Public procurement with 37.4% of works

Luanda – Angola has reported about 4,600 Public procurement procedures, accounted for 37.4% for public works contracts.

The statistics are contained in the database of the National Public Procurement System (SNCP) 2018-2021 and which were announced by the Minister of Finance, Vera Daves on Thursday in Luanda.

Speaking at the opening ceremony of the 6th Edition of Public Procurement Week, the minister underlined that given the significant weight of 1,722 public works contract procedures the approach to public procurement and its challenges should be deepened.

According to the minister, there is a need to improve architectural and public works projects, project management skills, using more practical solutions.

Vera Daves stressed that in public procurement it must be necessary to preserve transparency, integrity and probity.

“In fact, gradually, we have been able to ward off the specter of corruption in public procurement. In this new route that we are following, already with a certain stability, there are improvements in the quality of the staff and instruments assigned to the public administration ”, she said.

She underlined that a process of Public Contracting, well initiated, produces incalculable results, with advantages and benefits for all Angolans.

Vera Daves recognised the numerous challenges, stressing  the importance of commitment and dedication of everyone to the improvement  of the Public Procurement, Architecture and Engineering.

“This has been a very challenging path for all those involved and I believe it is important to recognise the lessons learned”, she stressed.

According to the minister, it is important to look at the advantages and disadvantages of drawing up design and construction contracts, through the presentation of real cases on the success or failure of opting for the adoption of this type of projects.

Vera Daves said that one should understand the stages of the transfer process of Software Management (transfer of know-how), intellectual property and the issue of monitoring deadlines for these contracts.

She also explained the responsibilities and models of the relationship between the designer and the supervisor, the prohibition of the same being a supervisor, as well as its and the supervisor’s responsibilities regarding errors and omissions in the projects.

In turn, the director general of the National Service for Public Procurement (SNCP), Sónia Guilherme, explained that the Public Procurement Market Observatory has 91 Procedures triggered by the SNCPE, generating total savings of 24% and 142 Public Procurement Units.

Regarding the audit of procedures, she pointed out that 35 audits were carried out, since 2016, and 29 PIIM procedures, as well as 7,812 tender procedures verified.

At this point, there are over 7,300 trainees since 2014, and more than 500 providers trained under the SNCPE.

The chairman of the Order of Architects of Angola, Celestino Chitonho, regretted the fact that the country does not have instruments for spatial planning in all municipalities.

“(…) The territory is going to be occupied and the master plans are not ready, but, at the same time, at the public level, a lot of construction is being done, that is, we are building first, and then ordering”, he lamented.

Celestino Chitonho explained that the idea is to hire an architect first, make a complete project and then start the work.

The 6th Edition of the Public Procurement Week takes place from June 16th to 17th, ahead of  commemoration of the Public Procurement Week.

 

 

Source: Angola Press News Agency

 

Angola and USA match cancelled due to Covid-19

Luanda – The friendly match that was supposed to oppose the Angolan women’s junior handball team to its United States of American counterpart, in Hungary, was today, Thursday, cancelled due to suspected cases of Covid-19 on the opponent’s side.

The national seven is serving a training camp in the city of Budapest, aiming for the World Championship, to be held in Slovenia from 23 of the current to 2 July.

According to the national team head coach, José Shuma, the American delegation informed the event and the game scheduled for tonight is without effect, forcing the Angolan team to perform only a correctional training.

On Wednesday, the Angolan women defeated Alba FCK of Slovenia by 32-20.

Earlier on, Angola lost 19-29 to Korea, 19-27 to Hungary and 21-22 against Romania.

The African champions close their preparations on Sunday, with a duel against Chile.

Angola is in group E with the Czech Republic, Romania and Latvia.

 

 

Source: Angola Press News Agency

Angolan team lose in friendly match

Luanda – Angolan senior men’s handball team lost Thursday 25-26 to Interclube in the fourth game between themselves.

The match is in preparation for the African Championship to take place on 11- 19 July in Egypt.

The result emerged in the ten-minute extra time, after the teams were tied at 20 goals.

This was the second defeat of the Angolan team, against the national “police” team after the 24-27.

In previous matches, Angola won 30-24 and 26-23, respectively.

José Pereira Kidó boys will play again on Friday at 5:30 pm, against 1º de Agosto, the defending champions, at the Cidadela pavilion.

Next week the 14 players, who will be announced, will travel for the pre-competitive stage.

Angola, which are in group D, eye to improve the fourth place reached in previous edition.

The team will debut on the 11th against Zambia,  face Senegal on the second round and end the group stage against the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).

 

 

Source: Angola Press News Agency

Angola becomes 55th member of Extractive Industries Transparency

Luanda – Angola joins as of Thursday (16 June)the group of more than 50 member countries of the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI), a global standard that promotes responsible management of oil, gas and mineral resources.

The integration of Angola as the 55th member country was decided at the 53rd Meeting of the EITI Council, co-sponsored by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Belgium and the European Commission, held  Brussels.

The event was attended by the Angolan Minister of Mineral Resources, Oil and Gas (Mirempet), Diamantino Azevedo.

According to Diamantino de Azevedo, who headed the Angolan delegation at the event, the acceptance of Angola’s candidacy as a member of the EITI represents the culmination of a preparatory work cycle started in 2019.

In that year (2019), President of the Republic, João Lourenço, declared publicly the country’s intention to join this initiative.

The EITI is a voluntary platform to promote transparency and responsible management of revenues from the extractive sectors (mining and oil) implemented by interested countries and companies operating in these industries.

The purpose of the EITI is to allow the proper and monitorable use of these revenues so that they can contribute to the economic and political stability of the countries with extractive industries and, in this way, strengthen the fight against corruption.

 

Source: Angola Press News Agency

 

Government reiterates commitment to increase access to health care

Talatona – The Angolan government reiterated, Thursday in Luanda, its commitment to increase the equitable access to primary health care, with the construction of new hospitals and the admission of technicians.

Health Minister, Silvia Lutucuta, who was speaking at the opening of the first Primary Health Care and Immunisation Forum on the theme, “Cuida Angola (Taking care of Angola),” said it was necessary to redouble efforts to make consistent progress towards universal health coverage.

Sílvia Lutucuta said that immunisation should be used as a platform to reach families and communities, with integrated services, including the control of major endemic diseases, by allocating the necessary human and financial resources to ensure the consolidation of the gains achieved so far.

With the holding of the forum, she said, the intention was to strengthen the mobilisation of communities and civil society, including the private sector and development partners, to work together for the health of Angolans.

The Cabinet minister spoke of the importance and need to guarantee all Angolans the right to a quality and healthy life.

 

Source: Angola Press News Agency

 

Angolan Vice President meets with Namibian counterpart

Luanda – Angola’s Vice President of Republic Bornito de Sousa Thursday (16) in Windhoek (Namibia) held an official meeting with his Namibian counterpart, Nangolo Mbumba.

The meeting took place at the Old State House, official residence and work office of the Namibian Vice-President,  according to a note from the Angolan diplomatic representation in that country, reached ANGOP Thursday.

Still Thursday, the first day of the visit, Bornito de Sousa went to the “Heroes Acre” (Heroes’ Monument), about 10 kilometers south of Windhoek city centre, where he laid a wreath in honour of the heroes of Namibia’s resistance war.

According to the official programme, Bornito de Sousa also made a courtesy visit to the facilities of the Angolan Diplomatic Mission, led, since August 2019, by Ambassador Jovelina Imperial e Costa.

At the Embassy, ​​he also laid a wreath on the bust of the first President of Angola, António Agostinho Neto.

Bornito de Sousa also plans to travel to the localities of Etosha, Ondangwa and Oshakati.

 

 

Source: Angola Press News Agency

Covid-19: Angola vaccinates over 38,000 people

Luanda – Angola has vaccinated, in the last 24 hours, 38,745 people.

According to the daily bulletin released Thursday, the provinces of note are Luanda (5931), Uíge (5684), Huambo (4772), Bié (3543) and Huila (2858).

The cumulative total points to 20,206,864 doses administered, of which 13,061,421 with one dose, 7,064,378 with full doses and 683,837 with booster doses.

 

 

Source: Angola Press News Agency

 

UNICEF calls for greater investment in health sector

Talatona – The UNICEF representative in Angola, Iván Yerovi, said Thursday it was urgent to ensure more investment in the health sector, to avoid newborn deaths and inequalities in the access of the population to rural and urban areas.
Speaking at the 1st Forum on Primary Health Care and Immunisation, he stressed the need for more investment in the health sector, as mentioned in the April 2001 Abuja Declaration, which Angola signed.
In this way, he said that primary health care should be intensified as a guarantee of effective responses to the current gaps in the sector in the maternal, neonatal and infant areas, at accessible costs for the most vulnerable, at a time when the country is preparing itself to respond to emerging diseases such as outbreaks and natural disasters.
For his part, the Representative of the Melinda Gates Foundation, Orion Levine, said that the Angolan government has improved in terms of care, highlighting the fight against the Covi-19 pandemic and access to primary care.
In his view, the country has improved control of the polio outbreak by 70 percent and shown it has the capacity to respond to its African neighbours.
The WHO deputy regional director, Elizabet Lindwe Maphosa, said it was necessary to support the Angolan government to speed up the health care programme, using measurable technologies to improve access to care for children.

Source: Angola Press News Agency

North Korea COVID-19 Vaccination Plan Facing Challenges

As North Korea faces a rising number of COVID-19 cases, simply having vaccines may be insufficient to roll out a countrywide immunization process that experts say needs to be accompanied by adequate cold storage units and trained medical and technical staff that the nation lacks.

Pyongyang announced on Tuesday that “more than 32,810 fevered cases” were detected in the country from June 12 to 13, through its state media Korea Central News Agency (KCNA). The total, “since late April,” surged past 4.5 million as of June 14, added the KCNA.

Outbreak first reported in May

North Korea first reported the outbreak of the virus on May 12. Until Pyongyang acknowledged the outbreak, it claimed zero cases since the global pandemic in early 2020.

The regime is battling the spread with “vigorous” anti-epidemic work by conducting tests to “confirm coronavirus infected cases” in Pyongyang, border areas and high-risk regions. It is also implementing quarantine measures such as installing “more than 11,300 temporary quarantine wards,” said the KCNA on a separate report on Tuesday.

Gavi, a global vaccine distribution network, told VOA’s Korean Service that North Korea “has accepted an offer of vaccines from China and has started to administer doses.”

Gavi, attributing comments to a spokesperson, did not say when the immunization began and what kind of WHO-approved Chinese vaccines such as Sinopharm, Sinovac or CanSino were sent.

North Korea, however, did not indicate it has begun a countrywide vaccination program that experts say is the only viable way to try to prevent severe illnesses and deaths.

Arthur Reingold, division head of epidemiology at University of California who served as a member of the WHO’s Strategic Advisory Group of Experts on Immunization (SAGE) from 2005 to 2012, said, “Vaccination with an effective SARS-Cov-2 vaccine is really the only approach that can limit morbidity, hospitalization, (and) death at this point.”

SARS-CoV-2 is the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 that causes coronavirus disease 2019, which came to be called COVID-19.

Gavi ‘ready to support’

Pyongyang has not accepted vaccine offers from the U.S., South Korea or international vaccine sharing programs such as Gavi. The Gavi spokesperson said it “has always been ready to support Pyongyang should it request our assistance, but so far,” did not receive “formal request for COVID-19 vaccine support.”

Heeje Lee is a researcher with the Korea Health Policy Project at Harvard Medical School who has traveled to North Korea multiple times since 2016 to teach at Pyongyang University of Science and Technology, North Korea. He told VOA’s Korean Service that the regime might have opted out of conducting a massive vaccination program due to medical challenges.

“Considering and weighing benefits and risks, they might have selected the zero-COVID strategy instead of nationwide vaccination,” Lee said. “They are very good at mobilization. It might have been easier for them to control behavior of the population such as lockdown and border closure than handling medical accidents from the vaccination.”

Experts said North Korea needs to overcome several medical and technical hurdles if it wants to begin a COVID-19 immunization program as it would need to import cold storage units and medical and technical experts. This is especially true if Pyongyang wants to use the mRNA vaccines, which need careful handling.

David Salisbury, associate fellow of Global Health Program at Chatham House, a policy institute in London, and director of immunization at the U.K.’s Department of Health until 2013, said, “Given the very demanding cold chain requirements for mRNA vaccines, this is likely to be very difficult for North Korea.”

The most effective vaccines, such as Pfizer and Moderna, use mRNA technology that instructs cells in the body to produce protein, which triggers immunity against the virus.

Pfizer vaccines are shipped at temperatures between minus 90-60 degrees Celsius and can be stored in the freezer between minus 25-15 degrees Celsius for up to two weeks.

Moderna vaccines are shipped at temperatures between minus 50-15 degrees Celsius and can be stored in the freezer at the same temperature.

After thawing, both vaccines can be kept in the refrigerator between 2-8 degrees Celsius for up to one month.

“Those [mRNA] vaccines need to be shipped and stored in very cold freezers and then thawed and delivered, by needle injection within several hours, perhaps a day,” said John Moore, a professor of microbiology and immunology at Weill Cornell Medical College in New York City.

“There are real logistical challenges to providing and using these freezers,” he said. “The mRNA (vaccines) may just be more than what the North Koreans can actually handle.”

Chinese vaccines and Novavax must also be kept in refrigerator temperature of approximately 4 degrees Celsius, said Moore.

Nagi Shafik, former project manager for WHO and UNICEF in North Korea, said, “If we are going to use the mRNA vaccines (such as) Pfizer or Moderna, (North Korea) will need ultra-cold refrigerators, which UNICEF can provide as they did with other countries.”

In 2021, UNICEF delivered 800 ultra-cold storage units to about 70 countries to store COVID-19 mRNA vaccines.

The Gavi spokesperson told VOA’s Korean Service on Friday that “regarding challenges of mRNA vaccines … that’s something we’d only be able to comment on if/when (North Korea) submits an updated national vaccine deployment plan as part of a request for support.”

VOA’s Korean Service contacted North Korea’s mission to the U.N., asking whether it is willing to accept mRNA vaccines if they are offered but did not receive a reply.

Turning to other vaccines

Due to the challenges of using mRNA vaccines, Moore said North Korea could resort to other vaccines.

“Chinese vaccines … are easier to use,” Moore said. “Those vaccines are mediocre by our standards but would be able to reduce the incidence of severe and fatal infections.” Sinopharm vaccines have an efficacy rate of 79%, and Sinovac vaccines are 51% effective, according to the WHO.

“There’s also another highly effective Western vaccine called Novavax,” which is “more potent” than Chinese vaccines, said Moore. Novavax vaccines have a 90% efficacy rate. In comparison, Pfizer and Moderna mRNA vaccines both have a 95% efficacy rate.

However, to be used properly, all these vaccines — particularly the mRNA vaccines — would require North Korea to accept outside medical experts who can administer immunizations, according to experts.

Country ‘will need help’

“North Korea will need help from global partners to acquire all the necessary knowledge for the vaccination” as well as “technical experts to make sure the cold chain works properly,” said Lee.

North Korea “would need few medical experts to administer the process of vaccination and storing vaccine,” said Shafik.

Experts said Pyongyang would also need to obtain power sufficient to run cold storage units – for both mRNA and non-mRNA vaccines – throughout the nation of nearly 26 million people.

North Korea lacks a reliable power supply, often struggling to keep lights on. According to the CIA World Factbook, only 26% of its total population had access to electricity in 2019.

Lee said North Korea has “solar refrigeration and solar panels” that are available in case of interruption on the electricity supply. However, Shafik said, solar-powered cold units may need to be supplemented for mass immunization.

“UNICEF had provided some solar energy (powered) refrigerators and (they are) working well for a ‘regular’ vaccination program,” Shafik said. “But for mass vaccination, there could be some modifications and other arrangement(s) to be considered before the campaign.”

Source: Voice of America

FDA Advisers Move COVID-19 Shots Closer for Kids Under 5

COVID-19 shots for U.S. infants, toddlers and preschoolers moved a step closer Wednesday.

The Food and Drug Administration’s outside vaccine advisers gave a thumbs-up to Moderna’s two shots for the littlest kids. The panel is set to vote later Wednesday on whether to also recommend Pfizer’s three-shot series for those youngsters.

The outside experts voted unanimously that the benefits of Moderna’s shots outweigh any risks for children under 5 — that’s roughly 18 million youngsters.

They are the last remaining group in the U.S. to get vaccinated, and many parents have been anxious to protect their little children. If all the regulatory steps are cleared, shots should be available next week.

“This is a long-awaited vaccine,” said panel member Dr. Jay Portnoy of Children’s Hospital in Kansas City, Missouri. “There are so many parents who are absolutely desperate to get this vaccine, and I think we owe it to them to give them a choice to have the vaccine if they want to.”

Dr. Peter Marks, FDA’s vaccine chief, opened the meeting with data showing a “quite troubling surge” in young children’s hospitalizations during the omicron wave, and noted that 442 children under 4 have died during the pandemic. That’s far fewer than adult deaths but should not be dismissed in considering the need for vaccinating the youngest kids, he said.

“Each child that’s lost essentially fractures a family,” Marks said.

FDA reviewers said both brands appear to be safe and effective for children as young as 6 months old in analyses posted ahead of the all-day meeting. Side effects, including fever and fatigue, were generally minor in both, and less common than seen in adults.

The two vaccines use the same technology, but there are differences. In a call with reporters earlier this week, vaccine experts noted that the shots haven’t been tested against each other, so there’s no way to tell parents if one is superior.

“That is a really important point,”‘ said Dr. Jesse Goodman of Georgetown University, a former FDA vaccine chief. “You can’t compare the vaccines directly.”

If the FDA agrees with its advisers and authorizes the shots, there’s one more step. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will decide on a formal recommendation after its own advisers meet Saturday. If the CDC signs off, shots could be available as soon as Monday or Tuesday at doctor’s offices, hospitals and pharmacies.

Pfizer’s vaccine is for children 6 months through 4 years. Moderna’s vaccine is for 6 months through 5 years.

Moderna’s shots are one-quarter the dose of the company’s adult shots. Two doses appeared strong enough to prevent severe illness but only about 40% to 50% effective at preventing milder infections. Moderna has added a booster to its study and expects to eventually offer one.

Pfizer’s shots are just one-tenth its adult dose. Pfizer and partner BioNTech found that two shots didn’t provide enough protection in testing, so a third was added during the omicron wave.

Pfizer’s submitted data found no safety concerns and suggested that three shots were 80% effective in preventing symptomatic coronavirus infections. But that was based on just 10 COVID-19 cases. The calculation could change as more cases occur in the company’s ongoing studies.

The same FDA panel on Tuesday backed Moderna’s half-sized shots for ages 6 to 11 and full-sized doses for teens. If authorized by the FDA, it would be the second option for those age groups. Currently, the Pfizer vaccine is their only choice.

The nation’s vaccination campaign started in December 2020 with the rollout of adult vaccines from Pfizer and Moderna, with health care workers and nursing home residents first in line. Teens and school-age children were added last year.

Moderna said in April that it is also seeking regulatory approval outside the U.S. for its little kid shots. According to the World Health Organization, 12 other countries already vaccinate kids under 5, with other brands.

In the U.S., it remains uncertain how many parents want their youngest children vaccinated. While COVID-19 is generally less dangerous for young children than older kids and adults, there have been serious cases and some deaths. Many parents trying to keep unvaccinated tots safe have put off family trips or enrolling children in day care or preschool.

Still, by some estimates, three-quarters of all children have already been infected. Only about 29% of children ages 5 to 11 have been vaccinated since Pfizer’s shots opened to them last November — a rate far lower than public health authorities consider ideal.

Dr. Nimmi Rajagopal, a family medicine physician at Cook County Health in Chicago, said she’s been preparing parents for months.

“We have some that are hesitant, and some that are just raring to go,” she said.

Source: Voice of America