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Monday, 28 June 2021

INTERNATIONAL CASSAVA CONGRESS RECOMMENDS MORE INVESTMENT IN VALUE CHAIN



Malanje - The first International Cassava Congress held in northern Malanje province recommended Saturday more investments in the tuber value chain and promotion of public-private partnerships favorable to agribusiness centered on the inclusion of women and young people.

The two-day event, held between 24 and 25 this month, also recommended that producers and peasants increase their knowledge of techniques and the use of technologies in agriculture, with relevant impacts on the quantity and quality of cassava produced in the country.

The recommendations include the increase in the industrial production of cassava flour, using 100% national raw material, aimed at reducing the price of the product.

The event also recommended promotion of regulation of mandatory application of a minimum of 30% cassava flour in the production of bread and other pastry products.

The forum also urged the need to create and promote small cassava processing industries, using incubators and accelerators of investment in agribusiness, as a way of boosting and developing agriculture and valuing the tuber.

On the other hand, the participants at the Congress concluded that there is a need to create a fund to finance agriculture, grants of land to promote agriculture at affordable costs, expansion of Field Schools as a method for transmitting knowledge to rural producers.

It was also concluded that access to adequate markets for the sale of cassava and its derivatives with added value was necessary, as well as the creation of an institutional framework of permanent support services (incubators, accelerators, Business Development Services and others) to Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises.

Sponsored by Ministry of Industry and Commerce in partnership with the government of Malanje province, the first Congress was held under the motto “Leveraging the diversification of the economy based on the cassava value chain”.

COVID-19: 157 INFECTIONS, 91 RECOVERIES IN LAST 24 HOURS



Luanda – Angolan health authorities reported Saturday 157 new cases, 91 recoveries and 4 deaths in the last 24 hours.

According to the daily bulletin, most cases were detected in Luanda, with 74.

The source also quoted 36 fresh cases as being reported in Cunene, 25 in Huambo, 13 in Cabinda, 5 in Huíla, 2 in Cuando Cubango, and Cuanza Sul and Uíge with one each.

The new cases involves people aged 1 day - 94 years of age, being 80 men and 87 women.

Among those recovered, according to the report, 36 reside in Huíla, 20 in Huambo, 18 in Luanda, 16 in Cuando Cubango and 1 in Lunda Sul.

Deaths were registered in the provinces of Luanda and Huambo, with 2 each.

So far, Angola has 38,528 positive cases, 887 deaths, 32,696 recoveries and 4,945 active patients.


TRANSFORMING PRODUCERS INTO SUPPLIERS - MINISTER



Malanje - Angola’s participation in SADC and African Continental Free Trade Zone might influence the transformation of producers into suppliers or partners of projects focused on agri-business in the region, said the minister of Industry and Trade, Victor Fernandes.

The minister was speaking at closing ceremony of the two-day First International Cassava Congress held in northern Malanje province on Saturday.

 

Victor Fernandes said that the presence of the country in this regional group is an opportunity for its access to the market of the countries holding a substantive value chain in the continent, in the view of production flow the continent foresees to attain. 

 

 “As we develop this supply lines we should consider a set of factors that allows the production and supply flow, including the creation of conditions to facilitate the access to new market channel and regional processing points”, he noted.

 

The minister also said that the challenges to integrate cross-border production entail necessarily the use of sophisticated techniques for the marketing of national products, such as cassava and its derivatives.

 

To him, the Congress represents another opportunity to find the reality of the industry and trade sector and other ones which guarantee absorption of the real elements for the assessment of the needs and improve the public policy action at local level


Countries impose new restrictions amid struggle to contain Delta

The rise of highly contagious coronavirus variant prompts several countries to reintroduce restrictions amid surge in new COVID-19 infections.


Authorities in several countries – from Bangladesh and Indonesia to Australia and Israel – are racing to contain the spread of the highly contagious Delta variant of the coronavirus, while Russia’s Saint Petersburg announced a record death toll, laying bare the challenges faced by nations worldwide in their efforts to return to pre-pandemic life.


While vaccination campaigns have brought down infections in mostly wealthy nations, the rise of the Delta variant has stoked fears of new waves of a virus that has already killed nearly four million people.

“There is currently a lot of concern about the Delta variant,” World Health Organization (WHO) chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told a Friday news briefing.

“Delta is the most transmissible of the variants identified so far, has been identified in at least 85 countries and is spreading rapidly among unvaccinated populations.”

In Bangladesh, authorities announced they would impose a new national lockdown from Monday over the variant, with offices shut for a week and only medical-related transport allowed.

Australia’s largest city Sydney, meanwhile, entered a two-week lockdown, with people ordered to stay home except for essential trips.Sydney’s new restrictions apply to some five million people, along with hundreds of thousands of others living in nearby towns.

New Zealand, citing “multiple outbreaks” in Australia, announced a three-day suspension of its quarantine-free travel arrangement with its larger neighbour.

Australia’s COVID-19 Response Minister Chris Hipkins said the suspension would give officials time to consider measures “to make the bubble safer, such as pre-departure testing for all flights” between the two countries.

In Indonesia, President Joko Widodo said the country of 270 million people was facing an “extraordinary situation” and pledged to respond with “quick and appropriate policies”. The country recorded more than 21,000 new infections on Saturday, the highest daily tally yet.

Delta, which was first identified in India in April, is so contagious that experts say more than 80 percent of a population would need to be inoculated in order to contain it – a challenging target even for nations with significant vaccination programmes. The variant is now responsible for more than 90 percent of all new infections in the United Kingdom and about 30 percent in the United States.

European scientists estimate Delta is 40 to 60 percent more contagious than the Alpha variant (B.1.1.7), first discovered in the United Kingdom, which itself was more infectious than the original virus first detected in late 2019.

“It infects more people, it can spread faster,” vaccinologist Dr Annelies Wilder Smith, of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, told Al Jazeera. “We saw it in India. We’re seeing it in Australia and Indonesia, in the UK. And I think we’ll see now increasingly in Europe, and indeed, also in the Americas,” she said.

“Whether it really also causes more severe disease has not yet been confirmed. So if you see more disease you will also see more hospitalisations – that does not mean that the virus itself causes more severe disease.”

Experts say Delta spreads more easily because of mutations that help it latch onto cells in the body. While several studies have shown that vaccines are slightly less effective against Delta, they are still highly effective – but only after the second dose.

Israel, which has one of the world’s most successful vaccination campaigns, has seen infections linked to the variant surge since dropping a requirement to wear masks in enclosed public places 10 days ago.

After four days of more than 100 new cases a day, the health ministry has now reversed that decision.

Situation in Europe

Meanwhile, Russia’s Euro 2020 host Saint Petersburg on Saturday reported the country’s highest daily COVID-19 death toll for a city since the start of the pandemic.

Official figures said Saint Petersburg, which has already hosted six matches of the football tournament and is due to host a quarter-final next Friday, recorded 107 virus deaths during the past 24 hours.

Authorities in the Russian city tightened anti-coronavirus restrictions last week in an effort to curb the spike in new infections, including closing food courts in the city’s shopping malls and its Euro 2020 fan zone. This came as Russia has seen an explosion of new cases since mid-June, driven by the Delta variant.

In neighbouring Finland, health officials said they had detected a spike in coronavirus infections that was traced to football fans returning from Saint Petersburg. The Finnish health institute’s director, Mika Salminen, told public broadcaster YLE that more than 120 cases have so far been identified from passengers returning from the Russian city, mostly football fans, and the number is likely to increase.

Al Jazeera’s Paul Brennan, reporting from London, said there have been concerns about a link between the tournament and COVID-19 outbreaks.

“Attendance at these stadiums has been pre-conditional on you actually showing a negative coronavirus test. But that doesn’t stop people’s mingling in the streets and mixing with other members of the public who don’t have to go through these tests,” he said.

Elsewhere, the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention warned infections were also surging at an alarming rate in at least 12 countries in Africa, with the Delta variant leading to unprecedented hospitalisations.

According to the WHO, only one percent of Africans are fully vaccinated – the lowest ratio globally.

In South Africa, the continent’s worst-hit country, scientists said on Saturday the Delta variant appeared to be dominating new infections. On Friday, authorities registered 18,000 new cases.

Acting Health Minister Mmamoloko Kubayi-Ngubane told the same news conference that it was now likely that the peak of the third wave would surpass the peak of the second wave in January.

In Europe, however, some countries announced the lifting of restrictions even as scientists have warned that Delta was expected to account for 90 percent of all new cases in the European Union by the end of August.

Spain on Saturday brought an end to mandatory outdoor mask-wearing, a year after the rule was first introduced.

The decision came despite the announcement of a major coronavirus cluster in the capital, Madrid, traced to a student trip to the holiday island of Mallorca, with more than 2,000 people ordered to self-isolate.

The Netherlands also ended its rules on outdoor mask-wearing, while easing restrictions on indoor dining and reopening nightclubs to people who have tested negative.

And Switzerland scrapped most of its remaining coronavirus restrictions on Saturday after Health Minister Alain Berset said this week that the country’s use of Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccines gave adequate protection against the Delta variant.

SOURCE: AL JAZEERA AND NEWS AGENCIES

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The 24-year-old athlete died in a car crash ahead of preparing to qualify for the Tokyo Olympic Games.

Qatari world 400m medallist Abdalelah Haroun dies aged 24


Qatari 400 metre runner Abdalelah Haroun, who won a bronze medal at the 2017 world championships, has died in a car crash in Doha, the Qatar Athletics Federation said on Saturday. He was 24.


The federation’s secretary general, Mohammed Issa al-Fadala, said Qatar sports and athletics “lost a great hero” on a global level.

“He was in a rehabilitation programme after recovering from an injury (in preparation) to qualify for the Tokyo Olympics,” al-Fadala said.

The Qatar Olympic Committee also mourned the loss on Saturday.

“Team #Qatar sprinter and world 400m bronze medalist Abdalelah Haroun died today,” it posted on Twitter – along with a black-and-white picture of the athlete holding a bouquet of flowers and the Qatari flag.

Haroun, of Sudanese origin, first represented Qatar in 2015 – stealing the spotlight in his early days by recording remarkable times over 400m.

He finished in third place at 44.48 seconds at the IAAF World Championships in London in 2017, behind South African winner Wayde van Niekerk and Bahamas athlete Steven Gardiner.

Haroun also won silver at the World Indoor Championships in 2016 in Portland and gold at the Asian Games in 2018 in Jakarta.

SOURCE: NEWS AGENCIES

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Classified UK defence ministry documents found at bus stop

The sensitive files contained details outlining the movements of a warship that led to Russia firing warning shots off the Crimean coast


Britain’s government is investigating how secret defence documents, outlining the movements of a warship that led to Russia firing warning shots off the Crimean coast, were found at a bus stop in England.


The Ministry of Defence (MoD) said on Sunday that an employee reported lost documents last week and that an investigation had been launched.

“It shouldn’t be able to happen,” Brandon Lewis, minister for Northern Ireland, told Sky News. “It was properly reported at the time … there’s an internal investigation into that situation.”

A member of the public, who wanted to remain anonymous, contacted the BBC after finding 50 pages of classified information in a soggy heap behind a bus stop in Kent early on Tuesday.

The papers included one set of documents that discussed the potential Russian reaction to HMS Defender’s travel through Ukrainian waters off the Crimea coast on Wednesday, according to the BBC, while another laid out plans for a possible British military presence in Afghanistan.

The MoD said that HMS Defender “conducted innocent passage through Ukrainian territorial waters in accordance with international law” and that “all potential factors” are considered when making “operational decisions”.

The HMS Defender is part of the UK Carrier Strike Group currently heading to the Indo-Pacific region.

However, it was announced earlier this month that it would be temporarily breaking away from the group to carry out its “own set of missions” in the Black Sea.

The Type 45 destroyer caused a clash with Russian forces on Wednesday when it travelled through waters south of the Crimean Peninsula, which Russia unofficially annexed from Ukraine in 2014.

Moscow responded by having several aircraft shadowing the ship at varying heights, the lowest being approximately 500 feet (152 metres).

SOURCE: NEWS AGENCIES

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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...