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Monday, 18 January 2021

Corona Voice - Angola. The tok show with Sofonie Dala. Don't Miss Out! Day 45

 Our Corona Voice show is live in Angola. Day 45

Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) can affect young adults directly and indirectly. Beyond getting sick, many young adults ’social, emotional and mental well-being has been impacted by the pandemic.

Our today's guest is Emanuel, he will share with us the impact of covid-19 on his life.

Hello, my name is Emanuel, I am a student and catholic. I will share how the covid-19 pandemic impacted my life.

You said you're a student. How has covid-19 affected your academic life?

Well, almost everything was closed, the studies are no longer the same as before. Before the pandemic, we had many openings and many schools available.

How has it affected your financial life?

It affected almost everything, I can’t do anything anymore, nothing can be achieved for free. In addition, my family was negatively affected. Some of my family members lost their jobs, odd jobs no longer exist.

Do you follow preventive measures against coronavirus?

Yes I do.

What are the coronavirus prevention measures that you follow?

First of all, we must  wash our hands with soap and water, desinfect then with  gel alcohol, use face mask and keep the social distance of 1 meter.


Many higher education institutions temporarily transitioned to only virtual courses to help stop the spread of COVID-19. This included the temporary closing of college campuses, prompting the suspension of many work-study opportunities and campus housing services.

 Many young adults also lost their internships or practices, jobs, or wages due to business closures. Having to juggle moving to a new place, spending long hours online completing coursework, and job seeking without the in-person support from peers could be overwhelming for many young adults.

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 31

 Our girls back to school campaign is ongoing. Day 31

A record number of children and youth are not attending school because of temporary or indefinite closures mandated by governments in an attempt to slow the spread of COVID-19.

Today we invited Victoria, she will share with us the challenges she faces to continue learning while her school is closed.

Hi how are you?

I'm fine thanks.

What is your name?

My name is Victoria Domingos.

How old are you?

I'm 11 years old

What is your grade?

Study in the third class.

How did the coronavirus affect your studies?

Difficult.

When was the last time you went to school?

I stopped studying in March 2020, since then I haven't seen my teacher and my classmates again.

Being at home, have you done anything to continue learning?

Not at all.

But why?

Because I've been busy with housework.

Now that the schools have reopened, have you gone back to school?

I don't.

Why?

Because our government has said that only 6th grade and junior students will return to school, 5th grade students and down should stay home.

Do you follow preventive measures against coronavirus?

Not.

Because of what?

I have forgotten.

It is a challenge to ensure children and youth return and stay in school when schools reopen after closures. This is especially true of protracted closures and when economic shocks place pressure on children to work and generate income for financially distressed families.

When schools shut down, early marriages increase, more children are recruited into militias, sexual exploitation of girls and young women rises, teenage pregnancies become more common, and child labor grows.


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 education - whether you are 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.

COVID-19: ANGOLA WITH 122 RECOVERIES, 110 NEW INFECTIONS

 One hundred and twenty-two recoveries, 110 new cases and five deaths were recorded in the last 24 hours in Angola, the health authorities announced on Sunday.

Passageiros são testados ( COVID-19)

The new cases, with ages ranging from 2 to 90 years old, were detected in provinces of Lunda Sul with 41, Cuanza Sul (23), Luanda (19), Bié (8), Huambo (6), Zaire (5), Huíla (3), Uíge (3) and Moxico 2.

Among the new patients, 64 are male and 46 female.

Four deaths were registered in Luanda and one in Uíge.

Of the recoveries, 85 were reported in Luanda, followed by Huambo with 32 and Bié (5), aged between 14 and 71 years.

Angola currently has 18,875 positive cases, with 16,347 recovered, 436 deaths and 2,092 active patients.


Trump’s Legacy: 2 Impeachments, An Insurrection, Countless Lies And Corruption

 Donald Trump called everything he did, from his election to his trade deals, “historic.” But his last months in office finally make that claim correct.

Trump’s Legacy: 2 Impeachments, An Insurrection, Countless Lies And Corruption

One hundred and sixty years after the first Republican president was forced to put down a violent insurrection against the United States, the party Statess 19th is leaving office after inciting one.

Donald Trump plans to leave the White House for the final time Wednesday morning, 78 days after becoming only the fourth incumbent to lose reelection in a century and seven days after becoming the first president to be impeached twice.

Democrat Joe Biden will take the oath of office at noon that day, becoming president and commander-in-chief of the United States, and leaving Trump suddenly vulnerable to both civil and criminal legal liabilities from which holding that office had shielded him for four years .

Trump is facing lawsuits from women accusing him of sexual misconduct, including rape; criminal investigations by both state and federal prosecutors in New York; a Senate impeachment trial that could bar him from holding federal office again; and potentially both civil and criminal exposure for his weekslong efforts to spark chaos at the U.S. Capitol in order to prevent Biden from being certified as the winner of the 2020 election. The Jan. 6 riot, which Trump egged on with a rally near the White House, quickly turned bloody and ended with the deaths of a Capitol Police officer and four Trump supporters. A second officer died by suicide days later.


“While Trump will not be receiving the Nobel Peace Prize, he will now be inducted into the Guinness Book of World Records for being the only president anywhere to have been impeached for the second time,” said Michael Cohen, Trump's onetime lawyer who served federal prison time for, in part, his work to pay hush money to women who'd had affairs with Trump. “Congratulations, Donald, and best of luck in your future endeavors.”


Trump ous first impeachment had come a year earlier, for trying to extort the new Ukrainian leader into publicly smearing Biden, whom Trump feared even in early 2019 as the Democratic challenger most likely to oust him.


“The Trump legacy will include: the most corrupt administration in American history, the grandest handover of policymaking to corporations of all time, the most overt and vicious racism and anti-immigrant xenophobia of any administration in modern times, unparalleled incompetence, cruelty and callousness in its mismanagement of the pandemic, and rushing the globe toward climate catastrophe at the exact moment when the world needed the United States to pivot away from fossil fuel reliance, ”said Robert Weissman, president of the liberal group Public Citizen. “Therementss a long list of’ accomplishments, ments far beyond these lowlights. ”

A Legacy Of Lies

While Trump frequently claims he has done more than any previous president - “In less than two years, my administration has accomplished more than almost any administration in the history of our country,” he told the United Nations just 20 months into his term - in reality, he leaves office with among the thinnest portfolios of policy successes of any president in modern times.

While establishment Republicans managed to achieve their decadeslong goals of large tax cuts for corporations, the rollback of environmental and worker safety regulations, and the appointment of more than 200 pro-business judges to the federal bench, Trump himself checked almost nothing off the agenda he pushed at the start of his 2016 presidential campaign.

Trump promised he would renegotiate the North American Free Trade Agreement to benefit U.S. workers. Instead, it was renamed the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement but remains functionally nearly identical, with the exception of some small tweaks lifted directly from the Trans-Pacific Partnership ― another trade pact Trump pulled out of and called the worst deal ever.

He promised a large middle-class tax cut, but instead went along with a plan from congressional Republican leaders that gave the biggest benefit to the richest Americans. Although he again promised a middle-class tax cut heading into the midterm elections of 2018, Trump did nothing to enact one afterward.

There were similar results with an infrastructure plan to rebuild the nation’s highways, bridges and airports and a health care plan to replace the Affordable Care Act: Trump repeatedly promised to push through these “tremendous” proposals but never even released a single word of either.

Trump’s creation of a “Space Force,” which he appears to believe was a major accomplishment, was merely a bureaucratic renaming of the Air Force’s Space Command, which had existed since the Reagan presidency, with no change in mission or staffing. Democrats, however, were able to trade that Trump “win” for paid family leave for federal workers, a longtime priority of theirs.

In foreign policy, Trump claimed he would “get tough” with China to help U.S. manufacturers. Instead, he launched a fruitless trade war that devastated American farmers and manufacturers both, while hurting consumers through higher prices ― all while he turned a blind eye to China’s escalating human rights abuses against its Muslim minority and increasingly totalitarian measures against all its citizens.

He claimed he would remove the threat of a nuclear-armed North Korea, but in the end did nothing ― apart from trading “love letters” with its dictator, Kim Jong Un. In Western Europe, Trump accused traditional allies of “ripping off” the United States through the NATO military alliance and European Union trade policies. The attacks strained those relationships, inuring to the benefit of Russian dictator Vladimir Putin, who has long sought to drive a wedge between the trans-Atlantic allies and who helped Trump win the election in 2016.

Even Trump’s signature promise, that he would build a massive concrete wall along the 2,000-mile southern border of the U.S. and force Mexico to pay for it, was a failure. After four years, he managed to build only 80 miles of steel fencing in areas where there had been no barrier at all, using money he raided from the Pentagon’s construction budget meant for, among other things, schools and housing for military families. Mexico has not paid anything.

Yet on that and any number of other issues, Trump would claim huge success, typically making assertions that were completely the opposite of the actual facts ― with those lies then amplified by Trump’s aides and allies.

That, said longtime Florida Republican consultant Mac Stipanovich, was perhaps the most useful piece of Trump’s legacy: “Ruining the reputations of people who might otherwise have continued in public life with the extent of their moral bankruptcy still unknown,” Stipanovich said, offering as examples: “Bill Barr, Mike Pompeo, Lindsey Graham.”

No Intention Of Fading Away

Despite failing to deliver on his promises, despite a botched coronavirus response that began with months of denial, despite tens of thousands of lies to the public on any number of topics, and despite funneling many millions of dollars from domestic and foreign lobbyists, Republican donors large and small, and American taxpayers into his own pockets over his four years in office, Trump nevertheless received nearly 11 million more votes in 2020 than he had in 2016.

“There are 74 million Americans who know exactly who Donald Trump was and voted for him anyway,” said one former White House official who spoke on condition of anonymity.

Within days of losing the Nov. 3 election, Trump began capitalizing on that popularity to raise millions of dollars, first with the trumpeted aim of challenging the voters’ decision and then under the guise of supporting GOP candidates in two Senate runoff elections. But, in fact, he can use the proceeds of the “leadership PAC” he created for almost anything he wants, including paying himself an eight-figure salary. He wound up spending nothing at all on the Georgia Senate races. Trump has also vowed to remain involved in Republican politics by attacking incumbents who have not shown him sufficient loyalty and has hinted at another White House run himself in four years.

Those threats have kept Republicans largely muted in their criticisms since the election. A recent Axios-Ipsos poll showed that, even after his incitement of the mob attack on the Capitol, 64% of Republicans said they supported his recent behavior, and 57% said they would like to see him as their 2024 nominee. Indeed, in the House impeachment proceedings against him a week after the attack on the Capitol, only 10 of the 211 Republican lawmakers voted with the Democrats in favor of the resolution.

At a Republican National Committee gathering in Amelia Island, Florida, Trump called into a breakfast meeting the morning after the violence he had incited. “A lot of members sat quietly, while others cheered him,” said one member on condition of anonymity. “There were a lot of RNC members who were hesitant to say anything.”

Yet that desperation to hang onto power, even if it meant shredding the Constitution and endangering the lives of his own vice president and hundreds of lawmakers, may finally bring an end to Trump’s political career. While Trump remains popular among Republicans, that support is less than it used to be, while his support among independent voters has plummeted.

If enough Republican senators vote with Democrats to reach the two-thirds supermajority needed for conviction in his second impeachment trial, a subsequent simple majority vote in the Senate could then prevent him from holding any federal office for the rest of his life.

And even if the conviction vote fails, the former White House official said, Trump likely will never recover from Americans’ searing memory of the insurrection itself, particularly as more details emerge and more prosecutions are filed in court. “It’ll be next to impossible because he’ll be saddled with it,” the official said. “He’ll be saddled with Jan. 6 forever.”

In Pictures: New protests in France against security bill

 Demonstrators march across the country to denounce a security bill critics say will restrict the filming of police.

You have thousands of protesters marched across France to denounce a security bill that would restrict the filming of police and posting of images on social media, something critics say would impact the ability to document cases of police brutality.

In Pictures: New protests in France against security bill

Protesters are also against the use of ramped-up surveillance tools such as drones and pedestrian cameras.


Thousands marched in Paris and cities across France on Saturday, estimates of the turnout varying widely between the authorities and activists. Police put the total turnout across the country at 34,000, while organizers insisted it was closer to 200,000.


In Paris, marchers came out despite a rare snowfall, carrying banners with slogans such as “Police everywhere, justice nowhere”, and “State of emergency, police state.”


“It as a strange dictatorship, one asks how far they will go with this law,” said one marcher in the northern city of Lille, who identified himself only by his first name, Francois. “If this is the case in the country of the rights of man and freedom, then I freedomm ashamed to be French!”


Police arrested 75 people across the country, 24 in Paris, said Interior Minister Gerard Darmanin, while 12 police officers and paramilitary officers were injured in clashes.


Several incidents of “disproportionate” police responses fuelled protesters’ anger, such as police actions when they broke up an illegal New Year’s rave in Brittany, which attracted some 2,400 people.

Footage of white policemen beating an unarmed Black music producer in his Paris studio on November 21, 2020, also amplified anger over the legislation, condemned by many as signalling a lurch towards the right by President Emmanuel Macron.

Other recent incidents caught on camera include the violent tear-down of a refugee campy in the iconic Place de la République by Paris police in November last year.

 


Corona Voice - Angola. The tok show with Sofonie Dala. Don't Miss Out! Day 44

 Our Corona Voice show is live in Angola. Day 44

Parents are understandably concerned about the impacts of COVID-19 on their children’s own mental health. They have good reason. But being positive, we promote more positivity down the road.

Our today's special guest will sing a very positive song about covid-19.

A good morning starts with joy, a good morning begins with love, the sun is shining and the birds are singing, good morning, good morning good morning!

Covid-19 this battle you will not win, coronavirus together we will stop you, you can not give us trouble. Coronavirus, to beat you we will put you in prayer

Coronavirus you can't give us trouble

When I was informed about this, I thought it was a woman, after all it is a pandemic

Coronavirus what do you want? you are making our Angola cry

Minister of health come to help us, we no longer have bread or water, eliminate this disease to make the country move.


Kids ’brains work better when they’re thinking positively. So kids who are in a positive frame of mind are more able to handle, say, a tricky distance-learning assignment.

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

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.


Apelo por Escolas Seguras e Sustentáveis no Âmbito Climático || Call for Safe and Climate-Friendly Schools in Angola

Assunto: Apelo por Escolas Seguras e Sustentáveis no Âmbito Climático Excelentíssima Senhora Vice-Presidente da República de Angola,  Espera...