ANGOLA AND SEYCHELLES SIGN GENERAL COOPERATION AGREEMENT

Luanda – Angola and the Seychelles Tuesday signed a General Cooperation Agreement, after the accreditation of Ambassador Sandro de Oliveira by the Indian Ocean island nation’s President Wavel Ramkalawan.

Ambassador Sandro de Oliveira and the Minister of Foreign Affairs and Tourism, Sylvestre Radegonde, also signed the Agreement on the Creation of a Bilateral Commission, reads a press release from the Angolan Embassy in the United Republic of Tanzania, where the Angolan diplomat has his permanent residence.

During the ceremony, that served to present his credentials, Sandro de Oliveira discussed with the Head of State of the Seychelles the state of the existing relations between the two countries, characterized as “good”.

The communiqué, to which ANGOP had access, said there was agreement on the need to extend cooperation, aiming at obtaining reciprocal advantages, with the private sector playing an important role.

The Angolan diplomat’s agenda also included working meetings with the ministers of Transport, Antony Derjacques, and of Investment, Entrepreneurship and Industry, Devika Vidot.

During his week-long visit to the Indian Ocean island nation, Sandro de Oliveira is also scheduled to meet with the ministers of Fisheries and Blue Economy and Finance, Economic Planning and Trade.

Seychelles is an island nation, located northwest of Madagascar and 1,593 kilometres south of Kenya, with a population of about 99,500, 2019 estimates.

It is one of the 16 member states of the Southern African Development Community (SADC).

Source: Angola Press News Agency

PRESIDENT POINTS OUT WAYS TO BETTER PROTECT CHILDREN

Luanda – The President of the Republic, João Lourenço, Tuesday said that Angola has made great advances in the strategy for child protection, but much remains to be done, mainly in terms of empowering families.

In a message on the International Children’s Day (1 June), the Angolan Head of State encouraged the official bodies responsible for this purpose to continue their efforts to strengthen the fight against paternity denial and early pregnancy.

He also called for more action to combat domestic violence, sexual aggression, obscurantist practices such as accusing children of witchcraft, exploitation of child labour and other negative situations that are at the root of many of the problems of children in Angola.

He highlighted the issue of empowering families, as it is the nucleus where the first attention should be paid to children and where the first values are transmitted to ensure their full development, besides preventing possible deviations of conduct.

The Angolan President also recalled that since the first years of National Independence, the rights of children “began to be enshrined in the famous slogan Give the child everything he or she deserves and were formalised in the 11 Commitments for Children, adopted by the Government in 2007, and in other documents of equal importance”.

Source: Angola Press News Agency

US Companies Offer Sweet Deals to Overcome Vaccine Hesitation?

American corporations are offering a growing cornucopia of special?deals?and promotions to encourage?people?in the U.S. to get vaccinated against COVID-19.

Vaccine activism among some of the nation’s best-known brands comes as daily totals for jabs in the arm have declined by roughly 50% since mid-April. U.S. health officials say convincing the hesitant to roll up their sleeves is critical for defeating the coronavirus, a message that appears to have been heard loud and clear in corporate boardrooms.

Ride-booking services, food retailers and even dating sites?have?teamed up with the White House to help push forward President Joe Biden’s goal of getting?at least one shot?into?70%?of adults by July.?

To encourage more people to get the shot,?America’s largest pharmacy chain, CVS, has started a sweepstakes?campaign for those who sign up.?More than?1,000 prizes?will be handed out?to?people who get,?or plan to?get,?vaccinated?through CVS?by July 10.?The winnings include?cash, cruises and?other?vacations.?

Dr.?Kyu Rhee,?senior vice president of CVS Health,?said the company has already dispensed?more than 17 million COVID?vaccinations.?

“Getting as much of the population fully vaccinated will bring us one step closer to all the things we’ve missed during the past 14 months and keep our country moving in the right direction,” he said in a statement.

As the pandemic appears to be winding down in the U.S., many people are eager to travel. United Airlines is helping some of them through its?”Your Shot to Fly”?sweepstakes that will give away free flights. Until June 22, immunized?frequent flyer passengers?can?upload their vaccination record to the airline’s mobile app?or?website?for a chance to win round-trip tickets or?free flights for a year to United’s destinations worldwide.?

In a statement, United CEO Scott Kirby said: “We’re excited to give people one more reason to get vaccinated so they can reunite with friends and family or take that long-awaited vacation which all could be just one shot away.”

From travel to food, customers are getting rewards for being vaccinated, including sweet treats.

Krispy Kreme shops are giving away one free doughnut each day?until the end of the year?to?people who?show they?are?immunized.

At many Shake Shack fast food locations, customers with a vaccination card can get a free side of fries through June 12 with the purchase of a hamburger or chicken sandwich.

While not giving away food freebies,?McDonalds?has partnered with the Biden?administration to?promote vaccinations by printing information on some 50 million coffee cups?beginning in?July.?Featuring the slogan?”We Can Do This,”?the aim of the?campaign is to?encourage Americans who are hesitant to get vaccinated.?

In a statement, U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra noted that customers will be able to get “trusted information about vaccines when they grab a cup of coffee or order a meal.”

Some people don’t have transportation to get to vaccination sites, so ride-sharing?firms Lyft and Uber are helping them by giving free rides for inoculations until July 4. Lyft is funding up to $15 each way, while Uber is covering up to $25 back and forth.

Both companies use their own apps to pick up customers.

“We’ve built a new easy-to-use in-app experience,”?Uber’s website says,?”where users will be able to find nearby available vaccines from tens of thousands of local providers.”?

Some stores are offering discounts for getting immunized on-site. At Target, a?merchandise retailer,?customers receive?$5 off any?in-store?purchase, while Albertsons?is?offering a 10% food discount for people who get vaccinated at its grocery stores.

For those seeking romance among the inoculated, online dating site OKCupid recently launched a profile badge that lets users sort other users by vaccination status.

“The (I’m Vaccinated) badge allows daters to signal to others that they’ve been vaccinated,” Ariel Charytan, the company’s CEO, said in a press release, “and will direct users who aren’t to a government-approved resource where they can find a vaccination site near them.”

Profiles of the daters who are immunized are given a “boost,” meaning they can be seen by more users.

There are also freebies for the practical-minded. For the tens of millions of people who got the jab and want to protect their vaccinated cards, office supply chains Office Depot and Office Max are running a promotion through July 25 where they will laminate them free of charge.

Source: Voice of America

World Health Organization Developing Pandemic Game Plan for Future Outbreaks

Member nations of the World Health Organization have approved a plan to negotiate the terms of an international pandemic response treaty.

Attendees at the closing session of the World Health Assembly in Geneva voted Monday on resolution to create a special WHO assembly session in November aimed at reaching a treaty or convention that would help nations better prepare and respond to a potential pandemic similar to the COVID-19 outbreak.

The ongoing outbreak has sickened over 170 million people around the world and led to more than 3.5 million deaths since it was first detected in central China in late 2019.

WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told attendees “the time has come” for such a treaty, saying it would strengthen both the U.N. health agency and global health security as a whole. He said it will address “the lack of sharing of data, information, technologies and resources” that marked the sluggish response to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The issue of a global pandemic response treaty was one of several reforms taken up during the weeklong event, although they will not be voted on until the World Health Assembly meets again next year.

Organizers of the Copa America soccer tournament announced Monday it was moving the upcoming event to Brazil due to a surge of new COVID-19 infections in Argentina, which was co-hosting with Colombia. The news was greeted with skepticism by some in Brazil, which trails only the United States and India in the total number of coronavirus cases more than 13.5 million, and is second only to the U.S. in deaths at over 462,000.

Scientists are concerned about hosting a tournament in a nation with a more transmissible COVID-19 variant, with many predicting another wave of the disease to hit the country in a matter of weeks. Some opposition politicians are threatening to file an injunction with the Brazilian Supreme Court to block the tournament.

President Jair Bolsonaro has come under heavy criticism for his apparently dismissive attitude toward the pandemic, and is the subject of a congressional investigation over his government’s management of the crisis.

Meanwhile, Australia’s women’s Olympic softball team on Monday became the first to arrive in Japan to begin preparations for the upcoming Tokyo Olympics, which is also under a cloud due to a new wave of COVID-19 infections across the country and a slow rate of vaccinations, generating strong public opposition against going through with the Games.

Foreign spectators are barred from attending the Olympics, which begin July 23, and a Japanese newspaper reported Monday the government may require potential spectators to either have to show proof they received a COVID-19 vaccine or tested negative for the virus.

Source: Voice of America