Category: Foreign

  • Zambia reports 174 new COVID-19 cases

    Zambia reports 174 new COVID-19 cases

    About 338 samples were assessed on May 9 and May 10 in the country.

    The new cases were recorded in different parts of the country, including a border town with Tanzania which has become the country’s epicentre.

    The cases include 66 truck drivers and Minister of Health, Chitalu Chilufya, said the government will increase collaboration with other neighbouring countries to contain the spread of the pandemic.

    READ ALSO: Zambia plans to compel copper miners to account for gold

    The government, he said, will not close all borders following increased cases of truck drivers but will intensify screening and tests for the drivers.

    The country has reported 441 cases, 117 recoveries and 7 deaths.

     

    (Xinhua/NAN)

  • US pandemic death toll hits 80,000 as states continue reopening

    US pandemic death toll hits 80,000 as states continue reopening

    New York, the epicenter of the coronavirus crisis in the U.S., plans to start reopening its economy in some upstate regions on Friday, but New York City is unlikely to see nonessential business resume until June at the earliest.
    “We’re now on the other side of the mountain,” Gov. Andrew Cuomo said on Monday at his daily news briefing.

    He added: “Next step, how do we reopen? How do we reopen intelligently? And how do we reopen without taking a step back?”

    As the number of coronavirus-related deaths in the United States surpassed 80,000, the number of deaths in New York dipped to 161 and the number of new coronavirus infections to 488 in the last 24 hours, levels last seen in March, he said. Cuomo’s statewide stay-at-home order ends Friday.

    The state accounts for about a third of the Covid-19 deaths nationwide, according to Johns Hopkins University.

    Across the country, elected leaders are weighing how to protect public health while starting to loosen restrictions on individuals and businesses. Some, including local leaders in Pennsylvania and Michigan, are going against the orders of their states’ governors.

    In Michigan, a hotbed of protests against shutdown orders, another armed rally is planned at the state capital on Thursday.

    Gov. Gretchen Whitmer on Monday asked Vice President Mike Pence to discourage the protests as a public health hazard.

    “We have seen from initial protests here … that we’ve got Covid-19 spreading in rural parts of our state, from which people traveled,” Whitmer said during a call with governors, according to ABC News.

    “We’re going to keep watching those numbers and doing the tests,” the governor added.

    Shutdown opponents, including some who plan to attend Thursday’s protest, repeatedly called for the governor to be assassinated in four private Facebook groups, according to Metro Times.

    Facebook removed Michigan United for Liberty’s private group on Sunday, the organization said on the platform, using the post to encourage supporters to attend the protest.

    Whitmer, who recently extended the stay-at-home order through May 28, has been sued by that protest group, a member of Congress and Republican state lawmakers who question the constitutionality of the extension. Some local officials are refusing to follow the orders.

    The Shiawassee County sheriff announced that his department would not enforce Whitmer’s coronavirus restrictions.

    The mayor of Perry also announced that the city will not enforce the orders or assist other law enforcement agencies in doing so.

    Polling shows that a majority of Americans oppose the protests and overwhelmingly support enforcing stay-at-home orders and keeping businesses closed to stop the spread of coronavirus, but new surveys show the patience for shutdowns is beginning to drop.

    Nearly 3 out of 4 respondents in a Gallup Poll released on Monday said they were avoiding small gatherings, a 10-point drop from a poll a week prior.

    Another poll, by The Associated Press and NORC Center for Public Affairs Research, released on Monday found that 71 per cent supported stay-at-home orders, down from 80 per cent two weeks earlier.

    Just over two-thirds favored the shuttering of bars and restaurants, also down 9 points from the prior poll.

    More than half disapprove of the anti-shutdown protests; 31 per cent approve of them.

    More than 40 states have taken some steps to reopen their economies, including California.

    But the approaches vary widely among the states, and among counties and cities.

    READ ALSO: U.S. virus expert Fauci to testify to Congress

    Public health officials warn that if states reopen too quickly, without substantial reductions in infections and deaths as well as proper safeguards, they could see a surge of new cases.

    On Monday, Louisiana Governor John Bel Edwards said the state would begin reopening Monday, and Massachusetts Governor, Charlie Baker laid out a four-phase plan also to begin on Monday.

    Gov. Henry McMaster of South Carolina, who had allowed restaurants to reopen Monday, announced that gyms, pools, nail salons, and other close-contact businesses, could resume operations next week.

    Iowa Governor, Kim Reynolds, who has been partially self-quarantining after coming into contact last week with a White House staffer who tested positive, said she planned to further loosen restrictions there in coming days.

    President Donald Trump has been the loudest cheerleader for reopening the economy, in many cases encouraging officials to move far faster than laid out in his administration’s own guidelines for safely easing restrictions.

    The financial devastation brought about by the pandemic has undermined the foundation of the president’s reelection campaign – a robust economy.

    On Monday, the president lashed out at Pennsylvania leaders, who have eased restrictions in less populous parts of the state but extended closures in the Philadelphia region through June 4.

    “The great people of Pennsylvania want their freedom now, and they are fully aware of what that entails,” Trump tweeted Monday.

    Asked at a Rose Garden news conference about whether he was putting politics ahead of public safety, Trump claimed Democratic governors in states that could safely reopen are choosing not to.

    He noted that Americans are dying from substance abuse and suicides during the shutdown.

    “The people want to go back, the numbers are getting to a point where they can and there just seems to be no effort on certain blue states to get back into gear, and the people aren’t going to stand for it,” Trump said.

    “They want our country open. I want our country open too. I want it open safely.

    “But I want it open. Don’t forget … people are dying in a lock-down position too,” the president added.

    Trump, who has eschewed wearing a face mask or social distancing, made these remarks as the White Houseappears to have become an infection zone.

    At least two staffers have tested positive, and several top officials, including infectious disease expert Dr Anthony Fauci, are self-quarantining.

    Some local elected officials in Pennsylvania are flouting the governor’s reopening orders, with a state representative in York County hosting a meeting on Saturday that drew 150 people, many of whom did not wear masks or follow social distancing guidelines.

    Leaders of seven counties that have not yet been authorized to open have indicated they plan on following their own timetable.

    Gov. Tom Wolf responded on Monday by threatening to cut off discretionary federal aid to these counties.

    “To those politicians who decided to cave in to this coronavirus, they need to understand the consequences of their cowardly act,” Wolf said.

    “The funding we have put aside to help with fighting this crisis will go to the folks who are doing their part.

    “However, other discretionary funding won’t go to counties that put us all at risk by operating illegally,” Wolf added.

    In New York, Cuomo has divided the state into 10 regions that need to hit seven criteria regarding infections and hospital capacity to enter Phase 1 of the reopening process, which includes curbside retail, construction and manufacturing.

    Later phases involve in-store retail, restaurants and schools.

    There will be a two-week monitoring period between phases, and if the pandemic shows signs of resurgence in a region, the reopening will be paused until the outbreak is brought back under control.

    Three regions currently qualify – the Southern Tier west of the Catskill Mountains; the Mohawk Valley near Albany; and the Finger Lakes and Rochester.

    Statewide, low-risk recreation and businesses such as tennis courts, landscaping and drive-in movie theaters, can reopen Friday, Cuomo said.

    “Talk about going back to the future. Back to drive-in movie theaters. I’m OK with that,” the governor added.

    One region that is nowhere close to reopening is the New York City metropolitan area.

    “Unless something miraculous happens, we’re going into June,” New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio said Friday.

    (tca/dpa/NAN)

  • U.S. virus expert Fauci to testify to Congress

    U.S. virus expert Fauci to testify to Congress

    The top U.S. expert on infectious diseases, Anthony Fauci, will testify to the Senate on Tuesday, as the White House’s response to the coronavirus pandemic comes under the spotlight amid sharp criticism by Democrats.

    President Donald Trump announced last week that he would allow Fauci to testify in the Republican-controlled Senate, but not to any committees in the House of Representatives, which is dominated by his rivals from the Democratic Party.

    The Senate hearing at the health committee will be handled largely remotely.

    The chairman, Lamar Alexander, is in self-quarantine, after being exposed to someone who has the virus.

    Fauci himself and other top officials have also been exposed and are in forms of self-isolation.

    Also testifying will be Robert Redfield, the head of the Centers for Disease Control (CDC); Stephen Hahn, the chief of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA); and Brett Giroir, an assistant secretary of health.

    Democrats accuse Trump of mishandling the response to the virus, including a fairly lax approach through February and lingering testing shortages.

    The president also publicly pushed treatments that have been deemed questionable, at best.

    Despite the committee having a Republican majority, Democratic lawmakers will still get to ask questions.

     

    (dpa/NAN)

  • Trump accuses Democrats of reopening U.S. states too slowly

    Trump accuses Democrats of reopening U.S. states too slowly

    PRESIDENT Donald Trump has accused Democrats of moving to reopen United States (U.S.) states from coronavirus lockdown measures too slowly for political advantage, without providing evidence to support his claim.

    The Republican president, who is running for re-election in November, is working to reopen the crippled economy quickly against recommendations from health experts to move more cautiously to avoid a resurgence of the virus that has so far killed more than 80,000 people in the United States.

    Trump has encouraged states to ease restrictions designed to mitigate the spread of the coronavirus. Yesterday, he targeted the election battleground state of Pennsylvania, which has a Democratic governor, Tom Wolf.

    “The great people of Pennsylvania want their freedom now, and they are fully aware of what that entails. The Democrats are moving slowly, all over the USA, for political purposes. They would wait until November 3rd if it were up to them. Don’t play politics. Be safe, move quickly!” Trump said in a Twitter post.

    Some of the states hardest-hit by the novel coronavirus outbreak that has infected more than 1.3 million nationwide are led by Democratic governors, including New York and Michigan – both important prizes in the Nov. 3 election between Trump and presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden.

    Trump has encouraged reopenings with tweets calling on people to “liberate” their states, providing fuel to protests across the country including large gatherings in the Michigan capital of Lansing.

    Read Also: ‘Why Buhari must retract easing of lockdown order’

     

    The politicisation of the health crisis is playing out at local levels as well, as Democrats and Republicans clash over reopening plans.

    In Pennsylvania, some counties over the weekend asked Wolf to move their regions into the group he has targeted for earlier reopenings, according to media reports.

    Officials in Lancaster County sent Wolf a letter on Saturday notifying him that they intend to move forward with reopening on May 15, ahead of his schedule for the area.

    “Lancaster County has demonstrated time and time again that our leaders are able to find local solutions to local problems through collaboration. This approach is far different than that of the Governor,” state Senator Ryan P. Aument, a Republican, said in a Twitter post yesterday.

    Trump’s overall popularity has been mostly flat throughout the pandemic, with the number of adults who approve of him wavering between 40% and 45% from March to May, according to Reuters/Ipsos national opinion polls.

    Despite mounting economic damage that saw 20.5 million Americans lose jobs in April, most Americans have consistently said in polls they want to maintain social distancing to protect themselves from the virus.

  • Nigerian parents in Switzerland warn against school reopening

    Nigerian parents in Switzerland warn against school reopening

     

    SOME Nigerian parents in Switzerland have expressed concern over the European country’s decision to reopen schools, restaurants and bars after a two-month lockdown imposed to suppress the coronavirus.

    The Swiss authorities had previously announced the reopening of some amenities with effect from May 11 following the adoption of stringent hygiene, data, and social distancing measures.

    In an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), the parents said it was too early for children to return to school as they might not be able to observe the safety protocol recommended for the containment of the coronavirus.

    “Children by nature forget things easily. They will get too excited when they reunite with their friends and may not be able to observe social distancing,” Mr Emmanuel Obi said.

    Obi, who survived the coronavirus pandemic in spite of exposure during travels, said he was still contemplating whether to allow his three children to return to school.

    In the same vein, Mrs. Lilian Eweka, whose only child is in kindergarten, said her daughter would stay at home till June.

    Read Also: Convert abandoned buildings, schools to isolation centres, FG tells states

     

    “I belong to the high-risk group with pre-existing medical conditions.”

    “I cannot expose my child to (the risk of contracting) the virus because it would ultimately get to me,” Eweka said.

    Others, who spoke were unanimous in their decision to shield their children from exposure to the virus.

    They were also unanimous in their decision to completely avoid restaurants and bars until the coronavirus curve flattens.

    A recent study revealed that children were incapable of infecting adults with the virus.

    The same study revealed a contradiction to earlier warnings that children constituted a major risk to older people – as they could easily infect grandparents.

    Meanwhile, 15 Swiss border points with Italy, France, and Austria reopened yesterday but the border crossing with Germany will remain closed until May 15, according to the federal council.

    The council shut the borders on March 25 with a view to containing the spread of the coronavirus from neighbouring countries.

    According to the authorities, 30,344 people have tested positive for the virus, just as 1,543 deaths have so far been recorded in the country.

  • Labour, British regional leaders attack Johnson’s plan to ease UK COVID-19 lockdown

    Labour, British regional leaders attack Johnson’s plan to ease UK COVID-19 lockdown

    British regional leaders and opposition chief Sir Keir Starmer have accused Prime Minister Boris Johnson of sowing confusion with his plan to gradually ease the country’s near-lockdown to curb the spread of novel coronavirus.

    Starmer, who state during questions time in the parliament, said: “We are living through the biggest threat this country has faced for a generation. Coronavirus has taken so much from us – it’s brought normal life to a halt.”

    “Over 30,000 people have lost their lives… millions are worried about their loved ones, their jobs, their communities, their families and their future.”

    “That’s why when I was elected leader of the Labour Party, just over a month ago, I promised a new type of opposition. Labour will always put the national interest first.”

    Starmer promises that his party will “have the courage to support the government when that’s the right thing to do, and the courage to challenge the government where it’s getting it wrong”.

    “What we needed from the prime minister last night was clarity and reassurance,” he said, adding that “so many of us have questions that need answering”.

    “We needed to hear that nobody would be asked to go to work or send their children to school without it being safe to do so.

    “I’ll keep demanding answers to these questions because that’s how we get better decisions and better outcomes.

    Read Also: Wike announces temporary lifting of lockdown

     

    “We can’t go back to a society where we clap our carers once a week but where half of our care workers are paid less than the real living wage.”

    Also yesterday, regional leaders insisted that social distancing rules remained unchanged, while a major trade union called for “caution and clarity” before allowing large numbers of people to resume travel to work.

    Andy Burnham, the mayor of Greater Manchester in north-west England, said Johnson’s statement on Sunday had come “too soon for the North West and could cause confusion.”

    “My message to the people and businesses of Greater Manchester is this: please be cautious and take time before making any changes to your routine,” Burnham tweeted.

    Leaders of devolved governments in London, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland all suggested they would not change social distancing rules after Johnson said the country would shift from ordering people to “stay at home” to allowing them to go out more but “stay alert.”

    “Our message in Wales remains the same: Staying at home is the best way to protect yourself and others,” Welsh First Minister Mark Drakeford tweeted.

    Johnson said he had given the first sketch of a road map for reopening society, after a fall in the average number of confirmed infections with Covid-19 and deaths linked to the virus since mid-April.

    He said schools and shops could begin a phased reopening in June, while hospitality businesses might need to remain closed until July.

  • UK PM accused of ‘confusion’ over plan to ease COVID-19 lockdown

    UK PM accused of ‘confusion’ over plan to ease COVID-19 lockdown

    British regional leaders on Monday accused Prime Minister Boris Johnson of sowing confusion with his plan to gradually ease the country’s near-lockdown to curb the spread of novel coronavirus.

    The regional leaders insisted that social distancing rules remained unchanged, while a major trade union called for “caution and clarity” before allowing large numbers of people to resume travel to work.

    Andy Burnham, the mayor of Greater Manchester in north-west England, said Johnson’s statement on Sunday had come “too soon for the North West and could cause confusion.”

    “My message to the people and businesses of Greater Manchester is this: please be cautious and take time before making any changes to your routine,’’ Burnham tweeted.

    READ ALSO: Boris Johnson announces six new lockdown rules

    Leaders of devolved governments in London, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland all suggested they would not change social distancing rules after Johnson said the country would shift from ordering people to “stay at home” to allowing them to go out more but “stay alert.”

    “Our message in Wales remains the same: Staying at home is the best way to protect yourself and others,’’ Welsh First Minister Mark Drakeford tweeted.

    Johnson said he had given the first sketch of a road map for reopening society, after a fall in the average number of confirmed infections with Covid-19 and deaths linked to the virus since mid-April.

    He said schools and shops could begin a phased reopening in June, while hospitality businesses might need to remain closed until July.

    (dpa/NAN)

  • Russia’s coronavirus caseload becomes world’s 3rd largest

    Russia’s coronavirus caseload becomes world’s 3rd largest

    Russia’s coronavirus caseload reached 221,000 on Monday, surpassing that of Britain, to become the world’s third-largest recorded nationwide outbreak.

    According to comparative data compiled by Johns Hopkins University, the highest known caseloads are in the U.S. and Spain.

    Russia’s identified caseload of the novel coronavirus has sharply risen over the past month and a half, with daily additions of over 10,000 over the past week.

    READ ALSO: Russian authorities ban online videos on origin of COVID-19

    According to a federal monitoring service that publishes the daily statistics, over 2,000 people have died in Russia from causes directly linked to the disease.

    Lockdown quarantine measures have been imposed throughout most of the country for over a month in an effort to curb the infection rate.

    About half of Russia’s coronavirus caseload has been detected in the largest city and capital, Moscow, with about 115,000 reported.

    Recently, Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said the actual number of cases in the city is probably about three times higher than reported.

     

    (dpa/NAN)

  • Nurse to face trial for stealing, using credit card from her dying COVID-19 patient

    Nurse to face trial for stealing, using credit card from her dying COVID-19 patient

    Our Reporter

    The Police in New York City have charged a nurse for stealing a credit card of a former COVID-19 patient while being hospitalized.

    The patient’s daughter alleges that the credit card was later used for gasoline and groceries.

    Danielle Conti, 43, is being tried for grand larceny, petty larceny and criminal possession of stolen property after ringing up charges on two of Anthony Catapano’s credit cards while hospitalized at Staten Island University Hospital with coronavirus, according to the New York Police Department.

    Catapano, 70, was hospitalized on April 4 after getting sick from coronavirus, his daughter, Tara Catapano, said. He was lucid when the alleged theft occurred and later died on April 12 from complications of the virus.

    “I was in shock and disbelief,” Tara Catapano said. “Obviously, I knew it had to be a hospital employee because visitors weren’t really allowed.”

    Tara Catapano, who had been paying her father’s bills since her mother passed away in 2014, said she normally doesn’t track her father’s spending closely.

    Read Also:  Roy Horn of Las Vegas magic duo Siegfried and Roy, dies of COVID-19

    However, after he died and she received a credit card statement for gasoline — which she said her father always paid for in cash — she then saw the charge date occurred on April 9, when her father was “in the hospital, literally fighting for his life.”

    Tara Catapano said the police showed her surveillance footage from a ShopRite of what appeared to be Conti paying for groceries using her father’s card.

    “They take an oath to protect, not to harm,” Tara Catapano said.

    Other belongings unaccounted for include her father’s eyeglasses, cell phone, cash in the wallet, phone chargers and pictures. It’s not clear what happened to those belongings and it isn’t certain they were intentionally stolen.

    Conti, who has worked at the hospital since 2007, is currently on suspicion from work and faces termination in response to the felony charges.

  • Boris Johnson announces six new lockdown rules

    Boris Johnson announces six new lockdown rules

    Agency Reporter

    Boris Johnson has updated the public on six new rules ahead of his Sunday evening speech during which he will set out the “roadmap” out of lockdown.

    The Prime Minister included the Government’s new slogan “stay alert, control the virus, save lives” which has generated criticism after claims that “it is too ambiguous.”

    The PM tweeted his new advice, saying that people should “stay at home as much as possible”, keep two metres apart when outside and “limit contact with other people” as the coronavirus lockdown continues.

    Read Also: Fresh lockdown looms in Lagos

    The advice from the Prime Minister:

    -Stay at home as much as possible

    -Work from home if you can

    -Limit contact with other people

    -Keep your distance if you go out (2 metres apart where possible)

    -Wash your hands regularly

    -If you or anyone in your household has symptoms, you all need to self-isolate

    Ahead of hi speech, Mr Johnson will set out a five-tier warning system for the coronavirus in England as part of plans to begin slowly easing lockdown measures.

    (www.newsnow.co.uk)