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Sunday 15 November 2020

Vietnam braces for Typhoon Vamco, 53 dead in Philippines

 Vietnam was bracing for Typhoon Vamco to make landfall in the country’s central coast early on Sunday, as the death toll in the Philippines rose to 53 from that country’s deadliest storm this year.

Vietnam braces for Typhoon Vamco, 53 dead in Philippines


Packing winds of up to 165 kph (103 mph), Vamco is forecast to hit a swathe of Vietnam’s coast from Ha Tinh to Quang Ngai province, the government’s weather agency said on Saturday.

“This is a very strong typhoon,” Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc said, warning provinces in Vamco’s projected path to prepare for its impact.

The provinces plan to evacuate 468,000 people by the end of Saturday, state media cited the government’s disaster management authority as saying.

Vietnam is prone to destructive storms and flooding due to its long coastline. Vamco will be the 13th storm that affects the Southeast Asian country this year, where more than 160 people have been killed in natural disasters triggered by a series of storms since early October.

“There has been no respite for more than eight million people living in central Vietnam,” said Nguyen Thi Xuan Thu, Vietnam Red Cross Society President. “Each time they start rebuilding their lives and livelihoods, they are pummeled by yet another storm.”

In the Philippines, coast guard and disaster agencies scrambled on Saturday to rescue thousands in a northern province after the 21st cyclone to hit the Philippines this year tore through the main island of Luzon late on Wednesday and early Thursday.

Vamco has killed at least 53 people, injured 52 and left 22 missing in the Philippines, according to the Philippines police and army.

Evacuations begin in Central America ahead of Tropical Storm Iota

 As Tropical Storm Iota barrels toward Central America, authorities are urging communities to evacuate before it unleashes “life threatening” flooding across a region still recovering from Hurricane Eta’s devastation.

Evacuations begin in Central America ahead of Tropical Storm Iota

Iota is expected to intensify to major hurricane strength or just short of it by the time it smashes into the jungles of the Miskito Coast of Nicaragua and Honduras on Monday.

The storm comes as Central America is still coping with the massive destruction wrought by Hurricane Eta, which slammed the region two weeks ago, prompting flooding and mudslides that have killed scores of people across a huge swath stretching from Panama to southern Mexico.

On Saturday morning, Guatemalan authorities said a mudslide buried 10 people in the state of Chiquimula near the border with Honduras. Emergency workers have rescued two people and recovered three corpses so far. Five people are still missing.

Saturday’s mudslide follows last week’s partial collapse of a mountain onto the village of Queja, in the Central Guatemalan region of Alta Verapaz, which killed and buried alive dozens of residents.

Guatemalan President Alejandro Giammattei expressed on Saturday his concern about the approach of Iota, saying he has ordered evacuations for areas expected to be affected.

“We are concerned about the area of ​​Alta Verapaz and Quiché. We believe that they are the areas where we could have the greatest impact, ”said Giammattei. "We hope God helps us."

In Honduras, where Eta killed 64 people and damaged roads, bridges and crops, President Juan Orlando Hernández on Saturday urged people in the path of Iota to evacuate to the nearest shelters.

“Iota is going to put our lives and our economy at risk again,” he said.

Residents of the community of Cruz de Valencia in northwestern Honduras have begun evacuating.

“We have to get out, we have to save our lives,” said resident Erick Gomez, who said he only survived the flooding from the last hurricane by clinging to a tree to avoid being swept away by the rushing water.

“We are afraid of what we just suffered with Eta, and we do not want to go through the same thing again,” he added.

The U.S. National Hurricane Center (NHC) is warning Iota could bring flash flooding and mudslides across northern Colombia and Central America as early as Monday. It is expected to pack maximum winds of 110 mph (177 km) as it approaches landfall.

At 1 p.m. EST (1800 GMT), Iota was about 485 miles (780 km) east-southeast from the Nicaraguan-Honduran coast, with maximum sustained winds of 50 mph (80 kph). It was moving at 5 mph (8 kph) in a west-southwest direction.

China finds coronavirus on packaging of Saudi shrimp

 The western Chinese city of Lanzhou said on Saturday it had detected the new coronavirus on the packaging of a batch of shrimp imported from Saudi Arabia, as China ramps up testing of frozen foods.

China finds coronavirus on packaging of Saudi shrimp

The Lanzhou Municipal Health Commission said in a statement on its website that it had found one positive sample on Friday on the inner packaging of imported frozen shrimp from Saudi Arabia that had passed through customs in the coastal city of Tianjin.


The cold storage plant in Lanzhou where the case was discovered had been temporarily closed, all employees of the plant had been tested, all food involved was sealed and the whereabouts of all food sold had been determined, the statement said.


The commission said the shrimp had been purchased by Zhanjiang Guolian Aquatic Products Co Ltd, entered the country on Oct. 21 and reached Lanzhou on Nov. 8.


The positive sample in Lanzhou follows the detection of the virus on the packaging of a batch of Brazilian beef in Wuhan on Friday, and on Argentinian beef samples in Shandong and Jiangsu provinces this week.


The World Health Organization says the risk of catching COVID-19 from frozen food is low, but China has repeatedly sounded alarms after detecting the virus on imported food products, triggering disruptive import bans.

3 years after Mugabe overthrow, many Zimbabweans say life’s worse

 Having lost his job as a sales assistant in an electrical consumables shop, Amos Chivedede at first believed Emmerson Mnangagwa, the man who succeeded Zimbabwe’s longtime President Robert Mugabe in a military coup three years ago, was a godsend.

3 years after Mugabe overthrow, many Zimbabweans say life’s worse

The reason? Mnangagwa’s promises of jobs and democracy.

“Today, we are witnessing the beginning of a new and unfolding democracy,” Mnangagwa told local and foreign journalists after his return from brief exile on November 22, 2017, a day after Mugabe resigned under duress.

“The voice of the people is the voice of God,” he said at the Harare headquarters of ZANU-PF, the party that has governed Zimbabwe since independence from Britain in 1980. “No one is more important than the other. We are all Zimbabweans. We want to grow our economy. We want jobs. ”

Weary of Mugabe and his ruinous economic policies, Zimbabweans were optimistic.

An infectious euphoria premised on the pledge of change and a prosperous Zimbabwe was palpable at the time, with thousands of jubilant Zimbabweans taking to the streets to celebrate what they hoped would be the dawning of a new chapter in the country’s history.

"I honestly thought the jobs he promised us would come," Chivedede recalled.

But for the 38-year old father of three, reality quickly set in.

With no source of income and no job prospects on the horizon, Chivedede took his two-wheeled steel pushcart and offered to ferry heavy goods for an agreed fee around Kuwadzana, a high-density suburb west of Harare.

It is the only job he has known since then.

“I have not seen any change since Mnangagwa took over. In fact, things have gotten worse, ”Chivedede said. “The economy is in trouble; there has been no job creation; industry is still grounded. ”

Three years after the military coup that led to Mugabe’s departure, observers say Mnangagwa is still struggling to deliver on his promises.

Zimbabwe is in the throes of a deepening economic crisis characterized by high inflation of close to 700 percent, foreign currency shortages and a devastating mix of a rapidly weakening currency and stagnant salaries.

In December last year, the World Food Program warned that Zimbabwe was facing its worst hunger crisis in 10 years, with half of the population - 7.7 million people - food insecure.

Meanwhile, more than an estimated 90 percent of Zimbabweans are either unemployed or earn a living from some sort of informal work.

“On employment, the economy has been declining so no doubt the performance [of the government] is not so good,” Harare-based economist Victor Bhoroma said.

“The employment council points that over 1.2 million formal jobs have been lost in the last 18 months due to economic decline, COVID-19 and other economic ills.”


Rampant hyperinflation

Zimbabwe adopted the use of US currency in 2009 after hyperinflation decimated the value of the local currency. Following the disputed 2013 elections and the end of a unity government between Mugabe and the late opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai, the economy started to suffer from lack of confidence.

By early 2016, a shortage of US dollars prompted authorities to introduce bond notes, a surrogate currency, which largely traded on a par with the dollar.

At the time, the country’s economy was relatively stable, but Zimbabweans felt Mugabe - in power since 1980 - had overstayed and demanded change.

In November 2017, annualized inflation stood at 2.97 percent, up from 2.24 percent the previous month. But just a year after Mnangagwa took over, inflation had hit double-digit territory at 31.01 percent, according to Zimbabwe’s statistical agency - and seven months later, the wheels had basically fallen off.

Annualized inflation was last measured at 175.66 percent in June last year, up from 97.85 percent in May. Inflation for September was measured at 659.4 percent after peaking at 837 percent in July.

Hyperinflation has seen the value of earnings for Zimbabweans decimated.

The country’s currency, the Zimbabwe dollar, a combination of bond notes and the Real Time Gross Settlement Dollar, has lost value against major currencies under Mnangagwa and is now trading at $ 1: 105 on the black market and $ 1: 83 at the official market.

Economists blame the creation of electronic money by the central bank - a move taken after speculation saw the bond note trade at a discount to the dollar - for the Zimbabwean currency’s rapid depreciation.

“The Zimbabwean economy performed very well from 2010 to 2014 with record investment, free movement of capital, improvements in standards of living and reduction in poverty, price stability, record corporate profits and investment and other social indicators,” Bhoroma said.


Lack of human rights reforms

After years of diplomatic ostracisation under Mugabe, Mnangagwa early on committed to political reforms as part of a process of re-engagement with the international community.

But three years later, critics say his administration has not steadfastly implemented these pledges. They point out to the government’s record that has seen the repealing of just one law, the Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act (AIPPA), a piece of legislation seen as hindering freedom of expression and press freedom.

The US and European Union have expressed dissatisfaction over the piecemeal reforms and accuse Mnangagwa of human rights abuses

The United States and European Union have expressed dissatisfaction over the piecemeal reforms and accuse Mnangagwa of human rights abuses. The government denies the accusations.

Mnangagwa, a ZANU-PF stalwart, has also faced allegations of employing the heavy-handed tactics of his predecessor’s government, which harassed, threatened and arbitrarily arrested critics and activists.

Six people were killed in August 2018 when security forces opened fire on opposition supporters protesting against what they said was an attempt by the ZANU-PF party to steal tightly contested elections. Seventeen others were killed in January last year when soldiers fired at demonstrators protesting against a 150 percent fuel price hike.


“In terms of human rights, we are worse off [under Mnangagwa],” said Rejoice Ngwenya, a Harare-based political analyst. “Economically, we are also worse off.”

Others said Mnangagwa missed an opportunity to steer the country forward.

“The 2017 coup was meant to be a watershed moment for the history of our country,” said political analyst Rashwheat Mukundu.

“Regardless of the fact that it was not a democratic process, there was hope that Mnangagwa would understand the history of the challenges that our society was facing. The history of human rights abuses, the history of economic collapse and suffering of the majority of the people of this country, ”Mukundu added.

“The expectation was that he would implement major turnaround in terms of policy responses to these challenges.”

But government officials painted a different picture, saying Mnangagwa had managed to stabilize the local currency and that his administration remains committed to rebuilding the country and engaging the broader family of nations.

“On the economic front, businesses are bullish about foreign currency stabilization and ongoing price discovery since July 2020 when the president intervened through statutory instruments on finance and banking,” said Information Minister Monica Mutsvangwa, adding that a weekly foreign currency sale using the Dutch auction system, in which prices start high and then decline, is “doing well to the delight of the public and investors”.

Authorities blame sanctions imposed by the US and the EU against top ZANU-PF and government officials following the 2002 elections that were marred by widespread electoral violence for the country’s economic woes.

In October, member countries of the Southern African Development Community (SADC) marked what is now known as the SADC Anti-Sanctions Day, with the African Union also calling for the unconditional removal of sanctions against Zimbabwe.

“Our regional and continental diplomacy is very alive as demonstrated by the recent resounding solidarity in calling for the removal of sanctions,” said Mutsvangwa.

Mutsvangwa said the Zimbabwean government is pinning its hopes for food security on its “Pfumvudza”, a climate change resilient program, and argued reforms on the renewable energy market, among others, have begun to show positive results.

“Now there are no more fuel queues and power cuts are rapidly disappearing.”

Still, three years on, many ordinary Zimbabweans say their dreams of a better life have been crushed.

“I was hoping for more jobs and a better country,” said Beulah Muchaya, a 31-year old mother of two who hawks fruits and flavored corn snacks in Harare.

“But things have gotten worse under Mnangagwa,” she added.

“Life is hard now. These days the number of people who have turned to vending has increased. As a result, it's difficult to make a decent living from it. ”


SOURCE: AL JAZEERA

FOOTBALL: ANGOLA DRAW IN KINSHASA WITH DRC

 Luanda – The Angolan senior males National Football Team last Saturday drew nil-nil with the DR Congo, in a Group D third-round encounter qualifier for the final stage of the Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON2022), set to happen in Cameroon.

The match was played in Kinshasa, in Martyrs Stadium. 

The national squad’s coach, Pedro Gonçalves, selected as main team the players Hugo Maques, Matuwila, Gaspar, Jonathan Buatu, Paizo, Diógenes (Milson), Herenilson, Show, Mateus Galiano (Vá), Fábio Abreu (Mabululo) and Gelson Dala (Ary Papel).

With this result, Angola are in the last place of the group with 1 point, whereas the Congolese stand in the third position with 3 points.

The second-leg match (fourth round) is scheduled for November 17, Tuesday, in Luanda’s 11 de Novembro Stadium.

Still for the same group, Gabon beat Gambia (2-1).

The Gabonese lead Group D with 7 points, followed by the Gambians with four points.

MINISTER HIGHLIGHTS ANGOLA/CUBA COOPERATION RELATIONS

 Luanda – The minister of Foreign Affairs, Téte António, considered last Saturday that the cooperation relations between Angola and Cuba are tangible and strong.

In a message sent to his Cuban counterpart, Bruno Rodriguez Parrilla, on the occasion of 45 years after the establishment of diplomatic relations between the two countries, being marked this Sunday (November 15), the Angolan diplomat underlines that the relations have adjusted to the new realities.

“The Angolan government now and always retains the importance of your contribution in all domains of national life so that, 45 years later, there is pride in the history of the bilateral cooperation, allowing the training of thousands of Angolan staff with commitment, selflessness and patriotism in the construction of the Angolan nation”, states the message to which ANGOP had access last Saturday.

The minister reiterated that the Angolan government is committed to the pursuit of progress, development, prosperity and social welfare of each Angolan citizen, he emphasized.

The head of Angolan diplomacy stresses that the 45 years of diplomatic relations between Angola and Cuba were instrumental in consolidating independence and Angolan sovereignty.

“I cannot let this occasion pass without a note of profound delight, and so, on this historic date, it is highlighted all the values ​​that have cemented the basis on which our bilateral relations rest in these 45 years”.

He then stressed that it is a great honor to address on behalf of the Angolan Executive “congratulations on the celebration of the 45th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between the two countries”.


ANGOLA REPORTS 146 NEW INFECTIONS, 19 RECOVERIES

 LUANDA – Angola has recorded 146 new infections of Covid-19 in the last 24 hours, as well as 19 recoveries and five deaths, the Health authorities announced.


The information was delivered Saturday evening in Luanda by the secretary of State for Public Health, Franco Mufinda, during the daily Covid-19 update briefing.

The official stated that of the mentioned new infections, 128 have been reported in Luanda, 16 in central Benguela, one in northern Bengo and one in central Cuanza Sul.  

The new patients with ages ranging from one to 81, include 96 males and 50 females.

19 have been recovered, seven of which in Luanda, seven in northeastern Lunda Sul province and five in Benguela, with ages from 20 to 64 years, Mufinda said.

According to the official, the dead are five Angolan nationals, four males and one female, aged between 54 to 75, with three in Luanda, one in northern Malange and one in Benguela

Angola’s Covid-19 statistics show 13. 374 registered positive cases, 322 deaths, 6. 345 recoveries and 6.707 active cases.

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