Tag: Coronavirus

  • Fear grips Upper East Police as they await coronavirus results

    Aside from the seven police officers who were reported to have tested positive for Covid-19 in the Bolgatanga Municipality, many others in the region are sitting on tenterhooks as they await their Covid-19 test results.

    Over 100 police officers, who were identified to have come into contact with the seven police officers, have had their samples taken for testing during a contact tracing exercise, and the results are yet to be released.

    Another group of police officers drawn from the Bolgatanga Municipality, Nabdam, Talensi and Bolgatanga East districts, and members of the SWAT and Visibility Units have also had their samples taken.

    Some of the police officers are anxious and waiting eagerly to know their Covid-19 status.

    A few that spoke with DAILY GUIDE said their partners were equally apprehensive and would only be at ease after their results had been released.

    The Upper East Regional Police Commander, DCOP Ampofo Duku, had earlier confirmed the seven positive cases and admitted that the sense of fear among personnel could affect their morale.

    DCOP Duku said many of the results of the samples taken had not been released and they were psyching themselves up for the outcome.

    Meanwhile, the Regional Police Command has put in place strict precautionary measures across all police stations in the Upper East Region, including handwashing and mandatory wearing of face masks by all police officers, including members of the public that visit the police stations on a daily basis.

    Source: Daily Guide Network

  • Covid antibody test a ‘positive development’

    A test to find out whether people have been infected with coronavirus in the past has been approved by health officials in England.

    Public Health England said the antibody test, developed by Swiss pharmaceutical company Roche, was a “very positive development”.

    The blood test looks for antibodies to see if a person has already had the virus and might now have some immunity.

    Until now, officials have said such tests are not reliable enough.

    The government previously spent a reported £16m buying antibody tests which later proved to be ineffective.

    Sources told the BBC the Roche test was the first one to offer serious potential.

    Antibodies are made by our immune system as it learns to fight an infection.

    Finding antibodies that attack the coronavirus show that person has been infected in the past, but they do not prove they are protected against it in the future.

    Experts at the government’s Porton Down facility evaluated the Roche test last week, Public Health England said.

    They found that if someone had been infected, it gave the correct result 100% of the time.

    Roche said if someone had not caught coronavirus then it gave the correct result more than 99.8% of the time.

    It means fewer than two in 1,000 healthy people would be incorrectly told they had previously caught the coronavirus.

    Health minister Edward Argar said the tests would mainly be used on those in the NHS and social care settings to begin with.

    He could not give an exact date for when the testing could start.

    Prof John Newton, national coordinator of the UK coronavirus testing programme, said: “This is a very positive development because such a highly specific antibody test is a very reliable marker of past infection.

    “This in turn may indicate some immunity to future infection, although the extent to which the presence of antibodies indicates immunity remains unclear.”

    Roche is understood to be in talks with the Department of Health and Social Care about possible use by the NHS in England, though other testing products are also being assessed.

    Health officials in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland make their own decisions, but are likely to follow suit if England does adopt it.

    The test already has approval from medical regulators in the EU and the United States.

     

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: New Zealand reopens with midnight barbers queues

    Thousands of businesses in New Zealand have reopened on Thursday as the country relaxes its coronavirus curbs, with some hairdressers seeing overnight queues round the block.

    Shops, cafes, and public parks are all open as the country moves into Level 2 of its restrictions, described as a “safer new normal”.

    New Zealand has reported no new cases of the virus in the past three days.

    Authorities say the chance of community transmission is now very low.

    People are allowed to start seeing their friends and families again, with a limit of 10 people.

    Professional sport is back on the menu – albeit with safety measures in place. And for those keen to let off steam after a long lockdown, gyms have reopened too.

    There have been reports of crowds at shopping centres in some parts of the country, but for some a quiet catch-up on the waterfront was the first thing on their minds.

    New Zealand has seen 1,497 confirmed cases of Covid-19 out of a population of around five million people, according to Johns Hopkins University figures. Twenty-one people have died, and fewer than 90 are still sick.

    The country had already eased some restrictions in late April, allowing takeaway food shops and some non-essential business to re-open.

    Though offices reopened on Thursday, people have been urged to continue working from home where possible, to help avoid a second wave of infections.

    To the relief of many parents, school pupils will be able to return from Monday.

    Bars are closed for now, but will be back in business from 21 May.

    Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern has been widely praised for taking swift action early on in the global pandemic.

    “We’re going hard and we’re going early,” Ms Ardern told the public in mid-March. “We only have 102 cases, but so did Italy once.”

    Beaches, waterfronts and playgrounds were shut on 26 March, as were offices and schools. Bars and restaurants were also closed, including for takeaway and delivery.

    Imposing some of the world’s toughest restrictions on travel and activity helped stop cases arriving in New Zealand from overseas. But it also struck a heavy blow to the country’s tourism-dependent economy.

    Ms Ardern has described economic conditions as the worst since the Great Depression in the 1930s.

    As part of a budget on Thursday, the government announced a NZ$50 billion (£24bn; US$30) Covid-19 recovery fund to help cushion the country’s losses in the months to come.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus antibody test a ‘positive development’

    A test to find out whether people have been infected with coronavirus in the past has been approved by health officials in England.

    Public Health England said the antibody test, developed by Swiss pharmaceutical company Roche, was a “very positive development”.

    The blood test looks for antibodies to see if a person has already had the virus and might now have some immunity.

    Until now, officials have said such tests are not reliable enough.

    The government previously spent a reported £16m buying antibody tests which later proved to be ineffective.

    Sources told the BBC the Roche test was the first one to offer serious potential.

    Antibodies are made by our immune system as it learns to fight an infection.

    Finding antibodies that attack the coronavirus show that person has been infected in the past, but they do not prove they are protected against it in the future.

    Experts at the government’s Porton Down facility evaluated the Roche test last week, Public Health England said.

    They found that if someone had been infected, it gave the correct result 100% of the time.

    Roche said if someone had not caught coronavirus then it gave the correct result more than 99.8% of the time.

    It means fewer than two in 1,000 healthy people would be incorrectly told they had previously caught the coronavirus.

    Health minister Edward Argar said the tests would mainly be used on those in the NHS and social care settings to begin with.

    He could not give an exact date for when the testing could start.

    Prof John Newton, national coordinator of the UK coronavirus testing programme, said: “This is a very positive development because such a highly specific antibody test is a very reliable marker of past infection.

    “This in turn may indicate some immunity to future infection, although the extent to which the presence of antibodies indicates immunity remains unclear.”

    Roche is understood to be in talks with the Department of Health and Social Care about possible use by the NHS in England, though other testing products are also being assessed.

    Health officials in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland make their own decisions, but are likely to follow suit if England does adopt it.

    The test already has approval from medical regulators in the EU and the United States.

    The main use of an antibody test is to find out how many people have been infected.

    The official figures are only a fraction of the total number – not everybody is getting tested and some people are being infected without developing symptoms.

    Antibody tests will help answer questions such as how far and how easily the virus has spread and, crucially, how deadly it really is.

    The second use – helping to lift lockdown – is highly controversial.

    The idea is if you have antibodies, then you can go back to work. This could be particularly helpful in hospitals and care homes full of vulnerable people, if you could guarantee the staff were immune.

    But having antibodies does not automatically mean you cannot get sick or harbour the virus and pass it on to others.

    World Health Organization scientists advise against using so called “immunity passports” because of the lack of evidence.

    The swab tests currently being carried out in the UK determine whether someone has the virus at the time of the test.

    These will remain the core part of the government’s test, track and trace strategy for containing the spread of the virus.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus Sanofi: France resists idea of US getting vaccine first

    It would be “unacceptable” for French drug giant Sanofi to give priority to the US market if it develops a Covid-19 vaccine, a French minister has warned.

    Deputy Finance Minister Agnès Pannier-Runacher was responding to comments by Sanofi CEO Paul Hudson, who said “the US government has the right to the largest pre-order because it’s invested in taking the risk”.

    Many labs worldwide are involved in research to find a Covid-19 vaccine.

    Vaccines usually take years to develop.

    “For us, it would be unacceptable for there to be privileged access to such and such a country for financial reasons,” Ms Pannier-Runacher told France’s Sud Radio.

    Earlier this month the EU chaired a global online summit to boost coronavirus research, and secured pledges of $8bn (£6.5bn) from some 40 countries and donors. The funding is aimed at developing a coronavirus vaccine and treatments for Covid-19.

    The UK co-hosted the summit but the US and Russia did not take part.

    On Thursday Sanofi’s chief in France, Olivier Bogillot, said “the goal is to have this vaccine available to the US as well as France and Europe at the same time”.

    Speaking on French news channel BFMTV, he said that would only be possible “if Europeans work as quickly as the Americans”, and added that the US government had pledged to spend “several hundreds of millions of euros”.

    Sanofi’s Covid-19 vaccine research is partly funded by the US Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (Barda).

    But Sanofi has received tens of millions of euros in tax credits from the French government in recent years to help its research.

    Last month Sanofi also teamed up with Britain’s GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) to work on a vaccine, though trials have not yet started.

    Sanofi’s head of vaccine research, John Shiver, says “we are using an existing technology that was designed for influenza, and we’re applying it to the new virus that causes Covid-19 disease”.

    Sanofi says GSK “will contribute its adjuvant technology, an ingredient added to enhance the immune response, reduce the amount of vaccine protein required per dose and improve the chances of delivering an effective vaccine that can be manufactured at scale”.

    The candidate vaccine is expected to enter clinical trials in the second half of 2020 and to be available by the second half of 2021.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Antarctica: ‘Isolated within isolation’

    Antarctica is cut off from the rest of the world for months at a time – and there’s not been a single case of coronavirus. So why are research teams there following isolation rules to combat the virus, when it’s probably not even on the continent?

    “A case of Covid-19 here could be disastrous,” Pradeep Tomar, on the Indian base, told the BBC.

    “So we are taking lockdown measures, too. It feels like we are isolated within the isolation.”

    If there was an outbreak it would be devastating. There’s nowhere else to go, medical facilities are limited – and the likelihood of spreading it to others would be high.

    But most of the team members are still more fearful for people back home than for themselves.

    “I truly wish I could serve my country in this time of need,” Tomar said. “Nobody has ever witnessed something like the ongoing crisis. I hope to see the same world again when we go home.”

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: Tunisia relaxes curfew hours

    Tunisia has reduced its nightly curfew hours for a second time.

    A 12-hour curfew that was introduced a little under a month ago to help combat coronavirus has been reduced to six hours.

    The country has not recorded any new cases of the disease for th ree days.

    Health officials say half of those who have been recorded as having the infection have recovered and only a few people remain in hospital.

    Some restrictions still remain: large public events are banned, a permit is required for travel between regions and shopping malls, bars and restaurants remain closed.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: Children affected by rare inflammatory reaction

    Scores of UK and US children have been affected by a rare inflammatory disease linked to coronavirus.

    A number of children have also been diagnosed with the disease – which can cause symptoms similar to toxic shock syndrome – elsewhere in Europe.

    Up to 100 UK children have been affected. Some have needed intensive care while others recovered quickly.

    In April, NHS doctors were told to look out for a rare but dangerous reaction in children.

    This was prompted by eight children becoming ill in London, including a 14-year-old who died.

    Doctors said all eight children had similar symptoms when they were admitted to Evelina London Children’s Hospital, including a high fever, rash, red eyes, swelling and general pain.

    Most of the children had no major lung or breathing problems, although seven were put on a ventilator to help improve heart and circulation issues.

    Doctors are describing it as a “new phenomenon” similar to Kawasaki disease shock syndrome – a rare condition that mainly affects children under the age of five. Symptoms include a rash, swollen glands in the neck and dry and cracked lips.

    But this new syndrome is also affecting older children up to the age of 16, with a minority experiencing serious complications.

    Coronavirus: ‘My son had symptoms of rare syndrome’

    Dr Liz Whittaker, clinical lecturer in paediatric infectious diseases and immunology, at Imperial College London, said the fact that the syndrome was occurring in the middle of a pandemic, suggests the two are linked.

    “You’ve got the Covid-19 peak, and then three or four weeks later we’re seeing a peak in this new phenomenon which makes us think that it’s a post-infectious phenomenon,” she said.

    This means it is likely to be something related to the build-up of antibodies after infection.

    ‘Exceptionally rare’

    Prof Russell Viner, president of the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health, said the majority of children who have had the condition have responded to treatment and are getting better and starting to go home.

    The syndrome is “exceptionally rare”, he said.

    “This shouldn’t stop parents letting their children exit lockdown,” Prof Viner added.

    He said understanding more about the inflammatory disease “might explain why some children become very ill with Covid-19, while the majority are unaffected or asymptomatic”.

    Children are thought to make up just 1-2% of all cases of coronavirus infection, accounting for less than 500 admissions to hospital.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: Trump says Dr Fauci’s warning ‘not acceptable’

    US President Donald Trump has said a sobering warning by his top infectious diseases expert about lifting pandemic restrictions too soon was unacceptable.

    He accused Dr Anthony Fauci of wanting “to play all sides of the equation” in his testimony to lawmakers on Tuesday.

    The president said he was especially dissatisfied with Dr Fauci’s caution around reopening schools too quickly.

    COVID-19 has infected nearly 1.4 million people in the US and killed 84,000, while ravaging the economy.

    What did the US president say?

    Speaking on Wednesday at the White House, Mr Trump took issue with Dr Fauci’s comments to a Senate hearing a day earlier about the risks to children of reopening and his assessment that a vaccine was unlikely before classes could begin this autumn.

    “Look, he wants to play all sides of the equation,” Mr Trump said of his top coronavirus expert’s concerns.

    “I was surprised by his answer actually, because, you know, it’s just to me – it’s not an acceptable answer, especially when it comes to schools,” the president told reporters.

    He said “the only thing that would be acceptable” is giving older teachers and professors a few more weeks before they return.

    “Because this is a disease that attacks age, and it attacks health,” the president said.

    “But with the young children, I mean, and students, it’s really – just take a look at the statistics. It’s pretty amazing,” Mr Trump added.

    The Republican president is keen to get Americans back to work and has praised governors who are moving to do so while criticising others for not acting aggressively enough.

    The country is split over Mr Trump’s focus on protecting livelihoods, critics accuse him of gambling with lives to serve his own political interests ahead of November’s re-election bid.

    The president’s latest comments come amid reports of some young children being severely affected by an inflammatory syndrome that could be linked to the virus.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus may never go away, World Health Organization warns

    The Coronavirus “may never go away”, the World Health Organization (WHO) has warned.

    Speaking at a briefing on Wednesday, WHO emergencies director Dr Mike Ryan warned against trying to predict when the virus would disappear.

    He added that even if a vaccine is found, controlling the virus will require a “massive effort”.

    Almost 300,000 people worldwide are reported to have died with coronavirus, and more than 4.3m cases recorded.

    “It is important to put this on the table: this virus may become just another endemic virus in our communities, and this virus may never go away,” Dr Ryan told the virtual press conference from Geneva.

    “HIV has not gone away – but we have come to terms with the virus.”

    Dr Ryan then said he doesn’t believe “anyone can predict when this disease will disappear”.

    There are currently more than 100 potential vaccines in development – but Dr Ryan noted there are other illnesses, such as measles, that still haven’t been eliminated despite there being vaccines for them.

    WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus stressed it was still possible to control the virus, with effort.

    “The trajectory is in our hands, and it’s everybody’s business, and we should all contribute to stop this pandemic,” he said.

    WHO epidemiologist Maria van Kerkhove also told the briefing: “We need to get into the mindset that it is going to take some time to come out of this pandemic.”

    Source: bbc.com

  • Somalia’s coronavirus khat bans leaves chewers in a stew

    Flights carrying the mild stimulant khat have been banned from entering Somalia, leaving chewers of the leaves in a stew, write the BBC’s Mary Harper and Bella Hassan.

    In normal times, around midday, when the bunches of fresh leaves arrive in Somalia’s capital, Mogadishu, by plane from Kenya, men disappear from view, lounging in khat kiosks or chewing at home.

    The leaf, also known as miraa, acts as a stimulant, sending users into a frenzy of excited chatter. Business deals are made and broken, tired fighters are kept awake.

    In March, the government of Somalia banned international flights, including khat planes, as part of its efforts to contain coronavirus.

    When it imposed a lockdown, it forbade people from gathering together to chew their beloved leaves as this would break social distancing rules. Officials warned that because khat is picked by hand it could help spread COVID-19.

    But the stimulant is still finding its way into the country.

    Some comes in by road from Ethiopia. Some is transported by boat from Kenya, where many khat growers and traders say they have lost their livelihoods. The situation is especially grave in central Meru county, the heartland of khat farming in Kenya.

    Crafty dealers

    The chairman of the Nyambene Miraa Traders’ Association, Kimathi Munjuri, said members of his organisation exported about $250,000 (£200,000) worth of khat a day to the Somali capital, Mogadishu.

    About half-a-million farmers cultivate the stimulant in the Horn of Africa; many will be hit hard by the ban.

    Although most khat sellers in Somalia have nothing to trade, a few crafty dealers have hit a goldmine.

    “Before Covid-19, we got fresh leaves from Kenya,” says a woman who sells khat in Mogadishu. “Now we get it illegally from the port city of Kismayo, and because it is so limited, we can push up the price. I used to sell one kilo of leaves for about $20 to $25. Now I sell it for $120. This ban has been very good for us.”

    Source: bbc.com

  • ‘I was shunned over coronavirus fears’ – Kenyan nurse

    A Kenyan nurse found herself being shunned and harassed after she prepared a patient for a Covid-19 test while she was on a nightshift.

    Eunice Mwabili says the case was handled professionally – she wore personal protective equipment while dealing with the man, who was placed in an isolation room at the hospital.

    By the next morning, her friends and neighbours in the capital, Nairobi, had begun to avoid her, fearing she had become infected with Coronavirus.

    It is unclear who leaked the information that she had organised to have the patient tested – but both her name and number were leaked on social media.

    The patient ended up being negative, but that news never filtered out – the damage was done.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: Rejecting isolation centres only puts yourself, families & community at risk – Dr Dacosta Aboagye cautions

    The Chairman of the National Risk Communications and Social Mobilization Committee for COVID-19, Dr. DaCosta Aboagye, has pleaded with Ghanaians to welcome the setting up of isolation centres in their communities as part of measures to help in the fight against Covid-19.

    This, according to him, will protect, not only persons suspected to have contracted the disease, but every other person living within the community and accordingly reduce the risk of spread.

    Speaking to the media on Tuesday, 12th May 2020 after a press briefing , Dr DaCosta Aboagye said the National Risk Communication and Social Mobilisation team is working closely with relevant stakeholders including the Ministry of Information, the regional and districts health directorates, MMDAs, some NGOs, the National Commission on Civic Education (NCCE), and many others to intensify public education and community engagements on Covid -19 across the country.

    Dr DaCosta Aboagye, who doubles as the Director of Health Promotion at the Ghana Health Service, noted that “the focus of this renewed education campaign shall be on the aspects of the public education involving stigma and the many benefits of having isolation centres in communities”.

    Commenting on the incidence in Obuasi and some parts of the country where some residents in communities earmarked for the setting up of isolation centres are protesting against the proposal, Dr. DaCosta did not mince words in condemning such actions, and said, if persuasion fails, the authorities may be left with no option but to deploy security personnel to ensure compliance in furtherance of the national interest.

    Indeed, he confirmed that in the specific case of Obuasi, the epicenter of Covid-19 in the Ashanti Region, security personnel have already been deployed to that part of town following reports that some residents were protesting against plans to establish an isolation centre in their community.

    This notwithstanding, the Health Promotions expert, Dr Aboagye, disclosed that his outfit is working with the District Chief Executive (DCE) of Obuasi East, Ms Faustina Amissah , the Police, Regional and District Health directorates to support the people of Obuasi to come to terms with the new normal and accordingly accept the isolation centre.

    Finally, Dr DaCosta pleaded with traditional leaders, heads of faith- based organisations and celebrities in the country to join the Covid -19 stigma education, education on the benefits of isolation centre as well as the campaign on other preventive etiquette.

    Source: Peace FM

  • Ghana repatriates 122 ECOWAS nationals over virus restrictions

    A total of 122 ECOWAS nationals were arrested in the Upper West Region in April this year, officials of the Ghana Immigration Service (GIS) has said.

    The foreigners, according to the GIS, have since been repatriated. They were intercepted at various border posts, especially at Babile in the Lawra Municipality.

    Ghana has tightened border restrictions after the country recorded the deadly Coronavirus in March. The border closure has been extended to the end of May following a surge of the virus.

    Public Affairs Director of the Upper West Region sect of the Ghana Immigration Service told Dailymailgh.com that security has been beefed up across border towns to ward off such migrants.

    “Within our operational duty or function, we are responsible to fish out people who enter the country without documents. In April, for instance, we rounded up 122 foreigners and all of them were screened and have since been repatriated”, said ICO Ibn Yussif Duranah Abdul-Mumin Seidu, the Public Affairs Director of the Upper West Immigration Service.

    Meanwhile, five persons believed to be Burkina Faso nationals had been arrested by the service at the time of filing this report.

    They were picked up on Wednesday, May 12 while using an unapproved route near their native country, Burkina Faso.

    The all-male ECOWAS nationals whose ages ranged between 15 and 34 were intercepted on two motorbikes with Burkina Faso registration numbers.

    “Our investigations revealed that they were destined for Kumasi and Techiman for farming and trading activities,” said the Public Affairs Director in an interview with Dailymailgh.com.

    They have since been screened by the Port health personnel and have been handed over Burkina Faso authorities on the other side of the border at about 1630hrs local time.

    Source: Daily Mail

  • Closure of churches has prevented our prayers from being answered – Odeefour Koduah

    The founder and the leader of Healing God Maranatha Prayer Ministry, Odeefour Jeremiah Koduah has opined that the closure of churches and mosques in the country has also shut the doors to heaven preventing prayers from being heard by God.

    The man of God speaking in an interview on Nyankonton Mu Nsem on Rainbow Radio 87.5Fm said although it may sound risky physically to lift the ban on churches and mosques, it is more dangerous spiritually.

    He claims the decision to ban religious activities created a space between God and his children and “until we lift the ban, the situation we are trying to resolve will remain the same”.

    Odeefour Koduah appealed to President Akufo-Addo to lift the ban, allow Christians and Muslims to pray to God and seek his face in the face of the coronavirus outbreak.

    He indicated “we have used our physical energies in solving the outbreak and it was time we turn to God for help”.

    He has also advised Ghanaians not to politicise the outbreak but work collectively, pray and seek the face of God to deliver the country from the virus.

    Source: rainbowradioonline.com

  • Ban on public gatherings: It’s too early for churches to open – Dr. Boadi Nyamekye

    General Overseer of The Maker’s House Chapel (TMHCI), Dr. Michael Boadi Nyamekye, has commended President Nana Akufo-Addo for not yielding to pressures by his colleague Pastors who are calling on him to revoke restrictions on religious activities, so Christians can go back to their various churches.

    The President, addressing the nation in his ninth update on COVID-19, extended the ban on public gatherings till 31st May, 2020 which means churches also remain closed till the end of the month.

    President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo‘s announcement has been met with mixed feelings from religious leaders as some men of God in the country have vehemently spoken against the decision.

    Some of the Pastors have taken it a step further by threatening the President saying if he doesn’t allow churches to operate after the extension period, God will visit his wrath upon the nation.

    One of the religious leaders leading the crusade against the President is the Founder of Life Assembly Worship Centre and Presidential candidate for the Ghana Union Movement (GUM), Rev. Christian Kwabena Andrews, popularly known as Osofo Kyiri Abosom.

    According to Osofo Kyiri Abosom, the rage of God is kindled against the nation because of the closure of churches and if the ban is not lifted, something worse than the Coronavirus pandemic will befall the entire nation in the coming weeks.

    But speaking to Presenter and news anchor Akosua Ago Aboagye on Okay FM’s ‘Abrabo Pa’ programme, Dr. Boadi Nyamekye threw his weight behind the President saying ”the truth is we have to think about lives. If it is only the Word of God we want to tell them, we can reach them on the TV, radio and internet. And we should pray that the people stay alive because it is when people are alive that they will come to church. But if they get infected by the disease, there is nothing that we can do”.

    Dr. Boadi Nyamekye further had a word of advice for those advocating the opening of churches saying “we need people to be alive to be in church. So, we have to make sure whatever we can do as a people to make sure they’re alive and Christian leaders to make sure they’re alive and healthy, we do that. I agree with the President. They should wait patiently for things to tone down”.

    The TMHCI General Overseer disclosed that even when President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo lifts the ban on public gatherings, his church will continue to be closed till there is every indication that the disease can be cured.

    “Even when they lift the restriction for us to go to church, I still will not conduct church services. I am not yet ready to hold church now at all. No way! Even if they allow churches to open, I have already told my church leadership that I won’t do church services and so the members should stay home and watch the sermons on Facebook, YouTube and Television. I will allow our members to come to church when a vaccine or medicine is discovered because I wouldn’t want you to come to receive life and go home with death,” he said.

    Source: Peace FM

  • Coronavirus: God will save us if we adhere to preventive measures – Pastor

    Reverend Dominic Owusu, Head Pastor of Calvary Temple Assemblies of God Church at Bantama in the Kumasi Metropolis, has said it is only God who can save Ghana from the deadly coronavirus.

    He however, said it was important for the public to strictly adhere to all measures and protocols that have been announced by the government to prevent the further spreading of the virus, which was now threatening the lives of citizens in the country.

    Delivering a Sunday sermon on a virtual church service in Kumasi, Rev. Owusu pointed out that, God was ready to save the lives of His people.

    “We have unwavering belief in the Almighty God that He has what it takes to save us and the world from this affliction,” he stated

    Rev. Owusu said if citizens obeyed all the preventive protocols outline by the government, the country would come out victorious.

    “As the government continues to take bold steps to curb the spread, and citizens are encouraged to strictly observe these preventive measures to protect us from contracting and further spreading the virus, I wish to urge our religious leaders as well as faith based organizations to continue to pray for our dear nation Ghana and the world,” he said.

    He urged the citizens to regularly wash their hands under running water, ensure social distancing, use alcohol based hand sanitizers as well as wear nose mask when going out.

    Source: GNA

  • We will have summer tourist season, promises EU

    A gradual lifting of borders has been proposed by the EU’s executive in an attempt to kick-start a tourist industry hit hard by the coronavirus pandemic.

    “Our message is we will have a tourist season this summer,” said economic affairs commissioner Paolo Gentiloni, “even if it’s with security measures and limitations.”

    Borders closed across the EU, including the border-free Schengen zone.

    But states are starting to reopen them.

    Austria and Germany have become the latest EU countries to agree to remove travel restrictions.

    From Friday there will be random checks at border crossings and then on 15 June free movement should resume. “We want to make people’s everyday lives easier and take another step towards more normality,” said Chancellor Sebastian Kurz.

    UK travellers have already been warned not to expect “lavish” international holidays, with plans for a 14-day quarantine on air arrivals. But travel without quarantine will be possible to France and Ireland.

    The scale of the crisis was illustrated by travel giant Tui announcing the loss of up to 8,000 jobs worldwide with plans to cut costs by 30%. The German government has given the company a €1.8bn (£1.6bn; $1.9bn) bridging loan to stay afloat.

    What is the EU planning?

    The European Commission said its guidance was based on the principles of safety and non-discrimination. Tourism provided almost 10% of Europe’s economic output and millions of jobs across the 27 member states relied on it.

    Commission Vice-President Margrethe Vestager said no-one should travel if they felt sick or experienced symptoms.

    The non-binding plans involve countries working together to gradually remove travel bans and then border checks, while keeping targeted measures as the Covid-19 outbreak comes under control across the member states.

    A phased approach would start by allowing seasonal workers across borders, followed by a lifting of restrictions between countries with the virus under a similar level control and then the opening of all the EU’s internal borders.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Wall Street bonuses set to fall by as much as 30% in 2020: report

    Wall Street bonuses for 2020 could fall by as much as 25%-30% due to the deep cuts to revenues recorded by banks and hedge funds earlier this year as a result of the novel coronavirus, according to a report published Wednesday by compensation consulting firm Johnson Associates Inc.

    While most compensation is expected to be down, 2020 is likely to be a year with “wide, wide variations in incentive outcomes between stronger and weaker competitors,” according to the report by Alan Johnson, whose predictions are closely watched by financial professionals.

    The outbreak of the novel coronavirus has led to widespread shutdowns in the U.S. economy, causing gross domestic product to decline at a 4.8% annualized rate in the first quarter and forcing some 33.5 million Americans to file for unemployment benefits.

    For Wall Street professionals, most of whom are working from home, bonuses make up a significant percentage of their annual pay, and many have been fearing big cuts. reut.rs/3dxqHa6

    Workers in the commercial and retail divisions of many large banks could see the largest year-over-year declines in their incentive pay of up to 30%, as those banks have had to set aside billions for loans that could potentially go bad in this economy.

    Investment bankers in advisory roles could receive 20%-25% cuts to incentive pay, while their investment bank colleagues who work in underwriting would see smaller declines of 10%-15%.

    Johnson writes that this is because investment banking advisory revenues were down in the first quarter of the year, with most deals stalled, while debt underwriting flourished as corporations sought to build up their cash.

    The report also finds that asset managers could receive 20%-25% reductions in bonuses, while hedge fund workers could see 15%-20% declines.

    Source: reuters.com

  • Russia records more than 10,000 new virus cases

    Russia reported more than 10,000 new coronavirus cases Wednesday, continuing a grim trend that has seen the country register the world’s second-highest number of infections.

    Health officials reported 10,028 new cases over the last 24 hours, bringing Russia’s total number of infections to 242,271.

    Health Minister Mikhail Murashko told parliament more than 100,000 patients are now hospitalised with confirmed or suspected coronavirus, a significant jump from the figure of 80,000 he gave on Friday.

    Nearly 1,500 patients are currently on ventilators, the minister said.

    Six patients have died in deadly fires at hospitals in Moscow and Saint Petersburg over the past week.

    The blazes have been linked to domestically-produced ventilators and the country’s healthcare regulator on Wednesday suspended the use of the particular model involved.

    Murashko acknowledged ongoing “disruptions” in supplies of personal protective equipment for medics, while he said those working in “red zones” with infected patients now have enough.

    The Kremlin this week began easing a national lockdown to slow the spread of the virus, despite a steady rise in numbers that on Tuesday brought Russia to second place in a global tally of infections, behind the United States.

    A majority of Russia’s new cases were registered in the capital, a government virus tally said, where Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin has extended a lockdown until the end of May.

    Senior figures infected

    President Vladimir Putin’s spokesman Dmitry Peskov has become the most recent senior official to test positive for the coronavirus.

    He told reporters he was receiving treatment in hospital.

    His wife, Olympic ice dancer Tatiana Navka, who has also tested positive, wrote on Instagram that she was already recovering but “it’s a bit more complicated for my husband”.

    Despite the steady rise in new cases, Russia’s reported mortality rate is significantly lower compared to other European countries hit hard by the pandemic, with 96 new deaths and a total of 2,212 dead from the coronavirus as of Wednesday.

    Authorities say the low mortality rate is because Russia was able to learn lessons from the experiences of western Europe, moving quickly to isolate travellers and people at risk, convert hospitals for virus patients and launch a vast campaign to test and quarantine those infected.

    Health Minister Murashko said low fatalities were “thanks to our hero medics.”

    Authorities on Monday said they had carried out nearly six million tests.

    But critics have cast doubt on the figures, accusing the authorities of under-counting by blaming virus-related deaths on other causes.

    Murashko said that Russia was working on developing vaccines and clinical tests are planned to start in June.

    Source: france24.com

  • WHO stresses need to find source of coronavirus

    Pinning down the source of the coronavirus pandemic should help in working out how COVID-19 has “invaded the human species” so quickly, a senior WHO official told AFP.

    The outbreak has triggered a fierce diplomatic spat between China and the United States – with the World Health Organization at the centre of the row.

    In late March, US President Donald Trump and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping struck an informal truce in the war of words over the origin of the deadly disease.

    But it quickly broke down. Trump has been accusing Beijing of being slow to alert the world to the initial outbreak in Wuhan, and openly suspects China of covering up an accident at the eastern city’s virology lab.

    Far from the cross-Pacific spat, Sylvie Briand, the WHO’s director of infectious hazard management, said it was crucial to know the origin of the virus “to understand how it has evolved”.

    “It is a virus of animal origin transmitted to humans. And so we have to try to understand how the adaptation of this virus allowed it to invade the human species,” she told AFP outside the WHO’s headquarters in Geneva.

    Virus ‘ping-pong’

    The first cases of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes the COVID-19 disease, were reported in late December in Wuhan.

    Since then, the pandemic has infected more than four million people worldwide and claimed nearly 300,000 lives.

    Many researchers believe the new coronavirus came from bats, but passed through another species before being transmitted to humans.

    “The virus multiplied in these animals, changed a little in doing so and finally resulted in a type of virus” that is transmissible to human beings, said Briand, who in 2009 headed the WHO’s influenza progamme during the 2009 H1N1 “swine flu” pandemic.

    Retracing the origin of the virus, by discovering the intermediate hosts, would “prevent the phenomenon from happening again — and avoid ping-pong” transmission between humans and animals.

    “Every time it jumps from one species to another, the virus can mutate a bit,” the French scientist said.

    “That can have an impact on treatments – it can become resistant – while vaccines may no longer be effective enough.”

    For now, there are still many unknowns, despite “thousands and thousands of samples” having been taken, notably from “many animals in the market in Wuhan” – but also from dogs in Hong Kong, said Briand, stressing that the analysis will take time.

    The samples are taken by WHO member states but the United Nations’ health agency “encourages them to share information with each other” in order to speed up research.

    Changing the alert system

    The United States and Australia have called for an international probe into the origin of the virus.

    More diplomatically, the WHO has called on Beijing to invite them in to investigate the source.

    Shortly afterwards in early May, China proposed setting up a commission under the auspices of the WHO to assess the “global response” to COVID-19 – and only once the pandemic is over.

    The Chinese authorities insist that the plan should be signed off in advance by the WHO’s World Health Assembly or its executive board – the two main bodies of the UN agency, which host their annual meetings next week.

    Briand said the gatherings should also focus on the need to “refine” the WHO’s health alert system, which only allows the organisation to declare whether there is a global emergency or not – while the previous procedure had six stages, with the last being declaring a pandemic.

    “We need to find a system that can trigger alerts so that people can get ready,” she said.

    “But at the same time we have to tell them whether it is imminent or if it’s coming in a few weeks or months, and tell them more precisely what it is they need to be prepared for.”

    Source: france24.com

  • Coronavirus: Broadway actor Nick Cordero wakes from coma

    A Broadway actor who had his right leg amputated while fighting Covid-19 has woken up from a medically induced coma, his wife has revealed.

    Amanda Kloots said it was “a miracle” that husband Nick Cordero was on the road to recovery.

    The Canadian actor, who was nominated for a Tony Award for the Bullets Over Broadway musical, has been in hospital in Los Angeles since the end of March.

    Kloots has been posting regular updates about the 41-year-old’s condition.

    A fundraiser set up to support the couple and their young son Elvis has raised more than $500,000 (£407,000).

    Cordero was initially admitted to hospital on 30 March after being diagnosed with pneumonia, and later tested positive for coronavirus.

    According to his wife, he went into septic shock while in hospital, had two “mini strokes” and had blood clotting complications that resulted in his leg being amputated.

    Speaking on Instagram on Tuesday, Kloots said her husband was “extremely weak” but was “following commands which means his mental status is coming back”.

    Cordero’s other theatre credits include stints in Waitress, Rock of Ages and the musical version of A Bronx Tale.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Hong Kong pushing to make ‘insult of Chinese anthem’ a crime punishable by up to three years in prison

    After five months of being at the forefront of the coronavirus pandemic, new infections in Hong Kong have slowed to a trickle, and the city is slowly getting back to normal. Which, these days, means protests.

    Many are not waiting for the final coronavirus restrictions to be lifted. During protests over the weekend, police arrested some 230 people on a variety of charges, including unlawful assembly and refusing to abide by social distancing regulations.

    Such disturbances are only likely to increase, with summer being the city’s traditional protest season around the key anniversaries of June 4, for the Tiananmen Square massacre, and July 1, which marks Hong Kong’s handover to Chinese control, as well as a host of new key dates created by last year’s protests.
    The government has attempted to wield public opinion against the protesters, pointing out that people are already hurting economically from the coronavirus crisis and now is not the time for further public disturbance. The heavy police response to initial protests also seems designed to dissuade anyone on the fence from joining in.

    At the same time, however, the government is pushing ahead with a piece of legislation that — like the extradition bill that kicked off last year’s protests — has sparked concern among moderate Hong Kongers about increasing Chinese encroachment and undermining of the city’s political freedoms.

    On Tuesday, the government said lawmakers will resume debate on the Chinese national anthem bill on May 27. The proposed law will make it a crime punishable by up to three years in prison “to insult the national anthem.”
    “The national anthem is the symbol and sign of the country,” Matthew Cheung, Hong Kong’s chief secretary and number two official, said in a statement. “(The purpose of the law) is to preserve the dignity of the national anthem so that members of the community would respect the national anthem.”

    Hong Kong is part of China, but the semi-autonomous city has its own legal and political system, with limited democracy and greater personal freedoms than on the mainland. The city competes as itself in many arenas, such as the Olympics and international football matches, but uses China’s national anthem, “March of the Volunteers,” which is also played at official ceremonies.

    The proposed law mirrors legislation passed in Beijing in September 2017, amid widespread anger in the mainland at Hong Kong football fans booing the country’s national anthem during international matches.

    But it has taken almost three years for the same rules to be applied in Hong Kong. That is despite it being added to Annex III of Hong Kong’s Basic Law, the city’s de facto constitution, which requires the city’s government to apply the national anthem law locally “by way of promulgation or legislation.”

    Per Article 18 of the Basic Law, “laws listed in Annex III … shall be confined to those relating to defense and foreign affairs as well as other matters outside the limits of the autonomy of the Region.” Previous laws introduced in Hong Kong by law of Annex III include regulations regarding China’s exclusive economic zone, which has an effect on territorial claims in the South China Sea, and legislation regarding foreign banks.

    That this can be applied to cover legislation regulating the country’s national anthem shows the fairly broad remit Beijing sees the law as providing. What checks exist on this ability are only really provided by the Hong Kong legislature, and the local government’s previously stated commitment to allowing lawmakers to debate such laws rather than simply promulgating them unilaterally.

    Nor is Annex III the only way the Chinese government can influence laws in the semi-autonomous city, beyond its appointment of Hong Kong’s leader and influence on pro-Beijing lawmakers. The NPC can also issue “interpretations” of constitutional issues, such as in 2016, when it intervened in a debate over oath-taking to rule that lawmakers who had staged protests during their swearing-in ceremony had voided their election and were barred from taking their seats.

    Hong Kong’s legislature began debating the national anthem law early last year, before the protests over the extradition bill brought all procedures to a stop and shut down the legislature for several months. In its statement Tuesday, the government said it wanted to pass the law before the current legislative session ends in July and any outstanding work becomes defunct, meaning the entire process would have to start over again.

    Passage of the law seems inevitable without the kind of radical action taken by protesters last year to block the extradition bill. Opposition lawmakers do not have the numbers to block the law, and while filibustering and other procedural tactics have succeeded in slowing it in the committee stage, they have largely run their course.
    Once law, it will be illegal to misuse or insult “March of the Volunteers,” with offenders subject to a fine of up to $6,450 (50,000 HKD), and three years in prison. Schoolchildren, including those at international schools, would also be legally required to learn the anthem, which opens with the line, “Arise, we who refuse to be slaves!”

    Multiple legal and human rights bodies have criticized the law for undermining freedom of expression and contravening Hong Kong’s constitutional protections.

    Both the Hong Kong Bar Association and the Progressive Lawyer’s Group (PLG), which represent legal professionals in the city, raised concerns that the wording of the law left it open to abuse and uncertainty, with the PLG saying in a statement that it is “poorly drafted and appallingly lacking in clarity.”

    A joint statement from 38 Hong Kong civil society groups warned the law “could have chilling effects on dissent and become a tool for the government to suppress opposition.”

    A spokesman for Hong Kong’s Constitutional and Mainland Affairs Bureau said Tuesday that the spirit of the bill was “respect,” adding that a person would only commit an offense if they publicly and intentionally insulted the national anthem. He denied that the law was “draconian” or that there was any risk of “suppressing the freedom of speech.”

    Government officials have previously said they hope not to see any prosecutions, that the law itself would be sufficient to engender “respect” for the anthem, a suggestion ridiculed by opposition lawmakers.

    “Respect cannot be won via legislation,” pro-democracy lawmaker Claudia Mo told CNN last year. “Respect has to be won by oneself. You cannot threaten and force others to respect you unwillingly.”

    Nor are protesters who have regularly taken to using the phrase “Chinazi” and defacing the Chinese flag during demonstrations likely to stand and salute as “March of the Volunteers” plays.

    If and when the bill passes, its revocation will likely become another protest demand, as anti-government unrest will inevitably kick into high gear again.

    The stakes are substantially higher this year, with legislative elections in September. While Hong Kong’s parliament is not fully democratically elected, the opposition is hoping it can build on a landslide victory in last year’s local elections to squeak a bare majority in the higher chamber, the first time this has ever happened under Chinese rule.

    With Beijing increasingly asserting its control over Hong Kong affairs however — including hinting at expelling or barring more lawmakers from election — the national anthem law could become a key tool in avoiding any further electoral humiliation.

    Source: cnn.com

  • Coronavirus: Prestea Government Hospital gets isolation centre from Golden Star Resources

    The multi-purpose recreational park in Prestea has been temporarily released to the Prestea HuniValley Municipal Health Directorate to be used as an isolation centre.

    The move by the mining firm, Golden Star Bogoso Prestea Limited (GSBPL) on Friday, May 8, 2020, was part of plans being made by the company to fight the disease in the municipality.

    At the short ceremony at the recreational park to officially release the facility, the Finance and Administrative Manager of GSBPL Rodney Oddoye stated that, as a company, it has always been their way of supporting in difficult times, hence the several support they have provided since the outbreak of the disease in Ghana.

    He said, Golden Star has so far provided some water storage systems at various public places in the operational areas, where water is supplied intermittently, just to make sure people get free water to wash their hands to prevent contracting Covid 19.

    “We have given out water poly tanks to major lorry stations in our catchment areas which include Bogoso, Dumasi and Prestea. YOM, a water tanker contractor of GSBPL has agreed to provide free water to fill these polytanks from time to time”

    “We have also supported the three CHIP compound health facilities in our catchment areas including Brakwaline, Himan and Bondaye with complete sets of veronica buckets, to help with proper handwashing in these facilities.” Mr. Oddoye stated.

    Above all, Mr. Oddoye further said, the release of the recreational park will help deal with Covid19 in the Prestea Huni Valley Municipality.

    He said, “this very centre where we are holding this ceremony has been given out to the management of the Prestea Government Hospital, to serve as a temporary holding and isolation centre for COVID19 cases, that may arise in the Prestea Huni Valley Municipality”.

    The Medical Superintendent at the Prestea Government Hospital thanking GSBPL confirmed the first case of COVID19 in the Prestea HuniValley and pleaded for calm.

    He advised against stigmatization and pleaded with everyone to observe the precautionary measures and better still stay at home.

    On behalf of the chiefs, Nana Adu Panyin II, Chief of Mbease Nsuta expressing sadness over the case recorded Thursday, May 7 2020, called on the Health Directorate and GSBPL to intensify education on what isolation centre is. So not to be blamed for spreading the disease in Prestea and its environs.

    Later at the same event, the Third Party Contractors, through GSBPL donated some items amounting over Ghc44,000 to be distributed to the clinics scattered in the Prestea Huni Valley Municipality.

    The items included gallons of hand sanitizers, gallons of liquid soaps, veronica buckets, waste bins and paper tissues.

    The third party contractors who made the donation were LOCOMS, Amaray Enterprise, P2W, Petrosol, Western Transport Services, Kruger Brent Security and Primus.

    The rest were ERAM, Scrap dealers, Environmental Services(Bronsons, Braodleaf, Inubellem, Ralph Amonoo, Perfect Atom and PaCS), YOM Water Tanker Services and Erdmac.

    Source: Tina Cudjoe, Contributor

  • Coronavirus: Niger reopens mosques, churches

    Niger has further relaxed Coronavirus restrictions, allowing mosques and churches to reopen from Wednesday.

    Places of worship had been closed for nearly two months as part of measures to contain the spread of the virus.

    The authorities say they are reopening them because the situation has improved. But worshippers have to adhere to social-distancing rules, wear face masks and regularly wash their hands.

    Mosques and churches must also be disinfected before prayer sessions or services.

    A dusk-to-dawn curfew in the capital, Niamey, has also been lifted. But hotels, airports and land borders remain closed.

    In a statement, the government warned that mosque and churches could be closed if the situation deteriorates.

    Niger has confirmed a total of 854 coronavirus cases..

    Senegal reopened places of worship on Tuesday and reduced the hours of its night-time curfew.

     

    Source: BBC

  • ‘Oldest woman in Spain’ beats coronavirus at 113

    A 113-year-old woman – believed to be the oldest woman in Spain – has recovered from the coronavirus, officials have said.

    Maria Branyas was diagnosed with Covid-19 after the country went into lockdown in March.

    But after weeks in isolation, Ms. Branyas recovered, having suffered only mild symptoms.

    It means she has lived through the flu pandemic of 1918-19, the 1936-39 Spanish Civil War, and the coronavirus.

    “Now that she is well, she is wonderful, she wants to speak, to explain, to make her reflections, it is her again,” her daughter tweeted.

    Born in Mexico in 1907, she moved north to San Francisco two years later and arrived in the Catalan province of Girona during World War One with her Spanish journalist father. She raised three children – one of whom recently turned 86 – has 11 grandchildren – the oldest of whom is 60 – and 13 great-grandchildren.

    She has lived for two decades at a care home in the city of Olot.

    Speaking to La Vanguardia last year, she said: “I have done nothing

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: You can withdraw from your pension if youre in hardship NPRA

    The National Pensions Regulatory Authority (NPRA) has issued guidelines for persons who will want to withdraw some funds from a provident fund or personal personal scheme before their retirement age due to the hardship COVID-19 has brought on them.

    According to the Authority anyone who wants to withdraw from provident fund schemes as a result of lose of job due to COVID-19 can withdraw only 15 per cent of total accrued benefits.

    However, members of personal pension schemes can withdraw all the amounts in their savings accounts.

  • Coronavirus: Two new infections end Hong Kong’s 24-day clean sheet

    Two people in Hong Kong tested positive for coronavirus, officials said Wednesday, ending a 24-day run of no new local cases that saw the city begin to ease social distancing regulations.

    The financial hub was on course for 28-days of no local transmissions – a yardstick often used by epidemiologists to judge if an outbreak has been defeated.

    But on Wednesday officials said a 66-year-old woman and her five-year-old granddaughter had tested positive for the virus.

    Investigators described them as local transmission cases, saying they were still trying to work out how the older woman had become infected.

    “She has no travel history. Her family has no travel history and they have no contact history with confirmed cases,” Dr Chaung Shuk-kwan told reporters, adding officials were planning to test neighbours.

    For the last three weeks the only new cases have been in 24 people arriving from overseas, who were placed in quarantine.

    The new infections will raise fears that a new outbreak could still occur.

    Despite its close proximity and links to mainland China, Hong Kong has kept infections to around 1,000 people with four deaths using intensive testing and contract tracing.

    The city has avoided the kind of harsh lockdowns seen elsewhere.

    On Friday authorities began easing many social distancing measures with the re-opening of bars, gyms and cinemas after a three-week closure.

    The threat of renewed outbreaks is a persistent worry for governments trying to balance public health with protecting badly battered economies.

    South Korea, which has also been held up as a model for defeating the virus, has seen more than 100 new cases emerge this week with a cluster linked to a Seoul nightclub district.

    Source: france24.com

  • Senegals engineering students design machines to fight coronavirus

    Senegalese engineering students are throwing themselves at the West African state’s growing coronavirus problem with inventions such as automatic sanitiser dispensers and medical robots.

    Youngsters from a top engineering school in the capital Dakar have turned their technical skills toward easing pressure on the wards and they are already in talks with hospitals over some of their innovations.

    One example is a small robot, dubbed ‘Dr. Car’, which will be able to measure patients’ blood pressure and temperature, according to students from Dakar’s Ecole Superieure Polytechnique (ESP).

    The university is considered one of West Africa’s best for engineering and technology, and is highly selective, with 28 nationalities represented among its 4,000 students.

    Lamine Mouhamed Kebe, one of the students who conceived the robot, said the machine would reduce the exposure of doctors and nurses to infected patients and use of expensive protective gear.

    “At a certain point … we realised that medical equipment was limited,” the 23-year-old added. “We can do something”.

    Guided by a mounted camera and controlled via an app, doctors will also be able to communicate with patients through the robot, Kebe said, potentially allowing them to treat people isolated in hard-to-reach rural areas.

    Confirmed Covid-19 cases rising

    Senegal’s coronavirus outbreak pales in comparison to the situation in virus-stricken Europe and the United States.

    But after a slow start, confirmed cases in the nation of some 16 million people are increasing.

    And as with other poor countries in the region, there are fears that Senegal is ill equipped to handle a large outbreak.

    Authorities have recorded more than 1,700 cases to date, including 19 fatalities. Hospital staff in Dakar are also beginning to contract Covid-19.

    Faced with an increased threat, frontline Senegalese doctors are taking the young engineers seriously.

    An initial prototype designed by the students was essentially a small mobile trolley, designed to carry equipment or meals to patients.

    But Abdoulaye Bousso, the head of an emergency ward in a Dakar hospital, asked to redesign it to include mechanical arms capable of conducting medical tests an upgrade the students are working on now.

    “It’s a whole process,” Bousso said, adding that the robot could cut down on their use of expensive bibs and gowns, which must be thrown away.

    Focus on practicality

    Ndiaga Ndiaye, an ESP professor in charge of marketing the inventions, said that the university has long emphasised practical projects and entrepreneurship, which meant students were poised to act when the virus broke out.

    The robot is “far from being a gadget,” he said, and could be produced at a larger scale once ready.

    “We are a public institution. There is one concept that binds us all together, and that is service to the community,” he said.

    Other students have devised simpler devices that they also hope will battle the disease in Senegal.

    Gianna Andjembe, a masters student in electrical engineering, has designed an automatic hand-sanitiser dispenser that he said could reduce the need for staff in schools and hospitals to supervise hand-washing.

    “It’s very simple, it’s basic,” said the 26-year-old.

    “As scientists, as engineers, we have to meet the challenges and really take our destiny into our own hands,” Andjembe added.

    The coronavirus has upended ESP students’ lives.

    Lectures are now held over video and students who used to tinker in labs until late at night must now rush home owing to a dusk-to-dawn curfew.

    But the crisis has also given the young engineers a sense of purpose.

    “What has changed is the responsibility,” robotmaker Kebe said before adding that the students also felt “much more patriotism”.

    Source: france24.com

  • ‘Serious’ consequences if US reopens too fast: top government expert

    The US government’s top infectious disease expert warned Congress Tuesday that ending lockdowns too quickly could bring severe consequences including new outbreaks of coronavirus just as the country tries to overcome the pandemic.

    Anthony Fauci told a Senate panel the federal government had developed guidelines for local jurisdictions on how to safely re-open activities, and a sustained decrease in cases for 14 days was a vital first step.

    “If a community or a state or region doesn’t go by those guidelines and reopens… the consequences could be really serious,” said Fauci.

    Fauci acknowledged that US deaths caused by the virus are likely higher than the roughly 80,000 fatalities in the current official government toll.

    This, he said, was because many people particularly in hardest-hit New York died at home before they could be admitted to a hospital.

    But he also said he was “cautiously optimistic” about the prospects of a vaccine, with eight candidates currently undergoing clinical trials.

    “We have many candidates and hope to have multiple winners,” he said. “In other words, it’s multiple shots on goal.”

    – Remote testimony –

    Fauci, who has become the trusted face of the federal government’s virus response, was one of four top medical experts testifying remotely at the hearing of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee.

    The New York Times had earlier reported Fauci would warn the country would see “needless suffering and death” if it rushed too quickly to re-open, but the remarks did not eventually feature in his opening address.

    There has been frequent speculation that Fauci’s forthright approach has irritated President Donald Trump, who has been accused of downplaying the dangers of the crisis as he rushes to restart the economy.

    Tuesday’s hearing was Fauci’s first appearance before Congress since Trump declared the coronavirus pandemic a national emergency on March 13.

    The director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, Fauci himself is in “modified quarantine” after Vice President Mike Pence’s spokeswoman — who he had no close contact with — tested positive.

    “Opening Up America Again” is name of the administration’s guidelines on a three-phase approach to help state and local officials reopen their economies, while observing medical advice on limiting the spread of the virus.

    Among the administration’s requirements before moving to a phased comeback, states should have a “downward trajectory” of documented cases or positive tests, as a percentage of total tests, over two weeks.

    There should be a robust testing program for at-risk healthcare workers, with asymptomatic cases screened as well, and contacts of positive cases traced.

    Trump has been criticized as essentially abdicating any leadership role during the pandemic, leaving states on their own to grapple with their outbreaks and even bid against each other to obtain critical medical equipment on the open market or abroad.

    While the situation has improved in New York — the epicenter of the US outbreak — progress has been slow elsewhere.

    The US has reported more than 80,000 deaths and 1.3 million infections.

    Source: france24.com

  • Coronavirus: The Colombian jail with 859 cases

    The director of a prison in the Colombian city of Villavicencio says overcrowding is to blame for one of the country’s worst coronavirus outbreaks.

    More than 850 inmates and members of staff have been infected.

    “How can I ensure there is isolation if there are people sleeping under the beds and in the bathrooms?” asked prison director Miguel Ángel Rodríguez.

    He said that when the outbreak started, there were 1,835 inmates at the jail, more than double its capacity.

    Mr Rodríguez was answering questions about the outbreak at Villavicencio prison during a virtual session of the regional assembly in Meta province.

    He alleged that the Colombian state had “abandoned” the jail. “There are working groups and security councils where a lot of ideas are thrown around and lots of papers are signed, but there are no results. Red tape is paralysing us, and inside the prison we’re doing what we can.”

    Two weeks ago, police foiled an escape attempt by a group of inmates who had started building a tunnel.

    The prison director said 1,750 inmates were currently being held at the jail and that the overcrowding made it impossible to slow the spread of the virus.

    “The areas we use to isolate [inmates] are not ideal,” he said, adding that prison authorities were moving prisoners into one of the carpentry workshops to create more space.

    To make matters worse, there is also a shortages of doctors at the prison.

    Last week, Colombia’s director of prison services, Lissette Cervantes, said that doctors working at Villavicencio jail had quit because they had not been given the necessary protective equipment.

    “It’s not because they just felt like it or even because they were afraid, they just can’t go unprotected into what is like a war [against the virus],” Ms Cervantes said.

    Nationwide, Colombia has more than 11,500 confirmed cases of coronavirus and 479 people have died, according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: How many people have died in the UK?

    The number of people who have died because of Covid-19 is nearly twice as high as the figure we hear announced every day.

    By 1 May, the number of coronavirus deaths announced by the UK government was just over 28,000.

    Looking back at death registrations filed then, the figure is higher: just under 36,000 death certificates mentioned Covid-19.

    The measure preferred by statisticians, counting all deaths above what would be expected, was even higher: more than 50,000.

    Each measure answers different questions.

    Why should I not rely on the government’s daily figure? Every day the Department for Health and Social Care (DHSC) reports on the number of coronavirus deaths that have been reported to it across the UK.

    This is the figure read out at the daily press conference, and the figure used on most international comparison sites.

    But it only includes deaths of people who test positive for coronavirus.

    That is fine for scientists who want to monitor patterns in the growth of the epidemic precisely: the rate of increase and time spent at the peak are useful measures, says Prof Sylvia Richardson, who is president-elect of the Royal Statistical Society and based at the University of Cambridge.

    But it’s a poor measure of the overall death toll because it misses people who never had a test.

    When testing was largely limited to hospitals in the UK, those daily figures were missing most deaths in the community.

    On top of this, different countries use different definitions.

    For example, England excluded deaths outside hospitals from its daily count until a few weeks ago. Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland didn’t.

    And Belgium includes suspected cases of coronavirus in its daily count, which makes their figures look unusually high compared to other countries.

    That makes it hard to do precise like-for-like comparisons between countries, and scientists warn against reading too much into small absolute differences in these daily statistics.

    When every country counts things differently, statisticians turn to a different measure – with a simpler definition.

    Looking at all deaths If you look at all deaths in a country, irrespective of cause, you will capture the deaths missed by lab testing, the misdiagnosed deaths and the deaths caused by the strain the virus puts on our society.

    Of course, you’ll capture the heart attacks and car accidents that might have happened anyway.

    But the total number of deaths registered in a week normally follows a predictable pattern.

    It has shot up since the end of March, running far higher than the previous weeks or what would be expected at this time of year. That number has fallen in recent weeks but we’re still seeing more deaths than would be expected at this time of year.

    And it’s these extra or “excess” deaths, the difference between the number we normally see and what we’re seeing at the moment, that statisticians use to capture the true toll of the coronavirus.

    What does it tell us?

    Adding the weekly excess up over the weeks of the epidemic and it comes to just over 50,000 by 1 May, higher than either the number of death registrations that mention Covid-19 or the UK government’s daily count.

    About three-quarters of this excess can be accounted for by deaths that mention Covid-19 on the death certificate – that total was just over 36,000.

    But there are still nearly 14,000 deaths, itself a significant spike, that could be undiagnosed deaths caused directly by the coronavirus or those caused by it indirectly.

    That gives a clearer picture of the total cost of the virus.

    It can also be a better measure for comparing countries because it doesn’t depend on which deaths get counted.

    Making comparisons But it still “needs to be put into perspective” says Prof Richardson.

    The UK releases deaths data every week, but that’s not the case for all countries.

    Some publish data daily, some monthly or quarterly, making it difficult to compare from a similar starting point.

    The things that make coronavirus dangerous also differ between countries.

    You would expect to see more excess deaths in Italy, where the average age is 47, than in Ireland, where it’s 40.

    That’s all before you get to the actions that governments take to address the virus: how quickly and how hard they lockdown or how effectively they test and track and quarantine cases of the virus and how the health system copes.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Bryan Adams criticised for coronavirus tirade on Instagram

    Rock star Bryan Adams is facing criticism after posting an expletive-laden coronavirus rant on social media.

    The singer was originally due to be performing in London this week before lockdown measures came into force.

    “Thanks to some bat eating, wet market animal selling, virus making greedy [expletives], the whole world is now on hold,” Adams wrote on Instagram.

    Many interpreted the star’s comments as anti-Asian or anti-Chinese, but he was praised by some animal rights groups.

    The BBC has contacted Adams’ representatives for comment.

    ‘Irresponsible’ After his comments were published, Adams was criticized by Amy Go, president of the Chinese Canadian National Council for Social Justice.

    “This is so irresponsible and just so, so, so, so racist,” she told CBC News. “People look up to public figures. He is seen as an idol by many.

    Go suggested Adams’ comments would intensify “racist hatred against Chinese”.

    Many people believe wet markets in Wuhan, China, were the the original source of coronavirus.

    Wet markets sell fresh produce straight from the farm, including meat, fish and other perishable goods. The presence of wild animals at such markets can drive extinction and spread disease.

    Last Friday, the World Health Organisation said one such market in the central Chinese city of Wuhan played a role in the outbreak either as the source or possibly as an “amplifying setting”, while stressing more research on the link was necessary.

    ‘Damage has been done’ Adams comments came on the night he was supposed to start a three-night residency at London’s Albert Hall.

    “Tonight was supposed to be the beginning of a tenancy of gigs… but thanks to some [expletive] bat-eating, wet-market animal-selling, virus-making greedy [expletives], the whole world is now on hold, not to mention the thousands that have suffered or died from this virus,” he wrote.

    “My message to them other than ‘thanks a [expletive] lot’ is go vegan.”

    A link to the post has since been deleted from his Twitter account, but Adams’ original statement remains on his Instagram page. By Tuesday morning, his name was trending on social media.

    “Wow. What racist garbage coming from someone I respected,” wrote Instagram user @globalcanuck.

    “Bryan Adams’ racist xenophobic tirade has been up for 10 hours now. Damage has been done,” added Dr Wing Kar Li on Twitter.

    The top trending comment came from @bornmiserable, who parodied the lyrics to Adams’ signature song Summer Of 69.

    However, animal rights group Peta noted that Adams’ intention was to promote veganism.

    “This is why its crucial for everyone to go vegan now to prevent the next pandemic,” it wrote in a reply to the star’s Instagram post.

    “It’s up to us to create a kinder, healthier future for all species.”

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus, low oil prices take toll on April US inflation

    Falling prices for just about everything besides food sent US inflation dropping in April by the largest amount since the global financial crisis in 2008, government data showed Tuesday.

    April’s consumer price index data were the first to fully capture the effects of the lockdowns to stop the coronavirus pandemic that have undone the world’s largest economy, sending the unemployment rate spiking to 14.7 percent and wiping out tens of millions of jobs, with 20.5 million rendered jobless last month alone.

    The disruptions have caused a dramatic fall in demand for oil which, together with a price war between top producers Russia and Saudi Arabia, pushed down energy prices dramatically, contributing to the fall in CPI.

    The CPI fell in April by a seasonally adjusted 0.8 percent, in line with analyst expectations but an acceleration of its 0.4 percent decline in March and its largest month-on-month fall since December 2008.

    The index’s last month of positive growth was February, in which it rose 0.1 percent, and over the last 12 months the index only increased 0.3 percent, not seasonally adjusted.

    Gasoline prices led April’s decline with a 20.6 percent fall, but other sectors badly affected by the business closure also saw prices drop.

    Apparel dropped by 4.7 percent compared to March, the same rate as transportation services, while airline fares fell by 15.2 percent and used cars and trucks by 0.4 percent.

    The “core” for all items except food and energy fell by 0.4 percent, its largest monthly drop since the index was created in 1957.

    As consumers pared back spending to the essentials, the food index registered spectacular growth of 1.5 percent, with food at home jumping by 2.6 percent — it largest-ever monthly increase.

    Meat, poultry, fish and eggs rose 4.3 percent, with eggs leading the charge with a 16.1 percent increase.

    However, Ian Shepherdson of Pantheon Macroeconomics said some of that increase was due to supply shortages at slaughterhouses as they struggled to fend off outbreaks of COVID-19, and the report didn’t indicate the US was set for protracted deflation.

    As the economy recovers from the coronavirus, “The collapse in clothing prices, for example, will be limited by the rotation of seasonal inventory and the reopening of retail stores, while airline traffic and hotel occupancy rates are now gradually rising, albeit from incredibly depressed levels,” Shepherdson said.

    Source: france24.com

  • Virus-hit Iran to reopen mosques for holy nights

    Virus-hit Iran will reopen its mosques for three nights over the next week so that worshippers can pray during one of the holiest times of year, a minister said Tuesday.

    The Islamic republic shut its mosques and shrines in March as part of its efforts to contain the Middle East’s deadliest outbreak of the novel coronavirus.

    The reopening was granted for Laylat al-Qadr – a high point during the fasting month of Ramadan that marks when the Koran was revealed to Prophet Mohammed.

    But Health Minister Saeed Namaki sounded a note of caution as he announced that worshippers would be allowed to attend mosques and ceremonies for three of the next five nights.

    “The biggest strategic mistake is to think that coronavirus is finished,” he said in remarks broadcast on state television.

    “At any time, we can go back to bad circumstances” due to “negligence”, said Namaki.

    “Our priority is to hold ceremonies outdoors” such as “in stadiums”, he said, “so that social distancing is properly observed.”

    Namaki said his ministry agreed in a meeting to help “organise ceremonies from midnight to 2:00 am during the nights of Qadr”.

    Supreme leader ‘concern’

    He said the move came in response to “concern” expressed by Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, but stressed the supreme leader “always supports all measures” to contain the virus.

    All gatherings would need to respect “sanitary protocols to the maximum”, he added.

    But he warned: “They shouldn’t blame the health ministry and say they wanted to open mosques but didn’t care about people’s health”.

    Iran has struggled to contain its outbreak of the virus that causes COVID-19 since announcing its first cases in the Shiite holy city of Qom on February 19.

    The government closed schools, postponed major events and banned inter-city travel but it has eased restrictions gradually since April 11.

    It allowed mosques to reopen on May 4 in 132 counties where the virus was deemed to be under control.

    And on Friday last week worshippers were able to attend the main weekly prayers for the first time in more than two months, except for in the capital.

    The government warned on Monday of a setback in its efforts to contain the virus as the official death toll hit 6,685.

    “We have regressed in Khuzestan due to (people) not observing health protocols,” Deputy Health Minister Alireza Raisi said, referring to a southwestern province that is now the epicentre of the country’s outbreak.

    “This can happen to any other province if we are not careful,” he added, noting that tighter measures would be reimposed in other places too if needed.

    Experts inside and outside Iran have cast doubt on the country’s official COVID-19 figures, and say the real toll could be much higher.

    Source: france24.com

  • Coronavirus: Pandemic sends US jobless rate to 14.7%

    The US unemployment rate has risen to 14.7%, with 20.5 million jobs lost in April, as the coronavirus pandemic devastated the economy.

    The rise means the jobless rate is now worse than at any time since the Great Depression of the 1930s.

    Since the pandemic began, the US has suffered its worst growth numbers in a decade and the worst retail sales report on record.

    Just two months ago, the unemployment rate was at 3.5%, a 50-year low.

    “It is historically unprecedented,” said economist Erica Groshen, former head of the government’s Bureau of Labor Statistics, who now teaches at Cornell University. “We have put our economy into a medically induced coma in order to heal it from the pandemic… and that has led to the most precipitous loss of jobs seen in any of the modern data.”

    The report from the Labor Department showed declines in every sector of the economy.

    Leisure and hospitality was hit especially hard, with payrolls falling by 7.7 million or 47%. Employers in education and health services cut 2.5 million positions, while retailers shed 2.1 million.

    The Labor Department said more than three-quarters of those without jobs described themselves as temporarily laid off, a sign that many of those currently without work are hopeful that the economy will be able to rebound.

    But economists warned that the pandemic is likely to force major changes to businesses – such as limits on how many people may be in a restaurant at one time – that could reduce the need for workers. And the longer the shutdown lasts, the more likely it is that a business will not survive.

    “Even a temporary layoff can turn into a permanent one if the business doesn’t survive or if the business has to change its business model so dramatically that it needs different numbers or a different kind of worker,” Ms Groshen said.

    The economic crisis is not unique to the US. In the UK, the Bank of England has warned of the sharpest recession on record, while Canada on Friday reported its unemployment rate had increased 5.2 percentage points to 13% last month.

    Statistics Canada estimated that about a third of the workforce was either out of work, or working less than half of their usual hours.

    In an appearance on the Fox News channel, US President Donald Trump shrugged off the 20.5 million jobs lost in the US as “totally expected” and “no surprise”.

    “Even the Democrats aren’t blaming me for that. What I can do is I can bring it back,” he said as the figures were released.

    But bankruptcies have already claimed retailers such as J Crew and Neiman Marcus, as well as many firms in the energy sector, where a collapse in oil prices, due in part to a pandemic-related drop in demand, has worsened the strains.

    While some states have already started to relax restrictions, re-starting the economy is likely to be difficult, as workers worry about the risk of infection and grapple with the impact of school closures.

    “I’m not certain what’s going to happen next,” said Tanya Nikolaevskaya, a legal assistant in New York, who was furloughed last month, after working from home in March.

    Ms Nikolaevskaya hopes to return to what she described as her dream job, but she has a medical condition that makes her worried about infection and is a single mother, whose 8-year-old daughter will need care if schools do not reopen.

    “It’s all about, ‘Is there childcare,’” she said. “If I will not have childcare, I will not be able to go back.”

    The number of people in the labor force – working or looking for work – fell 2.5% last month, to its lowest level since 1970, while those reporting reduced hours or an inability to find a full-time job nearly doubled.

    The Labor Department warned that the situation might be worse than estimated, pointing to the spike in the number of people who said they were employed but “absent from work”. Including those responses suggests an unemployment rate closer to 20%, it said.

    Among black workers, the unemployment rate jumped to 16.7%, the highest since 2010. Among Hispanics, it surged to a record 18.9%, while it climbed to a lower – but still record-setting – 14.2% among white workers.

    Overall, the unemployment rate was the highest recorded in data back to 1948, while the over-the-month jobs decline was the largest reported in data back to 1939.

    “The scale of the challenge cannot be overstated,” said Robert Alster, head of investment services at wealth manager Close Brothers Asset Management.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Gold prices today gain amid fast rising coronavirus cases

    Gold and silver prices gained on Tuesday amid fast rising COVID-19 patient count, especially in hotspots like Mumbai.

    A second wave of infections in other countries also increased worries of the investors making them flee from riskier assets.

    Businesses and citizens in less affected areas in India are enjoying relatively more freedom in movement. Meanwhile, the total number of COVID-19 cases rose sharply to close to 70,000.

    Gold futures were up 0.30 percent or Rs 139 at Rs 45,920 per 10 grams. Silver futures gained 0.22 percent or Rs 95 to Rs 43,325 per kg.

    Spot gold markets remained shut due to lockdown in the country to check the spread of COVID-19, according to HDFC Securities.

    Globally, gold prices were steady in early Asian trade on Tuesday after two straight sessions of falls, as a stronger dollar countered fears of a new wave of coronavirus infections in many countries.

    Spot gold was unchanged at $1,695.75 per ounce by 0038 GMT. U.S. gold futures eased 0.2 percent to $1,695.40.

    SPDR Gold Trust, the world’s largest gold-backed exchange-traded fund, said its holdings fell 0.05 percent to 1,081.07 tonnes on Monday.

    Palladium slipped 0.4 percent to $1,887.51 per ounce and silver fell 1.2 percent to $15.36, while platinum climbed 0.3 percent to $758.98.

    Source: ET Markets

  • Australia coughing politician being tested for virus

    Australian Treasurer Josh Frydenberg is being tested for Covid-19 after suffering a coughing fit during a lengthy address to parliament today.

    As we reported earlier, the treasurer was giving an economic update which included projections of Australia’s GDP falling over 10% by June.

    Frydenberg was overcome by coughs halfway through his speech and jokingly wheezed out “too long a speech” as he tried to finish his sentences.

    In a statement just released he said he was getting tested “out of an abundance of caution” and would isolate. His results are due tomorrow.

    Source: bbc.com

  • More details on the Russian hospital blaze

    A fire at a St Petersburg hospital has killed five coronavirus patients in an intensive care unit.

    The blaze was apparently started by a short-circuit in a ventilator, Russian news agencies have said.

    “Ventilators are working on the brink of collapse. According to preliminary data, there was an overload and a machine ignited which caused the fire,” news agency Interfax reported, quoting a source at the St Petersburg emergencies department.

    All of the patients who died had been on ventilators.

    The fire has been contained and 150 people have been evacuated from the hospital, the country’s emergency ministry said. It is not clear how many people have been injured.

    A criminal investigation has been launched into the incident.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Bernard Mensah returns to training with Kayserispor after coronavirus break

    Ghana midfielder Bernard Mensah has returned to training at Kayserispor after an enforced break caused by the outbreak of the Coronavirus.

    The 25-year old trained alone as part of measures to control the spread of the virus ahead of the imminent return of the Turkish Super Lig.

    The former Atletico Madrid player has been influential for the Blood and Golds this season, courting attention from the country’s top clubs, Fenerbache, Galatasaray and Besiktas.

    Mensah has made 20 Super Lig appearances this season and has been involved in eleven goals for the club, scoring three and making eight.

    The Super Lig is expected to return in the middle of June after clubs were given the nod to start training.

    Source: Ghana Soccernet

  • Coronavirus claims 30,000 jobs in Kenya’s manufacturing sector

    More than 30,000 formal jobs have been lost in the manufacturing sector and 80 percent of the existing jobs are vulnerable as the Covid-19 pandemic continues to bite.

    Manufacturers now say the job situation remains grim as the stimulus package the government unveiled takes longer to create the desired impact in the disrupted business environment.

    In a report set to be launched today, the jobs assessment also contains several recommendations on how to keep one of the key pillars of President Kenyatta’s Big Four agenda alive.

    The retail, agriculture, beverages and textile sectors create the largest number of jobs and contribute up to 60 per cent of the manufacturing sector gross domestic product.

    Indirect jobs

    Kenya Association of Manufacturers (KAM) chairman Sachen Gudka did not readily disclose details of the report he called, “a feel on the pulse of the sector”.

    The Daily Nation had, however, obtained recordings of a webinar Mr Gudka held with Stanbic Bank East Africa regional economist Jibran Qureshi on the effects of the coronavirus on the manufacturing sector in which he gave several preludes to the report.

    “Manufacturing sector has about 330,000 direct and three million indirect jobs. We have already lost about 30,000 formal jobs and another 140,000 or so remain vulnerable if the Covid-19 situation persists. There is even bound to be more distress if the current liquidity challenges facing many businesses continue unaddressed,” he said during the one-hour video conference.

    The report that KAM prepared together with audit firm KPMG found that between five and eight out of 10 jobs have been impacted by the pandemic with employees working less, taking pay cuts or on the verge of losing their jobs.

    In the informal sector about half or at least 1.8 million workers face the risk of becoming jobless as manufacturing machinery grinds to a halt with subdued demand and slow business.

    Retail sector

    The agriculture sector, which employs about 294,000 formally and about 3.4 million informally, has not been spared either with about 40 percent of workers now risking job losses. The sector, which is largely subsistence will lose less jobs in the informal sector with just 10 percent expected to be impacted.

    The retail sector, largely small and medium enterprises, which and employ about 259,000 in the formal sector is also expected to take a 60-70 percent hit, the same percentage under threat for its 6.8 million informal employees.

    The impact is even greater on the food products, tobacco, beverages and the textile sector where most employees have already gone home as restaurants shut down and bars remain shut.

    Personal care products like lotion and automotive products like fuel and lubricants have also been heavily impacted as government moved to restrict movements.

    The KAM boss, however, said some sectors have received a major boost during the pandemic as their products gained more relevance.

    “Those dealing in food, home care, bleaches, detergents, plastics and sanitizers have had a better season, but nothing compared to the hit experienced by businesses like book printing which is at zero as construction is also reduced significantly,” Mr Gudka said.

    In the report, the manufacturers are going to ask for various interventions, some with revenue impact to the government already constrained by low tax yields. The interventions include 10-50 percent wage subsidies for some sectors hard hit by job losses like the apparel which may have to send thousands home.

    Source: allafrica.com

  • Coronavirus: Wuhan draws up plans to test all 11 million residents

    The Chinese city of Wuhan is drawing up plans to test its entire population of 11 million people for Covid-19, state media report.

    The plan appears to be in its early stages, with all districts in Wuhan told to submit details as to how testing could be done within 10 days.

    It comes after Wuhan, where the virus first emerged, recorded six new cases over the weekend.

    Prior to this, it had seen no new cases at all since 3 April.

    Wuhan, which was in strict lockdown for 11 weeks, began re-opening on 8 April.

    For a while it seemed like life was getting back to normal as schools re-opened, businesses slowly emerged and public transport resumed operations. But the emergence of a cluster of cases – all from the same residential compound – has now threatened the move back to normalcy.

    ‘The ten-day-battle’

    According to a report by The Paper, quoting a widely circulated internal document, every district in the city has been told to draw up a 10-day testing plan by noon on Tuesday.

    Each district is responsible for coming up with its own plan based on the size of their population and whether or not there is currently an active outbreak in the district.

    The document, which refers to the test plan as the “10-day battle”, also says that older people and densely populated communities should be prioritised when it comes to testing.

    However several senior health officials quoted by the Global Times newspaper indicated that testing the entire city would be unfeasible and costly.

    Peng Zhiyong, director of the intensive care unit of the Zhongnan Hospital of Wuhan University, instead that testing was instead likely to be targeted at medical workers, vulnerable people and those who’d had close contacts with a case.

    Another Wuhan University director suggested that a large percentage of Wuhan’s population – around 3-5 million – had already been tested, and Wuhan was “capable” of testing the remaining 6-8 million in a 10-days period.

    To put the goal into context, the US now conducts around 300,000 tests each day, according to the White House. So far, it’s tested almost 9 million people in total.

    On Chinese social media site Weibo, people have been raising questions about whether such a large number of tests can be carried out in just a matter of days.

    “It is impossible to test so many people,” said one commenter, who also questioned how much it would cost.

    Another said that such tests should have been carried out before Wuhan re-opened its doors to the rest of China.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Stonehenge solstice gathering axed over virus

    This year’s summer solstice celebrations at Stonehenge in southern England have been cancelled because of the ban on mass gatherings prompted by the Coronavirus.

    Traditionally about 10,000 people gather at the Neolithic monument in Wiltshire, on or around 21 June, to mark midsummer.

    English Heritage said it was cancelling the event “for the safety and wellbeing of attendees, volunteers and staff”.

    The occasion will instead be live-streamed on the charity’s social media accounts.

  • Germany’s declining infection rate

    Here’s a graph of Germany’s cases from the country’s official institute for infectious diseases.

    The yellow bars show the number of reported cases, the blue ones only the onset of symptoms. The occasional sudden drops are usually on a Monday because of delayed weekend data.

    The easing of the lockdown began on 20 April, when the country allowed small shops to reopen.

    In the following weeks, some schools began allowing some pupils to return to class. Since then, the country’s different states have eased measures further – with some even allowing restaurants and bars to open.

    While numbers of new infections have fallen below 1,000, and remain way down on their peak, worries remain that easing restrictions will drive infections up again.

    The latest figures from Germany, not on the chart, show a daily rise of 933 cases.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Premier League cleared to resume on June 1 after UK government publish 50-page post-lockdown plans

    The government have published a 50-page document for lifting the coronavirus-enforced lockdown in England which could see the Premier League restart on June 1.

    A guide for exiting the lockdown was released on Monday afternoon, with social distancing measures to remain in place as various activities are resumed across the country.

    Step two of British Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s “roadmap” clears the way for the current football season get back underway next month, with all remaining fixtures set to be played behind closed doors until public safety can be guaranteed.

    The new document has been titled ‘Our Plan to Rebuild: The UK Government’s Covid-19 Recovery Strategy’, and the lifting of restrictions is conditional upon the continued adherence to protocols which have been put in place to contain the spread of coronavirus.

    Whether or not supporters will be able to attend matches before the end of the campaign remains unclear, as step three proposes a reopening of venues such as cinemas and hairdressers in July.

    However it also includes the following warning: “Some venues which are, by design, crowded and where it may prove difficult to enact distancing may still not be able to reopen safely at this point, or may be able to open safely only in part.

    “Nevertheless, the Government will wish to open as many businesses and public places as the data and information at the time allows.

    “In order to facilitate the fastest possible reopening of these types of higher-risk businesses and public places, the Government will carefully phase and pilot reopenings to test their ability to adopt the new Covid-19 secure guidelines.

    “The Government will also monitor carefully the effects of reopening other similar establishments elsewhere in the world, as this happens.

    “The Government will establish a series of task forces to work closely with stakeholders in these sectors to develop ways in which they can make these businesses and public places Covid-19 secure.”

    The document continues by stating that fans being granted access to stadiums over the summer “may only be fully possible significantly later depending on the reduction in numbers of infections”.

    Some Premier League clubs have already voiced their concerns over ‘Project Restart’, with Aston Villa, Watford and Brighton anxious over the prospect of home advantage being taken out of the equation.

    A number of players have also publicly expressed doubts over returning to the pitch, including Manchester City star Sergio Aguero and Chelsea’s Antonio Rudiger, amid the continued rise of coronavirus cases in England.

    Three Brighton players have been placed in self-isolation over the last week after testing positive for the illness, with Spain and Germany having similar issues as they attempt to reopen doors in La Liga and the Bundesliga.

    Source: goal.com

  • This dirty politics of discrediting government’s interventions must stop! – Kabilla

    Acting General Secretary of the Convention People’s Party (CPP), James Kwabena Bomfeh Jnr., appears displeased with the penchant by some politicians to discredit efforts and policies of President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo to resolve the current Coronavirus pandemic.

    Kabila, as he is affectionately called, strongly held that such practice does won’t augur well for the growth of the nation.

    According to him, it is a dangerous political trend and so called on his colleague politicians to stop the ”dirty politics”.

    The CPP acting General Secretary was contributing to a panel discussion on ”Kokrokoo” on Peace FM’s on the COVID-19 scourge and matters arising.

    ”Equally dangerous and more serious was the attempt by some opposition elements to discredit everything government was doing. I was amazed…worse is or worse was and it continues till date the attempt that everything government was doing had to be discredited. I didn’t understand why but of course, I saw it was the usual NDC/NPP dirty politics that have associated our fourth Republican politics…it won’t augur well going forward”, Kabila stated.

    Source: Peace FM

  • Election 2020: We’ll compile new register under COVID-19 protocols EC

    The Electoral Commission of Ghana has said it will observe all the necessary safety measures to curb the spread of Coronavirus when it begins compiling a new register of voters.

    “All stakeholders are hereby reminded that plans are far advanced for the compilation of a new voter register with a new voter management system for the upcoming 2020 presidential and parliamentary elections”, the EC said in a statement on Monday, 11 May 2020 signed by Acting Public Affairs Director Sylvia Annor.

    The Commission said it is “sensitive to the current state of affairs due to the COVID-19 pandemic and will abide by the necessary precautions and safety protocols in the execution of its mandate when it deems it appropriate to begin the compilation of the register”.

    The exercise had been scheduled to start in April but has been put on ice indefinitely following the outbreak of Coronavirus in Ghana.

    The EC’s statement was in response to a comment passed by Minority Leader Haruna Iddrisu, who castigated the Chair as running the election management body like an NGO.

    Source: Class FM

  • Saudi Arabia triples VAT to support coronavirus-hit economy

    Saudi Arabia is tripling its value-added tax (VAT) as part of austerity measures to support its coronavirus-hit economy.

    The government in Riyadh also said it will suspend its cost of living allowance to shore up state finances.

    The oil-rich nation has seen its income plummet as the impact of the pandemic has forced down global energy prices.

    The kingdom first introduced VAT two years ago as part of efforts to cut its reliance on world crude oil markets.

    Saudi Arabia’s state news agency said VAT will increase from 5% to 15% as of 1 July, while the cost of living allowance will be suspended from 1 June.

    The allowance of 1,000 riyals ($267; 245 euros) per month to state employees was introduced in 2018 to help offset increased financial burdens including VAT and a rise in the price of petrol.

    “These measures are painful but necessary to maintain financial and economic stability over [the] medium to long term… and overcome the unprecedented coronavirus crisis with the least damage possible,” finance minister Mohammed al-Jadaan said in the statement.

    The announcement came after state spending outstripped income, pushing the kingdom into a $9bn (£7.2bn) budget deficit in the first three months of the year.

    That’s as oil revenues in the period fell by almost a quarter from a year earlier to $34bn, pulling down total revenues by 22%.

    At the same time Saudi Arabia’s central bank saw its foreign reserves fall in March at their fastest rate in at least two decades and to their lowest level since 2011.

    The measures to fight the impact of coronavirus are expected to slow the pace and scale of economic reforms launched by Crown Price Mohammed bin Salman.

    Last year Saudi Arabia raised a record $25.6bn in the initial public offering of shares in state-owned oil giant Aramco in Riyadh.

    The share sale was at the heart of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s plans to modernise the economy and wean it off its dependence on oil.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Virus symptoms multiply as pandemic deepens

    Every week, it seems, the list of coronavirus symptoms, ranging from disagreeable to deadly, from “COVID toes” to toxic shock, grows longer.

    What began as a familiar flu-like cluster of chills, headaches and fever has rapidly expanded over the last three months into a catalogue of syndromes affecting most of the body’s main organs.

    The new coronavirus can also push the immune system into overdrive, unleashing an indiscriminate assault on pathogens and their human hosts alike.

    “Most viruses can cause disease in two ways,” explained Jeremy Rossman, a senior lecturer in virology at the University of Kent.

    “They can damage tissue where the virus replicates, or they can cause damage as a side effect of the immune system fighting off the disease.”

    Doctors suspect, for example, that COVID-19 is behind the hospitalisation in recent weeks of more than 100 children and adolescent in New York, London and Paris diagnosed with a disorder similar to toxic shock syndrome that attacks blood vessel walls and can cause fever, vomiting and in extreme cases organ failure.

    Three deaths in New York state have been attributed to so-calling paediatric multi-system inflammatory syndrome, with two others deemed likely.

    In adults, COVID-19 had been linked in dozens of medical studies to other life-threatening symptoms, including strokes, heart damage and brain swelling.

    Researchers from the urology department of Nanjing Medical University, writing last week in Nature Reviews, described patients developing severe urinary complications and acute kidney injury.

    They also observed “dramatic changes” in male sex hormones.

    “After recovery from COVID-19, young men who are interested in having children should receive a consultation regarding their fertility,” they advised.

    Cascading symptoms

    Does that mean that COVID-19 causes a uniquely broad array of symptoms? Not necessarily, virologists and other experts say.

    “If it is a common disease, then even rare complications will happen frequently,” Babak Javid, a consultant in infectious diseases at Cambridge University Hospitals, told AFP.

    There are more than 4.1 million confirmed COVID-19 cases around the world, but the true number of infections – taking into account undetected and asymptomatic infection – “is going to be in the tens, possibly hundreds of millions” he said.

    “So if one-in-1,000, or even one-in-10,000, get complications, that is still thousands of people.”

    Some of the rare symptoms associated with the new coronavirus also show up with influenza, which kills several hundred thousand people worldwide every year, he noted. But with a crucial difference: “Compared to influenza, you are much more likely to become seriously ill, and to die.”

    The number of confirmed COVID-19 deaths is fast approaching 300,000.

    Frontline general practitioners have been the first to see patterns as the pandemic spread across the globe from ground zero in central China in a matter of weeks.

    “At the outset, we were told to watch out for headaches, fever and a light cough,” recalls Sylvie Monnoye, a family doctor in central Paris.

    “Then they added a runny nose and a scratchy throat. After that, digestive problems, including stomach aches and severe diarrhoea.”

    The list kept growing: skin lesions, neurological problems, sharp chest pains, loss of taste and smell.

    A feeling of confusion

    “We started to think that we should suspect everything,” Monnoye said, dressed from head-to-toe in protective wear.

    Some patients were so terrified, she added, that they cowered in the corner of her office afraid to touch anything or get too close to her.

    An internal US Centers for Disease Control (CDC) report with a breakdown of symptoms for 2,591 COVID-10 patients admitted to hospital between March 1 and May 1 chimes with such anecdotal accounts.

    Three-quarters of the patients experienced chills, fever and/or coughing, with nearly as many showing shortness of breath.

    These are, by far, the most common COVID-19 symptoms.

    Nearly a third complained of flu-like muscle aches, while 28 percent experienced diarrhoea and a quarter nausea or vomiting, according to the internal report, leaked to the media.

    Some 18 percent had headaches, while 10 to 15 percent were hit by chest or abdominal pain, runny nose, sore throat and/or a feeling of confusion.

    Less than one percent of the CDC cohort had other symptoms, including seizures, rashes and conjunctivitis.

    Health authorities have been slow in alerting the public to this panoply of possible impacts.

    Loss of smell

    Until the end of April, the CDC itself only listed three on its website: coughing, fever and shortness of breath. The update included only a few more: chills, muscle pain, headaches and loss of smell or taste.

    A loss of smell and taste was found in only 3.5 percent of patients included in the CDC report, but experts suspect these symptoms are – for reasons unknown – more prevalent in less severe cases where people were not hospitalised.

    “I don’t have any patients with these symptoms who had serious complications,” said Monnoye.

    The loss of taste and smell, experts note, is extremely rare with other types of virus.

    Another cluster of symptoms rarely found in flu patients appears to arise from blood clots.

    Heart problems, liver thrombosis, lung embolisms and brain damage in COVID-19 patients have been traced to such clots in recent studies.

    “When one is very sick with COVID, you can have a problem with blood clots forming, and that seems to be much, much more common than with other viral infections,” added Javid.

    A third cluster of unusual symptoms involve skin eruptions.

    “COVID-associated ‘rashes’ seem to be as numerous as they are hard to pin down,” dermatologist Graeme Lipper said on Medscape, a medical information website.

    A condition known as pseudo-chilblains, or “COVID toes”, has garnered the most attention, with photos on social media showing digits discoloured as if with frostbite.

    Like loss of smell, the symptom – which can cause painful itching and burning – is associated with benign forms of the virus.

    Source: france24.com

  • Displaced Somalis share Ramadan meal under shadow of coronavirus

    In makeshift metal homes in a camp in Mogadishu, women wrapped in brightly patterned scarves are making savoury pastries and mixing flour for flatbreads.

    They are preparing iftar, the evening meal when Muslims break their fast during Ramadan, which this year falls in the middle of a global pandemic.

    Social distancing and frequent handwashing to prevent the spread of the new coronavirus are difficult requests for people living at such close quarters and with poor sanitation.

    During Ramadan, when food prices rise, they become nigh on impossible. With cash growing even scarcer as the coronavirus outbreak cripples the economy, they are pooling what they have with neighbours in order to cobble together a communal meal.

    “As coronavirus broke out in the city and people are not going to work … we started collecting half dollar, one dollar or two dollars” from families for food, said resident Mohamed Warsame Hirsi.

    Somalia has 928 confirmed coronavirus cases as of Thursday, according to a Reuters tally based on government statements and WHO data. And with 44 deaths, it has the highest number of fatalities in the region.

    “We do not have soap to clean our hands as the virus spreads,” said Khadija Diriye, who also lives at the camp.

    People are praying for some respite, like Hassan Ibrahim, another resident.

    “We wish Allah to give us good recovery from disease.”

    Source: reuters.com