European-Japanese Space Mission Gets First Glimpse of Mercury

A joint European-Japanese spacecraft got its first glimpse of Mercury as it swung by the solar system’s innermost planet while on a mission to deliver two probes into orbit in 2025.

The BepiColombo mission made the first of six flybys of Mercury at 11:34 p.m. GMT Friday, using the planet’s gravity to slow the spacecraft down.

After swooping past Mercury at altitudes of under 200 kilometers (125 miles), the spacecraft took a low-resolution black-and-white photo with one of its monitoring cameras before zipping off again.

The European Space Agency said the captured image shows the Northern Hemisphere and Mercury’s characteristic pock-marked features, among them the 166-kilometer-wide (103-mile-wide) Lermontov crater.

The joint mission by the European agency and the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency was launched in 2018, flying once past Earth and twice past Venus on its journey to the solar system’s smallest planet.

Five further flybys are needed before BepiColombo is sufficiently slowed down to release ESA’s Mercury Planetary Orbiter and JAXA’s Mercury Magnetospheric Orbiter. The two probes will study Mercury’s core and processes on its surface, as well as its magnetic sphere.

The mission is named after Italian scientist Giuseppe “Bepi” Colombo, who is credited with helping develop the gravity assist maneuver that NASA’s Mariner 10 first used when it flew to Mercury in 1974.

Source: Voice of America

Alaska’s Vanishing Salmon Push Yukon River Tribes to the Brink

In a normal year, the smokehouses and drying racks that Alaska Natives use to prepare salmon to tide them through the winter would be heavy with fish meat, the fruits of a summer spent fishing on the Yukon River like generations before them.

This year, there are no fish. For the first time in memory, both king and chum salmon have dwindled to almost nothing and the state has banned salmon fishing on the Yukon, even the subsistence harvests that Alaska Natives rely on to fill their freezers and pantries for winter. The remote communities that dot the river and live off its bounty — far from road systems and easy, affordable shopping — are desperate and doubling down on moose and caribou hunts in the waning days of fall.

“Nobody has fish in their freezer right now. Nobody,” said Giovanna Stevens, 38, a member of the Stevens Village tribe who grew up harvesting salmon at her family’s fish camp. “We have to fill that void quickly before winter gets here.”

Opinions on what led to the catastrophe vary, but those studying it generally agree human-caused climate change is playing a role as the river and the Bering Sea warm, altering the food chain in ways that aren’t yet fully understood. Many believe commercial trawling operations that scoop up wild salmon along with their intended catch, as well as competition from hatchery-raised salmon in the ocean, have compounded global warming’s effects on one of North America’s longest rivers.

The assumption that salmon that aren’t fished make it back to their native river to lay eggs may no longer hold up because of changes in both the ocean and river environments, said Stephanie Quinn-Davidson, who has worked on Yukon River salmon issues for a decade and is the Alaska Venture Fund’s program director for fisheries and communities.

Looking for ‘smoking gun’

King, or chinook, salmon have been in decline for more than a decade, but chum salmon were more plentiful until last year. This year, summer chum numbers plummeted and numbers of fall chum — which travel farther upriver — are dangerously low.

“Everyone wants to know, ‘What is the one smoking gun? What is the one thing we can point to and stop?’ ” she said of the collapse. “People are reluctant to point to climate change because there isn’t a clear solution … but it’s probably the biggest factor here.”

Many Alaska Native communities are outraged they are paying the price for generations of practices beyond their control that have caused climate change — and many feel state and federal authorities aren’t doing enough to bring Indigenous voices to the table. The scarcity has made raw strong emotions about who should have the right to fish in a state that supplies the world with salmon, and it underscores the powerlessness many Alaska Natives feel as traditional resources dwindle.

The nearly 3,200-kilometer (2,000-mile) Yukon River starts in British Columbia and drains an area larger than Texas in both Canada and Alaska as it cuts through the lands of Athabascan, Yup’ik and other tribes.

The crisis is affecting both subsistence fishing in far-flung outposts and fish processing operations that employ tribal members in communities along the lower Yukon and its tributaries.

“In the tribal villages, our people are livid. They’re extremely angry that we are getting penalized for what others are doing,” said P.J. Simon, chairman and chief of the Tanana Chiefs Conference, a consortium of 42 tribal villages in the Alaska interior. “As Alaska Natives, we have a right to this resource. We have a right to have a say in how things are drawn up and divvied up.”

More than a half-dozen Alaska Native groups have petitioned for federal aid, and they want the state’s federal delegation to hold a hearing in Alaska on the salmon crisis. The groups also seek federal funding for more collaborative research on the effects that ocean changes are having on returning salmon.

Citing the warming ocean, Republican Governor Mike Dunleavy requested a federal disaster declaration for the salmon fishery this month and has helped coordinate airlifts of about 41,000 kilograms (90,000 pounds) of fish to needy villages. The salmon crisis is one of the governor’s top priorities, said Rex Rock Jr., Dunleavy’s adviser for rural affairs and Alaska Native economic development.

A vital tradition

That’s done little to appease remote villages that are dependent on salmon to get through winter, when snow paralyzes the landscape and temperatures can dip to minus 29 C (minus 20 degrees Fahrenheit) or lower.

Families traditionally spend the summer at fish camps using nets and fish wheels to snag adult salmon as they migrate inland from the ocean to the place where they hatched so they can spawn. The salmon is prepared for storage in a variety of ways: dried for jerky, cut into fillets that are frozen, canned in half-pint jars or preserved in wooden barrels with salt.

Without salmon, communities are under intense pressure to find other protein sources. In the Alaska interior, the nearest road system is often dozens of miles away, and it can take hours by boat, snowmachine or airplane to reach a grocery store.

Store-bought food is prohibitively expensive for many: 3.8 liters (1 gallon) of milk can cost nearly $10, and a pound of steak was recently $34 in Kaltag, an interior village about 528 kilometers (328 air miles) from Fairbanks. A surge in COVID-19 cases that has disproportionately hit Alaska Natives has also made many hesitant to venture far from home.

Instead, villages sent out extra hunting parties during the fall moose season and are looking to the upcoming caribou season to meet their needs. Those who can’t hunt themselves rely on others to share their meat.

“We have to watch our people because there will be some who will have no food about midyear,” said Christina Semaken, 63, a grandmother who lives in Kaltag, an Alaska interior town of fewer than 100 people. “We can’t afford to buy that beef or chicken.”

Semaken hopes to fish next year, but whether the salmon will come back remains unknown.

Tribal advocates want more genetic testing on salmon harvested from fishing grounds in Alaska waters to make sure that commercial fisheries aren’t intercepting wild Yukon River salmon. They also want more fish-tracking sonar on the river to ensure an accurate count of the salmon that escape harvest and make it back to the river’s Canadian headwaters.

Loss of sea ice

Yet changes in the ocean itself might ultimately determine the salmon’s fate.

The Bering Sea, where the river meets the ocean, has had unprecedented ice loss in recent years, and its water temperatures are rising. Those shifts are throwing off the timing of the plankton bloom and the distribution of small invertebrates that the fish eat, creating potential chaos in the food chain that’s still being studied, said Kate Howard, a fisheries scientist with the Alaska Department of Fish and Game. Researchers have also documented warming temperatures in the river that are unhealthy for salmon, she said.

Because salmon spend time in both rivers and the ocean during their unique life cycle, it’s hard to pin down exactly where these rapid environmental changes are most affecting them, but it’s increasingly clear that overfishing is not the only culprit, Howard said.

“When you dig into all the available data for Yukon River salmon,” she said, “it’s hard to explain it all unless you consider climate change.”

Alaska Natives, meanwhile, are left scrambling to fill a hole in their diet — and in centuries of tradition built around salmon.

On a recent fall day, a small hunting party zoomed along the Yukon River by motorboat, scanning the shoreline for signs of moose. After three days, the group had killed two moose, enough to provide meat for seven families, or about 50 people, for roughly a month in their small community of Stevens Village.

At the end of a long day, they butchered the animals as the Northern Lights blazed a vibrant green across the sky, their headlamps piercing the inky darkness.

The makeshift camp, miles from any road, would normally host several dozen families harvesting salmon, sharing meals and teaching children how to fish. On this day, it was eerily quiet.

“I don’t really think that there is any kind of bell out there that you can ring loud enough to try to explain that type of connection,” said Ben Stevens, whose ancestors founded Stevens Village. “Salmon, to us, is life. Where can you go beyond that?”

Source: Voice of America

Fauci Calls Merck COVID Pill Data ‘Impressive’

Members of the White House COVID-19 Response Team said Friday that recent trials showing the effectiveness of the U.S. drug company Merck’s experimental new COVID-19 pill were certainly good news, but they stressed that vaccines would remain the best way to end the pandemic.

During the response team’s virtual briefing, top U.S. infectious-disease expert Dr. Anthony Fauci said early data from the studies on the Merck COVID-19 pill were “impressive,” including a 50% reduction in hospitalizations and deaths.

White House Coronavirus Response Coordinator Jeff Zients said the U.S. government had already arranged to buy 1.7 million doses of the pill, with an option for more if needed.

If approved for emergency use, the Merck pill would be the first COVID-19 treatment that could be taken orally and not through injection or intravenous drip. Fauci said he would not predict when the pill might be approved as both the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention evaluate the medication.

Vaccinations still seen as best choice

But, Zients said, while the pill is very good news, vaccinations are still the best way out of the pandemic, and the response team spent the bulk of its briefing presenting statistics to encourage the unvaccinated 70 million U.S. residents to take the shot.

CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky said new data from her agency demonstrated the vaccination’s value at preventing serious illness. The data, collected in August during the peak of the surge of infections caused by the delta variant of the virus, showed that areas where 55% or less of the total population was vaccinated had more than twice the infection rates of areas with greater vaccine coverage. Hospitalization and death rates also were significantly higher where vaccination rates were lower.

Fauci presented statistics compiled over the past 30 days at hospitals in King County in Washington state, information he said also demonstrated the vaccine’s effectiveness against the delta variant. That data showed that unvaccinated people were eight times more likely to test positive for COVID-19, 41 times more likely to be hospitalized from it and 57% more likely to die from it.

Noting the recent overall decline in new cases and hospitalizations in the past few weeks, Fauci said people should not interpret that decline to mean they now did not need to be vaccinated. He said the best way to prevent resurgences of the disease and end the pandemic was to get vaccinated.

Source: Voice of America

US Tops 700,000 COVID Deaths

The United States has surpassed 700,000 deaths from COVID-19, the highest of any country.

The U.S. recorded 700,258 deaths Friday evening, according to data from the Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center.

Brazil has the second-highest number of deaths, with 597,255. India has 448,339; Mexico, 277,507; and Russia, 204,424, according to Johns Hopkins. Globally, nearly 4.8 million people have died from COVID-19.

U.S. health officials say cases have been declining across the United States in recent weeks. However, while the latest wave of COVID-19 has peaked across the country as a whole, some states, especially in the North, are seeing case numbers rise.

In other developments in the U.S., California became the first state to announce a vaccine mandate for schoolchildren once the Food and Drug Administration formally approves COVID-19 vaccines for younger age groups.

Currently, the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine has been fully approved for people age 16 and older and cleared for emergency use in children ages 12-15.

Once the vaccine is fully approved for the younger age group, California will mandate it for students in seventh through 12th grades.

After it is approved for anyone 5 and older, the state will mandate the vaccine for children in kindergarten through sixth grade.

Students will be granted exemptions for religious and medical reasons.

In Washington, U.S. Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh tested positive for COVID-19, despite having been vaccinated. The court said the 54-year-old justice had no symptoms.

The positive test forced Kavanaugh to miss Friday’s ceremonial swearing in for Justice Amy Coney Barrett, who was appointed to the court last year by former President Donald Trump. Her ceremony was delayed because of the pandemic.

In other court news, Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor denied an emergency appeal from a group of New York City schoolteachers seeking to block the city’s vaccine mandate for school staff.

The ruling means the vaccine mandate can go forward. Under its rules, the city’s school employees had until 5 p.m. Friday to get at least their first vaccine shot.

Source: Voice of America

WHO: Most of Africa Has Missed 10 Percent COVID-19 Vaccination Goal

Fifteen African countries have succeeded in fully vaccinating at least 10 percent of their populations against COVID-19 by September 30, a goal set by the World Health Organization in May. However, that leaves two-thirds of the continent’s 54 nations extremely vulnerable to the deadly disease.

Several countries have performed extremely well. Seychelles and Mauritius have fully vaccinated more than 60 percent of their populations and Morocco has inoculated 48 percent against the coronavirus.

Richard Mihigo is coordinator of the Vaccine-preventable Diseases Department in the WHO’s regional office for Africa. He said those countries were able to achieve and even excede the 10 percent target because they had a steady vaccine supply available.

He said most had the money to strike bilateral deals to procure vaccine in addition to the supplies delivered through the COVAX facility.

“Unfortunately, 70 percent of African countries have missed this important milestone to protect their most vulnerable, with half of the 52 countries with COVID-19 vaccination programs in Africa having inoculated less than two percent of their populations,” said Mihigo.

That compares to an inoculation rate of 50 percent or higher in wealthier countries.

The WHO reports monthly vaccine deliveries to Africa have increased 10-fold since June. However, it notes more than double that amount is needed to reach the 40 percent immunization target of Africa’s 1.3 billion people by the end of the year.

Mihigo said COVAX is identifying countries that do not have the means to procure vaccines and put them in the front of the line to get enough doses to cover their most at-risk populations. However, he said pledges of doses by wealthier countries need to materialize soon.

“Starting next week, we are sending multi-disciplinary teams of international experts to countries that are struggling to scale up their operations so that we can drill down and identify the bottlenecks so that the local authorities and their partners can remedy them as they continue to rollout the vaccines,” said Mihigo.

On a more positive note, the World Health Organization says COVID-19 infections in Africa dropped by 35 percent to just over 74,000 last week, with more than 1,700 deaths reported in 34 countries.

Despite the declining numbers, the WHO warns people must remain vigilant and continue to adhere to proven public health measures to save lives. Those include the wearing of masks, regular hand washing, and physical distancing.

 

 

Source: Voice of America

Yemen’s Humanitarian Situation ‘Fragile’

The United Nations’ top humanitarian official in Yemen says that while widespread famine was averted in the country earlier this year with a surge in donor support, the situation is fragile and many essential programs remain at risk of further cuts.

“It’s not enough that we just got that one push, we need a continuous stream of support coming in over the next weeks into 2022,” David Gressly told VOA. “And until this crisis is solved politically, this situation on the ground will persist.”

Seven years of war between the Saudi-backed government of President Abdu Rabu Mansour Hadi and Iranian-supported Houthi rebels has pushed the Middle East’s poorest country to the brink.

Ongoing U.N. efforts to broker a nationwide cease-fire, reopen Sana’a airport, ease restrictions on the flow of fuel and other imports through Hodeidah port, and get direct talks going again have been unsuccessful.

More than 20 million Yemenis – in a population of around 30 million – need humanitarian assistance. The World Food Program says 16 million of them are “marching towards starvation,” due to a combination of conflict and a crippling economic crisis.

The situation of children is especially critical: the U.N. says one child dies every 10 minutes from preventable causes, including malnutrition and vaccine-preventable diseases.

The United Nations has appealed for nearly $4 billion to meet needs through December. Gressly said they have received about $2.6 billion in cash and pledges, casting uncertainty over the future of some assistance.

In March, there was a severe shortage of humanitarian funding for Yemen, which caused WFP to halve rations to people already in dire need. An injection of cash from major donors, including the United States, Germany, the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia, helped restore them to full rations, but Gressly said without sustained funding, his “greatest fear” is this could happen again.

WFP’s executive director, David Beasley, warned last week that without more money, his agency may have to cut rations to 3.2 million people by October, and by December that number could grow to 5 million people.

While funding to food and nutrition programs is up, Gressly said other essential sectors including health, water and sanitation are 80-85% underfunded.

Affordability crisis

Gressly, who took up his post in March, says food and other items are available in most of Yemen’s urban markets, but with rampant inflation driving up prices, unemployment, exhausted savings, and civil servants not being paid, people simply do not have the money to buy things.

“It’s an affordability crisis,” he said.

“That’s why we need to find a complementary strategy, one that addresses not only humanitarian assistance directly to those in need, but also an economic one that takes a look at what can — even in the context of a conflict — what can be done to help revive at least, in part, the economy,” he added.

Pandemic

Yemen’s already overstretched health care system is also coping with a third wave of the coronavirus pandemic.

While confirmed cases have been low compared to other countries – just over 9,000 according to the Johns Hopkins University Coronavirus Resource Center – there has been a high proportion of deaths – more than 1,700.

Gressly said vaccinations have also been very slow to roll out and it will take years to vaccinate the entire country.

“The bigger issue is probably twofold: one is getting enough vaccine in the country — we’re not getting anywhere near enough for the population, maybe between 1 and 2 percent,” he said. “So that’s not going to make a major difference on its own.”

The vaccine alliance, COVAX, has allocated nearly 3 million doses for Yemen. Only 868,000 have been shipped so far.

“Secondly, there’s a lot of hesitation in the south and denial by authorities in the north on the reality of COVID and the necessity for vaccination,” he noted of the different factions in control of Yemen’s territory.

Earlier this week, Gressly met with USAID officials in Washington, where he pressed for continued humanitarian funding into next year and support for economic initiatives.

The United States pledged an additional $290 million to humanitarian efforts in Yemen at a donors conference on the sidelines of last week’s U.N. General Assembly. It has provided nearly $806 million in humanitarian assistance since last October.

 

 

 

Source: Voice of America

UNWTO OFFERS SCHOLARSHIPS FOR ANGOLAN CADRES

Luanda – The World Tourism Organisation (UNWTO), based in Madrid, has offered 20 scholarships for Angolan staff in the tourism sector, as part of President João Lourenço’s visit to the United Nations agency.

The information was provided Wednesday in the Spanish capital, Madrid, by Foreign Minister, Téte António, following President João Lourenço’s visit to the Kingdom of Spain.

The head of Angolan diplomacy said that the reception of these scholarships was a good result in terms of the quality that one wants to give to the Tourism sector.

As part of the state visit, the President of the Republic visited the UNWTO headquarters, where he received guarantees for the development of the tourism sector in Angola.

According to Minister Téte António, Angola has ambitions in tourism “that certainly include the training of staff”.

New dynamic in bilateral relations

The Foreign Affairs minister noted that cooperation with the Kingdom of Spain is ruled by a new dynamic, “which makes more Spanish companies invest in Angola, in order to achieve the objectives of diversification of the economy.

He said that President João Lourenço’s visit to the Kingdom of Spain reflected the will of the two countries to evolve into a strategic partnership, with a component of bilateral and multilateral relations.

Source: Angola Press News Agency

Southern Africa Region – Fact Sheet, September 2021

The 16 countries in Southern Africa host nearly 9.7 million people of concern, including 1.1 million refugees and asylum-seekers, mainly from the Central African Republic, Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), Rwanda, Burundi and South Sudan.

UNHCR in the Southern Africa region contributes to protection and solutions for almost 6.5 million internally displaced persons (IDPs) – almost 5.2 million in DRC, 732,000 in Mozambique, over 304,000 in Republic of the Congo (ROC) and 110,000 in Zimbabwe.

In the first half of 2021, about 5,000 refugees and asylum-seekers voluntarily repatriated to their country of origin from asylum countries in the region. UNHCR has also assisted 435 resettlement departures since the start of the year.

Source: UN High Commissioner for Refugees

UNITA ENCOURAGES FIGHT AGAINST COVID-19

Luanda – The main opposition UNITA party parliamentary group Wednesday encouraged health professionals to remain committed to fight against Covid-19 and other diseases.

In a press release, the party said it was following with “great concern” the latest data on the epidemiological situation in Angola, which has seen a substantial increase in cases.

The party said that the register of more than 100 deaths in the last eight days, due to Covid-19, should draw the attention of all to the need to redouble efforts to prevent and combat the pandemic.

Despite this increase in the incidence of Covid-19, the Parliamentary Group believes that possible restrictive measures, capable of compromising the economy on a large scale, should be considered.

It calls for strict compliance with biosecurity measures, such as the correct use of face mask, physical distancing and frequent hand hygiene.

Due to this situation, the main opposition party considers it crucial to intensify the information, education and institutional communication campaign on Covid-19.

Source: Angola Press News Agency

COVID-19: ANGOLA RECORDS 543 NEW CASES, 143 RECOVERIES

Luanda – In the last 24 hours, Angola registered 543 new cases, the recovery of 143 patients and 11 deaths.

According to the daily bulletin, 324 cases were diagnosed in Luanda, 52 in Huambo, 36 in Cuanza Norte, 29 in Huila, 25 in Cuanza Sul, 21 in Malanje, 14 in Uige, 11 in Zaire, 10 in Cabinda, 7 in Cuando Cubango, 7 in Namibe, 5 in Bié and 2 in Bengo.

The list includes 284 male and 259 female patients, whose ages range from 3 months to 93 years.

Six deaths were registered in Luanda, three in Huíla, one in Bengo and one in Malanje.

Among those recovered, 56 reside in Huambo, 47 in Luanda, 17 in Huíla, 17 in Namibe, 2 in Cuando Cubango, 2 in Lunda Sul, 1 in Bié and 1 in Cunene.

The laboratories have processed, in the last 24 hours, 5,475 samples.

118 citizens are under institutional quarantine, 4,167 contacts are under epidemiological surveillance and 343 are hospitalised.

Angola has 56,583 positive cases, of which 1,537 have died, 47,564 have recovered and 7,482 are active. Of those active, 37 critical, 40 severe, 187 moderate, 79 mild and 7,139 asymptomatic.

Source: Angola Press News Agency