Featured News

now browsing by category

 

Gambia: Gambia Moral Congress executive member bow out, joins National People’s Party

Momodou Sidideh, an executive member of the Gambia Moral Congress, and a esteemed prominent member of the Serekunda West community has bow out from the party to join the National People’s Party of President Barrow.

Sidibeh, who amalgamated the GMC in April 2017, first hold on to the powerful and vital position of administrative secretary well before becoming an executive member responsible for constitutional matters and discipline at a succeeding party congress.

Recording his resignation to The Standard yesterday, Mr Sidibeh said: “I supported the GMC at the invitation of its leader Mai Fatty and also because it was part of the coalition. Now that Mr Fatty has left the government effective implying they are no longer part of the coalition, I feel that I have to leave.”

“Also, I am impressed with the achievement recorded by President Barrow in the last three years,” Sidibeh said. He draw the inference that he has made his position known to the GMC leader Mai Fatty.

Source___Standard Newspaper

Gambia: Gigantic Covid-19 tests in Bakau amidst new Record cases

A gigantic Covid-19 prompt testing has begun in Bakau yesterday as the number of new cases in the country escalated rapidly.

Abundance of frontline health workers tag along by security personnel were in the town to voluntarily screen and test inhabitants who may have come into contact with the new recorded cases for symptoms of Covid-19.

The development comes as the toll of infected cases continues to grow with five new cases.

As said by Haruna Jallow from the National Public Health Laboratories, there is a plain reflection of local contraction as a result of which mass voluntary testing to track down affected people as quickly as possible has become urgent.

“This is a community fight because the only efficacy in your testing is as equal as if everybody else has tested. Any person who fails to do the test is putting the community at risk. The norm should be mass testing as Bakau is a flash point. There must be mandatory testing to know the status of the community to be able to deal with the virus,” Gomez urged.

Modou Ceesay, another volunteer decried that most Gambians are being very complacent to understand the deadliness of the coronavirus pandemic.

“I don’t know what is wrong with us as Gambians. People still believe Covid-19 is a ploy of politics by government to get money from the international community. Covid-19 is real and it is killing people all over the world; let us come out and get tested,” he advised.

Source___Standard News

Illinois state in US surpasses 51,499 cases of Covid-19 on Sunday

Illinois officials on Sunday confirmed 2,994 new known coronavirus cases and 63 more deaths, bringing statewide totals to 61,499 cases and at least 2,618 confirmed deaths

Now US have more than 1.1 million reported infections as the death toll passed 67,000 on Sunday, according to Johns Hopkins University

This brings Worldwide record to more than 247,000 deaths and over 3.5 million cases confirmed, according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University on Sunday

Source___Chicago Tribune

In city of Taj Mahal, coronavirus recovery bears alarming signs

On Feb. 25, a day after U.S. President Donald Trump and his wife Melania snap for pictures outside the Taj Mahal on an official visit to India, Sumit Kapoor went to his not far away home from a trip to Italy.

Kapoor, an ally in a shoe manufacturing firm, tested positive a week later for the new Covid-19 becoming the first recorded case in the northern Indian city of Agra and the origin of the country’s first big cluster of the virus.

The city of 1.6 million people, known for its 17th-century marble-domed Taj Mahal, moved fast. It set up containment zones, screened hundreds of thousands of residents and conducted escalating contact finding.

By early April, the city thought it had the virus overcome, containing cases not more than 50, while new infections escalated in other Indian cities.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government praised the “Agra Model” as a template for the country’s fight against COVID-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus.

Now, as the city and its hospitals fight a second wave of infections, Agra is a model of a different kind, shows how the coronavirus can flash back even after a lockdown and elaborate impoundment procedures

“If it hadn’t spread in the hospitals, we would have been able to contain it,” said Agra’s top local official, District Magistrate Prabhu N. Singh.

As India struggles with around 42,000 coronavirus infections, next only to China in Asia, Agra’s tangle with the virus offers lessons for big cities in India and elsewhere.

Source___India (Reuters)

Trump administration thrusting to snatch global supply chains from China

The Trump administration is “turbocharging” an inventiveness to detach global industrial supply chains from China as it contemplates new tariffs to make an example of Beijing for its tackling of the coronavirus outbreak, according to officials familiar with U.S. planning.

President Donald Trump, who has crush up recent backfires on China ahead of the Nov. 3 U.S. presidential election, has since pledged to bring manufacturing way then from overseas.

Now, economic demolition and the enormous U.S. coronavirus death toll are driving a government-wide strive to move U.S. production and supply bond dependency away from China, even if it goes to other more friendly nations as an alternative, current and former senior U.S. administration officials said.

“We’ve been working on [reducing the reliance of our supply chains in China] over the last few years but we are now turbo-charging that initiative,” Keith Krach, undersecretary for Economic Growth, Energy and the Environment at the U.S. State Department told Reuters.

“I think it is essential to understand where the critical areas are and where critical bottlenecks exist,” Krach said, adding that the matter was important to U.S. security and one the government could make known new action on soon.

The U.S. Commerce Department, State and other agencies are looking for means to push companies to move both bearing out and manufacturing out of China. Tax incentives and potential re-shoring subsidies are among measures put in place to pervade changes, the current and former officials told Reuters.

“There is a whole of government push on this,” said one. Agencies are probing which manufacturing should be deemed “essential” and how to make these goods outside of China.

“This moment is a perfect storm; the pandemic has crystallized all the worries that people have had about doing business with China,” said another senior U.S. official.

Source____WASHINGTON (Reuters)

Swimming World Championships postponed From 2021 To 2022

The succeeding swimming world championships, arranged for summer 2021 in Japan, have been moved back until May 2022 following the adjournment of the Olympic Games, the sport’s governing body said on Monday.

The world championships were expected to be held in Fukuoka next year from July 16-August 1 but will in lieu will take place from May 13-29 in 2022, the international swimming federation (FINA) said in a statement.

“After liaising with the relevant stakeholders and receiving feedback from them, we have no doubt that the decision taken will provide the best possible conditions for all participants at the championships,” said FINA president Julio Maglione.

“At a time of unprecedented uncertainty, FINA hopes the announcement of these dates will allow for some clarity in planning for all concerned.”

The world aquatics championships also spotlight diving, open water swimming, synchronised swimming and water polo.

Updated by__Channels TV

Nigeria’s Ex-Minister Turaki Begs Not Culpable To Deceit Charges

A former Minister of Special Duties and Inter-Governmental Affairs, Tanimu Turaki, has begged not culpable to the deceit charges layed against him by the Federal Government of Nigeria.

More upadate on the News will be published soon.

Credit___Channels TV

Lagos RecordsThree More Deaths, 22 Recoveries

The Lagos State Government has records three COVID-19 deaths, saying that 22 persons have been taking from the isolation centres in the state.

In a number of tweet on Sunday, the Ministry of Health said the state had now confirmed a total of 28 COVID-19 deaths and discharged 247 patients who had recovered from the pandemic.

62 new cases of COVID19 Infection recorded. Total recorded cases in Lagos now 1,084. In which 22 of the patients were discharged. Toll of discharged rose to 247.

Meanwhile, Nigeria Records 170 New Cases, Total Infections Now 2,558

Source___Channels TV

Nigeria Confirms 220 New Cases Of COVID-19, Toll of Infections Now 2,388

Nigeria has confirmed 220 new cases of coronavirus, bringing the country’s toll of infections to 2,388.

As tweeted by the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) on Saturday, of the new infections, 62 are in Lagos, 52 from the FCT, 31 in Kaduna and 13 from Sokoto.

The toll of deaths from the virus also rose to 85 as 385 have now recovered.

Source____Channels TV

Five Cases of virus in Gambia

Breaking: Gambia Records Five New Cases of the novel Corona Virus.

Afrinity News

Copyright © 2014-2025 Afrinity Productions.

Powered By SML Media
| KABBO Theme by: D5 Creation | Powered by: WordPress