Category: Foreign

  • India suspends visas to nationals from Italy, Iran, S. Korea, Japan

    India suspends visas to nationals from Italy, Iran, S. Korea, Japan

    India on Tuesday suspended with immediate effect all regular visas or e-visas granted to the nationals of Italy, Iran, South Korea, Japan issued on or before March 3 to curb COVID-19, said a revised travel advisory.

    These visas also included visas-on-arrival for Japan and South Korea, according to the travel advisory.

    “Those requiring to travel to India under compelling circumstances may apply for fresh visas to the nearest Indian Embassy or Consulate,” it added.

    Diplomats, officials of the UN and other international bodies, Overseas Citizenship of India (OCI) cardholders and aircrew from the above countries were, however, exempted from such restriction on entry, adding that medical screening is compulsory for them.

    Three more cases were detected in India on Monday, including places in Delhi, the southern state of Telangana and the western state of Rajasthan.

    Besides, six people who were said to have been in contact with the Delhi case have been kept under watch and their samples were sent for testing.

    READ ALSO: Covid-19: ‘We have discovered its cure’

    Earlier, three patients suffering from COVID-19 were successfully cured in February.

    According to the advisory, all foreign nationals who have traveled to China, Iran, Italy, South Korea, and Japan on or after Feb. 1 have been prohibited from entering India.

    Passengers of all international flights entering into India from any port are required to furnish duly filled self-declaration form and travel history to health officials and immigration officials.

    Passengers (foreign and Indian) other than those restricted, arriving directly or indirectly from a number of countries and regions must undergo medical screening at the port of entry.

    These include China, South Korea, Japan, Iran, Italy, China’s Hong Kong, China’s Macau, Vietnam, Malaysia, Indonesia, Nepal, Thailand, Singapore, and China’s Taiwan.

    (NAN)

  • Guinea-Bissau President Cassamá quits amid ‘death threats’

    Guinea-Bissau President Cassamá quits amid ‘death threats’

    ONE of the two men declared president of Guinea-Bissau, Cipriano Cassamá, has resigned from the post after just one day in office, saying his life was in danger.

    Cassamá was chosen by lawmakers as president following disputed elections in December.

    This was despite the fact that former Army General Umaro Cissoko Embaló had already been sworn in as president at a hotel in the capital, Bissau.

    Guinea-Bissau has had nine coups or attempted coups since 1980.

    A former Portuguese colony in West Africa, it has also become a key trafficking point for drugs from South America on their way to Europe.

    This has led to it being dubbed a “narco-state”.

    Ministries are closed and surrounded by armed guards, as the country lurches through a protracted crisis that some parliamentarians are calling a coup.

    A truck of soldiers from a regional force, deployed to Guinea-Bissau about eight years ago, are guarding the home of Aristides Gomes, one of two men laying claim to the post of prime minister.

    The soldiers are perched on their white truck, with a mounted machine-gun pointed outward and at the ready.

    Mr. Gomes’ home is just a few hundred metres from the presidential palace.

    Read Also: Global peace: I won’t rest on my oars, says ex-President

     

    On the same street, the ministries of Finance, Justice and Fisheries are all closed and guarded by armed officers.

    But residents appear to be continuing with their daily lives – cashew vendors are still on the streets, and residents are still withdrawing money from cash machines along Avenue Amilcar Cabral, named after the revolutionary who led Guinea-Bissau’s campaign for independence.

    The poll was intended to draw a line under the past, but it has triggered a new political crisis in a nation where the military wields huge political influence.

    The national electoral commission declared that Embaló had beaten his main rival, Domingos Simoes Pereira, by 54% to 46% in the December 29 run-off election.

    Outgoing President José Mário Vaz handed power to Embaló at a ceremony at a luxury hotel on Thursday.

    But Pereira’s PAIGC party, which led Guinea-Bissau to independence and was the only legal party until 1990, rejected Embaló’s inauguration, saying the election was marred by fraud.

    It then used its parliamentary majority to swear in Cassamá, the parliamentary speaker, as interim president, until the Supreme Court ruled on its bid to annul Embaló’s victory.

    Cassamá said he had no choice but to give up the post because he had received death threats.

  • NAPTIP, UK Aid restrategise to combat human trafficking, irregular migration

    NAPTIP, UK Aid restrategise to combat human trafficking, irregular migration

     

    THE National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons (NAPTIP), in conjunction with the UK Aid, yesterday held a “Not for Sale” town/community dialogue with the Ikpoba-Okha community as part of efforts in combating irregular migration in the locality.

    News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that Ikpoba-Okha community is one of the three and the most populated local government areas that makes up the Benin metropolis.

    Director General of NAPTIP Mrs. Julie Okah-Donli, in her opening remarks, said human trafficking was both a global and local problem, which needed to be tackled from the root.

    Mrs. Okah-Donli, who was represented by Mr. Abdulrahim Shuaibu, Director, Legal and prosecution, NAPTIP, also said many factors had been attributed to the prevalence of human trafficking.

    She, however, said irrespective of the factors, human trafficking and illegal migration was a scourge that should be discouraged and stopped.

    She hailed the partners and stakeholders on the fight against human trafficking and illegal migration, adding that the UK Aid had done well in championing the “Not for Sale” campaign.

    Mrs. Ijeoma Uduak, the Zonal Commander, Benin zonal command, said the “Not for Sale” campaign was a UK cabinet project with NAPTIP.

    Mrs. Uduak explained that the project was focused on helping young women and men say “NO” to human trafficking, access economic opportunities in the country and not to sell themselves because of a dream that ends in pain.

    She added that the issue of human trafficking and irregular migration in the country has become worrisome to transit as well as destination countries.

    She added that the event was the launch of the second phase of the campaign in the locality.

    In his goodwill message, Mr. Buba Wakawa, commander, National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA), stressed the need for public sensitisation in defeating crimes in the society.

    Wakawa, represented by the Mr. Michele Ofoyeju, also said that the NDLEA was concerned about the fight against human trafficking because of the connection between human and drug trafficking.

    Similarly, Ms Obehi Okpiabhele, the Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Genius Hub Global Initiative, the UK Aid local implementing partners, said the organisation was desirous of changing the present narrative about the Benin women.

  • South Korea seeks murder charges against church leaders

    South Korea seeks murder charges against church leaders

    South Korea sought murder charges against leaders of a secretive church at the heart of its ballooning coronavirus outbreak on Monday as the global death toll rose above 3,000 and the Chinese province at the epicentre reported a fall in new cases.

    World stock markets regained some calm as hopes for global interest rate cuts to soften the economic blow of the virus steadied nerves after last week’s worst plunge since the 2008 financial crisis.

    The global death toll was up to 3,044, according to a Reuters tally.

    Read Also: Coronavirus: Two more foreign nationals test negative in Lagos

     

    In the largest outbreak outside China, South Korea has had 26 deaths and reported another 599 infections yesterday, taking its tally to 4,335 following Saturday’s biggest daily jump.

    Of the new cases in South Korea, 377 were from the city of Daegu, home to a branch of the Shincheonji Church of Jesus, to which most of South Korea’s cases have been traced after some members visited China’s Wuhan city, where the disease emerged.

    The Seoul government asked prosecutors to launch a murder investigation into leaders of the church, a movement that reveres founder Lee Man-hee. Seoul Mayor Park Won-soon said if Lee and other heads of the church had cooperated, preventive measures could have stopped fatalities.

    Lee knelt and apologised to the country yesteray that one church member had infected many others, calling the epidemic a “great calamity”. “We did our best but were not able to stop the spread of the virus,” Lee told reporters.

     

  • Coronavirus: Germany, France,  Britain to fly medical supplies to Iran

    Coronavirus: Germany, France, Britain to fly medical supplies to Iran

     

     

    Germany, France, and Britain yesterday said they will be flying urgent medical supplies to Iran to help it combat the COVID-19 outbreak that has claimed at least 66 lives in the country.

    The supplies, which were expected to be delivered yesterday, include testing kits, protective equipment and gloves, a statement from the French Foreign Ministry said.

    The three countries – the European signatories to the 2015 deal on Iran’s nuclear programme – said they will also be providing financial aid of almost 5 million euros ($5.6 million) via the World Health Organisation (WHO) and other UN agencies to combat the outbreak in Iran.

    An adviser to Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has died after contracting the novel coronavirus, state radio said yesterday.

    Mohammad Mirmohammadi, 71, was a member of the Expediency Council that advises Khamenei.

    He is the latest in a string of Iranian officials to have died after contracting the virus.

    The virus started spreading through Iran last week, and by yesterday, 66 people were dead and 1,501 cases were confirmed, Deputy Health Minister Alireza Raisi said.

    Raisi added that 291 people had recovered.

    Iran has the most coronavirus cases in the Middle East, the most deaths outside of China – where the virus originated – and is in an ongoing state of economic crisis.

    Iran’s parliament has been suspended until further notice amid the outbreak, and universities and schools nationwide have been closed, according to state media.

    All public gatherings, including Friday prayers, have been cancelled to help curb the spread of the disease, the IRNA state news agency reported.

    Read Also: We discovered cure for Coronavirus in 2015, says Iwu

     

    Also yesterday, Egypt and Algeria reported new confirmed cases of the novel Coronavirus (Covid-19), increasing the number of recorded patients in Africa.

    The Health Ministry in Algeria said, a 53-year-old woman and her 24-year-old daughter have tested positively for the new coronavirus.

    It said they live in the city of Blida, some 50 km south-west of the capital, Algiers.

    The ministry said they recently hosted a man, 83, and his daughter visiting from France, who were tested positive for coronavirus after their return to France, prompting the health authorities in Algeria to test the hosts.

    Only one case had been previously reported in Algeria.

    Meanwhile, Egypt’s Health Ministry said a foreigner has tested positive for the new coronavirus, becoming the second case in the country.

    The ministry did not reveal the person’s nationality.

    Of the more than 88,900 global cases of COVID-19 cases, 90 per cent were reported from China, most of them from the outbreak epicentre in Hubei province.

    Outside of China, more 8,700 cases have been reported to the World Health Organisation (WHO) in Geneva, with four countries accounting for 81 per cent of this figure, WHO chief said.

    He added that South Korea, Italy, Iran and Japan are causing the biggest concerns.

     

  • Taliban to resume attacking Afghan forces after deal with U.S.

    Taliban to resume attacking Afghan forces after deal with U.S.

     

    THE Taliban are to resume attacks against government forces, just days after signing a deal with the United States (U.S.) aimed at bringing peace to Afghanistan.

    The hardline Islamist group had observed a “reduction in violence” in the week leading up to the agreement.

    The deal included a commitment to hold peace talks with the Afghan government.

    But the group’s spokesman said yesterday the talks would not go ahead if 5,000 Taliban prisoners held by the government were not released.

    The release formed part of the agreement signed on Saturday in Qatar with the U.S.

    But on Sunday, Afghanistan’s President Ashraf Ghani told reporters his government had agreed to no such release.

    Taliban have previously refused to negotiate with the Afghan government, so Saturday’s deal was just with the U.S.

    , which invaded Afghanistan weeks after the September 2001 attacks in New York by al-Qaeda, then based in Afghanistan.

    Meanwhile, Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid told news agency Reuters they would not take part in talks with the government unless the release went ahead.

     

  • Syria crisis: Millions of migrants may head to EU, says Turkey

    Syria crisis: Millions of migrants may head to EU, says Turkey

    Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has warned that “millions” of migrants and refugees will soon head towards Europe.

    Erdogan was speaking after announcing Turkey could no longer enforce a 2016 deal with the EU to prevent migrants entering Europe.

    Erdogan said Turkey could not cope with a new wave of refugees after an escalation of the Syrian conflict.

    A young boy died when a boat capsized off the Greek island of Lesbos yesterday, Greek police said.

    It was the first reported fatality since Turkey opened its border last week.

    Meanwhile, a Turkish official accused the Greek authorities of killing a Syrian man who was trying to breach the border yesterday. Athens denied the allegation.

    An unverified video showed a man on the ground with blood on his neck.

    Nearly a million Syrians have fled to the Syrian-Turkish border since December, amid heavy fighting in the Idlib region between Turkish-backed rebels and Syrian government forces.

    Turkey is already hosting 3.7 million Syrian refugees, as well as migrants from other countries such as Afghanistan – but previously stopped them from leaving for Europe.

    In a televised speech, Mr Erdogan said the EU had provided no help for resettling Syrian refugees in “safe zones” inside Syria.

    After Turkey opened its doors for migrants to leave its territory for Europe last week, he said, “hundreds of thousands have crossed, soon it will reach millions”.

    The Turkish leader gave no evidence for his figures, while Greece said about 1,000 migrants had reached its eastern Aegean islands from Turkey since Sunday morning.

    In addition, Greece said it had stopped almost 10,000 migrants from crossing its land border in 24 hours. Some migrants tossed stones and metal bars when stopped, and Greek border guards fired tear gas.

  • Iranian council member dies from coronavirus

    Iranian council member dies from coronavirus

    Tasnim news agency on Monday reported that Seyed Mohammad Mir-Mohammadi, a member of the Islamic Republic of Iran’s Expediency Discernment Council, died of COVID-19.

    His death comes as other top Iranian officials have contracted the virus.

    The country has the highest death toll in the world, after China.

    Seyed Mohammad Mir-Mohammadi was 71.

    Iran, along with Italy, has just recently become a new coronavirus hotbed outside of China.

    READ ALSO: Coronavirus: Italy’s Regional minister tests positive

    The number of people infected with COVID-19 in the Islamic Republic is approaching 600.

    Over 40 people have died from the coronavirus disease in Iran.

    The novel coronavirus was first detected in China in late December and has since spread to more than 50 countries, prompting the World Health Organisation (WHO) to declare a global health emergency.

    So far, the virus infected more than 79,000 people in mainland China, while over 2,800 people died and nearly 40,000 have recovered.

    According to the latest WHO data, the number of those infected outside China has reached 4,691, while 67 people have died.

    Earlier, several Iranian officials fell ill with coronavirus as Iran has become the epicentre of the outbreak in the Middle East.

    (Sputnik/NAN)

  • Coronavirus: Italy’s Regional minister tests positive

    Coronavirus: Italy’s Regional minister tests positive

    A regional minister in Lombardy, the Italian region most affected by the novel coronavirus outbreak, has tested positive for the virus.

    The Lombardy region said in a statement on Monday that the contagion concerns Alessandro Mattinzoli, 60, who serves as Commissioner for Economic Development.

    READ ALSO: Coronavirus: ‘More than 100 Nigerians met with Italian’

    The region said the entire 17-member Lombardy regional government would undergo testing for the novel coronavirus.

    Earlier, Lombardy President, Attilio Fontana, said he would self-quarantine after a member of his staff tested positive for the virus.

    (NAN)

  • Baby, dog contract virus as new cases, deaths rise

    Baby, dog contract virus as new cases, deaths rise

    Agency Reporter

    A forty-five day old and a dog have become the latest confirmed carriers of Coronavirus pandemic.

    The parents of the baby in South Korea and owner of the pet in Hong Kong had earlier tested positive to the virus.

    By Sunday, eight countries – United States, China, United Kingdom, Iran, Australia, Thailand, Qatar and Lebanon — recorded more deaths and more positive cases of the virus.

    More than 87,690 people are infected as the virus spreads around the world with hotspots in South Korea, Europe and the Middle East.

    The Korea Times reported that the baby boy, the youngest so far to contract the virus, and his mother, are in self-quarantine and in good condition.

    South Korea, which is grappling with the largest outbreak of the virus outside China, urged citizens to stay indoors, warning of a “critical moment” in the spread of the infection.

    Its Center for Disease Control and Prevention (KCDC) reported 376 cases and one death linked to the virus. The country’s total number of infections stood at 3,736 last night.

    Churches were closed in the country yesterday with many following services online.

    In the capital Seoul, about a dozen worshippers were turned away from the Yoido Full Gospel Church, which put a sermon for its 560,000 followers on YouTube, filmed with a small choir instead of the usual 200 members and 60-strong orchestra.

    “I had heard there would be no service, but just came to check as I live nearby, but yes, it is so empty,” said one of them, Song Young-koo, as he left South Korea’s biggest church.

    For the first time in its 236-year history, South Korea’s Catholic Church decided to halt mass at more than 1,700 locations nationwide. Buddhist temples also called off events.

    In Hong Kong, the infected dog was quarantined after it tested “weak positive” for coronavirus. Authorities said however there was no evidence yet that the virus could be transmitted to man’s best friend.

    China reports 573 new positive cases

    Mainland China reported 573 new confirmed cases as of Saturday, up from 427 the previous day and the highest daily increase in a week, the country’s health authorities said on Sunday.

    The number of deaths stood at 35, down from 47 on the previous day, bringing the total death toll in mainland China to 2,870, the National Health Commission said.

    Of the deaths, 34 were in Hubei province, the epicenter of the outbreak, and the others were in neighboring Henan. Hubei accounted for 570 of the new cases, of which 565 were in the provincial capital of Wuhan, where the virus is believed to have originated.

    The three new cases outside Hubei is the lowest since the National Health Commission began compiling daily numbers on January 20.

    U.S. records 71 confirmed and presumptive positive cases  

    There are now 71 confirmed and presumptive positive cases of coronavirus in the United States (U.S.). They include 44 people who were aboard the Diamond Princess cruise ship, three people repatriated from China and 24 cases that occurred in the US, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

    The two dozen cases across the U.S. are in Arizona, California, Illinois, Massachusetts, Oregon, Washington state and Wisconsin.

    A presumptive case is a patient who has tested positive at a state, county or city lab, but whose results have not yet been confirmed by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

    Washington State health officials are also investigating a possible outbreak of   the virus at a long-term nursing facility in which two people tested positive for the disease.

    The news comes the same day the first US death from coronavirus was reported in Washington state, health officials said Saturday. The man in his 50s, who had underlying health conditions, was not a resident at the care facility.

    UK records 12 new cases

    There have been 12 new cases in the UK, bringing the total to 35, according to British health authorities.

    Chief Medical Officer Chris Whitty said in a statement on Twitter that three of those who tested positive were close contacts of a known case.

    Six others had recently travelled from Italy, and two from Iran. One patient had no relevant travel, and authorities were investigating how they had caught the virus.

    Iran’s records 11 new deaths, 385  cases

    Iran has reported 11 new coronavirus deaths. The outbreak has claimed the lives of 54 people, the health ministry said.

    “There were 385 new cases of infected people in the last 24 hours, increasing the total number to 978. The death toll is 54,” Kianush Jahanpur, spokesman for the health ministry said.

    He called on Iranians to avoid any unnecessary trips and stay at home.

    Australia records one death, new case

    Australia has recorded its first death from the coronavirus after a 78-year-old man who had been evacuated from the quarantined Diamond Princess cruise ship died in a Perth hospital.

    “Our condolences are with his family and unfortunately he’s the first death we’ve had from coronavirus in Australia,” Andrew Robertson, the chief health officer of the state of Western Australia, told journalists.

    The man’s wife also caught the virus, but is in stable condition, authorities said.

    The new case brings the total number of infections in the country to 26.

    Lebanon confirms three new cases

    Lebanon’s health ministry said three more people tested positive for virus after arriving from Iran, bringing the total in the country to 10.

    The three patients, who had been in isolation at home, were quarantined at a Beirut hospital after showing symptoms.

    Lebanon closed its schools and halted flights for non-residents from countries with outbreaks, namely China, Iran, Italy and South Korea.

    Qatar confirms two new cases

    Qatar also confirmed two more cases of the virus, according to the health ministry’s Twitter account, bringing the total number of confirmed cases to three.

    The two Qatari individuals were evacuated from Iran on February 27 and have been placed in full quarantine, it said.

    Thailand reports first death

    Thailand recorded its first fatality in the coronavirus outbreak, Reuters reported, citing Suwanchai Wattanaying charoen, director-general of the Department of Disease Control.

    The 35-year-old man also had dengue fever, Suwanchai told a news conference on Sunday.