Category: Foreign

  • COVID-19: Chinese medical team returns from Kyrgyzstan

    COVID-19: Chinese medical team returns from Kyrgyzstan

    Agency Reporter

     

    A medical team assigned to Kyrgyzstan to help with the battle against the COVID-19 pandemic on Monday returned to China .

    The 10-member medical team, invited by the government of Kyrgyzstan, was sent by northwest China’s Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region on April 20.

    During their stay in Bishkek, the team visited local hospitals, laboratories and communicated with officials and hospital principals.

    The team also held more than 20 seminars, sharing experiences online or offline in epidemic prevention and COVID-19 treatment with some 15,000 medics and community workers.

    On Sunday, Health Minister of Kyrgyzstan, Sabirzhan Abdikarimov, awarded the Chinese medical team medals and certificates of honour, with Vice Prime Minister Aida Ismailova expressing gratitude to the team, saying they had made important contributions to the fight against the COVID-19 epidemic. (Xinhua/NAN)

  • Taliban reject Afghan ceasefire offer during Ramadan

    Taliban reject Afghan ceasefire offer during Ramadan

    Agency Reporter

    Afghan President Ashraf Ghani appealed to the militants to lay down their arms for the holy month of fasting as the country battles the Covid-19 pandemic. The Taliban respond by accusing Kabul of putting prisoners’ lives at risk during the outbreak.

    The Taliban has dismissed a government call for a Ramadan ceasefire in Afghanistan, saying a truce is “not rational” as they ramp up attacks on government forces.

    Afghan President Ashraf Ghani appealed to the militants to lay down their arms for the holy month that began on Friday as the country battles the growing coronavirus pandemic.

    But the Taliban’s spokesman, Suhail Shaheen, tweeted late Thursday to lambaste the government’s offer, citing ongoing disagreements over a potential peace process and a delayed prisoner exchange as reasons to keep fighting.

    Read Also: Ramadan: Akeredolu urges Muslims to pray for end of COVID-19

    “Asking for ceasefire is not rational and convincing,” wrote Shaheen as he accused the government of putting prisoners’ lives at risk during the outbreak.

    Under a landmark US-Taliban deal signed earlier this year, the Afghan government and the insurgents were by now supposed to have concluded a prisoner swap and started talks aimed at bringing about a comprehensive ceasefire.

    The latest round of bickering comes after dozens of Afghan security forces personnel were killed in a fresh wave of violence launched by the insurgents this week.

    The attacks have mostly been limited to rural areas and small towns.
    Under the US-Taliban deal, the insurgents have agreed not to attack cities.

    American and other foreign forces have pledged to quit Afghanistan by July 2021 provided the Taliban sticks to several security guarantees and hold talks with the government.

    Ghani has been calling for a lasting ceasefire with the Taliban for years, only to be ignored by the increasingly emboldened insurgents.

    The Taliban instead has mocked Ghani’s government, referring to them as “puppets” controlled by foreign powers and have roundly refused to engage in peace talks as they intensify attacks on Afghan forces.

    (www.newsnow.co.uk)

  • COVID-19: Japan probes sudden virus outbreak on docked liner

    COVID-19: Japan probes sudden virus outbreak on docked liner

    Japan is investigating a virus outbreak among the crew of a cruise ship which docked in Nagasaki in January with no reported cases until a spike this week.

    The Costa Atlantica now has 91 crew out of 623 who have tested positive so far, with one in a critical condition.

    The ship had no passengers on board and diverted to Nagasaki for repairs rather than China due to the virus outbreak.

    The crew were meant to have been confined to the ship but local media report some left the vessel.

    Local authorities were first alerted to the possibility of the virus on board the Costa Atlantica last weekend. All crew are being tested – their nationalities are not known.

    “We think we will have a clearer picture once we get all the samples,” Katsumi Nakata, head of the regional government’s health and welfare department, is quoted as telling the AFP news agency.

    “Considering the limited medical resources we have in this region, it is difficult for us to maintain and control the health of all the 630 people.

    “We need to maintain the medical system for local residents,” he said.

    The Nagasaki Medical Association declared a “medically critical situation” on Thursday.

    Read Also: COVID-19: Expert prescribes recovery pills for Nigerian carriers

    Nagasaki, a port city in southern Japan, has not seen major coronavirus outbreaks and, as the crew was meant to have been confined to the ship, how such an outbreak could have developed is now the subject of investigation.

    The vessel arrived in Nagasaki on 29 January and was quarantined but no infection was found at the time. The authorities told crew they could not go beyond the quay unless it was to hospital, Reuters reports.

    But NHK says crew members ventured into town even after local authorities asked them to stay on board. A coach company and a taxi firm confirmed they had ferried crew around in late March, and officials suspect crew left the ship on other occasions too.

    It is also possible that fresh crew who were taken onboard in Nagasaki brought the virus with them.

    NHK reported that about half of the crew have been tested so far. Doctors sent by the Health Ministry and Japan’s armed forces are assisting in the task.

    Japan came in for criticism for its handling of another coronavirus crisis on a cruise ship – the Diamond Princess – back in February.

    After a former passenger tested positive, it was kept in dock in Yokohama and its passengers and crew quarantined on board. More than 700 tested positive and 13 died, according to Johns Hopkins University data.

    (www.newsnow.co.uk)

  • Activists hail Cameroon’s indictment of Army’s role in civilian killings

    Activists hail Cameroon’s indictment of Army’s role in civilian killings

    By Bola Olajuwon, Assistant Editor

     

    RIGHTS activists on the platform of Centre for Human Rights and Democracy in Africa (CHRDA) have hailed Cameroon for admitting that soldiers acting alongside a militia shot dead 13 civilians, including 10 children, in the restive north-west of the country.

    CHRDA Founder and Chairman Agbor Nkongho, an Anglophone Cameroonian human rights lawyer, who is also the vice president of the African Bar Association in charge of Central Africa, stated this in a statement he issued yesterday.

    He said it was noteworthy that the government finally recognised the responsibility of the military for the massacre that took place in Ngarbuh; Donga Mantung of the North West Region of Cameroon, following the findings of the commission of inquiry that was created by the Head of State.

    The statement reads: “It should be worthy of note that on February 16, 2020, upon due investigation, we concluded that the military was responsible for the massacre. After issuing a statement accusing the military of the said massacre and calling for a Commission of Inquiry, we were threatened with legal action.

    “We are happy that we have been vindicated. We have to continue advocating for a just and equitable society where the rule of law and respect of fundamental human rights will be the rule and not the exception.

    “Congratulations to all the human rights organisations, activists, advocates, journalists, politicians among others, who raised their voices against these gruesome massacre and egregious crimes.

    “We must condemn heinous and gross and systematic violations against the population irrespective of the perpetrator.”

    Cameroon’s officials had initially denied the army was involved in the killings in Ntumbo in February.

    In a statement late on Tuesday, Cameroon’s presidency suggested the deaths were accidental but soldiers tried to cover them up.

    Cameroon’s government has been fighting separatists in the region for three years.

    At the time of the attack, the UN said 23 people had been killed, including 15 children and two pregnant women. A tally by Human Rights Watch (HRW) said 21 civilians were killed, including 13 children and a pregnant woman, and blamed the attack on no fewer than 10 troops from an elite army unit, who were backed by “at least 30 armed Fulani” militiamen.

    The government had denied the army was involved but President Paul Biya responded to international pressure by ordering an investigation.

    Biya has ordered the arrest of the sergeant, who led the raid, officials said.

     

     

     

  • Why I temporarily suspended immigrant visas, by Trump

    Why I temporarily suspended immigrant visas, by Trump

    UNITED States (U.S.) President Donald Trump has defended his new executive order that temporarily suspends immigrant visas.

    Trump said he took the decision to protect American workers as the country prepares to reopen for business after a shutdown that cost millions their jobs.

    The order, he said, would last for 60 days subject to review and possible extension “at the appropriate time”.

    “In order to protect our great American workers I have just signed an executive order temporarily suspending immigration into the United States.

    “This will ensure that unemployed Americans of all backgrounds will be first in line for jobs as our economy reopens,” he said.

    The president added that the move would “preserve our healthcare resources for American patients” affected by the disease.

    Immigrant visas are those issued to foreigners approved to move permanently to the U.S.

    Majority of the recipients, who automatically qualifies for green cards, are family members of U.S. citizens or permanent residents.

    Some immigrant visas also are granted to those who have jobs waiting for them, including nurses planning to work at hospitals, the online encyclopedia adds.

    However, Trump highlighted some exemptions in the new order, including farmers relying on temporary visas to bring labourers from Latin America.

    Read Also: Why I suspended green cards — Trump

     

    On April 17, while announcing a three-phase plan to reopen the economy, the president had hinted at tighter immigration restrictions to relevant new COVID-19 infections from abroad.

    “As we begin a science-based reopening, we must be extra vigilant in blocking the foreign entry of the virus from abroad.

    “Border control, travel restrictions and other limitations on entry are more important than never before to keep the virus in check and allow Americans to get back to work,” he said.

    Some critics are accusing Trump of hiding behind the pandemic to advance his political agenda on tighter immigration.

    The measure by Trump is expected to stop the practice of green card holders sponsoring their extended families for permanent U.S. residency, which the president called chain migration.

    But it makes an exception for American citizens’ spouses and unmarried children under the age of 21.

    The order also suspends the Diversity Visa Lottery, which issues about 50,000 green cards annually.

  • Muhammad-Bande seeks sufficient resources to contain COVID-19

    Muhammad-Bande seeks sufficient resources to contain COVID-19

    By Bola Olajuwon, Assistant Editor

     

    UNITED Nations (UN) General Assembly President Tijjani Muhammad-Bande has stressed the need to mobilise sufficient resources to effectively contain COVID-19.

    He stated this yesterday while addressing the Fifth Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) Forum for Financing for Development in New York, United States.

    Muhammad-Bande noted that this year’s forum is taking place at a critical moment when the world is contending with the novel coronavirus, which is putting health systems under stress.

    He expressed his solidarity with member states, who are fighting COVID-19 and also extended his condolences to those who have lost loved ones.

    “The COVID-19 crisis is bringing to light vulnerabilities and fragilities of our systems and institutions. Indeed the fault lines of rising debt risks and deepening inequalities are being amplified by COVID-19.

    “This crisis has come just as we are embarking on the Decade of Action to implement the Sustainable Development Goals. However, our targets have not changed.

    We must remain steadfast in our commitment to implement Agenda 2030 and the Addis Ababa Action Agenda. We must demonstrate even greater resolve than ever before and galvanise urgent multilateral action now.

    Read Also: Lawan seeks prayer against COVID-19

     

    “Mobilising sufficient resources will be essential in order to effectively combat COVID-19. Moreover, it will be critical to restoring our societies and progressing along the path to 2030 and a sustainable world throughout this decade.

    “While no country will be spared from the economic impact of this crisis, developing countries will be hit the hardest, even if they do not experience an outbreak of COVID-19. The most vulnerable countries face financial constraints, lack the fiscal space and capacity to cope with the crisis.

    Moreover, developing countries will be most affected by the global economic repercussions of this crisis, due in part, to a slump in commodity prices and a reversal of financing flows. To build resilience for the poorest and most vulnerable people, we must ensure sufficient financing,” the UNGA President said.

    Muhammad-Bande said COVID-19 is a global pandemic, and as such response to contain it “must be global, comprehensive and well-coordinated”.

    “Our efforts must be directed towards all seven action areas of the Addis Agenda. This will entail taking effective fiscal and social measures and preventing mass unemployment by shoring up and bolstering businesses.

    We need to promote fair trade and innovative financing and we must honour Official Development Assistance (ODA) commitments. Importantly, we must act urgently to prevent a potentially devastating debt crisis.

    “Rising debt levels severely limit country’s ability to provide essential public services such as healthcare and social protection.

    We must move swiftly on debt and concessional finance to support the most vulnerable people we serve. We must also advance steps to provide debt relief for countries. These approaches must be comprehensive and go beyond traditional debt to include all sources of debt.

    Also yesterday, Muhammad-Bande reaffirmed the global organisation’s commitment to “promote harmony with nature to achieve a just, sustainable and prosperous society”.

    In a statement celebrating International Mother Earth Day, Muhammad-Bande said: “Our experience with COVID19 demonstrates that we, humanity, are not separate from the world around us.

    In this Decade of Action and Delivery to implement the Sustainable Development Goals, we are focused on nature. We must work together to protect our planet and ecosystems which affect every aspect of human life.”

  • Syrian ex-secret police on trial for war crimes

    Syrian ex-secret police on trial for war crimes

    Two former members of Syria’s secret police appeared in court in Germany on Thursday accused of crimes against humanity for their role in a government-run detention center where large numbers of opposition protesters were tortured.

    The trial of Anwar R. and Eyad A., whose last names weren’t released because of German privacy rules, is the first time that two representatives of the Syrian government have faced trial abroad for war crimes allegedly committed during the country’s years-long civil war.

    The men, who were arrested in Germany early last year, will face testimony from several Syrian refugees who allege they were tortured at the detention center known as Al Khatib, or Branch 251, near Damascus.

    Federal prosecutors allege 57-year-old Anwar R. was in charge of the site and thereby responsible for crimes against humanity, rape and the murder of at least 58 people there. The indictment by German prosecutors accuses him of complicity in more than 4,000 cases of torture.

    Eyad A., 43, is accused of being part of a police squad that detained protesters and brought them back to Branch 251, where they were then mistreated.

    At least nine torture victims are represented as co-plaintiffs in the case, as allowed under German law, while several more are expected to be called as witnesses. They are supported by the European Center for Constitutional and Human Rights.

    Read Also: Northern Governors mourn ex-AGF, Akinjide

    If convicted, Anwar R. could face life imprisonment. Eyad A. could be sentenced to up to 15 years in prison if convicted of complicity in crimes against humanity.
    The defendants’ lawyers declined to comment ahead of the trial, which is scheduled to last several months. The men, who themselves left Syria for Germany before their arrest in February 2019, remain in prison.

    The trial has been described as a pivotal moment in the effort to bring Syrian officials accused of crimes to justice.

    “With other avenues for justice blocked, criminal prosecutions in Europe offer hope for victims of crimes in Syria who have nowhere else to turn,” said Balkees Jarrah, associate international justice director at Human Rights Watch. “The trial in Koblenz shows that courts, even thousands of miles away from where the atrocities occurred, can play a critical role in combating impunity.”

    The Koblenz regional court, where the trial is being held, has reduced the number of seats available to reporters and the general public by a third due to social distancing rules to combat the coronavirus pandemic.

    (www.newsnow.co.uk)

  • Why I suspended green cards — Trump

    Why I suspended green cards — Trump

    Agency Reporter

     

    U.S. President Donald Trump has defended his new executive order that temporarily suspends immigrant visas.

    Addressing newsmen on Wednesday evening at the White House, Trump said he took the decision to protect American workers as the country prepares to reopen for business after a shutdown that cost millions their jobs.

    The order, he said, would last for 60 days subject to review and possible extension “at the appropriate time”.

    “In order to protect our great American workers I have just signed an executive order temporarily suspending immigration into the United States.

    “This will ensure that unemployed Americans of all backgrounds will be first in line for jobs as our economy reopens,” he said.

    The president added that the move would “preserve our healthcare resources for American patients” affected by the disease.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that immigrant visas are those issued to foreigners approved to move permanently to the U.S.

    Majority of the recipients, who automatically qualifies for green cards, are family members of U.S. citizens or permanent residents.

    Some immigrant visas also are granted to those who have jobs waiting for them, including nurses planning to work at hospitals, the online encyclopedia adds.

    However, Trump highlighted some exemptions in the new order, including farmers relying on temporary visas to bring labourers from Latin America.

    On April 17, while announcing a three-phase plan to reopen the economy, the president had hinted at tighter immigration restrictions to relevant new COVID-19 infections from abroad.

    “As we begin a science-based reopening, we must be extra vigilant in blocking the foreign entry of the virus from abroad.

    “Border control, travel restrictions and other limitations on entry are more important than never before to keep the virus in check and allow Americans to get back to work,” he said.

    Some critics are accusing Trump of hiding behind the pandemic to advance his political agenda on tighter immigration.(NAN)

  • Antibody study estimates 14% of 3,000 tested have had coronavirus

    Antibody study estimates 14% of 3,000 tested have had coronavirus

    Nearly 14 per cent of 3,000 people tested for coronavirus antibodies in New York state tested positive, Governor Andrew Cuomo said on Thursday.

    The preliminary results came from a state antibody study that randomly tested people at supermarkets, he told a daily news conference.

    “It means these are people who were infected and who developed the antibodies,” Cuomo explained.

    The governor said the data could point to a lower death rate than some estimates.

    If they translate to the true incidence of new coronavirus, they would mean that 2.7 million have been infected.

    “If you look at what we have now as a death toll, which is 15,500, that would be about 0.5 per cent death rate,” he said, while cautioning that this was based on preliminary data and that the death toll “is going to go up” and currently does not account for at-home or presumed deaths.

    He also noted that the results could be skewed as “they were not people who were in their home” or isolated, who may have a lower rate of infection.

    READ ALSO: EU coronavirus recovery plan could be ‘too little, too late’ – Lagarde

    Cuomo said that the antibody testing would be expanded to include larger sample sizes.

    The governor also called Republican Senator Mitch McConnell’s suggestion that local governments could declare bankruptcy “one of the really dumb ideas of all time”.

    He said it was “vicious” of McConnell to call Democratic states’ request for federal funding a “blue-state bailout”.

    New York is the epicentre of the coronavirus outbreak in the U.S.

    In total, the country has seen more than 46,000 deaths.

    (dpa/NAN)

  • EU coronavirus recovery plan could be ‘too little, too late’ – Lagarde

    European Central Bank chief Christine Lagarde warned EU leaders on Thursday that their efforts to kick-start the bloc’s economy in the wake of the coronavirus crisis could be “too little, too late,” as they grappled to overcome deep divisions.

    Lagarde laid out the scale of the problem during a videoconference on the European Union’s fiscal response to the crisis, according to EU sources, telling the leaders that the eurozone’s economic output could shrink by up to 15 per cent.

    This is the worst of three possible scenarios calculated by the ECB.

    At the centre of discussions is a coronavirus recovery fund potentially worth trillions of euros. Ahead of the talks however, EU officials dimmed hope of an immediate breakthrough.

    The distance between EU capitals remains too great – particularly on the issue of shared EU debt to raise money for the recovery – according to the sources.

    Lagarde urged the leaders to agree on a “fast, firm and flexible” response.

    There have been more than 1.1 million confirmed cases of Covid-19 so far in Europe, and more than 110,000 deaths.

    A decade after the European debt crisis, the pandemic is reawakening old conflicts and testing the EU’s ability to forge a coordinated response.

    The divisions between fiscally conservative northern member states and hard-hit southerners, notably Italy and Spain, have focused on recovery spending and joint bonds in particular – whether to issue them and how to dole out the proceeds.

    Italy called ardently for so-called coronabonds, receiving initial backing from eight other member states including France and Spain. However, Germany and the Netherlands are fiercely opposed to jointly-issued EU debt.

    In the run-up to the summit, positions softened on both sides, with Paris and Madrid putting forward less controversial proposals.

    But agreement on anything more than broad strokes remains unlikely. European Council President Charles Michel is set to pass the buck to the European Commission to develop a proposal for a recovery fund.

    Ahead of the summit, German Chancellor Angela Merkel said Berlin is willing to contribute more to the next EU long-term budget.

    “Europe is not Europe if we don’t stand up for each other in times of undeserved crisis,” she told parliament in Berlin.

    Most view the EU’s next seven-year budget framework, starting 2021, as central to the recovery effort, although EU capitals are deeply divided on how this should work and how much firepower it should have.

    Meanwhile, Italian Economy Minister Roberto Gualtieri told Thursday’s Financial Times that his government was no longer “attached” to terms like coronabonds.

    Instead, he said Rome now backs Madrid’s proposal, which foresees a fund in the long-term EU budget managed by the commission, which would issue bonds guaranteed by the member states.

    While the plan has drawn praise from the EU executive, it is unlikely to be approved by Berlin or The Hague.

    The stakes for Italy are particularly high. It has suffered Europe’s heaviest death toll from Covid-19, with more than 25,000 fatalities.

    The country has experienced a sharp rise in anti-EU and anti-German sentiment, amid widespread perceptions of insufficient solidarity from European partners.

    READ ALSO: Coronavirus: UN, EU hqtrs shut

    The SWG polling institute says that 45 per cent of Italians consider Germany an “enemy,” while trust in the EU has slipped to 27 per cent, from 42 per cent in September.

    Nevertheless, as a country with strained public finances and one of the world’s highest public debt levels even before the coronavirus crisis, Italy is economically vulnerable.

    But Rome is not alone in fearing that the worst anticipated recession in almost a century could add to the woes of heavily indebted states with stubbornly high unemployment.

    Europe’s economies are highly entwined, and a poor recovery in the South would also hit richer, export-heavy states like Germany and the Netherlands.

    In one glimmer of hope, EU leaders are expected on Thursday to approve a 540-billion-euro (584 billion dollars) aid package to support employees, companies and overburdened states, with a view to implementing the measures by June.

    (dpa/NAN)