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Monday 11 January 2021

Africa Educates Her Campaign - Angola. Season 3. Don't Miss Out! Webisode 25

 Our girls back to school campaign is ongoing. Day 25

Millions of girls aren't at school today. They are shut out of education because of the pandemic covid-19.

Our today's guest is Belma, she will share with us the impact of covid-19 on her academic life.

Hello! My Name Is Belma Paulino, I am 11 years old, I study in the fifth grade and I will talk about the impact that the coronavirus has had on my life.

Well, covid - 19 disrupted my studies, I stopped studying and I miss my classmates and my teachers so much, I want to renew my studies and go back to school.

When did you stop studying?

Well, I stopped studying in March 2020 since then, until this year I never went back to school again.

In this time that you are at home, have you done anything to continue learning?

Sometimes, I only make a few copies from the books.

Do you know what are the preventive measures against the coronavirus?

Yes. We must leave the house only for urgent reasons, we must use the mask, when coming from the street we must wash our hands with soap and water and disinfect them with gel alcohol.

Have you been following these preventive measures that you just mentioned?

I do not follow the preventive measures against the coronavirus.

Why?

By forgetfulness, but now that you've spoken to me, I'll move on.

Aren't you afraid of the coronavirus?

Yes, I am very scared because it affects my body and everyone.


Millions of girls and young women miss out on school - even though educating girls has huge benefits for health, prosperity and security. There has been progress but much work is still needed to break down barriers that prevent girls from going to school such as child marriage and cultural discrimination.

Click here to watch free full webisodes: https://she-leads.blogspot.com/

 

We launched this campaign to ensure that every girl is able to learn while schools are closed and return to the classroom when schools safely reopen. Everyone can play a role in supporting girls Everyone education - whether you Everyonere a teacher, parent, student, journalist, policymaker, or simply a concerned citizen.

Don't miss this opportunity to bring girls back to school. Tell us your story!

Do you have a personal experience with the coronavirus would you like to share? Or a tip on how your town or community is handling the poverty among women?


FIND SOMEONE TO SPONSOR TODAY

Your sponsorship will help the most vulnerable girls and women to take the first step out of poverty.

 

Corona Voice - Angola. The tok show with Sofonie Dala. Don't Miss Out! Day 39

Our Corona Voice show is live in Angola. Day 39

We sing when we're happy. Young people are using the power of dance and sing during the time of covid-19 pandemic.

We found this young guy in the neighborhood singing energetically a coronavirus song.

Look at him!

The calamity is going to kill me, hey

Will this coronavirus stop me? Hey

Now I will show you

Calamity, calamity, calamity hey

This coronavirus will end

This coronavirus will stop

Now you need to wash with alcohol gel, alcohol gel, alcohol gel

Now show him, show him, show him

Now prick, prick, prick, prick

This is the first and the only Coronavirus show in Angola where the most ordinary citizens show their brilliant talents.

The heroes of the program are the most ordinary citizens - they share with the audience their songs, poems and real stories of how the Coronavirus pandemic affected their lives.

We launched the “Corona Voice show” campaign to provide a space for young women and men around Angola to share their views, experiences and initiatives.

FIND SOMEONE TO SPONSOR TODAY

Your sponsorship will help the most affected people by covid-19 to take the first step out of poverty.

 

 

COVID-19: ANGOLA KEEPS HIGH RECOVERY RATE

 Angola has been recovering more than 400 patients on a daily basis in the last three days, and last Sunday the figure was 667 recovered citizens.

Field hospital

The recoveries took place in Luanda (637) and in Lunda Sul (30), involving compatriots aged between 1 and 54 years, at a time when the country sees cases reducing, according to data from the last 24 hours.

Meanwhile, in this latest update, Angola recorded 37 new cases, 18 in Cuanza Sul, 12 in Luanda, 4 in Cabinda, 2 in Benguela and 1 in Zaire, aged between 5 months to 58 years, of which 20 men and 17 women.

In this period, the country did not face death, having processed 1,017 samples by RT-PCR, from a total of 323,467 people tested since March 2020, with a positivity rate of 5.6%.

Thus, in general, Angola totals 18,193 positive cases of Covid-19, recovered 13 872 patients and closely follows 3 905 active diseased (9 critical, 8 severe, 80 moderate, 93 mild and 3 715 asymptomatic, respectively).

According to the Multi-Sector Commission for Preventing and Combating the pandemic, the country registers 416 deaths and 190 hospitalized patients. At the moment, it follows 416 citizens in Institutional Quarantine and keeps 3,278 individuals under epidemiological surveillance.

It is recalled that on the 8th of current month Angola recovered the highest number of infected, a total of 757 and, on the following day, discharged 493 patients, as a sign that the authorities remain committed to preventing and fighting this invisible enemy at the level from the country.


COVID crisis: UK at ‘very perilous moment’, PM Johnson warns

 British Prime Minister Boris Johnson has warned the United Kingdom is at a “very perilous moment” in the COVID-19 pandemic, as a surge of infections puts pressure on the health system.

COVID-19: UK Prime Minister, Boris Johnson to set out ‘further steps’ to combat variant spread in TV address

Johnson on Monday said the UK was now in a “race against time” to curtail the virus, a new highly infectious variant of which has driven the rising caseload and led to more deaths, before it overwhelms the National Health Service (NHS).

His government last week enforced a third national lockdown in England in a bid to slow transmission, and officials are increasing efforts to vaccinate 15 million people by mid-February as part of a mass immunization program.

“We can all see the threat that our NHS faces, the pressure it's under, the demand in intensive care units, the pressure on ventilated beds, even the shortage of oxygen in some places,” Johnson told reporters during a visit to a vaccination center in Bristol, one of seven mass vaccination sites opened on Monday.

"This is a very perilous moment," he said. "The worst thing now for us is to allow success in rolling out a vaccine program to breed any kind of complacency about the state of the pandemic."

Johnson’s comments came after the government’s chief medical adviser warned that the next few weeks of the COVID-19 pandemic will be “the worst” in the UK, in terms of pressure on hospitals.

Professor Chris Whitty’s said the NHS would come under greater pressure than ever, with about one in 50 people now infected across the UK, and as hospitals in parts of the country are pushed to breaking point.

“The next few weeks are going to be the worst weeks of this pandemic in terms of numbers into the NHS,” he told the BBC. “This new variant is really pushing things in a way in that the old variant, which was already very bad, wasn’t able to do.”

During the peak of the first outbreak in April, about 18,000 people were in hospital but now there are 30,000, Whitty said, adding the health service was facing “a significant crisis”.

Whitty urged the public to obey the lockdown enforced to curtail the spread of the virus; the new mutation is thought to be up to 70 percent more contagious.

On Friday, Sadiq Khan, London’s mayor, warned the UK capital’s hospitals were in danger of being overwhelmed by COVID patients, and ministers and health chiefs have pleaded with people to respect lockdown measures and stay at home unless it was essential to go out.

Vaccine plan put into action

UK officials aim to have given one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine to some 15 million people by mid-February, including to everyone in the country older than 70 and front-line health and care workers, a move they hope will allow lockdown restrictions to be eased.

"What we need to do before the vaccines have had their effect, because it will take several weeks before that happens, we need to really double down," Whitty said.

Having approved vaccines developed by Pfizer-BioNTech, Oxford-AstraZeneca and Moderna, the UK opened its seven large-scale vaccination centers on Monday as part of feverish efforts to reach its mid-February inoculation target.

The country is currently immunizing about 200,000 people a day, Health Secretary Matt Hancock said on Sunday.


Al Jazeera’s Paul Brennan, reporting from a mass vaccination site at London’s ExCeL center, said Whitty’s comments reflected the UK’s “stark and frightening” situation.


“He said it was not tinkering with restrictions that would make a difference, but that it was up to everybody to take responsibility for minimizing as much as possible the social contacts they have outside of the home,” Brennan said.

“He was not putting the responsibility on politicians to tighten the rules,” Brennan said.

About 1.3 million people had received their first dose of the two-dose vaccination as of January 3, according to government data, but the UK needs to inoculate two million people a week to meet its February 15 target.

Asked on Monday if life would ever return to normal, Whitty said it was “not in doubt” that we will return to “life as it was before at some point”.

Once vaccines are rolled out, he said, “people will be able to have the restrictions lifted”.

“It won’t happen in one go, and at a certain point, hopefully you’ll get back to a life that is basically exactly the same as it was before,” Whitty said. “However, we’re quite a long way away from that at the moment,” he said.

More than 81,400 people in the UK have died within 28 days of receiving a positive COVID-19 test, the fifth-highest official death toll globally.

"Anybody who is not shocked by the number of people in hospital who are seriously ill at the moment and who are dying over the course of this pandemic, I think, has not understood this at all," Whitty said. “This is an appalling situation.”

____


Source: Aljazeera

Capitol assault, a more sinister attack than first appeared

 Under battle flags bearing Donald Trump’s name, the Capitol’s attackers pinned a bloodied police officer in a doorway, his twisted face and screams captured on video. They mortally wounded another officer with a blunt weapon and body-slammed a third over a railing into the crowd.

In Pictures: The storming of the US Capitol building

“Hang Mike Pence!” the insurrectionists chanted as they pressed inside, beating police with pipes. They demanded House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s whereabouts, too. They hunted any and all lawmakers: “Where are they?” Outside, makeshift gallows stood, complete with sturdy wooden steps and the noose. Guns and pipe bombs had been stashed in the vicinity.

Only days later is the extent of the danger from one of the darkest episodes in American democracy coming into focus. The sinister nature of the assault has become evident, betraying the crowd as a force determined to occupy the inner sanctums of Congress and run down leaders — Trump’s vice president and the Democratic House speaker among them.

This was not just a collection of Trump supporters with MAGA bling caught up in a wave.

That revelation came in real time to Rep. Jim McGovern, D-Mass., who briefly took over proceedings in the House chamber as the mob closed in Wednesday and Pelosi was spirited to safer quarters moments before everything went haywire.

“I saw this crowd of people banging on that glass screaming,” McGovern told The Associated Press on Sunday. “Looking at their faces, it occurred to me, these aren’t protesters. These are people who want to do harm.”

“What I saw in front of me,” he said, “was basically home-grown fascism, out of control.”

Pelosi said Sunday “the evidence is that it was a well-planned, organized group with leadership and guidance and direction. And the direction was to go get people.” She did not elaborate on that point in a ”60 Minutes” interview on CBS.

The scenes of rage, violence and agony are so vast that the whole of it may still be beyond comprehension. But with countless smartphone videos emerging from the scene, much of it from gloating insurrectionists themselves, and more lawmakers recounting the chaos that was around them, the contours of the uprising are increasingly coming into relief.

___

THE STAGING

The mob got stirring encouragement from Trump and more explicit marching orders from the president’s men.

“Fight like hell,” Trump exhorted his partisans at the staging rally. “Let’s have trial by combat,” implored his lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, whose attempt to throw out election results in trial by courtroom failed. It’s time to “start taking down names and kicking ass,” said Republican Rep. Mo Brooks of Alabama.

Criminals pardoned by Trump, among them Roger Stone and Michael Flynn, came forward at rallies on the eve of the attack to tell the crowds they were fighting a battle between good and evil. On Capitol Hill, Republican Sen. Josh Hawley of Missouri gave a clenched-fist salute to the hordes outside the Capitol as he pulled up to press his challenge of the election results.

The crowd was pumped. Until a little after 2 p.m., Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell was at the helm for the final minutes of decorum in partnership with Pence, who was serving his ceremonial role presiding over the process.

Both men had backed Trump’s agenda and excused or ignored his provocations for four years, but now had no mechanism or will to subvert the election won by Biden. That placed them high among the insurrectionists’ targets, no different in the minds of the mob from the “socialists.”

“If this election were overturned by mere allegations from the losing side, our democracy would enter a death spiral,” McConnell told his chamber, not long before things spiraled out of control in what lawmakers call the “People’s House.”

Far-right social media users had openly hinted for weeks that chaos would erupt at the Capitol when Congress convened to certify the election results. As the attack unfolded, they urged followers to “trust the plan” and “hold the line.” Just what the plan might have been is central to the investigation.

The FBI is investigating whether some of the attackers intended to kidnap members of Congress and hold them hostage. Authorities are particularly focused on why some in the mob were seen carrying plastic zip-tie handcuffs and had apparently accessed areas of the Capitol generally difficult for the public to locate.

___

THE ASSAULT

Thousands had swarmed the Capitol. They charged into police and metal barricades outside the building, shoving and hitting officers in their way. The assault quickly pushed through the vastly outnumbered police line; officers ran down one man and pummeled him.

In the melee outside, near the structure built for Joe Biden’s inauguration on Jan. 20, a man threw a fire extinguisher at the helmeted head of a police officer. Then he picked up a bullhorn and threw it at officers, too.

The identity of the officer could not immediately be confirmed. But Capitol Police officer Brian Sicknick, who was wounded in the chaos, died the next night; officials say he had been hit in the head with a fire extinguisher.

Shortly after 2 p.m., Capitol Police sent an alert telling workers in a House office building to head to underground transportation tunnels that criss-cross the complex. Minutes later, Pence was taken from the Senate chamber to a secret location and police announced the lockdown of the Capitol. “You may move throughout the building(s) but stay away from exterior windows and doors,” said the email blast. “If you are outside, seek cover.”

At 2:15 p.m., the Senate recessed its Electoral College debate and a voice was heard over the chamber’s audio system: “The protesters are in the building.” The doors of the House chamber were barricaded and lawmakers inside it were told they may need to duck under their chairs or relocate to cloakrooms off the House floor because the mob has breached the Capitol Rotunda.

Even before the mob reached sealed doors of the House chamber, Capitol Police pulled Pelosi away from the podium, she told “60 Minutes.”

“I said, ‘No, I want to be here,’”she said. “And they said, ‘Well, no, you have to leave.’ I said, ‘No, I’m not leaving.’ They said, ‘No, you must leave.’” So she did.

At 2:44 p.m., as lawmakers inside the House chamber prepared to be evacuated, a gunshot was heard from right outside, in the Speaker’s Lobby on the other side of the barricaded doors. That’s when Ashli Babbit, wearing a Trump flag like a cape, was shot to death on camera as insurrectionists railed, her blood pooling on the white marble floor.

The Air Force veteran from California had climbed through a broken window into the Speaker’s Lobby before a police officer’s gunshot felled her.

Back in the House chamber, a woman in the balcony was seen and heard screaming. Why she was doing that only became clear later when video circulated. She was screaming a prayer.

Within about 10 minutes of the shooting, House lawmakers and staff members who had been cowering during the onslaught, terror etched into their faces, had been taken from the chamber and gallery to a secure room. The mob broke into Pelosi’s offices while members of her staff hid in one of the rooms of her suite.

“The staff went under the table, barricaded the door, turned out the lights and were silent in the dark,” she said. “Under the table for two and a half hours.”

On the Senate side, Capitol Police had circled the chamber and ordered all staff and reporters and any nearby senators into the chamber and locked it down. At one point about 200 people were inside; an officer armed with what appeared to be a semi-automatic weapon stood between McConnell and the Democratic leader, Sen. Chuck Schumer.

Authorities then ordered an evacuation and rushed everyone inside to a secure location, the Senate parliamentary staff scooping up the boxes holding the Electoral Collage certificates.

Although the Capitol’s attackers had been sent with Trump’s exhortation to fight, they appeared in some cases to be surprised that they had actually made it in.

When they breached the abandoned Senate chamber, they milled around, rummaged through papers, sat at desks and took videos and pictures. One of them climbed to the dais and yelled, “Trump won that election!” Two others were photographed carrying flex cuffs typically used for mass arrests.

But outside the chamber, the mob’s hunt was still on for lawmakers. “Where are they?” people could be heard yelling.

That question could have also applied to reinforcements — where were they?

At about 5:30 p.m., once the National Guard had arrived to supplement the overwhelmed Capitol Police force, a full-on effort began to get the attackers out.

Heavily armed officers brought in as reinforcements started using tear gas in a coordinated fashion to get people moving toward the door, then combed the halls for stragglers. As darkness fell, they pushed the mob farther out onto the plaza and lawn, using officers in riot gear in full shields and clouds of tear gas, flash-bangs and percussion grenades.

At 7:23 p.m., officials announced that people hunkered down in two nearby congressional office buildings could leave “if anyone must.”

Within the hour, the Senate had resumed its work and the House followed, returning the People’s House to the control of the people’s representatives. Lawmakers affirmed Biden’s election victory early the next morning, shell-shocked by the catastrophic failure of security.

_____

Source: AP

Pope amends Roman church law to allow women read at mass; but still cannot be priests

 In a step towards greater equality for women in the Roman Catholic Church, Pope Francis has changed church law to explicitly allow women to do more things during mass, but reaffirmed they cannot be priests.

Pope amends Roman church law to allow women read at mass; but still cannot be priests

Francis amended the law on Monday to formalize what is common practice in many parts of the world: that women can read the Gospel and serve on the altar as eucharistic ministers.

By introducing the change in the Code of Canon Law, it will be impossible for conservative bishops to block women in their diocese from having those roles. Previously, such roles were officially reserved for men, even though exceptions were made.

In the decree, called Spiritus Domini (The Spirit of the Lord), Francis said he had taken his decision after theological reflection and was making the change to increase recognition of the “precious contribution” women make in the church.

He said many bishops from around the world had said that the change was necessary to respond to the “needs of the times”.

But the Vatican stressed that these roles were “essentially distinct from the ordained ministry”, meaning that they should not be seen as an automatic precursor to women one day being allowed to be ordained priests.


The Vatican reserves the priesthood for men.

“The pontiff, therefore, has established that women can access to these ministries and they are attributed by a liturgical function that institutionalizes them,” the Vatican said in an explanatory note.

The changes come as Francis remains under pressure to allow women to be deacons - ordained ministers who perform many of the same functions as priests, such as presiding at weddings, baptisms and funerals.

Francis has created a second study commission of experts to study whether women could be deacons, after a first one failed to reach a consensus.

Advocates for expanding the diaconate to include women say doing so would give women greater say in the ministry and governance of the church, while also helping address priest shortages in several parts of the world.

Opponents say allowing it would become a slippery slope towards ordaining women to the priesthood.

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Source: News agencies

International Day of Clean Energy 2024 | 26 January 2024

 Every dollar of investment in renewables creates three times more jobs than in the fossil fuel industry.  Greetings friends. I am Sofonie D...