducted through partnering test centers and be available by early July, the spokesman said, confirming an earlier report in German weekly Der Spiegel.

    Lufthansa last week pledged a wide-ranging restructuring, from thousands of job cuts to asset sales, as it seeks to repay a 9 billion euro state bailout and navigate deepening losses in the face of the coronavirus pandemic.

    Source: Reuters

  • Indonesian police battle wave of ‘body snatching’ by grieving relatives

    Indonesian hospitals are beefing up security at their morgues after a spate of body-snatchings by relatives seeking traditional burials for family members who died of Coronavirus, police said Friday.

    Under new rules in the sprawling archipelago, COVID-19 victims must be wrapped in plastic and buried quickly to prevent the virus spreading, meaning grieving relatives are unable to follow Muslim funeral practices, which include washing the dead from head to toe.

    Families in the Muslim-majority nation have also been urged not to linger at cemeteries, robbing them of the chance to perform prayers for loved ones.

    Large groups of distraught relatives descended on several hospitals in Makassar on Sulawesi island this week, with some managing to forcefully take away bodies set to be buried under the virus protocols, according to authorities.

    At least 33 people were arrested, said local police spokesman Ibrahim Tompo, who added they faced up to seven years in prison for violating health quarantine regulations.

    In response, Makassar authorities have deployed more personnel to guard local hospitals, Tompo said.

    Rumours that some victims of the slated for a quick burial had died of unrelated illnesses had exacerbated the situation, Tompo added.

    “This angered the families and locals so they decided to forcefully take the bodies home.”

    In Surabaya, Indonesia’s second-biggest city, authorities said Friday that they had arrested four people after relatives grabbed the body of a suspected virus victim from a local hospital.

    Also this week, dozens of people snatched the corpse of a man who died at a hospital in Bekasi, a city that borders the capital Jakarta, police said.

    Citing the interrogation of one suspect, police said the man took to snatching his relative because he had died before test results were available. They later confirmed he had the virus.

    Officially, Indonesia has more than 35,000 cases of COVID-19 and 2,000 deaths. But with low testing rates, the real toll is widely believed to be much higher.

    Source: france24.com

  • Coronavirus: Italy prosecutors to quiz PM Conte on crisis

    Prosecutors from northern Italy are to question Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte on Friday after relatives of Covid-19 victims demanded an inquiry into alleged government negligence.

    The prosecutors have travelled to Rome from Bergamo, the city near Milan worst hit by coronavirus before the whole country was locked down in March.

    Mr Conte said he was “not at all worried” about the questioning.

    Relatives argue that virus hotspots should have been isolated earlier.

    Fifty legal complaints were filed on Thursday at the Bergamo prosecutor’s office by a citizens’ group called Noi Denunceremo (We Will Report).

    The group consists of bereaved relatives of Covid-19 victims, who say two Lombardy towns – Alzano and Nembro – should have been declared “red zones” as soon as the outbreaks were detected there.

    It is the first legal group action in Italy triggered by the pandemic. But the Lombardy region is governed by the right-wing opposition League party, and many have blamed them, rather than the central government, for alleged failures in the coronavirus response.

    In addition, the prosecutors will question Italian Interior Minister Luciana Lamorgese and Health Minister Roberto Speranza on Friday.

    The prosecutors aim to determine if there are grounds for any charges of criminal negligence.

    Lombardy was where the virus first started spreading in Europe and more than half the victims in Italy died in the region.

    On Thursday, Italy’s official coronavirus death toll stood at 34,114 – the second-highest figure in Europe after the UK, and fourth-highest in the world.

    But Italy’s infection rate has been brought down, enabling the authorities to gradually ease draconian restrictions.

    Rome’s responsibility or Lombardy’s? Mr Conte said: “I will conscientiously set out all the facts of which I have knowledge. I am not at all worried.

    “All investigations are welcome. The citizens have the right to know and we have the right to reply.”

    In a BBC interview in early April, Mr Conte denied claims that he had underestimated the crisis. He said that if he had ordered a lockdown at the beginning, when the first virus clusters were detected, “people would have taken me for a madman”.

    He dismissed the suggestion that Italy could have rapidly imposed a big lockdown like the one in the Chinese city of Wuhan.

    Lombardy officials say locking down virus hotspots was a central government responsibility. The region’s Health Minister Giulio Gallera has said it was clear from 23 February that Alzano and Nembro had many cases.

    But Mr Conte, who heads a center-left coalition government, hit back by saying “if Lombardy had wanted to, it could have made Alzano and Nembro red zones”, AFP news agency reported.

    The prosecutors have already questioned senior Lombardy officials.

    How did the crisis unfold in Lombardy?

    The little town of Codogno was first to be locked down, on 21 February. Then Lombardy and 14 provinces in the neighbouring regions of Veneto, Piedmont and Emilia Romagna were locked down on 8 March. Two days later the lockdown was extended to the whole of Italy.

    In early March it was clear that hospitals in the Lombardy crisis zone were overwhelmed with Covid-19 patients and struggling with shortages of protective kit, beds and medical staff.

    BBC footage from a hospital in Brescia, near Bergamo, showed how doctors struggled with “staggering” numbers of Covid-19 patients, without medication to fight the virus.

    The widow of one victim, Monica Plazzoli, said: “If it hadn’t been so disorganised, if [the province of] Bergamo had been made into a red zone earlier, perhaps the hospitals would not have been driven to collapse”.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: Twitter removes more than 170,000 pro-China accounts

    Twitter has removed more than 170,000 accounts it says were tied to an operation to spread pro-China messages.

    Some of those posts were about the coronavirus outbreak, the social media platform has announced.

    The company said “a core network” of 23,750 highly active accounts had been deleted, along with another 150,000 “amplifier accounts”.

    Twitter also revealed it has shut down more than a thousand Russia-based misinformation accounts.

    The firm said the Chinese network, which was based in the People’s Republic of China (PRC), had links to an earlier state-backed operation it broke up alongside Facebook and YouTube last year.

    That operation had been pushing out messages about the political situation in Hong Kong.

    “While this network is new, the technical links we used to identify the activity and attribute it to the PRC remain consistent with activity we initially identified and disclosed in August 2019,” Twitter said in its company blog, which was also tweeted by the firm’s founder Jack Dorsey.

    The US-based messaging platform added that it had been “thoroughly studying and investigating past coordinated information operations from the PRC.”

    While the 23,750 accounts were the main focus, 150,000 accounts were identified as helping to boost the messages online.

    Twitter said the two interconnected sets of accounts were caught early and typically had very few followers with low levels of engagement.

    “In general, this entire network was involved in a range of manipulative and coordinated activities. They were tweeting predominantly in Chinese languages and spreading geopolitical narratives favourable to the Communist Party of China (CCP), while continuing to push deceptive narratives about the political dynamics in Hong Kong,” the blog said.

    Twitter also said it had discovered a network of accounts linked to a media website it found to be “engaging in state-backed political propaganda within Russia”. This network of accounts, totalling 1,152, has now been suspended. “Activities included promoting the United Russia party and attacking political dissidents,” Twitter’s blog added.

    Combating misinformation

    Last week, Twitter accused US President Donald Trump of making false claims in some of his posts, although the platform has come under fire for not removing coronavirus misinformation.

    Earlier this week, the company said it was trialling a new “read before you retweet” pop-up aimed to promote “informed discussion”.

    The message will appear on articles that users share that they haven’t yet opened on the site.

    Mr Dorsey, Twitter’s high-profile chief executive, has also been making headlines recently by pledging money to anti-coronavirus efforts and racial equality organisations.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Post coronavirus: Make tax payment processes more convenient for businesses Tax Law Expert to GRA

    Tax Law Lecturer at the University of Ghana School of Law, Mr. William Owusu Demitia, has called on the Ghana Revenue Authority (GRA), to as a matter of urgency, review their existing tax payment procedures and processes to make it more convenient for taxpayers to fulfil their statutory obligations amidst the slow in business as a result of COVID -19.

    Mr. Demitia, made the call when his he delivered via Zoom, the sixth lecture of the fourteen (14) week-long “Law and Ethics Web Series”, under the theme, “Tax Implications of Covid-19”, on Wednesday the 10th of June 2020. The online seminar is organized jointly by the African Centre on Law and Ethics (ACLE) and the African Centre of International Criminal Justice (ACICJ), both based at the GIMPA Faculty of Law.

    “By our system, if you want to pay tax, you must close your shop, walk to the nearest GRA office, probably be in a queue, in order to fulfil your tax obligations. Now ask yourself, who will do that. Why would I close up shop, just to fulfil my tax obligations? What would I get from it? We have not made it so convenient for them to as it were, comply with their tax obligations” Mr. Demitia said.

    He intimated that it is time for the Ghana Revenue Authority (GRA) to introduce real-time technological options and platforms to allow taxpayers to fulfil their tax obligations as a stop gap measure to aid the business community to meet their tax obligations in time and as conveniently as possible.

    Law and Ethics Web Series

    The Law and Ethics Web Series begun on Wednesday the 6th of May 2020 on the online meeting platform, Zoom at 2pm. The pending presentations on Jun 17, Jun 24, Jul 1, Jul 8, Jul 15, Jul 22, Jul 29, and Aug 5, 2020, will come on as scheduled. Interested persons can join any of the upcoming sessions by visiting the Zoom application and using the Webinar ID:848-2795-0621 or https://us02web.zoom.us/j/84827950621.

    Various speakers have been lined up for the exercise by the organizers. The series is being coordinated by Dr. Kwaku Agyeman-Budu, a Lecturer and Head of Law Centers at the GIMPA Faculty of Law. The 10th of June 2020 session was moderated by Mrs. Clara Kasser-Tee, Lecturer at the GIMPA Faculty of Law, under the distinguished patronage of the Rector of GIMPA, Professor Philip Ebow Bondzi-Simpson, and the Honorific Dean of the GIMPA Law Faculty, Justice Sir

    Source: Kasapa FM