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Monday 30 November 2020

Overview of Africa Educates Her Campaign Angola. Interview with Sofonie Dala. Bonus

COVID-19 lockdown in Angola has had a devastating impact on children and young ladies with 80 percent saying they learned little or nothing during the pandemic. According to the results, 60 percent of the children reported had no contact with teachers at all during and after lockdown.

This short video provides an overview of the challenges and issues that girls in Angola have faced during the COVID-19 related school closures (this include some of the issues the girls we interviewed shared with us) and what actions we have taken as part of the #AfricaEducatesHer campaign to promote girls re-entrance to school.


Hello! We are here again, to give some brief considerations of Africa Educates Her Campaign that was carried out in Angola from August to November 2020.

My name is Sofonie Dala, I am the organizer of the Africa Educates Her Campaign in Angola, which aims to bring awareness around issues that hinder girls and women from accessing education during the COVID 19 pandemic.

This campaign was divided into two stages, during the schools closures and after school reopening. In the first phase we recorded over twenty video interviews and over thirty interviews in the second stage, where students shared with us their fears and challenges during the pandemic and how the covid-19 affected their studies.

The second part of the program we call ''Girls Back to School After Lockdown Campaign'' aiming to certify that there is no weak compliance to COVID-19 measures in schools and also to help us understand why children and youth may experience anxiety and concern (as schools reopen)".

Today I am here with Laura, one of the girls who participated in the interviews, she will talk about her life and how the covid-19 affected her as a student.

Laura's Feedback

Hello, my name is Laura, I am a 12th grader high school student. I am here once again to share with you how covid-19 has affected my academic life. 

The coronavirus affected me a lot in the sense that I stayed a long time without studying (over 6 months). I would like to say that at school we are complying with social distancing and we are following the prevention rules against covid-19.

I also would like to mention that I already forgot some subjects that we studied in the beginning of the academic year, but fortunately, some teachers have been recapping the classes so that we can remember what we have forgotten.

How have teachers behaved? Do they attend classes?
Teachers have been attending classes, but sometimes they enter the classroom in a bad mood fearing to catch the virus.

How is the dynamic at school? Have all students returned to classrooms?
No, not all of them, some students did not return to school because they are afraid of covid-19.

Has your school been following the covid-19 prevention rules?
Yes, they have been checking our temperature with the thermometer, we constantly wash our hands with water and soap and we keep a distance of 1 meter from each other in the classroom.

And what do you think about our campaign? What is the impact that it caused on you?
I really liked the campaign, it gave me an opportunity to express how covid-19 affected me, since this virus affected not only my academic life but other work activities  I use to do.

Click here to watch Laura's first interview


In addition to what was said above, we distributed some school and bio-safety materials to some of the most vulnerable girls.




Distribution of school and biosafety materials


Click here to watch Ivete's interview



Click here to watch Flavia's first interview 


Common picture with children

We intended to distribute more materials and reach the rural areas to cover those girls who have been left behind. Unfortunately, due to lack of financial resources, we were unable to reach them this year. But we will do our best to get there next year if we manage to raise some funds to address these challenges.


Click here to see the entire campaign from August to November 2020

1. Celebrating the completion of Girls back to school campaign: 

https://sofoniedala.blogspot.com/2020/11/the-grand-finale-congratulations-we-are.html


2. Celebrating the successful completion of Africa Educates Her Campaign - Angola:

Link to signup form and pledge: 

https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1hGOHt-E0TDUBT_oNswL1I34ynB1FtLZLsq_m3HjEnDY/edit

Don't miss this opportunity to bring girls back to school. Join us!

Share your experiences learning / teaching during the school closures & the projects or initiatives you've launched to get girls back to school post #COVID-19 in your local communities.


ANGOLAN EXECUTIVE INVEST IN TRAINING AND ECONOMIC ORIENTATION OF YOUTHS

 The Ministry of Youth and Sports alongside the Ministry of the Economy and Planning will implement until 2022 a training and economic orientation program for the youth, within the framework of a cooperation protocol.

Nito Alves, activista social presente no evento


According to a note from the Ministry of Youth and Sports (Minjud) to which ANGOP has had access, the program will be managed by the Angolan Youth Institute (IAJ) and the National Institute of Small and Medium Enterprises (INAPEM).

It is an initiative of the Angolan Executive, with a national scope that covers several areas of training, with emphasis on preparation of business plans, management of companies and cooperatives, accounting, technical assistance, formalization of business and entrepreneurship.

According to the note, the program expects to reach a total of 20 thousand young people across the country, in the period between 2020 and 2022, and will essentially benefit young people with a vocation for entrepreneurship.

“This is an innovative and comprehensive program, which aims, essentially, to guarantee the capacities within Angolan youth in view of the structuring projects that the Executive has been developing within the scope of the Production Support, Export Diversification and Import Replacement Program (PRODESI) ”, The note states.

The program was formalized and endorsed by the referred ministerial departments last August and it will be managed through the provincial representations of IAJ and INAPEM.

The cooperation protocol aims to promote entrepreneurship and qualified youth cooperatives as an essential tool for generating self-employment and promoting economic participation by young people.

It also aims to provide economic literacy programs for young people, so that their businesses are better structured and thus become feasible, reliable and safe, to boost business models based on innovation and creativity, to ensure greater viability and flexibility in supporting projects of young entrepreneurs , as well as to identify young potential entrepreneurs and support the development of their skills.

The program foresees, among other actions, training, monitoring, consultancy and monitoring, support in setting up companies and cooperatives, guidance on management, the market and access to credit within the framework of ongoing programs, formalization of activities.

It also includes certification, business incubation and acceleration, access to finance, support for setting up startups and skills development.


COVID-19: ANGOLA WITH 16 NEW INFECTIONS, ONE DEATH

 The Angolan health authorities announced, last Sunday, the registration of 16 new infections and one death, in the last 24 hours.

Franco Mufinda, Secretario de Estado da Saúde

According to the secretary of State for Public Health, Franco Mufinda, who spoke at the usual Covid-19 data update session, the new cases were all diagnosed in Luanda, as until 3pm no cases were registered in other provinces.

The list of new patients, whose ages range from 1 to 68 years, comprises 11 males and 5 females.

Regarding the death, Franco Mufinda informed that he is a 57-year-old Angolan citizen that resided in Luanda.

Angola registered so far 15,103 cases, with 346 deaths, 7,763 recovered and 6,994 active ones.

Of the diseased patients, 6 are in critical condition with invasive mechanical ventilation, 16 severe, 174 moderate, 177 with mild symptoms and 6,621 asymptomatic.

The Angolan health authorities take care of 373 patients admitted to treatment centers in the country.

Damage to burned GCB building in Ghana manageable

 The SIC Insurance Company Limited, insurers of GCB bank, has inspected the extent of damage caused by fire on Liberty House branch of the GCB Bank at Kantamanto, in Accra.

Damage to burned GCB building in Ghana manageable


The inspection was done to assess the extent of damage on the Bank’s properties.

Mr Emmanuel Simpiney-Mensah Jr., the Head of Corporate and Risk at SIC Insurance Company Limited, told the Ghana News Agency after the assessment that the damage was manageable.

He said the fire was concentrated at one place but the smoke billowed around.

He said SIC would be meeting with the Management of the Bank soon to forge ahead with the next step.

He said for now they could not come up with any estimate, unless the Bank provided them with their estimate of things damaged.

He called on the public to patronize insurance packages to protect their properties.

Preliminary investigation have established that the wildfire that gutted the Bank, in Accra, on Saturday, started from a storeroom packed with sanitizers, papers and batteries.

Earlier, Mr Ellis Robinson Okoe, Divisional Officer 1, the Public Relations Officer (PRO) of the Ghana National Fire Service, told the Ghana News Agency (GNA) that, “only a small part of the first floor of the building got burnt, And that firefighters determined the cause of the fire in time.

Mr Okoe said his office got a distressed call around 1059 hours that the GCB Liberty house branch was engulfed in fire and rushed to the scene with eight fire tenders.

He said the personnel within an hour, brought the fire under control and stopped it from spreading to other parts of the building.

Elite runners brave Delhi half-marathon dubbed ‘suicidal’

 Some of the world’s leading long-distance runners have participated in a half-marathon in New Delhi as India’s capital grapples with a surge in COVID-19 cases and air pollution that has recently been among the world’s worst.

Elite runners brave Delhi half-marathon dubbed ‘suicidal’

More than 60 professional runners participated in the race on Sunday, while several hundred enthusiasts ran in other cities on routes of their choice, using a mobile app to post their race timings, said the event organizers.

The route was sprayed with chemicals to minimize the effect of the annual toxic smog that blankets the megacity in winter due to traffic and industrial pollution, crop stubble burning, and cold temperatures.

The air quality index - which monitors tiny PM2.5 and PM10 particles that get into the bloodstream and vital organs - was at 244 and in the “poor” category, the Central Pollution Control Board said on Sunday.

Doctors last week said it would be “suicidal” for runners to take part in the competition given the twin risks.

Ethiopia’s Amdework Walelegn won the men’s race with a course record of 58.53 minutes with last year’s champion Andamlak Belihu just a second behind.

The previous best was 59.06 set by Ethiopia’s Guye Adola in 2014.

"The course was very good," Walelegn said. “In earlier years there were a lot of U-turns, but this time it was flat and good to race on.”

In the women's race, Yalemzerf Yehualaw of Ethiopia won in 1.04.46 - also a record - with Kenya's Ruth Chepngetich second.Avinash Sable, who qualified for the Tokyo Olympics in the 3,000-meter steeplechase, was the top Indian finisher with a record national time of 1: 00.30.

The Airtel Delhi Half Marathon 2020 “is a very significant moment for Indian sports since the pandemic began”, said Abhinav Bindra, brand ambassador for the event and India’s only individual Olympic gold medalist.

The event is a step towards resuming competitive sports in India and will be a benchmark for other sports to follow, he said.

The race also took place as thousands of farmers, riled by new agricultural laws, staged a third straight day of protests, blockading some arterial roads into the capital.

Sunday 29 November 2020

Trump loses another election court challenge

 The US state of Pennsylvania’s supreme court has dismissed another legal challenge to the election by supporters of President Donald Trump, further reducing his already near-impossible odds of overturning the results.

Trump loses another election court challenge

A Republican lawsuit sought to invalidate mail-in ballots in the battleground state – which President-elect Joe Biden won by about 81,000 votes – or to throw out all votes and allow the state’s legislature to decide the winner.

The court dismissed both claims on Saturday in a unanimous decision, calling the second one an “extraordinary proposition that the court disenfranchise all 6.9 million Pennsylvanians who voted in the general election”.

The lawsuit argued that a Pennsylvania law from 2019 allowing universal mail-in voting was unconstitutional.

The judges said their November 21 challenge to the law was filed too late, coming more than a year after it was enacted and with the election results “becoming seemingly apparent”.

Pennsylvania officially certified Biden’s victory there on November 24. The lawsuit had also sought to stop certification.

Saturday’s decision follows a long line of similar ones, including a ruling the day before in which a federal appeals court flatly dismissed Trump’s claim that the election was unfair and refused to freeze Biden’s win in Pennsylvania.

Trump has refused to give up on his claims of fraud in the November 3 election despite repeated court defeats, tweeting conspiracy theories and vowing to continue his legal fight.

On Thursday, he said for the first time that he would leave the White House if Biden is officially confirmed the winner by the Electoral College on December 14.

But on Friday he tweeted that “Biden can only enter the White House as president if he can prove that his ridiculous ‘80,000,000 votes’ were not fraudulently or illegally obtained”.

Biden, who is to be sworn in on January 20, won 306 votes in the Electoral College to Trump’s 232.

The president-elect has said Americans “won’t stand” for attempts to derail the vote outcome.

Sudan forces seize large weapons haul near Ethiopia

 Sudan’s Rapid Support Forces (RSF) have seized significant amounts of weapons, ammunition and military equipment on its eastern border with Ethiopia.

Sudan forces seize large weapons haul near Ethiopia

The RSF made the announcement on Saturday of the seizure in Kassala state, the official SUNA news agency reported.

The seized weapons included a number of mortar rounds and assault weapons, said the report.

“The weapons were seized as part of the operations carried out by the security forces these days on the border line in anticipation of any security threat,” it said.

The RSF did not specify the threat to security. However, fighting has raged for three weeks in neighboring Ethiopia between federal troops and forces of the northern Tigray region.

An estimated 40,000 Tigrayan refugees have fled Ethiopia into Sudan overwhelming local authorities with the UN warning of a humanitarian disaster.

Ethiopia’s Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed announced the end of military operations in Tigray on Saturday after the army said it was in “full control” of the regional capital, Mekelle.

But hours later, the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) said the heavily armed Tigrayan forces would keep fighting the federal government. Some experts have warned of a drawn-out conflict that could destabilize the wider Horn of Africa region.


Al Jazeera

Dozens killed in attack on farm workers in Nigeria

 Attackers have killed dozens of people working in rice fields in northeastern Nigeria, according to several local sources cited by news agencies.

Dozens killed in attack on farm workers in Nigeria

The assailants on Saturday tied up the agricultural workers and slit their throats in the village of Koshobe, near Maiduguri, the capital of Borno state.

“We have recovered 43 dead bodies, all of them slaughtered, along with six others with serious injuries,” Babakura Kolo, the leader of a local militia fighting armed groups in the region, told AFP news agency.

Reuters news agency, citing a village leader, a local fighter with the Zamarmari group and a police source, also reported the attack, putting the death toll to at least 40 people.

A search by the authorities for the attackers has been launched, it added.

Boko Haram and Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP) are both active in northeast Nigeria. You have thousands of people have been killed in the conflict, which has displaced about two million since 2009.

“It is no doubt the [work] of Boko Haram who operate in the area and frequently attack farmers,” Kolo, who helped the survivors, said of Saturday’s attack.

The victims were laborers from Sokoto state in northwest Nigeria, roughly 1,000km (600 miles) away, who had traveled to the northeast to find work, said another militiaman, Ibrahim Liman, who gave the same toll.

“There were 60 farmers who were contracted to harvest paddy in the rice fields. Forty-three were slaughtered, with six injured, ”Liman told AFP.

Eight others were missing, presumed to have been kidnapped by the attackers, he said.

The bodies were taken to nearby Zabarmari village, where they would be kept ahead of burial on Sunday, according to resident Mala Bunu who took part in the search and rescue operation.

Last month, Boko Haram fighters killed 22 farmers working on their irrigation fields near Maiduguri in two separate incidents.

Boko Haram and ISWAP have increasingly targeted loggers, herders and fishermen in their violent campaign, accusing them of spying and passing information to the military and the local militia fighting them.


SOURCE: NEWS AGENCIES

Brazilians to vote in municipal runoff as COVID-19 rages

 Brazilians are preparing to head to the polls for municipal election runoffs on Sunday, the COVID-19 infections continue to arise in the South American country.

Brazilians to vote in municipal runoff as COVID-19 rages

Voters will cast their ballots in mayoral and city council races in 57 Brazilian municipalities, including Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro, the country’s two most-populous cities, where mayoral races remain undecided.

Brazil’s first round of voting on November 15 involved some 500,000 city council candidates and 19,000 mayoral candidates in more than 5,570 municipalities.

The vote was the first time Brazilians had gone to the ballot box since far-right President Jair Bolsonaro was elected in 2018.

Bolsonaro-backed candidates performed poorly in the first round, with only nine of nearly 60 candidates backed by the president advancing to the next round, according to a tally by Estado de S Paulo newspaper.

Bolsonaro, who has resisted COVID-19 restrictions and been antagonistic towards local leaders who have imposed lockdowns to prevent the spread of the virus, won Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro easily in 2018.

But the two candidates he backed in those cities this time around did not advance to the runoffs.

On Saturday, Brazil registered 51,922 new cases of COVID-19 and 587 additional deaths linked to the virus, bringing its totals since the pandemic began to more than 6.2 million cases and more than 172,500 deaths.

Brazil has the third-highest tallies of COVID-19 cases and deaths in the world, after India and the United States, according to Johns Hopkins University.

On Friday, Guilherme Boulos, a rising star of the Brazilian left who is running to be mayor of Sao Paulo, tested positive for COVID-19.

The diagnosis forced Boulos to cancel his final debate against centrist incumbent Mayor Bruno Covas, who contracted the virus himself in June.

Boulos’s campaign said he is asymptomatic but “will observe the quarantine protocol for the necessary period”.

SOURCE: AL JAZEERA AND NEWS AGENCIES

THE ANGOLAN PRESIDENT RECOMMENDS CREATION OF MAINTENANCE FUND FOR NATIONAL ARCHIVES

 Angolan president João Lourenço has recommended the creation of a fund for maintenance of the new headquarters of the National Archives of Angola (ANA).

Presidente da República, João Lourenço, observa maquete do Arquivo Nacional de Angola

Inaugurated Saturday by the President of Republic, the infrastructure ushers in a new era in the scientific modernization of the country's archival policy.

Speaking to the press, after inaugurating the USD 97 million project, Joao Lourenço said that the new structure needs a budget, "whether from the State General Budget or from other revenues".

According to the Head of State, with modern facilities, the country will be able to collect, select, disinfect and preserve documents, magazines, books, maps and art pieces with a greater guarantee of longevity.

The president considered it a gain for students, scholars and researchers from various branches of science, especially culture and history, "who have a space with excellent conditions to work".

"The investment made is very large and we need to preserve it", stressed the President of the Republic, adding that the use of the site must comply with criteria that afford the users to perform the activity.

The new structure, located in Camama, began to be built in 2008, in an area of ​​four hectares and has 30,540 square meters of construction.

The new building of the National Archives of Angola, with five floors, houses 69 archive rooms, three exhibition rooms and nine training rooms, 39 offices, two laboratories, two auditoriums, among other facilities.

With an initial budget of USD 72 million, the work was increased with USD 25 million, aimed at inter-connection of the energy, water and final adjustments and equipment networks.

The building is part of the National Development Plan's agenda, which provides for the implementation of the National Archives System, among other objectives.

The infrastructure will allow the right accommodation of the existing documentation in the former premises of the National Archives of Angola, as well as the incorporation of the documents produced after 1975, by the Sovereign Bodies.

The archives will be transferred to the new facilities with the purpose of improving the conservation and quality of services, including the access of researchers and students to its collection.

The National Archives of Angola is a public institute with legal personality, administrative, financial and patrimonial autonomy, whose mission is to coordinate the national archival policy and to evaluate, collect, classify, preserve and divulge documents of archival and historical value.

Created under Decree No. 51/09 of 16 September 2009 of the Council of Ministers, the National Archives also has the functions of formulating general guidelines and supervising methodologically the functioning of the National Archive System.

Until its affirmation as an institution of the Angolan State, guarantor of the preservation of all archival heritage in the country, there has been a long history of reporting the changes that have taken place in the archives services over time.

In April 1977, the National Center for Documentation and Historical Research was created, an institution that dealt with the problem of the Archives and, as such, inherited the entire collection of the then Historical Archives of Angola.

COVID-19: ANGOLA REPORTS 79 NEW INFECTIONS, 66 RECOVERIES

 Angolan health authorities announced Saturday the record of 79 new infections, 66 patients recovered and three deaths in the last 24 hours.

Franco Mufinda, Secretario de Estado da Saúde

According to the Secretary of State for Public Health, Franco Mufinda, who was speaking at the country usual Covid-19 update session, 41 new cases were diagnosed in Luanda, 16 in Cuando Cubango, 13 in Cuanza Norte, six in Huambo and one each in Bengo, Cabinda and Uíge. 

The list of new patients, whose ages range from two months to 70 years, is composed of 46 men and 33 women.

He said that 66 patients, 63 from Luanda, two from Benguela and one from Lunda Sul, aged between four and 63 years, had been recovered.

In relation to the deaths, Mr. Mufinda said that these were three Angolan men, two living in Zaire and one in Uige, aged between 63 and 68.

Angola has a record of 15,087 cases, with 345 deaths, 7,763 recovered and 6,979 active people.

Of the active cases, six are in critical condition with invasive mechanical ventilation, 16 severe, 174 moderate, 176 with mild symptoms and 6,607 asymptomatic.

The health authorities have followed up 372 patients admitted to treatment centers in the country.


Saturday 28 November 2020

Ethical Awareness to youths in Africa


Focusing on moral development and personal growth, that which gives life a sense of purpose which is a significant part of our very life and an efflorescence which has substantially help us to mold and form our very essence and a better world. 

Organizing moral conduct lecture camps, providing equal opportunities to youngster to explore deep moral lectures -Visiting any community school, college, university, cultural, religious institutions and deliver a short motivational lecture on moral conduct.

Stage 6: Sustained Scale

Focusing on personal growth and moral development, that which gives life a sense of purpose, which is a significant part of our very life and an efflorescence which has substantially help us to mold a future generation and form a better world.

Problem

In presenting the details of any conflict, moral challenges and bad behavior it is important programmes standard of objective are heeded.


Solution

The concept of the moral imagination, embrace, repentance. Providing the future generation with ethical solution.

Target Beneficiaries

Identifying and accompanying youths and inspired individuals to explore how one’s own worldwide and experiences shape perceptions of moral conduct, ethics and social development dynamics. This is about accompanying and equipping people internally and externally.

Mission and Vision

Explore morality – moral development -personal growth. 

Competitive Advantage

Despite the fact that an academic approach or attempt cannot solve all problems, it can still provide valuable knowledge and skills, moral education should therefore form part of schools, religious, cultural and sectoral curricular. it is in the realm of ethics, research and moral conductor engaged themselves who have been motivated by strong moral concerns. Moral as a scholarly endeavour seek to encourage social growth.

Suspected Iranian nuclear mastermind Fakhrizadeh assassinated near Tehran

 An Iranian scientist long suspected by the West of masterminding a secret nuclear bomb program was killed in an ambush near Tehran on Friday that could provoke confrontation between Iran and its foes in the last weeks of Donald Trump’s presidency.

Suspected Iranian nuclear mastermind Fakhrizadeh assassinated near Tehran

The military adviser to Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei blamed Israel for the assassination of Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, and vowed to retaliate for his killing.

“In the last days of the political life of their… ally (Trump), the Zionists seek to intensify pressure on Iran and create a full-blown war,” Hossein Dehgan tweeted.

"We will strike as thunder at the killers of this oppressed martyr and will make them regret their action."

Fakhrizadeh died of injuries in hospital after armed assassins fired on his car, Iranian state media reported. There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attack.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office declined to comment on the killing. In the United States, the Pentagon declined to comment and the State Department and White House did not immediately respond to requests for comment. President-elect Joe Biden’s team also declined to comment.


Fakhrizadeh has been described by Western and Israeli intelligence services for years as the leader of a covert atomic bomb program halted in 2003, which Israel and the United States accuse Tehran of trying to restore in secret. Iran has long denied seeking to weaponise nuclear energy.

“Unfortunately, the medical team did not succeed in reviving (Fakhrizadeh), and a few minutes ago, this manager and scientist achieved the high status of martyrdom after years of effort and struggle,” Iran's armed forces said in a statement carried by state media .

The semi-official news agency Tasnim said “terrorists blew up another car” before firing on a vehicle carrying Fakhrizadeh and his bodyguards in an ambush outside the capital.

Regardless of who was responsible for the attack, it is certain to escalate tension between Iran and the United States in the final weeks of Trump’s U.S. presidency.


Trump, who lost his re-election bid on Nov. 3 and leaves office on Jan. 20, has repeatedly accused Iran of secretly seeking nuclear weapons. Trump pulled the United States out of a deal under which sanctions on Iran were lifted in return for curbs on its nuclear program. Biden has said he would restore it.


A U.S. official confirmed earlier this month that Trump had asked military aides for a plan for a possible strike on Iran. Trump decided against it at that time because of the risk it could provoke an uncontrollable wider Middle East conflict.


Last January, the U.S. drone strike in Iraq killed Qassem Soleimani, Iran’s most powerful military commander. Iran retaliated for that attack by firing missiles at a U.S. base in Iraq, the closest the two foes have come to war in decades.


Fakhrizadeh is thought to have headed what the U.N. nuclear watchdog and U.S. intelligence services believe was a coordinated nuclear weapons program in Iran, shelved in 2003.


He was the only Iranian scientist named in the International Atomic Energy Agency’s 2015 “final assessment” of open questions about Iran’s nuclear program. The IAEA’s report said he oversaw activities “in support of a possible military dimension to (Iran’s) nuclear program”.


He was a central figure in a presentation by Israeli Prime Minister Benajmin Netanyahu in 2018 accusing Iran of continuing to seek nuclear weapons.


“Remember that name, Fakhrizadeh,” Netanyahu said at the time.


During the final months of Trump’s presidency, Israel has been making peace with Gulf Arab states that share its hostility towards Iran.


Earlier this week, Netanyahu traveled to Saudi Arabia and met its crown prince, an Israeli official said, in what would be the first publicly confirmed visit by an Israeli leader. Israeli media said they were joined by U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.


On Friday before the news of the attack on Fakhrizadeh emerged, an Israeli official said Israel was discussing with Gulf Arab states how to tackle Iran.

“The story is not Trump, nor even Israel. The story is Iran - the growing dread that a new U.S. administration will go back to the nuclear deal which threatens the very existence of the Gulf countries, ”Tzachi Hanegbi, who sits in Netanyahu’s security cabinet, told Tel Aviv radio station 102 FM.


“We will know how to handle the issue of the Iranian threat, even if through our own means.”

AL AHLY OF ANGOLAN GERALDO WIN CHAMPIONS LEAGUE

 Al-Ahly of Angola's Geraldo won the African Champions League on Friday, thanks to a 2-1 victory over Zamalek, bringing the number of titles in this competition to nine.

Angola Calles up Geraldo for National Team Camp

The historical final of the 56th edition, the first between two clubs from the same country (Egypt) was decided with goals from Amr Al Sulaya, in the fifth minute, and Mohamed Magdy Kafsha, in the 86`.

Zamalek's goal was scored by Shikabala in the 31st minute, in a match, played behind closed doors, in which Geraldo, former 1º de Agosto player took the field in the second half, when the two sides were drawn to one goal.

Al Ahly had already won the tournament on eight occasions, in 1982, 1987, 2001, 2005, 2006, 2008, 2012 and 2013, the first four of the 21st century, under the command of the Portuguese coach Manuel José.


Activists, Black celebrities call on UK to halt deportation plane

 The UK government is under increasing pressure to halt a planned deportation flight to Jamaica with up to 50 people, a move which would separate 31 children from their fathers.

Activists, Black celebrities call on UK to halt deportation plane

As campaigners and activists appeal to the Home Office to stop the plane scheduled to leave on December 2, 82 Black British public figures, including model Naomi Campbell, historian David Olusoga, actresses Thandie Newton and Naomie Harris, and writer Bernardine Evaristo, are urging airlines which have previously allowed such charter flights to refuse any assistance.

The issue has also trended regularly on Twitter since the flight was announced earlier this week, under the hashtag #stoptheplane.

The Kingston-bound flight will be second deportation operation to Jamaica this year.

According to the Home Office, the flight will deport “convicted murderers and rapists”

Under the UK law, a foreign national who has been convicted of an offence and received a custodial sentence of 12 months or more can be eligible for deportation.

But Jacqueline Mckenzie, human rights lawyer and director for the Center for Migration Advice and Research, said the 12-month limit unjustly targeted people responsible for less serious crimes, such as a young man she represented who was deported to Jamaica in February 2019, after serving 14 months in prison for driving offences.

"The majority of people on the list are on the list for drug offences," she told Al Jazeera.

“If you have been in the UK as a child, you shouldn’t be deported irrespective of what your offence is.

“Whether you’ve got the right documentation or not, you’re culturally British, you’re part of this society. You’ve offended here, you are punished here, and your punishment is going to prison. People should not be punished twice. ”

Meanwhile, there were growing concerns over the impact of separating families.

According to the civil liberties and migrant rights group Movement for Justice, eight of the men due to be deported have 31 children among them, aged from three to 18.

Although the Home Office has said none of the deportees is eligible for the Windrush Scheme, Zita Holbourne, co-founder of the anti-racist Black Activists Against Rising Cuts organization, said many detainees had a direct link to the Windrush generation through their parents or grandparents.

“It’s like an extension of the Windrush scandal. You’re now punishing their children and their grandchildren, ”she said.

The Windrush Scheme allows Commonwealth citizens settled in the UK before January 1, 1973, who do not have documentation to prove it, to obtain evidence confirming their British citizenship free of charge.

The last chartered flight to leave for Jamaica in February this year drew concerns from lawyers after it emerged mobile phone outages had prevented deportees from accessing legal advice.

In that case, a last-minute court ruling granted a reprieve to 25 people, while 17 others were still removed.

Holbourne claimed that the detainees at Colnbrook detention center in Middlesex, who are scheduled to be on the December 2 flight, are experiencing similar challenges.

“The computer room is locked as a COVID-19 measure. But the computer room is where you email, print, prepare your case, find a lawyer and liaise with your lawyer, ”she said.

“That’s actually barring access to justice. And families aren't allowed to visit the detention centers, which means they can’t say goodbye, which adds to that trauma and distress. ”

As the UK grapples with a second wave of the coronavirus disease, the Home Office says it is taking “sensible, precautionary measures in relation to COVID-19 and immigration detention” to protect staff and detainees.

But Mckenzie and Holbourne raised concerns over the implementation of social distancing measures in detention centers, en route to the airport, and on the flight itself.

“When you get to the plane, you are shackled from the waist down and you are cuffed to two guards on either side,” said Holbourne. “[The Home Office] is saying they’re aiming for up to 50 [deportees]. Up to 50 [people] with two guards added is 150, which is a full plane, so that won’t be socially distanced. ”

The announcement follows a report from the Equalities and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) earlier this week, criticizing the Home Office for breaking equalities legislation with its hostile environmental policies.

EHRC said the Windrush scandal, which saw the wrongful deportation of British citizens invited to the UK between 1948 and 1971 from Caribbean countries, was a “shameful stain on British history”, adding “negative equality impacts… were repeatedly ignored, dismissed, or their severity disregarded ”.

More than 6,400 “foreign national offenders” have been removed since January 2019, according to the government.

Since April, enforced returns and deportations have seen more than 30 charter flights to countries including Albania, France, Germany, Ghana, Lithuania, Nigeria, Poland and Spain.

Responding to criticism of the planned deportation, the Home Office said: “We make no apology for seeking to remove dangerous foreign criminals to keep the public safe.”



COVID-19: ANGOLA REPORTS 88 NEW INFECTIONS, 80 RECOVERIES

 Angolan health authorities announced Friday the record of 88 new infections, 80 patients recovered and one death, in the last 24 hours.

According to the Secretary of State for Public Health, Franco Mufinda, who was speaking at the country usual Covid-19 update session, 53 new cases were diagnosed in Lunda Norte, 15 in Luanda, eight in Huambo, five in Cuando Cubango, three in Cabinda, two in Uíge, one in Moxico and the same number in Malanje.

The list of new patients, whose ages range from 14 to 66, is made up of 75 men and 13 women.

It was reported that 80 patients were recovered, 46 from Huila, 23 from Luanda, eight from Benguela, two from Namibe and one from Cuanza Sul, aged between two and 71 years.

In relation to the death, Mr. Mufinda said that the patient was a 61-year old Angolan, resident in Luanda.

Angola has a record of 15,008 cases, with 342 deaths, 7,697 recovered and 6,969 active people.

Of the active cases, six are in critical condition with invasive mechanical ventilation, 13 severe, 176 moderate, 176 with mild symptoms and 6,598 asymptomatic.

The health authorities have followed up 371 patients admitted to treatment centers in the country.


Friday 27 November 2020

CURRENCY FLOW RISES MORE THAN USD 139 MILLION

 Angola recorded an inflow of foreign exchange estimated at 139.7 million this week, according to the Secretary of State for Planning, Milton Reis.

MILTON REIS, SECRETÁRIO DE ESTADO PARA O PLANEAMENTO

The official said USD 105.3 million concern the Single Treasury Account, that is, the collection of petroleum taxes and the issuance of foreign currency bonds.

The official, who was speaking at usual briefing on the progress of the national economy, said that another USD 34.3 million corresponds to operations by the National Bank of Angola (BNA).

The latter values, he clarified, have to do with the purchase of foreign exchange and deposit interest.

On the other hand, the Secretary of State, Milton Reis explained that in terms of project execution levels, the Development and Welfare axis reached 74.8%, Sustainable, Diversified and Inclusive Economic Development 65.6% and the Infrastructure and Development 69.7%.

The axis on Peace building, Democratic and Law Strengthening, Good Governance, State Reform and Decentralization had an execution of 80%.

Harmonious Development of the territory stands at 52.7% and the Guarantee of Territorial Stability of Angola and Strengthening of its role in regional integration with 29.2%.

As for the main commodities, in average terms, the price of Brent was higher this week, compared to the previous one, standing at 42.21%, against 43.22% having justified that it was due to the optimism of the vaccine against Covid-19 and the prospect of extending the agreement to cut oil production by around 7.7 million barrels / day from OPEC and OPP +.

As for futures prices, Brent recorded an appreciation of 5.1%, compared to last week, standing at USD 44.96 / barrel, with the performance of Angolan stocks that registered an increase of 5.79 percent when moving to USD 44.55 / barrel.

While natural gas decreased to USD 2.6 / cubic meter, due to the increase in production in the market, influenced by China and the United States of America, which are the biggest consumers of gas.

The price of gold, on the other hand, registered an average increase of 0.3 per cent, compared to the previous week, standing at USD 880 / ounce, justified by the excess demand for the purpose of reserving value, following the announcements about the levels effectiveness of the Covid-19 vaccine.

ANGOLAN PRESIDENT CALLS FOR AN END TO EXCESSIVE USE OF FORCE IN DEMONSTRATIONS

 Angolan head of State João Lourenço said Thursday in Luanda that the demonstration should not degenerate into violence.

The president was speaking at the youth consultation meeting, stressing that there is no need for violence, either by demonstrators or authorities.

However, he recalled that everything is relative and depends on the behavior of citizens, who should not commit excesses, as happened in recent protests.

At the time, he discouraged rallies on the public road with more than five people, saying that social gatherings fuel Covid-19 emerges. "The Executive does not ban demonstrations.

Presidente João Lourenço ausculta a juventude


The Executive prohibits gatherings ", he clarified. According to João Lourenço," if the demonstration is tantamount to a public gathering, it should obvious not be allowed, otherwise it will contribute to the spread of the Covid-19 virus throughout the national territory " .

The President underlined that, internally, it is the Executive's obligation to prevent Covid-19's progression from spiraling out of control.

João Lourenço called for collaboration of Angolan society to prevent the country's health system from collapsing, in the face of Covid-19.

The president considered the meeting with the youth an alternative way to avoid violating the Presidential Decree.

The Angolan Head of State was speaking at the meeting with representatives of various Angolan Youth.

Similar meetings took place in July and October last year, respectively in the cities of Soyo (Zaire) and Kuito (Bie).


ANGOLA’S LOCAL ELECTIONS UNLIKELY TO TAKE PLACE BY 2021

 Angolan President of the Republic João Lourenço said Thursday that the country is unlikely to hold the first municipal elections in 2021, due to the lack of completion of some tasks related to the process.

Presidente João Lourenço ausculta a juventude

The president said so at the youth consultation meeting, having clarified that the local elections require complete legislative package, as well as conduct unofficial and in-person electoral registration.

Among the tasks, the president spoke of the need to establish the residence of citizens, the completion of the process of political-administrative division.

João Lourenço underlined that the National Electoral Commission (CNE) must issue an opinion, addressed to the President of the Republic, in which it declares that conditions have been created for municipal elections.

However, the Angolan statesman pledged the Executive’s commitment to municipal elections.

The President Joao Lourenço held similar meetings in July and October last year in Soyo (Zaire) and Kuito (Bie).


ANGOLA: 13.4 BILLION SET ASIDE FOR ENDEMIC DISEASES - EXECUTIVE

 The minister of Finance, Vera Daves, assured last Thursday, in Luanda, that the General State Budget (OGE) for the coming financial year sets aside, for great endemic diseases, an amount of 13.4 billion kwanzas (US $ 20.7million) and an additional 142 billion kwanzas (US $ 218.1million) for possible purchase of Covid-19 vaccines.

Vera Daves,  Ministra das Finanças


The official, who was speaking at the National Assembly in the ambit of the analysis, discussion and voting n the OGE for the 2021 financial year, said she took good note that parliamentarians have already internalized the awareness that there is little room to make the budget grow without aggravating the pressure on public accounts.

She clarified that what managers are asked to do is restructure their form of management, taking into account that there is little fiscal space and limited financial resources to meet the expectations.

The Executive recognizes the importance of dialogue with the social partners, within the current procedures, in the preparation of the OGE, which this year was reviewed.

She added that the situation with Covid-19 made the timings more challenging for the economic team and, therefore, procedures that had already been established were not fully implemented.


COVID-19: ANGOLA REGISTERS 99 NEW INFECTIONS AND 100 RECOVERIES

 The Angolan health authorities announced, last Thursday, the registration, in the last 24 hours, 99 new infections, 100 patients recovered and one death.

Secretário de Estado para a saúde Pública Franco Mufinda


According to the secretary of State for Public Health, Franco Mufinda, who spoke at the usual Covid-19 data update session in the country, he pointed out also that the new infections involve citizens whose ages range from two months to 77 years, 65 being male and 34 female.

According to the official, there are 46 cases diagnosed in the province of Luanda, 21 in Huambo, 14 in Cunene, 7 in Cuanza Sul, 4 in Malanje and Cabinda, 2 in Uíge and 1 in Moxico.

Regarding the recovered patients, 34 are from Huíla, 32 from Luanda, 17 from Malanje, 13 from Huambo, 3 from Lunda Sul and 1 from Cuanza Sul, aged between 2 to 63 years.

On the death, Franco Mufinda informed that she is a 63-year-old Angolan citizen that resided in Luanda.

Angola registers 14,920 positive cases so far, 341 deaths, 7,617 recovered and 6,962 active cases (diseased).

Of the diseased, 7 are in critical condition with invasive mechanical ventilation, 13 severe, 175 moderate, 185 with mild symptoms and 6,582 asymptomatic.

The health authorities are also taking care of 380 patients admitted to treatment centers in the country.


PRESIDENT JOÃO LOURENÇO TRAVELS TO GABON

 The President of the Republic, João Lourenço, has left the Angolan capital heading to Gabon, where he will participate in the eighteenth Summit of Heads of State and Government of the Economic Community of Central African States (ECCAS).

Presidente da República desloca-se para a República do Gabão

At the 4 de Fevereiro International Airport, the Head of State was bid farewell by the Vice President of the Republic, Bornito de Sousa, members of the government and office aides.

In Libreville, João Lourenço will witness the transition from the ECCAS presidency from the Gabonese Head of State, Ali Bongó, to his Congolese counterpart Dennis Sassou Nguessou.

The contributions of the member states, the organization's budget for 2021, and the activity report of the ECCAS Commission, a body that is now headed by Angolan Gilberto Veríssimo, are some of the documents that will be analyzed at the Libreville Summit.

The Head of State is due back home this Friday.


AfCFTA Secretariat rolls out “Vision” initiative backed by “super-app”

 With barely two weeks left to the Extraordinary Summit of African Union Heads of State on December 5, 2020, ahead of the expected start of trading under AfCFTA on 1st January 2021, the AfCFTA Secretariat is pleased to announce AfCFTA Vision, an initiative in partnership with the Sankoree Institute, an affiliate of AfroChampions.

AfCFTA Secretariat rolls out “Vision” initiative backed by “super-app”

In addition to building a community of visionaries (the “AfCFTA Visioneers”) and creating a platform for knowledge creation and sharing to help accelerate the pace of implementation of AfCFTA, the initiative also creates room for entrepreneurial contests to find investable solutions that can propel AfCFTA to success with the backing of the continent's development finance institutions.

Major African DFIs and other visionary financial institutions such as TDB, Africa50, AfDB, AFC, Equity Bank, Ecobank and Afreximbank will serve as the institutional jury for the AfCFTA Vision Challenge.

Compelling solutions to challenges posed by some of Africa’s foremost political leaders, and analyzed by leading continental thinkers, in 8 identified issue areas submitted ahead of the two deadlines of 30th November and 22nd December stand a chance of securing syndicated investment from these leading institutions.

Innovators and doers of all stripes, committed to the ideal AfCFTA, are therefore encouraged to submit their plans through the online portal (https://www.afcfta.blog/challenge).

AfCFTA’s success shall however require more than brilliant solutions from Africa’s finest minds and doers. It shall require more intense connections among problem-solvers, infrastructure to bridge gaps and differences, and vast material resources.

The role of the AfCFTA Secretariat is to coordinate capacity that already exists on the continent in order to generate the necessary momentum. Digital technology can play a critical role in this quest due to its leveling function and exponential network creation ability.

Above all, digital technology has become one of the most efficient ways to bring large but marginalized communities like Small, Medium & Micro Enterprises (SMMEs), youth, women and the informal sector into the productive sectors of an integrated African company.

Thus, a major component of the AfCFTA Vision Initiative is a suite of apps (or collectively, a “super-app”) that shall serve as the base for a continental business registry, trade directory, cross-border trade facilitation network, and a dashboard for the private sector to interact with the upcoming Africa Trade Observatory (for beta access, visit: www.afcfta.app).

As an integral part of the AfCFTA Digital Strategy, and building on top of the AVRIVA (www.avriva.org) program developed to support the AU's Open Corridor Initiative, the AfCFTA App offers a free “trusted identity” (known as the “AfCFTA Number ”) to every AfCFTA Actor, as well as a range of complementary tools to discover opportunities made available to all economic actors throughout the continent in the wake of AfCFTA.

The partners are of the view that all the components of the AfCFTA Vision Initiative work seamlessly together to boost the chances of a spectacularly successful AfCFTA rollout.

About AfCFTA Secretariat

The AfCFTA Secretariat is a creation of the AfCFTA Agreement tasked with the responsibility of coordinating the successful implementation of the Agreement.

The Secretariat operates as an autonomous organ of the African Union charged with implementing the decisions of the higher organs of the body in respect of the wide array of areas covered by the Agreement, ranging from industrialization to intellectual Property, and from trade in professional services to harmonization of standards for manufactured goods.

About Sankoree Institute

An affiliate of the AfroChampions Initiative and other leading pan-African institutions, the Sankoree Institute brings together many of Africa's most passionate and eminent leaders, thinkers, and doers to reimagine all the best paths to a strong, globally influential, integrated, and prosperous Africa .

Sankoree leads the charge in experimentation, exploration, prototyping and execution of the best ideas resulting from robust, rigorous, and action-oriented dialogue, analysis and design-thinking

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Source: Myjoyonline

Libya’s rival forces have stopped shooting, but they’re not pulling back

 In Libya’s frontline city of Sirte, parts of which still lie in ruins, the commission set up to oversee warring rivals ’recent ceasefire has put its name on a large downtown conference center - an outward sign of its commitment to peace.

Libya’s rival forces have stopped shooting, but they’re not pulling back

So far the ceasefire is holding, and some elements of the truce have been implemented: flights between rival cities Tripoli and Benghazi have summarized and foreign fighters have left oil facilities - the keys to Libya’s economy.

But meetings of the Joint Military Commission in northern Libya, attended by five officers each from the two sides, have yet to make progress on other key demands of a U.N.-brokered agreement, underlining its fragility.

The rivals in a civil war that has left thousands dead and the country in chaos have yet to withdraw troops from frontline positions, open a major coastal road linking Sirte to Misrata and rid their ranks of foreign mercenaries.

“The danger won’t end unless the process of national reconciliation is completed,” said Mohammed Mofteh, 33, the head of a charity in Sirte, summing up widespread public skepticism about permanent peace.

Since the internationally recognized Government of National Accord (GNA) drove Khalifa Haftar’s Libyan National Army (LNA) back from the capital Tripoli in June, the shooting has given way to political jostling.

The U.N.-led diplomatic effort has set a roadmap to elections at the end of next year and implemented an audit of the central bank, which is split between the sides.

The 75 participants in a U.N.-led political dialogue, which is separate from the military commission’s work, also have a Dec. 24, 2021 election date. But they have not agreed on a unified transitional government needed to oversee the vote.

Progress in those political talks slowed when they turned to the question of who would be on the new presidential council and the prime minister, said Hamad al-Bandaq, an eastern-based member of parliament who took part.

“We reached a stumbling block, which is the choice of who will be in the presidential council and government,” he said.

Beyond the GNA and LNA's involvement in the peace process, their foreign backers - Turkey in the case of the GNA and Russia, the UAE and Egypt in the case of the LNA - also support it, although they, too, have invested heavily in the conflict.

Some of their military and economic interests could be lost or reversed under a new unified government.

Situated near Libya’s main oil terminals, and seen as the gateway to the OPEC producer’s “oil crescent”, Sirte - now under the control of the LNA - was a major prize in the civil war.

Its domed Ouagadougou Conference Center, an undamaged part of which is now the Joint Military Commission headquarters, serves as a reminder of what is at stake.

The biggest building Muammar Gaddafi gave to his hometown, the center hosted the 2009 African Union summit. But it is pitted with bullet and shrapnel marks from a battle in the 2011 uprising that toppled the former leader.

After Islamic State seized Sirte in 2015, its black flag was painted onto the center. Today a new banner for the commission hangs where GNA and LNA negotiators hash out details of their October ceasefire.

They have pledged to remove foreign mercenaries from Libya by late January, pull forces back from forward positions and open the road across frontlines.

But U.N. acting Libya envoy Stephanie Williams last week told the Security Council the GNA was still patrolling, the LNA setting up new fortifications and both sides landing cargo planes at bases they have used to resupply.

A Western diplomat focused on Libya said the two sides had asked for only limited outside monitoring of the ceasefire - a sign they may not plan new withdrawals until the political situation is clearer.

In Sirte, queues of up to 50 cars at petrol stations point to the hardships of life near the frontline. Living conditions in Tripoli and the eastern center of Benghazi this summer led to widespread protests.

Williams has said this public frustration will aid the push for a deal. The U.N. process helped resolve an eight-month LNA blockade of oil exports which aggravated economic problems in both east and west.

The third strand of talks beyond the military commission and the political process is economic negotiations. There, too, the tussle, particularly over the National Oil Company and Central Bank of Libya, continues.

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