Category: Foreign

  • Germany, Eastern Europe countries plan gradual removal of border controls

    Germany, Eastern Europe countries plan gradual removal of border controls

    THE leaders of Germany, Poland, the Czech Republic, Hungary and Slovakia yesterday agreed to gradually dismantle border checks put in place to curb the spread of coronavirus.

    According to the spokesman to Chancellor Angela Merkel, Steffen Seibert, who participated in a video conference with its Eastern European counterparts from the Visegrad Group, no time frame was given for the easing of travel restrictions.

    Seibert said Merkel held a bilateral call with Czech Prime Minister Andrej Babis, in which cooperation on re-opening the two neighbours’ border was also discussed.

    Merkel and Babis also discussed joint projects, including developing the train line that connects the capitals of Berlin and Prague.

    The chancellor is also said to have explained central aspects of a Franco-German proposal for a 500-billion-euro (or 545-billion-dollar) European recovery fund in response to the coronavirus crisis.

    However, it was not initially known the response of other leaders about the idea.

  • Children group donates N50m to Fed Govt’s coronavirus response

    Children group donates N50m to Fed Govt’s coronavirus response

    From Frank Ikpefan, Abuja

     

    AN international non-governmental organisation, Save the Children International Nigeria, yesterday donated personal protective gears and Infection Prevention and Control equipment to the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja to help protect front-line workers from contracting COVID-19.

    It was received by the Deputy Director, Health and Human Services Secretariat, Abuja Central Medical Store, Samson Eriba on behalf of the Secretary of the organisation.

    Save the children said the equipment, which is worth N50 million, will help address the immediate needs of front-line health workers who are providing care and treatment to people affected by the virus, either suspected, probable or confirmed cases.

    It said the donation will also enhance the Federal Government’s capacity towards containing the spread of the virus and help to sustain the ongoing health care responses to patients already infected by the disease.

    Interim Country Director, Save the Children International Nigeria, Mercy Gichuhi, said: “During infectious disease outbreaks, children face multi-dimensional risks, including exposure to the infection, indirect risks to accessing education and healthcare services; while the government’s priorities are focused on minimising contamination and direct risks to their overall care and protection.

    Read Also: Trump gives WHO ultimatum over Covid-19 handling

     

    “It is our responsibility to protect vulnerable children and their families from this disease, and we need to support our government partners who are at the front line in the coronavirus response.”

    The group explained that the donation was made through the support of the Femi Otedola Fund obtained through his daughter’s foundation, the Cuppy Foundation.

    The equipment included protective gowns, eye goggles, facemasks, gloves and other vital health supplies, to support the government’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic.

    Florence Otedola, popularly known as DJ Cuppy, said: “The most vulnerable Nigerian children and their families are bearing the biggest burden of the COVID-19 pandemic.

    “We have to ensure that they are protected from catching this deadly virus, especially children who are malnourished or suffering from diseases like pneumonia that is the biggest killer of children.

    “I am glad to see that many Nigerians are offering their support. Together with my family and The Cuppy Foundation, I am working with the government and Save the Children to provide materials urgently needed to fight the coronavirus.”

  • Health leaders push for inquiry into Covid-19 pandemic response

    Health leaders push for inquiry into Covid-19 pandemic response

    • World pays heavy price for ‘little unity’ on virus, says UN chief
    • China pledges $2b to fight virus
    • Macron, Merkel to join forces

    Global health leaders are pushing for an independent review of the response to the Covid-19 pandemic at the UN’s World Health Assembly.

    Yesterday’s virtual meeting brings together envoys from 194 member states of the World Health Organisation (WHO).

    The WHO is facing questions on how it dealt with the coronavirus pandemic.

    Chinese President Xi Jinping, who has defended his country’s actions during the outbreak, spoke during yesterday’s opening ceremony.

    He said China had acted “with openness and transparency” and insisted that any investigation should happen after the pandemic was brought under control.

    United Nations (UN) Secretary General Antonio Guterres also said the coronavirus was able to spread across the globe because countries failed to fight it together.

    “We have seen some solidarity, but very little unity, in our response to Covid-19,’’ he said at the start of the WHO annual meeting.

    According to him, because many countries had ignored the WHO’s recommendations, “the virus has spread across the world and is now moving into the global South, where its impact may be even more devastating.’’

    In a video message from New York, Guterres called on countries to increase their funding of the WHO, so that the UN health agency can support developing countries.

    In other opening remarks, WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus welcomed a proposed resolution calling for a review of the WHO’s handling of the pandemic and said it would initiate it “at the earliest opportunity”.

    South Korean President Moon Jae-in said the WHO must be given more legal powers to ensure that countries report outbreaks and share data.

    “A novel infectious disease could emerge at any time and we must be able to respond more quickly and effectively,” he said.

    The two-day assembly – an annual meeting that reviews the work of the UN’s health agency – comes amid recriminations between the US and China over the virus.

    The U.S. has already stopped its funding for the agency and is promoting its own vaccine programme.

    More than 4.5 million people have been infected and more than 300,000 have died since the virus emerged in China in December.

    The European Union, alongside countries including the UK, Australia and New Zealand, is pushing for an inquiry into how the pandemic has been handled and what lessons can be learned.

  • COVID-19: Experts fear new wave of infections in US

    COVID-19: Experts fear new wave of infections in US

    Agency Reporter

    US health officials are warning about the possibility of a new wave of coronavirus infections as more than two-thirds of states begin to open.

    The death toll in the United States is nearly 90,000, making it the worst-affected country in the world.

    And although the overall number of new cases in the country is on the decline, in some states, the number of infections is actually on the rise.

    Al Jazeera’s Heidi Zhou-Castro reports from Silver Spring, Maryland in the US.

    (www.newsnow.co.uk)

  • China pledges $2bn to fight global pandemic

    China pledges $2bn to fight global pandemic

    Agency Reporter

    China said it will contribute two billion dollars over the next two years for the global fight against the COVID-19 pandemic, Chinese President, Xi Jinping on Monday announced.

    The money is not only earmarked for health measures, but also for development aid for affected countries.

    Xi said in a message to the World Health Organisation’s (WHO) annual conference.

    READ ALSO: China replies to Trump’s threat to cut off ties, urges cooperation

    Xi urged other countries to increase their funding to the WHO.

    “The WHO should lead the global response,’’ he said about the UN agency that is facing a shortfall because the United States has suspended its financial contributions.

    (dpa/NAN)

  • Taiwan protests exclusion from World Health Assembly

    Taiwan protests exclusion from World Health Assembly

    Taiwan is protesting its exclusion from the World Health Organisation’s annual two-day meeting which opened on Monday.

    Taiwan and dozens of friendly countries have urged the WHO to invite the island nation to the online meeting to discuss its containment of the novel Coronavirus (COVID-19), which is seen as a success story.

    “It’s a loss for the WHO that the Taiwan model won’t be able to be shared at such an important meeting,’’ Health and Welfare Minister Chen Shih-chung told a news conference in Taipei.

    Taiwan’s letter of protest will be immediately sent to the WHO, Chen said.

    The WHO, under pressure from Beijing, does not recognise Taiwan.

    READ ALSO: China warns France against selling weapons to Taiwan

    Taiwan has had its own government since 1949.

    Beijing considers the self-governing democracy part of its territory.

    As the world has reported more than 4.7 million confirmed cases of COVID-19, Taiwan has recorded 440 cases with seven deaths.

    Taiwan is ranked 156th in the list of confirmed cases per million people among 187 countries, Chen said.

    A growing number of world leaders have spoken out publicly for Taiwan, including Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.

    “The WHO Secretariat should listen carefully to reasonable appeals from the international community,’’ Taiwan’s Foreign Minister Joseph Wu said.

    (dpa/NAN)

  • 130 test positive for COVID-19 in refugee home in German town – Officials say

    130 test positive for COVID-19 in refugee home in German town – Officials say

    One hundred and thirty people have tested positive for the novel Coronavirus (COVID-19) at accommodation for asylum seekers in western Germany, officials said on Monday.

    A spokeswoman for the district government of Cologne said that the remaining 170 residents at the shelter in the town of St. Augustin, around 30km south-east of Cologne, have been confirmed negative in tests.

    “As in all state accommodation facilities, the highest hygiene standards are being implemented,’’ she said.

    According to the spokeswoman, the residents are now being housed separately, depending on their test results, with outdoor areas also segregated.

    READ ALSO: Sporting world focuses on Germany as Bundesliga resumes

    Asylum seekers have been instructed to eat only in their rooms.

    In order to reduce numbers at the facility, where families and individuals in the early process of applying for asylum in Germany are housed, some who tested negative have been relocated to other accommodation.

    The state of North Rhine Westphalia, where St Augustin is located, has already seen two major COVID-19 outbreaks at refugee accommodation facilities.

    (dpa/NAN)

  • Obama blasts Coronavirus  response in rare public rebuke

    Obama blasts Coronavirus response in rare public rebuke

    Our Reporter

     

    Former United States (U.S.) President Barack Obama has again attacked officials handling the coronavirus pandemic in a rare public rebuke of the President Donald Trump administration.

    “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,” the former Democratic president said in an address to college graduates at the weekend.

    He did not name his successor or specific U.S. officials in the address, which appeared to be pre-recorded.

    “A lot them aren’t even pretending to be in charge,” Obama said during the speech, which capped a two-hour event for Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU) broadcast on social media.

    In a second address to the high school Class of 2020, Obama told graduating students that the pandemic means they would have to grow up faster than some other generations, and urged them to “do what you think is right”.

    “Doing what feels good, what’s convenient, what’s easy. That’s how little kids think.

    “Unfortunately, a lot of so-called grownups, including some with fancy titles and important jobs, still think that way, which is why things are so screwed up,” Obama added, in what appeared to be a dig at Trump and administration officials.

    Read Also: Hope as race for Coronavirus vaccine hots up

     

    The White House’s response to the coronavirus pandemic has come under the spotlight amid sharp criticism by Democrats, who have bashed Trump’s fairly lax approach through February and lingering testing shortages.

    Since leaving the White House in early 2017, Obama has largely refrained from criticising the Trump administration, following a convention among former U.S. presidents.

    Last week, comments Obama made in a private conference call, in which he called the U.S. handling of the pandemic “an absolute chaotic disaster,” were leaked by Yahoo News.

    In the call, Obama also reportedly said that “the rule of law was at risk” after criminal charges against former national security adviser Michael Flynn were dropped.

    In the university commencement speech, the former president also addressed racism in the U.S. and the case of a 25-year-old black man killed while jogging in February.

    Ahmaud Arbery suffered two shotgun blasts to the chest and was grazed by a gunshot on his wrist, according to an autopsy report released by authorities in the U.S. state of Georgia earlier this week.

    His case has roiled the nation after video emerged showing two men confronting Arbery in broad daylight while brandishing weapons.

  • UNGA President reiterates UN’s call  for immediate global ceasefire

    UNGA President reiterates UN’s call for immediate global ceasefire

    United Nations General Assembly President Amb. Tijani Muhammad-Bande has reminded the world of the UN’s call for an immediate global ceasefire.

    The reminder came in his message to mark this year’s International Day of Living Together in Peace.

    The day was declared by the General Assembly in 2017 to promote world peace, tolerance, inclusion, understanding and solidarity.

    “Today, we are facing the most challenging crisis since the Second World War.

    “COVID-19 and its social and economic fallouts threaten the maintenance of international peace and security, potentially leading to an increase in social unrest and violence.

    “The United Nations has called for an immediate global ceasefire to work together on defeating the actual, clear enemy: the pandemic.

    Read Also: Taliban reject Afghan ceasefire offer during Ramadan

     

    “It is time to silence the guns and bring hope to those who are most vulnerable,” he appealed.

    The UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres issued the global ceasefire appeal on March 23.

    No fewer than 100 member-states have endorsed the call, but armed conflicts persist in several countries including Syria and Libya.

    Guterres admitted this in April when he said in spite of “nominal support” in some countries, “there is still a distance between declarations and deeds in many countries”

    Russia and the United States are reportedly blocking efforts to win a UN Security Council backing for the proposed global ceasefire.

    Both countries’ positions stem from their concerns that such a measure would undermine their military operations against terrorist groups in Libya, Syria and Iraq.

    Muhammad-Bande, who is Nigeria’s Ambassador to the UN, urged member-states that have not endorsed the call to do so as an example to others.

    According to him, the world is watching and looking up to the UN to show leadership in these trying times.

  • Israel’s Netanyahu  sworn in as head of  long-awaited unity govt

    Israel’s Netanyahu sworn in as head of long-awaited unity govt

    PRIME Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has been sworn in as Israel’s new prime minister at the head of a unity government with former rival Benny Gantz, ending a nearly 18-month political crisis.

    The unity deal with former military chief of staff Gantz means Netanyahu has been able to hang on to power for a record fifth term despite corruption charges against him and a looming trial.

    Gantz, who is due to replace Netanyahu as prime minister in November 2021, was sworn in as defence minister minutes after Netanyahu.

    The ceremony comes after three elections in under a year – the last on March 2 – ended without a clear winner.

    Gantz has said that the need for a stable Israeli government to tackle the coronavirus outbreak drove him to break his vow never to serve with Netanyahu.

    According to deal between the two sides, Netanyahu may ask his cabinet or the Knesset as early as July 1 to vote on annexing West Bank land with Jewish settlements.

    Netanyahu and his former rival yesterday hailed the end of an unprecedented one-and-a-half-year political crisis as they presented their long-awaited unity government.

    “This is an important day for the state of Israel,” Netanyahu told the Knesset, Israel’s parliament, hours before he would be sworn in and start a fourth consecutive term in office, and one week before his corruption trial is set to start in a Jerusalem court.

    On May 7, Israel’s top court rejected petitions against the indicted premier starting a fifth term in office, removing the final obstacle for the unity government and cementing the 70-year-old’s reputation as a political wizard, who survives against all odds.

    Read Also: Netanyahu seeks defectors after failing to secure majority

     

    “The time has come to extend the Israeli law over (Israel’s) settlements (in the occupied West Bank) and to start a new chapter in the history of Zionism,” Netanyahu said, a step that would bring peace with the Palestinians “closer” and be carried out with the approval of the U.S.

    Former military chief Gantz justified his “difficult decision” to break his vow never to serve with the indicted Netanyahu, saying the choice had been “either unity or kind of civil war”.

    The two men were greeted by loud heckling by opposition lawmakers, one of whom was ushered out of the Knesset by security.

    The festive parliament session – delayed twice in the past week – followed three inconclusive elections in a year.

    The last of those was on March 2 – after which neither right-wing Likud party leader Netanyahu, nor centrist Blue and White alliance leader Gantz had proved able to muster a majority for a governing coalition.

    Gantz broke his long-time vow never to serve with the indicted Netanyahu.

    He said Israel needed a stable government to tackle the coronavirus pandemic and its economic fallout and could not afford a fourth election.