Tag: Donald Trump

  • Trump holds up Bible in front of St John’s

    US President Trump paused to hold up a Bible in front of the historic St John’s Church, just moments after armed soldiers chased out peaceful protesters from the area – clearing the way forward for him.

    But the episcopal bishop of Washington DC accused Trump of using the church as a prop.

    “I am outraged…[that] they could use one of our churches as a prop, holding a Bible… one that declares that God is love when everything [Trump] has said and done is to enflame violence,” the Right Rev Mariann Budde told the Washington Post newspaper.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Australia PM calls for probe into ‘assault’ on journalist

    PM Scott Morrison has spoken to US President Donal Trump after an Australian TV crew was allegedly assaulted by police in Washington, reports say.

    Mr Morrison has also asked the Washington embassy to investigate the incident.

    Channel 7’s US correspondent Amelia Brace and cameraman Tim Myers were attacked while covering Monday’s protest outside the White House.

    Police used tear gas to disperse the protests, leading to a stampede of sorts as the crowds fled – and that’s when the attack appears to have occurred.

    The incident was caught on live TV, and the footage was shared on Twitter.

    It shows an officer hitting Mr Myers with his shield and then punching him. But another officer intervened and the two reporters escape, just as a third officer swings a baton at them from behind.

    The news comes amid a slew of similar reports during protests – of police assaulting journalists, arresting them and even damaging their equipment.

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

    Source: bbc.com

     

  • Minnesota governor responds to Trump’s ‘weak’ remark

    Minnesota Governor Tim Walz has disclosed that he responded to President Trump’s criticisms during a conference call with governors on Monday morning.

    He said he told the president: “No one is laughing here. We’re in pain.”

    It comes after Trump reportedly called governors “weak” and said the world was “laughing” at them.

    The governor refused to confirm that Trump called him weak, but said: “I think those were the words.”

    “It was a hard conversation today,” he continued, adding that governors are looking to his state, where protests first began before spreading nationally, much like states have looked to New York to better understand Covid-19.

    Audio of the phone call with governors has emerged, in which the president is heard disparaging governors and calling for a tougher response from police.

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

    Source: bbc.com

  • See Donald Trump’s glint house made of gold (photos)

    Donald Trump turned into the 45th leader of the most impressive country on the planet. Turning into the President came inseparably with him moving to the White House. Be that as it may, in this article we will show you the house he abandoned and the one he would return to after the end of his assignment.

    Donald Trump is one of the known land businesspeople on the planet. The Trump Organization land index remembers properties for states all over America. You would expect the place of a land big shot to be nothing not exactly extraordinary magnificence and amazing landscape and you will be totally right.

    Donald trump has consistently cherished Gold, He demonstrated that when he got a completely useful 18-carat strong Gold latrine rather than a Van Gogh painting. Everything in Trump’s home is made of Gold from jars to plans with important relics and costly works of art.

    The Penthouse is situated in Manhattan. How marvelous! Toward the finish of the battle in the White house he has a place of Gold pausing.

    Source: opera.com
  • Trump delays ‘outdated’ G7 leaders’ summit

    US President Donald Trump has said he will postpone this year’s G7 summit and invite leaders of other countries to participate in the talks.

    “I don’t feel that… it properly represents what’s going on in the world. It’s a very outdated group of countries,” Mr Trump said on Saturday.

    The G7 group, which the US hosts this year, includes Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and the UK.

    The president said Russia, South Korea, Australia and India should be invited.

    Speaking to reporters on board the presidential plane Air Force One, Mr Trump said that he was delaying the summit – which was scheduled to take place later in June – until September.

    Last week, Mr Trump said it might be possible to hold a gathering at the White House and potentially parts of Camp David, the US presidential country retreat, despite concerns over the coronavirus pandemic.

    German Chancellor Angela Merkel later rejected the president’s invitation to attend a summit in person because of the outbreak.

    Her spokesman thanked Mr Trump, but said the German leader “cannot agree to her personal participation, to a journey to Washington”.

    On Friday, UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson “agreed on the importance of convening the G7 in person in the near future” following a conversation with the US president, the White House said in a statement.

    The G7 – or Group of Seven – leaders were scheduled to meet by videoconference in June in response to Covid-19.

    The group is made up of seven of the world’s largest economies.

    It regards itself as “a community of values”, with freedom and human rights, democracy and the rule of law, and prosperity and sustainable development as its key principles.

    Source: bbc.com

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

  • I answered the most embarrassing question of my life when I visited Trump’s hotel – Nigerian

    A New York based Nigerian identified as Jackson Ude  has taken to his Twitter handle to share his experience with subtle racism in the United States of America detailing some unpleasant moments he had during a visit the Trump International Resort on Collins Avenue.

    Following the ongoing uprising in the US on systemic racism and police brutality against people of color, many have taken to social media to share their experiences, encouraging each other to change the current administration.

    Jackson Ude in a series of tweets said,

    “In 2008, I went to Miami for a vacation and I decided to stay at the Trump International Resort on Collins Avenue. The fact that I decided to stay in that hotel as a black man was a big deal let alone staying in a suite. I answered the most embarrassing questions of my life!”

    He castigates Trump for inflaming hate crimes because of his rhetoric

    According to him In 2002, he went to a small town called Pittsburg, Kansas, and in front of a building was a bold sign: “Blacks keep off.” Derek Chauvin, the former Minneapolis Police Officer is certainly one of those who can put up such signs, boast about killing blacks. And he rolls with Trump.

    “I still do not know or understand why someone is Abule Egba in Lagos, would want to educate me on why Trump is the best President the U.S has ever produced. I live in New York and I have had one or two things to do with the Trump organization. The experience is not worth it!” – said Jackson.

    Source: operanewsapp.com

  • Trump’s ventilators ‘have not arrived in Nigeria’

    Nigeria’s information minister has said the country is yet to receive ventilators promised by US President Donald Trump in April.

    Lai Mohammed has denied Mr Trump’s remarks made last week that he had sent 1,000 ventilators to the West African country.

    Mr Mohammed said that if the consignment had arrived, it would be announced publicly.

    President Trump made the promise during a telephone call with President Muhammadu Buhari on 28 April.

    He said the US was committed to helping Nigeria’s response to the Coronavirus pandemic.

    Last week, during a tour of the Ford motor plant in Michigan, Mr Trump said the US had just sent 1,000 ventilators to Nigeria.

    Nigeria has so far recorded 8,915 coronavirus cases, including 259 deaths.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Trump to ‘sign executive order about social media’

    US President Donald Trump will sign an executive order targeting social media firms, the White House has said.

    It comes after he threatened to shut down social media platforms he accused of stifling conservative voices.

    The latest dispute emerged after Twitter added fact-check links to his tweets for the first time.

    The order’s details have not been shared and it is unclear what regulatory steps the president can take without new laws passed by Congress.

    White House officials gave no further information on what is expected in the executive order which is set to be signed on Thursday.

    Before leaving Washington for Florida to watch a space launch that was postponed due to bad weather, Mr Trump again accused Twitter and other social media of bias, without offering evidence.

    Mr Trump also continued his criticism of social media platforms on Twitter, ending a tweet with: “Now they are going absolutely CRAZY. Stay Tuned!!!”

    The long-running dispute between Mr Trump and social media companies flared up again on Tuesday when one of his posts was given a fact-check label by Twitter for the first time.

    He had tweeted, without providing evidence: “There is NO WAY (ZERO!) that Mail-In Ballots will be anything less than substantially fraudulent.”

    Twitter added a warning label to the post and linked to a page that described the claims as “unsubstantiated”.

    On Wednesday Mr Trump threatened to “strongly regulate” or even “close down” social media platforms.

    He tweeted to his more than 80 million followers that Republicans felt the platforms “totally silence conservatives” and that he would not allow this to happen. In an earlier tweet, he said that Twitter was “completely stifling free speech”.

    Twitter’s chief executive Jack Dorsey responded to criticism of the platform’s fact-checking policies in a series of posts, saying: “We’ll continue to point out incorrect or disputed information about elections globally.”

    Mr Trump wrote a similar post on Facebook about mail-in ballots on Tuesday, and no such warnings were applied.

    In an interview with Fox News on Wednesday, Facebook’s chief executive Mark Zuckerberg said censoring a social media platform would not be the “right reflex” for a government concerned about censorship. Fox said it would play its full interview with Mr Zuckerberg on Thursday.

    Twitter has tightened its policies in recent years as it faced criticism that its hands-off approach was helping fake accounts and misinformation to thrive.

    Some of America’s biggest technology companies have also been accused of anti-competitive practices and violating their users’ privacy. Apple, Google, Facebook and Amazon face antitrust probes by federal and state authorities and a US congressional panel.

    Shares in both Twitter and Facebook fell in Wednesday’s trading session in New York.

    Facebook, Twitter and Google did not immediately reply to requests from the BBC for comment.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Twitter tags Trump tweet with fact-checking warning

    A post by US President Donald Trump has been given a fact-check label by Twitter for the first time.

    Mr Trump tweeted, without providing evidence: “There is NO WAY (ZERO!) that Mail-In Ballots will be anything less than substantially fraudulent.”

    Twitter put a warning label in the post and linked to a page that described the claims as “unsubstantiated”.

    Mr Trump on Wednesday threatened to “strongly regulate” or even “close down” social media platforms.

    He tweeted that Republicans felt the platforms “totally silence conservatives” and that he would not allow this to happen. In an earlier tweet, he said that Twitter was “completely stifling free speech”.

    Later on Wednesday he said that Twitter “has now shown everything we have been saying about them… is correct” and vowed “big action to follow”.

    It is unclear what regulatory steps the president could take without new laws passed by Congress. The White House has yet to offer further details.

    For years, Twitter has faced criticism for not acting on the president’s controversial tweets, which include personal attacks on political rivals and debunked conspiracy theories.

    This month the platform introduced a new policy on misleading information amid the coronavirus pandemic.

    But recent posts in which Mr Trump – who has more than 80 million followers on Twitter – promoted a conspiracy theory about the death of political aide Lori Klausutis, blaming a high-profile critic, have not received the same treatment.

    The notification on Mr Trump’s tweet shows a blue exclamation mark and a link suggesting readers “get the facts about mail-in ballots”.

    It directs users to a page on which Mr Trump’s claims are described as “unsubstantiated”, citing reporting by CNN, the Washington Post and others.

    The pandemic is putting pressure on US states to expand the use of postal voting because people are worried about becoming infected at polling stations.

    In a “what you need to know” section, Twitter writes that Mr Trump “falsely claimed mail-in ballots would lead to ‘a Rigged Election’.”

    “Fact-checkers say there is no evidence that mail-in ballots are linked to voter fraud,” it continues.

    The company had pledged to increase the use of warning labels about false or misleading information on its site, but has been slow to take steps against the US president.

    Mr Trump posted the same claim about mail-in ballots on Facebook, but it is not fact-checked on that platform.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Trump threatens to ‘close down’ social media after his tweets were tagged unsubstantiated

    US President Donald Trump on Wednesday threatened to close down social media platforms after Twitter labelled two of his tweets “unsubstantiated” and accused him of making false claims.

    Twitter targeted tweets in which the president said that mail-in voting would lead to fraud and a “Rigged Election” in November.

    Under the tweets, Twitter posted a link which read “Get the facts about mail-in ballots” — a first for the social network which has long resisted calls to censure the president.

    In response, Trump fought back, tweeting that “Republicans feel that Social Media Platforms totally silence conservatives voices. We will strongly regulate, or close them down, before we can ever allow this to happen.”

    Trump repeated his allegations, saying “we can’t let large scale Mail-In Ballots take root in our Country. It would be a free for all on cheating, forgery and the theft of Ballots.

    “Whoever cheated the most would win. Likewise, Social Media. Clean up your act, NOW!!!!” he added.

    The president also accused social media platforms of interfering in the last election, saying “we saw what they attempted to do, and failed, in 2016.”

    – 80 million followers –

    The president has long used Twitter as a platform to spread abuse, conspiracy theories, false information and insults to his 80 million followers.

    Before being elected in 2016, he built his political brand by supporting the “birther” lie that Barack Obama, America’s first black president, was not born in the United States and therefore was not eligible to be president.

    The notice tagged to Trump’s tweets read “Trump falsely claimed that mail-in ballots would lead to ‘Rigged Election’

    “However, fact-checkers say there is no evidence that mail-in ballots are linked to voter fraud.”

    Trump aimed the misleading tweets at California, contending wrongly that anyone living in the state would be sent ballots when in fact they will only go to registered voters, according to the notice.

    The tweets in question violated a recently expanded Twitter policy, said the San Francisco-based company.

    “In serving the public conversation, our goal is to make it easy to find credible information on Twitter and to limit the spread of potentially harmful and misleading content,” the company vowed when the change was announced.

    Twitter’s move came as Trump, already facing US economic calamity and 100,000 deaths from coronavirus as well as sinking reelection polls, continued to push a conspiracy theory about TV host Joe Scarborough.

    In an attempted character assassination of Scarborough, Trump has spread the baseless rumor that Scarborough murdered an aide.

    The entirely evidence-free story claims that Scarborough killed a woman he was having an affair with in 2001, when he was a Republican congressman and she was one of his staffers.

    Source: france24.com

  • China rebuts Trump accusation of coronavirus ‘mass killing’

    China offered a low-key rebuttal to United States President Donald Trump’s accusation of mass killing on Thursday, with a foreign ministry official insisting the country did its best to protect lives during the pandemic.

    Tensions between the US and China have been on the rise as the deadly coronavirus, which first surfaced in the central Chinese city of Wuhan, ravaged the global economy.

    Trump has since made attacking Beijing a centrepiece of his November re-election bid, alleging it covered up the initial outbreak of the virus — a claim that China forcefully denies.

    Beijing’s latest response came a day after Trump blamed China for “mass Worldwide killing” in a tweet, which also referred to an unidentified “wacko”.

    Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian told a regular press briefing: “We have persisted in speaking the truth, presenting the truth and speaking with reason, doing our utmost to protect the lives and health of the people.”

    Zhao reiterated China’s stance that it has “always had an open, transparent and responsible attitude” as it battled the pandemic.

    He added the country has been doing its best to promote international cooperation against the pathogen.

    China has come under fire for its initial response over the outbreak, which has since claimed over 325,000 lives around the globe.

    As the virus continued its worldwide march, governments including the US and Australia called for an investigation into its origins, with US leaders pushing a theory that the pathogen had leaked from a Chinese maximum-security laboratory.

    China has since said it supports a “comprehensive evaluation” of the global response to the pandemic after it has been brought under control.

    Zhao, however, said earlier in the week that the draft motion currently under discussion at the World Health Assembly is “completely different from the so-called ‘independent international inquiry’ into the pandemic previously mentioned by Australia”.

    Source: france24.com

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Source: france24.com

  • Trump says US topping world virus cases is ‘badge of honour’

    President Donald Trump has argued it is “a badge of honor” that the US has the world’s highest number of confirmed Covid-19 infections.

    “I look at that as, in a certain respect, as being a good thing because it means our testing is much better,” he said at the White House.

    The US has 1.5 million coronavirus cases and nearly 92,000 deaths, according to Johns Hopkins University.

    In second place is Russia, with nearly 300,000 confirmed cases.

    What did Trump say? On Monday, Mr Trump was hosting his first cabinet meeting since the US outbreak began.

    “By the way,” he told reporters, “you know when you say that we lead in cases, that’s because we have more testing than anybody else.”

    “So when we have a lot of cases,” he continued, “I don’t look at that as a bad thing, I look at that as, in a certain respect, as being a good thing because it means our testing is much better.”

    He added: “So I view it as a badge of honour. Really, it’s a badge of honour.

    “It’s a great tribute to the testing and all of the work that a lot of professionals have done.”

    According to the Centers for Disease Control, a federal agency, the US had conducted 12.6m coronavirus tests by Tuesday.

    What did Trump say?

    On Monday, Mr Trump was hosting his first cabinet meeting since the US outbreak began.

    “By the way,” he told reporters, “you know when you say that we lead in cases, that’s because we have more testing than anybody else.”

    “So when we have a lot of cases,” he continued, “I don’t look at that as a bad thing, I look at that as, in a certain respect, as being a good thing because it means our testing is much better.”

    He added: “So I view it as a badge of honour. Really, it’s a badge of honour.

    “It’s a great tribute to the testing and all of the work that a lot of professionals have done.”

    According to the Centers for Disease Control, a federal agency, the US had conducted 12.6m coronavirus tests by Tuesday.

    Mr Trump was responding to a question about whether he was considering a travel ban on Latin America, Brazil in particular. That country now has the third highest number of confirmed cases, following the US and Russia.

    The Democratic National Committee criticised the Republican president’s comments, tweeting that the 1.5 million Covid-19 cases in the US represented “a complete failure of leadership”.

    Has the US conducted the most tests? While the US has carried out more tests by volume than any other country, it is not first in the world on a per capita basis, according to Our World in Data, a scientific publication based at Oxford University.

    Its chart ranks the US as 16th globally in terms of tests per 1,000 people, ahead of South Korea, but behind the likes of Iceland, New Zealand, Russia and Canada.

    Over the past week, the US has been conducting between 300,000 and 400,000 tests daily, according to the Covid Tracking Project, a volunteer-led effort.

    But Harvard Global Health Institute director Ashish Jha last week told a congressional hearing: “The US needs more than 900,000 tests every day to safely open up again. We are doing about a third of that.”

    The US has also reported the most coronavirus deaths in the world, though on a per capita basis it ranks sixth behind the likes of Belgium, the United Kingdom and France, according to Johns Hopkins University.

    US coronavirus testing rates have been criticised on both sides of the aisle.

    At a Senate hearing last week, Mitt Romney, a Republican, criticised the country’s testing record, saying it was “nothing to celebrate whatsoever” because, he said, “we treaded water in February and March”.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: Trump says he is taking unproven drug hydroxychloroquine

    US President Donald Trump has said he is taking hydroxychloroquine to ward off Coronavirus, despite public health officials warning it may be unsafe.

    Speaking at the White House, he told reporters he started taking the malaria and lupus medication recently.

    “I’m taking it for about a week and a half now and I’m still here, I’m still here,” was his surprise announcement.

    There is no evidence hydroxychloroquine can fight coronavirus, and regulators warn the drug may cause heart problems.

    What did Trump say?

    The 73-year-old president was hosting a meeting devoted to the struggling restaurant industry on Monday, when he caught reporters unawares by revealing he was taking the drug.

    “You’d be surprised at how many people are taking it, especially the frontline workers before you catch it, the frontline workers, many, many are taking it,” he told reporters. “I happen to be taking it.”

    Asked what was his evidence of hydroxychloroquine’s positive benefits, Mr Trump said: “Here’s my evidence: I get a lot of positive calls about it.”

    He added: “I’ve heard a lot of good stories [about hydroxychloroquine] and if it’s not good, I’ll tell you right I’m not going to get hurt by it.”

    Though some people in the White House have tested positive for coronavirus, the president said again on Monday he had “zero symptoms” and was being tested frequently.

    He added that he has been taking a daily zinc supplement and received a single dose of azithromycin, an antibiotic meant to prevent infection.

    When asked whether the White House physician had recommended he start taking the disputed remedy, Mr Trump said he himself had requested it.

    Dr Sean Conley, physician to the president, said in a statement issued through the White House later on Monday that Mr Trump was in “very good health” and “symptom-free”.

    The US Navy officer added: “After numerous discussions he and I had regarding the evidence for and against the use of hydroxychloroquine, we concluded the potential benefit from treatment outweighed the relative risks.”

    What have US health officials said?

    The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) last month issued an advisory saying that hydroxychloroquine has “not been shown to be safe and effective”.

    It cited reports that the drug can cause serious heart rhythm problems in Covid-19 patients.

    The FDA warned against use of the medication outside hospitals, where the agency has granted temporary authorisation for its use in some cases. Clinical trials of the drug are also under way.

    The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) says there are no approved drugs or therapeutics to prevent or treat Covid-19, which is confirmed to have infected more than 1.5 million people in the US, killing over 90,000 patients.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: Trump gives WHO ultimatum over coronavirus handling

    US President Donald Trump has sent a letter to the head of the World Health Organization (WHO) threatening to pull US funding permanently over Covid-19.

    The letter outlines a 30-day deadline for the body to commit to “substantive improvements” or risk losing millions and US membership altogether.

    Addressed to WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, it criticises stages of the body’s response since December.

    Earlier in the day, Mr Trump called the UN’s health body a “puppet of China”.

    The president, who faces re-election this year and has himself been criticised for his handling of the pandemic, has blamed China for trying to cover up the outbreak and has accused the WHO of failing to hold Beijing to account.

    The US has more than 1.5 million of the world’s 4.8 million confirmed cases of coronavirus so far, with more than 90,000 deaths.

    Mr Trump’s ultimatum also comes at a time of pressure for the WHO.

    On Monday Dr Tedros backed a review of the agency’s handling of the pandemic. He said an independent evaluation would take place “at the earliest appropriate moment”.

    What does the letter say?

    Mr Trump published the letter on Twitter on Monday night, following a day of heavy US criticism of the health agency.

    US Health Secretary Alex Azar earlier spoke at the UN’s World Health Assembly and accused the WHO of letting Covid-19 spin “out of control” at the cost of “many lives”.

    In his letter to Dr Tedros, the US president accuses the WHO of having an “alarming lack of independence” from China.

    Among his assertions, Mr Trump accuses the agency of having “consistently ignored” what he describes as “credible reports” of the virus spreading in Wuhan at the start of December or even earlier.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Steve Linick: Democrats probe Trump’s firing of inspector general

    US Democrats have launched an investigation into President Donald Trump’s firing of the state department’s internal watchdog.

    Inspector General Steve Linick was investigating Secretary of State Mike Pompeo for suspected abuse of office, reports say.

    But he was sacked late on Friday after Mr Trump said he no longer commanded his full confidence.

    The move prompted angry criticism from senior Democrats in Congress.

    They accused Mr Trump of retaliating against public servants who want to hold his administration to account. Mr Linick was the third official responsible for monitoring government misconduct to be dismissed in recent weeks.

    The former prosecutor was appointed by Mr Trump’s predecessor, Barack Obama, to oversee spending and detect mismanagement at the state department.

    On Saturday, top Democrats on the House and Senate Foreign Relations Committees questioned the timing of Mr Linick’s removal and announced an immediate investigation.

    “We unalterably oppose the politically-motivated firing of inspectors general and the president’s gutting of these critical positions,” Congressman Eliot Engel and Senator Bob Menendez said in a statement.

    They said Mr Linick had “opened an investigation into wrongdoing by Secretary Pompeo himself”, adding that his firing was “transparently designed to protect Secretary Pompeo from personal accountability”.

    Mr Linick had begun investigating allegations that Mr Pompeo had improperly used staff to run personal errands, US media report.

    Mr Engel and Mr Menendez have requested that the White House and State Department hand over all records related to his dismissal by next Friday.

    Meanwhile, on Saturday, the White House said the decision to oust Mr Linick was prompted by Mr Pompeo himself. “Secretary Pompeo recommended the move, and President Trump agreed,” an official said.

    What happened on Friday? Mr Trump sent a letter to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi in which he declared his intention to fire Mr Linick.

    Under federal law, the Trump administration must give Congress 30 days’ notice of its plans to fire an inspector general. It is expected that Mr Linick will leave his post after this time, with some reports suggesting a political ally of Mr Trump is being lined up to replace him.

    “It is vital that I have the fullest confidence in the appointees serving as inspectors general. That is no longer the case with regard to this inspector general,” Mr Trump said in the letter.

    Not long after Mr Linick’s dismissal was announced, Mr Engel, the chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, said Mr Linick had opened an investigation into Mr Pompeo.

    “Mr Linick’s firing amid such a probe strongly suggests that this is an unlawful act of retaliation,” he said in a statement.

    House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Mr Linick was “punished for honorably performing his duty to protect the constitution and our national security”.

    It was the latest in a series of dismissals of independent government watchdogs.

    Last month, Mr Trump dismissed Michael Atkinson, the inspector general of the intelligence community.

    Mr Atkinson first alerted Congress to a whistleblower complaint that led to Mr Trump’s impeachment trial.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: Obama criticises Trump administration’s virus response

    Former US President Barack Obama has criticized his successor Donald Trump’s handling of the coronavirus crisis.

    In an online address to graduating college students, he said the pandemic had shown that many officials “aren’t even pretending to be in charge”.

    It is the second time in recent days that Mr Obama has hit out at the Trump administration’s coronavirus response.

    He said it had been “an absolute chaotic disaster” during a leaked conference call last week.

    The former president also gave an address to high school students that was hosted by NBA star LeBron James and was part of a special programme that featured numerous celebrities including the Jonas Brothers, Megan Rapinoe, Pharrell Williams and education activist Malala Yousafzai.

    In his speech to graduates from several dozen historically black colleges and universities, Mr Obama said the Covid-19 outbreak had exposed failings in the country’s leadership.

    “More than anything this pandemic has fully, finally torn back the curtain on the idea that so many of the folks in charge know what they’re doing,” he said.

    “A lot of them aren’t even pretending to be in charge,” he added.

    Why are Trump and Obama in a new spat? Why has the virus hit African Americans so hard? Trump says US reopening ‘vaccine or no vaccine’ More than 1,200 people have died with coronavirus in the US over the past 24 hours, according to the latest figures from Johns Hopkins University.

    The total death toll now stands at almost 89,000, which is the highest anywhere in the world.

    Mr Obama also spoke at length about the impact the pandemic is having on black communities in the US.

    “A disease like this just spotlights the underlying inequalities and extra burdens that black communities have historically had to deal with in this country,” he said.

    African Americans make up a disproportionate number of coronavirus deaths and hospitalizations in the US.

    The former president also referenced the killing of Ahmaud Arbery – an unarmed black jogger who was shot and killed by two white men in February – during his address.

    He said racial inequalities in the US were made apparent “when a black man goes for a jog and some folks feel like they can stop and question and shoot him, if he doesn’t submit to their question”.

    “If the world’s going to get better, it’s going to be up to you,” he told the graduates.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: Trump says US reopening, ‘vaccine or no vaccine’

    President Donald Trump says the US will reopen, “vaccine or no vaccine”, as he announced an objective to deliver a coronavirus jab by year end.

    He likened the vaccine project, dubbed “Operation Warp Speed”, to the World War Two effort to produce the world’s first nuclear weapons.

    But Mr Trump made clear that even without a vaccine, Americans must begin to return to their lives as normal.

    Many experts doubt that a coronavirus jab can be developed within a year.

    What is Operation Warp Speed? Speaking at a White House Rose Garden news conference on Friday, Mr Trump said the project would begin with studies on 14 promising vaccine candidates for accelerated research and approval.

    “That means big and it means fast,” he said of Operation Warp Speed. “A massive scientific, industrial and logistical endeavour unlike anything our country has seen since the Manhattan Project.”

    Mr Trump named an Army general and a former healthcare executive to lead the operation, a partnership between the government and private sector to find and distribute a vaccine.

    Moncef Slaoui, who previously led the vaccines division at pharmaceutical giant GlaxoSmithKline, will lead the mission, while Gen Gustave Perna, who oversees distribution for the US Army, is to serve as chief operating officer.

    Speaking after Mr Trump, Mr Slaoui said he was “confident” that a “few hundred million doses of vaccine” will be delivered by the end of 2020.

    He acknowledged in an earlier interview with the New York Times that the timeline was ambitious, but said he “would not have committed unless I thought it was achievable”.

    Many experts say a vaccine is the only thing that will give Americans confidence in fully reopening the economy in the absence of widespread testing.

    What else did President Trump say?

    “I don’t want people to think this is all dependent on a vaccine,” he said. “Vaccine or no vaccine, we’re back. And we’re starting the process.”

    “In many cases they don’t have vaccines and a virus or a flu comes and you fight through it,” he added. “Other things have never had a vaccine and they go away.”

    “I think the schools should be back in the fall,” Mr Trump continued.

    Earlier this week Dr Anthony Fauci, who serves on the coronavirus taskforce and appeared wearing a mask at the Rose Garden conference, testified to the Senate that it would be a “bridge too far” for schools to reopen in the autumn.

    As Mr Trump spoke on Friday, lorry drivers who have parked around the White House for several weeks blared their horns in protest against low wages, neither for nor against the president.

    “Those are friendly truckers. They’re on our side,” Mr Trump said. “It’s almost a celebration in a way.”

    At one point, the president – who wore no mask – instructed a reporter to remove hers so she could be better heard over the noise of honking as she addressed him.

    Is end of 2020 a realistic timeframe? Dr Fauci and other experts have strongly suggested that a jab will take at least a year to develop.

    When the Ebola outbreak struck between 2014-16, it was not until December 2019 that the US Food and Drug Administration approved its first vaccine.

    Some health experts have remained sceptical about the rapid timeline for development and distribution proposed by the White House.

    “I don’t understand how that happens,” said Dr Peter Hotez, co-director of the Medicine Coronavirus Vaccine Team at Baylor College, on CNN after Mr Trump’s announcement.

    “I don’t see a path by which any vaccine is licensed for emergency use or otherwise till the third quarter of 2021,” he added.

    Dr Rick Bright, an ousted US vaccines director who has accused the White House of exerting political pressure around coronavirus treatments, testified to Congress on Thursday that such jabs often take up to a decade to develop.

    What other US coronavirus efforts are there? ‘Warp Speed’ is the latest of several Covid response projects Washington has undertaken.

    In March, the White House launched a testing initiative, enlisting major pharmacy retailers like CVS, Walgreens and Rite Aid to set up drive-through testing sites throughout the country. Such partnerships have stalled, however, and the US has faced continued criticism for its lags in testing.

    In recent weeks, the White House announced further efforts and has helped ramp up testing to nearly 10 million as of 15 May, according to the Our World in Data database.

    Besides the new White House jab initiative, the Food and Drug Administration is also evaluating vaccine candidates for possible human trials.

    On Friday night, the Democratic-controlled US House of Representatives passed by a vote of 208-199 a bill to spend more than $3tn (£2.5tn) on coronavirus relief, including stimulus funds to local governments and direct payments to Americans.

    But the package, which even some Democrats objected to, is rated as having no chance of passage in the Republican-controlled Senate.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Trump threatens China ties, says in no mood for Xi talks

    US President Donald Trump further hardened his rhetoric towards China on Thursday, saying he no longer wishes to speak with Xi Jinping and warning darkly he might cut ties over the rival superpower’s handling of the coronavirus pandemic.

    Tensions have ratcheted up between Washington and Beijing as they trade barbs over the origin of the pandemic – which first appeared in late 2019 in the Chinese city of Wuhan, and which Trump has dubbed the “Plague from China.”

    “I have a very good relationship (with Xi), but I just – right now I don’t want to speak to him,” Trump told Fox Business. “I’m very disappointed in China. I will tell you that right now,” he said.

    Asked how the United States might choose to retaliate, Trump gave no specifics but struck a threatening tone, saying: “There are many things we could do. We could do things. We could cut off the whole relationship.”

    “If you did, what would happen?” Trump asked. “You’d save $500 billion if you cut off the whole relationship.”

    Trump has for weeks accused China of concealing the true scale of the outbreak, allowing it to spread unchecked across the globe and claim the lives of 300,000 people to date.

    Beijing strongly denies the charge, insisting it transmitted all available data as soon as possible to the World Health Organization.

    But Trump doubled down on Fox Business, insisting: “They could have stopped it. They could have stopped it in China where it came from. But it didn’t happen that way.”

    “It’s very sad what’s happened to the world and to our country, with all of the deaths,” he said.

    Hacking accusation

    The US-Chinese standoff over the pandemic has raised questions over the fate of a partial trade deal inked in January that had marked a truce in their bruising economic war.

    Trump earlier this week ruled out renegotiating that deal, when asked about reports that China was looking to reopen talks.

    Last Friday Vice Premier Liu He, who led China’s negotiations, spoke by phone with Washington’s top negotiators and confirmed that both sides agreed to implementing the first phase of the deal.

    But the war of words has simmered on, with US authorities adding fuel to the fire Wednesday by saying Chinese hackers were trying to obtain coronavirus data on treatments and vaccines, and warning the effort involved Chinese government-affiliated groups and others.

    The FBI and the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency said China’s efforts posed a “significant threat” to the US response to COVID-19 — coming as dozens of companies, institutes and governments around the world are racing to develop a vaccine.

    Beijing strongly rejected the accusation, calling it a smear attempt – just as it has forcefully rejected the US accusation that the virus originated in a Wuhan laboratory.

    When asked on Fox Business what evidence there was to support that claim, Trump was less categorical than on past occasions, even appearing to dial back his assertion.

    “We have a lot of information, and it’s not good. But you know, the worst of all, whether it came from the lab or came from the bats – it all came from China and they should have stopped it,” he said.

    Nevertheless, US officials are pressing ahead in search of ways to punish China and seek compensation for the costs of the pandemic – and Republican senators on Tuesday proposed legislation that would empower Trump to slap sanctions on China if it does not give a “full accounting” for the outbreak.

    Source: france24.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

  • Trump backs Tesla on reopening after Musk defies order

    President Donald Trump sided with Tesla on Tuesday, calling for California authorities to allow the reopening of the electric carmaker’s assembly plant after company chief Elon Musk said he was defying local authorities.

    Trump’s comments came a day after Musk said he was restarting production at the plant in Fremont, California and after a series of angry tirades against the state’s lockdown policies to contain the coronavirus pandemic.

    “California should let Tesla & @elonmusk open the plant, NOW. It can be done Fast & Safely!” Trump said in a tweet.

    Musk said Monday the company was resuming production, defying authorities and escalating a feud over the Pacific state’s pandemic shutdown.

    “I will be on the line with everyone else,” Musk tweeted. “If anyone is arrested, I ask that it only be me.”

    Musk’s move comes amid rising disputes over the pace of easing the lockdowns imposed by states to contain the deadly coronavirus outbreak.

    Over the weekend, Musk threatened to move Tesla’s headquarters and factory out of California as a result of the standoff.

    Following Musk’s statement, Alameda County’s office of emergency services said Tesla was only allowed to maintain “minimum basic operations” until officials approve a plan.

    “We are addressing using the same phased approach used for other businesses which have violated the (shutdown) order in the past, and we hope that Tesla will likewise comply without further enforcement measures,” the county statement said.

    The US administration is pushing a reopening of the world’s largest economy, battered by weeks of lockdown, even as the daily death toll has generally been rising by 1,000 to 2,500 in recent weeks.

    Musk has been raging on Twitter for days about his unsuccessful efforts to restart production, claiming the ban violates “our Constitutional freedoms & just plain common sense!”

    In late April, he delivered an expletive-laden diatribe during an earnings update call in which he dubbed coronavirus restrictions “fascist.

    Source: france24.com

  • Trump spars with Asian American reporter over ‘nasty question’

    CBS News journalist Weijia Jiang asked Mr Trump why testing is a global competition to him. The president answered by saying that’s a question she should ask China.

    After calling on another reporter, Ms Jiang followed up by asking the president why that response was specifically for her.

    President Trump has previously made comments regarding Ms Jiang’s Asian American background.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Trump savors ‘witch hunt’ vindication after charges against ex-aide Flynn dropped

    President Donald Trump claimed sweeping vindication Friday over the Russian election meddling investigation that he has long branded a hoax and a witch hunt, after the Justice Department dropped its prosecution of his former national security advisor Michael Flynn.

    Attorney General Bill Barr’s deeply controversial declaration that there were never grounds to pursue Flynn, a central target in the Russia investigation, and that the FBI abused its powers, drew outrage across much of the legal community.

    But it delivered to Trump a powerful victory in his three-year campaign to convince Americans that the probe was a political inquisition designed to delegitimize his presidency.

    “Most people knew from the beginning, and they knew it was just a total hoax. It was a made-up story, a disgrace to our nation,” Trump told Fox News.

    “They tried to take down the President of the United States, a sitting, duly elected President of the United States before I even won,” he said.

    Ammunition against Biden

    Coming six months before he stands for reelection, Barr’s move offered powerful ammunition that Trump indicated he would use against his Democratic opponent Joe Biden, who was vice president under president Barack Obama when the original FBI investigation began in July 2016.

    “These are dirty politicians and dirty cops and some horrible people. And hopefully they’re going to pay a big price some day in the not too distant future,” Trump said of all those involved in the Russia probe.

    “If anyone thinks that (Obama) and Sleepy Joe Biden didn’t know what was going on, they have another thing coming” he said.

    “I believe he and Biden… (were) involved in this all, very much.”

    Secret Russia talks

    By closing the case on Flynn, Barr was plunging a knife into the heart of the justification for Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation into alleged Trump campaign collusion with Russia.

    When completed, Mueller detailed numerous contacts between the Trump campaign and Russia which suggested collusion but did not add up to a crime.

    Mueller’s probe, which led to convictions or guilty pleas by five other trump associates, had cast a cloud over Trump’s 2016 upset election victory and riveted the nation for two years.

    Mueller detailed nearly a dozen acts of alleged obstruction by Trump, but his report neither exonerated the president nor concluded he had committed a crime.

    But Barr, who was appointed attorney general in 2018 after supplying legal arguments to the White House against the Mueller investigation, declared that Mueller found no actionable wrongdoing.

    By then, though, Flynn had already pleaded guilty to one count of lying to the FBI over his Russia contacts, and was facing sentencing.

    The court had heard substantial evidence about his secret talks in December 2016 with Russia’s envoy to Washington to discuss deals that would undermine then-president Obama’s policy toward Moscow.

    Yet in a nearly unheard-of reversal, on Thursday the Justice Department told the federal district court in Washington that Flynn’s guilty plea was moot, because the investigation was not justified to begin with.

    “Our duty we think, is to dismiss the case,” Barr told CBS News.

    “A crime cannot be established here. They did not have a basis for the counterintelligence investigation against Flynn.”

    ‘Purely corrupt’

    Despite the evidence amassed by US intelligence and Mueller, Trump never accepted that Russia interfered to help him in 2016 and that he or his staff should have been investigated.

    “You look at Mueller, that was purely corrupt,” Trump said of the special counsel, a former FBI director.

    Trump declared victory on Friday, as he did earlier this year following his Senate acquittal after being impeached on separate charges related to Ukraine.

    Barr, however, took heavy criticism.

    In a joint comment on the Lawfare website, legal experts called the Flynn move “astonishing”, “bizarre”, and “dishonest,” noting it was the second time in two months that Barr upended one of the remaining Mueller prosecutions.

    Former FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe, who oversaw the Russia investigation, said Barr’s move “has nothing to do with the facts or the law — it is pure politics designed to please the president,” he said.

    The Democrat-led House Judiciary Committee called Friday for an investigation of Barr’s “politicization” of the Justice Department.

    Americans “deserve a department that is guided by the facts and the law, and not by the president’s political interests.”

    But conservative Berkeley law professor John Yoo wrote that dropping the Flynn prosecution was necessary to help clean up the FBI and Justice Department.

    Yoo called it “an important step in restoring control over a law enforcement agency that believed it had a right to pick and choose who were acceptable leaders for our nation.”

    Source: france24.com

  • White House military aide tests positive for coronavirus

    A White House military aide reportedly part of a unit working closely alongside President Donald Trump — has tested positive for coronavirus, but Trump has not been infected, a spokesman said Thursday.

    “We were recently notified by the White House Medical Unit that a member of the United States Military, who works on the White House campus, has tested positive for Coronavirus,” Trump deputy press secretary Hogan Gidley said.

    “The President and the Vice President have since tested negative for the virus and they remain in great health.”

    According to a report by CNN, the military member in question is in the navy and works in a unit providing valet services to Trump.

    Trump, his immediate entourage and guests to the White House are regularly given tests that provide results within about 15 minutes.

    However, there are potential gaps in the screening, including journalists who may come within a short distance of the president but are not tested.

    The president has steadfastly refused to wear a mask in public, as do his top officials, although the practice is encouraged by his own government guidelines.

    Source: AFP

  • Trump calls for economy to reopen as he tours Arizona face-mask factory without a mask

    Without wearing a face-covering himself, President Donald Trump toured a new medical mask factory in Arizona on Tuesday, taking a rare trip out of Washington to visit a state he hopes to win in the November election even as Americans avoid travel to slow the spread of the coronavirus.

    Touching down in Phoenix in midafternoon, Trump visited a Honeywell International Inc factory making N95 face masks for healthcare workers.

    The facility was rushed into service in less than five weeks because of a shortage of the protective equipment and is producing face masks for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

    The president wore safety goggles during the factory tour but did not wear a mask, even though production workers at the facility did and a sign was visible that read: “Attention: Face Mask Required in this Area. Thank You!”

    Honeywell Chief Executive Officer Darius Adamczyk, White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows and some other visiting dignitaries also did not wear masks.

    Trump told reporters as he left the White House earlier on Tuesday that he would likely wear a mask at the facility.

    The federal government has encouraged Americans since early April to wear masks to avoid spreading the virus even when not feeling any symptoms of COVID-19, the highly contagious respiratory disease it causes. Trump has so far declined to wear a mask himself.

    Vice President Mike Pence said on Sunday he erred in not wearing a face mask to the Mayo Clinic last month. His decision not to wear the mask had drawn widespread criticism.

    The White House did not immediately respond to a query on why Trump did not wear a face mask at the Honeywell plant.

    Trump has sought to give an optimistic view about the country’s ability to recover from the virus and is eager for states to reopen businesses whose lockdown closings have crushed the economy and left millions unemployed.

    The virus is known to have infected more than 1.2 million people in the United States, including at least 70,000 who have died, according to a Reuters tally.

    In Arizona, Trump also participated in a discussion about supporting Native Americans. He took the opportunity to argue that the U.S. economy should be reopened quickly.

    “Will some people be affected? Yes. Will some people be affected badly? Yes. But we have to get our country open and we have to get it open soon,” Trump said.

    The Republican president confirmed his administration’s plans to wind down the White House’s coronavirus task force as it focuses on a new phase, the aftermath of the pandemic.

    Stump tour

    Asked if he would receive a coronavirus vaccine as soon as one is developed, Trump said he would but also might decide not to if that were deemed better for the country.

    “If there’s a vaccine and they wanted me to be first in line, I’d be first in line or I’d be last in line, or I wouldn’t take it at all, whatever’s best for the country,” Trump said.

    The location of Trump’s first trip out of Washington in weeks was not coincidental.

    Trump won Arizona in the 2016 election against Democratic presidential nominee and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, but opinion polls show him currently trailing the presumptive 2020 Democratic nominee, former Vice President Joe Biden, in the Southwestern state.

    Source: france24.com

  • Coronavirus: White House plans to disband virus task force

    US President Donald Trump has confirmed the White House coronavirus task force will be winding down, with Vice-President Mike Pence suggesting it could be disbanded within weeks.

    “We are bringing our country back,” Mr Trump said during a visit to a mask-manufacturing factory in Arizona.

    New confirmed infections per day in the US currently top 20,000, and daily deaths exceed 1,000.

    US health officials warn the virus may spread as businesses begin to reopen.

    The US currently has 1.2 million confirmed coronavirus infections and more than 70,000 related deaths, according to Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland, which is tracking the pandemic.

    What did President Trump say?

    During a visit to the plant in Phoenix after weeks holed up at the White House, Mr Trump told journalists: “Mike Pence and the task force have done a great job, but we’re now looking at a little bit of a different form, and that form is safety and opening. And we’ll have a different group probably set up for that.”

    The president – who wore safety goggles but no face mask during his tour of the facility – was asked if it was “mission accomplished”, and he said: “No, not at all. The mission accomplished is when it’s over.”

    Critics have accused the president of sacrificing Americans’ public health in his eagerness to reopen the US economy ahead of his re-election battle in November.

    Acknowledging a human cost to the plans, Mr Trump told reporters: “I’m not saying anything is perfect, and yes, will some people be affected? Yes.

    “Will some people be affected badly? Yes. But we have to get our country open and we have to get it open soon.”

    The president was also asked if White House task force experts Dr Deborah Birx and Dr Anthony Fauci would still be involved in efforts to address the coronavirus.

    “They will be and so will other doctors and so will other experts in the field,” the president answered.

    The once daily task force briefings have become increasingly scarce since Mr Trump was widely condemned by the medical community last month after he pondered at the podium whether injecting bleach into people might kill the virus.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Trump returns $312m “Abacha money” to Nigeria

    The Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami, has announced that the Nigerian government on Monday received $311,797,866 of the Abacha loot.

    The money was repatriated from the United States and the Bailiwick of Jersey after a recent agreement.

    Malami, in a statement by his Spokesman, Umar Gwandu, said the amount increased from over $308 million two months ago to $311 million because of the interest that accrued.

    He noted that the litigation process for the return of these assets titled “Abacha III” commenced in 2014, while the diplomatic process that culminated into the signing of the Asset Return Agreement in February.

    “This Agreement is based on international law and cooperation measures that sets out the procedures for the repatriation, transfer, disposition and management of the assets.

    “In line with the 2020 Asset Return Agreement, the fund has been transferred to a Central Bank of Nigeria Asset Recovery designated account and would be paid to the National Sovereign Investment Authority (NSIA) within the next fourteen days.

    “The NSIA is responsible for the management and execution of the projects to which the funds will be applied,” the Minister has said.

    Malami said the money will be used to fund projects including Lagos Ibadan Expressway, Abuja Kano Road, and the Second Niger Bridge.

    To ensure transparent management of the returned assets, the Nigerian government promised to, “engage a Civil Society Organisation, who has combined expertise in substantial infrastructure projects, civil engineering, anti-corruption compliance, anti-human trafficking compliance, and procurement to provide additional monitoring and oversight.”

    Source: mynewsgh

  • The US will have a COVID-19 vaccine by the end of the year’ – Trump

    US President Donald Trump, has expressed optimism that there would be a Coronavirus vaccine by the end of 2020.

    Trump speaking to Fox News hosts Bret Baier and Martha MacCallum inside the Lincoln Memorial on the National Mall in Washington, D.C. on Sunday, said the Coronavirus vaccine will come in 2020 while heaping praise on people willing to volunteer for clinical trials of the vaccine.

    The US will have a COVID-19 vaccine

    ‘We think we’ll have a vaccine by the end of this year. And we’re pushing very hard. We’re building supply lines now and we don’t even have the final vaccine,’ Trump said. He pointed to Johnson & Johnson as one of such companies.

    ‘Many companies, I think, are close,’ he told the Fox News.

    When asked if his hopes of an American company producing the vaccine first didn’t sound like his usual ‘America First’ rhetoric, and how he would feel if another country developed a successful vaccine first,

    Trump answered, ‘I don’t care,’ ‘I really just want to get a vaccine that works,’I really don’t care. If it’s another country, I’ll take my hat off to them. We have to come up with a vaccine.’ the president said.

    When asked if he was worried about people volunteering for vaccine trials, Trump replied; ‘No, because they’re volunteers,’ Trump said.

    ‘They know what they’re getting into,’ he added, calling those who sign up ‘good people.’

    Trump also said he’ll like to see therapeutics, too, that would work to cure patients who have COVID-19.

    ‘I would rather have therapeutics, something to make people better, not a cure, at least a therapeutic,’ Trump said.

    According to Trump the U.S. is working alongside Australia and the United Kingdom to develop a vaccine and said Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who became extremely ill from COVID-19 though he was going to die.

    ‘He thought it was over, it was vicious,’ Trump added.

    Source: theguardian.com

  • Trump hits Bush for failing to support him during impeachment

    US President Donald Trump on Sunday struck out at former President George W. Bush, who in a video called for compassion and solidarity over the coronavirus pandemic.

    Bush, like Trump, a member of the Republican Party, drew a parallel between the COVID-19 crisis and the September 11, 2001 attack in a clip posted Saturday by the George W. Bush Presidential Center.

    The Al-Qaeda led terror attacks took place just months after Bush arrived in the White House.

    “Following 9/11 I saw a great nation rise as one to honor the brave, to grieve with the grieving, and to embrace unavoidable new duties,” Bush said, with archive images playing in the background.

    Bush, 73, said he was convinced that the “spirit of sacrifice” has not disappeared, and called for compassion as the United States struggles to quell the novel coronavirus.

    “Let us remember how small our differences are in the face of this shared threat,” said Bush. “In the final analysis we are not partisan combatants, we are human beings.”

    Bush added that Americans should “remember that empathy and simple kindness are essential, powerful tools of national recovery.”

    As someone who is regularly criticized for his lack of empathy, Trump may have felt targeted.

    Early Sunday, Trump responded, by apparently quoting a co-anchor from the “Fox and Friends” show on Fox News.

    “Oh, by the way, I appreciate the message from former President Bush, but where was he during impeachment calling for putting partisanship aside,” Trump wrote, quoting the co-anchor.

    Trump then added in his own voice: “He was nowhere to be found in speaking up against the greatest Hoax in American history!”

    Source: punchng.com

  • Coronavirus: Trump promises vaccine by end of the year

    President Donald Trump relaunched his election campaign Sunday with a live television event inside the iconic Lincoln Memorial, promising an early coronavirus vaccine and urging Americans to put the pandemic behind them to embrace an “incredible” future.

    With the two-hour long Fox News “town hall,” Trump sought to wrap himself in the mantle of America’s arguably greatest president — and to persuade a nation battered by death and mass unemployment to look ahead.

    “We can’t stay closed as a country, we’re not going to have a country left,” he said on the show, where two moderators, as well as ordinary citizens via video, put questions to him in front of the monument.

    “We’re going to have an incredible following year,” he said.

    To a woman who called in expressing fear of financial ruin and eviction, Trump said her job would come back.

    “You get a job where you make more money,” he said.

    Saying Americans should start going back to beaches this summer and recommending that shuttered schools need to reopen in September, Trump forecast good news on the hunt for a vaccine.

    “We are very confident that we’re going to have a vaccine… by the end of the year,” he said, admitting he was getting ahead of his own advisors with the prediction. “I’ll say what I think,” he said.

    Saving his reelection

    The businessman Republican is doing poorly in most polls ahead of the November presidential contest against Democratic challenger Joe Biden, who remains shuttered in his Delaware home.

    Trump faces criticism for his bruising, divisive style during a time of national calamity. He is also accused by some of botching the early response to the COVID-19 virus.

    Worse, the previously booming US economy, which was seen as a golden ticket to his second term, is now in dire straits due to the nationwide lockdown.

    With officials saying the viral spread has begun to taper, Trump is itching to return to the campaign trail.

    However he faces new criticism that he is trying to declare premature victory, even as the illness continues to kill thousands of Americans every week.

    Having repeatedly minimized the death toll, claiming it will end at around 60,000, Trump conceded that now “I’m saying 80 or 90 and it goes up.”

    His emphasis, however, was not on the dead, but on resurrecting his image as a can-do leader who can end the skyrocketing unemployment caused by the lockdown.

    That audacious shift began Sunday at possibly the most hallowed monument in the country — the statue of Abraham Lincoln, who led the country through civil war, urged reconciliation, and was assassinated in his moment of triumph.

    Trump, who calls himself a “wartime president” denied that the election will turn into a referendum on his handling of the crisis.

    But he added: “I hope it does because we’ve done a great job.”

    In the next few days, Trump will follow up by breaking months of self-quarantine with long-distance trips to the key electoral states of Arizona and Ohio.

    It’s a play that will emphasise Trump’s massive visibility advantage over Biden and, the White House hopes, rewrite the public relations script after gaffes including the president’s suggestion that coronavirus patients ingest disinfectant.

    Greater than Lincoln?

    Lincoln gambled in 1861 that only war could preserve the United States by ending slavery and restoring the nation’s ideals of freedom. He won, becoming a national hero.

    But Lincoln is remembered as much for reaching out to former foes — something Trump did not seek to emulate as he spoke at the foot of the iconic statue.

    Previous presidents, he said, were “stupid” to allow reliance on foreign manufacturers for US medicines.

    The Democrats, he said, are “radical,” claiming they would prefer to see people get sick than see him succeed.

    Trump pronounced that he had “done more than any president in the history our country in the first three years.”

    His self-declared greatness is questioned by many Americans.

    FiveThirtyEight’s latest tracking poll showing only 43.4 percent approving Trump’s performance and 50.7 percent disapproving.

    Trump even got in an online tussle with former president George W. Bush earlier Sunday, after the fellow Republican posted a video filled with the kind of empathy and solidarity that many accuse the current White House occupant of failing to show.

    Trump responded by complaining that Bush was “nowhere to be found” when he was battling off an impeachment attempt in Congress last year.

    Source: france24.com

  • How soon can a vaccine be ready?

    US President Trump has said he believes a vaccine could be ready by the end of the year. But how likely is this?

    It’s been over a month since the first human trial of a vaccine took place in the US city of Seattle.

    But there’s still lots to do – even if the initial safety tests go well, the vaccine will still need to go through clinical trials, medicine regulators must approve it and a way of producing it on a huge scale must be developed.

    Vaccines normally take years, if not decades, to develop. Most experts think a vaccine is likely to become available by mid-2021, about 12-18 months after the new virus, known officially as Sars-CoV-2, first emerged.

    That would be a huge scientific feat and there are no guarantees it will work.

    Four coronaviruses already circulate in human beings. They cause common cold symptoms and we still don’t have vaccines for any of them.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: Trump seems to undercut US spies on virus origins

    US President Donald Trump has appeared to undercut his own intelligence agencies by suggesting he has seen evidence coronavirus originated in a Chinese laboratory.

    Earlier the US national intelligence director’s office said it was still investigating how the virus began.

    But the office said it had determined Covid-19 “was not manmade or genetically modified”.

    China has rejected the lab theory and criticised the US response to Covid-19.

    Since emerging in the Chinese city of Wuhan at the end of last year, the coronavirus is confirmed to have infected 3.2 million people worldwide and killed more than 230,000.

    What did President Trump say?

    At the White House on Thursday, Mr Trump was asked by a reporter: “Have you seen anything at this point that gives you a high degree of confidence that the Wuhan Institute of Virology was the origin of this virus?”

    “Yes, I have. Yes, I have,” said the president, without specifying. “And I think the World Health Organization should be ashamed of themselves because they’re like the public relations agency for China.”

    Asked later to clarify his comment, he said: “I can’t tell you that. I’m not allowed to tell you that.”

    He also told reporters: “Whether they [China] made a mistake, or whether it started off as a mistake and then they made another one, or did somebody do something on purpose?

    “I don’t understand how traffic, how people weren’t allowed into the rest of China, but they were allowed into the rest of the world. That’s a bad, that’s a hard question for them to answer.”

    The New York Times reported on Thursday that senior White House officials have asked the US intelligence community to investigate whether the virus came from a Wuhan research laboratory.

    Intelligence agencies have also been tasked with determining if China and the WHO withheld information about the virus early on, unnamed officials told NBC News on Wednesday.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: Trump says China wants him to lose re-election

    US President Donald Trump has said China “will do anything they can” to make him lose his re-election bid, stepping up his criticism of Beijing amid the coronavirus pandemic.

    In a White House interview with Reuters news agency, he said Beijing faced a “lot” of possible consequence from the US for the outbreak.

    He said China should have let the world know about the contagion much sooner.

    Mr Trump himself is often accused of not doing enough to tackle the crisis.

    The coronavirus has ravaged a formerly humming US economy that had been the president’s main selling point for his re-election campaign in November.

    Mr Trump, who has waged a trade war with China, offered no specifics about how he might act against Beijing.

    He told Reuters: “There are many things I can do. We’re looking for what happened.”

    Mr Trump added: “China will do anything they can to have me lose this race.”

    The Republican president said he believes Beijing wants his likely Democratic challenger Joe Biden to win in November’s election.

    Mr Trump also said he is sceptical of data indicating Mr Biden would win.

    “I don’t believe the polls,” the president said. “I believe the people of this country are smart. And I don’t think that they will put a man in who’s incompetent.”

    US media reported earlier in the day that Mr Trump had erupted at political advisers last Friday evening about internal polling that showed him losing in critical states.

    His aides have doubts about whether Mr Trump will win crucial battlegrounds such as Florida, Wisconsin and Arizona, while some of his re-election team have all but given up hope of success in Michigan, according to the Associated Press news agency.

    “I’m not losing to Joe Biden,” Mr Trump reportedly said, inserting an expletive, during a conference call with campaign officials.

    The US president also reportedly snapped at his campaign manager, Brad Parscale, who had called in from Florida.

    He cursed at Mr Parscale and at one point mentioned suing him, according to CNN and the Washington Post, though it is unclear how serious was his threat of legal action.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: Trump orders meatpacking plants to stay open

    US President Donald Trump has ordered meat processing plants to stay open to protect the nation’s food supply amid the coronavirus pandemic.

    He invoked a Korean War-era law to mandate that the plants continue to function, amid industry warnings of strain on the supply chain.

    An estimated 3,300 US meatpacking workers have been diagnosed with coronavirus and 20 have died.

    The UN last month warned the emergency threatened global food supply chains.

    Twenty-two US meatpacking plants across the American Midwest have closed during the outbreak.

    They include slaughterhouses owned by the nation’s biggest poultry, pork and beef producers, such as Smithfield Foods, Tyson Foods, Cargill and JBS USA.

    What does the White House say?

    “Such closures threaten the continued functioning of the national meat and poultry supply chain, undermining critical infrastructure during the national emergency,” says Tuesday evening’s executive order, invoking the 1950 Defense Production Act.

    “Given the high volume of meat and poultry processed by many facilities, any unnecessary closures can quickly have a large effect on the food supply chain.”

    The order designates the meatpacking plants as part of critical infrastructure in the US.

    A White House official told US media it will work with the Department of Labor to issue guidance for vulnerable workers, such as over-65s and those with chronic health conditions, to stay at home.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Trump angers China by warning US may seek damages over virus

    US President Donald Trump suggested he may seek damages from China over the coronavirus pandemic which began in the Chinese city of Wuhan and spread around the world, prompting a furious response from Beijing on Tuesday.

    Beijing and Washington have clashed repeatedly over the outbreak as tensions have soared between the world’s two biggest economic powers.

    “We are not happy with China,” Trump said at a White House briefing Monday. “We are not happy with that whole situation because we believe it could have been stopped at the source.

    “It could have been stopped quickly and it wouldn’t have spread all over the world,” he said, saying there were many options to “hold them accountable”.

    Trump was asked about a recent German newspaper editorial which called on China to pay Germany $165 billion in reparations because of economic damage due to the virus.

    Asked if the US would consider doing the same, Trump said “we can do something much easier than that.”

    “Germany is looking at things, we are looking at things,” he said. “We haven’t determined the final amount yet,” Trump said.

    In Beijing, a foreign ministry spokesman on Tuesday accused US politicians of “telling barefaced lies”, without naming Trump specifically, and of ignoring their “own serious problems”.

    “American politicians have repeatedly ignored the truth and have been telling barefaced lies,” Geng Shuang told reporters at a regular press briefing.

    “They have only one objective: shirk their responsibility for their own poor epidemic prevention and control measures, and divert public attention.”

    Geng said US politicians should “reflect on their own problems and find ways to contain the outbreak as quickly as possible.”

    Tensions and doubt

    There have been nearly a million infections with more than 56,000 coronavirus-related deaths in the United States and the pandemic has shut down huge swathes of the economy.

    In China, the outbreak seems to be under control with no new deaths reported for 13 straight days and the toll standing at 4,633, although several countries have cast doubt over whether the numbers are accurate.

    Trump and his Secretary of State Mike Pompeo angered Beijing last month by repeatedly referring to “the Chinese virus” when discussing the COVID-19 outbreak, although they later appeared to drop the term.

    But a foreign ministry spokesman in Beijing later suggested that it was the US military which brought the virus to Wuhan, prompting angry claims from Trump that China was spreading misinformation.

    Since then the US president has repeatedly attacked China’s lack of transparency and the slowness of its initial response to the outbreak.

    Claims from the US that the virus actually originated in a virology institute in Wuhan with a high-security bio-safety laboratory have also been angrily refuted in China.

    Source: france24.com

  • Trump blames press for furor over disinfectant comments

    The furor over President Donald Trump’s toxic suggestion that the coronavirus might be treated with an injection of disinfectant mounted Sunday as the President avoided the briefing room and one of his top medical advisers insisted his remarks were misinterpreted.

    After several days in which state public health officials have rushed to issue urgent warnings to Americans about the dangers of ingesting disinfectants, Dr. Deborah Birx, the White House coronavirus response coordinator, sidestepped the opportunity to amplify that message Sunday.

    Asked by CNN’s Jake Tapper what the American people should know about disinfectants and the human body, she instead defended the President’s tendency to muse aloud about his ideas as he processes new information, and suggested that the media had missed the point of the White House presentation.

    Birx noted that when Trump made the remark Thursday, he was engaged in a “dialogue” with William Bryan, the acting head of science at the Department of Homeland Security, about a study detailing the use of light and disinfectants to help kill the coronavirus on surfaces.

    “I think I’ve made it clear that this was a musing, as you described,” Birx told Tapper on “State of the Union” Sunday, dodging a question about whether she’s bothered by having to spend time discussing the President’s comments, by criticizing “the news cycle.”

    “I think we’re missing the bigger pieces of what we need to be doing as an American people to continue to protect one another,” Birx said. “We should be having that dialogue about asymptomatics. We should be having that dialogue about this unique clotting that we’re seeing.”

    Bruised by the avalanche of negative coverage and reprimands from public health experts, Trump retreated into the recesses of the White House this weekend, emerging only on Twitter where he aired his grievances about his press coverage. He took no questions at his briefing Friday and in a departure from recent weeks, there was no White House press conference Saturday and none scheduled for Sunday.

    Two officials said Sunday the White House is planning more economy-focused events in the coming days and weeks, as Axios first reported. That could include more roundtables with CEOs and workers meant to highlight efforts to spur an economic recovery.

    Aides believe Trump is better positioned to drive an economic message rather than a health one, officials said, a fact they feel was proven true after this week’s disinfectant disaster. The events could also provide a venue for the President to continue engaging with the media — through Oval Office or Cabinet Room sprays — without continuing the daily briefings.

    The President’s absence from the podium may be the best medicine for Americans at a time when some states are beginning to reopen and residents are looking for guidance from scientists and medical experts about whether it is safe to venture from their homes.

    For weeks now as aides and allies have urged Trump to stop doing daily briefings, the President has commandeered the microphone, dispensing self-congratulatory assessments of his administration’s handling of the pandemic rifled with inaccuracies. He has downplayed the desperate shortages in personal protective equipment and Covid-19 testing equipment. He has railed at state officials who don’t seem sufficiently grateful to him and snapped at reporters for “nasty questions” and unflattering news coverage.

    Instead of focusing on scientific guidance from doctors and experts, under Trump’s control have been more political than informative, often taking on the braggadocios tone of the President’s rallies. The imbalance of self-promotion and facts has led to worries among Democrats about the fact that former Vice President Joe Biden, his presumptive Democratic rival, has no equivalent platform.

    While Trump does share the microphone with his medical advisers like Birx, Dr. Anthony Fauci, Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Dr. Stephen Hahn, the President’s own statements about the coronavirus at the podium have been threaded with falsehoods and errors, often stoking confusion that has to be cleared up later by his team.

    On Thursday, Trump veered into dangerous territory as he questioned whether it would be possible to kill the coronavirus by streaming light into the body or through a shot of disinfectant.

    With aides clearly concerned that contradicting him might lead to their exits during a pandemic, no one corrected him in that moment. On Thursday in the midst of Trump’s tangent about disinfectant, Birx stared hard at the floor, briefly telling him when he asked, that she’d never heard of sun or heat as a coronavirus treatment.

    The consequences were serious: in the past few days state officials and disinfectant manufacturers repeatedly warned Americans about the dangers of using chemicals or household cleaners in any other manner than what is printed on the label.

    During a Saturday afternoon briefing, Illinois Public Health Director Dr. Ngozi Ezike reported a significant increase in calls to poison control, including, she said, someone who tried using a detergent-based solution like a sinus rinse and another person who gargled with a bleach and mouthwash mixture in an effort to kill germs.

    “Injecting, ingesting, snorting household cleaners is dangerous,” Ezike warned. “It is not advised and can be deadly.”

    Trump’s controversial comments offered an opening to Biden, who weighed in on Twitter: “I can’t believe I have to say this,” Biden tweeted Friday, but please don’t drink bleach.”

    Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi on Sunday likened the President’s suggestion to “embalming,” telling Tapper on CNN’s “State of the Union,” “We spend a lot of time on what the President said, when, and — disinfectant in the body. You know what they call that? They call that embalming. That’s the medical term.”

    Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan, a Republican, said on CBS’ “Face the Nation” Sunday that his state’s poison control hotline has now received “hundred of calls” from people “asking about injecting or ingesting these disinfectants.”

    “I think it is critical that the President of the United States — when people are really scared and in the middle of this worldwide pandemic — that in these press conferences, that we really get the facts out there,” Hogan told CBS.

    Shifting explanations from the White House

    In the midst of shifting explanations from the White House about the context of Trump’s remarks in Thursday evening’s briefing, the President hinted Saturday that his days at the briefing room podium might be coming to an end.

    In one tweet, Trump questioned the value of holding White House press briefings, saying they are “not worth the time & effort” if the media is going to just ask “nothing but hostile questions.” Trump also noted the “record ratings” for his appearances.

    In a subsequent tweet, he tried to rewrite the narrative about his own early skepticism about the origins and potential spread of Covid-19.

    “I never said the pandemic was a Hoax! Who would say such a thing?” Trump tweeted Saturday. “I said that the Do Nothing Democrats, together with their Mainstream Media partners, are the Hoax. They have been called out & embarrassed on this, even admitting they were wrong, but continue to spread the lie!”

    As CNN has reported, Trump used the term hoax when he compared Democratic criticism of the administration’s response to the virus to their efforts to impeach him: “This is their new hoax,” he said at a February 28 rally in South Carolina.

    Trump continued to try to shift blame to reporters for misunderstanding him throughout the weekend.

    During a Friday bill signing ceremony in the Oval Office, Trump insisted he had made the comments sarcastically to reporters, even though there was no hint of sarcasm in his Thursday delivery.

    “I was asking a very sarcastic question to the reporters in the room about disinfectant on the inside. But it does kill it, and it would kill it on the hands, and that would make things much better. That was done in the form of a sarcastic question to the reporters,” Trump said Friday.

    White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany told reporters the President’s remarks were simply taken out of context.

    On Saturday, Trump continued the debate, curiously quibbling with the fact that reporters had recounted his back-and-forth with Birx about the effect of heat, sun and light on the coronavirus, asserting that he was speaking to “our Laboratory expert, not Deborah, about sunlight etc. & Coronavirus.”

    Shortly before Trump’s Thursday remarks, he had been briefed by Bryan, who had presented findings from a study about whether the spread of coronavirus could be slowed by warmer weather.

    Bryan summarized the study in the briefing room, also discussing how ultraviolet rays and disinfectants, including bleach and alcohol, may shorten the life of the virus. (Bryan does not have a medical background and is not a scientist.)

    That seemed to carry Trump’s train of thought toward the notion that disinfectant might be used inside the body: “I see the disinfectant, where it knocks it out in a minute. One minute. Is there a way we can do something like that, by injection inside or almost a cleaning?” Trump said Thursday during the briefing. “Because you see it gets on the lungs and does a tremendous number on the lungs.”

    On “State of the Union” Sunday, Birx said the President “understood” after he turned to her during Thursday’s briefing, asked about the impact of the light and heat on coronavirus, “that it was not [used] as a treatment.”
    She said what got lost in the debate was that the “study was critically important for the American people.”

    “We had an MIT study just from a few weeks ago that suggests when people are talking and singing, aerosolized virus could be moving forward. What this study showed for the first time is that sunlight can impact that aerosolization outside,” Birx told Tapper.

    “This is why we asked them to do it. We’re trying to understand why people should be wearing masks,” Birx added. “You’re wearing masks because you could have asymptomatic infection and you will decrease your transmission to others. I think the half-life in the sunlight is very important as we move forward to really understand how we can effectively create decontaminations in different environments.”

    McEnany pushed back on reporters’ questions Saturday over whether the White House was sending mixed messages about the context of the President’s suggestion.

    “Taking a sarcastic comment and running with negative headlines is the definition of taking something out of context, so I believe those answers are very much in sync,” she told reporters at the White House.

    McEnany would not say whether the President plans to dial back his participation in the coronavirus task force briefings after his abrupt departure from the briefing room Friday.

    “I leave that to the President,” she said. “That’s entirely his decision, but I believe the President is at his best when he’s speaking directly to the American people.”

    When asked why he did not take questions Friday, she noted that “the President has taken questions for 49 briefings since the end of February.”

    Source: cnn.com

  • Coronavirus: Outcry after Trump suggests injecting disinfectant as treatment

    US President Donald Trump has been lambasted by the medical community after suggesting research into whether coronavirus might be treated by injecting disinfectant into the body.

    He also appeared to propose irradiating patients’ bodies with UV light, an idea dismissed by a doctor at the briefing.

    Another of his officials had moments earlier said sunlight and disinfectant were known to kill the infection.

    Disinfectants are hazardous substances and can be poisonous if ingested.

    Even external exposure can be dangerous to the skin, eyes and respiratory system.

    What did President Trump say?

    During Thursday’s White House coronavirus task force briefing, an official presented the results of US government research that indicated coronavirus appeared to weaken more quickly when exposed to sunlight and heat.

    The study also showed bleach could kill the virus in saliva or respiratory fluids within five minutes and isopropyl alcohol could kill it even more quickly.

    Donald Trump with a list of possible Covid-19 treatments at the White House briefing, 23 April 2020

    William Bryan, acting head of the US Department of Homeland Security’s Science and Technology Directorate, outlined the findings at the news conference.

    While noting the research should be treated with caution, Mr Trump suggested further research in that area.

    “So, supposing we hit the body with a tremendous – whether it’s ultraviolet or just very powerful light,” the president said, turning to Dr Deborah Birx, the White House coronavirus response co-ordinator, “and I think you said that hasn’t been checked but you’re going to test it.

    “And then I said, supposing you brought the light inside of the body, which you can do either through the skin or in some other way. And I think you said you’re going to test that too. Sounds interesting,” the president continued.

    “And then I see the disinfectant where it knocks it out in a minute. One minute. And is there a way we can do something like that, by injection inside or almost a cleaning?

    “So it’d be interesting to check that.”

    Pointing to his head, Mr Trump went on: “I’m not a doctor. But I’m, like, a person that has a good you-know-what.”

    He turned again to Dr Birx and asked if she had ever heard of using “the heat and the light” to treat coronavirus.

    “Not as a treatment,” Dr Birx said. “I mean, certainly, fever is a good thing. When you have a fever, it helps your body respond. But I’ve not seen heat or light.”

    “I think it’s a great thing to look at,” Mr Trump said.

    Disinfectants don’t work inside the body

    Analysis by Rachel Schraer, BBC health reporter

    Using a disinfectant can kill viruses on surfaces. It’s a very good idea to keep clean the things you touch, using products with anti-microbial properties – for example, substances with a high alcohol content.

    There is also some evidence that, in general, viruses on surfaces die more quickly when directly exposed to sunlight. But we don’t know how much or how long they have to be exposed for UV light to have an effect, so you’re far safer just washing your hands and surfaces and trying not to touch your face.

    Crucially, this is only about infected objects and surfaces – not about what happens once the virus is inside your body.

    One of the main ways of catching the virus is by breathing in droplets expelled by an infected person, mainly by sneezing and coughing. The virus very quickly begins to multiply and spread, eventually reaching the lungs.

    Not only does consuming or injecting disinfectant risk poisoning and death, it’s not even likely to be effective.

    Equally, by the time the virus has taken hold inside your body, no amount of UV light on your skin is going to make a difference.

    And since UV radiation damages the skin, using it to kill the virus could be a case of – to borrow a well-worn phrase – the cure being worse than the disease.

    Presentational grey line

    What’s the reaction been to Trump’s comments?

    Doctors warned the president’s idea could have fatal results.

    Pulmonologist Dr Vin Gupta told NBC News: “This notion of injecting or ingesting any type of cleansing product into the body is irresponsible and it’s dangerous.

    “It’s a common method that people utilise when they want to kill themselves.”

    Kashif Mahmood, a doctor in Charleston, West Virginia, tweeted: “As a physician, I can’t recommend injecting disinfectant into the lungs or using UV radiation inside the body to treat Covid-19.

    “Don’t take medical advice from Trump.”

    John Balmes, a pulmonologist at Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital, warned that even breathing fumes from bleach could cause severe health problems.

    He told Bloomberg News: “Inhaling chlorine bleach would be absolutely the worst thing for the lungs. The airway and lungs are not made to be exposed to even an aerosol of disinfectant.

    “Not even a low dilution of bleach or isopropyl alcohol is safe. It’s a totally ridiculous concept.”

    Mr Trump has previously hyped a malaria medication, hydroxycloroquine, as a possible treatment for coronavirus, though he has stopped touting that drug recently.

    This week a study of coronavirus patients in a US government-run hospital for military veterans found more deaths among those treated with hydroxychloroquine than those treated with standard care.

    Reacting to the president’s remarks on Thursday evening, Joe Biden, his likely Democratic challenger in November’s White House election, tweeted: “UV light? Injecting disinfectant? Here’s an idea, Mr President: more tests. Now. And protective equipment for actual medical professionals.”

    What’s the US government’s advice?

    Only this week, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention warned Americans to be careful with cleaning products as sales of household disinfectants soar amid the pandemic.

    “Calls to poison centres increased sharply at the beginning of March 2020 for exposures to both cleaners and disinfectants,” found the agency’s weekly morbidity and mortality report.

    The US Food and Drug Administration has warned against ingesting disinfectants, citing the sale of bogus miracle cures that contain bleach and purport to treat everything from autism to Aids and hepatitis.

    The agency’s website says: “The FDA has received reports of consumers who have suffered from severe vomiting, severe diarrhoea, life-threatening low blood pressure caused by dehydration, and acute liver failure after drinking these products.”

    Last week a federal judge secured a temporary injunction against one organisation, known as the Genesis II Church of Health and Healing, for marketing a product equivalent to industrial bleach as a remedy for coronavirus.

    Source: bbc.com

     

     

  • UN pushes for virus vaccine as Trump disinfectant theory sparks outrage

    The United Nations on Friday launched a global push to speed up production of a vaccine for the new coronavirus as US President Donald Trump came under fire for suggesting injecting patients with disinfectant.

    The pandemic has upended life around the planet as nations try to stop the spread of the disease that has so far claimed more than 190,000 lives, infected nearly three million people and hammered the global economy.

    UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres said defeating the pandemic will require the biggest health effort ever seen as the United Nations joined forces with world leaders and the private sector to develop, produce and distribute a vaccine for COVID-19, the disease caused by the virus.

    “We face a global public enemy like no other,” Guterres told a virtual briefing. “A world free of COVID-19 requires the most massive public health effort in history.”

    “None of us is safe until all of us are safe,” the UN chief said. “COVID-19 respects no borders. COVID-19 anywhere is a threat to people everywhere.”

    While the disease appears to be peaking in Europe and the United States, other nations are still in the early stages of the fight and the WHO has warned strict measures should remain until there is a viable treatment or vaccine.

    The race is on around the world to develop one, with the University of Oxford launching a human trial, while Germany announced similar trials will start by next week.

    In a briefing at the White House, scientists said they had found the virus was quickly destroyed by sunlight, raising hopes that the pandemic could ease as the northern hemisphere summer approaches.

    “Is there a way we can do something like that, by injection inside or almost a cleaning?” Trump said. “It sounds interesting to me.”

    But his suggestion was met with disbelief by many experts who cautioned against any such experiment.

    “This notion of injecting or ingesting any type of cleansing product into the body is irresponsible, and it’s dangerous,” Vin Gupta, pulmonologist and health expert told NBC News.

    The United States is now the worst-affected nation in the world, with about 50,000 coronavirus deaths.

    In a bid to restart its economy, the US state of Georgia will lift restrictions further than most on Friday when it allows businesses like gyms and hair salons to reopen; a move seen as too far by some.

    “This is an irresponsible move that is based solely on dollars over science,” Randy Adler, owner of Babs Midtown restaurant, told AFP. “It is not the right thing to do.”

    Ramadan on lockdown

    Across the globe more than four billion people are still under some form of lockdown or stay-at-home order even as governments begin easing restrictions, weighing the risk of more infections against growing economic fallout.

    Muslims across the world began marking the holy month of Ramadan under the confinement orders on Friday, with bans on prayers in mosques and large gatherings of families and friends to break the daily fast, a centrepiece of the holy month.

    In the Saudi holy city of Mecca, the Grand Mosque, usually packed with tens of thousands of pilgrims during Ramadan, was deserted as religious authorities suspended the year-round umrah pilgrimage.

    “We are used to seeing the holy mosque crowded with people during the day, night, all the time… I feel pain deep inside,” said Ali Mulla, the muezzin who gives the call to prayer at the Grand Mosque.

    But despite the coronavirus threat, clerics and conservatives in some countries including Bangladesh, Pakistan and Indonesia — the world’s largest Muslim-majority nation — have pushed back against social distancing rules, refusing to stop gatherings in mosques.

    Several thousand people attended evening prayers on Thursday at the biggest mosque in the capital of Indonesia’s conservative Aceh province, and there were similar scenes at many sites in Pakistan.

    The WHO called for a stop to some Ramadan activities to lower the risk of infections, and authorities in several countries have explicitly warned of the threat from large religious gatherings.

    Distancing measures and the severe economic impact of the pandemic have also meant many charitable activities during Ramadan, especially food distribution and other donations, have been hit hard.

    Massive economic stimulus

    The economic devastation wreaked by lockdowns indoors is huge, with the world facing its worst downturn since the Great Depression.

    US lawmakers covered their faces with masks and voted in small groups to approve a $483 billion stimulus plan, on top of a $2.2 trillion package already enacted.

    The money will back small businesses on the brink of bankruptcy and hard-pressed hospitals as the world’s biggest economy reels, with more than 26 million people losing their jobs since the pandemic hit.

    In Europe, the hardest-hit continent, leaders haggled by video conference over their own package that could top one trillion euros, as the European Central Bank chief warned of the risk of “acting too little, too late”.

    The 27-nation European Union agreed to ask the bloc’s executive arm to come up with a rescue plan by May 6, sources told AFP.

    The crucial economic discussions come as parts of Europe slowly loosen restrictions after progress on reducing the number of new infections.

    But experts have warned of a possible second wave, and authorities are ramping up their capacity to deal with it in Germany, where curbs on public life have been eased recently.

    The German Football League says it is ready for the Bundesliga to resume from May 9, though without fans in stadiums and with strict player hygiene measures. A final government decision is expected next week.

    Source: france24.com

  • Coronavirus: Disinfectant firm warns after Trump comments

    A leading disinfectant producer has issued a strong warning not to use its products on the human body after Donald Trump suggested they could potentially be used to treat coronavirus.

    Reckitt Benckiser, which owns Lysol and Dettol, said “under no circumstance” should its products be injected or ingested.

    President Trump faces a backlash over his comments at a briefing on Thursday.

    Disinfectants are hazardous substances and can be poisonous if ingested.

    Even external exposure can be dangerous to the skin, eyes and respiratory system.

    Mr Trump’s comments have been heavily criticised by doctors and have generated a huge online response. They have provoked hundreds of thousands of comments and caused well-known cleaning brands to trend on social media.

    Reckitt Benckiser, which also owns the brands Vanish and Cillit Bang, said its products should not be administered “through injection, ingestion or any other route”.

    “Our disinfectant and hygiene products should only be used as intended and in line with usage guidelines. Please read the label and safety information,” the company said in a statement.
    What did President Trump say?

    During Thursday’s White House coronavirus task force briefing, an official presented the results of US government research that indicated coronavirus appeared to weaken faster when exposed to sunlight and heat.

    The study also showed bleach could kill the virus in saliva or respiratory fluids within five minutes, and isopropyl alcohol could kill it even more quickly.

    Mr Trump then hypothesised about the possibility of using a “tremendous ultraviolet” or “just very powerful light” on or even inside the body as a potential treatment.

    Trump’s claims fact-checked
    The fake health advice you should ignore
    Will coronavirus go away in the summer?

    “And then I see the disinfectant where it knocks it out in a minute. One minute,” he said. “And is there a way we can do something like that, by injection inside or almost a cleaning?

    “Because you see it gets in the lungs and does a tremendous number on them, so it’d be interesting to check that,” he said.

    In a statement, the White House press secretary said the president had “repeatedly” told Americans to consult doctors about coronavirus treatment.

    “Leave it to the media to irresponsibly take President Trump out of context and run with negative headlines,” Kayleigh McEnany said.

    His comments have dominated social media platforms like Twitter and Reddit since Thursday night.

    Many compared his idea to a dangerous viral trend in 2018 where people ate Tide laundry detergent pods.

    Lysol, which is one of the America’s best known cleaning brands, has been named in tweets at least 125,000 times since the White House news conference.

    Owners Reckitt Benckiser said they issued their statement on Friday “due to recent speculation and social media activity”.
    What’s the medical reaction been?

    Doctors warned that the president’s suggestion could have fatal results.

    “This notion of injecting or ingesting any type of cleansing product into the body is irresponsible and it’s dangerous,” Dr Vin Gupta, a pulmonologist and global health policy expert, told NBC news. “It’s a common method that people utilise when they want to kill themselves.”

    “Inhaling chlorine bleach would be absolutely the worst thing for the lungs,” pulmonologist John Balmes told Bloomberg News. “The airway and lungs are not made to be exposed to even an aerosol of disinfectant.

    “Not even a low dilution of bleach or isopropyl alcohol is safe. It’s a totally ridiculous concept.”

    This is not the first time that Mr Trump’s medical advice has generated controversy and criticism.

    He has previously hyped a malaria medication, hydroxychloroquin, despite a lack of clinical evidence it helps treat Covid-19 and some concerns it can even be detrimental.
    Poisoning and death risks

    Analysis by Rachel Schraer, BBC health reporter

    Using a disinfectant can kill viruses on surfaces. It’s a very good idea to keep clean the things you touch, using products with anti-microbial properties – for example, substances with a high alcohol content.

    There is also some evidence that, in general, viruses on surfaces die more quickly when directly exposed to sunlight. But we don’t know how much or how long they have to be exposed for UV light to have an effect, so you’re far safer just washing your hands and surfaces and trying not to touch your face.

    Crucially, this is only about infected objects and surfaces – not about what happens once the virus is inside your body.

    One of the main ways of catching the virus is by breathing in droplets expelled by an infected person, mainly by sneezing and coughing. The virus very quickly begins to multiply and spread, eventually reaching the lungs.

    Not only does consuming or injecting disinfectant risk poisoning and death, it’s not even likely to be effective.

    Equally, by the time the virus has taken hold inside your body, no amount of UV light on your skin is going to make a difference.

    And since UV radiation damages the skin, using it to kill the virus could be a case of – to borrow a well-worn phrase – the cure being worse than the disease.

    Earlier this week, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention warned Americans to be careful with cleaning products as sales of household disinfectants soar amid the pandemic.

    “Calls to poison centres increased sharply at the beginning of March 2020 for exposures to both cleaners and disinfectants,” the agency’s weekly morbidity and mortality report found.

    The US Food and Drug Administration has also warned against ingesting disinfectants, citing the sale of bogus miracle cures that contain bleach and purport to treat everything from autism to Aids and hepatitis.

    Last week, a federal judge secured a temporary injunction against one organisation, known as the Genesis II Church of Health and Healing, for marketing one of these products as a potential coronavirus cure.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: Disinfectant firm warns after Trump comments

    A leading disinfectant producer has issued a strong warning not to use its products on the human body after Donald Trump suggested they could potentially be used to treat coronavirus.

    Reckitt Benckiser, which owns Lysol and Dettol, said “under no circumstance” should its products be injected or ingested.

    President Trump faces a backlash over his comments at a briefing on Thursday.

    Disinfectants are hazardous substances and can be poisonous if ingested.

    Even external exposure can be dangerous to the skin, eyes and respiratory system.

    Mr Trump’s comments have been heavily criticised by doctors and have generated a huge online response. They have provoked hundreds of thousands of comments and caused well-known cleaning brands to trend on social media.

    Reckitt Benckiser, which also owns the brands Vanish and Cillit Bang, said its products should not be administered “through injection, ingestion or any other route”.

    “Our disinfectant and hygiene products should only be used as intended and in line with usage guidelines. Please read the label and safety information,” the company said in a statement.

    What did President Trump say? During Thursday’s White House coronavirus task force briefing, an official presented the results of US government research that indicated coronavirus appeared to weaken faster when exposed to sunlight and heat.

    The study also showed bleach could kill the virus in saliva or respiratory fluids within five minutes, and isopropyl alcohol could kill it even more quickly.

    Mr Trump then hypothesised about the possibility of using a “tremendous ultraviolet” or “just very powerful light” on or even inside the body as a potential treatment.

    “And then I see the disinfectant where it knocks it out in a minute. One minute,” he said. “And is there a way we can do something like that, by injection inside or almost a cleaning?

    “Because you see it gets in the lungs and does a tremendous number on them, so it’d be interesting to check that,” he said.

    In a statement, the White House press secretary said the president had “repeatedly” told Americans to consult doctors about coronavirus treatment.

    “Leave it to the media to irresponsibly take President Trump out of context and run with negative headlines,” Kayleigh McEnany said.

    His comments have dominated social media platforms like Twitter and Reddit since Thursday night.

    Many compared his idea to a dangerous viral trend in 2018 where people ate Tide laundry detergent pods.

    Lysol, which is one of the America’s best known cleaning brands, has been named in tweets at least 125,000 times since the White House news conference.

    Owners Reckitt Benckiser said they issued their statement on Friday “due to recent speculation and social media activity”.

    What’s the medical reaction been?

    Doctors warned that the president’s suggestion could have fatal results.

    “This notion of injecting or ingesting any type of cleansing product into the body is irresponsible and it’s dangerous,” Dr Vin Gupta, a pulmonologist and global health policy expert, told NBC news. “It’s a common method that people utilise when they want to kill themselves.”

    “Inhaling chlorine bleach would be absolutely the worst thing for the lungs,” pulmonologist John Balmes told Bloomberg News. “The airway and lungs are not made to be exposed to even an aerosol of disinfectant.

    “Not even a low dilution of bleach or isopropyl alcohol is safe. It’s a totally ridiculous concept.”

    This is not the first time that Mr Trump’s medical advice has generated controversy and criticism.

    He has previously hyped a malaria medication, hydroxychloroquine, despite a lack of clinical evidence it helps treat Covid-19 and some concerns it can even be detrimental.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: Trump suggests injecting disinfectant as treatment

    US President Donald Trump has been lambasted by the medical community after suggesting research into whether coronavirus might be treated by injecting disinfectant into the body.

    He also appeared to propose irradiating patients’ bodies with UV light, an idea dismissed by a doctor at the briefing.

    Another of his officials had moments earlier said sunlight and disinfectant were known to kill the infection.

    Mr Trump’s own public health agencies warn against bleach as a medicine.

    What did President Trump say?

    During Thursday’s White House coronavirus task force briefing, an official presented the results of US government research that indicated coronavirus appeared to weaken more quickly when exposed to sunlight and heat.

    The study also showed bleach could kill the virus in saliva or respiratory fluids within five minutes and isopropyl alcohol could kill it even more quickly.

    William Bryan, acting head of the US Department of Homeland Security’s Science and Technology Directorate, outlined the findings at the news conference.

    While noting the research should be treated with caution, Mr Trump suggested further research in that area.

    “So, supposing we hit the body with a tremendous – whether it’s ultraviolet or just very powerful light,” the president said, turning to Dr Deborah Birx, the White House coronavirus response co-ordinator, “and I think you said that hasn’t been checked but you’re going to test it.

    “And then I said, supposing you brought the light inside of the body, which you can do either through the skin or in some other way. And I think you said you’re going to test that too. Sounds interesting,” the president continued.
    “And then I see the disinfectant where it knocks it out in a minute. One minute. And is there a way we can do something like that, by injection inside or almost a cleaning?

    “So it’d be interesting to check that.”

    Pointing to his head, Mr Trump went on: “I’m not a doctor. But I’m, like, a person that has a good you-know-what.”

    He turned again to Dr Birx and asked if she had ever heard of using “the heat and the light” to treat coronavirus.

    “Not as a treatment,” Dr Birx said. “I mean, certainly, fever is a good thing, when you have a fever it helps your body respond. But I’ve not seen heat or light.”

    “I think it’s a great thing to look at,” Mr Trump said.

    A journalist at the briefing questioned whether Mr Trump’s off-the-cuff remarks could spread dangerous disinformation to Americans.

    What’s the reaction?

    Doctors warned the president’s idea could have fatal results.

    Pulmonologist Dr Vin Gupta told NBC News: “This notion of injecting or ingesting any type of cleansing product into the body is irresponsible and it’s dangerous.

    “It’s a common method that people utilise when they want to kill themselves.”

    Kashif Mahmood, a doctor in Charleston, West Virginia, tweeted: “As a physician, I can’t recommend injecting disinfectant into the lungs or using UV radiation inside the body to treat COVID-19.

    “Don’t take medical advice from Trump.”

    John Balmes, a pulmonologist at Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital, warned that even breathing fumes from bleach could cause severe health problems.

    He told Bloomberg News: “Inhaling chlorine bleach would be absolutely the worst thing for the lungs. The airway and lungs are not made to be exposed to even an aerosol of disinfectant.

    “Not even a low dilution of bleach or isopropyl alcohol is safe. It’s a totally ridiculous concept.”

    Mr Trump has previously hyped a malaria medication, hydroxycloroquine, as a possible treatment for coronavirus, though he has stopped touting that drug recently.

    This week a study of coronavirus patients in a US government-run hospital for military veterans found more deaths among those treated with hydroxychloroquine than those treated with standard care.

    Reacting to the president’s remarks on Thursday evening, Joe Biden, his likely Democratic challenger in November’s White House election, tweeted: “UV light? Injecting disinfectant? Here’s an idea, Mr President: more tests. Now. And protective equipment for actual medical professionals.”

    What’s the US government’s advice?

    Only this week, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention warned Americans to be careful with cleaning products as sales of household disinfectants soar amid the pandemic.

    “Calls to poison centres increased sharply at the beginning of March 2020 for exposures to both cleaners and disinfectants,” found the agency’s weekly morbidity and mortality report.

    The US Food and Drug Administration has warned against ingesting disinfectants, citing the sale of bogus miracle cures that contain bleach and purport to treat everything from autism to Aids and hepatitis.

    The agency’s website says: “The FDA has received reports of consumers who have suffered from severe vomiting, severe diarrhoea, life-threatening low blood pressure caused by dehydration, and acute liver failure after drinking these products.”

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: Immigration to US to be suspended amid pandemic, Trump says

    President Donald Trump has said he will sign an executive order to temporarily suspend all immigration to the US because of the coronavirus.

    On Twitter, he cited “the attack from the invisible enemy”, as he calls the virus, and the need to protect the jobs of Americans, but did not give details.

    It was not clear what programmes might be affected and whether the president would be able to carry out the order.

    Critics say the government is using the pandemic to crack down on immigration.

    Immigration has traditionally been a strong campaigning theme for Mr Trump, but has taken a back seat during the pandemic and in the lead-up to the November election.

    Mr Trump’s announcement late on Monday came as the White House argued that the worst of the pandemic was over and the country could begin reopening. The restrictions on people’s movement, implemented by many states to curb the spread of the virus, have paralysed parts of the economy.

    Over the past four weeks, more than 20 million Americans have registered for unemployment benefits. That amounts to roughly as many jobs as employers had added over the previous decade.

    The US has more than 787,000 confirmed cases of Covid-19 and more than 42,000 deaths, according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University, which is tracking the pandemic globally.

    How can the proposals be implemented? It was not immediately clear who could be affected by Mr Trump’s announcement or when such a move could come into force, and the White House has not commented.

    According to the New York Times, citing several people familiar with the plan, a formal order temporarily barring the provision of new green cards and work visas could be one way of implementing the measure; the administration would no longer approve any applications from foreigners to live and work in the US for an undetermined period of time.

    Last month, the US suspended almost all visa processing, including for immigrants, because of the pandemic.

    The US has already agreed with both Canada and Mexico to extend border restrictions on non-essential travel until at least mid-May.

    Travel has also been sharply restricted from hard-hit European countries and China, though people with temporary work visas, students and business travellers are exempted.

    On Monday, the US said it would continue to expel migrants it encounters along the border with Mexico for at least another month.

    In recent weeks, emergency powers have been used to expel thousands of undocumented migrants on the US southern border. The public health measure lets officials override immigration laws, expediting removal processes.

    Last year, just over one million people were granted lawful permanent resident status in the US, according to the Department of Homeland Security. The top countries of origin were Mexico, China, India, the Dominican Republic, the Philippines and Cuba.

    More than half of those, though, were cases of “adjusted status from within the US” – meaning they were already there – and only 459,000 arrived from abroad. The latter group would be the ones presumably affected by an immigration ban.

    When it comes to refugees, there were 30,000 people admitted into the US in 2019, most of them from Congo, Myanmar, Ukraine, Eritrea, Afghanistan and Syria.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Trump suspends immigration to US to protect jobs of Americans

    President Donald Trump has announced that immigration to the US will be temporarily suspended to protect the jobs of Americans.

    The US President made the announcement on Twitter and he hinged the decision on “the attack from the invisible enemy”.

    Trump tweeted; “In light of the attack from the Invisible Enemy, as well as the need to protect the jobs of our GREAT American Citizens, I will be signing an Executive Order to temporarily suspend immigration into the United States!”

    Though it is still unclear the mechanism President Trump will use to suspend immigration, how long such a suspension could last or what effect this will have on the operation of US border crossings and on those who already hold green cards, the immigration ban generated close to 10,000 reactions less than 25 minutes after the US President tweeted it and it foreshadowed the political fire it will ignite on Tuesday April 19 across the North American country.

    The announcement came after the White House insisted that the worst of the pandemic is over and the country can begin reopening.

    The US has over 787,000 confirmed cases of Covid-19 and more than 42,000 deaths, according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University, which is tracking the pandemic globally.

    Source: Aljazeera

  • Trump says will sign order to ‘suspend immigration into US’ due to Covid-19

    Donald Trump said he would temporarily ban immigration to the United States because of the “invisible enemy” of the coronavirus, as angry Americans took to the streets to demand an end to crippling lockdowns.

    In just four months, the virus has turned the world upside down, confining half the planet indoors and killing nearly 170,000 on its march through virtually every country.

    Drastic measures never before seen in peacetime have shredded the global economy, resulting in the extraordinary spectacle of oil prices turning negative as demand evaporates.

    World leaders are agonizing over the right moment to loosen restrictions, terrified of a second wave but aware their citizens need to work and live amid growing signs of social tension.

    US President Trump, who has encouraged anti-lockdown protests roiling parts of the country, said Monday he would halt immigration – a theme long popular with his supporters.

    “In light of the attack from the invisible enemy, as well as the need to protect the jobs of our GREAT American Citizens, I will be signing an Executive Order to temporarily suspend immigration into the United States!” he tweeted.

    At least 22 million Americans have lost their jobs since sweeping lockdowns were implemented to slow the spread of the virus, and exasperation was growing in some parts of the country.

    Hundreds took part in a “Patriots Rally” in Pennsylvania, one waving a banner proclaiming “Give me liberty or give me death.”

    Rose Bayer, 50, said it was “crazy” to shut down the world over a disease she said has a recovery rate of about 98 percent.

    “People will starve, they’ll commit suicide, they’ll lose everything over this. The cure, like Trump said, cannot be worse than the disease,” she said.

    While such demos have captured much attention, more than four in five Americans would approve of a national stay-at-home order, according to a recent Quinnipiac poll.

    But isolated protests are also springing up elsewhere with hundreds defying social distancing rules in Vladikavkaz, in Russia’s Northern Caucasus, to demonstrate against the lockdown and economic hardship.

    Sporadic clashes also broke out in a downtrodden northern Paris suburb with protesters launching fireworks at police they accuse of enforcing the restrictions too harshly.

    ‘Like a war situation’

    In hard-hit Europe, several countries are cautiously creeping out from confinement measures, buoyed by mounting signs the worst of the virus may be behind them.

    Chancellor Angela Merkel warned Germany was “still a long way from being out of the woods,” as she allowed smaller shops from florists to fashion stores to reopen.

    There were also encouraging signs in other major European countries such as Italy, France and Britain, although authorities warned citizens against letting their guard down.

    Ghana became the first African country to lift its coronavirus restrictions, sparking a mixed reaction on streets in Accra teeming with citizens after a three-week lockdown.

    “It is a huge reprieve. We have a listening government,” hawker Jemima Adwoa Anim told AFP.

    “It was like a war situation. We had no money and at the same time couldn’t step out to work to earn some cash,” she added.

    But others were furious the restrictions had been lifted so early.

    “This is totally ridiculous. How is it possible?” asked 20-year-old student Francis Collison.

    “We just recorded over 1,000 positive cases of COVID-19 and suddenly the president decided to lift the partial lockdown.”

    ‘Nobody wants to buy’

    The fallout from the coronavirus has sparked fears of a second Great Depression with millions around the world losing their jobs as economies grind to a halt.

    A devastating supply glut resulted in oil producers effectively paying others to take crude oil off their hands, as a barrel of US benchmark West Texas Intermediate for May delivery closed at -$37.63.

    Futures prices rebounded back above zero in Asian trade Tuesday, but the historic moves sent shockwaves through global markets, sending the Dow Jones Index sharply lower and Asian markets into the red at the opening bell.

    “It’s a contract for something that nobody wants to buy,” said Matt Smith of ClipperData, as oil storage facilities are full and demand has plunged due to fast-shrinking economic activity.

    The virus has sent the aviation sector into a tailspin with cash-strapped Virgin Australia announcing Tuesday it had entered voluntary administration — the largest airline so far to collapse.

    But despite the virus, people around the world are finding imaginative ways to pierce the gloom.

    Police in Madrid are blaring their car sirens to celebrate birthdays of people stuck in their apartments.

    And in Paris, Carla Bianchi, an actress of Italian origin, sings for her neighbours every night from her window, dedicating her songs to caregivers.

    “It’s true that often Italian songs that are like serenades to be sung below the window work well,” she said.

    “As time goes by, a small audience is growing. Even on the other side, from afar, so I see my voice travels.”

    Source: France24

  • Coronavirus: Immigration to US to be suspended amid pandemic – Trump

    President Donald Trump has said he will sign an executive order to temporarily suspend all immigration to the US because of the coronavirus.

    In a late night message on Twitter, he cited “the attack from the invisible enemy”, as he calls the virus, and “the need to protect the jobs” of Americans.

    He gave no other details. Critics say the Trump administration is using the pandemic to crack down on immigration.

    The country has 782,159 confirmed cases of Covid-19 and 41,816 deaths.

    Mr Trump’s announcement comes as the White House also argues the worst of the pandemic is over and the country can begin reopening.

    The US has already agreed with both Canada and Mexico to extend border restrictions on non-essential travel until at least mid-May.

    Travel has also been sharply restricted from Europe and China, though people with temporary work visas, students and business travellers are exempted.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: Liberate states protesting against lockdown -Trump

    President Donald Trump has appeared to endorse protests against stringent lockdown measures in several states.

    In a series of tweets, he said: “LIBERATE MINNESOTA”, “LIBERATE MICHIGAN” and then “LIBERATE VIRGINIA”.

    Protesters say the severe economic restrictions are hurting citizens, but health officials warn lifting them could spread infection.

    The US saw its highest daily death toll on Thursday, recording 4,591 deaths in 24 hours.

    That spike could be because Johns Hopkins University, which records the data, began to include deaths with a COVID-19 probable cause.

    The US has the highest number of cases and deaths worldwide, more than 672,200 confirmed infections and 33,000 deaths.

    Demonstrations calling on authorities to end the shutdown have occurred in Michigan, Ohio, North Carolina, Minnesota, Utah, Virginia and Kentucky.

    The states Mr Trump referenced in Friday’s tweets are all led by Democrats. Ohio and Utah, which he did not mention, have Republican governors.

    More demonstrations are planned, including in Wisconsin, Oregon, Maryland, Idaho and Texas.

    The protests have varied in size, ranging from a few dozen people in Virginia to thousands in Michigan.

    The president’s apparent support comes a day after his administration unveiled new guidance for re-opening state economies.

    His Friday tweets contrast with his stance on Thursday, where he said he was sympathetic to the demonstrators, but “they seem to be protesters who like me… my opinion is just about the same as all of the governors”.

    Minnesota Governor Tim Walz responded to the tweets, saying he called the White House to ask “what they think we could have done differently”, but did not hear back.

    “The president unveiled a three-step plan that mirrors exactly what we’re trying to do,” Mr Walz told reporters.

    “I called to ask, what are we doing differently about moving towards getting as many people back into the workforce without compromising the health of Minnesotans or the providers?

    “And that will probably take longer than a two-word tweet, but I think there’s responsibility to tell us that.”

    What does federal guidance say?

    That guidance recommends three phases of slowly re-opening businesses and social life, with each phase lasting a minimum of 14 days.

    It includes some recommendations across all three phases including good personal hygiene and employers developing policies to ensure social distancing, testing and contact tracing.

    Dr Anthony Fauci, from the White House coronavirus taskforce, cautioned that even as restrictions were eased “it’s not game over”.

    He warns that the virus may rebound, and there could be setbacks along the way.

    On Friday morning Donald Trump fired off a series of tweets calling for the “liberation” of three states with Democratic governors, as though they were enemy-controlled territory.

    The message seems apparent.

    The governor of one, Michigan’s Gretchen Whitmer, recently was the target of a mass protest at the state capital against her sweeping lock-down orders. A mixed crowd of conservatives, white nationalists and anti-government militias waved Confederate and pro-Trump flags, and signs accusing Whitmer of dictatorial overreach.

    Another of the states, Virginia, had its own capital protests earlier in the year from gun-rights activists.

    The president’s social media fusillade suggests his goal is to reward – or encourage – such shows of force from his political base, as opinion polls indicate Trump’s approval rating is sagging after a boost during the early weeks of the outbreak.

    Trump followed those incendiary tweets by criticising New York’s Andrew Cuomo, another Democrat, for mishandling the pandemic and spending too much time “complaining”.

    Just a day after Trump reportedly told governors in a conference call they would “call the shots” on when to begin easing restrictions, it appears the president wants to up the pressure – and the political risk – for Democrats by other means at his disposal.

    Trump has benefitted in the past from a finely tuned sense of the sentiments – and resentments – of his supporters. Friday morning could be an indication that he’s positioning himself to again stand in their midst.

    Why are people protesting?

    Protesters say stringent restrictions on movement and businesses are an overreaction to the outbreak.

    Organisers of the Liberate Minnesota protest wrote on Facebook: “It is not the governor’s place to restrict free movement of Minnesota citizens!”

    “President Trump has been very clear that we must get America back to work very quickly or the ‘cure’ to this terrible disease may be the worse option!”

    The group added that the state’s economy “will be dealt a death blow” if restrictions continue.

    The event now has over 600 attendees marked on Facebook and some 2,800 more users interested in the event.

    Earlier this week, in Michigan, thousands of protesting workers blocked roads, demanding the state reopen after Governor Gretchen Whitmer extended stay-at-home restrictions.

    Governor Whitmer is also facing federal lawsuits against her orders shuttering non-essential businesses and limiting travel.

    However, public health experts, and some state governors, including Republican governors, have stressed the importance of social distancing.

    On Friday, Texas Governor Greg Abbott announced he was establishing a “strike force” to “safely and strategically” re-open America’s second largest state.

    The group of medical, public and private sector leaders will look into what services and activities may resume under existing guidelines.

    The governor will offer a re-opening plan based on the findings on 27 April.

    In addition, Mr Abbott said retail outlets that are able to deliver goods to customer’s cars, homes or other locations with minimal contact may begin operating on 24 April.

    In Florida, the mayor of Jacksonville said he would re-open beaches with limited hours starting Friday.

    Mayor Lenny Curry said residents must still practice social distancing, but could use beaches for exercise and recreation.

    Parks in the city will also be opened, though gatherings of more than 50 are banned.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: Trump defends tweets against US states’ lockdowns

    President Donald Trump has defended his tweets in which he appeared to endorse protests against stringent lockdown measures in several US states.

    At his Friday briefing, he said some measures imposed by Minnesota, Michigan and Virginia had been “too tough”.

    Earlier, he wrote in a series of tweets: “LIBERATE MINNESOTA”, “LIBERATE MICHIGAN” and then “LIBERATE VIRGINIA”.

    The curbs, including the stay-at-home orders, are needed to halt the spread of coronavirus, health officials say.

    But protesters say they are hurting citizens, by limiting movement unreasonably and stifling economic activity.

    The US saw its highest daily death toll on Thursday, recording 4,591 deaths in 24 hours.

    That spike could be because Johns Hopkins University, which records the data, began to include deaths with a Covid-19 probable cause.

    The US has the highest number of cases and deaths worldwide, nearly 700,000 confirmed infections and more than 36,000 deaths, according to Johns Hopkins.

    Demonstrations calling on authorities to end the shutdown have occurred in Michigan, Ohio, North Carolina, Minnesota, Utah, Virginia and Kentucky.

    The states Mr Trump referred to in Friday’s tweets are all led by Democrats. Ohio and Utah, which he did not mention, have Republican governors.

    More demonstrations are planned, including in Wisconsin, Oregon, Maryland, Idaho and Texas.

    The protests have varied in size, ranging from a few dozen people in Virginia to thousands in Michigan.

    The president’s apparent support comes a day after his administration unveiled new guidance for re-opening state economies.

    His Friday tweets contrast with his stance on Thursday, where he said he was sympathetic to the demonstrators, but “they seem to be protesters who like me… my opinion is just about the same as all of the governors”.

    Minnesota Governor Tim Walz responded to the tweets, saying he called the White House to ask “what they think we could have done differently”, but did not hear back.

    “The president unveiled a three-step plan that mirrors exactly what we’re trying to do,” Mr Walz told reporters.

    “I called to ask, what are we doing differently about moving towards getting as many people back into the workforce without compromising the health of Minnesotans or the providers?

    “And that will probably take longer than a two-word tweet, but I think there’s a responsibility to tell us that.”

    What does federal guidance say?

    That guidance recommends three phases of slowly re-opening businesses and social life, with each phase lasting a minimum of 14 days.

    It includes some recommendations across all three phases including good personal hygiene and employers developing policies to ensure social distancing, testing and contact tracing.

    Dr Anthony Fauci, from the White House coronavirus taskforce, cautioned that even as restrictions were eased “it’s not game over”.

    He warns that the virus may rebound, and there could be setbacks along the way.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Trump’s ex-lawyer ‘to be released from prison’

    US President Donald Trump’s former personal lawyer, Michael Cohen, is reportedly set for an early release from prison due to the coronavirus.

    Cohen is serving a three-year sentence after pleading guilty to multiple offences, including violating campaign finance laws and lying to Congress.

    He is currently in a minimum-security prison at Otisville, New York where cases of Covid-19 have been reported among inmates and staff.

    The Bureau of Prisons has faced criticism for its handling of outbreaks and is under pressure to release some non-violent inmates.

    A number of other high-profile figures, including R Kelly and Bill Cosby, have also appealed for release due to the virus.

    Last month a federal judge denied an earlier request by Cohen to be freed because of the pandemic, telling him to “accept the consequences of his criminal convictions”.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Trump says US will gradually reopen economy

    President Donald Trump said Thursday he is recommending a gradual reopening of the US economy from the catastrophic shutdown ordered to stop the spread of the coronavirus.

    “Based on the latest data, our team of experts now agree that we can begin the next front in our war,” he told a news conference. “We’re opening up our country.”

    However, the recommendations are a far cry from Trump’s previous hopes for a sudden, widespread end to social distancing measures.

    Instead Trump described a cautious approach in which state governors, not the White House, will take the lead – also a retreat for Trump who had insisted he could dictate the pace of reopening.

    “Our approach will outline three phases in restoring our economic life,” he said. “We are not opening all at once, but one careful step at a time, and some states, they will be able to open up sooner than others.”

    Some states, Trump said, are already free from the impact of the coronavirus and therefore can open “literally tomorrow.”

    “We have large sections of the country, right now, that can think about opening,” he said.

    If state governors “need to remain closed, we will allow them to do that. If they believe it is time to reopen, we will provide them the freedom and guidance to accomplish that task and very, very quickly, depending on what they want to do,” he said.

    In the White House plan, presented to governors earlier in the day, Trump laid out the plan for getting people gradually back into public venues, but offered no timetable.

    Depending on locations and levels of the virus there, people will be able eventually to attend public gatherings and conduct non-essential travel.

    But even in the third phase, or what government scientist Deborah Birx called the “new normal,” the White House is recommending continued, long-term extra hygiene measures.

    There will also be a focus on stamping out any resurgence.

    “What’s key to this is early alerts and getting in there before they have a problem,” another top government scientist, Anthony Fauci, said.

    The caution at the heart of the plan represents a shift of direction for Trump, who from the start of the crisis has shown frustration with having to close down the world’s biggest economy just as he ramps up his bid for reelection in November.

    Fauci said “the predominant and completely driving element” of the plan is “safety.”

    “Light switch on and off is the exact opposite of what you see here,” he said.

    Source: France24

  • Coronavirus: Bill Gates condemns Donald Trump for stopping US payments to World Health Organisation

    Bill Gates has said Donald Trump’s decision to stop US funding of the World Health Organisation “during a world health crisis” is as “dangerous as it sounds”.

    The Microsoft founder tweeted:”Their work is slowing the spread of COVID-19 and if that work is stopped no other organization can replace them. The world needs @WHO now more than ever.”

    Donald Trump had said that the global health body had “failed in its basic duty and it must be held accountable” for its handling of the coronavirus pandemic.

    He blamed the group for promoting China’s “disinformation” about the virus in the days following the initial outbreak in the Chinese city of Wuhan.

    The virus – which has infected almost two million people worldwide – could have been contained at its source if the WHO had been better at investigating the initial reports that came from China, Mr Trump said.

    But he added that the US will continue to engage with the organisation to pursue what he described as meaningful reforms.

    The US is one of the World Health Organisation’s biggest financial backers. In February, Mr Trump’s administration had called for America’s contribution to be slashed from $122.6m (£99.5m) to $57.9m (£47m).

    The WHO has praised China for its transparency on the pandemic, despite the fact there is reason to believe the country’s official tally does not reflect the true number of fatalities.

    Beijing is another major financial contributor to the UN health agency, prompting critics to claim that the WHO lacks the independence needed to properly fulfil its role.

    Mr Trump’s move comes amid growing criticism of his own handling of the COVID-19 crisis.

    Despite his own claims of success, it has emerged that he was warned about the virus and its potential for destruction as early as January.

    Among those warnings was one from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on 8 January, when the pandemic was seen as just a cluster of pneumonia.

    On 21 January, the US saw its first case – a man in his 30s – but a day later, Mr Trump said: “It’s going to be fine”.

    As late as the middle of March, he was comparing COVID-19 to flu, an illness which he said saw “nothing shut down, life and the economy go on”.

    Mr Trump’s news conferences have focused on promoting hydroxychloroquine, a drug that has not been scientifically proven to treat the virus, along with dodging blame and attacking reporters and rival politicians.

    Mr Trump used a media briefing on Monday to direct his anger at fellow politicians and the media, in what one television network described as “the biggest meltdown from a US president” they’d ever seen.

    The president had also claimed he – not state governors – had total authority over when states should end their lockdowns.

    Among those angered by that assertion was New York’s governor Andrew Cuomo, who said: “His proclamation is that he would be king, that’s what a king is. A king has total authority. That statement cannot stand.”

    But on Tuesday, Mr Trump stepped back from his previous stance, saying he would talk to governors and states would decide when and how to end lockdowns.

    Last month, Mr Gates and his wife Melinda’s foundation, which funds fights against diseases like malaria and polio, sent 15,000 medicinal molecules to a leading laboratory in Belgium to be tested as a potential cure for coronavirus.

    Source: Sharon Marris| sky.com