Tag: Coronavirus

  • Coronavirus hits more Serie A matches

    Five Serie A matches will be played behind closed doors this weekend – including Juventus’ match at home to Inter Milan – because of coronavirus.

    Matches at Udinese, AC Milan, Parma and Sassuolo will take place without fans.

    Games at Lazio, Napoli, Lecce and Cagliari will go ahead with supporters as normal, but Sampdoria’s match on Monday is yet to be decided upon.

    Italy has put towns in northern Italy into lockdown after 229 people tested positive and seven died.

    Inter’s Europa League last-32 home match against Ludogorets on Thursday will also be played behind closed doors because of fears about the possible spread of the virus.

    Inter were one of four Serie A clubs to postpone their games last weekend.

    League leaders Juventus are ahead of second-placed Lazio by one point before they face third-placed Inter on Sunday evening.

    Serie A fixtures to be played behind closed doors: Juventus v Inter (Sun); Udinese v Fiorentina (Sat); AC Milan v Genoa (Sun); Parma v Spal (Sun); Sassuolo v Brescia (Sun)

    Serie A matches to be played with fans: Lazio v Bologna (Sat); Napoli v Torino (Sat); Lecce v Atalanta (Sun); Cagliari v Roma (Sun)

    Still to be decided: Sampdoria v Hellas Verona (Mon)

  • Deputy Health Minister tests positive for Coronavirus

    Deputy Health Minister tests positive for Coronavirus

    Iraj Harirchi, Iran’s Deputy Health Minister has tested positive for the coronavirus and has been quarantined, ILNA news agency reported on Tuesday.

    No fewer than 95 people had been diagnosed with the dangerous disease.

    The majority of confirmed cases in the country come from the city of Qom – a centre of traditional pilgrimage for Shia Muslims, with at least 15 Iranians dying from the disease.

    Harirchi on Monday fiercely opposed putting Qom residents under quarantine. He said: “If We Shut Down Qom, People Would Go Travelling, spreading Coronavirus All Over the Country”.

    Following previous reports about casualties in Iran, several countries, including Turkey, imposed temporary bans on people travelling to and from the Islamic Republic.

    In the meantime, the deadly disease, originally discovered in China’s Wuhan, has killed over 2,600 people across the globe.

    Some 80,000 have been infected, including 77,000 people in China, 1,200 in South Korea and 229 in Italy.

    Austrian and Croatian authorities have now also confirmed the first cases of the disease in their countries.

  • Coronavirus death toll increases in Italy

    Coronavirus death toll increases in Italy

    Italy has recorded an increase in the death toll from Covid-19 on Monday after an 84-year-old man died in a hospital in the city of Bergamo.

    According to the Regional President, Attilio Fontana, the man had suffered from pre-existing conditions.

    After the Civil Protection Agency gave a nationwide rally of 152 on Sunday, the number of people infected with the new coronavirus has increased to 165 in Lombardy alone. Lombardy, home to 10 million people and the city of Milan, is Italy’s worst-hit region.

    Videos and photos have appeared online showing empty shelves and long queues at supermarkets in Milan, but Fontana said there was no need for panic buying, as food supply was secured.

    However, government decided on Saturday to block access to 10 municipalities in Lodi province South of Milan, forcibly confining tens of thousands of people. A municipality in Veneto is also on lockdown.

  • WHO puts Africa readiness for Coronavirus at 66%

    The World Health Organisation (WHO) has conducted a survey with countries to assess their overall readiness for Coronavirus (COVID-19) and found Africa readiness level was estimated at 66 per cent.

    Dr Matshidiso Moeti, WHO Regional Director for Africa, in a statement issued from Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, said there was still a gap to be filled in the continent readiness.

    “WHO finds there are critical gaps in readiness for countries across the continent.

    “We need urgently to prioritise strengthening the capacities for countries to investigate alerts, treat patients in isolation facilities and improve infection, prevention and control in health facilities and in communities,’’ Moeti said.

    According to her, as the threat of coronavirus disease looms over the continent, WHO promised to support African Union Member States on a common preparedness and response strategy.

    WHO joined Health Ministers in an Emergency Meeting on the Coronavirus Disease Outbreak, which was convened on Saturday by the African Union Commission in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.

    The African Ministers of Health discussed a joint communiqué on how to prepare for and potentially respond to COVID-19.

    WHO plays an active role in supporting countries to coordinate preparation efforts and so far has deployed more than 40 experts to 10 countries.

    The UN health agency has deployed experts to 10 countries to support coordination, treatment, infection, prevention and control, community engagement, surveillance and laboratory disease control.

    WHO has assisted countries in building their diagnostic capacity for COVID-19, and currently 26 laboratories are able to test for the new pathogen, up from just two early this month.

    “The threats posed by COVID-19, has cast a spotlight on the shortcomings in health systems in the African Region.

    “Countries must invest in emergency preparedness.

    “This investment is worthwhile when you consider the cost of responding to outbreaks, which for the 2014 Ebola outbreak was estimated at close to three billion dollars,’’ Moeti said.

    Preparedness efforts which countries already have in place are paying off.

    For instance, investments in Ebola preparedness for the nine neighbouring countries to the Democratic Republic of the Congo have yielded some dividends in relation to COVID-19.

    Most of these countries now have partner coordination structures in place, points-of-entry screening has been strengthened (particularly at major airports) and isolation units have been upgraded to manage suspected cases.

    Over the years, WHO has developed a national influenza network of laboratories and health facilities.

    The laboratories, which are members of the network, have been able to scale up their diagnostic capacity quickly and health facilities in the network are monitoring for severe acute respiratory infections and influenza-like illnesses.

    Using these conditions as a proxy for COVID-19 as they present with similar symptoms, so far this monitoring has not found any clustering or spike of influenza-like cases.

    As of Feb. 20, countries reported that since Jan. 22, countries report that 210 people have been investigated for COVID-10 in the WHO African region.

    204 cases have been ruled out and six cases are still pending.

  • Coronavirus outbreak slashes global oil prices

    Coronavirus outbreak slashes global oil prices

    Coronavirus outbreak is causing havoc in the crude oil market. Prices tumbled more than 2% on Monday, with investors worried about a hit to demand as the virus spreads rapidly outside China.

    Brent crude fell by $1.50 or 2.5% to $57.00 a barrel by 2332 GMT. U.S. crude futures fell by $1.26 or 2.3% to $52.12.

    Concerns about the coronavirus grew on Sunday after sharp rises in infections in South Korea, Italy and Iran.

    South Korea’s government put the country on high alert after the number of infections surged to over 600 with six deaths, while in Italy, officials said a third person infected with the flu-like virus had died, as the number of cases jumped to above 150 from just three before Friday.

    “We should not underestimate the economic disruption as a super spreader could trigger a massive drop-in business activity around the globe of proportions the world has never dealt with before,” said Stephen Innes, chief market strategist at AxiCorp.

    China, the world’s largest energy consumer, will adjust policy to help cushion the blow to the economy from the coronavirus outbreak that authorities are still trying to control, President Xi Jinping said on Sunday.

    Meanwhile, Saudi Arabia’s Energy Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman described as “nonsense” a media report that Riyadh is considering a break from the OPEC+ alliance with Russia.

    His comments followed a Wall Street Journal report that said Saudi Arabia was considering leaving the OPEC+ alliance as China’s coronavirus outbreak contributes to a drop in global oil demand.

    In the United States, the oil rig count, an indicator of future production, rose for a third straight week. Drillers added one oil rig last week, bringing the total count to 679, the highest since the week of Dec. 20, energy services firm Baker Hughes Co said.

  • African health system ill-equipped to handle Coronavirus outbreak – WHO

    How well equipped is the African health system to handle a possible Coronavirus outbreak in the continent?

    Ill-equipped, so said the World Health Organisation (WHO) yesterday.

    The Director General of the organisation, Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, warned that African health systems appeared ill-equipped to respond to the deadly coronavirus outbreak should cases start to proliferate across the continent.

    Tedros therefore asked African Union member states “to come together to be more aggressive in attacking” the virus, known as COVID-19.

    “Our biggest concern continues to be the potential for COVID-19 to spread in countries with weaker health systems,” Tedros said during the emergency ministerial meeting on COVID-19 organised by the African Union and the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention.

    He advised all countries to invest urgently in preparedness, stressing the need to take advantage of the window of opportunity available to attack the virus outbreak with a sense of urgency.

    The outbreak which began in December has already killed more than 2,200 people and infected more than 75,500 in China.

    More than 1,150 people have also been infected outside China, although Egypt is the only African country to have recorded a confirmed case.

    There have been more than 200 suspected cases in the WHO’s AFRO region, which includes most African countries, though nearly all have been confirmed negative, regional director Matshidiso Rebecca Moeti said yesterday.

    “But if COVID-19 starts to spread on the continent, African health systems will struggle to treat patients suffering from symptoms such as respiratory failure, septic shock and multi-organ failure,” WHO’s Tedros said.

    “These patients require intensive care using equipment such as respiratory support machines that are, as you know, in short supply in many African countries and that’s a cause for concern,” he said.

    According to him, China has now reported 75,569 cases, including 2,239 deaths, saying that data from China continues to show a decline in new cases.

    “This is welcome news, but it must be interpreted very cautiously. It is far too early to make predictions about this outbreak. Outside China, there are now 1,200 cases in 26 countries, with eight deaths. As you know, there is one confirmed case on the African continent in Egypt.

    “Several African countries have tested suspected cases of COVID-19, but fortunately they have been found negative.

    “We are especially concerned about the increase in cases in the Islamic Republic of Iran, where there are now 18 cases and four deaths in just the past two days,” he said.

    The director-general said that WHO had supplied testing kits to Iran, and would continue to provide further support in the coming days and weeks.

    “What has been reported from South Korea and Italy yesterday is also a matter of concern and how the virus is now spreading to other parts of the world.

    “But in addition to that, as I said earlier in my press conference, the window of opportunity is narrowing.

    “This meeting, I hope, will help us come together as a continent in attacking this virus,” he said.

    Ghebreyesus averred that the outbreak had captured the world’s attention in just seven weeks of the virus’ detection, and rightly so, saying it has the potential to cause severe political, social and economic upheaval.

    He noted that a WHO-led international team of experts including the Director-General of the Nigerian Centre for Disease Control, Dr Chikwe Ihekweazu, had been in China for the past week.

  • Coronavirus fear: Inter Milan game postponed

    Coronavirus fear: Inter Milan game postponed

    Italian authorities have ordered the postponement of three Serie A football matches on Sunday over coronavirus fears in northern Italy.

    The matches between title-chasing Inter Milan and Sampdoria, Atalanta against Sassuolo and Hellas Verona versus Cagliari have been pushed back to avoid the spread of the virus with 79 confirmed cases in an outbreak that has claimed two lives in the country.

    Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte announced late on Saturday evening that all sporting events in the Veneto and Lombardy regions would be suspended on Sunday.

    Juventus played earlier on Saturday to extend their lead on the top of the standings with a 2-1 win at SPAL in Emilia-Romagna.

    Inter Milan are six points behind the champions in third.

  • FG releases N386m to fight Coronavirus

    FG releases N386m to fight Coronavirus

    THE Federal Government has released N386 million to two health agencies to strengthen Nigeria’s preparedness to combat Coronavirus (COVID19).

    The Permanent Secretary, Federal Ministry of Health (FMOH), Mr Abdulaziz Mashi Abdulaziz, told reporters in Abuja that the amount was released by the government in two batches.

    He said: “While the first batch of N71 million was released at the end of January to facilitate activities of the Port Health Services department of the ministry, the second was released after the Minister of Health, Dr Osagie Ehanire, said the government had budgeted N620 million to curtail the virus from entering Nigeria when he appeared before the Senate Committee on Health.

    “It is true that intervention was sought from the Presidency and the Ministry of Finance and Budget Plannig.

    “Because of the level of the emergency, I can confirm to you that N71million was released to the Port Health Services division of the (health) ministry.

    “The Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC), was also given N315 million directly. Other requests are in the pipeline and yet to be released,” he said.

    Also speaking, the Minister of State for health, Dr. Olorunnimbe Mamora, said information available to Nigerian government was that the first case of Coronavirus had been reported from Egypt and that the affected person was a foreigner.

    Mamora added that the ministry has inaugurated an inter-ministerial committee to provide oversight leadership.

    He said the committee was being coordinated by the NCDC and that it met twice a week.

    He said: “Nigeria is receiving technical support from the World Health Organisation (WHO), Africa Centre for Disease Control and West African Health Organisation.

    He added that the Port Health Services had intensified screening of passengers coming from China and other countries of high risk.

    Screening forms have been provided to all airlines.

    “As at now, there is no report of any confirm case in Nigeria. Clinicians are being trained on management of cases at the moment.

    “We are developing a stockpile of medical supplies to be used in the event of any outbreak.

    “Our capacity for testing has been enhanced because we have three laboratories Edo and Lagos states as well as in Abuja,” he said.

  • Solidarity with the Chinese on the Coronavirus frontline

    By Owei Lakemfa.

    Li Wenliang, 34 was an ophthalmologist at Wuhan Central Hospital, China. In December, 2019 he noticed seven cases of a virus that he thought looked like Sars. The victims were said to come from the Huanan Seafood Market in Wuhan. Then he slowly realized that this virus was a strange one.

    On December 30, he posted a message on a doctors chat group warning them that: “A new coronavirus infection has been confirmed and its type is being identified. Inform all family and relatives to be on guard.” He advised they wear protective clothing to avoid infection. Skeptical authorities thought he was raising a false alarm and the Public Security Bureau gave him a letter which read: “We solemnly warn you: If you keep being stubborn, with such impertinence, and continue this illegal activity, you will be brought to justice…”

    Despite his conviction, Li Wenliang like a good soldier never abandoned his duty post. The virus was also cunning and ruthless; there was no way to tell where it was and how it could be detected. Just a week after he was warned, he treated a woman with glaucoma unaware she had been infected. So in spite of his early awareness and warning, the young doctor caught the virus. On January 10, he began coughing, next day, he had fever. As the authorities became conscious that Li had been right and started to fight the unknown enemy, they apologized to him. But it was too late for him. His parents were also affected. On January 20, China declared the outbreak of the virus and an emergency.

    After several tests for the coronavirus came back negative, the one on January 30, was positive. Li posted: “Today nucleic acid testing came back with a positive result, the dust has settled, finally diagnosed.” The young medical general leading the war against the virus, fell in battle. So did many of his medical colleagues including Dr. Liu Zhiming, Director of the Wuchang Hospital.

    That was how Coronavirus (Covid-19) stole into our lives virtually undetected and throwing the entire world into panic and a frenzy to find a cure and a vaccine.

    Now, China is a factory ceaselessly running to lubricate the human economy. So, its slow down by the Coronavirus is not just a Chinese challenge, but a worldwide one. With its 20 percent slice of the human population, the country effectively takes care of 1.35 billion people especially in meeting basic human needs. In terms of humanity’s fight against poverty, China alone, according to the World Bank, has lifted over 850 million human beings out of poverty with the poverty rate in the country falling from 88 percent in 1981 to 0.7 percent in 2015.

    Also, given its increasing centrality in world economy, there is no way China slows down that the world will not do the same. If China were to grind to a halt, many parts of the universe will be adversely affected. In other words, China has become a vital organ of the human anatomy. So no part of the world should rejoice about the Coronavirus as its negative effects on the phenomenal Chinese economic development will not translate to sustainable advantage.

    In fact, humanity should be grateful to China for its decisive interventions to contain the virus including its unprecedented lockdown of towns and cities and measures which affected about 500 million people.

    I am not sure any country in the world can match the supersonic speed with which China built two completely new hospitals; the 1,000-bed Huoshenshan and 1,600-bed Leishenshan hospitals within twelve days to cater for the Coronavirus victims. As the Xinhua News Agency described the feat, it was: “Mission Impossible made possible.”

    In another such move, the China Construction First Group decided to convert within six days, an industrial building in Beijing into a factory that can churn out 250,000 masks daily to meet the high demands. The factory is expected to become operational from tomorrow. The country also converted exhibition centers and sports halls into makeshift medical sites in its determined effort to control, then conquer the virus.

     

    The origin of the Coronavirus (Covid-19) has not been ascertained. There are unverified claims that it originated from the alleged Chinese habit of eating anything on land, in the waters and in the sky. For this, some unverified and derisive videos have been posted. There are also conspiracy theories that the virus is some biological warfare against China or even emanating from the country itself. Whatever be the origins, what should be clear to all humanity is that the world has become so globalized that what affects a section of humanity cannot but spread to other humans. Constantly increasing figures show that the virus has affected some 74,85 Chinese including about 3,000 medical workers with 2004 deaths mostly in the Hubei province and Wuhan, its capital.

     

    There is the possibility that the virus after waning in China might like a devastating hurricane make landfall in other parts of the world. So, a concerted and collective human response to Covid-19 such as the one the World Health Organisation (WHO) is coordinating, is required.

    What we are witnessing is an unprecedented human calamity which like HIV/AIDS endangers the entire humanity, and like the latter, we need to collectively fight a common enemy. In this, we need to discourage the pharmaceutical giants whose voracious and insatiable appetite for profit can lead to the pricing of drugs out of the reach of the poor, or poor nations as it did with the HIV/AIDS pandemic.

    China is our first, and perhaps, most effective line of defence against the Coronavirus, it is in in our collective interests to assist it focus on the fight rather than carry out vile, potentially destructive propaganda against that country because the virus is bias-free and ideologically-blind. In one of the earliest campaigns against that country that went virile, it was claimed that China was seeking the approval of the courts to kill over 20,000 Coronavirus patients as a way of checking the virus!

    There are positive signs that the virus will soon be defeated given lower rates of infection in China and about 14,000 previous victims fully recovered. In Africa, the WHO announced that the previously confirmed victim in Egypt is recovering fast with latest tests showing he is “no longer carrying the virus”. A world united will defeat Covid-19 sooner than later.

  • COVID-19: Cured cases surpasses new confirmed cases – Embassy

    COVID-19: Cured cases surpasses new confirmed cases – Embassy

    The People’s Republic of China Embassy in Nigeria says 2 out of 13 provinces on Chinese mainland are not seeing new cases of confirmed COVID-19.

    According to a newsletter on “Fighting 2019-nCoV” by the Embassy in Abuja, as of 24:00 on Feb. 19, the National Health Commission received 74,576 reports of confirmed cases on the mainland.

    “These include 2,118 deaths and 16,155 patients cured and discharged from hospital; there still remained 4,922 suspected cases.

    “So far, 126,363 are now under medical observation, who have been identified as having had close contact with infected patients.

    “The number of confirmed infections in the China’s Hong Kong 65-including 2-death, 5-cured and Macao 10 – including 6 cured.

    “Special administrative regions and Taiwan province 24 – including 1 death, 2 cured, had risen to 99 in total.”

    It stated that unlike acute diseases, virus quickly kills the host; the COVID-19 is very likely to co-exist with humans like the flu.

    It quoted President Xi Jinping to have called for priority to be given towards protection and care of medical workers, saying they are pillars of fights against the disease outbreak.

    It noted that 29 foreign citizens in China had been infected and 18 that recovered were discharged from hospital, adding that two were dead and nine under quarantine and treatment.

    It revealed Chinese tech firms had brought newest medical products and services to aid fights against the novel coronavirus epidemic and that internet firms recorded growth within the period.

    It mentioned that the 35th Chinese medical team in Sudan conducted training lecture on the prevention and treatment of the novel coronavirus in a hospital in Khartoum.

    It, however, said the epidemic was kept in check nationwide except for Hebei province and those growth rates of confirmed infections, suspected cases and patients under medical observation showed steady decline.