Tag: Coronavirus

  • Protests intensify coronavirus fears

    The Associated Press news agency has analysed protests over the past few days and found that demonstrations over the killing of George Floyd had been held in every one of the 25 US communities with the highest concentrations of new cases.

    There are growing fears that the tightly packed streets and squares with people often not even wearing and face masks could lead to a spike in the number of new cases.

    There are currently 1.8 million confirmed cases of coronavirus in the US – with more than 106,000 deaths.

    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: Risk of death is higher for ethnic minorities

    People from ethnic minorities are at a higher risk of dying from coronavirus, a report by Public Health England says.

    It shows age remains the biggest risk factor, while being male is another.

    The impact of Covid-19 is also “disproportionate” for other Asian, Caribbean and black ethnicities. But it remains unclear why.

    The health secretary said the “troubling” report was “timely” because “right across the world people are angry about racial injustice”.

    On Monday night, the Department of Health and Social Care denied reports the delay was down to official concerns of potential civil unrest linked to global anger over the death of African-American George Floyd.

    Health Secretary Matt Hancock told the House of Commons the public was “understandably angry about injustices” and that he felt a “deep responsibility because this pandemic has exposed huge disparities in the health of our nation”.

    “Black lives matter, as do those of the poorest areas of our country which have worse health outcomes and we need to make sure all of these considerations are taken into account, and action is taken to level-up the health outcomes of people across this country,” he said.

    Speaking at the daily coronavirus briefing in Downing Street, Mr Hancock said “much more work” needed to be done to understand “what’s driving these disparities”.

    “We are absolutely determined to get to the bottom of this and find ways of closing this gap,” he said, adding that he has asked equalities minister Kemi Badenoch to continue working on the issue alongside Public Health England (PHE).

    ‘I can’t change my colour’ The BBC’s Rianna Croxford pressed Mr Hancock on whether there were any specific recommendations for people from ethnic minority backgrounds.

    He said everyone in “the different high risk categories” highlighted in the report should follow social distancing guidelines “very stringently”.

    Prof John Newton said although the virus was having a worse impact on black and minority ethnic people, “that is not necessarily because of their ethnicity” and could instead be related to their job, for example.

    He said the report’s findings needed to be “widely discussed before deciding exactly what needs to be done”.

    London Mayor Sadiq Khan said “lives depend on” finding out why the virus disproportionately impacts black and minority ethnic people, and what actions the government was taking to stop it.

    Davida Wilkins, a 38-year-old district nurse in the West Midlands, told the BBC she felt “even more anxious” about doing her job following the report’s publication.

    She said she felt “obligated” to continue her front-line role but added she cannot minimise the risks posed to her by the virus because “it’s the colour that I am and I can’t change it”.

    Call for public inquiry into virus BAME death risk

    Why are more BAME people dying from coronavirus?

    Black Britons face ‘twice the risk’ of virus death The rapid review was launched when it became clear that some people were getting more sick with coronavirus than others.

    PHE reviewed thousands of existing health records and other virus data to look at disparities by:

    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

  • More countries to ease coronavirus restrictions as global cases rise

    More countries in Europe and Asia began to ease restrictions and resume operations, but more than 1 million cases of COVID-19 have been recorded in Latin America and the Caribbean, now the new epicentre of the coronavirus pandemic.

    Globally, confirmed COVID-19 cases have surpassed 6.16 million, according to data compiled by the Center for Systems Science and Engineering at Johns Hopkins University.

    New Epicenter

    Brazil on Sunday said its nationwide tally of confirmed COVID-19 cases reached 514,849 after 16,409 people tested positive in the past 24 hours, while the death toll neared 30,000. Its death toll rose to 29,314, the fourth highest in the global pandemic after the United States, Britain and Italy, after 480 deaths had been reported since Saturday, while another 4,208 deaths are still being investigated for any linkage with COVID-19, the Ministry of Health said.

    Also on Sunday, Mexico’s Deputy Health Minister Hugo Lopez-Gatell said that the country reported 3,152 new coronavirus cases in the past 24 hours, bringing the total number of confirmed cases in the country to 90,664.

    There were 151 new coronavirus deaths in Mexico, taking total fatalities to 9,930, Lopez-Gatell added.

    Meanwhile, Chile’s COVID-19 cases increased by 4,830 to reach 99,688 on Sunday.

    In the past 24 hours, 57 more patients died, the highest number of fatalities in a single day so far, taking the death toll from the disease to 1,054.

    A lockdown is in effect in the capital Santiago and the metropolitan area through June 5, as the region is the epicentre of the country’s outbreak.

    In recent weeks, Chile has seen an exponential rise in the number of cases and deaths, leading the government to set up field hospitals to deal with the growing number of patients.

    Easing Restrictions

    Italy has now recorded fewer than 600 new cases per day for eight consecutive days, a dramatic drop from peaks of more than 6,000 new infections a day when Italy was the epicentre of the pandemic in late March.

    Recent trends show that the spread of the virus has slowed dramatically despite a gradual easing of Italy’s national lockdown at a two-week interval, first on May 4 and again on May 18.

    The next step toward easing will come on June 3, when Italians will be allowed to move freely between regions even if for non-essential reasons.

    It will be the first time such travels will be allowed since March 9, the day before the national lockdown entered into force.

    Many businesses across Turkey on Sunday also prepared to resume operation for the first time after over two months of closure amid a slowdown in the spread of COVID-19.

    Restaurants, cafes, parks, beaches, daycare centres, kindergartens, libraries, sports facilities, swimming pools, and museums will be operational as of June 1 as part of the new normalization process announced on May 28.

    Following the announcement, the Health Ministry prepared a guide in particular for the eating and drinking industry, explaining the new rules in a detailed way.

    Likewise, the Egyptian government on Sunday announced a decision to reduce its curfew from 10 hours to nine, following a meeting led by Prime Minister Mostafa Madbouly.

    The government has already started gradual reopening of services and offices suspended since mid-March amid a “coexistence plan” to maintain anti-coronavirus precautionary measures while resuming services, businesses and economic activities.

    Chairing Saturday’s Downing Street daily briefing, British Culture Secretary Oliver Dowden said Britons will be able to exercise outside with up to five others from different households from Monday, provided that strict social distancing guidelines are followed.

    He also announced that from Monday, competitive sport will be allowed behind closed doors in England, paving the way for the return of live sports on TV screens in almost three months.

    The move came as some experts warned that lifting restrictions before cases come down is too “risky.”

    Professor Jonathan Van-Tam, England’s deputy chief medical officer, said that Britons need to “actually follow the guidance.”

    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: GNA

  • Government hiding behind coronavirus to spend recklessly – Minority

    The Minority in parliament is claiming that the government is hiding behind the outbreak of the coronavirus to spend recklessly.

    Spokesperson on Finance for the Minority Mr. Cassiel Ato Forson says the Minority will resist any attempt by the government to spend recklessly because they think that the implication on the economy will be severe.

    Addressing a press conference after the Finance Minister Ken Ofori-Atta had presented a report before the House on the limit of borrowing of the government under sub-section (6) of section 30 of the Bank of Ghana Act, 2002 (Act 612) in the novel coronavirus (COVID-) emergency, the former deputy finance minister said the government is only doing this to finance their 2020 campaign.

    The Bank of Ghana (BoG) has released the first tranche of GH¢5.5 billion of the GH¢10 billion emergency facility the government is seeking to support the national response to the fight the coronavirus disease.

    The Finance Minister told parliamentarians that, the release, was consistent with global policy responses of central banks with large scale asset purchases to provide support to manage the pandemic.

    But the Ranking Member on the Finance Committee, Mr Cassiel Ato Forson, is alleging that the government is seeking the funds from the central bank just to use the money to finance the elections expenditures of the New Patriotic Party (NPP).

    The move he lamented will lead to inflation and affect every Ghanaian.

    The government he explained should have done reprogramming of their budget as being done by other countries.

    The president he opined should have also reduced his number of ministers as part of efforts to deal with the impact of the coronavirus on the economy.

    Source: rainbowradioonline.com

  • Pope calls for end to ‘pandemic of poverty’ after virus

    Pope Francis called on Saturday for a “more just and equitable society” in the post-coronavirus world, and for people to act to “end the pandemic of poverty”.
    “Once we emerge from this pandemic, we will not be able to keep doing what we were doing, and as we were doing it. No, everything will be different,” he said, speaking in Spanish in a video message to mark the feast of Pentecost.

    “From the great trials of humanity — among them this pandemic — one emerges better or worse. You don’t emerge the same. I ask this of you: how do you want to come out of it? Better or worse?” he added.
    People needed to open their minds and hearts to learn the central lesson from this crisis: “We are one humanity,” said the pope.
    “We know it, we knew it, but this pandemic that we are living through has made us experience it in a much more dramatic way,” he added.

    Now there was a duty to build a new reality particularly for the poorest, who had been discarded, the pope said.
    “All the suffering will be of no use if we do not build together a more just, more equitable, more Christian society, not in name but in reality,” he added.

    Source: AFP

  • Coronavirus: Brazil now fourth-highest nation in Covid-19 deaths

    The number of coronavirus fatalities in Brazil has risen by almost 1,000 in a day, making the country’s overall death toll the world’s fourth-highest.

    Its figure of 28,834 has now surpassed France, and only the US, the UK and Italy have recorded more deaths.

    President Jair Bolsonaro has consistently played down the outbreak, although the country has the world’s second-highest number of cases.

    He has criticised state lockdowns for harming Brazil’s economy and jobs.

    What are the latest figures?

    Brazil’s health ministry said the past 24 hours had seen 956 new deaths.

    This puts it past France’s total of 28,774. Even if new figures raised the French total back above Brazil, the trends in the two countries show deaths in the Latin American nation are on a far steeper upward trend.

    According to a count by Johns Hopkins University, Brazil now has 498,440 confirmed cases.

    Only the US has more, with 1.77 million.

    The number of deaths in Brazil has been doubling roughly every two weeks, compared to about every two months in the UK, four months in France, and five months in Italy.

    Experts have warned that the real figure may be far higher due to a lack of testing.

    Will this change Brazil’s policies?

    Mr Bolsonaro is unlikely to alter his stance, arguing that the economic fallout of lockdowns is worse than the outbreak.

    He has fought what he calls “the tyranny of total quarantine” by state governors – despite the upward tick in cases – and has even called for Brazil’s football season to resume.

    He has also been seen mingling with hundreds of supporters in Brasilia while not wearing a face mask.

    On Sunday, Pope Francis added to the pressure on the president by highlighting the plight of the people of the Amazon.

    “We call on the Holy Spirit to grant light and strength to the Church and to society in Amazonia, which has been harshly tested by the pandemic,” he said.

    Amazonas state has one of Brazil’s highest infection rates and also one of the most underfunded health systems.

    Many experts believe Central and South America are now the major hotspots for increased infections.

    A combination of under-pressure healthcare systems and a mixed response by governments to the severity of Covid-19 has meant the region cannot apply the same easing of lockdowns taking place in Europe and elsewhere.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Russia says coronavirus infections pass 400,000

    Russia on Sunday reported 9,268 new cases of the novel coronavirus, raising the national tally to 405,843.

    Officials said 138 people had died of COVID-19, the respiratory disease caused by the coronavirus, in the last 24 hours, pushing to nationwide toll up to 4,693.

    Source: reuters.com

  • Thomas Partey intensifies training ahead of La Liga return

    Ghana and Atletico Madrid midfielder Thomas Partey has intensified his training following the announcement of La Liga’s return next month.

    The Spanish topflight return on June 11 when Real Betis face Sevilla in the Seville derby, with next season confirmed to start on September 12.

    The La Liga ha been on break since the outbreak of the deadly coronavirus but life is gradually returning to normal with players engaged in contact training.

    Spanish football authorities are looking forward to ending this season’s campaign on the 18-19 of July.

    Partey and his teammates are set to fight for a place in next season’s UEFA Champions League with eleven games left to end the campaign.

    The in-demand Ghana international is however been pursued by several clubs with Arsenal favourites to land the 26-year old.

    Partey has been outstanding for the Rojiblancos this season, helping them to the quarterfinals of the UEFA Champions League after beating holders Liverpool.

    Source: Ghana Soccernet

  • Coronavirus: Highlighting environmental cleanliness is vital – MCE

    Mr Isaac Kwadwo Buabeng, the Municipal Chief Executive for Nsawam-Adoagyiri Municipality, has said there is the need to highlight environmental cleanliness as we intensify the fight against COVID 19.

    Mr Isaac Kwadwo Buabeng made the call in an interview with the Ghana News Agency at Nsawam after a clean-up exercise organized by the municipal assembly, Ghana Health Services, NADMO, Ministry of Agriculture, Department of Sanitation and others.

    They cleared choked drains and cleaned the streets around the main Nsawam market, Nsawam Lorry station and the Commercial Bank streets amongst others. Mr Isaac Kwadwo Buabeng said as at yet Nsawam has not recorded any case of COVID 19 but recently two suspected cases were rushed to the Nsawam Government Hospital and fortunately, they tested negative.

    Mrs Perpetual B. Decker, Officer in charge of Agriculture at the Assembly, said there is the need for all to understand that COVID 19 is real, hence the need for all farmers to protect themselves by adhering to the safety protocols introduced by the health authorities.

    Mr Francis Kwame Safo, Municipal Health Sanitation Officer, said there is the need for all in the municipality to participate in frequent clean up exercises to rid their areas of vectors of diseases.

    Source: GNA

  • Coronavirus: South Korea closes schools again after biggest spike in weeks

    More than 200 schools in South Korea have been forced to close just days after they re-opened, due to a new spike in virus cases.

    Thousands of students had earlier on Wednesday returned to school as the country began easing virus restrictions.

    But just a day later, 79 new cases were recorded, the highest daily figure in two months.

    Most of these cases have been linked to a distribution centre outside Seoul.

    The warehouse, in the city of Bucheon, is run by the country’s biggest e-commerce firm Coupang, and officials have said the facility was not strictly complying with infection control measures. Health officials even discovered traces of Covid-19 on workers’ shoes and clothes.

    It’s possible that South Korea will continue to see a rise in cases as it continues to test thousands of employees from the centre.

    Some 58 new cases were recorded on Friday, bringing the total number of cases nationwide to 11,402.

    A ‘hotbed for the virus’

    A total of 251 schools in Bucheon have now been forced to close. A report by the Korea Times, quoting the Ministry of Education, says a further 117 schools in the capital Seoul have also postponed their re-opening.

    One student in Seoul, whose mother worked at the Coupang warehouse, had been found to have the virus.

    Public parks and museums across Seoul and its surrounding cities have now been closed, businesses are being urged to encourage more flexible working, and people are once again being asked to avoid mass gatherings.

    South Korea endured one of the worst outbreaks of the virus earlier this year, but had appeared to have brought it under control, thanks to an extensive “trace, test and treat” programme.

    Recent weeks, however, have seen new clusters emerge, including one linked to a man who visited five nightclubs and bars in Seoul’s nightlife district of Itaewon earlier this month.

    According to Yonhap News, some 266 cases have been traced to the Itaewon cluster.

  • Coronavirus: Speed up industrialization Andani to Government

    The Managing Director of the Stanbic Bank, Alhassan Andani, has Ghana must speed up its industrialsation agenda to cushion the country from external shocks when situations like COVID-19 emerge.

    He said this while speaking at a webinar organized by the Ghana National Chamber of Commerce and Industries on strategies for business survival and growth.

    The webinar was on the theme, “COVID-19, financing options to stimulate local production.”

    He said : “For example, most of our import trade that was coming from Asia, China have had to suffer significant setbacks because of the disruption in global supply chains.

    “ So, what kind of alternatives would be available and this is the kind of conversation we would want to pick up with the National Chamber for Commerce and Industry and other industry players to see how we can diversify our economy away from a huge reliance on Asia and China generally,” he said.

    The government is President Akufo-Addo is embarking on industrialization to strengthen the local economy.

    The government identified the strategic interventions including the One District, One Factory (1D1F) initiative, the National Industrial Revitalisation Programme (NIRP), the establishment of Industrial Parks and Special Economic Zones (IPSEZ), export development and SME development. As some of the measures to achieve that aim.

    Source: laudbusiness.com

  • Coronavirus deaths in US top 100,000

    The US has passed 100,000 deaths in the coronavirus outbreak in less than four months.

    It has seen more fatalities than any other country, while its 1.69 million confirmed infections account for about 30% of the worldwide total.

    The first US infection was reported in Washington state on 21 January.

    Globally there have been 5.6 million people recorded as infected and 354,983 deaths since the virus emerged in the Chinese city of Wuhan late last year.

    The US death toll stands at 100,276, according to Johns Hopkins University in Maryland, which has been tracking the pandemic.

    It means that around as many Americans have died from COVID-19 than from the Korea, Vietnam, Iraq and Afghanistan wars combined.

    But on a per capita basis the US ranks ninth in its mortality rate behind the likes of Belgium, the United Kingdom, France and Italy, according to the university.

    The US death toll is still climbing, and health officials say the actual number is likely higher than the recorded count.

    What’s the national picture?

    Twenty states reported a rise in new cases for the week ending on Sunday, according to a Reuters study.

    North Carolina, Wisconsin and Arkansas are among those seeing a steady rise in cases.

    The caseload remains stubbornly high in a number of metropolitan areas, including Chicago, Los Angeles and suburban Washington DC.

    Some hard-hit states are seeing a drop in death rates, including New York, where 21,000 residents have died.

    During the peak of the crisis in the city, the daily death toll was in the hundreds. Hospitals were overwhelmed and makeshift morgues were built outside health facilities.

    What has been the political response?

    President Donald Trump has insisted that without his administration’s actions the death toll would be 25 times higher, though critics have accused him of a slow response.

    State governors have also been blamed for failing to grasp early enough the lethal threat that the virus posed to nursing homes.

    Initially, the Republican president downplayed the pandemic, comparing it to the seasonal flu. Back in February he said the US had the virus “under control” and that by April it could “miraculously go away”.

    He predicted 50,000-60,000 deaths, then 60,000-70,000 and then “substantially under 100,000”.

    Mr Trump also argued this month it was “a badge of honour” that the US had the world’s highest number of confirmed infections “because it means our testing is much better”.

    A study from Columbia University in New York suggested about 36,000 fewer people would have died if the US had acted sooner.

    Joe Biden, Mr Trump’s likely Democratic challenger in November’s White House election, issued a message directly to grieving families on Wednesday.

    “To those hurting, I’m so sorry for your loss,” the former vice-president said in a tweet. “The nation grieves with you.”

    He also criticised the Trump administration’s handling of the crisis. “This is a fateful milestone we should not have reached; it could have been avoided,” he said.

    How is the lockdown easing?

    With nearly 39 million Americans out of work during the pandemic, the US is pressing ahead state by state with reopening the coronavirus-frozen economy, even as the death toll continues to move upwards.

    All 50 states have begun to ease COVID-19 rules in some form.

    The world’s largest theme park, Walt Disney World in Florida, has plans to begin opening on 11 July, if the state governor allows it.

    Four Las Vegas casinos owned by MGM Resorts are also scheduled to reopen on 4 July. The company says employees will be tested for Covid-19 regularly.

    Currently, there is no vaccine for Covid-19. There is also no confirmed treatment for the disease, but there are several being tested.

    According to an AP-NORC poll conducted this month, just 49% of Americans said they would get a coronavirus vaccine if one became available.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: 43 sex workers deported from Mozambique for violating restrictions

    Police in Mozambique have deported 43 sex workers who were arrested for violating coronavirus restrictions.

    They included Zambians and Zimbabweans who were arrested in an operation last week, the authorities said.

    About 109 people were arrested for violating the state of emergency rules in Beira city.

    They included sex workers, traders and people found drinking along public roads.

    Some 77 of those arrested were sex workers, 43 of which were foreigners who were deported, according to the director of the police provincial command Fernando Ribeiro.

    Some of the alcohol sellers were children, he added.

    Mozambique has recorded 227 positive cases of Covid-19, 12 of which are in Sofala province.

    The country’s President Filipe Nyusi extended the state of emergency announced on 1 April for another month citing rising cases.

    During the state of emergency movement within the country is restricted, schools are closed and foreigners are not allowed into the country.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: US goes the Ghanaian way as Zipline Drone gets license to deliver PPEs and medical supplies

    Just over a month after the TIME magazine commended Ghana for being the first country to use drones in the fight against COVID-19 and reporting that the US was considering emulating Ghana’s example, the Federal Aviation Authority has granted Zipline, the company operating Ghana’s drones, an emergency aviation waiver to use its drones to help America’s Coronavirus response.

    In a special report last month, the TIME magazine praised Ghana”s innovative use of drones to deliver samples from remote villages to cities for COVID-19 tests and the US newspaper further revealed that the US was considering adopting the usage of drones in its Coronavirus response.

    Now the BBC has reported that drone firm Zipline, has been given the go-ahead to deliver medical supplies and personal protective equipment to hospitals in North Carolina.

    The firm will be allowed to use drones on two specified routes after the Federal Aviation Administration granted it an emergency waiver.

    It is the first time the FAA has allowed beyond-line-of-sight drone deliveries in the US and experts say the pandemic could help ease some drone-flight regulations.

    Zipline, which has been negotiating with the FAA, wants to expand to other hospitals and eventually offer deliveries to people’s homes.

    It has been granted a waiver for two routes involving round trips of up to 30 miles (48km).

    The drones will launch from a nearby fulfilment centre and drop off a box of medical products by parachute at designated spots. The drones can carry up to almost 4lb (1.8kg) of cargo and can fly at up to 80mph, even in rain or wind.

    The route is currently short but Zipline hopes eventually to deliver to other hospitals and even homes.

    “The Covid-19 pandemic has tasked us with being even more nimble and innovative in how to solve complex challenges,” said Angela Yochem, the chief digital officer of Novant Health, which is the partner for the service.

    “Fast-tracking our medical drone transport capability is just one example of how we’re pioneering in the health care industry, which is known for being resistant to change,”

    Ghana sets global pace

    Ghana became the first country in the world to resort to the use of drones to aid its COVID-19 response and that remarkable effort by the government was duly acknowledged by the New York Times.

    Following the revelation of United States’ desire to adopt the innovation,
    British Transport Secretary Grant Shaps announced in April that drones were being trialled to deliver medical supplies to help Britain’s response against the Coronavirus.

    The severity of the pandemic has now prompted a handful of new drone deliveries, the BBC reports.

    According to the BBC, Windracers Ultra fixed-wing drone has been delivering PPE from Hampshire to the Isle of Wight – a 10-minute journey – and in Ireland, Manna Aero is working with the health authority to deliver prescriptions and other essential supplies to a small rural town.

    Robotics expert Prof Noel Sharkey believes the pandemic could make drone deliveries more common.

    “In a global pandemic everything changes,” he said.

    Akuffo-Addo Government vindicated?

    Vice President Bawumia last year launched the Zipline Medical Drones service in the country to deliver essential medical service to remote areas in the country to salvage emergencies.

    With four centres in the country, the Zipline Service has been delivering essential medical supplies to health centres in remote communities, and in the midst of the Coronavirus pandemic, the government decided to resort to the Zipline drones to deliver medical supplies and samples for COVID-19 tests – a move which was globally hailed.

    But the introduction of the Zipline Drone Service in Ghana by the government was heavily criticised by the opposition NDC as a waste of money.

    However, considering the usefulness of the Zipline drone in medical deliveries in the country, the role it has played in Ghana’s COVID-19 response so far and the recent global craze for the use of drones for medical deliveries during the Coronavirus pandemic, it seems the Akufo-Addo government has been vindicated for its vision and investment in the Zipline drone service.

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • Coronavirus: Business and trade associations urged to strengthen themselves

    A business development consultant has stressed the need for business and trade associations to build their capacities and strengthen themselves to support their members in this COVID-19 era.

    Mr Nyaaba Aweeba Azongo, says the impact of the outbreak of the coronavirus pandemic on micro, small and medium scale businesses was very huge and it was important for the associations to device practical measures to assist their members to continue to stay in business.

    “The lockdown brought stalemate to the business community, especially the small scale ones who are largely in the informal sector.

    Capital depletion is the obvious consequences coupled with the low purchasing power to stimulate the economy”, Mr Azongo told the Ghana News Agency in an interview in Kumasi.

    He said though the government had announced a stimulus package for SMEs in the country, not all of them had the capacity as individuals, to access that credit facility to support their businesses.

    It was therefore, important for business and trade associations to strengthen themselves and use their numbers as collateral to support their members to access this stimulus package and other loan schemes from the banks.

    “The most practical solutions should be the strengthening of business associations and using the numbers as a collateral buffer for group scheme loans from the banks”, he pointed out.

    Mr Azongo said lack of adequate support to micro, small and medium scale businesses, especially those in the informal sector, had contributed to the increasing unemployment and poverty in many households in the country.

    He said the barbers, hairdressers, petty traders, table-top traders along the roadside, mechanics, shop owners, fitters, and other one-man businesses, who were in the majority in business operations in the country, needed financial support to stay on their feet amid the pandemic.

    The government had announced a one billion Ghana cedis stimulus package to support SMEs, which had been seriously hit by the negative impact of the coronavirus pandemic.

    The aim is to provide a soft and flexible credit facility to these groups of businesses to assist them to rebuild, maintain and expand their businesses to help reduce unemployment while sustaining the country’s economy from collapsing after COVID-19.

    However, Mr Azongo said it was important for business associations to step in to ensure that their benefits benefited from this package and other financial support from the banks.

    Source: GNA

  • Coronavirus: Traders urged to invest in procurement of PPE

    Madam Aba Oppong, a Human Rights Activist, has underscored the need for traders and shop owners to acquire for themselves Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) to prevent them from contracting the coronavirus.

    She said traders needed PPEs such as nose masks, hand sanitizers, and Veronica Buckets in their shops and places of work to protect themselves and their customers as well.

    “I am not against government authorities and philanthropists distributing such equipment to traders in this period, but I strongly urge them not to wait until they are given to them,” she explained, adding that, “the earlier one guards against contracting COVID-19, the better it will be for us all”.

    Madam Oppong who was speaking to the Ghana News Agency (GNA) in Kumasi, noted that her visits to some markets, especially, outside the city of Kumasi, had revealed that most traders are shunning the wearing of COVID-19 protective equipment.

    The explanations, given by the traders, according to the Human Rights Activist, were that they had not received their share of nose masks and sanitizers from the local authorities, hence the failure to use them.

    This, she said was posing a serious threat to such traders and community members since the virus continued to spread in the country every day.

    As of Wednesday, May 27, 2020, Ghana has recorded over of 7,000 total COVID-19 positive cases with 34 deaths.

    Madam Oppong called on the various district COVID-19 teams to intensify education in rural communities to avert misconceptions members perceived about the virus.

    She advised everybody to stop stigmatization since it had ripple effects on victims.

    Source: GNA

  • Coronavirus: Boris Johnson to face senior MPs amid cummings row

    Boris Johnson will be questioned by senior MPs later amid continued calls for his top adviser to resign.

    The prime minister will appear before the Commons Liaison Committee for 90 minutes, during which he will be asked about Dominic Cummings’ controversial lockdown trip to County Durham.

    Around 40 Tory MPs have called for Mr Cummings to resign or be fired after his 260-mile journey came to light.

    But cabinet minister Robert Jenrick told the BBC it was “time to move on”.

    Wednesday’s session, due to begin at 16.00 BST, will be the first time that the PM has faced questions from MPs since the allegations against Mr Cummings emerged at the end of last week.

    The bulk of the hearing will be devoted to the government’s handling of the coronavirus pandemic, including testing, PPE, schools and the economy, with the section on Mr Cummings’ actions due to last less than 30 minutes.

    On Wednesdays Mr Johnson would ordinarily face Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer at Prime Minister’s Questions, but MPs are currently on recess.

    Mr Cummings’ decision in March to drive from his London home to his parents’ farm in County Durham with his wife – who had coronavirus symptoms – and his son has dominated the headlines since the story broke on Friday night.

    The PM’s chief adviser gave a news conference on Monday, explaining that he decided to make the trip because he felt it would be better to self-isolate in a place where he had options for childcare if required.

    He has received the continued support of the prime minister, who said that his aide had acted legally and with integrity.

    But cross-party critics have called for Mr Cummings to leave No 10, while junior minister Douglas Ross resigned in protest.

    Boris Johnson seems determined not to change his mind and determined to cling on to Dominic Cummings.

    The PM’s calculation is a simple one – that we will all move on, with journalists and angry Conservative MPs finding other issues to focus on.

    There are an awful lot of very important coronavirus challenges coming down the track – whether schools will go back on Monday, whether test, track and trace is going to be rolled out effectively, whether we get 200,000 tests by the end of the month.

    And although about 40 or so Tory MPs have pretty much demanded that Mr Cummings should walk the plank, there’s been no organised campaign to crank up the pressure on the PM to get rid of him, and no big beast – a cabinet minister or the like – demanding he goes.

    So, Boris Johnson seems determined to tough it out and take the hit in terms of public opinion.

    But does it risk public anger turning into a public readiness to flout some of those locked down rules? Might people say: “I’ll do a Cummings – I’ll interpret the rules in my own way”?

    That is perhaps the most serious side to this whole saga.

    Sir Bob Neill, Tory MP for Bromley and Chislehurst, is among those calling for Mr Cummings to resign, saying the row had become a “distraction”.

    He told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme Mr Cummings had “real talents and abilities” but “no adviser is indispensable”.

    However, in a note to fellow MPs, Danny Kruger, former political secretary to Mr Johnson and now Tory MP for Devizes, said demanding the resignation of Mr Cummings was “basically declaring no confidence in the PM”.

    In response, Sir Bob said he didn’t accept this, adding: “This is actually about us wanting to help the prime minister to get back to be able to focus on the key task of pulling the country together.”

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: Denmark opens borders to divided lovers

    Denmark has opened its borders to couples who were separated from their partners by the coronavirus lockdown.

    As of Monday, cross-border couples who reside in the Nordic countries or Germany can now visit Denmark.

    Rules currently require people to prove their relationship with photos, text messages and emails.

    But the justice minister has announced these regulations will be relaxed in the coming days, so all that is needed is a letter signed by both parties.

    “If you say you are a boyfriend and sign [the letter], we will assume it [is true],” Justice minister Nick Hækkerup told broadcaster TV2.

    A number of European countries are considering reopening Europe’s internal borders as the outbreak eases.

    Germany has proposed allowing travel to all 26 other EU states plus the UK and non-EU countries like Iceland and Norway that are in the border-free Schengen zone from 15 June. The EU has issued guidance on how best to lift restrictions on travel.

    But many restrictions remain in place. Several people have told the BBC about their frustration with ongoing rules about partners even as countries ease their lockdown measures.

    What are the rules? Currently, the authorities say people must give the name, address and contact details of their partner in Denmark, as well as phone records, photos and text histories to prove the relationship.

    Permanent residents of Finland, Iceland, Germany, Norway and Sweden all qualify, provided their partner is a resident of Denmark.

    Police also said this applies only to people in serious relationships, which they defined as of roughly six months – with actual face-to-face meetings and not purely online or via the phone.

    Opposition parties, however, criticised the stringent rules, prompting a government rethink. While they are sticking to the guidance about “serious” relationships, partners will simply need to sign a piece of paper declaring this is the case, and will be allowed to enter the country.

    “Although the other parties are in opposition, they can sometimes say sensible things – and I always listen to the other parties,” Mr Hækkerup said.

    The rules also say anyone from Germany or the Nordic countries who owns a holiday home in Denmark can come to the country.

    The new regulations will be good news for thousands of separated couples.

    One pair who caught the world’s attention when the outbreak hit Europe in March were octogenarians Inga Rasmussen from Denmark and Karsten Tüchsen Hansen from Germany.

    Both have been travelling to the border town of Aventoft to chat and share a drink, sitting at the recommended safe distance.

    But there are many others who remain separated from their partners by borders.

    Some in Denmark have created a Facebook group, Girlfriends Separated by Border Closures, for those affected under the lockdown.

    Carl Gustav Gylling, a 23-year-old student from Copenhagen, has not seen his Swiss girlfriend since the start of March. Though he supported the lockdown initially, Mr Gylling told the BBC he was growing frustrated with European governments discussing opening borders to tourists and international business, but not for partners to frequently visit one another.

    “I’m more than sure right now that couples would do anything to see each other,” he said in emailed comments. “Even going into a three-week quarantine [on arrival], which would solve basically all problems.”

    Christian Trampedach – separated from his girlfriend, who lives in Brazil – said the government had “equated couples and tourists” during discussions about ending the lockdown.

    “I dare to say that being away from your loved ones causes more emotional distress than being forced to skip another summer vacation,” he said.

    Donny ter Heide is a 24-year-old project engineer living in Enschede in the Netherlands. His girlfriend Mira lives in Copenhagen, and they have not seen each other since 16 February.

    They chat daily on the phone and online, and use Skype at least once a week. He told the BBC the worst part was not having “a timeframe” for things to go back to normal.

    “We would just like to know when we’re able to see each other and what the rules will be if we visit one another, like, do we need to stay in quarantine or anything,” he said. “It is making it very hard on both of us.”

    Laila Svanholmer agrees. Her boyfriend lives in California in the US, and she told the BBC that not knowing when she might see him again was “unbearable”.

    “It’s frustrating, stressful and heartbreaking to be forcefully separated from the person you love,” she said, describing the border closures as “entirely political decisions”, and not medical ones.

    She also questioned why tourists with holiday homes could visit and not partners. “They come here to spend a week or two at the beach. How can that be more essential than visiting a loved one?”

    US President Donald Trump imposed a travel ban on 26 European countries in March, a move met with anger and confusion in the EU.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: Egypt doctors accuse government over medics’ deaths

    Doctors have accused Egypt’s health ministry of negligence in its handling of Covid-19 and said it bears “full responsibility” for medics’ deaths.

    A union said on Monday that 19 doctors had so far died from the disease and more than 350 others had been infected.

    It blamed a lack of personal protective equipment and beds for sickened staff, and warned the system could “collapse”.

    The health minister insisted sufficient protection had been offered and medics had received the “best possible care”.

    Egypt, the most populous country in the Arab world, has so far reported 17,967 confirmed cases of Covid-19 and 783 associated deaths.

    The doctors’ union said the deaths and infections among its members were the result of the health ministry “falling short” of doing its duty to protect them.

    “The health ministry has an obligation towards doctors and all medics who are sacrificing their lives on the front lines to defend the safety of the homeland.”

    “It is imperative to provide them with the necessary protection and rapid medical intervention for those who contract the disease,” it added.

    With the outbreak showing no sign of abating and quarantine hospitals running at capacity, the union warned that “the health system could completely collapse, leading to a catastrophe affecting the entire country if the health ministry’s negligence and lack of action towards medical staff is not rectified”.

    In response, Health Minister Hala Zayed said that since the start of the outbreak, the ministry had “ensured the allocation of a floor in every quarantine hospital with a 20-bed capacity to treat those infected among medical staff”.

    Staff were tested for the coronavirus upon entering and leaving hospitals, and there were “sufficient stocks” of personal protective equipment, she added.

    Ms Zayed also stated that 11 doctors had so far died, rather than 19.

    The union’s warning came two days after the death of a 31-year-old doctor, Walid Yehia, who was unable to get a bed at an quarantine hospital in Cairo.

    “His colleagues and I were with him, appealing for help, but there was zero response,” his brother, Ashraf Zalouk, wrote on Facebook.

    Social media users contrasted Dr Yehia’s treatment to that given to the actress Ragaa al-Gadawy.

    The 81-year-old was tested quickly for the virus and admitted to a quarantine hospital in the city of Ismailiya based on the personal recommendation of the health minister, news websites quoted her daughter Amira Mokhtar as saying.

    Ms Zayed has reportedly ordered an investigation into the death of Dr Yehia and promised to take “all legal measures in case of any shortcomings”.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Dominic Cummings: Minister Douglas Ross quits over senior aide’s lockdown actions

    Junior minister Douglas Ross has resigned after Dominic Cummings’ defense of his trip to County Durham during the coronavirus lockdown.

    The Scotland Office minister said the senior aide’s view of the government guidance was “not shared by the vast majority of people”.

    Mr Cummings has explained why he drove 260 miles in March from his home to his parents’ farm with his wife and child.

    No 10 said the prime minister regretted Mr Ross’ decision to stand down.

    In a statement announcing his resignation, Mr. Ross, who remains Tory MP for Moray, said: “While the intentions may have been well-meaning, the reaction to this news shows that Mr Cummings interpretation of the government advice was not shared by the vast majority of people who have done as the government asked.”

    “I have constituents who didn’t get to say goodbye to loved ones; families who could not mourn together; people who didn’t visit sick relatives because they followed the guidance of the government.

    “I cannot in good faith tell them they were all wrong and one senior adviser to the government was right.”

    A No 10 spokesman said: “The prime minister would like to thank Douglas Ross for his service to government and regrets his decision to stand down as parliamentary undersecretary of state for Scotland.”

    Mr Cummings has faced calls to resign after it emerged he had driven his child and ill wife from London to County Durham during lockdown.

    At a news conference in the garden of 10 Downing Street on Monday afternoon, he said he did not regret his actions. and believed he acted reasonably and legally.

    On the subject of why he then drove his family to the town of Barnard Castle – 15 days after he had displayed symptoms – Mr Cummings said he was testing his eyesight to see if he could make the trip back down to London. He explained that he had experienced some eyesight problems during his illness.

    Douglas Ross backed Boris Johnson to be Tory leader and is not one of those in the party seen as hostile to his style of government.

    So this resignation is a blow – and could point to wider discontent.

    There is a Scottish subplot – the Scottish Tories have been accused of hypocrisy for demanding Scotland’s chief medical officer resign then staying quiet about Dominic Cummings.

    Mr Ross’s reasons for resigning are scathing.

    He says he cannot tell his constituents in good faith that they were wrong to miss funerals and other family events, but Mr Cummings was right.

    He says he has listened to his constituents and resigned. The question now is whether other Tory MPs are continuing to get the same feedback.

    Labour’s shadow Scottish Secretary Ian Murray said Mr Ross had done the “decent thing” by resigning.

    “He understands that it’s not acceptable to have one rule for Boris Johnson’s closest adviser, another for everybody else,” he said.

    The SNP’s Westminster leader Ian Blackford said he respected Mr Ross for taking the “difficult decision” to resign and called for Mr Cummings to be removed from his post “without further delay”.

    “This issue transcends politics. It is about protecting trust and confidence in the public health advice,” he said in a tweet.

    Opposition MPs are meeting to discuss their next steps in deciding how to hold Boris Johnson and his senior aide to account.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: Avoid indiscriminate spitting in public – Health expert warns

    To stop the spread of the coronavirus, the Eastern Regional Health Promotion Officer, Mrs. Bridget Anim, has urged Ghanaians to steer clear of each other when they leave their homes.

    She cautioned Ghanaians against indiscriminate coughing and spitting in public because Coronavirus spreads through droplets therefore sputum from an infected person could easily be transmitted to others around.

    She that coughing should be done into the elbow away from people if a person is hard-pressed for a cough.

    Speaking to the media at Aburi in the Eastern region on gate-keeping roles amidst COVID-19, Mrs. Anim said it is important to guard against stigmatization of Coronavirus patients and hoped that a vaccine would be found soon to keep COVID -19 at bay.

    She added that concerted efforts were required from all stakeholders to make the country alert, respond positively, and to forestall any possible outbreak of the deadly- flu-like virus.

    Source: Pulse.com.gh

  • GhanaWeb Polls: 55% of Ghanaians call for another lockdown to curb spread of coronavirus

    Results from a poll conducted by GhanaWeb on whether the government should impose another lockdown in the country indicate that 55.14% representing 381 votes were in favour of another lockdown to ease the spread of COVID-19.

    Meanwhile, 40.96% representing 283 voted against the idea of any further restrictions.

    Here is a link to the polls on GhanaWeb

    In the heat of this discussion, President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo on Sunday, May 24, 2020, indicated that plans are underway to further ease the coronavirus restrictions adding that, “we have to find a way back, but in safety, for we cannot be under these restrictions forever.”

    A study conducted by GhanaWeb on the impact of coronavirus on businesses proved that the beauty industry, event organizers, private school owners, fashion designers, among other service providers have been greatly hit by the Coronavirus crisis. Thus the need to ease the restrictions in other to save these businesses.

    Right from the time government lifted the 3-week partial lockdown in some parts of the country, the move has been greeted with diverse reactions.

    To a larger section of Ghanaians, the increasing number of coronavirus cases require stricter measures to halt the spread of the virus. Some citizens, on the other hand, believe the virus does not exist.

    Below are some comments from the polls:

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • First Spanish beaches to reopen as lockdown eases

    Coronavirus lockdown measures will finally be eased for people in Madrid and Barcelona from Monday, while elsewhere in Spain the first beaches are due to reopen.

    Residents in the two cities can now meet in groups of up to 10 people in their homes or on the terraces of bars and restaurants.

    The gates of the capital’s parks will also be reopened, and major museums will be able to receive a limited number of visitors.

    The Madrid and Barcelona regions, the most populated in the country, and a large part of Castile-Leon in the northwest are moving into the first phase of Spain’s four-phase deconfinement programme, following what has been one of the strictest lockdowns in the world.

    These regions have been on a slower deconfinement track as they bore the brunt of the pandemic in Spain, which has killed more than 28,700 people to date, one of the world’s highest tolls.

    Everyone must continue to wear a mask, which is already compulsory in buildings and on public streets when it is not possible to keep a distance of two metres (six feet).

    The rest of the country meanwhile — 22 million out of Spain’s 47 million inhabitants — is moving on to the second phase, which is expected to last until the end of June.

    Restaurants may then reopen to a limited number of customers, and outings for walks or sports will no longer be limited to certain hours of the day.

    As the summer heat arrives, beaches on the Atlantic Ocean coast and in much of Andalusia, as well as on the Balearic and Canary Islands, are open for swimming, subject to safety measures.

    The health ministry recommends limiting the number of visitors to the beaches, creating boundaries and spacing umbrellas four metres apart.

    Only locals will benefit for the time being. Travel between regions is still forbidden and foreigners arriving in Spain must quarantine for 14 days.

    But the government plans to reopen the borders to foreign tourists in July.

    The lockdown, in force since mid-March, has been among the most severe in the world.

    In the first few weeks, Spaniards could hardly set foot outside and their children were kept indoors.

    Many residents have become impatient over the government’s slow and cautious process of lifting the restrictions.

    Thousands of people protested on Saturday by car in major Spanish cities at the call of the far-right Vox party.

    Drivers honked their horns, waved Spanish flags and banged on pots and pans to denounce the management of the coronavirus crisis by the left-wing government of Pedro Sanchez.

    Source: france24.com

  • Japan set to lift coronavirus emergency as cases slow

    Japan was poised to lift its nationwide state of emergency over the coronavirus on Monday, gradually reopening the world’s third-biggest economy after new cases slowed to a crawl.

    Compared to hard-hit areas in Europe, the United States, Russia and Brazil, Japan has been spared the worst of the pandemic, with 16,581 cases in total and 830 deaths.

    Yet with infections threatening to run out of control, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe declared an initial state of emergency for Tokyo and six other regions on April 7 – later expanding it to cover the entire country.

    Businesses and schools were urged to shut and people were requested to remain home but Japan’s “lockdown” was far softer than in other parts of the world and there was no punishment for anyone flouting the rules.

    Citizens largely heeded the orders, with most of Tokyo’s famously packed streets falling quiet, and the number of new infections has fallen from a peak of around 700 per day to just a few dozen nationally.

    There does not appear to be one single reason why the pandemic has hit Japan less hard than other comparable countries, and trying to pinpoint possible causes has become a favourite sport on social media.

    High levels of hygiene and general health, removing shoes indoors, widespread masks, bowing as a greeting rather than shaking hands or kissing: all have been advanced as possible reasons but analysts agree there has been no silver bullet.

    Recession and deflation

    Japan has come under fire for a relatively low level of testing with around 270,000 carried out, the lowest per capita rate in the group of seven advanced economies, according to Worldometer.

    But Japanese authorities insist that mass testing was never their strategy, as cases remained low enough to rely on aggressive contact tracing to contain clusters.

    Nevertheless, testing has been ramped up in recent weeks as authorities warn of a possible next wave of the virus that could overwhelm their previous strategy.

    Medical facilities are also being boosted after horror stories of coronavirus victims being unable to find a suitable hospital bed – mainly for administrative reasons as only certain establishments are designated to deal with the virus.

    Although the human toll has been less severe than in other parts of the world, the economy – already struggling from the effects of natural disasters and a consumption tax hike – has suffered.

    The world’s third-largest economy has plunged into its first recession since 2015, data published last week showed, shrinking by 0.9 percent in the first quarter.

    With economic activity slowing to a crawl, the spectre of deflation is looming again, with consumer prices in March logging their first drop in more than three years.

    In a bid to stem the damage, Abe has ordered a mass handout of 100,000 yen ($930) per person, part of a stimulus package worth around $1 trillion.

    Coronavirus has also taken its toll politically, with polls showing support for Abe falling rapidly – a recent survey for the Asahi Shimbun suggested backing had dropped to 29 percent – the lowest since he took office in 2012.

    He performed a rare u-turn on the cash handouts – initially announcing an entirely different policy – and is seen to have bungled another signature move involving the distribution of two masks per household, which attracted widespread mockery.

    Source: france24.com

  • What sin have we committed to be omitted from stimulus package — Takyi Arhin asks government

    Outspoken football administrator Takyi Arhin could not hide displeasure with the government over the exclusion of football clubs from its Coronavirus relief package.

    The government on Wednesday announced a financial package to cushion businesses and enterprises affected by the lockdown.

    Several businesses and institutions have been closed down indefinitely with workers told to stay at home as the country intensifies efforts to stop the spread of the deadly novel virus.

    The football fraternity was not spared. Clubs have suspended camps until further notice, but are still expected to pay their players, coaches and other workers.

    But the Ghana FA plea to government to be considered for the stimulus funds to be shared for organisations that have been hit by the crisis was unsuccessful as the National Board for Small Scale Industries (NBSSI) in charge of distributing the package announced that football clubs were not factored.

    “What sin has football people committed that we are not part of the package,” Arhin quizzed on Happy FM.

    “Football is a serious business and we employ about 4000 people. We pay taxes and also we are citizens.”

    He concluded, “We have sent a proposal to government and still waiting for them.”

    Ghana have so far recorded 193 cases. Five persons have died with 31 others recovering as the government puts Greater Accra and Greater Kumasi under a 14-day partial lockdown.

    Source: Ghana Soccernet

  • Coronavirus: Dominic Cummings ‘made second lockdown trip’

    The prime minister’s chief aide Dominic Cummings is facing fresh allegations that he breached lockdown rules.

    He and the government had said he acted “reasonably and legally” by driving from London to County Durham while his wife had Coronavirus symptoms.

    The Observer and Sunday Mirror are now reporting he was seen in the North East on two more occasions, after recovering from his own COVID-19 symptoms and returning to work in London.

    No 10 said the story is “inaccurate”.

    Ministers have said Mr Cummings and his wife had chosen to self-isolate at a property adjacent to other family members in case they needed help with childcare.

    Speaking to reporters outside his home in London on Saturday, he said he would not be resigning and had done the “right thing” by travelling 260 miles with his wife and young son to be near relatives when she developed COVID-19 symptoms at the end of March.

    However, the two newspapers said witnesses have reported seeing Mr Cummings in Barnard Castle, more than 25 miles from Durham, on 12 April.

    On 14 April, he was seen in London. According to the reports, he was spotted again in Houghall Woods near Durham on 19 April.

    Mr Cummings is yet to publicly respond to the new claims, but the Sunday Telegraph reports that he told Downing Street that the allegations he made a second trip from London to Durham were “totally false”.

    But the BBC’s political correspondent Iain Watson says ministers will be hoping that questions about Mr Cummings’ movements will not have dented public trust in the government’s lockdown guidance.

    Quit calls

    The story of Mr Cummings’ journey to Durham originally appeared in the Guardian and Daily Mirror on Friday evening.

    In response to the fresh claims in the papers’ Sunday publications, Downing Street said: “Yesterday the Mirror and Guardian wrote inaccurate stories about Mr Cummings.

    “Today they are writing more inaccurate stories including claims that Mr Cummings returned to Durham after returning to work in Downing Street on 14 April.

    “We will not waste our time answering a stream of false allegations about Mr Cummings from campaigning newspapers.”

    Opposition parties renewed their calls for the prime minister’s adviser to go.

    The SNP’s Ian Blackford said Mr Cummings “has to leave office”, while acting Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey told BBC Radio 5 Live: “If Dominic Cummings has not been sacked by tomorrow, I think the prime minister’s judgement is in serious doubt.”

    Ministerial backing

    Government advice had been for people to stay at home during the first weeks of lockdown. Self-isolation at home continues to be advised for those with coronavirus symptoms.

    However, ministers offered their support to Mr Cummings earlier in the day, with Health Secretary Matt Hancock tweeting that it was “entirely right” for the senior aide to find childcare.

    Cabinet Office Minister Michael Gove tweeted: “Caring for your wife and child is not a crime.”

    England’s deputy chief medical officer Dr Jenny Harries also said all health guidance should be applied with “common sense”.

    But following the fresh reports concerning the alleged second visit to County Durham, a Labour source said: “If these latest revelations are true, why on earth were Cabinet ministers sent out this afternoon to defend Dominic Cummings?”

    Before the new allegations, both Labour and the SNP said Mr Cummings flouted the government’s own advice and called for an urgent inquiry into his conduct.

    It comes as the government announced 282 more people had died with Coronavirus since Friday, across all settings, bringing the total to 36,675.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Russian women stuck in lockdown hell as abuse surges

    Ineta Akhtyamova’s husband flew into a rage in late April, about a month into Moscow’s coronavirus lockdown.

    She was preparing a meal in the small apartment she shares with her partner when he exploded, calling her names, hitting her and shouting at her to get out.

    “So off I went. I just could not take it anymore,” said Akhtyamova, a 50-year-old singer who lost her income due to confinement restrictions.

    “I’m bad if I stay quiet. I’m bad if I talk. I’m bad if I make soup. I’m bad if I cook potatoes,” she told AFP.

    When her partner hit her before, she would run to friends. This time she had nowhere to go.

    Friends were reluctant to take her in over fears of coronavirus infection, and two women’s shelters turned her away because of Moscow’s city-wide quarantine.

    With the help of a crisis centre, Akhtyamova finally found temporary shelter in a small, two-star hotel in eastern Moscow.

    Rights groups say that domestic violence has surged around the world since the start of lockdowns, with the stress caused by social isolation and fears around financial security straining even healthy relationships.

    The quarantine has hit victims of domestic violence especially hard — some have seen verbal hostility escalate into physical abuse, and for others routine beatings have become even more severe.

    Women in Russia have been left especially vulnerable.

    Suffer in silence

    “The situation here is worse because there’s no law,” said Marina Pisklakova-Parker, a women’s rights campaigner.

    In 2017, President Vladimir Putin decriminalised some forms of domestic violence and most abusers can get away with a fine.

    Advocates say the lack of legislation, including restraining orders, as well as a shortage of shelters nationwide and police who are unresponsive to appeals for help, have left Russian women unprotected.

    Every year, nearly 16.5 million women across the country fall victim to domestic violence, according to activists’ pre-quarantine estimates.

    Pisklakova-Parker, founder of the ANNA women’s rights group, said they registered a 30 percent spike in calls to their nationwide hotline between February and late April.

    Had Russia adopted a domestic violence law, coping with the upsurge would have been easier, she said.

    Last month, Pisklakova-Parker and several other campaigners urged the government to urgently protect domestic abuse victims.

    Authorities, they said, need to set up enough shelters and conduct an awareness-raising campaign on violence against women, among other measures.

    Those calls have fallen on deaf ears.

    The interior ministry said this month there was no evidence domestic violence was on the rise. On the contrary, it said, such crimes went down by nine percent in April compared to last year.

    Alyona Sadikova, head of the Kitezh crisis centre, said they had received more than 400 calls for help since the enforcement of stay-at-home rules. Most of the victims said police did not help.

    Before the pandemic, women could leave their abusers, find jobs and send children to kindergartens. Now, Sadikova said, many have adopted a different strategy: sit tight and suffer in silence.

    “The country’s economic prospects are not clear,” Sadikova said. “So many have decided to endure it until the very end.”

    Akhtyamova, the Latvian-born singer, has lived at the eastern Moscow hotel free-of-charge for the past three weeks.

    It was Sadikova’s centre that helped her find the make-shift shelter and is now paying for her meals.

    “I feel safe here,” Akhtyamova told AFP in a cafe which shares premises with the hotel.

    “People are treating me so well here that I even forgot about my despot husband,” the bespectacled woman laughed.

    Worst still to come

    Valentina Konstantinova, the hotel’s owner, said it and another she runs had offered refuge to two dozen domestic violence victims since the lockdown began.

    One of her friends also briefly stayed at the hotel with her child.

    Pisklakova-Parker said authorities should take action immediately because the worst is yet to come.

    “What we are seeing now is just the beginning,” she said, adding many victims could not reach out for help because they are closely controlled by their partners.

    More women and their abusers are also likely to lose jobs due to the economic crisis, which will exacerbate tensions, she said, even if restrictions are eased soon.

    “When the quarantine is lifted, we will see aftershocks, waves of family violence,” said Pisklakova-Parker.

    “That’s why it is very important to focus as much as possible on this problem now.”

    Source: france24.com

  • WHO suspends coronavirus hydroxychloroquine trial

    The World Health Organization (WHO) has temporarily suspended testing of the malaria drug hydroxychloroquine as a potential treatment for COVID-19 as a precautionary measure, WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said during a news conference on Monday.

    Meanwhile, Mike Ryan, head of the WHO emergencies programme, warned in the same virtual news conference that, despite countries easing lockdowns, the world is “right in the middle of the first wave” of the outbreak, and a there could be a second peak within the wave.

    The statements come days after US President Donald Trump announced he had been taking hydroxychloroquine as a preventive measure against the virus. The president, who has said he has since stopped taking the drug, had long touted its benefits as a possible treatment for COVID-19, the disease caused by the novel coronavirus, even as health experts warned it might not be safe.

    “The executive group has implemented a temporary pause of the hydroxychloroquine arm within the Solidarity trial while the safety data is reviewed by the data safety monitoring board,” Tedros said in the online briefing.

    The WHO had previously recommended against using hydroxychloroquine to treat or prevent coronavirus infections, except as part of clinical trials.

    Ryan added the decision to suspend trials of hydroxychloroquine had been taken out of “an abundance of caution”.

    Other arms of the WHO’s so-called “Solidarity Trial” – a large international initiative to hold clinical tests of potential treatments for the virus – would continue, the officials said.

    Source: aljazeera.com

  • U.S. grants tentative go ahead for 15 air carriers to suspend service to 75 airports

    The U.S. Transportation Department said late on Friday it had granted tentative approval to 15 airlines to temporarily halt service to 75 U.S. airports because of the coronavirus pandemic.

    Airlines must maintain minimum service levels in order to receive government assistance but many have petitioned to stop service to airports with low passenger demand.

    Both United Airlines (UAL.O) and Delta Air Lines (DAL.N) won tentative approval to halt flights to 11 airports, while JetBlue Airways Corp (JBLU.O), Alaska Airlines (ALK.N) and Frontier Airlines were approved to stop flights to five airports each. The department said all airports would continue to be served by at least one air carrier.

    The Transportation Department said objections to the order can be filed until May 28.

    U.S. air carriers are collectively burning through more than $10 billion in cash a month as travel demand remains a fraction of prior levels, even though it has rebounded slightly in recent weeks. They have parked more than half of their planes and cut thousands of flights.

    The department has previously granted airlines waivers to cancel some additional flights and denied others. On May 12, the department said it would allow carriers to halt flights to up to 5% of required destinations.

    Under the tentative order, Delta can halt service to Aspen, Colorado; Bangor, Maine; Flint, Michigan; Santa Barbara, California; and Lincoln, Nebraska, among other cities, while United can halt service to airports including Chattanooga, Tennessee; Hilton Head and Myrtle Beach, South Carolina; Key West, Florida; and Lansing and Kalamazoo, Michigan.

    JetBlue can halt flights to Albuquerque, New Mexico; Palm Springs and Sacramento, California; Sarasota, Florida; and Worcester, Massachusetts.

    Alaska can suspend flights to Charleston, South Carolina; Columbus, Ohio; El Paso and San Antonio, Texas; and New Orleans.

    Only half of eligible carriers have applied to cut more flights.

    Source: reuters.com

  • Cambridge University to keep lectures online through summer 2021

    The University of Cambridge is planning to keep lectures online for the entire 2020-2021 academic year due to the coronavirus, becoming the first globally-known university to announce plans beyond only the fall term.

    According to a story in The Guardian newspaper, a university spokesman said: “Given that it is likely that social distancing will continue to be required, the university has decided there will be no face-to-face lectures during the next academic year.”

    The university said that while lectures would continue virtually until summer 2021, smaller, in-person teaching groups may take place if it “conforms to social-distancing requirements.”

    In March, Cambridge pivoted from in-person classes to online, and exams are being taken virtually.

    The higher education sector globally is currently weighing concerns over the safety of students and faculty should campuses reopen this fall against substantial financial losses should doors remain shut.

    Already, enrollments are expected to decline, with a drop in international student numbers in particular a concern for UK higher education institutions.

    In recent years, the number of students from China enrolled at UK universities had increased significantly, creating a considerable revenue stream as international students pay higher tuition fees than domestic students.

    In contrast, the University of Notre Dame in Indiana announced Monday it would welcome students back to campus on August 10, two weeks earlier than originally planned.

    In addition, the university cancelled fall break and will end the semester before Thanksgiving, in late November.

     

    Source: Forbes  

  • China open to international investigation into source of coronavirus

    China is “open” to international cooperation to identify the source of the novel coronavirus but any investigation must be “free of political interference”, China’s foreign minister said Sunday.

    Wang Yi blasted what he called efforts by US politicians to “fabricate rumours” about the pathogen’s origins and “stigmatise China”.

    The United States and Australia have called in recent weeks for an investigation into the origins of the pandemic.

    Both US President Donald Trump and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo have accused China of a lack of transparency over the issue, and repeatedly pushed the theory that the virus leaked from a Chinese maximum-security laboratory.

    Most scientists believe the virus jumped from animals to humans, possibly from a market selling exotic animals for meat in the central Chinese city of Wuhan.

    “China is open to working with the international scientific community to look into the source of the virus,” Wang said at a press conference on the sidelines of China’s annual parliament session.

    “At the same time, we believe that this should be professional, fair and constructive,” he added.

    “Fairness means the process be free of political interference, respect the sovereignty of all countries, and oppose any presumption of guilt.”

    The World Health Organization has also called on Beijing to invite them in to investigate the source, with China proposing that the “global response” to COVID-19 should only be assessed when the pandemic is over.

    WHO members on Tuesday adopted a resolution at the UN body’s first virtual assembly to review international handling of the pandemic.

    Source: france24.com

  • Coronavirus: Children half as likely to catch it, review finds

    Children and adolescents are half as likely to catch the coronavirus, the largest review of the evidence shows.

    The findings, by UCL and the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, will feed into the debate about how schools are reopened.

    Children also appear less likely to spread the virus, but the team said there was still uncertainty on this.

    The UK government is expected to publish its scientific advice on schools later.

    However, only England has announced that some primary children (Reception, Year 1 and Year 6) could return to the classroom, sparking concerns about safety.

    It is already clear that children are at far less risk of becoming severely ill or dying from coronavirus.

    The researchers went through 6,332 studies from around the world – much of it not formally published – to try to get the answers. They identified only 18 with useful data.

    These were a mixture of studies that tested how the virus spreads in schools or households through rigorous testing of contacts, as well as studies that test large numbers of people in a population for the virus to see who is carrying it.

    The analysis showed children were 56% less likely than an adult to catch the virus when exposed to an infected person.

    “Teachers worry about their children and I think it is incredibly reassuring the children they teach are half as susceptible to this virus,” said Prof Russell Viner, from University College London and the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health.

    However, the reason why is not clear.

    There have been discussions about differences in children’s lungs that make it harder for them to catch the virus or that they are exposed to more colds that are related to the coronavirus, which might lead to some degree of immunity.

    Can children spread coronavirus? The evidence was less clear-cut about how easily children spread the virus. For example, one study of 31 clusters of infections showed only three (10%) were started by a child. The equivalent figure in influenza is 54%.

    However, the researcher said if children were less susceptible to the virus, they are also less likely to be the major source of infections.

    Prof Viner added: “This supports the view that children are likely to play a smaller role in transmitting the virus and proliferating the pandemic, although considerable uncertainty remains.”

    He refused to be drawn directly on the political decision of reopening schools, but said he would be concerned if all the focus was solely on the health impacts to adults “and the harms to children of staying off school were devalued and not playing into the equation”.

    The advice given by the UK government’s scientific advisors, called SAGE, is due to be published later.

    However, the rival group called “Independent SAGE” has published its opinion, saying schools should not re-open until there is the ability to track the spread of the virus and test anyone coming into contact with infected people.

    It also said the risk to pupils would be halved if reopening was delayed by two weeks as a result of cases reducing further.

    Boris Johnson has indicated that 25,000 contact tracers, able to track 10,000 new cases a day, would be in place by 1 June.

    Sir David King, who leads the group, said: “It is clear from the evidence we have collected that 1 June is simply too early to go back, by going ahead with this dangerous decision, the government is further risking the health of our communities and the likelihood of a second spike.”

    Source: bbc.com

  • Abednego Tetteh to give out customised Hearts of Oak face masks to fans

    Abednego Tetteh is expected to give out a customised Hearts of Oak face masks to supporters in the fight against coronavirus pandemic.

    Tetteh will join a host of Ghanaian players to donate items to people in their hometowns, hospitals, and frontline workers.

    The former Al Hilal forward says his decision to give away free customized face masks to fans to help curb the spread of the deadly virus in Ghana.

    “I’m a graphic designer despite being a footballer, I opted to design customized face masks of Hearts of Oak and share it to football fans on all my social media account,” Tetteh told Kickgh.com

    “I’ll start the giveaways on Facebook. Twitter and Instagram will be next.

    “We can’t play football without the fans. We need everyone to be healthy to watch our games when football resumes,” he concluded.

    Tetteh joined Hearts of Oak on a three-year deal ahead of the second round of the 2019/20 Ghana Premier League.

    Source: footballghana.com

  • Lockdown gives Albanian beekeepers a ‘golden year’

    With factories and farms silenced by the coronavirus shutdown, Albania’s bees have been busier than ever, stirring excitement among farmers expecting an unparalleled honey harvest thanks to a respite from pollution and pesticides.

    “It’s a golden year for bees,” says 68-year-old Gezim Skermo, dressed in a protective suit as he inspects his rows of wooden hives, lined up along the verdant base of Morava mountain in southeast Albania.

    The bucolic bee farm, home to some 300 colourfully-painted hive boxes, is one of the biggest in Albania and the only operation in the Balkan state to export its honey abroad.

    During his 50 years in beekeeping, Skermo says he has “never seen a season like this,” hailing it as “rebirth for nature and the bees”.

    The beekeeper attributes the sudden buzz to the coronavirus measures, which froze public and industrial life after Albania detected its first cases of the novel coronavirus in early March.

    In the area around Morava, the restrictions have brought quiet, cleaner air and less pesticide-spraying from farmers who curbed production in the face of economic uncertainty from the virus, which has claimed some 30 lives in the Balkan state.

    “This year we didn’t have any losses, unlike in previous years when we found dead bees in front of the hives,” said Skermo.

    “There was no noise, no pollution, nothing that could disturb them”.

    Around him the pollinating insects performed their dance between surrounding flowers where they gather nectar, a water trough for refuelling and their hives, where the honey is made.

    In front of the entrance to each hive, four female bees stood guard to keep out intruders from other colonies.

    “Each bee has its own job and position, with the queen, the (egg) layer, in charge of all the inner life,” explains Ermal Benga, who oversees production, as he uses his bee-smoker to calm the insects down before opening a hive.

    Canaries in the coal mine

    The Morava farm normally produces between five and 15 tonnes of honey a year, in varieties ranging from white clover to pine, rapeseed, wild thyme and chestnut, depending on which flowers are in season.

    It also collects and processes tonnes of honey from beekeepers all over Albania, where there are some 360,000 registered hives.

    This year Morava’s beekeepers are planning to start collecting the sweet stuff earlier than normal in order to make two harvests instead of one.

    It is a huge turnaround from the devastation of 2016 and 2017, when 40 percent of Albania’s hives collapsed and losses topped 60 million euros.

    Experts blamed the ruin on an “epidemic” of the varroa mite parasite, whose rise was helped by deforestation, plus the use of neonicotinoids, a common class of insecticides used in agriculture.

    The chemicals, which attack the nervous system of insects, have since been banned in the European Union but not in Albania.

    Today, however, Albania’s “conditions are optimal for the bees, which are real ecological sentinels,” Skermo’s 44-year-old son Eugen told AFP, referring to species that can provide an advance warning of risks, such as canaries in a coal mine.

    In addition to the domestic market, Morava exports some 40 tonnes annually to the United States, Switzerland, Singapore and China.

    But although the company has an analysis laboratory donated by the EU, it is not allowed to export its honey to the bloc because of a ban on Albanian products of animal origin.

    Out of superstition, founder Skermo refuses to give specific figures from how much honey will be produced this season.

    But he insists the yield will be abundant and of the highest quality.

    “While people have been shut up at home, the bees have not been confined,” he said. “They have been working very hard.”

    Source: france24.com

  • Coronavirus: Toy and vegetable costs rise as fuel price drops

    The UK’s inflation rate fell in April to its lowest since August 2016 as the economic fallout of the first month of the lockdown hit prices.

    The Consumer Prices Index (CPI) fell to 0.8% from 1.5% in March, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) said.

    Falling petrol and diesel prices, plus lower energy bills, were the main drivers pushing inflation lower.

    But the prices of games and toys rose, which the ONS said may be due to people spending more time at home.

    However, there were 92 items in the ONS’s basket of goods and services that it could not measure in April because they were mostly unavailable. These ranged from haircut prices, lemonade, manicures, cinema popcorn, and leisure activities involving sport.

    The ONS said it would monitor the issue for any distortion in the overall picture. But Jonathan Athow, deputy national statistician for economic statistics at the ONS, said: “While the coronavirus limited the availability of some goods and services, its effect on prices was more muted.”

    He said that food prices generally rose no more quickly than other goods and services, “though fresh vegetables did see stronger rises”.

    The ONS said average petrol prices dropped by 10.4p a litre between March and April – the biggest fall since unleaded petrol records began in 1990 – amid a slump in global oil prices.

    Energy prices also pushed inflation lower as regulator Ofgem reduced its default tariff cap.

    The ONS said clothes retailers, hit during the early days of the lockdown by weaker footfall and then the closure of outlets, resorted to more discount sales than usual to try to shift their stock.

    Goods seeing upward pressure on prices included video games and consoles, board games and children’s toys, the ONS said. And the price of knitting wool rose, another sign of the crafts and hobbies popular with people staying at home.

    Long-life products – such as cook-in sauces and frozen fish – also saw price hikes last month as consumers stocked up for life in lockdown.

    Laura Suter, personal finance analyst at investment platform AJ Bell, said it was likely that as shops start re-opening retailers would deeply discount prices, putting further downward pressure on inflation.

    She also pointed to positive news for savers. “For the first time in ages [savers] can now get above inflation interest rates on easy-access savings accounts – from more than one account.”

    Low inflation not always good

    CPI is now far below the Bank of England’s 2% target, used as general guidance to help businesses set the right prices and for people to plan their spending.

    But while low inflation reduces the need for rises in interest rates and gives people a feeling the pound in their pocket stretches further, it’s possible to have too much of a good thing.

    Low inflation minimises the erosion of debt over the years.

    People (and governments) with borrowing, such as mortgages, don’t see the benefit. That big loan you have doesn’t look so big if wages are keeping up with inflation. So-called deflation actually increases the value the debts.

    But low inflation discourages employers from raising pay (which hits the Treasury’s tax take) and may even encourage them to cut pay in troubled times.

    And if prices are falling, consumers can put off big ticket purchases in the hope the fall will continue – and this slows economic growth.

    Savers are also penalised. Low inflation generally means lower official interest rates – and that means banks and building societies keep their savings rates down.

    It’s why, when inflation remains one percentage point below 2%, the governor of the Bank of England writes to the chancellor to explain how the price index can be brought back on target. There’s a good reason a little inflation is good for the economy.

    Most economists had expected April’s inflation to fall to 0.9%, and have predicted the rate will fall further as the economic fallout of the pandemic continues.

    Samuel Tombs, chief UK economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics, said inflation had taken a “big leap towards zero by the summer” as he said retailers were planning “further large price cuts”.

    He predicted inflation would recover next year but was likely to remain below 2% for much of 2021.

    “The inflation outlook, then, supports the [Bank of England’s] Monetary Policy Committee doing more to stimulate the economy at its next meeting in mid-June – we look for a further £100bn of quantitative easing to be announced,” he added.

    Core inflation, which excludes energy, food, alcohol and tobacco, held broadly steady at an annual rate of 1.5%.

    Inflation as measured by the Retail Prices Index (RPI) – an older measure of inflation which the ONS says is inaccurate, but is widely used in bond markets and for other commercial contracts – dropped to 1.5% from 2.6%.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Wilson Jerman: Ex-White House butler dies from coronavirus

    A former White House butler, who worked for 11 presidents in a career that spanned five decades, has died with coronavirus aged 91.

    It was Jackie Kennedy who noticed Wilson Roosevelt Jerman while he was working as a cleaner in the White House.

    The then First Lady had him promoted, and from then on he worked as a butler.

    “She was instrumental in ensuring that that happened,” his granddaughter, Jamila Garrett, told Fox 5.

    Decades later Mr Jerman was commemorated by another First Lady, appearing in a photo in Michelle Obama’s memoir Becoming.

    Paying tribute after his death, Mrs Obama said her family were “lucky to have known him”.

    “With his kindness and care, Wilson Jerman helped make the White House a home for decades of First Families, including ours,” she said in a statement to NBC News.

    “His service to others – his willingness to go above and beyond for the country he loved and all those whose lives he touched – is a legacy worthy of his generous spirit.”

    He died with coronavirus last weekend.

    Mr Jerman’s family members say he stood out not just to the Kennedys, who were in the White House during 1961-63, and the Obamas, who lived there from 2009 to 2017, but others he met in his roles.

    Mr Jerman’s career began in 1957 during the Eisenhower administration. In his last position, he served as a maître d’ in the Obama White House.

    He left his position in 2012, and President Obama honoured him with a series of plaques, one that represented each of the presidents he had served, Mr Jerman’s granddaughter Shanta Taylor Gay told CNN.

    He remains an important figure for those who study the history of African Americans and their role in political life.

    Like other African-American men of his generation, he showed dignity while serving in one of the few positions that was available to him at the time, said Ohio State University’s Koritha Mitchell, author of From Slave Cabins to the White House.

    She said he must have found it satisfying to end his career in the way that he did.

    He was working for Mr Obama, “a dignified president who was also African American”, she said, adding: “That must have felt like a victory.”

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: Lagos to begin trials for anti-malarial drug

    The Nigerian authorities say trials are due to begin to see whether an anti-malarial drug is effective against the Coronavirus.

    The Commissioner for Health in Lagos state said healthcare workers as well as people in close contact with someone with the virus would be either given chloroquine or a placebo.

    A second trial is to be launched in partnership with the World Health Organization (WHO).

    Officials say results should be known within two months.

    US President Donald Trump caused controversy earlier this week when he told reporters he had been taking another anti-malarial drug – hydroxychloroquine – despite warnings it might be unsafe.

    While the trials are taking place in a controlled clinical environment, the WHO has warned that some individuals are self-medicating and risk causing themselves serious harm.

    Chloroquine has not yet been shown to be safe and effective in the prevention or treatment of coronavirus and can cause dangerous heart arrhythmias.

    Lagos Health Commissioner Prof Akin Abayomi also said the government was trying to transition to home-based isolation, admitting that some patients who tested positive for the virus were absconding and reluctant to be admitted to isolation units.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: Alarm as crowds flock to European beaches

    A surge in visitors to beaches in northern Europe after coronavirus lockdowns was eased and temperatures rose has alarmed officials and experts.

    Three towns in north-western France shut their beaches on Wednesday because of the “unacceptable” failure of people to observe social-distancing rules.

    Municipalities in the Netherlands urged German tourists not to visit.

    And in England, the town council in Southend said it might take action after sunseekers flocked there.

    The number of confirmed cases of Covid-19 around the world has now passed five million, but the number of new infections has been falling across most of Europe.

    European countries had reported 1.74 million cases and 164,349 deaths as of Wednesday, according to the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control. Those with the most fatalities are the UK, Italy, France, Spain and Belgium.

    The World Health Organization (WHO) has warned that there is “still a long way to go in this pandemic”, and called on people in countries where restrictions are being eased to continue to adapt their behaviour to minimise transmission of Covid-19.

    The authorities in France reopened hundreds of beaches last weekend for running, swimming and fishing, but not for sunbathing or picnicking.

    On Wednesday evening, the prefecture of Morbihan, in Brittany, said beaches in five municipalities had been closed because of “unacceptable behaviour” by visitors in recent days, including incivility and ignoring social distancing.

    Several municipalities in the Netherlands meanwhile called on German tourists not to cross the border for a trip during the Ascension Day public holiday on Thursday.

    The Zeeland Safety Region temporarily closed roads in seaside town of Vlissingen to vehicles, while the Limburg-Noord Safety Region warned that it would seek to prevent crowding in its town centres and shopping malls by fining people who violated social distancing and other rules.

    People also headed to beaches across England on Wednesday on the hottest day of the year so far, a week after lockdown rules were eased. But people in England should not travel to Wales, Scotland or Northern Ireland, where the public is still being told to avoid any travel which is not essential.

    A care worker’s tweets expressing concern at the pictures from Southend-on-Sea, in Essex, were shared 20,000 times.

    Southend town council appealed to beachgoers to keep their distance, and warned that it might have to close the seafront to traffic as a last resort if it considered the crowding to be dangerous.

    On Wednesday, European Union tourism ministers agreed to do “whatever it takes for the quick and full recovery of European tourism”.

    They broadly backed plans spelt out by the European Commission that the bloc’s internal borders should come down in phases, based on the prevalence of Covid-19 in countries of origin and destination.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: Time short on test, track and trace – NHS leaders

    Time is running out to finalize a test, track and trace strategy to avoid a possible second surge in coronavirus cases, NHS bosses have said.

    The NHS Confederation warned of “severe” consequences to staff and patients if the right system was not established quickly.

    It said lockdown measures should not be eased until a clear plan was in place.

    It follows the PM’s pledge to introduce a “world-beating” contact tracing system in England from June.

    Contact tracing identifies those who may have come into contact with an infected person – either through an app or by phone and email – so they can avoid potentially passing the disease on.

    Niall Dickson, chief executive of the confederation, which represents health and care leaders, welcomed Boris Johnson’s pledge made at Prime Minister’s Questions on Wednesday.

    But in a letter to Health Secretary Matt Hancock, Mr Dickson said without a clear strategy the UK was at greater risk of a second peak of the virus and emphasised the importance of involving local health organisations in the plan.

    He said a test, track and trace strategy should have been in place sooner and if the right system was not instigated rapidly the ramifications for the NHS “could be severe”.

    Speaking on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme, Mr Dickson said: “We are absolutely clear that contact tracing is the right thing to do, it is absolutely critical, it has got to be in place to prevent any notion of a second surge if the lockdown is being further released.”

    He added the government was acting “quite late in the day [and] we haven’t yet seen the detail”.

    Chris Hopson, chief executive of NHS Providers – a membership group for England’s NHS trusts – told BBC Breakfast his members have “not had clear information and instructions about what their role will be” in the system.

    Security minister James Brokenshire said Mr Hopson’s comments “will not be lost on anyone” at the Department of Health – and will be followed up on “at pace”.

    Downing Street has confirmed that 24,000 manual contact tracers have been hired, with plans to employ an additional 1,000 people before the test, track and trace scheme starts on 1 June.

    The prime minister’s official spokesman said “test and trace” would start shortly.

    On Wednesday, Mr Johnson said 25,000 contact tracers, able to track 10,000 new cases a day, would be in place by 1 June.

    It coincides with the earliest possible date for the gradual reopening of schools and non-essential shops in England.

    Northern Ireland already has a telephone contact tracing system in place, while the Scottish government is currently trialling one. The Welsh government wants its programme operational by the end of May.

    One of the government’s most senior scientific advisers previously said an effective tracing system needed to be in place before lockdown restrictions could be changed.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Cyprus ends virus lockdown but airports stay shut

    The Cypriot government ended a strict coronavirus lockdown Thursday, reopening outdoor restaurants, barber shops and beaches, but keeping the Mediterranean resort island’s vital airports and hotels closed for now.

    After two months of living in self-isolation, Cypriots are allowed to move around freely again.

    Some 32,000 more people went back to work as part of the government’s second stage out of lockdown.

    Thousands of children returned to the classroom as state-run schools resumed most classes.

    Since mid-March people could only go outside for exercise and essential trips which needed to be approved by text message while a curfew was enforced every night.

    Cyprus activated the second stage of its draft timetable for ending the lockdown after the the daily number of new infections remained in single figures throughout the first three weeks of May.

    Virologist Dr Leontios Kostrikis, who is a member of the health ministry’s epidemiological monitoring unit, said he was “very satisfied” with the figures so far.

    Announcing four new infections in the previous 24 hours on Wednesday evening, Kostrikis said Cyprus was entering a watershed moment in its fight against the coronavirus.

    “The second stage is a make or break point for a full return to normalcy and for this reason we kindly ask you to keep up the good work with the same determination so that we are not forced to take backward steps,” Kostrikis told reporters.

    Due to the better than expected figures, the government has also decided to allow Cypriots access to organised beaches from 23 May, rather than June 1 as planned.

    At present only swimming is allowed not sunbathing or any other leisure activity.

    Parks and public spaces have also reopened but not children’s playgrounds.

    Church services and other forms of religious worship will also be allowed to resume from May 23 instead of June.

    Still no flights

    But the island’s two international airports in Larnaca and Paphos remain firmly shut for now, as do the crossing points to the breakaway Turkish-Cypriot north of the island.

    The tourism sector makes up a key part of the Cyprus economy and the government has been under heavy pressure to reopen airports and hotels before the peak summer season.

    The government has said it hopes to reopen airports gradually from mid-June with hotels to reopen two weeks after that.

    But it has yet to issue any health protocols on how they will operate.

    Gyms and indoor bars and restaurants will also remain shut until the third phase out of lockdown scheduled to start from June 9.

    The government has said crossing points through the UN-patrolled buffer zone that divides the government-controlled south from the breakaway north will not reopen before next month.

    Their closure has prevented thousands of Turkish Cypriots from reaching work in the south and sparked Turkish Cypriot demonstrations.

    Since the first case on March 9, the Cyprus government has confirmed 922 coronavirus infections and 17 deaths, including in the island’s British sovereign base areas.

    Turkish Cypriot authorities have confirmed 108 cases and four deaths.

    Source: france24.com

  • Coronavirus: Virus outbreaks push Germany to clean up abattoirs

    Germany has agreed a proposal to ban the use of temporary workers at slaughterhouses following a spate of coronavirus infections.

    Hundreds of people working at abattoirs across Germany and France have tested positive for Covid-19 in recent weeks.

    Many workers have arrived from Romania on flights chartered by farmers.

    Health experts are looking at possible reasons for the outbreaks, including overcrowded accommodation and cold conditions at processing facilities.

    On Wednesday, German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s cabinet agreed a draft proposal preventing subcontractors – largely migrant workers – from processing meat at plants from January 2021.

    Any violation of the new rules by abattoir owners could result in a fine of up to €30,000 (£26,800; $32,900), the proposal states.

    Countries across Europe started closing their borders to non-essential travel and reinstating checkpoints in March, to try to limit the spread of coronavirus.

    However, European farm workers – largely from Romania – are among the few permitted to travel. As many as 30,000 Romanians have been flown to Germany to work in the food industry.

    ‘Ashamed’ by mass infection of Romanians

    The issue of poor working conditions in German meat-packing factories was raised after a cluster of coronavirus infections were recorded at a slaughterhouse in the western German city of Münster over the weekend.

    At another slaughterhouse in Coesfeld, North Rhine-Westphalia, more than 260 workers – many living in shared accommodation – tested positive for the virus.

    Cases are also increasing in western France, where more than 100 infections were recently reported at two separate slaughterhouses.

    “The circumstances we are going through reveal a number of systemic problems that we haven’t addressed properly,” Romania’s labour minister, Violeta Alexandru, told Reuters news agency following a meeting with her German counterpart Hubertus Heil.

    She travelled 18 hours by car from Bucharest to see the conditions for herself, telling Deutsche Welle that any Romanian who encountered health or hygiene issues should turn to the police if necessary.

    Romania’s ambassador, Emil Hurezeanu, said the minister had heard from seasonal workers who had gone to the consulate in Bonn to protest about working and living conditions.

    Mr Heil said that the “mass infection of Romanian workers in the meat industry” was not acceptable, adding: “I have to say it makes me ashamed.”

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: All 50 US states move toward reopening

    As the country’s death toll surpasses 92,000, all 50 US states have partially reopened after a two-month shutdown.

    On Wednesday, Connecticut became the final state to lift restrictions when it gave the green light to shops and restaurants under certain conditions.

    But wide discrepancies remain between states in terms of infection rates and the pace of their economic restart.

    Many have not met the federal guidance on how to reopen, including a 14-day “downward trajectory” of cases.

    The District of Columbia is expected to announce its reopening next week.

    Countrywide, the US is seeing an overall downward trend in new cases and deaths over time.

    Some of the hardest-hit areas, including New York, New Jersey and Washington state are now showing the sharpest declines, while majority of states have reached plateaus. Still, states like Arizona and North Carolina continue to report increases.

    What are different states doing? Many like Connecticut have started with a state-wide approach, with varying degrees of restrictions.

    In Maryland, for example, residents must stick to outdoor recreation, including golf courses, beaches and campgrounds, while states like Oklahoma now allow residents to attend religious services, get a tattoo, and even spend an evening at a nightclub.

    Slower moving states – mostly concentrated in the country’s North East and West Coast – have begun regional openings.

    In California, for example, some restaurants and retail locations will be allowed to open, but only in counties that meet standards for testing and declining infection rates.

    Last week, District of Columbia Mayor Muriel Bowser extended the city’s social distancing restrictions until at least 8 June.

    The guidelines may be loosened, however, if DC meets a series of reopening metrics set out by Ms Bowser, including a two-week decline in community spread of the virus.

    What does the new guidance say? In 60 pages of guidance released by the Centers for Disease Control this past weekend, the centre provides detailed guidance to particular sectors.

    In schools, for example, desks must be placed six feet apart and face the same direction, with temperature checks for all staff and students.

    In restaurants, the CDC advises establishments open first with limited seating to allow for social distancing, and place higher-risk workers in roles that limit their interaction with customers.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: South Africa coronavirus deaths ‘to soar’ in coming months

    At least 40,000 people could die with coronavirus in South Africa by the end of the year, scientists have warned.

    The projections were made by a group of academics and health experts advising the government.

    They assume tough lockdown restrictions will be eased from June, as President Cyril Ramaphosa has announced.

    The curbs – which were introduced in March and include a ban on tobacco and alcohol sales – have been credited with slowing the spread of the virus.

    The country of 57 million people has recorded just 17,200 cases of Covid-19 and 312 deaths linked to the disease so far. Spain, by comparison, has reported about 278,000 cases and almost 28,000 deaths for a population of only 47 million.

    But the projections by the South African Covid-19 Modelling Consortium – set up to help government planning over the outbreak – says the country could experience a sharp rise in cases and deaths over the coming months.

    The report was released during a meeting with Health Minister Dr Zweli Mkhize following criticism of the government’s perceived lack of transparency.

    The predictions are subject to change as more data becomes available, and assume the current restrictions will be relaxed from 1 June.

    Under an “optimistic scenario”, by late August the number of active cases could reach almost 100,000, before declining. The cumulative number of deaths by November would be 40,000.

    Under a “pessimistic scenario” the number of active cases could peak around at 120,000 in August, and a total of 45,000 would die by November.

    The report also suggests there could be 1.2 million Covid-19 cases in total, and intensive care units could be overwhelmed within weeks.

    Source: bbc.com

  • COVID-19: 9,000 employees of Rolls-Royce to be rendered jobless

    Rolls-Royce has said it will cut 9,000 jobs and warned it will take “several years” for the airline industry to recover from the coronavirus pandemic.

    The Derby-based firm, which makes plane engines, said the reduction of nearly a fifth of its workforce would mainly affect its civil aerospace division.

    “This is not a crisis of our making. But it is the crisis that we face and must deal with,” boss Warren East said.

    The bulk of the job cuts are expected to be in the UK at its site in Derby.

    Rolls-Royce employs 52,000 people globally and Mr East told the BBC’s Today programme that the company had not yet concluded on “exactly” where the job losses would be, due to having to consult with unions.

    But he said: “It’s fair to say that of our civil aerospace business approximately two-thirds of the total employees are in the UK at the moment and that’s probably a good first proxy.”

    Rolls-Royce’s civil aerospace business has a number of sites in the UK, but the largest plant is in Derby.

    The company said it will also carry out a review of its sites but declined to comment on which ones may close.

    John, a worker in Rolls-Royce’s civil aerospace division who spoke to the BBC on condition of anonymity, said that while he expected there would be job cuts, the eventual 9,000 figure was “a shock”.

    “Since the Covid-19 outbreak we knew that business would shrink,” he said.

    But he said the scale of the cuts as well as the potential closure of some sites was a surprise.

    Unite the union said the decision was “shameful opportunism”.

    “This company has accepted public money to furlough thousands of workers,” said Unite’s assistant general secretary for manufacturing, Steve Turner.

    “Unite and Britain’s taxpayers deserve a more responsible approach to a national emergency. We call upon Rolls-Royce to step back from the brink and work with us on a better way through this crisis.”

    Rolls-Royce initially furloughed 4,000 workers in the UK last month. Some 3,700 people remain on the Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme though which the government pays 80% of a worker’s wage up to £2,500 a month.

    But Mr East said: “No government can extend things like furlough schemes for years into the future. We have to look after ourselves and make sure we meet medium term demand.”

    Job cuts a heavy blow

    This morning’s job losses are hardly unexpected – airlines have cut their flying hours by 90% or more, and Airbus and Boeing have slashed their production numbers for the next few years – but they are still a heavy blow to one of the UK’s few world-class manufacturing companies.

    While the details of where the cuts will fall have not been finalised, it is likely that two-thirds will go in the UK.

    The company has already used the government’s furlough scheme to help pay the wages of about 4,000 staff, but Warren East, Rolls-Royce’s chief executive, said companies could not expect the government to continue such a scheme for several years.

    There was also a clear hint this morning that some factories may close – the company said it would review its future manufacturing footprint.

    Some questions remain for Roll-Royce. Investors are scratching their head about when the company’s revenues – much of which rely on aircraft to be flying for money to flow – will return.

    The company has not yet tapped its shareholders for more money – some expect that may eventually come.

    Air travel has ground to a virtual standstill since the coronavirus began spreading across the world and many airlines have announced steep job cuts.

    Global air traffic is expected to decline by 45% this year, according to investment bank Baird. It also forecasts that airlines are expected to lose $310bn (£253bn) in revenue in 2020.

    Rolls-Royce said the impact of the pandemic on the company and the whole of the aviation industry “is unprecedented”.

    It added that it is “increasingly clear that activity in the commercial aerospace market will take several years to return to the levels seen just a few months ago”.

    As well as the job losses, the company said it would cut costs in areas such as its plants and properties. It expects to make cost savings of £1.3bn.

    Paul Everitt, chief executive of ADS, the aerospace industry association, said: “The crisis is having a major impact on aerospace companies who provide high value, long-term jobs in all regions and nations of the UK, putting thousands more jobs at risk now and in the months ahead.”

    Source: bbc.com

  • Ugandan police ‘close shops without wash-points’

    Police in Uganda’s capital Kampala have closed shops that had not installed wash-points, the New Vision newspaper reports.

    The authorities were following the president’s new directives to slow down the spread of coronavirus, the state-owned newspaper continued.

    People without face masks were also ordered to get one and the traders put up notices to customers that face masks were compulsory.

    The newspaper tweeted photos of police enforcing the directives:

    President Yoweri Museveni on Monday said the government will distribute free masks to all citizens aged over six before lifting coronavirus containment measures.

    Thereafter, shops will be allowed to open, public transport vehicles will be allowed to carry only half their capacity and food market vendors who have been working and living at their stalls will be allowed to go home at the end of each day.

    However, public transport is still banned in border districts for 21 days.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: Eight patients in critical condition

    Eight COVID-19 patients are in critical condition but none of them is on a ventilator, the Ghana Health Service (GHS) has said.

    Out of the eight, three are on admission at the University of Ghana Medical Centre, two are at the Ga-East Hospital, one is at Ho, with the Korle-Bu and Tetteh Quarshie Hospitals having one each.

    As of Wednesday, May 20, 2020, Ghana confirmed adding 173 new COVID-19 cases making the total confirmed cases of the novel Coronavirus stand at 6,269.

    The increase, per the GHS update, is attributed to new cases found in Greater Accra, Ashanti, Western and Central regions.

    The update also indicated 125 more recoveries, raising the number of recoveries to 1,898.

    The number of deaths remains at 31.

    The total active Coronavirus cases is now at 4,340.

    The Greater Accra region still leads with 4,582 confirmed cases, followed by the Ashanti region with 921 cases.

    The cases in the Western and Central regions have now increased to 170 and 285 respectively.

    So far, the Savannah, Ahafo and Bono East regions have not recorded any case of the virus.

    Find below the regional breakdown

    Greater Accra Region 4,582

    Ashanti Region 921

    Central Region 285

    Western Region 170

    Eastern Region 106

    Western North Region 57

    Volta Region 41

    Northern Region 31

    Oti Region 26

    Upper East Region 26

    Upper West Region 21

    North East Region 2

    Bono Region 1

    Savannah Region 0

    Ahafo Region 0

    Bono East Region 0

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • Coronavirus: 30 health workers test positive in Ashanti

    Thirty health workers in the Ashanti Region have so far tested positive for COVID-19 in their line of duty, Dr. Emmanuel Tinkorang, the Regional Director of Health Services, has disclosed.

    The affected workers, comprised of various categories of frontline workers managing the pandemic in the region, according to the Director, were all in stable conditions and responding to treatment.

    Dr. Tinkorang who was giving a regional update on COVID-19 at a media briefing said the situation would not, in any way, affect the unwavering resolve of health workers in the region to contain the disease.

    He said the new cases in the region were beginning to reduce, including Obuasi, which had been the main epicenter accounting for over 65 per cent of 886 confirmed cases.

    He further disclosed that the Obuasi Municipal and Obuasi East District have recorded 587 confirmed cases combined out of about 6,000 samples tested.

    The Regional Director explained that the huge numbers that were recorded in the Obuasi area on May 8, was as a result of a backlog of samples taken between April 19 and 27, following the confirmation of a case in one of the Obuasi markets.

    According to him, the patient who later died had spent about two weeks in the market without knowing her status, thereby, spreading the disease to a lot of people.

    “We had to embark on enhancing surveillance in the area and that explains why most of the samples taken proved positive”, he stated.

    Dr. Tinkorang said the rate of infection had since gone down, saying that, his outfit had intensified surveillance and also deployed more health workers to the area.

    Giving a general overview of the region, he said 15 people were on admission, 75 in isolation, with 54 active contacts being followed up.

    He said 25 out of the 43 districts had reported confirmed cases out of which 52 per cent were females and 48 per cent being males.

    Source: GNA

  • Ghanas coronavirus cases hit 6,269, recoveries now 1,898

    Ghana has confirmed 173 new COVID-19 cases.

    This makes the total confirmed cases of the novel Coronavirus stand at 6,269, according to the latest update by the Ghana Health Service (GHS).

    The increase, per the GHS update, is attributed to new cases found in Greater Accra, Ashanti, Western and Central regions.

    The update also indicated 125 more recoveries, raising the number of recoveries to 1,898.

    As of Wednesday night [May 20, 2020], the number of deaths remains at 31.

    The total active Coronavirus cases is now at 4,340.

    Eight persons are still in critical condition with the number of tests administered in the region of 187,000.

    The Greater Accra region still leads with 4,582 confirmed cases, followed by the Ashanti region with 921 cases.

    The cases in the Western and Central regions have now increased to 170 and 285 respectively.

    So far, the Savannah, Ahafo and Bono East regions have not recorded any case of the virus.

    Find below the regional breakdown

    Greater Accra Region 4,582

    Ashanti Region 921

    Central Region 285

    Western Region 170

    Eastern Region 106

    Western North Region 57

    Volta Region 41

    Northern Region 31

    Oti Region 26

    Upper East Region 26

    Upper West Region 21

    North East Region 2

    Bono Region 1

    Savannah Region 0

    Ahafo Region 0

    Bono East Region 0

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • Coronavirus: Spain tightens mask rules for all older than five

    Wearing masks is being made compulsory in Spain both indoors and out in public if social distancing is not possible.

    Only children under six and people with health issues are exempt from the law, which comes into force on Thursday.

    Many European countries have now made wearing masks a requirement on public transport but the Spanish decree goes further.

    Spain has seen one of the worst Covid-19 outbreaks in Europe but is now easing the lockdown gradually.

    It already requires the wearing of masks on public transport and is now strengthening the rules across the population. Spain has reported almost 28,000 deaths and 232,000 infections since March but the rate of infection has declined.

    Spain had imposed some of the toughest measures on the continent, including keeping children indoors for six weeks. Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez addressed parliament on Wednesday ahead of a vote on extending the state of alert for two more weeks.

    What does the law say?

    The decree states: “Using masks will be compulsory on the street, in open spaces and any closed place of public use, when it is not possible to maintain a safe distance of at least two metres (6.5ft).”

    While children under six are not required to wear masks, all between the ages of three and five are recommended to wear them. According to El País, that means 45 million people will now have to wear a mask and another 1.3 million will be urged to.

    The law underlines that it is following World Health Organization recommendations to minimize infection in closed and public places where there is a large concentration of people.

    It says wearing masks is justified as it blocks the transmission of infected droplets in areas where safe distances cannot be guaranteed.

    You are exempt if you have a respiratory illness or another health issue or disability that makes wearing a mask impossible.

    In other words, people with asthma, allergies or forms of anxiety will not be liable. No penalties for breaking the law are mentioned and there is no specific type of mask detailed other than that it should cover both nose and mouth.

    But they are by no means fool-proof – if you touch them, if you wear them wrongly and if they are loose around the edges they can become contaminated. And they are not a replacement for washing hands frequently and social distancing.

    They are also not thought to be as relevant when people are outdoors.

    The World Health Organization says only two groups of people should wear masks – those who are unwell with symptoms and those caring for people suspected to have the virus. It also says medical masks – which are usually much tighter and better made – should be kept for healthcare workers, who are most in need.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Trump says G7 summit could happen in person at Camp David

    President Donald Trump said Wednesday he could restore plans to hold the annual G7 summit in person at his Camp David retreat, after previously ordering the event to take place by video-conference.

    In a tweet, Trump said that recovery from the coronavirus pandemic was going well enough for possibly making the huge diplomatic gathering an in-person occasion.

    “Now that our Country is ‘Transitioning back to Greatness’, I am considering rescheduling the G-7, on the same or similar date, in Washington, D.C., at the legendary Camp David. The other members are also beginning their COMEBACK. It would be a great sign to all – normalization!” Trump tweeted.

    Due to the ambiguous wording of the tweet, it wasn’t clear if Trump meant is mulling ruling out Washington altogether in favor of Camp David – or if he is considering venues in the capital as well.

    The G7 summit, which is hosted by the United States this year, was due to be held in June at Camp David. But in March, the White House said that due to the pandemic it would be held remotely.

    G7 countries – Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and the United States – take turns organizing the annual gathering. Last year it was France.

    Trump’s hosting of the summit has seen numerous hiccups, starting with his controversial push to stage it at one of his own golf resorts.

    Last October, the White House announced that the Trump National Doral Golf Club near Miami had been chosen out of 12 possible sites.

    The White House insisted there was no conflict of interest in using a Trump family business and claimed there was no equally suitable venue in the country.

    Following strong resistance in Congress, Trump switched tack in December, saying he could use Camp David, a historic presidential retreat, instead.

    In a tweet at the time, Trump blamed “both Media & Democrat Crazed and Irrational Hostility” for the decision to abandon the Doral plan.

    Source: france24.com