Category: Foreign

  • Hundreds die in Iran after drinking methanol as cure

    Hundreds die in Iran after drinking methanol as cure

    HEALTH workers in Iran are warning people not to fall for coronavirus hoaxes, after 700 people died from alcohol poisoning amid claims drinking bootleg liquor can keep the virus at bay.

    A report released by the Iranian Government earlier this month showed alcohol poisoning over a two-month period was 10 times the number of cases during the whole of 2019, likely spurred by the COVID-19 epidemic.

    The national coroner’s authority said alcohol poisoning killed 728 Iranians between February 20 and April 7. Last year, there were only 66 deaths from alcohol poisoning, according to the report.

    Read Also: Experts lose enthusiasm for chloroquine treatment promoted by Trump

    “People think that alcohol causes immunity to corona, while drinking alcohol does not eliminate corona in the body,” a medical expert recently told the Government-aligned Tasnim News Agency.”

     

  • COVID-19: One billion may become infected globally, says report

    COVID-19: One billion may become infected globally, says report

    ONE billion people could become infected with the coronavirus worldwide unless vulnerable countries are given urgent help, an aid group has warned.

    The International Rescue Committee (IRC) said financial and humanitarian aids were needed to help slow the global spread of the virus.

    It said “fragile countries” such as Afghanistan and Syria needed “urgent funding” to avoid a major outbreak.

    “There remains a small window of time to mount a robust response,” it warned.

    There have been more than three million confirmed cases of Covid-19 worldwide with more than 200,000 deaths, according to Johns Hopkins University in the US.

    The IRC’s report, which is based on models and data from the World Health Organization (WHO) and Imperial College London, estimated there could be between 500 million and one billion infections globally.

    It also said there could be more than three million deaths across dozens of conflict-affected and unstable countries.

    “These numbers should serve as a wake-up call,” said the head of the IRC, David Miliband.

    “The full, devastating and disproportionate weight of this pandemic has yet to be felt in the world’s most fragile and war-torn countries,” he added. “The key now is for donors to urgently put flexible funding behind frontline efforts.

    “Governments must work together to remove any impediment to humanitarian assistance.”

    The U.S.-based group, which responds to humanitarian crises around the world, said factors such as household size, population density, healthcare capacity and pre-existing conflicts could all increase the risk of major outbreaks developing.

    Many countries in the developing world have low official infection rates or death tolls – but the actual numbers are believed to be much higher.

    Read Also: Coronavirus poses no real threat, says Stanbic IBTC

    Caroline Seguin, who manages programmes in Yemen for the medical charity Doctors Without Borders (MSF), said the organisation believed people there were already dying from COVID-19 – just not in hospitals.

    “We are convinced that there is local transmission ongoing but the capacity of testing is very, very low,” she told the BBC.

    Ms Seguin said Yemen, which was referenced in the IRC report as being particularly vulnerable to coronavirus, said the country had been weakened by recent outbreaks of cholera and measles.

    “The health system is collapsing… and for sure the ministry of health is not able to cope with this disease,” she said.

    A major issue facing developing or unstable countries is a lack of suitable medical equipment for treating patients with COVID-19.

    In Afghanistan and Pakistan, there are fewer than ten ventilators for every one million people. In Nigeria, that figure is even more stark at 0.8 ventilators per million.

    For context, Italy, which has one of the highest death tolls from the virus in the world, had 80 ventilators per one million people at the start of the crisis.

  • U.S. promises to donate ventilators to Fed Govt

    U.S. promises to donate ventilators to Fed Govt

    Bolaji Ogundele, Abuja

    THE United States of America (USA) has offered to donate ventilators to assist Nigeria’s national response to the war against the Novel Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic.

    President Donald Trump stated this yesterday while speaking to President Muhammadu Buhari in a telephone conversation.

    The conversation between Buhari and the American President was revealed by Minister of Information and Culture Alhaji Lai Mohammed during yesterday’s daily media briefing by the Presidential Task Force (PTF) on COVID-19 in Abuja.

    According to the minister, the conversation was centered on Nigeria’s response to COVID-19 and President Buhari was said to have updated President Trump on progress so far made by the country.

    Mohammed said: “President Buhari today had a phone conversation with President Trump, at the request of the American President.

    Read Also: UPDATED: America President Trump, Buhari in phone call

    “The conversation centred on Nigeria’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic. President Buhari used the opportunity to brief the American President on the steps that Nigeria is taking to contain the spread of the disease.

    “For his part, President Trump assured that the United States stand in solidarity with Nigeria in this difficult time and promised to send ventilators to support the country in its fight against the pandemic.

    “President Trump also extends his best regards to the people of Nigeria.”

  • Nigeria, Jamaica pledge to strengthen efforts against pandemic

    Nigeria, Jamaica pledge to strengthen efforts against pandemic

    NIGERIA and Jamaica have pledged to strengthen collaboration against the dreaded COVID-19 pandemic.

    Nigeria’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Geoffrey Onyeama and the High Commissioner of Jamaica to Nigeria Esmond Reid stated this in Abuja during a programme to commemorate the 50 years of diplomatic relations between the countries, which was established on 29 April 1970.

    Onyeama lamented that the occasion is held against the backdrop of global catastrophe and disaster of COVID 19 pandemic that is devastating the whole world.

    “It is really a source of great joy to celebrate this milestone against a sad backdrop. Nevertheless throughout the year, we will be organising other events to mark this occasion and certainly we would seek to work together to find a way to overcome this great scourge on humanity that is the COVID 19 pandemic,” Onyeama said.

    The minister noted that 50 years of diplomatic relations between Nigerian and Jamaica is something both countries are proud of because the two countries share common blood ties, cultural and historical ties, trade and investment, technology, tourism and arts. Both counties, he added, also collaborate on multilateral levels being members of the Commonwealth of Nations.

    “In the area of tourism, Jamaica is a world leader and this is one area that Nigeria more and more is very keen to get involved in. We will be looking at people- to-people contact, shared history and common route.  It is only appropriate that we should be seeing more of each other and visiting each other’s countries. In the area of trade, we will like to see an increase in trade relations between our two countries and also greater cooperation in multilateral areas,” the minister said.

    Read Also: Fed Govt to airlift citizens abroad from next week, says Onyeama

    Onyeama added that this year, there would be all kinds of celebrations, which include the 4th Joint Commission and also trade commission between the two countries.

    The Jamaican Minister of Foreign Affairs, who was represented by Reid, said his country values the relationship with Nigeria and would continue to do so even now at this time the world is facing the global Coronavirus pandemic which is a big challenge.

    He, however, said the COVID-19 is also an opportunity for both countries to become even more resilient and use it to demonstrate the opportunities for renewed cooperation.

  • Military commander Khalifa Haftar declares self ruler of Libya

    Military commander Khalifa Haftar declares self ruler of Libya

    Agency Reporter

    Military commander Khalifa Haftar has declared himself the ruler of Libya with a “popular mandate” from the people.

    In a televised speech on Monday night, the leader of the Libyan National Army (LNA) announced that the General Command of the Armed Forces had “accepted the will of the people” to take over management of the country.

    The move apparently marginalises an eastern-based civilian parliament that had until now been backing the military commander.

    In his speech, Haftar added that a 2015 deal that produced the UN-recognised Government of National Accord (GNA), a unity administration based in Tripoli that was formed after years of civil conflict, was null and void.

    “We announce our acceptance of the people’s will and mandate and the end of the Skhirat Agreement,” he said.

    “The political agreement destroyed the country. We will work to create the conditions for building permanent civic institutions.”

    Haftar’s forces, politically backed by the eastern parliament – nominally a signatory to the 2015 deal itself – have been staging an assault on the capital Tripoli since April 2019.

    Although the LNA last year managed to advance into the southern suburbs of the city, it lost ground to pro-GNA forces during clashes this month.

    Read Also: COVID-19: NCDC announces two more Molecular laboratories

    The GNA is backed by Turkey, while Haftar is supported by the United Arab Emirates, Egypt and Russia.

    A Russian source told Reuters on Tuesday that Haftar’s power grab was “surprising”.

    The source said the most important thing now was for the military and political decisions reached at a conference in Berlin in January to be implemented by Libyans, with the assistance of the international community

    “We support the continuation of the political process,” it said. “There is no military solution to the conflict.”

    2015 deal ‘expired’

    Libya has been in a state of unrest since 2011, when a Nato-backed uprising toppled longtime ruler Muammar Gaddafi.

    Some Libyans, as well as numerous regional powers, have seen Haftar – who was a US-based former military commander under Gaddafi – as a potentially stabilising force in the country.

    Others, however, have accused him and his forces of authoritarian tendencies and of committing war crimes, as well as trying to overthrow the UN-backed, internationally recognised government.

    (www.newsnow.co.uk)

  • UK says some children have died from syndrome linked to COVID-19

    UK says some children have died from syndrome linked to COVID-19

    UK Health Secretary Matt Hancock said on Tuesday that some children with no underlying health conditions have died from a rare inflammatory syndrome which researchers believe to be linked to COVID-19.

    Italian and British medical experts are investigating a possible link between the coronavirus pandemic and clusters of severe inflammatory disease among infants who are arriving in hospital with high fevers and swollen arteries.

    Doctors in northern Italy, one of the world’s hardest-hit areas during the pandemic, have reported extraordinarily large numbers of children under age 9 with severe cases of what appears to be Kawasaki disease.

    The Kawasaki disease is more common in parts of Asia.

    “There are some children who have died who didn’t have underlying health conditions,” Hancock said.

    “It’s a new disease that we think may be caused by coronavirus and the COVID-19 virus.

    READ ALSO: Sierra Leonean tests positive for COVID-19 in custody

    “We’re not 100 per cent sure because some of the people who got it hadn’t tested positive, so we’re doing a lot of research now but it is something that we’re worried about.

    “It is rare, although it is very significant for those children who do get it, the number of cases is small,” Hancock said.

    Kawasaki disease, whose cause is unknown, often afflicts children aged under 5 and is associated with fever, skin rashes, swelling of glands, and in severe cases, inflammation of arteries of the heart.

    There is some evidence that individuals can inherit a predisposition to the disease, but the pattern is not clear.

    Parents should be vigilant, Junior British Interior Minister Victoria Atkins said.

    “It demonstrates just how fast moving this virus is and how unprecedented it is in its effect,” Atkins said.

    Prof. Anne Rafferty, the President of the Royal College of Nursing, said she had heard reports about the similarity between cases in infants and Kawasaki syndrome.

    “Actually there’s far too little known about it and the numbers actually at the moment are really too small,” she said.

    “But it is an alert and it’s something that’s actually being explored and examined by a number of different researchers.”

    (Reuters/NAN)

  • Turkey says 120 inmates infected with coronavirus in four prisons

    Turkey says 120 inmates infected with coronavirus in four prisons

    Agency Reporter

     

    One hundred and twenty inmates in Turkey have tested positive for the coronavirus so far in four prisons, Justice Minister Abdulhamit Gul said on Tuesday in Ankara.

    The minister added none of the infected was in critical condition.

    “All [inmates] are receiving treatment in hospital. There is no inmate in an intensive care unit; all are in a good state of health,” Gul told a televised news conference.

    The minister would not disclose the locations of the prisons.

    On April 13, Gul reported 17 coronavirus cases in Turkish prisons and said three of them had died of the disease.

    There were no confirmed cases in closed prisons at the time, he said.

    Turkey earlier this month started releasing around 90,000 inmates as part of a mass amnesty in a bit to reduce overcrowding and stop the spread of the epidemic in prisons.

    The amnesty has been criticised for excluding opposition politicians, journalists, academics, civil servants and lawyers accused of terrorism-related charges.

    The nationwide death toll from Covid-19, the respiratory disease caused by the novel coronavirus, climbed by 95 to 2,900, Health Minister Fahrettin Koca said on Monday.

    The minister said that the number of positive cases rising to more than 112,000. (dpa/NAN)

  • Two Paris police officers suspended over racist remarks

    Two Paris police officers suspended over racist remarks

    Two Paris police officers have been suspended after being caught on tape making racist remarks about a man they had just taken into custody.

    The incident in a Paris suburb occurred at the weekend when a man was detained after he jumped into the Seine River as he was being chased by the police officers.

    The police suspected him of involvement in a crime.

    The footage posted on Twitter shows the officers using an extremely offensive word for men from North Africa and making other derogatory comments.

    READ ALSO: World Bank, IMF, G20, Paris Club suspend debt service

    “A video showing a police intervention around the Ile-Saint-Denis has provoked legitimate indignation,” Interior Minister Christophe Castaner tweeted on Monday, promising an investigation.

    Later the same day, Paris police announced that the two officers have been suspended as an internal investigation gets under way.

    The incident took place in the Seine-Saint-Denis suburb north of Paris, an area that has seen complaints of police violence or discriminatory policing since a coronavirus lockdown went into effect on March 17.

    (dpa/NAN)

  • Ramadan period drama with Jewish characters stirs debate in Middle East

    Ramadan period drama with Jewish characters stirs debate in Middle East

    A period drama about the trials of a Jewish midwife airing on Saudi-controlled MBC for Ramadan has drawn both criticism as an attempt to promote Arab “normalisation” with Israel and praise for a rare exploration of the Gulf’s social history.

    “Umm Haroun”, a fictional series about a multi-religious community in an unspecified Gulf Arab state in the 1930s to 1950s, began airing on Friday as part of MBC’s lineup for the Muslim holy month, when viewership typically spikes.
    It comes at a time when several Gulf states have broken with the recent past and made overtures to Israel, with which they have found common ground in confronting Iran.

    Some, including Saudi Arabia, have also backed a U.S.-Middle East peace plan to move on from a conflict they say holds back the Arab world. Egypt and Jordan are the only Arab states that have peace deals with Israel.

    An official from the Palestinian Islamist group, Hamas, Basim Naeem, condemned the series before it aired and told Reuters that portraying Jewish people in a sympathetic light was “cultural aggression and brain washing”.

    Hamas, like other Palestinian groups, is vehemently opposed to the peace plan laid out by U.S. President Donald Trump’s administration.

    A group of regional organisations against normalising ties with Israel circulated a poster on social media urging viewers to boycott “the wicked drama”, which was produced by Kuwait and United Arab Emirates-based companies.

    The show’s writers, Bahraini brothers Muhammad and Ali Abdel Halim Shams, told Reuters that it had no political message.

    “People have spoken and judged before seeing it,” said Muhammad. “The message focuses on the ways of Muslims centred on showing love, good intention and peace to non-Muslims.”

    MBC, the Arab world’s largest private broadcaster, said that according to its data the show is the top-rated Gulf drama in Saudi Arabia for Ramadan and among the top five dramas across genres.

    MBC spokesman Mazen Hayek said Umm Haroun’s main message was a human one – a nurse who heals people “irrespective of any consideration”.

    “It also focuses on tolerance, moderation and openness, showcasing that the Middle East was once a region where acceptance of one another was the norm versus the twisted interpretation and stereotyping of the region by hardliners and extremists, over the last decades.”

    Saudi authorities took a controlling stake in MBC Group in 2018 as they seized assets from those detained in an anti-corruption drive launched by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

    READ ALSO: Ramadan guide: TARAWIH

    MBC, which plans to move its headquarters from Dubai to Riyadh, has courted controversy before. Past shows dealt with sensitive issues like domestic violence and Islamist militancy.

    The writers said the main character, Umm Haroun, after whom the show is named, was loosely inspired by real-life Jewish midwife Umm Jan, who arrived in Bahrain from Iraq in the 1930s.

    A disclaimer during the first episode said the characters and events were imaginary.

    Some people in Bahrain, which still has a small Jewish community, took to social media to share pictures of and a 1977 TV interview with Umm Jan, who is widely regarded as a symbol of public service in Bahrain.

    In Kuwait, Twitter user Abdulaziz al-Seif said the show should not be seen as pro-Israeli.

    “We should also differentiate between the Jewish religion and Zionism … This show has nothing to do with normalising ties with Israel,” he said in a video post after the show aired its first episode.

    Veteran Kuwaiti actress Hayat Al-Fahad, who plays the midwife, told local daily Al Anbaa that young generations should know about “a people that were and still are in our world”.

    She recently stirred debate by publicly calling for the expulsion of migrant workers amid the coronavirus pandemic.

    Palestinian Nadia Ali, 48, told Reuters she was no longer a fan of the actress for “getting the Jewish twisted tale into every Arab house.”

    (Reuters/NAN)

  • Russia surpasses coronavirus epicentre China with reported caseload

    Russia surpasses coronavirus epicentre China with reported caseload

    Russia has reported more than 87,000 cases of the novel coronavirus, about 2,500 more than China, where the virus is believed to have originated, state media reported on Monday.

    Russia is currently ninth in the world in reported coronavirus cases, with the United States, Spain and Italy constituting the top three.

    China is 10th, according to its officially published statistics.

    Russia’s reported cases have grown exponentially over the past month, with authorities responding with lockdown quarantine measures imposed throughout most of the country.

    Russia expects its coronavirus caseload to plateau in three weeks, President Vladimir Putin’s spokesman said in an interview published on Monday.

    READ ALSO: Russia’s coronavirus cases surpass 50,000

    “By mid-May we should already have entered a plateau. Then, in the first month of summer (June), it should already be getting better,’’ Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.

    The Russian military has identified almost 900 cases of the novel coronavirus among its personnel, state media reported on Sunday, citing the Defence Ministry.

    Only four were in critical condition at that time, the report said.

    While Russia’s caseload is one of the highest in the world, the death toll has been relatively low, almost 800 as of Monday, according to the officially published statistics.

    Russia has conducted more than three million tests for the novel coronavirus, a state monitoring service said.

    (dpa/NAN)