Category: Foreign

  • African jazz legend Dibango dies from coronavirus in France

    African jazz legend Dibango dies from coronavirus in France

    Our Reporter

    WORLD famous singer and saxophonist Manu Dibango has died from a coronavirus infection at the age of 86 in France, his management team said on Tuesday.

    “It is with deep sadness that we announce the loss of Manu Dibango, our Papy Groove, who passed away on March 24, 2020, at 86 years old, further to COVID 19,” read a statement on Dibango’s Facebook page.

    The Cameroon-born Dibango arrived in France in the early 1950s and studied jazz and saxophone in the northern city of Reims, where he started playing in clubs, according to a biography on his Facebook page.

    Dibango died early yesterday morning in a hospital in the Paris region, Thierry Durepaire, a member of the artist’s management team, told Reuters.

    In the early 1960s, his style of playing took on more African rhythms as he collaborated with Brussels-based musicians from Congo and he began touring in Africa, developing his trademark pumping saxophone rhythms.

    In the late 1960s, Dibango started his own band, played with a string of French musicians and in 1972 he had a major hit with “Soul Makossa”, a song that brought him international success and was reinterpreted by many other artists.

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    In 2009, Dibango filed a lawsuit in a Paris court against the producers of Michael Jackson for using the “Mamase, mamasa, makossa” riff from Soul Makossa. The riff became world-famous through Jackson’s hit “Wanna Be Startin’ Somethin’”. The case was later settled out of court.

    In 2010, Dibango received the “legion d’honneur” medal in his adopted country France. He was diagnosed with a coronavirus infection earlier this month.

    Last year, on the sidelines of a tour celebrating 60 years on stage, he said jazz music needed to have a danceable beat.

  • States reject Trump talk of restarting economy early

    States reject Trump talk of restarting economy early

    Our Reporter

    A week after millions of Americans began taking shelter at home from the coronavirus, states warned on Tuesday against easing restrictions too soon even though the clampdown is devastating the U.S. economy.

    President Donald Trump said on Monday he was considering how to restart business life when a 15-day shutdown ends next week, even as the highly contagious virus spreads rapidly and poorly equipped hospitals struggle with a wave of deadly cases.

    However, senior Democrats and Republicans said they were close to a deal on a $2 trillion coronavirus economic stimulus package, raising hopes that the divided U.S. Congress could soon act to try to limit the pandemic’s economic fallout.

    “We are very close,” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said, as the chamber opened its session yesterday morning.

    The Republican-led chamber’s top Democrat, Chuck Schumer, said a few hours later that talks had been “very productive.”

    A Republican, Trump is seeking to win re-election in November on a promise of economic growth.

    Governor Andrew Cuomo, a Democrat whose state of New York has become the epicentre of the U.S. outbreak with 25,665 cases, strongly opposed allowing people to travel, socialise and get back to workplaces too quickly.

    Read Also: I’m coronavirus wartime president, says Trump

    “If you ask the American people to choose between public health and the economy, then it’s no contest. No American is going to say accelerate the economy at the cost of human life,” he said.

    Cuomo said the projected need for hospital beds in New York at the peak of the outbreak has jumped to 140,000, compared with the 53,000 that are available and that the apex of the outbreak could still be 14-21 days away

    Maryland Governor Larry Hogan, a Republican, told CNN yesterday: “We don’t think that we’re going to be in any way ready to be out of this in five or six days or so, or whenever this 15 days is up from the time that they started this imaginary clock.”

  • UN chief to G20: boost resources to stop COVID-19 pandemic

    UN chief to G20: boost resources to stop COVID-19 pandemic

    Our Reporter

    •U.S. could be next ‘virus epicentre’, says WHO
    •Confirmed cases exceed 398,000 with 17,400 deaths
    •UK, India, others lock down as Hubei weighs lift of curbs
    •Experts: global recession looms over health crisis

    UNITED Nations (UN) chief Antonio Guterres has in a letter to the Group of 20 (G20) major economies called for more resources to help the global coronavirus pandemic from reaching “apocalyptic proportions”

    The letter, dated Monday, urged the G20 to take steps including the launch of a coordinated stimulus package worth ‘trillions of dollars’ to help poor countries; a ban on tariffs, quotas or other restraints on trade; and a call to waive sanctions to help certain countries get food and medical supplies.

    It said the resources available to the International Monetary Fund are insufficient and should be steadily increased, that the IMF’s Catastrophe Containment and Relief Trust should get greater financial support and that debt restructuring must become a priority.

    “We are only as strong as the weakest health system in our interconnected world,” Guterres wrote.

    “We must create the conditions and mobilise the resources necessary to ensure that developing countries have equal opportunities to respond to this crisis … anything short of this commitment would lead to a pandemic of apocalyptic proportions affecting us all.”

    Guterres told a virtual news conference the United Nations wanted $2 billion to help poor countries combat the coronavirus.

    Confirmed coronavirus cases worldwide exceeded 398,000 with more than 17,400 deaths, according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University.

    Read Also: UN Chief says racism, prejudice, religious bigotry persistent

    But the United States (U.S.) could become the global epicentre of the coronavirus pandemic, the World Health Organisation said yesterday, as India announced a full 24-hour, nationwide lockdown in the world’s second-most populous country.

    India joined the ranks of Britain and other countries clamping down to hold back the virus as business activity collapsed from Japan to the United States at a record pace in March.

    The highly contagious coronavirus has caused entire regions to be placed on lockdown. In some places soldiers are patrolling the streets to keep consumers and workers indoors, halting services and production and breaking supply chains.

    “The global health crisis is rapidly morphing into a global recession, as there is a clear tension between preventing infections and ruining the economy,” said Edoardo Campanella, an economist at UniCredit Bank in Milan.

    But Wall Street bounced from three-year lows as investors pin their hopes on the U.S. Senate passing a $2 trillion stimulus bill.

    Confirmed coronavirus cases around the world exceeded 377,000 across 194 countries and territories as of early yesterday, according to a Reuters tally, more than 16,500 of them fatal.

    In Geneva, WHO spokeswoman Margaret Harris said infections in the U.S. had greatly increased.

    Over the previous 24 hours, 85 per cent of new cases were in Europe and the United States, and of those, 40 percent were in the United States.

    As of Monday, the virus had infected more than 42,000 people there, killing at least 559.

    Asked whether the United States could become the new epicentre, Harris said: “We are now seeing a very large acceleration in cases in the U.S. So it does have that potential.”

    Some U.S. state and local officials have decried a lack of coordinated federal action, saying that having localities act on their own has put them in competition for supplies.

    President Donald Trump acknowledged the difficulty.

    “The World market for face masks and ventilators is Crazy. We are helping the states to get equipment, but it is not easy,” he tweeted.

    Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi said on Tuesday the government would impose a nationwide lockdown from midnight for 21 days.

    Health researchers have warned that more than a million people in India could be infected with the coronavirus by mid-May, prompting the government to shut down all air and train travel, businesses and schools.

    India has so far reported 482 confirmed cases of the coronavirus and nine deaths.

    Olympic Games organisers and the Japanese government had clung to the hope that the world’s biggest sporting event could go ahead, but finally bowed to the inevitable to make Tokyo 2020 the latest and biggest victim of a ravaged sporting calendar.

    After a call with International Olympic Committee (IOC) president Thomas Bach, Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said the July 24-Aug. 9 event would be rescheduled for the summer of 2021 at the latest – as proof of victory over the coronavirus.

    “President Bach said he is in agreement, 100%.”

    It was the first time in the Olympics’ 124-year history that they had been postponed, though they were canceled outright three times during the two 20th-century world wars.

    Of the top 10 countries by case numbers, Italy has reported the highest fatality rate, at around 10%, which at least partly reflects its older population. The fatality rate globally – the ratio of deaths to confirmed infections – is around 4.3%, though national figures can vary widely according to how much testing is done.

    Britain, believed by experts to be about two weeks behind Italy in the outbreak cycle, yesterday began curbs on movement without precedent in peacetime after Prime Minister Boris Johnson ordered the country to stay at home.

    The streets of the capital were quiet as all but essential shops closed and people only went to work if it was unavoidable.

    Johnson had resisted pressure to impose a full lockdown even as other European countries had done so, but was forced to change tack as projections showed the health system could become overwhelmed.

    Meanwhile China’s Hubei province, the original centre of the outbreak, will lift curbs on people leaving the area, but other regions will tighten controls as new cases double due to imported infections.

    The provincial capital Wuhan, which has been in total lockdown since Jan. 23, will lift its travel restrictions on April 8.

    However, the risk from overseas infections appears to be on the rise, prompting tougher screening and quarantine measures in cities such as the capital Beijing.

  • Italian cases seem ‘10 times  higher’ than official tally

    Italian cases seem ‘10 times higher’ than official tally

    Our Reporter

    THE number of coronavirus cases in Italy is probably 10 times higher than the official tally, the head of the agency collating the data said on Tuesday as the government readied new measures to force people to stay at home.

    Italy has seen more fatalities than any other country, with latest figures showing that 6,077 people have died from the infection in barely a month, while the number of confirmed cases has hit 64,000.

    However, testing for the disease has often been limited to people seeking hospital care, meaning that thousands of infections have certainly gone undetected.

    “A ratio of one certified case out of every 10 is credible,” Angelo Borrelli, the head of the Civil Protection Agency, told La Republican newspaper, indicating he believed as many as 640,000 people could have been infected.

    After four weeks of steep increases in deaths and cases, the growth rate has eased since Sunday, raising hopes that the most aggressive phase of the contagion might be over.

    The government has shut down all non-essential business until April 3 and the cabinet was due to meet later today to tighten the screws still further, including hiking fines for people violating the shutdown to up to 4,000 euros ($4,300) from a maximum 206 euros at present.

  • Cambodia arrests 17 over COVID-19 ‘fake news’ posts – Report

    Cambodia arrests 17 over COVID-19 ‘fake news’ posts – Report

    Cambodian authorities have arrested 17 people since January over social media posts about the new Coronavirus (COVID-19) that the government has branded “fake news,” Human Rights Watch (HRW) said on Tuesday.

    “Four of the five people who have been charged and jailed are from the outlawed main opposition party,’’ the international rights organisation said.

    They face charges of incitement to commit a felony, conspiracy and spreading false information, which are infractions often levelled against opposition members who are critical of the government of Prime Minister Hun Sen.

    “One of those arrested earlier this month was a 14-year-old girl, who claimed in a Facebook post that three students at her school had contracted the respiratory disease, and three people had died from the virus,’’ HRW said.

    Authorities released her after the girl made a public apology.

    READ ALSO: COVID-19: Rate Your Leader cautions social media against myths, fake news

    “National Police spokesman Chhay Kim Khoeun said earlier this month that five people had been arrested over virus-related posts that caused social chaos.

    “It also scared the public, insulted and put blame on government leaders,’’ local news outlet VOD reported.

    Deputy Asia director of HRW, Phil Robertson, said in a statement that the government should stop abusing free speech rights and “misusing” the outbreak to lock up activists and others expressing concerns about the new Coronavirus and government response.

    According to the Health Ministry, Cambodia has reported 87 infections of COVID-19, the disease caused by the virus.

    Report says this includes 52 foreign nationals and 35 Cambodians, while two patients have recovered and left hospital quarantine.

    However, no deaths have been reported.

    (dpa/NAN)

  • China reports new surge in imported coronavirus

    China reports new surge in imported coronavirus

    China on Tuesday reported 78 new cases of the new coronavirus as well as seven new deaths due to the illness, the latest figures from the National Health Commission revealed.

    Only one of the new cases was reported in Hubei province, where the Covid-19 outbreak first began in December 2019.

    Of the new cases, 74 were imported from abroad, a new daily high that brings the total number of imported cases in China to 427.

    READ ALSO: FG denies buying used protective gear from China

    Since December, 81,171 people have been infected with the virus across mainland China, of whom 3,277 have died and 73,159 have recovered.

    (dpa/NAN)

  • U.S. newspapers call on China to reverse expulsion of journalists

    U.S. newspapers call on China to reverse expulsion of journalists

    Publishers of three U.S. newspapers on Tuesday urged China to reverse a decision to force out about a dozen of their American journalists.

    They noted in an open letter that the expulsions came at a time of “shared crisis” for the world.

    China announced on March 18 it was revoking the press accreditation of all American journalists in the China bureaus of the three newspapers that were due to expire at the end of 2020, effectively expelling them.

    “We strongly urge the Chinese government to reverse its decision to force the Americans working for our news organisations to leave.

    “The decision uniquely damaging and reckless as the world is fighting a global coronavirus pandemic,” the publishers of News Corp’s (NWSA.O) Wall Street Journal, the Washington Post and the New York Times (NYT.N) said.

    READ ALSO: COVID-19: Nigeria seeks China support as cases reach 36

    Perhaps over any major news event in modern history, this moment underscores the urgent importance of both probing, accurate, on-the-ground reporting from the centres of the pandemic and of sharing the information.

    The expulsions were the latest escalation in a dispute with the U.S. over media freedom and access, which February saw the U.S. require that Chinese state media register as foreign embassies.

    China then expelled three Wall Street Journal reporters, two Americans and an Australian, after the paper published an opinion column calling China the “real sick man of Asia”.

    The U.S. then cut the number of journalists allowed to work at four major Chinese state media outlets there from 160 to 100, citing a “deepening crackdown” on independent reporting in China.

    China’s Foreign Ministry has said its measures are “necessary” and “reciprocal” against “escalating discrimination and oppression against Chinese media” by the U.S.

    (Reuters/NAN)

  • EU urges nations to unblock borders to let in freight

    EU urges nations to unblock borders to let in freight

    Agency Reporter

    Freight carriers are struggling to deliver goods by land, sea or air as the coronavirus pandemic forces Western governments to impose lockdowns, threatening supplies of vital products, including medicines into the most affected areas, such as Italy.

    But, the European Union on Monday urged its 27 members to unblock their borders and allow freight vehicles to cross from one country to another within 15 minutes to ensure the flow of basic supplies and medical equipment.

    European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said in a video statement that measures introduced to slow the spread of the coronavirus had also slowed and sometimes paralysed transport, causing delays and risking shortages.

    “This weekend we had some crossing points with more than 40 kilometers of queues. This is a waiting time of up to 18 hours. This has to stop,” she said.

    Read Also: Nigeria shuts land borders over COVID-19

    Road transport, which accounts for 75% of freight shipments within the EU, has been particularly hit, notably at the Polish-German frontier after Warsaw’s decision to shut its borders to non-Poles, leaving Latvians, Lithuanians and Estonians unable to return home.

    German foreign minister Heiko Maas said yesterday many of the problems on that border had since been resolved and queues of traffic were now much shorter.

    The EU executive has asked EU countries to designate major crossing points as “green lane” border crossings, including for rail, sea and air transport and on waterways.

    While China’s draconian steps to stop the spread of the virus are now allowing its economy slowly to come back online, supply chains are backing up in other parts of the world.

    One European supplier of active pharmaceutical ingredients used by the industry, who declined to be named, said the business was struggling to get supplies transported by plane.

    The U.S. decision to ban foreign visitors has also cut an estimated 85% of U.S. air freight capacity, as vast amounts of goods were transported in the bellies of passenger planes that are now grounded. That has pushing freight costs up five-fold as space for remaining cargo runs is limited, companies directly involved in the trade say.

    Goods from Europe are being re-routed through places including Mexico and Canada to the United States, companies say, but that adds time and also comes at a price.

  • ECOWAS Parliament personnel to work from home

    ECOWAS Parliament personnel to work from home

    From Vincent Ikuomola, Abuja

    The Economic Community of West African States Parliament (ECOPARL) has directed its staff to work from their homes.

    ECOPARL also directed all staff to continue to deliver on their assignments.

    Besides, workers are expected to continue to make themselves available and accessible by keeping their telephone lines open for communication through voice and WhatsApp.

    Read Also: COVID-19: Osun govt orders workers to stay at home

    They are, however, warned against traveling out of their duty station.

    The measures, which was contained in a statement, according to the ECOWAS Parliament, is to limit the chances of infection by and distribution of the virus.

    The statement stated that staff are expected to consult their emails as well as the various ECOPARL Staff Platforms for further information or instructions.

  • COVID-19 pandemic is accelerating, WHO chief warns

    COVID-19 pandemic is accelerating, WHO chief warns

    Agency Reporter

    • Global economy will suffer for years to come, says OECD
    • Africa needs $100 billion economic stimulus
    • Philanthropist’s batch of supplies to AU arrives

    World Health Organisation (WHO) Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said on Monday that the coronavirus pandemic is spreading at an increasingly rapid pace.

    He called for cooperation from the world’s wealthiest nations to fight the outbreak.

    At a news conference in Geneva, Ghebreyesus said more than 350,000 cases had been confirmed around the world.

    “The pandemic is accelerating,” Tedros said. “We need to attack the virus with aggressive and targeted tactics.”

    About 16,0313 people have died worldwide, including at least 504 in the United States.

    Tedros added that it took 67 days to confirm the first hundred thousand cases, 11 days to confirm the second hundred thousand cases and just four days to confirm the third hundred thousand cases.

    He added that it’s essential for the world’s wealthiest nations to work together to combat the virus, a comment that seemed aimed at a growing feud between the United States and China.

    President Trump in recent days has increasingly sought to blame China for the spread of the virus. Chinese officials have spread baseless rumours about the United States.

    “We need unity in the G-20 countries,” Tedros said, referring to the Group of 20. “Political commitment at the G-20 level means a very strong solidarity that can help us to move forward and fight this pandemic in the strongest terms possible,” the WHO chief said

    ‘Global economy will suffer for years to come’

    The world will take years to recover from the coronavirus pandemic, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development has warned.

    Angel Gurría, OECD secretary general, said the economic shock was already bigger than the financial crisis.

    He told the BBC it was “wishful thinking” to believe that countries would bounce back quickly.

    The OECD has called on governments to rip up spending rules to ensure speedy testing and treatment of the virus.

    Gurría said a recent warning that a serious outbreak could halve global growth to 1.5% already looked too optimistic.

    While the number of job losses and company failures remains uncertain, Gurría said countries would be dealing with the economic fallout “for years to come”.

    He said many of the world’s biggest economies would fall into recession in the coming months – defined as two consecutive quarters of economic decline.

    “Even if you don’t get a worldwide recession, you’re going to get either no growth or negative growth in many of the economies of the world, including some of the larger ones, and therefore you’re going to get not only low growth this year, but also it’s going to take longer to pick up in the in the future,” he added.

    Gurría said the economic uncertainty created by the virus outbreak meant economies were already suffering a bigger shock than during the September 11 terror attacks or the 2008 financial crisis.

    Africa needs $100bn economic stimulus, say finance ministers

    Africa needs an immediate emergency economic stimulus to the tune of $100 billion, owing to the COVID-19 outbreak, the African Finance Ministers have said.

    This is contained in a statement by Communication and Media Relations Department of the group, which was made available to News Agency of Nigeria (NAN).

    It explained that it was part of decision of the African Finance Ministers, who met on March 19, in a virtual conference to exchange ideas on the efforts of their respective governments in dealing with the social and economic impacts of COVID-19.

    The ministers said as such, the waiver of all interest payments, estimated at 44 billion dollars for 2020, and the possible extension of the waiver to the medium term, would provide immediate fiscal space and liquidity to the Governments in their efforts to respond to the COVID-19 pandemic.

    According to them, the interest payments waiver should include not only interest payments on public debt, but also on sovereign bonds.

    The ministers agreed on the need to consider waiving principal and interest and encourage the use of existing facilities in the World Bank, International Monetary Fund (IMF), African Development Bank (AfDB) and other regional institutions for the fragile states.

    They underscored the need to support the private sector and protect about 30 million jobs at risk, particularly in the tourism and airline sectors across the continent.

    Philanthropist’s batch of supplies to AU arrives

    But, billionaire philanthropist Jack Ma is leaving no country behind in his effort to help the world fight the relentless coronavirus pandemic.

    A batch of supplies donated by his charities arrived in Ethiopia on Sunday so it can be distributed across the African continent as the region scrambles to contain the spread of the virus.

    Ma, China’s richest man and founder of e-commerce giant Alibaba, said the world “cannot afford the unthinkable consequences of a COVID-19 pandemic in Africa,” which had been spared the brunt of the outbreak but has seen an increasing number of infections in recent days.

    Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed Ali said the first batch of donations includes six million masks, more than a million testing kits and 60,000 protective suits.

    Support includes 1.1million testing kits,6million masks & 60,000 protective suits to be distributed throughout Africa.  Distribution to other countries will begin as of tomorrow.

    Each of the continent’s 54 nations will receive 20,000 testing kits, 100,000 masks and 1,000 protective suits to combat a potential surge in demand for medical supplies, Ma said in a statement last week.

    The gifts were funded by the Jack Ma and Alibaba foundations, which have also shipped medical supplies to countries in Latin America, the Middle East, Europe and Asia. The business magnate said he’s also sent a batch of testing kits and supplies to the U.S., another country facing shortages and a rapidly growing outbreak.