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Zimbabwe president gets COVID-19 dose

Zimbabwe president gets COVID-19 dose

ZIMBABWE's President Emmerson Mnangagwa and some opposition politicians received China's Sinovac COVID-19 vaccine in the tourist resort of Victoria Falls yesterday as part of efforts to encourage citizens to get inoculated. Zimbabwe has registered vaccines from China, India and Russia for emergency use but none so far from Western manufacturers. In a country where suspicion and scepticism often trump facts, Mnangagwa's vaccination at a public event, together with opposition leaders, was meant to assure citizens that the vaccines were safe. The southern African nation had planned to administer the Sinopharm vaccine to 53,000 health workers and selected security forces when…
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Sudan to receive Chinese vaccines

Sudan to receive Chinese vaccines

SUDAN will receive its first shipment of 250,000 doses of the Chinese Sinopharm COVID-19 vaccine tomorrow, according to state news agency SUNA. Sudan became the first country in the Middle East and North Africa region to receive vaccine doses through the COVAX facility this month when 828,000 doses of the shot produced by AstraZeneca arrived in the East African country.
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International research collaborations: how can we shift the power towards Africa?

International research collaborations: how can we shift the power towards Africa?

SALOME MASWIME, Professor of Global Surgery, University of Cape Town KEVIN MARSH, Professor of Tropical Medicine, University of Oxford RIFAT ATUN, Professor of Global Health Systems, Harvard University THE higher education sector globally has been disrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic. Academics have been discussing various aspects of the disruptions in a series of webinars organised by the University of Cape Town. One area of particular interest is how the pandemic could affect international research collaborations. The Conversation Africa’s Nontobeko Mtshali asked panellists to share their views. Could COVID-19 change the power dynamics between African and foreign institutions when it comes…
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Coronavirus fans flames of love in Nigeria’s online dating scene

Coronavirus fans flames of love in Nigeria’s online dating scene

NNEKA CHILE and ANGELA UKOMADU OREULUWA Akinnawo is in his element. Lagos's bars and restaurants are shut and Nigerians are struggling to socialise. The pandemic is his perfect time to find a soul mate online. "The dating thing during this restriction works perfectly for me because I'm really an indoors person," said Akinnawo, a 25-year-old digital marketer. Sparked by coronavirus, Akinnawo and others like him are part of a boom in internet dating tailored for Nigerian professionals. In Lagos, pre-outbreak courtship often revolved around social functions, as well as couples meeting through church or their mosque's social networks. Vybe, an…
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South African cabinet minister recovers from COVID-19

South African cabinet minister recovers from COVID-19

AFRICAN MIRROR REPORTER SOUTH Africa’s Minister of Defence and Military Veterans Nosiviwe Mapisa-Nqakula has recovered from COVID-19, the government has announced. In a statement, the Government Communication and Information Systems said Mapisa-Nqakula and her husband, Charles, the national security advisor to President Cyril Ramaphosa, have both fully recovered after testing positive and their symptoms have cleared. Charles Nqakula “The Minister and Mr Nqakula tested positive recently and are currently still in self-isolation. We are glad that all their symptoms have cleared and we are looking forward to them finishing their 14 days of mandatory self-quarantine period.  Both the Minister and…
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Ethiopian maids ‘dumped’ in the streets in Lebanon as COVID hits

Ethiopian maids ‘dumped’ in the streets in Lebanon as COVID hits

ETHIOPIAN mother Alemtsehay Nasir went to Lebanon dreaming that her maid's job would let her earn money to make a better life for her young son. But she was fired when the COVID-19 pandemic hit and her employers dumped her on the streets. The 32-year-old was left on the curb outside the Ethiopian consulate in a suburb of Beirut, one of hundreds of women abandoned by employers without the means to get home after the pandemic hit, on top of a financial crisis that has devastated the Lebanese economy. Lebanese labour laws offer little protection for migrant workers. The best…
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S.Africa COVID-19 cases set to reach 300,000 despite early lockdown

S.Africa COVID-19 cases set to reach 300,000 despite early lockdown

TIM COCKS SOUTH Africa's cases of COVID-19 were set to reach 300,000 on Wednesday, the most in Africa and in the top 10 in the world, despite a swiftly imposed lockdown aimed at preventing infections spiralling as they did in the West. Africa's most industrialised nation has 298,292 cases at the last count, and with positive tests now increasing at a rate of more than 10,000 a day, it is all but certain to vault over the 300,000 mark when the ministry releases nightly figures on Wednesday. At the end of March, President Cyril Ramaphosa took aggressive, early action, shutting…
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Beautiful send off for SA political stalwart

Beautiful send off for SA political stalwart

AFRICAN MIRROR REPORTER ARCHBISHOP Emeritus Desmond Tutu has led friend, comrades and family in paying warm and glowing tributes to anti-apartheid stalwart Tom Manthata, who has been laid to rest. Tutu told mourners at the funeral that Manthata was a wonderful person who was committed to the liberation of South Africans. He said Manthata was gentle but strong. “ Tom was a wonderful, wonderful person.  You would think that he could not say boo to a goose until you found out how deeply committed he was to the liberation of our people, shown by the fact that he and others…
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UN warns of dangerous drop in vaccinations during COVID pandemic

UN warns of dangerous drop in vaccinations during COVID pandemic

KATE KELLAND LEVELS of childhood immunisations against dangerous diseases such as measles, tetanus and diphtheria have dropped alarmingly during the COVID-19 pandemic, putting millions of children at risk, United Nations agencies said on Wednesday. "The avoidable suffering and death caused by children missing out on routine immunisations could be far greater than COVID-19 itself," World Health Organization (WHO) director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said in a joint report with UNICEF. Three-quarters of the 82 countries that responded to a survey for the report said they had suffered coronavirus-related disruptions to their immunisation programmes as of May 2020. Most problems were linked…
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In African villages, coronavirus sparks fears of a spike in malaria deaths

In African villages, coronavirus sparks fears of a spike in malaria deaths

SALLY HAYDEN IN her small home in northern Uganda surrounded by the six children she cares for, Acayo Rose, 74, sleeps under a mosquito net she inherited from a dead relative. "My net has many holes," said Rose, dressed in a t-shirt with the words "never quit", as she gestured towards the bedroom in the old, run-down building in Gulu district where she lives. "All the nets have holes." Rose has just recovered from malaria, which also infected the two-year-old grandchild she cares for. She is unemployed and went into debt to pay for the 25,000 Ugandan shillings ($6.80) medication…
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