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Turkish troops killed in Libya civil war

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan says his country has lost two soldiers killed in Libya where Turkish troops are supporting the UN-backed Government of National Accord (GNA).

The Libyan government is fighting an insurgency by rebel forces under Gen Khalifa Haftar, based in eastern Libya.

Gen Haftar is backed by Egypt and the UAE, while the UN-backed government is supported by Turkey and its ally Qatar.

“We have two martyrs there in Libya,” President Erdogan is quoted by AFP news agency saying, before leaving for Azerbaijan on an official visit.

Dame Julie Walters reveals shock of bowel cancer diagnosis

Dame Julie Walters has revealed she was diagnosed with stage three bowel cancer.

The actress, who has starred in Mamma Mia, Billy Elliot and Educating Rita, told the BBC’s Victoria Derbyshire she initially thought doctors “must have made a mistake”.

Having had chemotherapy, the actress has now been given the all clear.

She said her next film, The Secret Garden, could possibly be her last – although she is not certain to retire.

Dame Julie said she had been diagnosed with stage three bowel cancer – which means the cancer has spread to nearby lymph nodes but not to distant body parts – 18 months ago, with two primary tumours in her large intestine.

The 69-year-old said she had first gone to see her doctor a year earlier with indigestion and “slight discomfort”, and later returned with symptoms such as stomach pain, heartburn and vomiting.

She was then referred to a gastric surgeon, where she had a CT scan.

The actress had been on set filming The Secret Garden when she received a phone call asking her to come in. The specialist told her they had found an abnormality in her intestine, and feared it was cancer.

“I was still thinking, ‘That’s ridiculous, he must have made a mistake’. I couldn’t believe it,” Dame Julie said.

She remembers, still in shock, the moment she told her husband Grant Roffey the news.

“I’ll never forget his face. Tears came into his eyes.

Dame Julie said she had always maintained hope of a recovery, having been told by her doctor: “We can fix this.”

But she said there were moments – especially waiting for surgery – when she thought: “Well, I may not come round from the anaesthetic.”

Dame Julie explained she had “30cm taken out of my colon” in hospital.

On coming round from her anaesthetic, she said – still feeling its effects – she had had the “weird” experience of “feeling absolutely marvellous”.

“I said to the night nurse, ‘Is Love Island on?’ – because we were talking about it – and we watched it together.

“It was only a couple of days later I thought, I feel exhausted, and a bit low actually.”

After being initially reluctant, she opted for chemotherapy, which she said was “fine” and had not caused hair loss.

Smiling, she said she was now she was “really well”, adding: “I’ve just had a scan, and I know that [I’m] clear.”

Her recovery, however, had meant she had to be cut from certain scenes in the soon-to-be-released film The Secret Garden, in which she stars alongside Colin Firth.

She said she also missed the premiere of Mamma Mia 2, with her agent telling people she had a ruptured hernia so she could keep the diagnosis out of the spotlight.

Dame Julie told Derbyshire – who has previously documented her own recovery from cancer in a series of video diaries – the diagnosis had “completely changed” her perspective towards acting.

“The person before the operation is different to this person.”

She said it was in some ways a “huge relief” to get off the “merry-go-round” of starring in films and on television – which she said although she found enjoyable, was also stressful and consuming.

“I was due to do two big series… and there were two films. And I just didn’t have to do any of it. And that was wonderful.”

Asked if she thought The Secret Garden could be her last film, she said it was possible.

“It would have to be something I’m really engaged with [to take another role on].

“I’m not saying I’ll never act again. But I certainly don’t think I can go back to [a film that requires working] six days a week, five in the morning till seven o’clock at night.”

What are bowel cancer symptoms?

A persistent change in bowel habit – going more often, with looser stools and sometimes tummy pain

  • Blood in the stools without other symptoms, such as piles
  • Abdominal pain, discomfort or bloating always brought on by eating – sometimes resulting in a reduction in the amount of food eaten and weight loss

 

Most people with these symptoms do not have bowel cancer, but the NHS advice is to see your GP if you have one or more of the symptoms and they have persisted for more than four weeks.

And if you, or someone you know, have been affected by cancer, information and support is available on the BBC’s Action Line page.

Coronavirus: Pregnant nurse ‘propaganda’ sparks backlash

A video featuring a pregnant nurse treating patients in a hospital in the virus epicentre of Wuhan has sparked a backlash across China.

The video by state media outlet CCTV was meant to portray nine-month pregnant Zhao Yu as a hero.

But instead social media users criticised the hospital for allowing a heavily pregnant nurse to work in a highly contagious environment.

One user said the woman was being used as a “propaganda tool”.

More than 2,200 people have now died from the coronavirus in China, with the majority of deaths coming out Wuhan, capital of Hubei province.

In China alone, there have been more than 75,000 cases of infection. The virus has also spread around the globe with more than 1,000 cases and several deaths worldwide.

A show of ‘propaganda’

State media outlet CCTV had last week released a video featuring Zhao Yu, who works in the emergency ward at a military hospital in Wuhan.

The video shows her walking around the hospital in a hazmat suit while heavily pregnant. She’s seen making the rounds and testing a patient who is later sent to the fever department. The patient is heard telling her not to work as it is “dangerous”.

Zhao Yu acknowledges in the video that her family objects to her continuing to work, but adds that she hopes to do her part in fighting the virus.

But the video – which was meant to be a touching tribute to her self-sacrifice – touched a nerve, with many accusing the broadcaster of using her story as a form of “propaganda”.

“Can we stop all this propaganda? Who made the decision that this video was okay? Pregnant women should not be [on the frontlines], that’s it,” another said.

“What is this, a show for political purposes? Don’t send a woman who is nine months pregnant to do this,” said one comment.

“I really think that this message… blindly advocating women to fight on the frontlines regardless of their health… it’s really sick,” one person said.

And it’s not the only video that has got netizens angry.

Another video posted this week by state-owned media outlets in Gansu showed several female nurses weeping as they had their heads shaved.

The video explained that the head-shaving exercise took place so it would be easier for women to wear protective head gear while treating patients.

But many doubted the logic of this, asking why women couldn’t simply have short hair instead of shaving their heads off entirely. Others asked why there weren’t videos of men having their heads shaved.

The hashtag #SeeingFemaleWorkers – calling for people to recognise the contribution of women on their front lines – also started to go viral on Weibo.

“Professionalism. Faith. Loyalty. Strength. These are all qualities worth being proud of. Women aren’t capable and great just because they’re shaving off their long hair,” said one comment.

“Why does the media always use women’s sacrifices as a tool for propaganda? Wouldn’t it be equally as admirable for these women to go on the front line with their long hair? For women who are not pregnant to be fighting?” said one commentary on WeChat.

“They must be beautiful, a mother, a partner, and then make sacrifices. Only then will they be considered great.”

L’Arche founder Jean Vanier sexually abused women – internal report

A religious leader who founded a celebrated organisation for people with learning difficulties sexually abused six women in France, an internal report found.

Canadian Jean Vanier founded the global network L’Arche in France in 1964 and died last year aged 90.

None of the women he abused were themselves disabled, the report says.

An investigation into Vanier was commissioned by L’Arche International last year after suspicions were raised.

The full report is due to be published in the coming days.

“We are shocked by these discoveries and unreservedly condemn these actions, which are in total contradiction with the values Jean Vanier claimed and are incompatible with the basic rules of respect and integrity of persons, and contrary to the fundamental principles on which L’Arche is based,” L’Arche International said in a statement on its website.

The organisation runs homes and centres where people with and without disabilities live together, operating in 38 countries with around 10,000 members.

What does the report say?

Vanier, a devout Catholic, had “manipulative and emotionally abusive” sexual relationships with six women in Trosly-Breuil, France, between 1970 and 2005, according to a statement by L’Arche International about the soon-to-be-published report.

Sexual relations were instigated by Vanier, usually in the context of giving spiritual guidance.

“These women reported similar facts associated with highly unusual spiritual or mystical explanations used to justify these behaviours,” the statement said.

“The relationships […] had a significant negative impact on their personal lives and subsequent relationships.

“These actions are indicative of a deep psychological and spiritual hold Jean Vanier had on these women,” it said.

It also says Vanier asked the women the keep the incidents secret.

The women included assistants and nuns, according to Canadian newspaper the Globe and Mail, which first broke the story.

Vanier also shared sexual partners and “mystical” sexual practices with disgraced priest Thomas Philippe, according to the newspaper.

Father Philippe, who died in 1993, was Vanier’s “spiritual father”.

Vanier publicly denied knowledge of those practices, but the report finds that he was using the same methods.

Vanier’s actions “reveal his own adoption of some of Father Thomas Philippe’s deviant theories and practices which he continued over a very long period of time”, L’Arche International said.

The investigation was carried out by independent UK consultancy GCPS.

Who was Jean Vanier?

The son of a Canadian diplomat, he left a naval career in 1950 to study theology, saying he wanted to “follow Jesus”.

While visiting a chaplain in Paris who worked with men with learning difficulties, he became disturbed by the poor conditions in which the men lived.

He founded L’Arche to provide communities for people with learning difficulties to live alongside people without disability as equals.

There are now 154 L’Arche centres around the world.

Vanier was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize for his work, and was awarded the prestigious Companion of the Order of Canada.

In 2015, he was the recipient of the Templeton Prize, an award described as “entirely deserved” by the Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby.

Coronavirus: South Korea confirms huge rise in cases

South Korea says the number of new coronavirus cases in the country has more than doubled in one day.

Officials said on Saturday that 229 new cases had been confirmed since Friday, raising the total to 433.

Vice Health Minister Kim Gang-lip said the outbreak had entered “a serious new phase”.

Many of the new cases are linked to a hospital and to a religious group near the south-eastern city of Daegu, authorities have said.

Two patients in South Korea have died so far and there are fears the number will rise.

Daegu and nearby Cheongdo – where the hospital is situated – have been declared “special care zones” and the streets of Daegu are reported to be largely abandoned.

South Korea has now reported the largest number of confirmed infections outside China – 76,288 cases including 2,345 deaths – and the outbreak on the Diamond Princess cruise ship off the coast of Japan which has seen more than 600 cases.

The latest developments came as Chinese health authorities reported a decrease in the rate of deaths and new cases of the coronavirus on Saturday.

The head of the World Health Organization (WHO), Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, has expressed concern at the number of new cases with no clear link to China or other confirmed cases.

He said the greatest concern now was countries with weaker health systems, particularly in Africa.

Outside China, more than 1,200 cases of the virus have been confirmed in 26 countries and there have been at least eight deaths, the WHO says.

In other developments:

  • An evacuation flight carrying 32 British and other European cruise ship passengers from Japan has landed in England
  • Italy reported its second death from the virus – a woman living in the northern region of Lombardy – a day after a 78-year-old man became the first person in Italy to die from the new coronavirus.
  • Iran reported its fifth death from the disease and said there were now 28 infections

The new virus, which originated last year in Hubei province in China, causes a respiratory disease called Covid-19.

What happened in South Korea?

Medical officials first announced 142 new cases on Saturday and then hours later increased the number by 87.

In a statement, the Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (KCDC) said that of the 229 new cases, 95 were related to Daenam Hospital in Cheongdo. There are now 114 confirmed cases at the hospital – nine staff and 102 patients – it added.

Mr Kim said most of those diagnosed had been inpatients for mental health issues. He said some cases showed “no confirmed epidemiological connections”, meaning it was not clear how they had contracted the virus, he added.

Coronavirus: Car sales in China fall 92% in February

Car sales in China fell 92% in the first half of February as the coronavirus shutdown took its toll, according to an industry trade body.

Car dealerships have remained closed while buyers have stayed away to prevent the spread of the deadly virus.

Nationwide car sales slumped 96% in the first week of February to a daily average of just 811 vehicles.

The China Passenger Car Association (CPCA) said it hoped sales would pick up as more showrooms reopened.

“There was barely anybody at car dealers in the first week of February as most people stayed at home,” said CPCA secretary general Cui Dongshu.

Dealers have gradually restarted operations this month, and the automobile trade body is hoping sales will improve during the second half of February.

Chinese car maker Geely has just launched a “contactless” service that lets customers buy its cars online and get them delivered directly to their homes.

China is the world’s biggest car market, selling just over 21 million cars last year, according to Statista. The US is the second biggest market.

Even before the deadly outbreak, car sales in China were in decline due to a slowing economy and trade tensions with the US.

While car sales have slumped, production has also been severely disrupted with many of the world’s biggest car makers warning of delays.

Many car companies had expected to restart operations in China this week. But even those firms that have re-opened some locations have warned it will take longer to return to full capacity than expected.

It is not just car makers who are suffering disruptions in China, known as “the world’s factory”. Global manufacturers are also facing production delays, with Apple warning of global iPhone supply shortages.

The death toll from the coronavirus outbreak has now risen to more than 2,200 people.

MASSIVE GAS SHORTAGE HITS GAMBIA;

There has been a massive shortage in fuel in the Gambia since the start of this week. Only few fuel station like Jah Oil and Castle are selling Gas at this moment and drivers rush to coastal Road Castle, Brikama Jah Oil station, and West Field Castle to buy fuel.

Most drivers believe that the fuel station do not want to sell gas because the price has skyrocketed.

Talking to a Taxi driver on Wednesday, in whose car Afrinity Reporter boarded, He said;

If the add up the price of the gas oil, then the transportation will increase and government refuses for this to happen. therefore fuel stations refuse to sell gas and says there is a shortage.

Some drivers complain in a Van that they have parked their cars because there is no fuel and they cannot drive their cars without fuel. One of the passengers in the car who is a Van driver says.

Business is going slow now.

A fishmonger who travels from Tanjai to Serekunda every morning to sell fish after buying from the fishermen at the seashore says she fears that this will soon affect traveling and slow down trade.

One Abdou who works at Banjul said

“If fuel increases, transport will increase and if that happens then we earning D5,000 for salary will spend everything on transportation and stay hungry”

However the few gas stations  we visited, we were told that there was no gas. Their tanks were completely empty.

The Ministry of Petroleum and Gambia National Petroleum Company is yet to address this issue.

The country is also undergoing high living cost; where the price of food stuff are increasing at its highest rate by the day. The price of a Bag of rice which is the main staple food of the Gambia has increase and average consumers cannot afford a bag of rice at this time.

The communities has reported the worst power cuts this year. Power has been cut for hours, some go days without water.

Trump isn’t pleased a South Korean film won best-picture Oscar

President Donald Trump bemoaned this year’s Academy Award winner for best picture, “Parasite,” on Thursday because it’s a South Korean film.

“How bad were the Academy Awards this year, did you see? ‘And the winner is … a movie from South Korea,’ ” Trump said, impersonating an announcer, at a rally in Colorado.
“What the hell was that all about? We’ve got enough problems with South Korea with trade, on top of it they give them the best movie of the year?” he asked.
Parasite was the first foreign language movie to win best picture at the Academy Awards. It also won awards for directing and original screenplay.
Trump, however, wasn’t impressed. He seemed more interested in American films that had been made more than 70 years ago.
“I’m looking for like, let’s get ‘Gone with the Wind’ — can we get like ‘Gone with the Wind’ back, please? ‘Sunset Boulevard,’ so many great movies,” he continued.
Trump said he didn’t know if “Parasite” was good. “I thought it was best foreign film, best foreign movie — no, it was the best. Did this ever happen before?” he asked
Neon, the American distributor of “Parasite,” responded to Trump’s criticism on Twitter.
“Understandable, he can’t read,” the company wrote.
Trump also wasn’t a fan of Brad Pitt, whose speech, when he received the award for best supporting actor, veered into politics when he mentioned John Bolton’s absence from the President’s Senate impeachment trial.
“I was never a big fan of his,” Trump said. “He got up, said a little wise-guy statement. Little wise guy, he’s a little wise guy.”
Pitt had joked during his acceptance speech about how the Senate voted against allowing witnesses during the trial, which had wrapped up the prior week.
“They told me I only had 45 seconds up here, which is 45 seconds more than the Senate gave John Bolton this week,” Pitt said. “I’m thinking maybe Quentin (Tarantino) does a movie about it and in the end the adults do the right thing.”

Lesotho PM resigns

The Prime Minister of Lesotho Thomas Thabane announced his resignation Thursday.

In a televised speech in the capital, Maseru, the 80-year old said the decision has been the hardest he’s made in his career.

“Today I wish to reiterate my announcement to retire from office. I might still have the necessary zeal and fervor to continue serving my people and country, but the truth is that at my age I have lost most of my energy. I’m not as energetic as I use to be a few years ago”, he said.

I appeal to all Basotho not to intentionally misconstrue my announcement to retire from office.

While there’s speculation that his resignation follows mounting pressure over his former and late wife, Thabane attributes his decision to the lack of eenrgy.

“My fellow countrymen and women it is very unfortunate that some have deliberately decided to distort my decision to retire either motivated by hate or for political gain. I appeal to all Basotho not to intentionally misconstrue my announcement to retire from office”, Thabane added.

The Prime Minister is expected to be charged with the murder of 58-year old Lilopelo Thabane, who was murdered in June 2017 by unknown assailants.

The couple was embroiled in a bitter divorce. Months after assuming office. Thabane married Lesotho’s current first lady, Maesaiah Thabane.

The 48 year old is also facing trial over the murder. She returns to court on March 17.

AFP

SOURCE AFRICA NEWS

Boat carrying 91 migrants goes missing in Mediterranean

The dinghy had contacted a crisis hotline for distressed migrants after sailing from Libya for Europe on February

A rubber dinghy packed with 91 migrants and refugees that set out from Libya with hopes of reaching Europe appears to have gone missing in the Mediterranean, the UN migration agency said on Thursday.

The inflatable boat carrying mostly African migrants departed from al-Qarbouli, 50km (30 miles) east of the capital, Tripoli, on February 8, said Osman Haroun, whose cousin was on board.

He has not heard from the 27-year-old Mohamed Idris, or his 10 other friends also on the boat, since.

“It’s the first time I’ve heard of this happening,” Haroun told The Associated Press by phone from the western coastal district of Zawiya, where he has lived with his family since fleeing the conflict-ridden Darfur region of Sudan in 2016.

“Those who set out you usually hear from within a few hours … no one has even seen the boat’s remains.”

News of the missing boat comes amid criticism of a lack of European Union rescue missions in the Mediterranean Sea.

Member countries agreed earlier this week to end an anti-migrant smuggler operation involving only surveillance aircraft and instead deploy military ships to concentrate on upholding a widely flouted UN arms embargo that is considered key to winding down Libya‘s relentless war.

Alarm Phone, a crisis hotline for migrants in need of rescue at sea, drew attention on Thursday to what it called “an invisible shipwreck,” urging Libyan, Maltese and Italian authorities to share information about the day’s rescue missions.

It said a black rubber boat with 91 people on board, reportedly hailing from Sudan, Niger, Iran and Mali, called the hotline in distress at 3:30am on February 9.

The passengers managed to share their GPS coordinates minutes later, which put them in international waters north of Libya.

Alarm Phone passed the SOS to Italian and Maltese authorities and to the Libyan coast guard, an EU-trained force criticised by human rights groups, which patrols Mediterranean waters and intercepts migrants to keep them from reaching European shores.

The Libyan coast guard took five hours to respond to Alarm Phone’s urgent request, and said it dispatched two ships to search for the missing vessel, without providing evidence.

Alarm Phone lost contact with the boat more than two hours later, when it heard people panicking, saying the engine had failed. Migrants were slipping into the sea, they told the hotline, as water flooded the shrinking dinghy.

“For sure something bad has happened,” said Haroun.

The International Organization for Migration cross-checked search and rescue records from Italy, Malta, Libya and the non-governmental Aita Mari rescue ship, but could not match the missing migrant boat with any recent interceptions or rescues.

Italian, Maltese and Libyan authorities did not respond to requests from The Associated Press for information about their rescues.

Frontex, the EU border agency, said it deployed a plane to search for the missing boat. Authorities have also yet to respond to requests put forward by Alarm Phone on Monday. Both Alarm Phone and the IOM say they fear the worst.

“Tragically, the last hypothesis is that this could be another invisible shipwreck,” said Marta Sánchez, a project officer with IOM’s Missing Migrants project who examined the records.

Sánchez said the IOM would wait a few days before officially recording the 91 people as missing, to see if any remains turn up.

The IOM tally of “ghost boats” lost in the Mediterranean Sea has been rising. Last year, the agency documented seven missing vessels carrying 417 people, a four-fold increase from the year before.

The migration agency sources its data from non-government organisations and testimony from families, and cross-references the reports against records of attempted crossings, rescues and interceptions.

Haroun, 29, said he and his cousin had repeatedly tried and failed to cross the Mediterranean throughout their years in Libya.

As the North African country descended into chaos following the 2011 uprising that toppled and killed longtime leader Muammar Gaddafi, it became a haven for smugglers ferrying African migrants to European shores.

The voyage is perilous, often harrowing. As of last October, roughly 19,000 migrants have drowned or disappeared on the sea route since 2014, according to the IOM.

Each time Haroun and Idris set out, the coastguard forcibly returned them to war-ravaged Libya. In 2020 alone, 1,700 people have been brought back, according to the IOM, often landing in squalid militia-run detention centres rife with torture and abuse.

Haroun paid 1,500 Libyan dinars (some $1,000) upfront to smugglers, and bade his cousin farewell, imagining he would join his four relatives who have crossed the sea and started new lives in England and France.

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