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”.

Source: Angola Press News Agency

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

Source: Angola Press News Agency

Afghan Officials: Delta Variant Accounts for Nearly 60% of New Infections

ISLAMABAD – Authorities in Afghanistan confirmed Saturday the delta coronavirus variant, first identified in India, has been mainly responsible for the recent surge in cases and deaths in the war-torn country.

Minister for Public Health Wahid Majrooh told reporters in Kabul that out of 19 samples examined in national laboratories a day earlier, nearly 60% tested positive for the delta variant and the rest for a British variant.

“It shows the delta variant of the coronavirus is rapidly spreading in Afghanistan, and this is the main reason for the rise and criticality of the cases,” Majrooh warned in his nationally televised news conference.

The minister stressed the crisis required the Afghan nation to strictly observe safety guidelines to help contain the spread of the delta variant, which is more infectious and more resistant to existing vaccines.

The coronavirus, which causes COVID-19 disease, hit Afghanistan early last year, infecting 114,000 people and killing 4,600 to date.

Afghan officials have documented an average of more than 80 deaths a day, however, from COVID-19 over the past week or so. The data accounts only for a fraction of cases, though, because of capacity issues and a lack of access to areas controlled by the Taliban insurgency.

The pandemic has led to a shortage of medical oxygen, with hospitals throughout Afghanistan refusing to accept new coronavirus patients, citing a lack of beds and other shortages.

The outbreak forced the U.S. Embassy in Kabul to lock down much of the diplomatic mission after dozens of its staff contracted the coronavirus.

The pandemic has gripped Afghanistan as U.S. and NATO allies are withdrawing their troops from the country after nearly 20 years of presence. The retrograde process is due to be complete by September 11.

Meanwhile, the Taliban has intensified battlefield attacks against government forces, capturing more territory. The deteriorating security has added to the challenges facing Afghan health authorities in battling the COVID-19 outbreak.

Afghan authorities are said to have administered 766,000 doses of the coronavirus vaccine in a country with an estimated population of more than 35 million people, with less than a half percent fully vaccinated so far.

The conflict and suspicions about vaccines are blamed for the slow-moving national inoculation campaign. Kabul has received donations of the AstraZeneca vaccine from India and the Sinopharm vaccine from China.

The United States has pledged to deliver 3 million doses of the single-shot Johnson & Johnson coronavirus vaccine as early as next week to help the Afghan government combat what is being termed the deadliest wave of the pandemic.

Source: Voice of America

Johnson & Johnson Reaches $230 Million Opioid Settlement With New York State

NEW YORK – Johnson & Johnson agreed to pay about $230 million to resolve claims it helped fuel an opioid crisis in New York, the state’s attorney general said Saturday.

The agreement addresses claims brought by Attorney General Letitia James, and it will remove Johnson & Johnson as a defendant in a broader trial over opioids scheduled to begin next week.

J&J did not admit liability or wrongdoing in agreeing to settle. It said the agreement was consistent with its prior agreement to pay $5 billion to settle opioid claims by states, cities, counties and tribal governments nationwide.

Source: Voice of America