Wednesday, February 10, 2021

3.8 million people in Tigray need help

 Eighty percent of Ethiopia’s conflict-hit Tigray region has been cut off from humanitarian assistance and tens of thousands could starve to death, the Ethiopian Red Cross has warned.

The president of the Ethiopian Red Cross Society, Abera Tola, told a news conference, adding that some starvation deaths have already been reported and the figures could climb fast.

“The number today could be one, two or three, but you know, after a month it means thousands. After two months it will be tens of thousands.” he said.

Tola said  that aid access remained largely restricted to main roads north and south of Mekelle, excluding most rural areas. Once humanitarian workers are able to reach Tigray’s rural areas, “there we will see a more devastating crisis”. He added, “We have to get prepared for the worst.”

Displaced civilians who have managed to reach camps in Tigrayan towns are “emaciated”, he said.

“You see their skin is really on their bones. You don’t see any food in their body,” he said. “Sometimes it is also really difficult to help them without some kind of high nutritional value foods.”

Francesco Rocca, president of the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent (IFRC) who visited Tigray this week, told Al Jazeera he was “shocked” by what he encountered, describing accounts by people displaced by the fighting as “unbearable”.

“The situation there is one of the most difficult I’ve ever seen. The people there are missing almost everything,” he said, sounding the alarm over the lack of food and life-saving medicines, among others. Rocca said only four hospitals out of 40 are operational in the region and are all facing major shortages in medical supplies that have crippled doctors’ ability to perform any surgeries. He decried the “unacceptable” looting that has ravaged most of the health facilities in the region, including the disappearance of 140 of IFRC’s ambulances.

‘Tens of thousands’ could starve to death in Ethiopia’s Tigray | Ethiopia News | Al Jazeera

Tanzania's President in Denial

 In almost a repeat of the former South African president, Mbeki's HIV/AIDS denialism, Tanzania's president, John Magufuli.  downplays the severity of the coronavirus.

In May 2020, he declared that through prayer, Tanzania had defeated the coronavirus.

Tanzania's refusal to provide COVID-19 data and procure vaccines could endanger its neighbouring nations.

The minister of health, Dorothy Gwajima,  told citizens to use traditional ways to protect themselves


Friday, February 05, 2021

Convicted for Doing the Lord's Work

 It is strange that when some Islamic fundamentalist jihadist commits an atrocity, all Muslims are complicit for the crime in the media's eyes.

Dominic Ongwen,  commander of the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA), was convicted on 61 of the 70 counts of crimes against humanity and other war crimes of murder, rape torture, sexual enslavement and pillaging, among others. The ruling by the  International Criminal Court also saw him convicted of forced pregnancy - a legal first.

An LRA attack on Lukodi refugee camp in northern Uganda, children were disembowelled and the charred bodies of babies left in shallow graves. Civilians were shot, burned and beaten to death. Children were thrown into burning houses, some were put in a polythene bag and beaten to death.

The LRA was formed in Uganda where it said its goal was to install a government based on the biblical 10 commandments. Led by Joseph Kony, it became notorious for abducting thousands of children to use as soldiers or sex slaves.

Dominic Ongwen convicted of war crimes for Uganda's LRA rebels - BBC News

Thursday, February 04, 2021

The African Covid Crisis

Tanzania has rejected vaccinations altogether, raising fears that the east African country could act as a reservoir for the disease and threaten progress elsewhere. President John Magufuli said last week that Tanzania had “lived for over one year without the virus because our God is able and Satan will always fail” and insisted the pandemic can be fought with herbal remedies.

There is growing evidence that the 3.6m cases and 93,000 deaths from Covid-19 in Africa counted by the CDC may be a significant underestimate, deepening concerns that tens of thousands could die in the coming months if enough vaccines are not made available. Health systems across the continent have been overwhelmed since December as the second wave pushed daily recorded infections above 30,000. Oxygen has been in short supply, workers exhausted, and crematoria unable to meet demand. There have been acute shortages of beds in even relatively wealthy countries and high-profile casualties.  The case fatality rate in Africa was now 2.6%, above the global average of 2.2%

African Union  announced it had secured 670m doses for its 54 member countries, only 50m are likely to be available before June and the winter in the southern parts of the continent. It is estimated Africa will need 1.5bn vaccine doses to immunise 60% of its 1.3bn inhabitants, costing between $7bn and $10bn.

Even before the second wave, Covid killed more than 300 health workers in South Africa’s stretched public health care system. In Sudan, 41 doctors died from Covid-19 between March and January, medical associations said. The country has less than six doctors for every 10,000 people, half the minimum level recommended by the WHO. High numbers of casualties among health workers have also been reported in Zimbabwe, Mozambique and Kenya, where 30 doctors had died by November. Enema Amodu, the chairman of the Nigeria Medical Association, said at least 20 doctors died there in a single week in December after getting coronavirus. In Malawi, new cases increased exponentially in January, doubling every four to five days, and nine frontline health workers have died after testing positive for Covid-19.

 Only a few countries in Africa will start immunising even frontline health workers until much later this year, prompting accusations that large orders by wealthy nations are costing the lives of medical staff in poorer parts of the world. Only six countries in Africa have now received relatively small quantities of vaccine,

“We haven’t started because we didn’t have the vaccines … some countries placed very important premarket commitments that made it difficult for vaccines to be available in Africa,” said Dr John Nkengasong, director of African Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC),

“It would be indefensible if some countries started to vaccinate their lower-risk citizens while many countries in Africa are still waiting to vaccinate their very first frontline health workers,” said Christine Jamet, director of operations for the medical organisation Médecins Sans Frontières. “This is a global pandemic that requires a global spirit of solidarity if we truly hope to bring it under control.”

Dr Matshidiso Moeti, the World Health Organization regional director for Africa, said that the continent was “at a crossroads”.

Nigeria was spared the worst in its first Covid-19 wave that began in February last year. But more than half of Nigeria’s 131,242 confirmed cases have been logged in the past three months. Fatalities now total 1,586.

In South Africa, the country with the most reliable statistics, excess mortality figures suggest the true death toll from the disease may be as much as three times the official total of 44,000. The most recent statistics show more than 50,000 excess deaths in the four weeks from 27 December.

“The priority now is protecting frontline health workers,” said Marion Péchayre, MSF’s head of mission in Lilongwe. “If Malawi had 40,000 doses of vaccine, we could at least start by vaccinating health staff in the country’s main hotspots. Without this, the situation will soon be untenable.”

African nations fear more Covid deaths before vaccination begins | Global development | The Guardian

Tuesday, February 02, 2021

Africans who got richer

 Africa's 18 billionaires are worth an average $4.1 billion, 12% more than a year ago, driven in part by Nigeria’s surging stock market. 

For the tenth year in a row, Aliko Dangote of Nigeria is the continent’s richest person, worth $12.1 billion, up by $2 billion from last year’s list thanks to a roughly 30% rise in the share price of Dangote Cement, by far his most valuable asset. 

 The second richest is Nassef Sawiris of Egypt, whose largest asset is a nearly 6% stake in sportswear maker Adidas.

At number three: Nicky Oppenheimer of South Africa, who inherited a stake in diamond firm DeBeers and ran the company until 2012, when he sold his family’s 40% stake in DeBeers to mining giant AngloAmerican for $5.1 billion. 

Africa’s Wealthiest have Come through the Pandemic just Fine - iAfrica

Monday, February 01, 2021

Condoning Corruption

  Trump  reversed US policy and quietly eased sanctions against billionaire Israeli mining magnate Dan Gertler. A last-minute license issued by the US Department of Treasury and not publicly announced does not entirely remove Gertler and his companies from the US sanctions list, though it does allow them to conduct business transactions, while requiring them to file reports on financial activities every 90 days. Unlike the pardons and regulatory changes done openly, or any of Treasury's normal methods for undoing sanctions, this was done behind closed doors not only to the public but many professionals in the government as well."

Gertler was put on the sanctions list by the US State Department in December 2017, for "opaque and corrupt mining deals" stemming from his friendship with then Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) President Joseph Kabila. The State Department says Gertler cheated the DRC out of $1.4 billion (€1.15 billion) in tax revenue over the course of a decade. Further sanctions were applied in June 2018. The State Department sanctions barred Gertler from conducting business with US citizens, businesses and banks, essentially prohibiting him from making transactions in dollars.

Gertler, whose name appeared in the Panama Papers in connection with a number of holding companies registered in offshore tax havens, is said to have leveraged his friendship with Kabila to access Congo's rich resources. The desperately impoverished country is home to the world's largest cobalt deposits as well as massive copper, diamond, gold, tin and coltan reserves.

 Now, rights groups are calling on President Joe Biden to reinstate sanctions and to revoke this effective pardon.

Trump secretly eased sanctions against Israeli billionaire on way out | News | DW | 26.01.2021

Sunday, January 31, 2021

Another Dire Situation in CAR

  Central African Republic's (CAR) capital of Bangui is being defended by government forces backed by UN, Russian and Rwandan troops.

CAR is one of Africa's poorest and most unstable countries, even though it is rich in resources such as diamonds and uranium. The UN estimates that about half the population is dependent on humanitarian aid. There is daily fighting across the country. At least 12,000 peacekeepers are already on the ground in the CAR.

 92,000 refugees had fled to the Democratic Republic of Congo and more than 13,000 had crossed into Cameroon, Chad and the Republic of Congo. It said the rest were displaced within the CAR.  UNHCR, told reporters that rebel attacks had hampered humanitarian access to Bangui and that many people were now facing "dire conditions". Disease was growing and some of those displaced were so desperate they were exchanging sex for food, spokesman Boris Cheshirkov added.

Central African Republic's capital in 'apocalyptic situation' as rebels close in - BBC News

Friday, January 29, 2021

Pay for the Pollution

  


A Dutch court ruled that Royal Dutch Shell's Nigerian subsidiary must pay punitive restitution to Nigerian villages for oil spill contamination that brought death, illness, and destruction to Nigerian farmers and communities.

"After 13 Years, Justice!" Dutch Court Orders Shell Oil to Pay for Harm Done to Nigerian Farmers | Common Dreams News