Elections 2022: Over 500,000 home electrical wiring in five years

Luanda – More than 500,000 household electrical energy connections were conducted in Luanda province, as part of the supply of this good to the populations, said the MPLA President João Lourenço on Saturday (23).

The party leader was speaking at the mass political event held in Luanda, which marked the opening of the MPLA campaign for the general elections on 24 August, in Angola.

According to the President of the Republic, the Angolan Executive will continue to invest in the electricity sector, to improve the conditions of the population.

As an example, he said that public lighting in Luanda has improved considerably in recent years, despite the vandalism unleashed by some citizens, who destroy and remove the invested resources.

However, the MPLA candidate for President of the Republic acknowledged the existence of places deprived of this good.

 

 

Source: Angola Press News Agency

Elections 2022: National Police urge people to avoid violence

Lubango- National Police Commander-General Commissioner-General Arnaldo Manuel Carlos has appealed to the citizens to avoid violence as they head to August 24, 2022 elections.

Speaking in the central Huila province on Friday, the police commander urged everyone to demonstrate exemplary behaviour during August 24 elections.

The high ranking officer has called on supporters for contending political parties for serenity.

Police officers are prepared to ensure safety during the general elections, the commander told the press on the sidelines of the inauguration of the Integrated Center for Public Security (CISP) in Huíla province.

At least 14.3 million voters are expected to cast ballots this year in Angola of which 22,560 voters abroad for the first time in the country’s history.

Overseas voting takes place in 12 countries and 25 cities, located in Africa, Europe and South America.

 

 

Source: Angola Press News Agency

 

2022 Elections: Civil society calls for tolerance

Luanda – With just 24 hours to go before the opening of the election campaign in Angola, to be held over the next 30 days, civil society is multiplying its calls for tolerance and mutual respect among contestants.

The appeals for restraint, in this remarkable period for the country, come from various social organisations, which recommend an exemplary posture and respect for democratic foundations to the political players involved in the electoral dispute.

In the run-up to the ballot on 24 August, Angolans living in the country and abroad are called upon to preserve peace and political stability.

In the opinion of civil society organisations, the parties validated by the Constitutional Court to contest the general elections must take into account, above all, the need for civic-mindedness during the campaign.

Angola is going to the polls for the fifth time in its history since it gained independence on 11 November 1975.

In total, seven political parties and a coalition of parties are qualified to participate in the ballot, to dispute, inch by inch, the vote of the 14.3 million voters registered by the National Electoral Commission (CNE).

According to the civil society representatives heard by ANGOP, it is fundamental that the contestants prepare the militants and sympathisers for the need to be tolerant, despite the political and ideological differences.

They invoke the need for the contestants to look to the future and the welfare of the communities as the main objective to be achieved in the next five years of governance, as well as the continuous affirmation of Angola in the concert of nations.

For the head of the Electoral Observation Mission, Dom Gabriel Mbilingui, said it was fundamental that the country’s political players have moderation in their speeches.

He advised them to remain firm and to respect the democratic process, hoping that this year’s general elections would be free, fair and transparent.

The secretary-general of the Council of Christian Churches in Angola (CICA), DeolindaTeca, called on contestants to respect difference, stressing that they should not look at each other as enemies, but rather as political adversaries.

“We would not like politicians to bring situations that undermine harmony, peace and stability in Angola, that is why they should avoid mushy speeches that should not occur in the public and political stage,” she advised.

The president of the Local Education Forum, Nelson Paulo, appealed to society to promote, at this stage, peace, national reconciliation and political stability in the country.

He is of the view that political actors, especially parties that benefit from public resources and other social benefits, are challenged to think of the national interest, to the detriment of group interests, in order to help preserve peace.

He appealed to churches to help in this process by providing scientific knowledge to inform the way society as a whole acts.

To that end, he suggested that they use the media and other similar bodies to spread the message to the largest number of Angolans, including abroad.

The associative leader pointed to dialogue as a fundamental tool to promote trust, having suggested the creation of some spaces where everyone can speak in an open way, involving exempt people and institutions.

He said that political parties and society should have a good attitude, based on tolerance, in order to prevent the process from leading to possible conflicts.

Transparent elections 

The director-general of Action for Rural Development and the Environment (ADRA), Carlos Cambuta, called on political parties or coalitions of parties, and citizens in general, to opt for a civic conduct.

He said he hoped society would look at the elections as an opportunity to elect the party or coalition of parties that are up to the task of ruling the country, taking into account the challenges of the present and the future.

“Citizens must assume a behaviour based on plural respect and the will to contribute to the consolidation of peace and national reconciliation,” he said.

He advised political players to avoid insulting speeches and to pass on to society positive ideas about the resolution of the various ills that plague the country.

Carlos Cambuta also argued that allegations of electoral fraud should be seen as a concern by all institutions and citizens.

“The country must overcome this challenge – confidence – with determination, that is, the allegations of fraud must be accompanied by objectively verifiable means and, if proven, must be corrected immediately, without prejudice to the timetable leading to the holding of the elections. In this way, all citizens with electoral capacity participate in the polls with the feeling of greater security”, he stressed.

He also argued that the public and private media should treat all contestants equally, particularly in terms of news coverage of mass political events.

He also called for political parties to avoid personal attacks, which do not contribute to the good electoral atmosphere necessary for the country.

“We appeal, for this reason, to the running parties to opt for a debate of ideas on the various issues of national interest,” he said.

Angola has an estimated 33.9 million inhabitants, according to figures recently published by the National Statistics Institute (INE).

 

Of these, 64.9 percent are young people, with an estimated 21.4 million people aged 25 or under.

For this year’s general elections, 14.3 million voters are expected, of which 22,560 are due to vote from abroad.

This year’s elections, which will have the participation of Angolans abroad for the first time, are the fifth in Angola’s history, after those of 1992, 2008, 2012 and 2017.

Overseas voting will take place in 12 countries and 26 cities, such as South Africa (Pretoria, Cape Town and Johannesburg), Namibia (Windhoek, Oshakati and Rundu), Democratic Republic of Congo (Kinshasa, Lubumbashi and Matadi), Congo (Brazzaville, Dolisie and Black Point) and Zambia (Lusaka, Mongu, Kolwezi).

Outside the continent, voting will take place in Brazil (Rio de Janeiro, Brasilia and Sao Paulo), Germany (Berlin), Belgium (Brussels), France (Paris), the United Kingdom (London), Portugal (Lisbon, Porto) and the Netherlands (Rotterdam).

The previous ballot was held on 23 August 2017 by six political forces, with the participation of 76.57 per cent of at least 9.3 million voters.

The MPLA won by an absolute majority, with 61 percent of the votes, ahead of UNITA (26.67 percent) and CASA-CE (9.44 percent).

 

 

Source: Angola Press News Agency

 

Elections 2022: PHA calls for humanization

Luanda – The vice-president of the Humanist Party of Angola (PHA), Nsimba Luwawa, defended Saturday in Luanda the need to further humanize the various sectors of society.

While speaking to ANGOP in the scope of the ballot scheduled for 24 August, the politician explained that his party defends greater valuing of human beings over material means.

 

“The country’s governance tendency is to value what is material (the roads, bridges, cars, housing and hospitals), without knowing how the people are exactly, which means, their psycho-social state. This is the perspective that the PHA wants to change, that is, to think first about human beings and only afterwards about things”, argued the young politician.

 

While defending the good psychological and social health status of the citizens in the country, the official advocates that his party intends to implement a proximity policy and work with and for everybody.

 

According to Nsimba Luwawa, “the lack of humanization in the country has kept away Angolans and PHA wants to change this situation”, if it wins the general election.

 

The Humanist Party of Angola (PHA) that participates in the general elections for the first time, will open its political campaign Sunday in the southern province of Huíla, where its leader, Florbela Malaquias is already present.

 

The electoral campaign officially starts on Sunday (24th) throughout the country, with the participation of eight political forces, according to the law.

 

This party has already visited the provinces of Cuanza Sul, Benguela and Namibe, where it held courtesy meetings with the provincial government authorities, police and traditional leaders.

 

The 2022 election has eight contesting political parties, of which two are taking part for the first time, namely the PHA and P-ONJANGO.

 

The eight political parties will compete for roughly 14.399 million votes, of which 22.560 are abroad.

 

The Angolan diaspora will debut its vote in this fifth election in Angola´s history, after the elections of 1992, 2008, 2012 and 2017.

 

 

Source: Angola Press News Agency

 

Elections 2022: PRS wants to reshape education system

Luanda – The Social Renewal Party (PRS) in case of winning the elections of 24 August, plans to reshape and improve the Angolan education system.

This plan is part of the Electoral Manifesto of the party that comprises 13 requirements for improving the living conditions of Angolans.

 

In this regard, PRS wants to improve the Angolan education system and fight any behaviour aimed to create difficulties towards access to education, science and culture.

 

According to the Electoral Manifesto that ANGOP had Access to, the party plans to adopt a policy that ensures the medical and hospital assistance, as well as promoting traditional medicine as a support to scientific medicine.

 

PRS intends to boost preventive health by taking care of nutrition, basic sanitation and routine lectures on human health awareness and accelerate the country’s economic development.

 

The party points out that, if it wins the elections, it will ensure the introduction of the Federal State, so that governors are elected in a framework in which the provinces become federated states.

 

PRS also intends to institutionalise land as the original property of the people and hold the local elections simultaneously in all of Angola´s municipalities.

 

The Social Renewal Party (PRS) was founded on 18 November 1990, having as first president Eduardo Kuangana, who led the party for 27 years.

 

In the first election that took place in 1992, PRS won six seats in the Parliament and in the 2008 elections it increased to eight seats.

 

In the 2012 elections, the party only had five seats and in 2017 elections it only won two parliamentary seats.

 

The youth wing of this party is the Social Renewal Youth and the women’s wing is the Social Renewal Women´s Union.

 

Source: Angola Press News Agency

2 Children in US Have Monkeypox, Officials Say

Two children have been diagnosed with monkeypox in the U.S., health officials said Friday.

One is a toddler in California and the other an infant who is not a U.S. resident but was tested while in Washington, D.C., according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The children were described as being in good health and receiving treatment. How they caught the disease is being investigated, but officials think it was through household transmission.

Other details weren’t immediately disclosed.

Monkeypox is endemic in parts of Africa, but this year more than 15,000 cases have been reported in countries that historically don’t see the disease. In the U.S. and Europe, most infections have happened in men who have sex with men, though health officials have stressed that anyone can catch the virus.

In addition to the two pediatric cases, health officials said they were aware of at least eight women among the more than 2,800 U.S. cases reported so far.

While the virus has mostly been spreading among men who have sex with men, “I don’t think it’s surprising that we are occasionally going to see cases” outside that social network, the CDC’s Jennifer McQuiston told reporters Friday.

Officials have said the virus can spread through close personal contact, and via towels and bedding. That means it can happen in homes, likely through prolonged or intensive contact, said Dr. James Lawler, an infectious diseases specialist at the University of Nebraska Medical Center.

“People don’t crawl on each other’s beds unless they are living in the same house or family,” he said.

In Europe, there have been at least six monkeypox cases among kids 17 years old and younger.

This week, doctors in the Netherlands published a report of a boy who was seen at an Amsterdam hospital with about 20 red-brown bumps scattered across his body. It was monkeypox, and doctors said they could not determine how he got it.

In Africa, monkeypox infections in children have been more common, and doctors have noted higher proportions of severe cases and deaths in young children.

One reason may be that many older adults were vaccinated against smallpox as kids, likely giving them some protection against the related monkeypox virus, Lawler said.

Smallpox vaccinations were discontinued when the disease was eradicated about 40 years ago.

 

 

Source: Voice of America

 

Monkeypox Declared Global Health Emergency

 

World Health Organization Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus used his authority Saturday to declare Monkeypox a public health emergency of international concern. The action comes after an Emergency Committee convened to review the situation was unable to reach consensus.

When the Emergency Committee last met a month ago, more than 3,000 cases of monkeypox in 47 countries had been reported to the WHO. Since then, the outbreak has grown, with more than 16,000 cases reported in 75 countries. Five deaths from the disease also have been reported.


As happened the last time it met, the committee again was unable to reach consensus on whether monkeypox posed a global health threat. WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus says he has evaluated the information under consideration and has determined there is a clear risk of further international spread of the disease.

“So, in short, we have an outbreak that has spread around the world rapidly, through new modes of transmission, about which we understand too little, and which meets the criteria in the International Health Regulations,” said Tedros. “For all of these reasons, I have decided that the global monkeypox outbreak represents a public health emergency of international concern.”

Tedros says the WHO believes monkeypox poses a moderate risk globally and in all regions, except in the European region, where it assesses the risk as high. Although there is a potential for further international spread, he says the danger of interference with international traffic remains low for now.

The monkeypox virus is spread from person to person through close bodily contact. For now, the outbreak is concentrated among men who have sex with men, especially those with multiple sexual partners.

Since the outbreak is largely contained in one group, Tedros says monkeypox can be stopped with the right strategies in the right groups.

“It is therefore essential that all countries work closely with communities of men who have sex with men, to design and deliver effective information and services, and to adopt measures that protect the health, human rights, and dignity of affected communities,” he said. “Stigma and discrimination can be as dangerous as any virus.”

Tedros says the necessary tools for tackling the outbreak are available. However, he adds the world must act together. It must act in coordination and solidarity to bring the monkeypox virus under control and prevent it from gaining a foothold in the countries where it is found.

Source: Voice of America

 

Explainer: What’s Behind the Rising Conflict in Eastern DRC?

When the gunshots rang out, Dansira Karikumutima jumped to her feet.

“I ran away with my family,” she said of the March day that M23 rebels arrived in Cheya, her village in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo’s North Kivu province. “We scattered, each running in a different direction out of fear.”

Months later, the 52-year-old, her husband and their 11 children have regrouped in an informal camp in Rutshuru town, where they’re spending nights in a schoolhouse and scavenging for food by day.

They’re among the latest victims of rising volatility in the eastern DRC. If unchecked, the unrest “risks reigniting interstate conflict in the Great Lakes region,” as the Africa Center for Strategic Studies warned in a late June report on the worsening security situation.

M23 is among more than 100 armed groups operating in the eastern DRC, an unsettled region where conflict has raged for decades but is escalating, especially in recent months. Nearly 8,000 people have died violently since 2017, according to the Kivu Security Tracker, which monitors conflict and human rights violations. More than 5.5 million people have been displaced — 700,000 just this year, according to the United Nations.

The Norwegian Refugee Council identified the DRC as the world’s most overlooked, under-addressed refugee crisis in 2021, a sorry distinction it also held in 2020 and 2017.

Fueling the insecurity: a complicated brew of geopolitics, ethnic and national rivalries and competition for control of eastern DRC’s abundant natural resources.

The fighting has ramped up tensions between the DRC and neighboring Rwanda, some of which linger from the 1994 genocide in Rwanda, where ethnic Hutus killed roughly 800,000 Tutsis and moderate Hutus. Competition for resources and influence in DRC also has sharpened longstanding rivalries between Rwanda and Uganda.

How does M23 fit in?

The DRC and its president, Felix Tshisekedi, accuse Rwanda of supporting M23, the main rebel group battling the Congolese army in eastern DRC. M23’s leaders include some ethnic Tutsis.

M23, short for the March 23 Movement, takes its name from a failed 2009 peace deal between the Congolese government and a now-defunct rebel group that had split off from the Congolese army and seized control of North Kivu’s provincial capital, Goma, in 2012. The group was pushed back the next year by the Congolese army and special forces of the U.N. Stabilization Mission in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (MONUSCO).

Rwanda and its president, Paul Kagame, accuse the DRC and its army of backing the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR), a Congo-based mainly Hutu rebel group that includes some fighters who were involved in the genocide.

What sparked the resurgent crisis?

Last November, M23 rebels struck at several Congolese army positions in North Kivu, near the borders with Uganda and Rwanda. The rebels have made advances that include the overrunning of a Congolese military base in May and taking control of Bunagana, a trading town near the border with Uganda, in June.

Bintou Keita, who as head of MONUSCO is the top U.N. official in the DRC warned in June that M23 posed a growing threat to civilians and soon might overpower the mission’s 16,000 troops and police.


M23’s renewed attacks aim “to pressure the Congolese government to answer their demands,” said Jason Stearns, head of the Congo Research Group at New York University, in a June briefing with the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS).

The rebels want implementation of a 2013 pact known as the Nairobi agreement, signed with the DRC government, that would grant them amnesty and reintegrate them into the Congolese army or civilian life.

How is Uganda involved?

“The longstanding rivalry between Uganda and Rwanda in the DRC and the Great Lakes region is a key driver of the current crisis,” the Africa Center observed in its report. It cited a “profound level of mistrust at all levels — between the DRC and its neighbors, particularly Rwanda, Uganda and Burundi, as well as between all of these neighbors.”

Late last November, Uganda and the DRC began a joint military operation in North Kivu to hunt down the Allied Democratic Forces (ADF), an armed group of Ugandan rebels affiliated with the Islamic State and designated by the U.S. government as a terrorist organization. Uganda’s President Yoweri Museveni has blamed ADF for suicide attacks in Kampala last October and November.

Ugandan officials have accused Rwanda of using M23 to thwart its efforts against ADF, the Africa Center report noted, adding that the U.N. also “has implicated Uganda with aiding M23.” U.N. investigators a decade earlier had claimed credible evidence of Rwandan involvement.

Stearns, of the Congo Research Group, said the joint Ugandan-DRC military operation created “geopolitical ripple effects in the region,” with Rwanda essentially complaining that Uganda’s intervention “encroaches” on its sphere of interest in eastern Congo.

What economic factors are at play?

Some of the fighting is over control of eastern DRC’s vast natural resources, including diamonds, gold, copper and timber. The country has other minerals — cobalt and coltan — needed for batteries to power cellphones, other electronics and aircraft.

“The DRC produces more than 70% of the world’s cobalt” and “holds 60% of the planet’s coltan reserves,” the industry website Mining Technology reported in February, speculating that the DRC “could become the Saudi Arabia of the electric vehicle age.”

The Africa Center report noted there is “ample evidence to suggest that Ugandan- and Rwandan-backed rebel factions — including M23 — control strategic but informal supply chains running from mines in the Kivus into the two countries.” It said the groups use the proceeds from trafficked goods “to buy weapons, recruit and control artisanal miners, and pay corrupt Congolese customs and border officials as well as soldiers and police.”

Access also has value. In late 2019, a three-way deal was signed to extend Tanzania’s standard gauge railway through Burundi to DRC, giving the latter two countries access to Tanzania’s Indian Ocean seaport at Dar es Salaam.

And in June 2021, DRC’s Tshisekedi and Uganda’s Museveni presided over groundbreaking of the first of three roads linking the countries. The project is expected to increase the two countries’ trade volume and cross-border transparency, and to strengthen relations through “infrastructure diplomacy,” The East African reported. The project includes a road connecting Goma’s port on Lake Kivu with the border town of Bunagana.

“Rwanda, in between Uganda and Burundi, sees all this happening and feels that it’s being sidelined, feels that it’s being marginalized,” Stearns said in the CSIS briefing.

Rwanda has had its own deals with the DRC — including flying RwandAir routes and processing gold mined in Congo —but the Congolese government suspended all trade agreements in mid-June.

What can be done to address the crisis?

The DRC, accepted this spring into the East African Community regional bloc, agreed to the community’s call in June for a Kenya-led regional security force to protect civilians and forcibly disarm combatants who do not willingly put down their weapons.


No date has been set for the force’s deployment.

The 59-year-old Tshisekedi, who is up for re-election in 2023, has said Rwanda cannot be part of the security force.

Rwandan President Paul Kagame, 64, told the Rwanda Broadcasting Agency he has “no problem” with that.

The two leaders, at a July 6 meeting in Angola’s capital, agreed to a “de-escalation process” over fighting in the DRC. The diplomatic roadmap called for ceasing hostilities and for M23’s immediate withdrawal.

But fighting broke out the next day between M23 and the Congolese army in North Kivu’s Rutshuru territory.

Speaking for the M23 rebels, Major Willy Ngoma told VOA’s Swahili Service that his group did not recognize the pact.

“We signed an agreement with President Tshisekedi and Congo government,” Ngoma said, referring to the 2013 pact, “and we are ready to talk with the government. Whatever they are saying — that we stop fighting and we leave eastern DRC — where do you want us to go? We are Congolese. We cannot go into exile again. … We are fighting for our rights as Congolese.”

Congo’s government says it wants M23 out of the DRC before peace talks resume.

Paul Nantulya, an Africa Center research associate who contributed to its analysis, predicted it would “take time to resolve the long-running tensions between Rwanda and the DRC.”

In written observations shared with VOA by email, he called for “a verifiable and enforceable conflict reduction initiative between Congo and its neighbors — starting with Rwanda” and “an inclusive democratization process in Congo.”

Rwanda’s ambassador to the DRC, Vincent Karega, warned in a June interview with the VOA’s Central Africa Service that hate speech is fanning the conflict. Citing past genocides, he urged “that the whole world points a finger toward it and makes sure that it is stopped before the worst comes to the worst.”

 

 

Source: Voice Of America

Governors Keep Busing Migrants to Washington

 

A novel Republican-led effort to protest the Biden administration’s handling of record-setting migration across the U.S.-Mexico border has resulted in thousands of asylum-seekers being bused to the nation’s capital, alarming aid groups and immigrant rights advocates.

Texas Governor Greg Abbott launched the program in April, chartering buses to send recently arrived migrants from the southern border to Washington.

He announced the initiative after the Biden administration said it would halt Title 42, the pandemic-era immigration policy that allows authorities to turn away migrants at the U.S.-Mexico border. Though the push to lift Title 42 was blocked by federal courts, Texas moved ahead and bused migrants to Washington.


Arizona’s Governor Doug Ducey, also a Republican, followed Abbott’s lead and in May started busing migrants to the nation’s capital.

Three months into the program, local officials said more than 3,400 people have reached Washington by bus. Aid groups say they are overwhelmed.

Why is the Texas governor doing this?

According to Abbott, the policy was put into place to help local officials whose border communities are being overrun by asylum-seekers.

“We are sending them [undocumented immigrants] to the United States capital, where the Biden administration will be able to more immediately address the needs of the people that they are allowing to come across our border,” Abbott said during a news conference on April 6.

The Texas governor’s office said the bus trips are voluntary and migrants are allowed to travel only if they have been processed and released by the Department of Homeland Security. Migrants have to show documents received from U.S. immigration officials to prove they have been processed.

Who pays for the buses?

According to Texas state records, it costs more than $1,400 per rider to bus undocumented immigrants to Washington.

KXAS-TV in Dallas-Fort Worth first reported that the busing costs totaled more than $1.6 million in April and May. The station obtained the information through an open-records request to the Texas Division of Emergency Management. The documents show that 1,154 passengers were transported during the first two months of the program.

Abbott announced an initiative to raise private funds to pay for the busing, but as of July 15, the state website shows the governor has raised $116,382. The KXAS investigation said Texas taxpayers may wind up paying the rest.

Where are migrants from?

Migrants from Nicaragua, Venezuela, Colombia, Angola, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ghana and Cuba have been bused to the nation’s capital after they cleared their federal immigration inspections at the border, according to the Texas governor’s office and Washington aid groups.

How many buses have arrived?

Washington city officials estimate 100 buses have come so far. They usually arrive midweek, some in the middle of the night, after a three-day trip from Texas. Local media have reported that Washington’s council members have urged the local government to direct resources to help the migrants. But the continuing arrival of asylum-seekers has overwhelmed aid organizations, which rely on donations and federal grants.

Immigration advocates from the Central American Resource Center in Washington have been meeting migrants as they arrive. Washington is usually not their last stop. Yet, migrants often stay more than a day while waiting for family members or local nonprofits to help them continue to their final destinations, such as New York or Chicago.

Regardless of their final destinations, they are obligated to report to an Immigration and Customs Enforcement office once they arrive to continue the immigration process.

Are migrants benefiting?

“In a way, it’s actually perfect,” Bilal Askaryar, a spokesman for Welcome With Dignity, told The New York Times. “Unintentionally, Governor Abbott sent them to one of the best places in the nation to welcome people.”

Vanessa Cardenas, deputy director of America’s Voice, agreed in a statement.

“Fortunately, here in Washington, D.C., a coalition of community organizations demonstrate the ‘American can do’ attitude that we should embrace,” Cardenas said. “They have welcomed those escaping violence and political persecution and have helped these asylum-seekers continue their journeys to reunite with their families. By putting refugees on buses to D.C., Abbott wanted to show chaos and distrust; instead, he is now seeing a community coming together to help those in need.”

What are critics saying?

Former White House press secretary Jen Psaki called the move a “publicity stunt,” and the American Civil Liberties Union of Texas called the busing politically motivated. Texas State Representative Matt Schaefer, a Republican, called it a “gimmick.”

In Texas, Abbot is standing firm, tweeting on Friday, “Biden won’t come to the border so we continue to take the border to him. DC is seeing only a fraction of the crisis that Texas faces daily.”

 

 

Source: Voice Of America

Africa Prepares Rollout of World’s First Malaria Vaccine

 

Preparations are underway for the mass rollout of the world’s first malaria vaccine to protect millions of children in Africa.

The rollout is being funded by Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, for nearly $160 million.

The World Health Organization said Gavi’s multimillion-dollar funding marks a key advance in the fight against one of Africa’s most severe public health threats. It noted that countries in sub-Saharan Africa bear the brunt of the yearly toll of more than 240 million global cases of malaria, including more than 600,000 reported deaths. The main victims are children under age 5.

WHO regional director for Africa Matshidiso Moeti said one child dies every minute in Africa, with catastrophic consequences for families, communities and national development.

The vaccine was introduced in Africa in 2019. Since then, more than 1.3 million children have benefited from the lifesaving inoculations in three pilot countries — Ghana, Kenya and Malawi. Moeti said those countries have reported a 30 percent drop in hospitalizations of children with severe malaria and a 9% reduction in child deaths.

“If delivered at scale, millions of new cases could be averted, and tens of thousands of lives saved every year,” Moeti said. “We were encouraged to see that demand for the vaccine is high, even in the context of COVID-19, with the first dose reaching between 73% to over 90% coverage.”

Thabani Maphosa, managing director of country programs at Gavi, called the vaccine the most effective tool in the fight against malaria, one that will save children’s lives. However, he said, demand for the lifesaving product will outstrip supply.

“Our challenge during this critical phase is to ensure the doses we have available are used as effectively and equitably as possible,” Maphosa said. “With this is mind, Gavi today is opening an application window for malaria support.”

He said the three pilot countries, which already have experience in rolling out the vaccine, will get first crack at applying for and receiving funding. So, practically speaking, Maphosa said, they will require little help in setting up their systems to get the operation underway.

Maphosa said a second round of funding will take place at the end of the year. At that time, he said other countries with moderate to high cases of severe malaria can submit applications for support.

 

 

Source: Voice of America