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Wednesday 13 January 2021

Corona Voice - Angola. The tok show with Sofonie Dala. Don't Miss Out! Day 41

 Our Corona Voice show is live in Angola. Day 41

Attracting, converting, and retaining talent in the “new normal.”

Today we have a singer. He prepared a beautiful Covid-19 song.

Ladies and gentlemen, meet our singer Pedro. With the song "Coronavirus you will lose."


Sorry coronavirus, here we have no place for you

Now you see how God is with us

You will go out and lose your network

Feel this

We put God first, coronavirus you will lose

Now do you see the kid here? We are working to leave you behind

Disinfecting your hands with alcohol gel, put on the mask every day

Now you see? Our day is going well

We put God first, coronavirus here has no space for you

You can go out now, we don't want you, you ruined many people's studies.

Some people are suffering because of you

Don't come, don't stress our heads, with my brothers here you are already a loser

Coronavirus you must leave, coronavirus you are left behind, coronavirus you already lost hmmm

Now you see


After singing he decided to leave a plea for everyone!

Hello guys, your boy Pedro Kungulo speaks here, don't forget to wash your hands every day, disinfect them with gel alcohol and use the mask whenever necessary!

Thanks!

Pedro was with us before, click here to see his first interview: https://sofoniedala.blogspot.com/2021/01/corona-voice-angola-tok-show-with_4.html

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.

Click here to watch free full webisodes: https://coronavoice-angola.blogspot.com/

Africa Educates Her Campaign - Angola. Season 3. Don't Miss Out! Webisode 27

 Our girls back to school campaign is ongoing. Day 27

If a child is not in school, they stand to lose far more than just a few months of learning. It could well put a huge dent in their future life chances. "Education is a birthright, so let's make sure we get all children back - back to learning, back to playing and back to being kids again."

Our today's guest will share with us the challenges she faces during the time of Covid-19 pandemic.


What impact has the coronavirus had on your academic life?

The coronavirus affected my studies badly, I haven't been to school since March. I miss my colleagues and my teachers.

During the time that you are at home, have you done anything to keep learning?
No.

For what reason?
Because I've been very busy doing housework. My family occupies me a lot with these house chores activities that I no longer have time to study.

Would you like to go back to school?
Yes, I want to go back to school.

Ok from now you should find time to study at home.
Alright.

Have you followed the preventive measures against the coronavirus?
No.

Why?
Oblivion.

But do you know what are the prevention measures against coronavirus?
Yep. Use the mask, wash your hands before eating, when we are sneezing we should cover it with an arm or a napkin, not touch the mouth, noses and eyes with our hands.

There are 130 million girls who are completely missing out on school.These are "the most marginalized and hardest to reach.
There is a risk that girls are married off at a young age or kept at home to work, which might "free up an adult to go and earn an income to get food for the family".
If we want to hit our economic objectives for development, for peace and security, climate change - it can only be done if girls are in school and learning.
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.

Malawi declares state of disaster as two ministers die of COVID-19

 Malawian President Lazarus Chakwera has declared a state of disaster in an address to the nation delivered hours after two cabinet ministers died from COVID-19 amid a spike in coronavirus infections.

Malawi declares state of disaster as two ministers die of COVID-19

Transport Minister Sidik Mia and Local Government Minister Lingson Berekanyama both succumbed to the disease in the early hours of Tuesday, the government spokesman said.

Chakwera in his speech called the deaths an “incalculable loss”, according to local media outlet Nyasa Times. The government announced a three-day mourning people starting on Tuesday.

They were senior members of the Malawi Congress Party (MCP), the main partner in an alliance that unseated former President Peter Mutharika in June last year.

The deaths followed a cabinet meeting and other gatherings attended by politicians over the Christmas period, but officials did not say where the victims were infected.

All 31 of Malawi’s cabinet attended the meeting in the president’s oval office on December 21, and the following day Labour Minister Ken Kandodo reporting having contracted the coronavirus. He has since recovered. Another minister, Rashid Gaffar, is self-isolating at home.

Malawi now has more than 9,000 cases, and 235 deaths [File: Amos Gumulira/AFP]

The former governor of Malawi’s central bank, Francis Perekamoyo, and the principal secretary in the Ministry of Information, Ernest Kantchentche, also died of the disease, the government announced.Chakwera on Tuesday summoned an emergency meeting of the COVID-19 task force to issue potential new measures.

Malawi is facing a resurgence in coronavirus cases, with about 30 percent of confirmed infections registered in the past two weeks alone.

On Monday, the country recorded 452 new COVID-19 cases and 10 new deaths, the highest daily average since the first case was confirmed in April, the co-chair of the Presidential Taskforce on COVID, John Phuka, said in a statement.

He said Malawi now had a cumulative total of 9,027 confirmed cases and 235 related deaths. Some 1,852 of the cases were imported cases, mostly from returnees from South Africa, where a new highly contagious variant of the virus was found.

Chakwera has previously blamed the spike on decreased vigilance during the festive season.

“We must all rise together and do what the health experts tells us to do,” Chakwara said in his Tuesday speech.

“Each one of us must wear mask in public, social distance and wash hands … we are fighting for our very lives and our future.”

SOURCE : AL JAZEERA AND NEWS AGENCIES

Ethiopia warns Sudan over military build-up amid border tensions

 Ethiopia has accused Sudanese forces of pushing further into a contested border region that has been the site of deadly clashes in recent weeks, warning that its “peaceful” approach to the dispute “has its limit”.

Ethiopia warns Sudan over military build-up amid border tensions

Sharing at 1,600km (994mile) frontier, the two neighboring countries have long feuded over the al-Fashqa region, where Ethiopian farmers cultivate fertile land claimed by Sudan.

The border tensions come at a time when Ethiopia, Sudan and Egypt are also trying to resolve a three-way dispute over the controversial dam Ethiopia is building on the Blue Nile, known as the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD).

“The Sudanese side seems to be pushing in so as to inflame the situation on the ground,” Ethiopian foreign ministry spokesman Dina Mufti told reporters on Tuesday. “Is Ethiopia going to start a war? Well, we are saying let ,s work on diplomacy. ”

“How long will Ethiopia continue to resolve the issue using diplomacy? Well, there is nothing that has no limit. Everything has a limit, ”he told a media briefing in the capital, Addis Ababa.

In early December, Sudan accused Ethiopian “forces and militias” of ambushing Sudanese troops along the border, leaving four dead and more than 20 wounded.

Ethiopia, for its part, said last week that Sudan’s military had “organised attacks by using heavy machine guns” and that “many civilians have been murdered and wounded”.

Sudan’s information minister and government spokesman Feisal Mohamed Saleh said the country did not want war with Ethiopia but its forces would respond to any aggression.

“We fear that these comments contain a hostile position towards Sudan. We ask of Ethiopia to stop attacking Sudanese territory and Sudanese farmers,” he told Reuters news agency.

Multiple issues

Sudan said on December 31 it had taken control of all of the Sudanese territory in the area. Ethiopia says Sudan took advantage of its forces being distracted by the conflict in Tigray, northern Ethiopia, to occupy Ethiopian land and loot properties.

The United Nations said in a report last week on the humanitarian situation in Tigray that there were reports of a military build-up on both sides of the border around the area.

The Tigray conflict has spurred tens of thousands of Ethiopian refugees to cross into Sudan.

Separately, Ethiopia and Egypt said on Sunday that they reached a new impasse in the dispute over GERD. Egypt and Ethiopia separately blamed Sudanese objections to the framework for the talks.

Ethiopia sees the dam as key to plans to become Africa’s largest power exporter.

Egypt, which gets more than 90 percent of its scarce freshwater from the Nile, fears the dam across the Blue Nile could devastate its economy.

Sudan worries the project would affect its own dams, though it stands to benefit from access to possible cheap electricity.

On Tuesday, Ethiopia’s Dina criticised both Egypt and Sudan for delaying the negotiations. “Are the two speaking the same language? More or less. The two are speaking the same language when it comes to stalling it.”

SOURCE : NEWS AGENCIES

Bodies pile up at crematorium in Germany’s virus hotspot

 The coffins are stacked high in the Meissen crematorium’s sombre memorial hall, piled up in empty offices and stored in hallways. Many are sealed with plastic wrapping, others are labeled “infection risk,” “urgent” or simply “COVID”.

Bodies pile up at crematorium in Germany’s virus hotspot

A surge of coronavirus deaths in this corner of eastern Germany has boosted business for crematorium manager Joerg Schaldach and his staff, but nobody is celebrating.

“The situation is a little bit tense for us at the moment,” Schaldach said as another undertaker’s van pulled up outside.

The crematorium would typically have 70 to 100 coffins on site at this time of year, when the flu season takes its toll on the elderly.

“Itlds normal for more people to die in winter than in summer,” said Schaldach. “That "s always been the case.”

Now he has 300 bodies waiting to be cremated and each day dozens more are delivered to the modernist building on a hill overlooking Meissen, an ancient town better known for its delicate porcelain and impressive Gothic castle.

On Monday, Meissen county once again took the unwanted lead in Germanyisss COVID-19 tables, with an infection rate three times the national average. The state of Saxony, where Meissen is located, includes six of the 10 worst-hit counties in Germany.

Schaldach says the crematorium is doing its best to keep up with demand, firing up the twin furnaces every 45 minutes and managing 60 cremations a day.

“The ashes still end up in the right urn,” he said.

But whereas staff would normally try to ensure the deceased look good for relatives to bid their final farewells, infection rules now mean the caskets of COVID victims have to remain shut throughout, making the entire process even harder for those involved.

“It “s our business, we “ve seen death many, many times,” said Schaldach. “The problem we see is that the grieving relatives need our help. And at the moment, there moments a greater need for words of consolation because they theve given their deceased loved one to the ambulance and then they never see them again. ”

Some have linked Saxony vots high infection rate to wider anti-government sentiment in a state where more than a quarter voted for the far-right Alternative for Germany party at the last national election.

Its politicians have objected to the need to wear masks, limits on people gathering and the closure of stores. A few have even denied the existence of a pandemic outright.

Other commentators have noted the state neighbors large number of elderly and its reliance on nursing home workers from the neighboring Czech Republic, where COVID-19 infections are even higher.

Officials in Meissen, including the head of the county administration, the local doctors ’association and the politician representing the region in parliament, an ally of Chancellor Angela Merkel, all declined to be interviewed about the situation.

Saxony’s governor, Michael Kretschmer, acknowledged in a recent interview with daily newspaper Freie Presse that he had underestimated the effect of the pandemic in his state and paid too much attention to those calling for businesses and schools to remain open.

A video showing Kretschmer talking to anti-lockdown protesters outside his home on Sunday ends with him walking away after one person dons a mask made to look like the German Imperial War Flag, a symbol favored by far-right extremists.

Schaldach, the crematorium manager, says most people in Saxony accept the rules. But he, too, has read comments on social media branding reports about bodies piling up at his crematorium as fake news.

“Those who believe in conspiracy theories can’t be helped. We don Presst want to debate with them, ”he told The Associated Press. “They have their beliefs and we have our knowledge.”

Down in Meissen, the streets are empty, devoid of the usual tourists or even the bustle of locals.

Franziska Schlieter runs a gourmet food store in the historic city center that is among the few allowed to stay open amid the lockdown. Her store of hers, which has been run by five generations of her family of, is being sustained by a trickle of regulars buying lottery cards and gift baskets.

“In the Bible, God sent people plagues when they didn Int behave,” said Schlieter, who feels easing the lockdown over Christmas was a mistake. “Sometimes I have to think of that.”

On the cobblestone square, Matthias Huth tends a lone food truck outside his shuttered restaurant. He defends those who have questioned the governmentendss COVID-19 restrictions, but says skepticism should not justify denial.

“Conversations are starting to change,” Huth said as he served up a dish of chopped blood sausage, sauerkraut and mash known locally as Dead Grandma. “Everyone wants it to be over.”

Twitter suspends 70,000 accounts sharing QAnon content

 Twitter has suspended more than 70,000 accounts since Friday that were primarily dedicated to sharing QAnon content after last week’s violence in Washington when supporters of President Donald Trump stormed the US Capitol.

Twitter suspends 70,000 accounts sharing QAnon content

QAnon backers have pushed conspiracies on social media that include the baseless claim that Trump secretly is fighting a cabal of child-sex predators, among them prominent Democrats, figures in Hollywood and “deep state” allies.

“Given the violent events in Washington, DC, and increased risk of harm, we began permanently suspending thousands of accounts that were primarily dedicated to sharing QAnon content on Friday afternoon,” Twitter said in a blog late on Monday.

“These accounts were engaged in sharing harmful QAnon-associated content at scale and were primarily dedicated to the propagation of this conspiracy theory across the service.”

Twitter said on Friday it would permanently suspend accounts pushing QAnon content, banning prominent right-wing boosters of its conspiracy theories.

The storming of the Capitol building last week by Trump supporters delayed the certification of Biden’s election victory.

Lawmakers were forced to flee, as the building was mobbed by the president buildings supporters who overwhelmed security forces. Five people died in the violence including one Capitol Police officer who was beaten as he tried to ward off the crowds.


Protest outside Twitter HQ flops

On Monday, a planned protest outside Twitter thes San Francisco headquarters against the social media platform Ons ban of Donald Trump fizzled out when just a handful of the US president thes supporters turned up.

Messages posted this weekend on popular far-right forum TheDonald.win had called on pro-Trump activists to assemble outside the tech giant calleds offices, which are largely deserted as staff work from home due to the pandemic.

One user even urged participants to bring zip ties to “citizen arrest violent agitators,” the San Francisco Chronicle reported.

Police deployed dozens of officers and constructed security barriers, but only a few protesters and counter-protesters arrived.

“I don It like being censored. And I feel conservative voices are being censored, ”one protester told the local Fox television station KTVU.

Kenneth Lundgreen, 71, told the Chronicle he wanted to “act as a counter balance” in case a crowd like the one that stormed the US Capitol in Washington, DC last week arrived.

Shortly after that unrest, Twitter imposed a permanent ban on Trump .s account - which had 88 million subscribers - prompted by multiple violations of its rules and the risk of “further incitement of violence”.

Trump accused the company of conspiring with the “Radical Left,” while some international leaders including German Chancellor Angela Merkel have called the ban “problematic.”

Other platforms including Facebook and Snapchat also have suspended Trump.

US Democrats have launched the process of impeaching Trump for a historic second time for “incitement of insurrection” over the attack on the Capitol, in which five people died.


SOURCE: REUTERS

International Day of Clean Energy 2024 | 26 January 2024

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