Category: Foreign

  • Violence forces 23,000  Nigerians to flee to Niger

    Violence forces 23,000 Nigerians to flee to Niger

    NO fewer than 23,000 people escaping violence in the Northwest have fled to neighbouring Niger in recent weeks, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) has said.

    The refugees were “mainly desperate women and children”, who had been allowed to seek protection in Niger despite border closures as a result of coronavirus pandemic, the UN agency said.

    The UNHCR added that an additional 19,000 Niger nationals in the southern Maradi region had become displaced inside their own country “fearing and fleeing the same insecurity in the border areas”.

    “Those fleeing speak of extreme violence unleashed against civilians, murders, kidnappings for ransom and pillaging and looting of villages,” the statement said.

    Read Also: Death tolls rise in Taraba multi-ethnic violence

     

    The numbers fleeing have almost tripled from last year when the agency reported the first influx of 20,000 people following an insurgency and banditry in northern Nigeria that killed hundreds and displaced thousands.

    The flight to Niger takes the total number of refugees fleeing that part of Nigeria to more than 60,000 since the first wave in April last year, it said.

    The latest have fled bloodshed in the Nigerian states of Katsina, Sokoto and Zamfara, the agency said.

    The deadliest attack in Nigeria claimed 47 lives in Katsina State, the agency said.

    This prompted air strikes by Nigerian security forces already stretched tackling a decade-long insurgency by Islamist group Boko Haram in the north-east.

    Niger is also beset by jihadist violence, notably around Lake Chad, where the borders of Cameroon, Chad, Niger and Nigeria converge.

  • China-linked hackers targeting U.S. vaccine research, says FBI

    China-linked hackers targeting U.S. vaccine research, says FBI

    UNITED States (U.S.) federal authorities have warned that China-linked hackers were targeting American research organisations to steal data on vaccines and treatments for the new coronavirus.

    The FBI and Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) said health care, pharmaceutical and research institutions working on a pandemic response should all be aware they were the prime targets of this activity.

    The agencies said the institutions were to take the necessary steps to protect their systems.

    “China’s efforts to target these sectors pose a significant threat to our nation’s response to COVID-19,’’ the agencies said.

    Read Also: COVID-19: CBN to fund researchers for local vaccine

     

    The potential theft of this information “jeopardises the delivery of secure, effective, and efficient treatment options.”

    According to the advisory, organisations should partner with CISA to help protect their efforts, while those suspecting suspicious activity should alert the FBI.

    “More details on the threat will be released in the coming days,’’ the agencies said.

    The warning is the latest in a series of efforts by President Donald Trump’s administration to blame China for being the source of the pandemic and exploiting its aftermath.

    Secretary of State Mike Pompeo recently accused Beijing of being responsible for hundreds of thousands of deaths and the economic downturn.

  • NIDCOM pledges to work with recognised Diaspora groups

    NIDCOM pledges to work with recognised Diaspora groups

    Nigerians in Diaspora Commission (NIDCOM) on Wednesday pledged to work closely with recognised Diaspora groups for unity and national development.

    The commission also said it would work with several existing socio-cultural and professional diaspora groups.

    NIDCOM Head, Media and Protocol  Mr. Abdur-Rahman Balogun, in a statement in Abuja, said  the commission’s  attention was drawn to a “confusing and illogical statement” being circulated by the Chairman of Nigerians in Diaspora Organisation (NIDO) Europe Mr. Keneth Gbandi on the relationship between NIDCOM and NIDO.

    He said NIDO-Europe’ s statement could be described as selfish and self-seeking.

    Balogun alleged that it was all in the attempt of a few, who wanted to lord over the majority.

    He recalled that former President Olusegun Obasanjo, came up with the idea of NIDO being an umbrella body of all diaspora organisations, but unfortunately for 20 years, the  vision had not materialised.

    He said that NIDO had not succeeded in bringing registered and recognised diaspora groups under one roof.

    “Rather, it has been controlled in some countries by a few, who are determined to turn it to a personal belonging,” he said.

    Read Also: COVID-19: NIDCOM sets fresh conditions for evacuation

     

    Balogun added that in the Act establishing NIDCOM, the commission was to coordinate the activities of all diaspora groups and organisations .

    “So, it is imperative to stress that NIDCOM will not only relate with NIDO but also all recognised diaspora organisations.

    “This, the commission has been able to do effectively by coordinating and harnessing the potentials of the diaspora groups and individuals for national development,” he said.

    Balogun also added that NIDCOM had been able to engage as many diaspora groups as possible in all parts of the world through its various activities and interventions.

    “But the leadership of NIDO-Europe wants to go it all alone. According to Gbandi, who has been in NIDO leadership in the last 20 years, it is either his way or no way.

    “We stress again that Gbandi’s argument that whenever NIDCOM board is constituted by Mr. President, it should be made up of only members of NIDO will remain a dream by Gbandi.

    “For the purpose of clarity and emphasis, NIDCOM is for all Nigerians in diaspora, irrespective of groups and affiliations, and not for one organisation or group in the diaspora,” he said.

  • China warns France against selling weapons to Taiwan

    China warns France against selling weapons to Taiwan

    China warned France on Wednesday not to “harm Sino-French relations” by selling arms to neighbouring Taiwan, which is planning to buy weapons as part of an upgrade to a French-made warship fleet bought 30 years ago.

    China says that Taiwan is part of “one China” and that this principle must be accepted by any country with which it has diplomatic relations. Arms sales to Taiwan are always highly sensitive and regularly prompt a strong reaction from Beijing.

    Taiwan is mostly equipped with US-made weapons, but in 1991 France sold Taiwan six Lafayette frigates, to China’s anger. Francealso sold Taiwan 60 Mirage fighter jets in 1992.

    Since then, China has vastly expanded its economic and military capabilities, and has grown more assertive in its efforts to thwart such sales.

    Taiwan last month said it was seeking to buy equipment from France to upgrade the ships’ missile interference system.

    Speaking in Beijing, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian said China resolutely opposed any arms sales to Taiwan.

    “We have already expressed our serious concern to France,” he told a daily news briefing.

    READ ALSO: China’s Wuhan kicks off mass testing campaign for new coronavirus

    “We again urge the French side to abide by the one China principle and withdraw the arms sale plan to Taiwan to avoid harming Sino-French relations,” the spokesman added.

    France has rejected Chinese criticism of the planned weapons deal with Taiwan, saying everyone’s focus at this time should be on fighting the coronavirus epidemic.

    France strictly respects the contractual agreements that it formed with Taiwan and nothing has changed in its position since 1994,” the French foreign ministry said in a statement on Wednesday, referring to a 1994 agreement re-establishing ties with Beijing.

    “Faced with the Covid-19 crisis, all our attention and all our efforts should be focused on the fight against the pandemic,” the ministry added.

    Taiwan says it needs to upgrade its armed forces to deal with the growing threat from China, which has in recent months stepped up its military drills near the democratic, self-governing island.

    China describes Taiwan as its most sensitive and important territorial issue, and has never renounced the use of force to bring the island under its control. Taiwan has shown no interest in being ruled by autocratic China.

    (www.newsnow.co.uk)

  • China’s Wuhan kicks off mass testing campaign for new coronavirus

    China’s Wuhan kicks off mass testing campaign for new coronavirus

    Authorities in the Chinese city where the novel coronavirus emerged launched an ambitious campaign on Wednesday.

    The campaign was to test all of its 11 million residents, after a cluster of new cases raised fears of a second wave of infections.

    At least two of the city’s main districts have delivered notices of the campaign door-to-door and sent out online questionnaires through community workers seeking information about tests people have had, and if they belong to what are deemed high-risk groups, residents said.

    “To better make use of nucleic acid tests as a monitoring tool and in accordance of the state cabinet’s requirements to expand testing.

    “ We’ve decided after consideration to conduct testing for all residents,’’ according to a questionnaire sent to residents of the city’s Wuchang district, which has a population of about 1.2 million.

    Wuhan was placed under a lockdown on Jan. 23 and it was only lifted on April 8. It reported six new cases over the weekend, the first infections since the curbs were removed.

    Reuters, citing an internal document to district officials, reported on Monday that the city planned to conduct the campaign of city-wide nucleic acid tests over 10 days.

    Residents of two city districts, Wuchang and Hankou, the latter with a population of more than 2.6 million, said they were told on Wednesday to provide personal details including any history of nucleic acid tests and whether they belonged to any of 12 key groups, according to four residents and copies of questionnaires seen by Reuters.

    The tests would include both nucleic acid and serum anti-body tests, according to a notice issued by Wuchang district.

    READ ALSO: Trump claims information indicates Wuhan lab behind outbreak

    The 12 key groups include confirmed and asymptomatic coronavirus cases and their close contacts, people with a fever, school, medical, transport, bank, supermarket and government workers, and people coming back from overseas or who plan to leave Wuhan for work.

    Asymptomatic cases, or people who have tested positive but show no clinical symptoms such as a fever, are capable of spreading the virus to others. China does not disclose estimates of the number of such cases.

    The Wuchang district said in its notice it aimed to test all residents, but stressed testing for those in the 12 categories must reach 100%’’.

    Wuhan is divided into 13 districts, and covers an area of about 8,500 sq km, almost as big as the New York metropolitan area.

    The Wuhan government said on April 23 that the city had 53 laboratories to process tests and 211 locations where nucleic acid tests can be done.

    It was not clear when the tests would be conducted in Wuchang, but some residents of Hankou said testing had started there.

    The Wuhan government’s public relations office was not immediately available for comment on the campaign.

    An official at the city government’s Mayor’s Hotline confirmed the city’s plan to test all residents but told Reuters there has been no notice by the city health authority about officially starting the tests.

    Different city districts could be conducting tests at their own pace for now, the official said.

    Since the Wuhan’s lockdown was lifted, the city has conducted an average of 47,000 tests a day and more than 1.5 million tests in total, according to Reuters calculations based on city health authority daily reports.

    Of China’s total of nearly 83,000 confirmed infections, Wuhan accounted for 50,339 of them. The tally does not include asymptomatic cases.

    More than 3,800 people in Wuhan have died from the virus, authorities say, or about 80% of China’s fatalities.

    It is not clear if Wuhan residents will have to pay for their test or if the local government will cover the cost.

    Hubei provincial authorities have gradually brought down testing costs and recently capped prices of nucleic acid and IgM/IgG antibody tests at 180 yuan ($25) and 50 yuan ($7), respectively, according to the Changjiang Daily.

    (Reuters/NAN)

  • Russia suspends use of ventilator type sent to U.S. after fatal fires

    Russia suspends use of ventilator type sent to U.S. after fatal fires

    Russia on Wednesday suspended the use of some Russian-made medical ventilators after two fatal hospital fires reported to involve the machines, a setback in its fight against the novel coronavirus.

    The ventilators’ safety was called into question a day earlier after a fire at Saint George’s Hospital in St Petersburg in which five people died.

    That followed another fire at a hospital in Moscow which killed one person on Saturday.

    In both cases, sources told the TASS news agency that the source of the fires had been faulty Aventa-M ventilators.

    Authorities have procured hundreds of Aventa-Ms to help hospitals cope with coronavirus patients.

    Though Russia has so far suffered a low number of virus-related deaths compared to other countries, at 242,271, its infections tally is now the second highest in the world after the United States.

    Russia sent a batch of the same ventilators to U.S. in early April, though U.S. officials say the machines were not needed in the end.

    READ ALSO: Russian President’s spokesperson tests positive for novel coronavirus

    Roszdravnadzor, the state healthcare regulator, said in a statement it was suspending the use in Russia of all such machines made after April 1.

    It gave no explanation for the suspension, but noted that the ventilators had been used in the two hospitals where the recent fires had taken place which it said a day earlier it was looking into.

    It was not immediately clear exactly how many new ventilators the suspension would cover.

    Public procurement data cited by the Interfax news agency said that the Saint George Hospital in St Petersburg spent 441 million roubles ($6 million) last month on buying 237 Aventa-M ventilators.

    The procurement contract was finalised on April 24, it said. Each ventilator cost 1.86 million roubles.

    The ventilators are made at the Urals Instrument Engineering Plant (UPZ) in the region of Sverdlovsk.

    Radio-Electronic Technologies Concern (KRET), which controls UPZ, said on Tuesday that its ventilators had passed all the necessary tests and had been used by medical facilities in Russia since 2012 without any safety concerns.

    It urged people to avoid rushing to conclusions until the outcome of official investigations into the fires was known.

    (Reuters/NAN)

  • Hundreds of workers report employers for ‘furlough fraud’

    Hundreds of workers report employers for ‘furlough fraud’

    Agency Reporter

     

    Almost 800 reports have been made to the taxman over claims employers are fraudulently taking furlough money from the Government.

    HMRC confirmed it has received 795 reports of potential fraud related to the Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme.

    It said it will now be “assessing” these cases in line with its usual procedures.

    The scheme was introduced from March, with the Government pledging to pay 80 per cent of the wages of workers affected by the Covid-19 pandemic, in a bid to protect jobs.

    On Tuesday, Chancellor Rishi Sunak outlined plans to extend the furlough scheme until the end of October.

    One stipulation of the scheme is that workers must not complete any work at all for their organisations to be eligible for the pay-out.

    Almost 800 reports have been made to the taxman over claims employers are fraudulently taking furlough money from the Government.

    HMRC confirmed it has received 795 reports of potential fraud related to the Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme.

    It said it will now be “assessing” these cases in line with its usual procedures.

    The scheme was introduced from March, with the Government pledging to pay 80 per cent of the wages of workers affected by the Covid-19 pandemic, in a bid to protect jobs.

    On Tuesday, Chancellor Rishi Sunak outlined plans to extend the furlough scheme until the end of October.

    One stipulation of the scheme is that workers must not complete any work at all for their organisations to be eligible for the pay-out.

    Bosses at whistleblower support organisations said many workers are scared to report employers who are asking them to continue to work despite claiming furlough support.

    Liz Gardiner, chief executive of Protect, said: “We expect this is just the tip of the iceberg.

    “In this time of unprecedented change, when people are really worried about their jobs, it’s a really difficult thing to stand up and say ‘I think you’re committing fraud, employer, and I’m going to report you’.”

    Latest figures show that 7.5 million jobs have been furloughed since the scheme was launched, with 935,000 employers choosing to furlough staff.

    A spokesman said: “HMRC is committed to ensuring the tax systems we operate are used fairly and efficiently and, where necessary, will take action to ensure compliance with the relevant rules, regulations and legislation that govern the UK taxation systems.

    (www.newsnow.co.uk)

  • Thailand reports no new coronavirus cases for first time since March 9

    Thailand reports no new coronavirus cases for first time since March 9

    Thailand, the first country outside China to discover a case of the new coronavirus, on Wednesday reported no new daily cases for the first time in two months.

    Taweesin Wisanuyothin, a spokesman for the government’s Centre for COVID-19 Situation Administration, said the report made the government to consider easing more restrictions on businesses.

    “We all can be relieved but not complacent.

    “We need to continue with the main measures, wash hands, practice social distancing and wear masks,” Taweesin said.

    Thailand detected its first coronavirus case, a tourist from China on Jan. 13.

    Since then it has recorded a total of 3,017 infections and 56 deaths.

    Taweesin said areas that were still most at risk included Bangkok and surrounding provinces, as well as southern Thailand, where there has been a large number of cases in the past two weeks.

    Fuelling the rise in southern cases has been a cluster at an immigration detention centre in Songkhla province and in provinces bordering Malaysia.

    Thailand’s neighbour to the south has had 6,742 coronavirus cases and 109 deaths.

    The last day Thailand recorded no new cases was March 9, but within two weeks the daily numbers jumped to double digits and then to over 100 a day.

    That sharp escalation prompted the government to order the closure of shopping malls, restaurants, gyms and other businesses and to impose a 10 p.m. curfew.

    Recently, as the numbers of new cases fell, some of those restrictions were lifted, with businesses such as hair salons and pet groomers allowed to open.

    Report says the government is considering reopening shopping malls next week.

    It is, however, expected to meet on Friday to decide on the easing of measures.

    (Reuters/NAN)

  • Madagascar virus remedy scorned because it’s from Africa, says president

    Madagascar virus remedy scorned because it’s from Africa, says president

    Agency Reporter

    Madagascan President Andry Rajoelina on Monday batted away criticism for promoting a homegrown “remedy” for Covid-19, charging that the West has a condescending attitude toward traditional African medicine.

    “If it wasn’t Madagascar, and if it was a European country that had actually discovered this remedy, would there be so much doubt? I don’t think so,” he told French media in an interview.

    The World Health Organisation has repeatedly issued warnings that the Covid-Organics infusion, which Mr Rajoelina has touted as a remedy against the deadly coronavirus, has not been clinically tested.

    The drink is derived from artemisia – a plant with proven antimalarial properties – and other indigenous herbs.

    “African scientists… should not be underestimated,” he told broadcasters France 24 and Radio France International.

    “I think the problem is that (the drink) comes from Africa and they can’t admit… that a country like Madagascar… has come up with this formula to save the world,” said Mr Rajoelina, who claims the infusion cures patients within 10 days.

    READ ALSO: Buhari okays collection of Madagascar’s cure drug

    Already Equatorial Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Niger and Tanzania have taken delivery of consignments of the potion, which was launched last month.

    “No country or organisation will keep us from going forward,” Mr Rajoelina said in response to the WHO’s concerns.

    He said proof of the tonic’s efficacy was in “the healing of our sick”.

    Madagascar has officially reported 183 coronavirus infections and 105 recoveries, with no deaths.

    “The patients who were cured were cured through the administration of COVID-Organics alone,” the president said.

    He referred to the remedy as “an improved traditional medicine” and said Madagascar was not conducting clinical trials but “clinical observations” in accordance with WHO.

    (www.newsnow.co.uk)

  • Russian President’s spokesperson tests positive for novel coronavirus

    Russian President’s spokesperson tests positive for novel coronavirus

    Russian President Vladimir Putin’s Spokesperson, Dmitry Peskov, informed state media on Tuesday that he had contracted the novel coronavirus.

    Peskov, 52, said the last time he had met with Putin in person was more than a month ago. Russia’s prime minister, culture minister and construction minister have also tested positive for the virus.

    “I am receiving treatment,” Peskov said in comments carried by state news agency TASS.

    Russia’s novel coronavirus caseload surpassed 230,000 on Tuesday to become the world’s second-largest, behind the United States, according to comparative data compiled by Johns Hopkins University.

    Although Russia’s caseload has been rising by more than 10,000 per day for the past week, officials have noted a slight decline in the growth rate as regions seek to lift lockdown quarantine measures that have devastated the economy.

    Putin, who has been working remotely for a month to avoid contracting the disease, announced this week that a nationwide non-working period intended to curb the infection rate would end on Tuesday.

    Putin has tasked regional officials with determining when to lift stricter quarantine restrictions at the local level.

    Russian domestic economic activities have declined by one-third since late March, according to Federal Government statistics announced last week.

    Russia has been conducting about 170,000 coronavirus tests per day, Putin said in a video chat with senior officials on Monday.

    Russia plans within the next two weeks to “practically double the number of tests, bring them to 300,000 per day,” Putin said in comments carried by state news agency TASS.

    Russia has conducted nearly six million coronavirus tests, according to a federal monitoring service that publishes daily statistics.

    More than half of Russia’s confirmed cases, 120,000, have been in the capital and largest city, Moscow, which has lockdown quarantine measures in place until the end of this month, with residents warned to stay at home unless absolutely necessary.

    The pandemic has strained Russia’s health care system, with overcrowding at medical facilities throughout the country.

    (dpa/NAN)