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European cities announce new restrictions as COVID-19 cases soar

European cities announce new restrictions as COVID-19 cases soar

GUY FAULCONBRIDGE and INGRID MELANDER EUROPEAN countries from Denmark to Greece announced new restrictions on Friday to curb surging coronavirus infections in some of their largest cities, while Britain was reported to be considering a new national lockdown. Cases in the United Kingdom almost doubled to 6,000 per day in the latest reporting week, hospital admissions rose and infection rates soared across parts of northern England and London. British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said it was inevitable that the country would see a second wave of the coronavirus, and while he did not want another national lockdown, the government may…
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COVID-19 isn’t the only infectious disease scientists are trying to find a vaccine for

COVID-19 isn’t the only infectious disease scientists are trying to find a vaccine for

DANIELLE STANISIC, Associate Research Leader, Institute for Glycomics, Griffith University JOHNSON MAK, Professor, Institute of Glycomics, Griffith University MORE than 28 million people around the world have now contracted COVID-19, and more than 900,000 people have died. Research groups across the globe are rightly racing to find a vaccine to protect against SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19. While it’s not surprising all eyes are on this vaccine race, COVID-19 isn’t the only disease for which scientists are currently trying to find a vaccine. Let’s look at three others. The big three We regard malaria, tuberculosis and HIV/AIDS as the…
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Beyond COVID-19, Africa needs an integrated approach to development

Beyond COVID-19, Africa needs an integrated approach to development

PETER ERIKSSON and BAN KI-MOON As the virus spreads across the African continent, innovative and collaborative initiatives are springing up to strengthen healthcare systems.  Mobile apps that transmit agricultural prices and weather forecasts to farmers are also being used to send out messages on how to avoid contagion by Covid-19. In South Africa, the government is working with the private sector to manufacture 10,000 ventilators. In Kenya and Ghana, garment factories have switched to producing masks and protective clothing. But in spite of this noteworthy spirit of collaboration and the efforts in healthcare systems to contain the pandemic, Covid-19 cases…
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Namibia to allow international travel, lift COVID state of emergency

Namibia to allow international travel, lift COVID state of emergency

THE Namibian government has announced that it will open up the country for international travel from September 18, as it ends a six-month-long state of emergency with the average number of daily coronavirus cases trending downwards. President Hage Geingob, during a media briefing, said the government had considered the economic implications of continuing the restrictions and the state of preparedness of its hospitals. The announcement comes a day after South African President Cyril Ramaphosa said the country would allow international travel from October and lifted almost all lockdown restrictions with effect from September 21. Namibia's economy which relies heavily on…
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S.Africa tourism sector cautiously hopeful as borders set to reopen

S.Africa tourism sector cautiously hopeful as borders set to reopen

WENDELL ROELF SOUTH Africa's pandemic-battered tourism sector on Thursday welcomed a government decision to allow international travel from October 1 but officials worried restrictions on key markets facing high infection rates could curtail any recovery. President Cyril Ramaphosa on Wednesday eased lockdown restrictions, among the world's strictest at the height of South Africa's outbreak, in a bid to revive the economy. Uncertainty over still unpublished travel regulations however, is tempering hopes of a quick recovery for the tourism sector, which contributes nearly 9% of GDP but has been devastated by massive job losses and business closures. "If we do not…
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COVID-19 graft scandals fuel South Africans’ anger with ruling ANC

COVID-19 graft scandals fuel South Africans’ anger with ruling ANC

SIYABONGA SISHI and ALEXANDER WINNING A spate of corruption scandals during the COVID-19 pandemic has further fuelled some South Africans' frustration with the ruling African National Congress (ANC) party and its failure to tackle graft despite renewed promises from President Cyril Ramaphosa. Reports of suspect deals between state officials and businesses providing medical equipment, as well as food aid parcels to the poor, have sparked outrage in a country which has recorded some 650,000 coronavirus cases, the highest number in Africa, and is also in the grip of a deepening recession. "In the coronavirus pandemic, we thought ... things will…
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Zimbabwe eases COVID-19 restrictions as exam classes start

Zimbabwe eases COVID-19 restrictions as exam classes start

ZIMBABWE has lifted a ban on inter-city travel and extended working hours as the government gradually re-opens the economy by easing COVID-19 restrictions. The Southern African nation went into a lockdown in March and President Emmerson Mnangagwa later imposed an overnight curfew to curb the spread of the coronavirus. The pandemic has battered Zimbabwe, which was already reeling under hyperinflation and a looming scarcity of basic amenities before the pandemic struck. The country of 14 million people has seen 7,531 cases and 224 deaths so far, according to a Reuters tally. The cabinet approved the "resumption of inter-city travel to…
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South Africa opens its borders, economy but cautions on COVID-19 resurgence

South Africa opens its borders, economy but cautions on COVID-19 resurgence

AFRICAN MIRROR REPORTER BOUYED by declining COVID-19 infections, hospitalisations and deaths, South Africa has all but lifted restrictions on economic and social activity but warned of a possible resurgence. South African President Cyril Ramaphosa has announced that the country will move to a “new normal”, under COVID-19 alert level 1. Under the “new normal”, South African wills be required to exercise caution, social distancing, good hygiene and wear a mask at all times.  In terms of the new minor restrictions, the country will gradually open its borders to allow for international travel. From September 21, the following changes will come…
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Pandemic makes tackling global woes more critical than ever – Bill Gates

Pandemic makes tackling global woes more critical than ever – Bill Gates

ELLEN WULFHORST  THE coronavirus pandemic has wiped out progress on lofty goals such as ending world poverty and hunger in the next decade, but the economic damage of COVID-19 shows how badly such global development is needed, philanthropist Bill Gates said. Across the world, the virus has deepened social and economic inequality in areas like education, pay and health care access, Gates said in remarks accompanying Monday's release of a global development report by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. The report outlines ways in which COVID-19 has wreaked economic damage and derailed progress on many of the global development…
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S.Africa’s coronavirus loan scheme lags, hobbling govt relief package

S.Africa’s coronavirus loan scheme lags, hobbling govt relief package

EMMA RUMNEY and ALEXANDER WINNING SOUTH Africa’s National Treasury plans no further easing of its coronavirus loan scheme criteria to stimulate uptake, it told Reuters, meaning almost a third of the government’s 500 billion rands ($30 billion) relief package may end up going unused. The 200 billion rand loan programme is a pillar of South African efforts to shield small businesses from the impact of the pandemic. Conditions were tweaked in July, including expanding who qualifies and extending the repayment grace period, after relatively few firms applied for the loans. Still, only 14.5 billion rand had been paid out through…
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