PRESIDENT JOAO LOURENÇO IN CUNENE

Luanda – Angolan head of State João Lourenço started Friday morning a two-day working visit to the southern Cunene province to address issues related to the development of the southern region of Angola.

Accompanied by the First Lady, Ana Dias Lourenço, Government members and officials of his Office, João Lourenço was welcomed at 11 de Novembro airport in Ondjiva city by Governor, Gerdina Didalelwa, and other local officials.

According to the visiting agenda of Friday and Saturday, includes a visit some undertakings in the Cafu locality.

He will check the progress of the structuring project to combat the effects of the drought, which comprises the water catchment system in the Cunene river, the process of pumping, the pipeline and the open channel.

Under the Executive commitment to deal with the drought that periodically hits the south of the country, the Head of State will chair a meeting with the governors of the provinces of Cunene, Cuando Cubango, Huíla and Namibe.

The Angolan Head of State’s agenda also includes audiences to traditional, religious, authorities, businesspeople and youth.

João Lourenço visited in May 2019 Cunene province, reeling from severe drought at the time, with more than 200,000 families in need of emergency help to ensure their subsistence in food.

Prior, he visited sites affected by drought in Namibe province.

Angolan Executive launched an emergency programme with a view to supporting for drought victims.

Source: Angola Press News Agency

HEAD OF STATE ANNOUNCES FUNDS FOR DROUGHT FIGHT PROJECT

Ondjiva – The Angolan Head of State, João Lourenço, announced this Friday, in the southern Cunene Province, that this October the construction works of the Calucuve and Ndue dams are to kick off, in the framework of structural measures being taken by the Executive to tackle the drought situation in this region.

In the same indicative date, disclosed the Angolan President, the dykes recovery project in Curoca Municipality is equally expected to take off.

“This means that the suffering endured by this population and the livestock, as from the year 2023, will change in a radical manner (…)”, emphasised the Head of State.

The president reiterated the determination of the Angolan Executive to put an end to the cyclical drought that has been affecting this southern region for many years.

The Head of State made such announcement in Cunene, in the ambit of his two-day work visit to this province, at an assessment meeting with members of the local government.

Source: Angola Press News Agency

UN?Security Council Extends Cross-border Aid to Syria for 1 Year

The United States and Russia reached a last-minute compromise Friday to keep humanitarian aid flowing for another year from Turkey to millions of people in northwestern Syria.

In a unanimous vote, the U.N. Security Council?approved a draft resolution extending the cross-border aid operation. In a rare twist, the U.S. and Russia came together to put forward the compromise resolution, supported by Ireland and Norway, which hold the file on Syria’s humanitarian situation in the council and have guided months of negotiations.

The resolution reauthorizes the use of the Bab al-Hawa crossing point for another six months. It had been due to expire Saturday. It will then automatically be renewed for six more months – until July 2022. The U.N. secretary-general also is instructed to report to the council on the aid operation in January.

“Thanks to this resolution, millions of Syrians can breathe a sigh of relief tonight, knowing that vital humanitarian aid will continue to flow into Idlib through the Bab al-Hawa?border crossing after tomorrow,” U.S. Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield told the council. “And parents can sleep tonight knowing that for the next 12 months their children will be fed. The?humanitarian?agreement we’ve reached here will literally save lives.”

More than 3.4 million people live in the area outside government control serviced by the 1,000 aid trucks that cross through Bab al-Hawa each month.

Western countries also had sought to reopen the al-Yarubiyah crossing from Iraq to Syria, which had been used to bring medical supplies to 1.4 million people in the northeast, but that was lost in negotiations.

“Of course, like every political agreement, we continue to believe we could have done more, that more should be done, and we will continue work to make sure that humanitarian needs in Syria remain in focus,” Ireland’s Ambassador Geraldine Byrne Nason told reporters after the vote.

Al-Yarubiyah and two other crossing points have been closed over the past two years under pressure from Moscow, which would like to see the entire cross-border aid operation shut down and all supplies flow through Damascus across conflict frontlines.?The United Nations and aid groups say crossline operations are plagued with problems and cannot meet the soaring demand.

Turning point?

Syria’s decadelong war has deepened divisions among the Security Council’s five permanent powers. Russia and China have sought to protect the regime of Bashar al-Assad, while Britain, France and the United States have tried to rally council action to hold the regime accountable for chemical weapons attacks on civilians, military sieges and other atrocities.

Those divisions have spilled over into the humanitarian dossier, making it one of the council’s most contentious. The seven-year-old aid operation regularly faces nail-biting questions of whether the humanitarian lifeline will be severed by a veto. So, it was all the more surprising to see the U.S. and Russia come together Friday to hammer out a compromise minutes before the vote.

“It’s important?that the United States and Russia were able to come together on a humanitarian initiative that serves the interests of the Syrian people,” Ambassador Thomas-Greenfield said. “And it’s an important moment for the U.N. and the Security Council?–?which today showed we can do more than just talk. We can work together to find solutions and deliver actions on the world’s most?pressing challenges.”

Friday’s vote was the first time since 2016 that the council was able to unanimously reach a decision on extending the cross-border aid operation.

Russian Ambassador Vassily Nebenzia said he was grateful to his American colleagues, who he said “worked in the spirit of the Geneva summit” between Presidents Vladimir Putin and Joe Biden.

“Today, we are witnessing a historical moment,” Nebenzia said. “For the first time, Russia and the United States not only managed to find an agreement, but to present a joint text supported by all our colleagues in the council. We expect that this kind of day would become a turning point, that not only Syria will win from this, but the whole Middle Eastern region and the world as a whole.”

The White House has said that Biden raised the issue of the cross-border aid operation with Putin when they met on June 16, and Biden told him he sees it as an important issue. The two leaders spoke Friday by telephone and the White House said they commended the joint work of their teams following the summit, which led to the unanimous renewal of the Syrian aid operation.

The U.N. secretary-general’s spokesman said Antonio Guterres welcomed the council’s extension but noted that “needs continue to outstrip the response,” and that with additional crossings and more funding, the United Nations could do more to assist the rising number of Syrians in need.

Source: Voice Of America

US Ships Moderna Vaccine to Indonesia Amid COVID-19 Surge

WHITE HOUSE – As Indonesia deals with a surge in COVID-19 cases, the Biden administration on Friday is sending the nation 3 million doses of the Moderna coronavirus vaccine.

“In addition to the vaccines we’re also sending, we’re moving forward on plans to increase assistance for Indonesia’s broader COVID-19 response efforts,” said White House press secretary Jen Psaki during a briefing to reporters Friday.

“We recognize the difficult situation Indonesia currently finds itself in with a surge of COVID cases. And our thoughts are with those affected by this surge.”

Indonesia is battling a record-breaking surge in new cases and deaths due to the highly contagious delta variant.

A senior administration official told VOA the shipment was one of the largest batches the U.S. had donated. In total, the U.S. has allocated 4 million doses for Indonesia, with the remaining 1 million doses to be shipped “soon.”

The administration is also sending 500,000 doses of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine to Moldova, the first batch of U.S. vaccine shared with Europe. In addition, 1.5 million Johnson & Johnson doses will be sent to Nepal, and 500,000 Moderna doses to Bhutan.

Indonesia surge

During a Friday press conference, Indonesian Minister for Foreign Affairs Retno Marsudi confirmed the shipment.

“This is the first shipment through the COVAX mechanism,” Marsudi said, referring to the United Nations vaccine-sharing mechanism.

Indonesia, with only about 5% of its population fully vaccinated, relies heavily on Chinese vaccines. The country has procured 108.5 million doses of the Sinovac vaccine but is seeing rising infection rates among medical workers fully vaccinated with it.

After several fully inoculated medical personnel had died from COVID-19, Health Minister Budi Gunadi Sadikin said on Friday the government would give 1.47 million health workers a shot of the Moderna vaccine.

“The third jab will only be given to health workers, because health workers are the ones who are exposed to high levels of virus every day,” he told a press conference. “They must be protected at all costs.”

The Indonesian government authorized the Moderna vaccine for emergency use last week.

Broader COVID-19 response efforts

The senior White House official said that in addition to providing vaccines, the administration is moving forward on plans to increase assistance for Indonesia’s broader COVID-19 response efforts.

“To date, we have provided more than $14.5 million in direct COVID-19 relief to Indonesia, including $3.5 million to help vaccinate Indonesians quickly and safely,” the official said.

The official added that support from the U.S. Agency for International Development had also provided Jakarta with public health education, training for thousands of health workers, funding for a national COVID-19 information website that has reached more than 36 million people, COVID-19 testing equipment, 1,000 ventilators and nearly 2,000 hand-washing stations.

The 4 million-dose vaccine shipment to Indonesia is part of the 80 million doses the U.S. has allocated to help countries in need, on top of the 500 million doses it has committed to COVAX.

Activists say it is not enough.

“We need far more from the United States and other countries that have surpluses to share,” said Tom Hart, acting CEO of the ONE Campaign, a nonprofit group that fights global poverty and disease.

According to CDC data, most U.S. states have administered at least 75% of the first vaccine doses allocated to them.

Hart pointed out that in some countries, less than 1% of people have received a COVID-19 vaccine.

“We have locked up in the United States and the G-7 and other EU countries the global supply of the very thing to end this pandemic,” Hart said. “And so far, not sharing at nearly the pace or scale that we need to reach what’s the global herd immunity that will make all of us safe.”

Responding to a question from VOA about plans to donate more doses, White House press secretary Psaki said the U.S. is already the largest contributor. Of the 1 billion doses pledged by wealthy nations of the G-7, some 580 billion are from the U.S.

“The president has made clear that we will continue to build from here, and we’re working on manufacturing capacity around the world and in the United States and we will continue to contribute even beyond the billion doses,” Psaki said.

Source: Voice Of America

More Raids on Independent News Outlets as Belarus Steps up Crackdown

Belarusian authorities on Friday raided the offices of several media outlets outside Minsk and searched the homes of independent journalists, in the second straight day of the country’s latest crackdown on independent press critical of authoritarian leader Alexander Lukashenko.

The?raids, most of which took place in the western city of Brest, came a day after the website of the country’s oldest newspaper, Nasha Niva, was blocked and its chief editor was detained and reportedly beaten while security forces searched the offices of several regional newspapers.

Offices of news outlets were also raided in Baranovichi in the Brest region. Journalist Ruslan Ravyaka of the Baranovichi news portal Intex-Press was taken in for questioning by the KGB, the Belarusian state security agency, and was later released.

Journalist Tatsiana Smotkina’s home was raided in the northern city of Hlybokaye, as was the apartment of the administrator of the Virtual Brest news portal, Andrey Kukharchyk. The Onliner Telegram channel reported that security forces also searched the home of its journalist, Anastasia Zenko.

Search for ‘radicals’

Konstantin Bychek, the chief of the KGB’s investigative department, told state television that a “large-scale operation” was under way to root out “radicals.”

The Belarusian Association of Journalists reported that 32 media representatives have been detained since July 8.

Nasha Niva’s editor in chief, Yahor Martsinovich, was beaten and suffered head injuries while being detained in a raid, the publication reported Friday.

It said that the raids on the outlet were carried out as part of a probe into actions that grossly violated public order.

The latest crackdown came after authorities in May hit top independent news portal Tut.by, whose website was blocked. Twelve of its journalists were arrested. Also in May, authorities intercepted a Ryanair flight from Athens to Vilnius and forced it to land in Minsk where they detained dissident blogger Raman Pratasevich and his girlfriend, who were on board.

Both Nasha Niva and Tut.by extensively covered months of protests against Lukashenko, which were triggered by his reelection to a sixth term on August 9 in a vote that was widely seen as rigged.

Since the election, security forces have cracked down hard on journalists, rights defenders and pro-democracy demonstrators, arresting more than 35,000 people and pushing many activists and most of the top opposition figures out of the country.

Killings, possible torture

Several protesters have been killed in the violence, and some rights organizations say there is credible evidence of torture being used by security officials against some of those detained.

Leading opposition figures have been either jailed or forced to leave the country.

Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya, the main opposition candidate in the election, who says she actually won the poll, condemned the latest raids.

“Our independent journalists suffer violence, torture in prison because they do their work,” she wrote Friday on Twitter.

Western nations have imposed a wide range of sanctions on Lukashenko and his regime over the crackdown, but they appear to have had limited effect as he retains support from key ally and financial backer Russia.

Source: Voice Of America

COVID-19: 198 NEW INFECTIONS AND 84 RECOVERIES REPORTED

Luanda – The health authorities announced this Friday the occurrence of 198 new infections by Covid-19, as well as the recovery of 84 patients and the registration of three deaths in the last 24 hours.

According to the secretary of State for Public Health, Franco Mufunda, among the new cases 55 were recorded in Cunene Province, 38 in Luanda, 37 in Lunda Norte, 22 in Huila, 18 in Huambo, 6 in Bie, 6 in Cuanza Norte, 3 in Benguela, 2 in Cabinda, 2 in Moxico, 2 in Zaire and 1 in Lunda Norte.

The ages of the new patients, informed the source, vary from 3 months to 84 years of age, of whom 61 are male and 137 female.

The deaths were recorded in Moxico (2) and Huila (1).

Of those recovered, 39 reside in Luanda, 15 in Cunene, 10 in Huambo, 6 in Zaire, 5 in Lunda Norte, 5 in Huila, 3 in Namibe and 1 in Benguela.~

In the referred period, local labs processed 4,615 samples.

The authorities also announced that 185 citizens are in institutional quarantine, while 2,071 others are under epidemiological surveillance.

The general picture shows now 39.791 positive cases, 928 deaths, 34,169 recoveries and 4,679 active cases.

The updated on Covid-19 also shows that of the active cases 12 are in critical state, 14 serious, 41 moderate, 14 with mild symptoms, and 4,698 asymptomatic.

Source: Angola Press News Agency

With 4 Million COVID Dead, Many Kids Left Behind

Some won’t ever remember the parents they lost because they were too young when COVID-19 struck. Others are trying to keep the memory alive by doing the things they used to do together: making pancakes or playing guitar. Others still are clutching onto what remains, a pillow or a photo, as they adapt to lives with aunts, uncles and siblings stepping in to fill the void.

The 4 million people who have died so far in the coronavirus pandemic left behind parents, friends and spouses — but also young children who are navigating life now as orphans or with just one parent, who is also mourning the loss.

It’s a trauma that is playing out in big cities and small villages across the globe, from Assam state in northeast India to New Jersey and points in between.

And even as vaccination rates tick up, the losses and generational impact show no sign of easing in many places where the virus and its variants continue to kill. As the official COVID-19 death toll reached its latest grim milestone this week, South Korea reported its biggest single-day jump in infections and Indonesia counted its deadliest day of the pandemic so far.

Victoria Elizabeth Soto didn’t notice the milestone. She was born three months ago after her mother, Elisabeth Soto, checked into the hospital in Lomas de Zamora, Argentina, eight months pregnant and suffering symptoms of COVID-19.

Soto, 38, had tried for three years to get pregnant and gave birth to baby Victoria on April 13. The mother died six days later of complications from the virus. Victoria wasn’t infected.

Her father, Diego Roman, says he is coping little by little with the loss, but fears for his baby girl, who one day will learn she has no mother.

“I want her to learn to say ‘Mom’ by showing her a picture of her,” Roman said. “I want her to know that her mother gave her life for her. Her dream was to be a mom, and she was.”

Tshimologo Bonolo, just 8, lost her father to COVID-19 in July 2020 and spent the year adjusting to life in Soweto, South Africa, without him.

The hardest thing has been her new daily routine: Bonolo’s father, Manaila Mothapo, used to drive her to school every day, and now she has to take public transport.

“I used to cook, play and read books with my papa,” Bonolo said. “What I miss most is jumping on my papa’s belly.”

In northwest London, Niva Thakrar, 13, cuts the grass and washes the family car — things her dad used to do. As a way to remember him, she takes the same walks and watches the movies they used to watch together before he died in March after a two-month hospital stay.

“I still try to do what we used to do before, but it’s not the same,” Thakrar said.

Jeshmi Narzary lost both parents in two weeks in May in Kokrajhar, in the northeastern Indian state of Assam.

The 10-year-old went on to live with an aunt and two cousins but could only move in after she underwent 14 days of quarantine herself during India’s springtime surge that made the country second only to the U.S. in the number of confirmed cases.

Narzary hasn’t processed the deaths of her parents. But she is scrupulous about wearing face masks and washing her hands, especially before she eats. She does so, she said, because she knows “that coronavirus is a disease which kills humans.”

Kehity Collantes, age 6, also knows what the virus can do. It killed her mother, a hospital worker in Santiago, Chile, and now she has to make pancakes by herself.

It also means this: “My papa is now also my mama,” she said.

Siblings Zavion and Jazzmyn Guzman lost both parents to COVID-19, and their older sisters now care for them. Their mother, Lunisol Guzman, adopted them as babies but died last year along with her partner at the start of the violent first wave of the pandemic in the U.S. Northeast.

Katherine and Jennifer Guzman immediately sought guardianship of the kids — Zavion is 5 and Jazzymn 3 — and are raising them in Belleville, New Jersey.

“I lost my mother, but now I’m a mother figure,” said Jennifer Guzman, 29.

The losses of the Navales family in Quezon City, Philippines, are piling up. After Arthur Navales, 38, died on April 2, the family experienced some shunning from the community.

His widow, Analyn B. Navales, fears she might not be able to afford the new home they planned to move into, since her salary alone won’t cover it. Another question is whether she can afford the kids’ taekwondo classes.

Ten-year-old Kian Navales, who also had the virus, misses going out for noodles with his dad. He clutches onto one of the pillows his mother had made for him and his sister with a photo of their father on one side.

“Our house became quiet and sad. We don’t laugh much since papa left,” said Kian’s 12-year-old sister, Yael.

Maggie Catalano, 13, is keeping the memory of her father alive through music.

A musician himself, Brian Catalano taught Maggie some guitar chords before he got sick. He presented her with her own acoustic guitar for Christmas on Dec. 26, the day he came home from the hospital after a nine-day stay.

Still positive and weak, he remained quarantined in a bedroom but could hear Maggie play through the walls of their Riverside County, California, home.

“He texted me and said, ‘You sounded great, sweetie,'” Maggie recalled.

The family thought he had beaten the disease — but four days later, he died alone at home while they were out.

Devastated, Maggie turned to writing songs and performed one she composed at his funeral in May.

“I wish he could see me play it now,” she said. “I wish that he could see how much I have improved.”

Source: Voice Of America

CDCA DANCE COMPANY PROMOTES UPGRADING COURSE

Luanda – The Contemporary Dance Company of Angola (CDCA) is promoting an upgrading dance course, as part of its diversity program, the head of CDCA, Ana Clara Guerra Marques said on Wednesday.

The one-month course is composed of four modules: appreciation and history of theatrical dance, dance teaching methodologies, choreographic creation processes and contemporary dance techniques.

According to Ana Clara Guerra Marques, the course is directed to dancers, choreographers and dance teachers and aims to improve the technical, interpretive and creative dance skills of professionals in Angola.

Marques said the course was selected under the 2020 Procultura Palop-TL European development funds and is an action funded by the European Union and co-financed and managed by Camões IP.

The DIVERSITY Program is managed in partnership with Alliance Française Luanda and the EUNIC Cluster – Network of Cultural Institutes and Embassies of the European Union”, Marques said.

Source: Angola Press News Agency

UN Chief Calls for Better Global COVID-19 Vaccination Efforts

As the world surpassed four million coronavirus-related deaths, United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres warned that millions more remain at risk “if the virus is allowed to spread like wildfire.”

The head of the world body said in a written statement that most of the world is “still in the shadows” due to the inequitable distribution of COVID-19 vaccine between the world’s richest and poorest nations and the rapid global spread of the more contagious delta variant of COVID-19.

Guterres called for the creation of an emergency task force, composed of vaccine-producing nations, the World Health Organization and global financial institutions, to implement a global vaccine plan that will at least double production of COVID-19 vaccine and ensure equitable distribution through the COVAX global vaccine sharing initiative.

“Vaccine equity is the greatest immediate moral test of our times,” Guterres said, which he also called a “practical necessity.”

“Until everyone is vaccinated, everyone is under threat,” he added.

The Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center is reporting 4,002,909 total COVID-19 deaths, out of 185.1 million total confirmed cases.

The World Health Organization is urging nations to proceed with “extreme caution” as they ease or altogether end lockdowns and other restrictions in the face of a steady rise of new infections due to the delta variant.

Dr. Mike Ryan, the agency’s head of health emergencies program, told reporters in Geneva Wednesday that countries are making “a false assumption” that transmission rates will not increase because of high vaccination rates.

“The idea that everyone is protected and it’s Kumbaya and everything is back to normal I think right now is a very dangerous assumption anywhere in the world,” Ryan said, according to CNBC.

In a similar vein, an open letter signed by hundreds of scientists published in the Lancet medical journal denounced British Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s plan to lift most of the country’s coronavirus restrictions on July 19, a date the prime minister has dubbed “Freedom Day.”

The letter called the government’s reopening plans “unethical” and “dangerous”

because it involves acceptance of a high level of new infections. Britain is now averaging more than 25,000 new infections over a seven-day period due to the delta variant, but hospitalizations are in the hundreds and the average number of fatalities per day has remained in the low double digits due to the country’s high vaccination rate.

Health Secretary Sajid Javid has acknowledged that the rate of new infections could climb to as many as 100,000 a day after July 19, when mandates such as social distancing and mask wearing will expire.

Meanwhile, the SEA Games Federation announced Thursday this year’s Southeast Asian Games has been postponed due to a rise of new infections in Vietnam, the host country. The regional games were scheduled to be held in the capital, Hanoi, and 11 other locations from November 21 and December 2.

The announcement coincides with a suspension of public passenger services in Hanoi and a two-week lockdown in Ho Chi Minh City that takes effect Friday.

The Southeast Asian Games are the latest sporting event affected by the pandemic. Organizers of the Australian Grand Prix auto racing event announced Tuesday it is canceling the Formula One race for the second consecutive year because of Australia’s strict travel and quarantine mandates, while the Australian Motorcycle Grand Prix, which was scheduled for October, has also been scrapped for a second year.

Source: Voice Of America

LATE PLAYER QUINTINO’S QUALITIES HIGHLIGHTED

Dundo – Authorities of the eastern Lunda Norte province have highlighted the qualities of the former player of local Sagrada Esperança football team, Francisco Quintino, who passed away on Wednesday victim of illness.

“As a player, Quintino inspired many young people to bet on soccer, so his passing is a great loss to the local sport, “said Ernesto Muangala, local governor.

José Muacabalo, head of Sagrada Esperança, said Quintino was a true leader, who exercised with responsibility the role of captain and that his loss is irreparable for the club.

Muacabo underscored that the former striker gave a great contribution for the evolution of the team in the 1980’s and early 1990’s, helping the team to win the Angola Cup in 1988.

Quintino, who died at the age of 59, retired in 1992. He was assistant coach of Sagrada Esperança, head of the sports department in Lunda Norte and a member of the Sagrada scouting area.

Source: Angola Press News Agency