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Tuesday 28 February 2023

US energy dept says COVID probably leaked from Wuhan lab

 Investigations into the origins of a virus that has now killed nearly 7 million people have been hampered by politics and a lack of access and transparency.



COVID-19 was probably the result of a leak from a laboratory, according to a newly updated classified report from the United States Department of Energy obtained by the Wall Street Journal newspaper.


The new coronavirus — SARS-CoV-2 — first emerged in the central Chinese city of Wuhan in late 2019 and quickly spread around the world, so far killing nearly 7 million people. It also created turmoil in the global economy as countries closed borders and ordered lockdowns to try and curb the spread of a virus against which there were, initially, no effective vaccines.

The judgement for the latest classified report arose out of new intelligence and was made with “low confidence”, the Journal reported on Sunday. The energy department oversees a network of US laboratories, including some that undertake advanced biological research.

The latest findings suggest a change in the view of the US energy department, which said previously it was undecided on how the virus emerged. The officials declined to elaborate on the intelligence that had prompted the department to change its position. It now joins the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) in saying the virus probably spread after a mishap at a laboratory, a conclusion the FBI reached in 2021 with “moderate confidence”.

Four US intelligence agencies believe with “low confidence” that COVID-19 took place through natural transmission, while two others remain undecided, the Journal added.

Despite the agencies’ differing analyses, the update reaffirmed an existing consensus that COVID-19 was not the result of a Chinese biological weapons programme, the people who had read the classified report told the newspaper.

The report, extending to five pages, was prepared for the White House and members of Congress, the Journal said.

White House National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan said there were still a “variety of views” on the issue.

Speaking on CNN on Sunday, he stressed US President Joe Biden had repeatedly asked the intelligence community to invest in trying to find out as much as possible about how the pandemic started.

“President Biden specifically requested that the national labs, which are part of the Energy Department, be brought into this assessment because he wants to put every tool at use to be able to figure out what happened here,” Sullivan said.

In mid-February, the World Health Organisation (WHO) promised to do everything possible “until we get the answer” on the origins of the virus, denying a report that suggested the agency had abandoned its investigation.

After much delay, a WHO team travelled to Wuhan, China, in early 2021 to visit the Huanan market where the first cluster of cases emerged and which was closed and cleaned soon after the virus began to spread. Working alongside Chinese scientists, they also visited the Wuhan Institute of Virology, a biosecurity lab where researchers had been working on bats.

The investigation faced criticism for lacking transparency and access, and for not sufficiently evaluating the lab-leak theory, which it deemed “extremely unlikely”. It said the most likely explanation was that the virus originated in a bat before crossing to an intermediary animal and making the jump to humans.

China has accused the US of politicising the investigation and for ‘scapegoating’ the country after former US President Donald Trump dubbed SARS-CoV-2 virus, which causes COVID-19, the “Chinese virus”.

Finding the origins of the SARS-CoV-2 virus is seen as crucial in order to better fight or even prevent another pandemic.

WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus has insisted that all hypotheses remain on the table and called on China to provide further access to investigate.

SOURCE: AL JAZEERA

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Opposition parties challengeTinubu’s win in Ekiti

 Party agents of the Nigeria’s opposition PDP and Labour are contesting the results of south-western Ekiti state, saying there was over-voting.



Official results showed the state was won by ruling party candidate Bola Tinubu. Ekiti is seen as one of his strongholds.

Mr Tinubu has won in his south-western strongholds of Ondo, Ekiti and Kwara, narrowly losing to Atiku Abubakar of the main opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Osun state, according to results announced by state election officials.

Mr Abubakar has also narrowly won the presidential election in Katsina, the home state of outgoing President Muhammadu Buhari.

The results from the states still have to be formally announced by the head of the Independent National Electoral Commission (Inec) at its headquarters in the capital, Abuja.

The delays in getting results from the states and the capital, Abuja, have led to growing frustration.

The electoral commission has apologised for the unresponsiveness of the results viewing page on its website, saying a surge in use caused technical hitches.

The delays are partly a result of the election continuing for a second day in parts of the country.

The election on Saturday saw voting start several hours late in many areas, and also attacks on some polling stations.

Source:BBC

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Nigeria election 2023: More results arriving

 More results are expected shortly from Nigeria’s tightest election since the end of military rule in 1999.So far, only one of the 36 state results has officially been declared, leading to growing frustration.



The electoral commission has apologised for the unresponsiveness of the results viewing page on its website, saying a surge in use caused technical hitches.

The delays are partly a result of the election continuing for a second day in parts of the country. The election on Saturday saw voting start several hours late in many areas, and also attacks on some polling stations.

More than 87 million people were eligible to take part, making it the biggest democratic exercise in Africa.

The election has seen an unprecedented challenge to the two-party system that has dominated Nigeria for 24 years.

Peter Obi from the previously little known Labour Party, Bola Tinubu from the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) and Atiku Abubakar of the main opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) are all seen as potential winners. There are 15 other presidential candidates.

The only result officially declared so far is from the south-western Ekiti state which saw a clear victory for Mr Tinubu in one of his strongholds.

The earliest a winner has been announced is on the third day after voting in the previous two elections, but many had expected a faster conclusion this time because of the introduction of an electronic result transmission system.

This was meant to increase transparency and make sure the results could not be altered by creating a digital version on the website of the electoral commission, Inec.

But many voters have accused electoral officials of refusing to upload the results at the polling units as they are supposed to.

Officials complained of a lack of internet in some places to upload the results, but voters have shared videos and images shared where Inec officials refused to upload the results.

There have also been reports of disturbances at Inec collation centres in some states, with some political parties on Sunday asking their supporters to go to such places to protect their votes.

Source: BCC

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Twitter CEO, Elon Musk Sacks 200 More Twitter Staff In Latest Round of Cuts

 Twitter CEO, Elon Musk has fired at least 200 members of staff at Twitter after revealing the firm is experiencing a “massive drop in revenue”.



The cuts made over the weekend equate to around 10 percent of Twitter Inc’s workforce, the New York Times (NYT) reported late on Sunday, adding that it marks the latest round of job cuts since Mr. Musk took over the social media site in October.

On Sunday, Musk Tweeted: ‘Hope you have a good Sunday. First day of the rest of your life.’

The latest layoff targeted product managers, data scientists, and engineers and include product manager and Musk devotee Esther Crawford who led the launch of paid subscription service Twitter Blue.
The layoffs impacted the largest number of people at the company since half the company was laid off in November last year.

Employees discovered they were set to lose their jobs after they found themselves unable to log in to their emails and work computers.

Musk told employees during a meeting in late November that no more plans for staff reductions were being made. But staff suspected another wave of cuts was coming this month after they suddenly lost access to their Slack channel last week.

On Saturday night, some found they had been logged out of their emails and laptops.

The latest cuts primarily hit product managers including Crawford, as well as data scientists and engineers who worked on machine learning and site reliability, according to the New York Times.

The staff took to an anonymous platform for verified workers to detail the cuts as they unfolded at the weekend.

‘People receive email at 2am on Saturday and access cut immediately. This will go down as one of the most extreme layoff in entire corporate history,’ read a post on Blind.

The poster claimed layoffs hit the project management department the hardest and were spread across human relations, sales and marketing, engineering, and finance.

Crawford, who before joining Twitter founded a small screen-sharing and video chat app called Squad, which Twitter acquired in 2020, was among those laid off.  Haraldur Thorleifsson, who created the design studio Ueno, which the company bought in 2021, was also removed from his position at Twitter.

Martijn de Kuijper, a senior project manager, said he found out about lay off after being locked out of his email account.

The dismissal of much of the product team has led some to speculate that Musk is preparing to bring in entirely new teams.
Source: peacefmonline

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Betty Boothroyd, UK’s first woman Commons speaker, dies at 93

 Tributes pour in from across the political spectrum for Boothroyd, who served as speaker of the United Kingdom’s lower house of Parliament from 1992 to 2000.



Betty Boothroyd, the first female speaker in Britain’s House of Commons, has died aged 93. Lindsay Hoyle, the current speaker, announced her death in a statement on Monday, hailing Boothroyd as an “inspiring woman” and an “inspirational politician”.


“To be the first woman Speaker was truly ground-breaking and Betty certainly broke that glass ceiling with panache,” Hoyle said.

“She stuck by the rules, had a no-nonsense style, but any reprimands she did issue were done with good humour and charm. Betty was one of a kind. A sharp, witty and formidable woman – and I will miss her.”

Boothroyd became the first woman to be elected speaker in April 1992 and presided over the Commons until October 2000. She also served as a Labour Party MP for West Bromwich West, a seat in England’s midlands region, from 1973 to 2000.

In 2001, she became a baroness in the UK Parliament’s unelected upper chamber, the House of Lords.

Tributes to her work came from across the political spectrum on Monday.

Simon Clarke, the governing Conservative Party’s MP for Middlesbrough South and East Cleveland, described Boothroyd as a “magnificent parliamentarian”.

“It was still a thrill to see her around the Commons until recently. A really great Speaker,” he said in a post on Twitter.

Kim Johnson, Labour MP for Liverpool Riverside, meanwhile praised Boothroyd as a “strong northern, female and working class voice at the heart of Parliament”.

Boothroyd was born on October 8, 1929, in the market town of Dewsbury in northern England.

She was raised in a working-class family, described herself as having come “out of the womb into the Labour movement”, and held a number of office jobs prior to the beginning of her political career.

In recent years, Boothroyd was engaged in the campaign to keep the United Kingdom within the European Union. The UK voted to leave the bloc in a close-run 2016 referendum.

SOURCE: AL JAZEERA AND NEWS AGENCIES

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US announces crackdown on child labour amid surge in violations

 Biden administration’s announcement comes after reports of underage refugees and migrants working in dangerous industries.



The United States government has announced plans to clamp down on child labour in the country following a surge in violations and news reports detailing the illegal employment of underage refugees and migrants in dangerous industries.


US officials said on Monday that the Department of Labor had seen a nearly 70 percent increase in child labour violations since 2018, with 835 companies found to have violated child labour laws in the last fiscal year alone.

Officials told reporters during a conference call that US President Joe Biden’s administration is probing the employment of children at companies, including Hearthside Food Solutions and suppliers to Hyundai Motor.

To try to curb the rise, a joint task force by the Department of Labor and the Department of Health and Human Services — responsible for unaccompanied minors arriving in the country — will seek to improve information sharing between the two agencies.

A parallel initiative by the Department of Labor will focus on better enforcement of existing laws, especially in regions and industries where offences are most widespread. According to existing laws, the maximum fine for breaking child labour laws is $15,138 per case.

It was not clear whether the probe will lead to criminal charges, fines or other penalties. Hearthside said in a statement the company was “appalled” at allegations of child labour and would “work collaboratively with the Department of Labor in their investigation and do our part to continue to abide by all local, state and federal employment laws”.

The uptick in illegal child labour coincides with a massive influx of unaccompanied children fleeing poverty and violence in Latin America, resulting in the referral of 130,000 minors to US government shelters in the last fiscal year.

“This is not a 19th-century problem — this is a today problem,” Labor Secretary Marty Walsh said in a statement on Monday, calling for a vast mobilisation of resources to tackle the problem.

“We need Congress to come to the table, we need states to come to the table.”

Children are allowed to start work at 14 in the US, subject to restrictions on their working hours, but employment in certain workplaces such as slaughterhouses and meatpacking plants is off limits for minors.

A weekend expose by The New York Times reported on an increased presence of migrant minors — some as young as 12 years old — working in sectors across the US economy, from car factories to construction sites and delivery services.

SOURCE: NEWS AGENCIES

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EU observers criticise failures in Nigerian poll

 A European Union observer mission has faulted the lack of transparency and operational failures in the Nigerian election, according to its preliminary findings.



It said there was confidence in the independence and professionalism of the electoral body during preparations for the elections.

But public trust waned over lack of efficient planning and effective communication in the process – including on the election day, the observers said.

Nigerians cast their votes in a presidential and parliamentary general election on Saturday.

The observers noted that some poll centres opened late and polling procedures were not always followed.

They said the uploading of the results using an electronic system did not work, raising concerns as transmission of presidential election results forms was delayed.

The observer team has urged stakeholders in the election to uphold peace until the process is completed and called for any disputes arising to be addressed through legal channels.

Source: BBC

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Israeli-American killed in Jericho attack

 The drive-by shooting comes after Jewish settlers killed a Palestinian during a rampage through villages in the West Bank.



An Israeli-American motorist has been killed in an attack by suspected Palestinian gunmen near the occupied West Bank city of Jericho.


Israeli officials said the Palestinian attackers had carried out several drive-by shootings on a highway near Jericho, one of which killed the Israeli-American on Monday, before getting away.

The United States confirmed that the man killed was a US citizen, but did not identify him.

The incident occurred after Jewish settlers rampaged through Huwara and other Palestinian villages near Nablus in the West Bank, killing one Palestinian civilian, and burning dozens of cars and homes in what has been described by some Palestinians as a “pogrom”.

Israel had reinforced its West Bank bases after two brothers from a Jewish settlement were shot dead on Sunday, but have been accused of standing by as the Jewish settlers attacked Palestinian villages.

With the Muslim holy month of Ramadan and the Jewish Passover festival weeks away, foreign mediators have sought to tamp down tensions that surged after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu regained power at the head of a hard-right coalition.

The events cast doubt on Netanyahu’s ability to walk a diplomatic tightrope between Washington – pushing for a lasting compromise – and his own cabinet that includes hardline settlers demanding tough action against Palestinian attacks.

At a regular briefing for reporters, State Department spokesperson Ned Price condemned attacks by both sides and welcomed statements by Netanyahu calling for a cessation of what he described as “vigilante violence” by settlers.

“We expect the Israeli government to ensure full accountability and legal prosecution of those responsible for these attacks, in addition to compensation for the lost homes and property,” Price said.

On Sunday, Jordan, with US envoys, hosted a rare meeting between Israeli and Palestinian officials. The Jordanian foreign ministry said Israel had pledged a slowdown in Jewish settlement announcements and reaffirmed past peace accords.

However, Netanyahu was quick to deny that, and tweeted that there would not be any settlement freeze.

SOURCE: AL JAZEERA AND NEWS AGENCIES

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Sunday 26 February 2023

Angola in business enabling environment ranking for doing business

 Luanda – Angola is one of the 40 chosen countries by the World Bank (WB) to be part of the favourable environment ranking for doing business (Business Enabling Environment, BEE).



According to what ANGOP has learnt through a publication on the website of the Ministry of Economy and Planning, the choice fell on Angola due to the set of reforms implemented in the last five years.

 

The ministerial department’s website says that the BEE is a report that will make a quantitative assessment on the business environment for the development of the private sector, focused within the regulatory framework and in the provision of public services aimed at companies, workers and markets.

 

The publication in the website also states that in the last five years, the Angolan Government implemented a set of reforms in 10 areas which comprise the life cycle of a company.

 

The selection of Angola for the first BEE report is seen as recognition of the reform drive of the Angolan government over the past five years.

 

The World Bank has not published reports on the business environment since 2019.

Saurimo Diamond Hub gains 5th diamond cutting factory

 Saurimo - A diamond cutting factory called “Pollaro” was inaugurated this Friday, at the Saurimo Diamond Hub, Lunda Sul Province, by the minister of Mineral Resources, Oil and Gas, Diamantino Azevedo, aiming to promote the institution.



With the capacity to cut 5,000 carats per month, the 5th factory was built in an area of 750 square metres, with an investment of over USD 5 million, for its construction and to acquire the equipment.

 

The factory includes areas for treatment, planning, stone scanning, laser cutting, manual and automatic polishing.

 

On the occasion, the minister of Mineral Resources, Oil and Gas, Diamantino Azevedo, said that the hub would continue to be a priority as it was a sector that contributed most to the national economy.

 


He expressed his satisfaction for the fact that another one of the many factories that will still be built and also for the fact that it provided jobs for Young finalists of the Training, Evaluation and Diamond Cutting Centre.

 

The governor of Lunda Sul Province, Daniel Neto, noted that the opening of the new factory would in fact make more diamonds to be cut locally, which would bring more job opportunities for young people.

 

The president of the factory's executive committee, Hélder David, said that it employs 60 young people, of whom 30 are nationals and 30 foreign citizens.

 

He informed that the company will continue to make continuous improvements with investment aiming to get better results.

Sonangol becomes more agile with regeneration programme

 Luanda - Angola's secretary of State for Oil and Gas, José Barroso, said Friday that Sonangol had become more dynamic and organised with the ongoing regeneration process.



Barroso said that the regeneration process saw the emergence of a more agile Sonangol (National Fuel Society) that was better prepared to implement projects and programmes in the Upstream (exploration, drilling and production), midstream (refining) and downstream (transport, distribution and commercialisation), within the framework of the migration of a large part of its "non-core" assets.

 

Speaking in a press conference held as part of the 47th anniversary of the state-owned oil company, Barroso said the same process has made it possible to redefine the company's organisational model, which was based on an entrepreneurial vision, while preparing to put part of its capital in the stock exchange, based on  best international practices.

 

"We are convinced that the impact that our national oil company has had and will continue to have in the implementation and development of socio-economic projects in several areas of the economy is unique and deserves to be highlighted", Barroso said.

 

The official added that the restructuring of the oil sector over the last few years led Sonangol to focus on carrying out its business across the sector's value chain, at a national and international level, with a national and international vision, based on the Angolan government's strategy for consolidation of the oil and gas sector.

 

He underscored that in terms of upstream exploitation the national company approved and should focus on implementing the exploration and production strategy, with the aim to increase its operating quota to 10 percent by 2027, which is currently around 2 percent.

 

The official added that the Sonangol will have to invest in exploration and development in new fields, while it continues production and revitalisation of existing oil and gas fields in already operated blocks.

 

In midstream and downstream, the official underscored Sonangol's involvement in refining projects to implement the government's strategy to achieve fuel self-sufficiency by 2027.

 

For this purpose the Cabinda, Soyo and Lobito refineries inaugurated in 2022 are expected to contribute a lot, as well as the Luanda Refinery Complex with capacity for 1.5 million barrels per day is opened in mid-2022. 

 

Barroso also mentioned other achievements by the national oil company, such as the increasing fuel storage capacity with the execution of the Barra do Dande Ocean Terminal project, which plans to store more than 580,000 cubic metres in its first phase.

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