Rain to clear over the long weekend, but windy conditions are brewing

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Weather forecasters expect some of the heavy downpours experienced across South Africa this week to clear up over the long weekend but warn more wet and windy conditions are brewing. Associate professor in meteorology at the University of Pretoria Liesl Dyson said the recent conditions were due to tropical moisture moving over the country. “In the past week or so, a tropical weather system called an Africane was situated over southern Angola and Mozambique,” she said. Dyson said an Africane was a large-scale, hurricane-like low that occurred over the southern subcontinent of Africa and supplie… Continue reading “Rain to clear over the long weekend, but windy conditions are brewing”

Call for Entries Issued for the 2022 Stevie® Awards for Great Employers

Seventh Annual Honors for Employers and HR Professionals is Accepting Nominations

FAIRFAX, Va., March 17, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — The Stevie Awards has issued the call for entries for the seventh annual Stevie® Awards for Great Employers, which honor the world’s best companies to work for and the human resources teams, professionals, suppliers, and new products and services that help to create and drive great places to work.

All individuals and organizations worldwide – public and private, for-profit, and non-profit, large and small – may submit nominations to the Stevie Awards for Great Employers. The early-bird entry deadline, with reduced entry fees, is April 27. The final entry deadline is June 8, but late entries will be accepted through July 7 with payment of a late fee. Entry details are available at www.StevieAwards.com/HR.

Juries composed of scores of executives around the world will determine the Stevie Award winners. Winners will be announced on August 8. Gold, Silver, and Bronze Stevie Award winners will be presented their awards at a gala event at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas on September 17.

The Stevie Awards for Great Employers recognize achievement in many facets of the workplace. Categories include:

There are new categories in 2022 for Thought Leadership including Achievement in Thought Leadership Skills, Achievement in Thought Leadership Talent, Achievement in Thought Leadership for Recruitment, Achievements in Internal Thought Leadership, and HR Thought Leader of the Year.

Fourteen of the 16 HR Individual categories do not require payment of entry fees.

Winners in the 31 industry-specific Employer of the Year categories will be determined by a unique blend of public votes and professional ratings. Public voting will take place from July 11 – August 1.

Stevie Award winners in 2021 included Allied Irish Banks (Ireland), Bank of America (USA), IBM (USA), Dell Technologies (USA), Everise (Singapore), Fullscript (Canada), Globe Telecom (Philippines), MGM China (China), PT. Bank Central Asia Tbk (Indonesia), Rakuten USA, Salary.com (USA), Turkcell İletişim Hizmetleri A.Ş. (Turkey), Upwork (USA), and many more.

About the Stevie® Awards:
Stevie Awards are conferred in eight programs: the Asia-Pacific Stevie Awards, the German Stevie Awards, The American Business Awards®, The International Business Awards®, the Middle East & North Africa Stevie Awards, the Stevie Awards for Women in Business, the Stevie Awards for Great Employers, and the Stevie Awards for Sales & Customer Service. Stevie Awards competitions receive more than 12,000 nominations each year from organizations in more than 70 nations. Honoring organizations of all types and sizes and the people behind them, the Stevies recognize outstanding performances in the workplace worldwide. Learn more about the Stevie Awards at www.StevieAwards.com.

Marketing Contact:
Nina Moore
Nina@StevieAwards.com

Moderna Seeks FDA Authorization for Second COVID Booster for All Adults

Moderna Inc sought emergency use authorization with U.S. health regulators for a second COVID-19 booster shot late Thursday, as a surge in cases in some parts of the world fuels fears of another wave of the pandemic.

The U.S. biotechnology company said its request covered all adults over the age of 18 so that the appropriate use of an additional booster dose of its vaccine, including for those at higher risk of COVID-19 due to age or comorbidities, could be determined by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and health care providers.

Moderna’s request is significantly broader than Pfizer Inc and its German partner BioNTech SE’s application that was filed earlier this week with U.S. regulators for a second booster shot for people aged 65 and older.

Moderna, without specifically commenting on the effectiveness of a fourth shot, said its submission was partly based on data recently published in the United States and Israel following the emergence of the omicron variant.

FDA did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

U.S. health officials, including top infectious disease expert Dr. Anthony Fauci, have raised the prospect of a fourth shot, especially for older people and to prepare for the possibility of another surge in cases.

CDC data has shown that vaccine efficacy wanes over time and a third shot helps restore it. It, however, has not released comprehensive data based on age or health status to back the case.

The news was first reported by The New York Times.

While COVID-19 cases are falling in the United States and much of the world, infections are rising in China. In the UK and Europe, there has been a reversal in the downward trend of COVID cases as economies have opened up and a second variant of omicron circulates.

Source: Voice of America

Republicans Revive Anti-Vax, Pro-Ivermectin Measure in Kansas

Conservative Republican lawmakers on Thursday revived a proposal to weaken Kansas’ vaccination requirements for children enrolling in school and day care and to make it easier for people to get potentially dangerous treatments for COVID-19.

The Senate health committee approved a bill that would allow parents to get a no-questions-asked religious exemption from requirements to vaccinate their children against more than a dozen diseases, including measles, whooping cough, polio and chickenpox.

The measure also would limit pharmacists’ ability to refuse to fill prescriptions for the anti-worm treatment ivermectin and other drugs for off-label uses as COVID-19 treatments.

The bill goes next to the full Senate for debate. The Republican majority there also is considering a proposal to greatly limit the power of the state’s public health administrator to deal with infectious diseases and another to ban all mask mandates during future pandemics.

“When you put them all together, it’s a lot of negative bills,” said Democratic Sen. Cindy Holscher, of Overland Park.

The measure approved Thursday would require schools to grant an exemption to parents who say vaccinations violate their religious or strongly held moral or ethical beliefs without investigating those beliefs.

A law enacted in November granted a similar, broad exemption to workers seeking to avoid COVID-19 vaccine mandates.

“It allows the day care-aged kids’ parents and school-aged kids’ parents to enjoy the same freedom of religion that everyone else would,” said Sen. Mark Steffen, a Hutchinson Republican.

But Sen. Kristen O’Shea, of Topeka, broke with fellow Republicans in opposing the measure and noted Thursday that the committee didn’t have a hearing on weakening childhood vaccination requirements.

She said during a meeting earlier this month: “It’s really scary to think that we’re in a society that’s going to bring back measles and polio and whooping cough, et cetera.”

The committee approved a version of the bill early last month, but it became tangled in a dispute over congressional redistricting that involved Steffen. Senate President Ty Masterson, an Andover Republican, sent it back to the committee for what a spokesperson called “some tweaks.”

The measure also is shadowed by a state medical board investigation of Steffen, an anesthesiologist and pain-management specialist from Hutchinson. While Steffen disclosed the investigation and acknowledged trying to prescribe ivermectin, he has said the probe deals with his public statements about COVID-19 and not patient care.

Steffen pushed the previous version of the bill, which would have required pharmacists to fill all prescriptions of drugs for off-label uses in treating COVID-19. Kansas law allows pharmacists not to fill prescriptions they deem inappropriate or potentially harmful.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has approved ivermectin to treat infections of lice, roundworms and other tiny parasites in humans. The FDA has tried to debunk claims that animal-strength versions of the drug can help fight COVID-19, warning that large doses can cause nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, seizures, delirium and even death.

The new version of the bill says pharmacists still can refuse to fill drugs for off-label COVID-19 treatments, unless they object only because it’s for treating the novel coronavirus.

The measure prohibits the state medical board from disciplining doctors over such prescriptions, but the committee dropped a provision that would have made that ban apply at the start of the coronavirus pandemic in March 2020.

Steffen said Thursday that he believes doctors who prescribe ivermectin and other drugs to treat COVID-19 can show that they’re doing what other reasonable physicians would do in similar circumstances. That’s the standard the state medical board uses to determine whether a doctor is providing adequate care.

 

 

Source: Voice of America

 

Angola presents priorities for gender equality in CPLP

Luanda – The minister of Social Action, Family and Promotion of Women, Faustina Alves de Sousa presented in New York City, United States of America, the priorities of Angola for gender equality in CPLP.

In a set of priorities presented Wednesday during the 66th Session of the Commission on the Status of Women, it is included the training of state agents for planning gender-sensitive budgets, for the effective implementation of gender-related policies and empowerment of women, as well as the promotion of economic autonomy and income generation capacity.

 

In the scope of the force lines that will guide the presidency of Angola in the body, Faustina Alves de Sousa affirmed that the agenda includes also  the education for health in the communities as a priority matter.

 

While talking in the meeting the minister made known the legislative initiatives for the approval of diplomas that might be useful regarding  gender equality and human rights, promoting the cooperation in this domain among the member states, not neglecting commitments assumed at regional level as in SADC, AU and EU.

 

Minister Faustina Alves de Sousa expressed also the concern on the feminization trend of the gender matters, appealing, however, for balance and inclusion of men and women in conferences and debates on the topic.

 

Regarding this, the official considered being crucial to reinforce the actions in domestic violence domain with emphasis on prevention projects and fighting all discrimination and violence against women, children, elderly and girls.

 

The official also noted the need to raise awareness of focal points for a encompassing approach to gender issues at Community level, with the aim of promoting greater cooperation between Member States.

 

Meanwhile, the preparatory meeting of the ministerial meeting to be held in Luanda, in April this year, will be attended by the minister of State and Presidency of Portugal, Mariana Vieira da Silva, Cape Verde´s minister of Family and Social Inclusion, Elísio Freire, East Timor Secretary of State for Equality and Inclusion, Maria José Monteiro de Jesus, and  representatives of Mozambique and Guinea Bissau.

 

 

Source: Angola Press News Agency

Angolan President sends message to Zambian counterpart

 

Luanda – The Angolan Minister of Foreign Affairs, Téte António, on Thursday in Lusaka, expressed to the Zambian Head of State, Hakainde Hichilema, a verbal message from President João Lourenço.

In the message, the Angolan President, on his own behalf, of the Government and of the Angolan people, sent “heartfelt condolences” for the loss of the former Head of State, Rupiah Banda.

Representing President João Lourenço, Téte António highlighted, in the book of condolences, the qualities of the former Zambian statesman, Rupiah Banda, who will be buried Friday at the Presidential Cemetery in Lusaka.

According to a note from the Angolan Foreign Ministry, the Zambian government on Thursday held a state funeral in Lusaka attended by foreign heads of state and government and other guests.

As early as Friday, the document said, the former President will be buried at the Presidential Cemetery in Lusaka.

Rupiah Banda, 4th President of the Republic of Zambia, died Friday (11) at the age of 85 from illness, having ruled Zambia from 2008 to 2011, replacing Levy Mwanawasa.

After Lusaka, the Angolan head of diplomacy will travel to Lilongwe, in Malawi, where he will take part, from 18 to 19 of the current month, in a session of the Council of Ministers of the Southern African Development Community (SADC).

 

 

Source: Angola Press News Agency

 

Cuando Cubango to have Ombudsman’s office

Menongue – The Ombudswoman, Florbela Araújo, announced today, Thursday, in the city of Menongue, capital of Cuando Cubango, the installation this year of the office of the Ombudsman, to ensure the observance of the rights and freedoms of citizens.

Speaking to the press at the beginning of a working visit of two days to Cuando Cubango, Florbela Araújo said that the trip to the province aims to negotiate with the local government the possibility of installing the Ombudsman’s office in the coming days.

She said that her schedule also included a lecture and visits to a children’s home, hospitals and prisons.

The lecture, which takes place on the first day, will address the theme “The role and function of the Ombudsman in the defence of Citizens’ Rights, Freedoms and Guarantees”. It will be addressed to the bodies that intervene in the administration of justice, members of the government, traditional authorities and guests.

 

Source: Angola Press News Agency

Maritime military drills “Obangame 2022” end

Luanda – The joint military exercises of the navies of the countries that share the Atlantic Ocean, known as “Obangame 2022”, ended Thursday with simulations of approaching drug traffickers and rescue on the high seas.

Angola, with 120 active personnel, led zone A, which included Brazil, Congo, the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and Namibia, the latter a candidate member of the Gulf of Guinea.

Of the simulations made, the first resulted in the seizure of large quantities of drugs by a Namibian vessel, with Angolan coordination.

In the second situation, the rescue of a pilot of an MI 8 was simulated, who had disappeared in high seas, after the crash of the aircraft in which he was travelling.

The exercise involved the signatory states to the Accra (Ghana) agreement on maritime security in the Gulf of Guinea, namely Central and West African countries, and other nations such as the United States, Canada, France, Spain, Portugal and Brazil.

The spokesperson for the drills, Angolan Navy’s Captain Sebastião António Gregório, said the action aimed to exercise international, inter-regional and regional agreements, as well as the Yaounde (Cameroon) code of conduct, in the context of maritime security in the Gulf of Guinea.

 

Source: Angola Press News Agency

 

Government reiterates fight against child labour

 

Luanda – The Angolan government Thursday in Luanda reiterated its commitment to fight and eliminate child labour, by implementing programmes and actions for the resilience of families.

According to the Minister of State for Social Affairs, Carolina Cerqueira, who was speaking at the ceremony to launch the National Plan for the Eradication of Child Labour (PANETI), to mitigate the effects of the phenomenon in families, with the implementation of programmes such as the Inclusive Social Protection, the Programme for Intervention in Municipalities (PIIM), the Programme to Combat Poverty and school meals.

According to the government official, these are programmes that allow for a large increase in the national school network, and keep children in school even in adverse situations.

“For the Angolan government, the fight against child labour is a concern whose elimination is urgently required. The government is aware of the crucial time we are going through and all the results to be achieved depend to a large extent on the challenging and resilient measures taken,” said the minister.

According to Carolina Cerqueira, the government is aware of the social weaknesses and economic shortages that facilitate and enhance the growth of the phenomenon, stating that it cannot ignore its responsibilities as a state, society and nation.

 

 

Source: Angola Press News Agency

Food Security Implications of the Ukraine Conflict for the Southern Africa Region

Regional Bureau Johannesburg

KEY POINTS

  • The onset of the Ukraine conflict came at a time when global food and fertilizer prices were already hitting record highs. As a net importer and price-taker of various commodities such as wheat, vegetable oil and petroleum products, prices in the Southern Africa region have already surged. Nearly 80% of countries in the Southern Africa region are 100% import dependent for wheat and its products.
  • As global and regional prices transmit to local markets, food accessibility in the region could worsen as household purchasing power is effectively reduced. This is especially concerning as it could fuel further social unrest and aggravate situations witnessed in conflict-affected areas in some parts of the region.
  • As the 2021/22 season was marked by mixed seasonal performance (e.g. late onset of rainfall, dry spells and extensive rainfall and flooding across various parts of the region), regional crop production will likely be average at best. With tight global markets, we are likely to enter into the 2022/23 marketing year with elevated maize prices.
  • If fertilizer prices remain at their record high levels, it will also dim crop yield prospects for the 2022/23 agricultural year.

 

 

Source: World Food Programme