Tag: COVID-19

  • COVID-19: Lagos unveils mass vaccination programme, targets 4m vaccinated residents

    COVID-19: Lagos unveils mass vaccination programme, targets 4m vaccinated residents

    The Lagos State Government on Wednesday unveiled a mass vaccination campaign, as part of the strategies to stave off re-emergence of the COVID-19 viral infection.

    Speaking during the unveiling, Lagos State Governor, Mr Babajide Sanwo-Olu, said that the objective is aimed at vaccinating four million residents in Lagos before the end of 2021.

    The accelerated vaccine rollout is tagged: ”Operation Count Me in 4 Million Lagosians Vaccinated Against COVID-19”, and it is undertaken by the Lagos State Government in collaboration with the National Primary Health Care Development Agency (NPHCDA).

    Sanwo-Olu said that there was the possibility of the fourth wave of COVID-19, as the Yuletide approaches.

    He, therefore, said that residents of Lagos, who are 18 years and above, are eligible to be fully immunised with the COVID-19 vaccine.

    The governor said that the mass vaccination campaign would help bolster the state’s response to the emerging threat posed by the pandemic.

    Sanwo-Olu said that the joint committee set up by the Lagos State Government and NPHCDA to oversee the implementation of the campaign would be opening vaccination sites in high traffic locations as part of the strategies to expand vaccine access in underserved communities.

    He said that mobile vans would be deployed to move round boundary settlements, in order to reach individuals in areas with limited access to health facilities.

    ”There is potential for a fourth wave of COVID-19, as our borders would be opened to all people coming into Lagos in December.

    ”To prevent the catastrophic events we witnessed in the previous waves, the state has developed a robust vaccination drive, leveraging on both the strengths we have in the public and private sectors of our healthcare system.

    ”In development of our strategy and counter-measures, we prioritise the protection of human lives and keeping our economy open for business.

    “To mitigate against this potential damage that will further spread existing variants of COVID-19 in the state, and accelerate efforts towards herd immunity, the need for a different strategy becomes a front burner issue.

    ”This is what has culminated in the campaign, tagged ‘Count Me In! 4 million Lagosians Vaccinated Against COVID-19’, to target the full vaccination of 4 million Lagos residents before the end of December 2021.

    ”Once achieved, this will bring the State closer to reaching our promise to vaccinate 30 per cent of our population within one year,” Sanwo-Olu said.

    The governor said that since March when Lagos started its vaccination programme, the state has successfully vaccinated 800,000 residents with the first dose of Moderna vaccine and 310,000 persons fully vaccinated with AstraZeneca vaccine.

    He said that the total number of residents vaccinated with the first dose of either AstraZeneca or Moderna is 1.2 million.

    Sanwo-Olu said this raised the number of fully vaccinated individuals to 550,000, which accounted for about 4 per cent of the state’s population.

    He re-emphasised that the vaccines being administered are safe and remains free of charge in public health facilities.

    Sanwo-Olu, however, said that an administrative charge of N6,000 would be paid by individuals who wish to get the vaccines at approved private facilities.

    The governor charged stakeholders, including the local council chairmen, to mobilise for participation in the programme and ensure the success of the campaign.

    ”We have set up COVID-19 vaccination in all our 205 public primary health centres, 14 of the state’s secondary and tertiary hospitals, and we are hoping that this partnership can be implemented in over 400 private health centres across seven underserved Local Government Areas in the state.

    ”Let me re-emphasise that we are not compelling anyone to get vaccinated. But, we want everyone to take it as personal responsibility, which is highly important.

    ”What we seek to achieve by this campaign is to ensure there is access to the vaccines and availability. Then, give people an opportunity to get vaccinated at centres close to them. This will give nobody a reason not to get the vaccines,” he said.

    The Commissioner for Health, Prof. Akin Abayomi, said that the vaccination campaign is ambitious, adding that the state government has put in place two-pronged approaches to prevent the fourth wave of the pandemic.

    ”The first step is to control the in-bound flight passengers and maintain adherence to all preventive measures that have been put in place, while the second step is to closely monitor the isolation of those coming from the red zone area,” Abayomi said.

    The NPHCDA Executive Director, Dr. Shuaib Faisal, said that only 2,950,232 Nigerians had been fully vaccinated, which was a far cry from reaching the target number for herd immunity.

    ”We have enough vaccines in storage to give many people the opportunity to get vaccinated. We now have the jabs, but we now need the arms,” Faisal said.

  • White House rejects plans to donate expiring unused COVID-19 vaccines overseas

    White House rejects plans to donate expiring unused COVID-19 vaccines overseas

    Although surplus Coronavirus (COVID-19) vaccine doses in U.S. states will soon expire, the White House Vaccine Task Force rejected the proposal to donate unused doses to other countries.

    The Washington Post reported that health authorities and hospitals in Southern California’s demand for COVID-19 vaccines decline while the expiration dates of the unused doses are nearing.

    The report says a small group around San Diego put forward a plan to donate thousands of shots to Mexico, where the vaccination campaign was carried out quite slowly with a high infection rate.

    However, the White House task force has blocked such plans and similar efforts by local and state governments to donate leftover vaccines to other countries.

    A white house official said vaccines in the United States are the property of the federal government, not the cities or states in which they are distributed.

    “That means the federal government is liable for their use and donation efforts.”

  • London’s Heathrow hits losses of £3.4bn due to pandemic

    London’s Heathrow hits losses of £3.4bn due to pandemic

    Heathrow’s losses from the COVID-19 pandemic have hit 3.4 billion pounds (4.68 billion dollars).

    The west London airport said it was continuing to lose money in spite of reducing its operating costs by more than 30 per cent.

    But it insisted it has the “financial strength” to survive “until the market recovers”, with 4.1 billion pounds of cash.

    Some 10.2 million passengers travelled through Heathrow in the first nine months of the year, compared with 19.0 million during the same period in 2020.

    Proposals announced by the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) last week to allow the airport to increase passenger charges by up to 76 per cent “do not go far enough to ensure financeability,’’ Heathrow claimed.

    The CAA was planning to raise the cap on the average charge per passenger over the next five years to between 24.50 pounds and 34.40 pounds.

    Heathrow had called for the range to be between 32 pounds and 43 pounds. The current average charge is 19.60 pounds.

    The airport’s chief executive John Holland-Kaye said: “We are on the cusp of a recovery which will unleash pent-up demand, create new quality jobs and see Britain’s trade roar back to life but it risks a hard landing unless secured for the long-haul.

    “To do that, we need continued focus on the global vaccination programme so that borders can reopen without testing, we need a fair financial settlement from the CAA to sustain service and resilience after 15 years of negative real returns for investors.

    “We need a progressively increasing global mandate for sustainable aviation fuels so that we can protect the benefits of aviation in a world without carbon.’’

  • Our Fingers and Death by COVID-19 – Hope Eghagha

    A finger or our fingers could be the death of us. So we are advised, cautioned, and warned by COVID-19 experts, locally and globally. In a sense, it is a new way of dying. This finger thing. I know about death at the touch of a button. Nuclear switch or button. The hangman’s button. But his finger and COVID-19 type of death? I really I’m not sure. However, it is not really a new way of catching disease. Ignaz Semmelweis, a Hungarian doctor who worked at the Vienna General Hospital between 1844 and 1848 was the first to establish a link between washing hands and disease. Most of his colleagues did not agree with him at the time because of the politics of discovery of scientific truth and what I may term accepting responsibility for deaths in hospitals. The poor man died in ignominy, confined to a sanatorium. Details of that story? That is story for another day. These days it is routine to wash the hands whether at home or the office or hospital. But somebody died for it.

    In our days in public primary schools we were taught the benefits of washing hands in hygiene as a subject. Suffice it to say that ‘the importance of hand washing for medical professionals didn’t really become understood until scientists hit upon germ theory—the idea that certain diseases and infections are caused by microorganisms we can’t even see. In particular, the British surgeon Joseph Lister drastically improved patient mortality by advocating that surgeons wash their hands and sterilize their instruments in between patients’.

    Those fingers therefore in your hands could bring a deadly virus to your face, your mouth, your nostrils, and into your life. A handshake could be the death of us, of anybody. Fingers naturally find their way to the face. To scratch. To eat. To wipe sweat or dust. The fingers rush to protect and safeguard the face. But we are told that in that process fingers could take a virus to the face. You could catch a cold. A cold degenerates. Coughing follows. Malaria symptoms. Body weakness. Pains in the joints. Fever. Pneumonia. Inability to breathe. Then death. Death horrendous for most. No family members go near them while they are ill. Sometimes, husband and wife catch the virus. One dies. The other stays back. Filled with pain. Sorrow and tears. For some both husband and wife are struck by death. The children become orphans. A finger could have brought in the virus. Or where they breathed in the virus- the virus of death. Or it could have been brought in the by innocent kids or grandchildren.

    Breathing in the virus could also have the same consequences. Cold and fever. We treat for malaria and typhoid and breathing becomes a problem in some people. Death follows. Often, for the rural poor in Nigeria, it is too late by the time they realize that they should see a doctor. They prepare all kinds of herbal concoctions to fight fever. For some, Agbo saves the day. How this happens, we are yet to fathom. Yet we know that for some reason, we have not died in our thousands in the streets of Lagos or Port Harcourt or Kano or Warri as health experts had predicted. Are we immune to the deep and overwhelming tragedies of a pandemic that we do not easily succumb to death? Hundreds of years of living with viruses and fighting them may have a role to play. It has not been proven. It has not been tested. It has not been confirmed. Yet there is death. There are deaths. Many deaths. Too many Nigerians have displayed the symptoms without getting to the hospital. Some get to the hospital with all the symptoms and die. When the test reports come in, they are negative. No presence of COVID-19. Some are saved after millions have been spent in highbrow hospitals for first class treatment. Others, especially the poor ones, are not so lucky. It is their time to go. They die. They are buried immediately. No report. They are not part of the statistics of the dead. Were they a part of the statistics of the living before?

    In all of this, there are doubts. Skepticism. Skepticism in Warri, in Asaba, in Enugu, in Kano, in Port Harcourt. Skepticism over the existence of the virus. Skepticism over the efficacy of the vaccine. Some say those who take the vaccine will die in two years. The confusion is heightened by the death of some people who are fully vaccinated. A fully vaccinated General Collin Powell has just died. We are told he had underlying health challenges. There are conspiracy theories. Some pastors promote the theories. Some doctors too. And some scientists have been brought into the circle to dispute the vaccine. In America, home to great scientists and science, there are over seventy million people who have refused to take the vaccine. Or to wear a nose mask. Former President Donald Trump and his gullible supporters dispute everything pro-vaccine. Trump mocked COVID-19. He caught the virus and came out of it. But he quietly took the vaccine. Wily and deceptive leadership. These all add to the confusion. COVID-19, the conspiracy theorists say, is part of the attempt to chop money, or to steal money.

    When poor victims, not famous or popular or media-known people die, the cause of death is hidden, not published. Some families believe there is stigmatization if one died from COVID-19. Such ignorance. Such superstition. Such fear of the unknown. As a result, they are silent on the cause of death even to the extended family members. One fellow who ought to know better asked me whether families usually announced cause of death in the church or newspapers or social media. I had no answer to that foolish question. I only reminded him what Professor Olikoye Ransome-Kuti did after Fela Anikulapo-Kuti elder brother to the music icon did when Fela died of AIDS. He made a public announcement about the cause of death to create awareness among Fela’s many fans. That reduced nothing about the person or music of Fela!

    There is confusion. Big confusion. Confusion in America. Confusion in Europe. Confusion in Africa. Confusion in Asia. China disputes the narrative that the virus became a monster in their homeland. There are doubts about how our fingers that usually feed us with good food could be the cause of our death. But let it be said that the fingers that give us food could also give us poisoned food. Poisoned food. The fingers do not know what is bad or good. They act as directed. The nose which breathes in fresh air could also breathe in foul or fatal air. The word therefore is caution. Those preachers who rail against the mask should be cautioned. If they wish to die of the virus, let them go. Let them not deceive their poor gullible adherents. Late Brother Ebenezer Otomewo, President of the God’s Kingdom Society used to tell us that one false prophet was more dangerous than ten armed robbers. I didn’t understand it then. Now I understand how false teachers can lead one million people to destruction. ‘And the leaders of these people cause them to err, says Prophet Isaiah, ‘and they that are led of them are destroyed’. It is true. The good book says it.

    The finger, our fingers could be the death of us. Our nostrils could be the death of us too. Let no one deceive us with puerile words from the altar in the name of God. Simple obedience to COVID-19 protocols and the grace of God could make the difference. Let us tap into the spirit of obedience and the grace of God!

  • BREAKING: COVID-19 kills former US Secretary of State, Colin Powell

    BREAKING: COVID-19 kills former US Secretary of State, Colin Powell

    First Black US Secretary of State, Colin Powell has died from Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) complications, his family said on Facebook.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Powell, whose leadership in several Republican administrations helped shape American foreign policy in the last years of the 20th century and the early years of the 21st died at age 84.

    “General Colin L. Powell, former U.S. Secretary of State and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, passed away this morning due to complications from Covid 19.

    “We have lost a remarkable and loving husband, father, grandfather, and a great American,” the Powell family wrote on Facebook, noting he was fully vaccinated.

    Powell was a distinguished and trailblazing professional soldier whose career took him from combat duty in Vietnam to becoming the first Black national security adviser during the end of Ronald Reagan’s presidency and the youngest and first African American chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff under President George H.W. Bush.

    His national popularity soared in the aftermath of the US-led coalition victory during the Gulf War, and for a time in the mid-90s, he was considered a leading contender to become the first Black President of the United States.

    But his reputation would be forever stained when, as George W. Bush’s first secretary of state, he pushed faulty intelligence before the United Nations to advocate for the Iraq War, which he would later call a “blot” on his record.

    General Colin L. Powell, former U.S. Secretary of State and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, passed away this…

    Posted by General Colin L. Powell on Monday, 18 October 2021

  • COVID-19: FG outlines fresh conditions to inbound travellers

    COVID-19: FG outlines fresh conditions to inbound travellers

    The Federal Government have listed fresh conditions to inbound travellers to Nigeria after the United Kingdom relaxed its COVID-19 travel restrictions for fully vaccinated Nigerians.

    In a statement on Friday, Secretary to the Government of the Federation and Chairman, Presidential Steering Committee on COVID-19, Boss Mustapha, disclosed that fully vaccinated travellers entering Nigeria must present a negative test result while the unvaccinated and partially vaccinated are required to isolate on arrival.

    The statement reads, “Travellers arriving in Nigeria must present a negative COVID-19 PCR test result conducted not more than 72hours before boarding,

    “Unvaccinated and partially vaccinated in-bound passengers will be required to observe a mandatory 7-day self-isolation in addition to a COVID-19 PCR test on days 2 and 7 after arrival.

    “Fully vaccinated in-bound passengers will not be required to observe the mandatory 7-days self-isolation but will be required to do a COVID-19 PCR test on day 2 of arrival.

     

    The statement also gives conditions to travellers coming to Nigeria for a short period stating that they must be fully vaccinated before they are allowed entry while also disclosing the reason for the protocol review.

    “Persons arriving on ‘Business’ trip or on official duty staying less than 7 days in Nigeria must; be fully vaccinated; produce negative COVID-19 PCR result 72hours before boarding; and conduct a PCR test on day 2 of their arrival,” the statement added.

    “It will be recalled that the PSC Chairman, Boss Mustapha, had during the national briefing, promised that a revised travel protocol would be published.

    “The review of the protocol is based on science, national experience, and global developments.”

     

  • COVID-19: FG releases revised international travel protocol into Nigeria effective from Monday

    COVID-19: FG releases revised international travel protocol into Nigeria effective from Monday

    The Presidential Steering Committee on Covid-19 has released the revised travel protocol into Nigeria as in-bound travelers must show negative test result 72 hours before departure.

    TheNewsGuru.com, (TNG) reports the revised travel protocol into Nigeria will be effective from Monday as contained in a statement issued by Boss Mustapha Chairman, Presidential Steering Committee/ Secretary to the Government of the Federation.

    The committee stated that:”Travellers arriving in Nigeria must present a negative COVID-19 PCR test result conducted not more than 72hours before boarding,

    “Unvaccinated and partially vaccinated in-bound passengers will be required to observe a mandatory 7-day self-isolation in addition to a COVID-19 PCR test on days 2 and 7 after arrival,

    “Fully vaccinated in-bound passengers will not be required to observe the mandatory 7-days self-isolation but will be required to do a COVID-19 PCR test on day 2 of arrival

    Read full statement below:

    PRESIDENTIAL STEERING COMMITTEE ON COVID-19
    OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY TO THE GOVERNMENT OF THE FEDERATION

     

    RELEASE OF REVISED INTERNATIONAL TRAVEL PROTOCOL INTO NIGERIA

    The Chairman of Presidential Steering Committee/ Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Boss Mustapha, has released the revised travel protocol into Nigeria effective Monday, 25th October, 2021 as follows:

     Travellers arriving in Nigeria must present a negative COVID-19 PCR test result conducted not more than 72hours before boarding,

     Unvaccinated and partially vaccinated in-bound passengers will be required to observe a mandatory 7-day self-isolation in addition to a COVID-19 PCR test on days 2 and 7 after arrival,

     Fully vaccinated in-bound passengers will not be required to observe the mandatory 7-days self-isolation but will be required to do a COVID-19 PCR test on day 2 of arrival;

     Persons arriving on “Business” trip or on official duty staying less than 7 days in Nigeria must
    * be fully vaccinated
    * produce negative COVID-19 PCR result 72hours before boarding; and
    * conduct a PCR test on day 2 of their arrival.

    It will be recalled that the PSC Chairman, Boss Mustapha, had during the national briefing, promised that a revised travel protocol would be published. The review of the protocol is based on science, national experience, and global developments.

    SIGNED:

    Boss Mustapha
    Chairman, Presidential Steering Committee/
    Secretary to the Government of the Federation

  • Kogi demands apology from EFCC over frozen N20B

    Kogi demands apology from EFCC over frozen N20B

    Kogi State government has said the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) must apologise for embarrassing the state by dragging it to court over a N20 billion bail-out fund.

    Recall that the commission had told the court that it was no longer interested in pursuing the case after the state government had given its commitment to return the money to the Central Bank of Nigeria.

    The Commissioner for Information, Hon. Kingsley Fanwo, disclosed the government’s position at the presentation of awards to senior journalists that participated in the Governor Yahaya Bello (GYB) Essay Competition for Nigeria’s Political and Crime Editors in Lagos.

    Fanwo said it was unfortunate that the commission ignored thorough explanations by the state government on the matter but chose to heed allegations from “hired guns.”

    Fanwo added that it was unfortunate that the Commission chose to believe allegations that it fixed N19 billion out of the money in a new generation bank.

    He challenged the commission to exhibit professionalism in its affairs, noting, however, that the state government had yet to receive details of the judgement.

    Fanwo declared that the state government would address the media after receiving the Certified True Copy of the judgment.

    The commission withdrew the suit seeking the forfeiture of N20billion bailout funds granted to the Kogi State Government by a new generation bank.

    The money, which was meant for the payment of Kogi workers, was alleged to have been domiciled in an interest-yielding account with the bank by officials of the state government.

    Justice Chukwujekwu Aneke granted the order of withdrawal on Friday sequel to a motion filed and argued by EFCC counsel, Mr Kemi Pinheiro, SAN, leading Mr Rotimi Oyedepo.

    Pinheiro listed six grounds upon which the judge granted the prayer, adding that “the EFCC is a responsible body”.

    One of the grounds was that questions resulting in the commencement of the suit had been clarified, and an intention had been shown to return the sum of N19,333,333,333.36 to the Central Bank of Nigeria.

  • COVID-19: Virologist advises FG against Dec. 1 deadline for vaccination of civil servants

    COVID-19: Virologist advises FG against Dec. 1 deadline for vaccination of civil servants

    Dr Solomon Chollom, a Jos-based Virologist, has advised the Federal Government against imposing Coronavirus (COVID-19) vaccine on its workers.

    He said the proposed barring of civil servants who failed to take the Coronavirus (COVID-19) vaccines from offices by Dec. 1, was curious as it raised more questions than answers.

    Chollom, who is also the spokesman of Plateau Inter-professional Health Committee on COVID-19 Response in Jos, gave the advice while fielding questions on the development from the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Friday in Abuja.

    He noted that on the surface, the government decision would appear as a smart policy towards increasing vaccine uptake across the country.

    NAN reports that the Presidential Steering Committee on COVID-19 recently proposed that effective from Dec. 1, no federal government employee shall access office without presenting a safe Coronavirus certificate.

    The federal workers shall be required to show proof of Coronavirus vaccination or present a negative COVID-19 Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) test result done within 72 hours, to gain access to their offices in all locations within Nigeria and at foreign Missions.

    According to the committee, an appropriate servicewide advisory/circular will be issued to guide the process.

    Reacting to the development, Chollom pointed out that the proposed policy will breach labour relations.

    He said within the prism of labour laws the decision would violate fundamental rights of employees as it brushed aside people’s right to informed consent on medical decisions.

    According to the expert, accepted that government is permitted to take desperate measures in form of executive decisions during emergency situations, especially those that constitute a threat to security, which public health is one.

    He noted that the concern here was whether the current transmission rate, morbidity and mortality indices of the virus as well as hesitancy to the coronavirus vaccine constitute a graveous national challenge to Nigeria with economy and lives on the balance to warrant the desperate measure.

    Chollom added that it appeared government had forgotten that Nigerians have raised vital questions that border on trust as far as governance during the vaccine rollout was concerned.

    “To allay the fears of Nigerians who doubt the purpose and safety of the vaccines, government should have been seen to be busy raising policies and structures for in-country vaccine production, trials and evaluation to generate homegrown products and data that will answer and allay these genuine concerns.

    “Unfortunately, Nigerians wake up daily to policies that seem to suggest that government has some social and economic advantage against the people in the COVID-19 pandemic,” he stressed.

    He added that many Nigerians have queried why COVID-19 tests for international travels were referred to centres that charge exorbitantly, while over 70 free testing labs have been sited across the country.

    Chollom however advised that the federal government should be mindful of cashing in on the vulnerable economy to entrench modern day slavery on her employees because they can accept anything to cling on to their jobs in view of the biting economy and lack of jobs around.

    “What ratio of Nigerians works for the federal government to think of using them to scale up vaccine coverage to achieve herd immunity?

    “Civil servants are still asking questions and agitating against policies and framework of Pensions Fund Administration, National Housing Fund and National Health Insurance Scheme, among others, for which the government has remained unresponsive.

    “Instead of building confidence and looking into the issues raised regarding these policies, the government seem to be bent at raising more policies that enslave and demoralise the discouraged workforce

    “Instead of usurping the rights of civil servants to medical decisions, the federal government should be seen to be aggressive on establishing framework that will allow for in-country development of products, raise more awareness on safety and efficacy of vaccines as well as have a balanced approach to all disease outbreaks especially the common ones that have been endemic in Nigeria,” the virologist explained.

    He added that by this way, Nigerians would not take government efforts towards coronavirus as ulterior and self-serving

  • Apprehension as Latvian president tests positive for COVID-19

    Apprehension as Latvian president tests positive for COVID-19

    Apprehension has gripped the cabinet of the Latvian government as the President of the Baltic Sea country, Egils Levits has tested positive for Coronavirus disease (COVID-19).

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports the development has forced President Levits to postpone his scheduled Thursday’s meeting with Estonia’s new president Alar Karis.

    The positive result was returned by a rapid test taken by Levits on Wednesday evening after coming back from a working visit to Sweden.

    A PCR test will now be carried out, said a spokesperson.

    Levits postponed his scheduled meeting with Karis, who is in Riga for his inaugural visit to the neighbouring Baltic state.

    Karis is instead expected to meet with the Speaker of the Latvian Parliament Inara Murniece.

    In February, the 66-year-old Levits was one of the first people in Latvia to be vaccinated against the Coronavirus, receiving his jab on camera to encourage his 1.9 million compatriots to do the same.

    In spite of his efforts, however, Latvia’s vaccination campaign is proceeding very slowly and the infection rate has risen significantly in recent weeks.

    The situation forced the government to declare a state of emergency on Monday that will remain in effect until Jan. 11.