Tag: UK

  • UK Prime Minister, Boris Johnson apologises, takes full responsibility as COVID-19 deaths surpass 100,000

    UK Prime Minister, Boris Johnson apologises, takes full responsibility as COVID-19 deaths surpass 100,000

    United Kingdom (UK) Prime Minister Boris Johnson has offered his condolences to families bereaved by Coronavirus and said he took “full responsibility”, after the nation passed the grim milestone of 100,000 COVID-19 deaths.

    “It’s hard to compute the sorrow contained in that grim statistic, the years of life lost, the family gatherings not attended, and, for so many relatives, the missed chance even to say goodbye,” the PM said during a coronavirus news briefing yesterday.

    “I am deeply sorry for every life that has been lost and, of course, as prime minister, I take full responsibility for everything that the government has done.”

    On Tuesday, the UK death toll during the pandemic crept above 100,000 within 28 days of a positive test, as the government reported another 1,631 fatalities. It also registered 20,089 new cases of the virus.

    Labour leader Keir Starmer described the figure of 100,000 deaths as a “national tragedy”, while Liberal Democrat Ed Davey called for an immediate public inquiry.

    The PM was joined at the briefing by England’s Chief Medical Officer, Chris Whitty, who warned the UK would see “quite a lot more deaths over the next few weeks” before the effects of the country’s vaccine rollout would start being felt.

    As of Tuesday, more than 6.8 million people in the UK had received a first dose of one of the country’s three authorised COVID-19 vaccines, while 400,000 have received a second dose.

    Whitty also stressed that the new, more infectious B117 strain of the virus discovered in the UK last year had “changed the situation we’re in very substantially”.

    The variant has rapidly replaced old forms of the virus in the UK, and the government’s Chief Scientific Adviser, Patrick Vallance, said last week it may be 30 per cent more transmissible.

    The numbers of new Covid-19 infections in the UK are falling, but the country’s healthcare system remains strained, with more than 37,000 people hospitalised with the virus, according to the latest government data, published on Sunday.

    The UK’s COVID-19 death toll is the worst in Europe and the fifth-worst in the world after the U.S., Brazil, India and Mexico, according to data from Johns Hopkins University, in the United States.

  • Supreme Court rejects request to unfreeze Abacha’s accounts in UK, Switzerland, others

    Supreme Court rejects request to unfreeze Abacha’s accounts in UK, Switzerland, others

    The Supreme Court has declined the request by a brother to the late Head of State, Sani Abacha, Alhaji Ali Abacha, to unfreeze the accounts traced to him and relatives of the late Abacha in the United Kingdom, Switzerland, Jersey, Liechtenstein and Luxembourg.

    In a unanimous judgment on Friday, a five-man panel of the court, led by Justice Sylvester Ngwuta, held that Ali Abacha’s case was statute barred as at when it was commenced in April 2004 at the Federal High Court in Kaduna.

    The judgment was in the appeal marked: SC/359/2010, filed by Alhaji Ali Abacha, said to be a brother of the late Gen Sani Abacha.

    In the lead judgment prepared by Justice Kudirat Kekere-Ekun, but read on Friday by Justice Ejembi Eko, the court held having dismissed a similar appeal in an easier judgment given in February last year, it has no reason to depart from its reasoning that case brought by Alhaji Abba Mohammed Sani on behalf of the Abacha family.

    The court said it noticed that the appellant in this appeal is represented by R. O. Atabo esq, who, incidentally, was the appellant’s counsel in the earlier appeal.

    “No new superior arguments were proferred here to warrant a departure from the decision in the case of Alhaji Sani, earlier decided. This appeal fails, and it is hereby dismissed. Parties to bear their costs,” the court said.

    The appeal was against the July 19, 2010 unanimous judgment of the Court of Appeal, Kaduna division, in which a three-man panel set aside the September 24, 2004 judgment by Justice Mohammed Liman of Federal High Court, Kaduna, earlier given in favour of Ali Abacha.

    Abacha had sued at the Federal High Court, Kaduna in 2004, challenging among others, the 1999 decision by the Olusegun Obasanjo’s administration, acting through the Attorney General of the Federation (AGF) and Minister of Justice, Kanu Agabi (SAN), to request the freezing of all accounts traced to the late Abacha, his family members and relatives in the United Kingdom, Switzerland, Jersey, Liechtenstein and Luxembourg.

    He prayed the court to, among others, void the freezing of the accounts on the grounds that the AGF lacked the powers under the Banking (Freezing of Accounts Act, Cap 29, Laws of Nigeria,under which he claimed to have acted, to request the foreign nations to freeze his accounts and those of the companies in which he is a director.

    Justice Liman, in his judgment on September 24, 2004, upheld the claims by Ali Abacha and granted all the reliefs sought, a decision the AGF, listed as the sole defendant, appealed at the Court of Appeal, Kaduna division.

    In their judgment on July 19, 2010, in the appeal marked: CA/K/71/2005, Justices John Inyang Okoro, Baba Alikali Ba’aba and Mohammed Lawal Garba of the Court of Appeal, Kaduna, were unanimous in holding that the suit was statute barred.

    They equally held that the AGF was not accorded fair hearing by the Federal High Court, and proceeded to set aside the judgment by Justice Liman, a decision Ali Abacha appealed to the Supreme Court, which the apex court decided on Friday.

    A five-member panel of the Supreme Court had, in its February 1, 2020 judgment in the earlier appeal, marked: SC68/2010 by Abba Mohammed Sani, held among others, that it was was too late for the Abacha family to query the decision taken by the Federal Government of Nigeria in 1999, via a letter authored by the then Minister of Justice and Attorney General of the Federation (AGF), Kanu Agabi (SAN).

    Justice Chima Nweze, who authored the panel’s lead judgment, held among others, that in view of the evidence presented by parties, he was left with no other options than to uphold the earlier concurrent decisions of the two lower courts (the Federal High Court, Kano and the Court of Appeal, Kaduna division), to the effect that the suit was statute barred.

    Justice Nweze said: “In all forms, with the eloquent submission of the respondents’ counsel, and submissions anchored on the admitted evidence, I have no hesitation in affirming the concurrent decisions of the lower courts.

    “Accordingly, I hereby enter an order dismissing this appeal. I further affirm the concurrent findings and decisions of the lower courts. Appeal dismissed.”

    According to court documents, the then President, Olusegun Obasanjo, in December 1999, authorized the then AGF, Agabi to request the Swiss authorities to freeze all bank accounts held in its jurisdiction by the late Head of State, General Abacha, his children, servants, agents and any other individuals or companies liked to them between 1993 and 1998.

    The Nigeria government was also said to have requested the Swiss authorities to seize and detain all banking and other documents relating to the affected accounts, charge and prosecute all holders of such accounts, in order to recover and pay over to the Federal Government of Nigeria all monies falsely and fraudulently taken from the government and people of Nigeria.

    Also, the FG was said to have engaged a foreign financial investigator, Enrico Monfrini of Hauchomann & Bottage in Geneva, Switzerland, to assist in recovering “all looted monies by Gen Abacha and his family members and other public servants and third parties who have used their position or participated as accomplices to misappropriate public funds.”

    Following these steps by the Federal Government, the accounts of the Abachas found in Switzerland, United Kingdom, Jersey, Liechenstein and Luxembourg were frozen, a development members of the late Head of State challenged by filing a suit, marked: FHC/KN/CS/6/2004, on January 28, 2004 before the Federal High Court, Kano.

  • UK’s COVID-19 variant more deadly – PM Johnson

    UK’s COVID-19 variant more deadly – PM Johnson

    Prime Minister Boris Johnson has warned that the Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) variant first identified in the United Kingdom (UK) may be more deadly than the original virus.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports PM Johnson sounded the warning at a Downing Street news conference on Friday.

    The Prime Minister, however, stated that all evidence available shows that current COVID-19 vaccines are effective against it.

    “There is some evidence that the new variant may be associated with a higher degree of mortality.

    “All current evidence continues to show that the current vaccines remain effective against the old coronavirus variant and this new one,” Johnson said.

    Meanwhile, explaining the mortality, Sir Patrick Vallance, the chief scientific adviser to the UK government said with the initial variant, out of a 1,000 people, over 60 infected with it, 10 would die.

    With the UK variant, the available data suggests that 13 or 14 people out of 1,000 from the same age group would be expected to die, he added.

    First identified in Kent, the variant is thought to be more than 70% more transmissible.

  • Wedding guests on the run as police raid venue over violation of Covid-19 order

    Wedding guests on the run as police raid venue over violation of Covid-19 order

    Many guests on Friday fled the scene of a wedding ceremony as British police raided the event with 400 guests in a London school, as the government began a crackdown on illicit parties flouting national lockdown laws.

    Under current lockdown rules in England, weddings can only take place in “exceptional circumstances” with up to six people present.

    Officers found hundreds of people at the school, whose windows had been covered up, with Detective Chief Superintendent Marcus Barnett calling it “a completely unacceptable breach of the law”.

    The organiser could face a £10,000 ($13,600, 11,200-euro) fine, police said. While many of the guests fled the scene, five were fined £200.

    The wedding was held at the Yesodey Hatorah school in Stamford Hill, an area with a large ultra-Orthodox Jewish community.

    The school said in a statement it had leased the hall out and had “no knowledge that the wedding was taking place”.

    Britain is under a national lockdown introduced this month after a surge in cases and the identification of a more contagious virus variant.

    But the government, police and health chiefs have expressed frustration that laws on social distancing and household mixing were still being flouted.

    Vin Diwakar, NHS England regional medical director for London, on Thursday, likened people risking the close-contact spread of the virus to “turning on the lights during the Blitz”.

    Police have previously carried out raids on illegal raves, music concerts and parties.

    Interior minister Priti Patel has hiked the maximum fine for those who attend illegal house parties with more than 15 people in homes to £800.

    Britain’s Chief Rabbi Ephraim Mirvis tweeted that the illegal event was “a shameful desecration of all that we hold dear” and that such behaviour is “abhorred by the overwhelming majority of the Jewish community”.

    In November, a New York synagogue was fined $15,000 for holding an indoor wedding with thousands of guests.

  • Trending: UK reinstates Nigerian doctor who was suspended for flogging his son

    Trending: UK reinstates Nigerian doctor who was suspended for flogging his son

    A Nigerian consultant anaesthetist Adekunle Okunuga based in the United Kingdom has been reinstated following his suspension from work for beating his son.

    The 59-year-old medical personnel, who was arrested after the incident in June 2014, blamed his cultural upbringing in Nigeria for the act, Daily Mail UK reports.

    He said corporal punishments are common in Nigeria.

    Okunuga caned his son for misbehaving in school and made him stand one leg with his arms in the air while he kicked him.

    He also caned the boy’s open palms with a walking stick.

    The boy got into trouble in school for not submitting homework, lying to other pupils, using the word ‘rape’ and for stamping in any injured girl during PE lesson.

    In 2015, Okunuga’s name was ordered to be removed from the medical register after he was found guilty of professional misconduct by a disciplinary panel.

    The doctor, who has been working at the National Orthopaedic Hospital in Lagos, is now free to return to work at the University Hospital Coventry.

    “My actions embarrassed the medical profession and brought it into disrepute and as a member of the medical community, I should be role model. I apologised sincerely to the GMC and the wider public,” he was quoted to have said.

    “My behaviour was born out of my cultural upbringing, I should have known better and I take full responsibility for my actions. If I were to witness a similar occurrence by one of my colleagues, I would be the first to speak up and take action and report it to the appropriate authorities.

    “I have been working abroad but have always given full disclosure of my sanction to all employers and the relevant medical authorities.

    “I have attended courses in order to maintain my professional development and am clinically ready to resume practice in the United Kingdom where I could be of tremendous support to the medical community.”

    After the incident, he was arrested and convicted at Leamington Spa magistrates court for ill treating a child and was sentenced to eight weeks in jail and ordered to complete 160 hours unpaid work.

    The boy was temporarily put in foster care and was later returned to his family.

  • UK orders closure of all travel corridors Monday

    UK orders closure of all travel corridors Monday

    All travel corridors to the UK will be closed from Monday, the Prime Minister has announced, ending the quarantine exemption for arrivals from selected nations.

    The announcement comes after it was confirmed that a new variant of COVID-19, which emerged in Brazil, had been discovered in the UK.

    The new policy, which comes into effect from 4am on Monday, means that arrivals from every destination will need to self-isolate for 10 days, or receive a negative result from a coronavirus test taken at least five days after they enter the UK.

    It had already been announced that travellers arriving in England and Scotland from Monday will need to have a negative test taken up to 72 hours before leaving the country of departure.

    Boris Johnson told the Downing Street press conference: “It’s precisely because we have the hope of that vaccine and the risk of new strains coming from overseas that we must take additional steps now to stop those strains from entering the country.

    “Yesterday we announced that we’re banning flights from South America and Portugal and to protect us against the risk from as-yet-unidentified strains we will also temporarily close all travel corridors from 0400 on Monday.

    “Following conversations with the devolved administrations we will act together so this applies across the whole of the UK,” he said.

  • US, UK, France made COVID-19 Vaccines completely untrustworthy – Iran

    US, UK, France made COVID-19 Vaccines completely untrustworthy – Iran

    Iran’s supreme leader on Friday banned the import of American and British-produced vaccines against COVID-19, saying they were “completely untrustworthy”.

    “Importing vaccines made in the US or the UK is prohibited,” Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said in a tweet, accompanied by the hashtag #CoronaVaccine.

    “It’s not unlikely they would want to contaminate other nations,” he added.

    The Islamic republic has reported more than 1.2 million cases of the novel coronavirus, which have caused over 56,000 deaths.

    Iran has accused arch-enemy the US of hampering its access to vaccines through a tough sanctions regime.

    While food and medicine are technically exempt from the measures, international banks tend to refuse transactions involving Iran.

    Iran’s President Hassan Rouhani said last month that Washington had demanded that Tehran pay for the drugs through US banks, adding that he feared the United States would seize the money.

    Khamenei also tweeted that “given our experience with France’s HIV-tainted blood supplies, French vaccines aren’t trustworthy either.”

    That was a reference to a scandal in the 1980s in which blood infected with HIV was distributed in France, and later abroad, even after the government became aware of the problem.

    Hundreds of people in Iran were among those infected.

    France’s then-prime minister Laurent Fabius was charged with manslaughter, but acquitted in 1999, while his health minister was convicted but never punished.

    Iran last month launched clinical trials of a vaccine developed in the Islamic republic, the Middle Eastern country hardest hit by the pandemic.

  • Defiant Trump: World leaders react to embarrassing chaos in U.S. Capitol, attempts to overturn election

    Defiant Trump: World leaders react to embarrassing chaos in U.S. Capitol, attempts to overturn election

    Police in the U.S. Capitol responded with drawn guns and tear gas as hundreds of protesters stormed in and sought to force Congress to undo President Donald Trump’s election loss shortly after some of Trump’s fellow Republicans launched a last-ditch effort to throw out the results.

    Here are reactions from around the world:

    SWEDEN
    Swedish Prime Minister Stefan Lofven in a tweet described the incidents as “an attack on democracy”. “President Trump and many members of Congress bear significant responsibility for what’s now taking place. The democratic process of electing a president must be respected.”

    UNITED KINGDOM
    British Prime Minister Boris Johnson in a tweet described the scenes in the U.S. Congress as a “disgrace”, saying the United States stood for democracy around the world and that was it was “vital” now that there should be a peaceful and orderly transfer of power.

    GERMANY
    German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas said democracy’s enemies would be cheered by scenes of violence at the United States Capitol, and he called on Trump to accept U.S. voters’ decision.

    In a Tweet posted after protesters stormed the seat of the U.S. legislature, Maas said the violence had been caused by inflammatory rhetoric. “Trump and his supporters must accept the decision of American voters at last and stop trampling on democracy.”

    RUSSIA
    “Quite Maidan-style pictures are coming from DC,” Russia’s deputy U.N. Ambassador Dmitry Polyanskiy posted on Twitter, referring to protests in Ukraine that toppled Russian-backed President of Ukraine Viktor Yanukovich in 2014.

    “Some of my friends ask whether someone will distribute crackers to the protesters to echo Victoria Nuland stunt,” he said, citing a 2013 visit to Ukraine when then-U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Victoria Nuland offered food to protesters.

    NATO
    NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg called the violent protests in Washington “shocking scenes” and said the outcome of the democratic U.S. election must be respected.

    SPAIN
    Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said in a tweet: “I am following with concern the news that are coming from Capitol Hill in Washington. I trust in the strength of America’s democracy.

    “The new Presidency of @JoeBiden will overcome this time of tension, uniting the American people.”

    CANADA
    Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau expressed concern about the violent scenes in Washington. “Obviously we’re concerned and we’re following the situation minute by minute,” Trudeau told the News 1130 Vancouver radio station. “I think the American democratic institutions are strong, and hopefully everything will return to normal shortly.”

    Foreign Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne on Twitter: “Canada is deeply shocked by the situation in Washington DC. The peaceful transition of power is fundamental to democracy – it must continue and it will. We are following developments closely and our thoughts are with the American people.”

    TURKEY
    Turkey’s foreign ministry issued a statement expressing concern about the violence and called for calm and common sense while urging its citizens to avoid crowds and the protest area.

    FRANCE
    French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said on Twitter: “The violence against the American institutions is a grave attack on democracy. I condemn it. The will and the vote of the American people must be respected.”

  • UK University develops 5-minute test for COVID-19

    UK University develops 5-minute test for COVID-19

    Scientists at the University of Birmingham said on Tuesday that they had developed a new COVID-19 test capable of delivering results in less than five minutes.

    The new test simplifies the testing method to a single step and uses an alternative amplification method called Exponential Amplification Reaction (EXPAR), said the university.

    The new test can reduce testing time from 30 minutes to less than five and deliver accurate results, local media reported.

    It can be performed using standard laboratory equipment, compared to Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) tests, which require higher temperatures to separate out strands of DNA as part of the amplification process, according to the university.

    It came as England enters a national lockdown from Tuesday, the third of its kind since the coronavirus pandemic began in Britain.

    Scotland also enters a new lockdown from midnight on Monday, as well as a shutdown of schools until Feb. 1, 2021.

    To bring life back to normal, countries such as Britain, China, Germany, Russia and the U.S. have been racing against time to develop coronavirus vaccines.

  • BREAKING: UK kickstarts inoculation of citizens with Oxford-AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine

    BREAKING: UK kickstarts inoculation of citizens with Oxford-AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine

    An 82-year-old man has become the first person in the world to receive the Oxford/AstraZeneca jab.

    The UK government believes the development could be “a pivotal moment” in fighting coronavirus.

    The UK began vaccinating citizens with the Oxford-AstraZeneca coronavirus jab amid a surge in cases.

    According to a DW report on Monday, Brian Pinker, an 82-year-old dialysis patient, was the first person to receive the vaccine at a hospital a few hundred metres away from where it was developed.

    “I am so pleased to be getting the vaccine today and I’m really proud that it is one that was invented in Oxford,” he said. “The nurses, doctors and staff today have all been brilliant and I can now really look forward to celebrating my 48th wedding anniversary with my wife Shirley later this year.”

    A ‘pivotal’ moment

    As many as half a million doses are ready to be administered over the next 24 hours, the British government said.

    The vaccine costs just 3 pounds ($4.10, €3.35) per shot.

    It also can be stored in regular refrigerators, making it easier for GPs and healthcare workers to distribute.

    British Health Secretary Matt Hancock said in an interview with broadcaster Sky News on Monday that it was “a triumph for British science” and “a pivotal moment” in fighting COVID-19.

    Germany’s BioNTech, along with its US partner Pfizer, was the first company in the world to develop an effective vaccine against the virus.

    But it is five times more expensive and must be kept at -70 degrees Celsius (-112°F).

    Hundreds of thousands of Britons have already had their first shot of the BioNTech-Pfizer vaccine.

    England lockdown calls mount

    On Sunday, the UK recorded more than 50,000 new coronavirus infections for the sixth day running.

    Keir Starmer, the leader of the opposition Labour Party, called on Prime Minister Boris Johnson to impose a third nationwide lockdown in England to curb the rise in cases.

    The UK has seen an uptick in infections after authorities announced they had discovered a new variant of the virusthat appears to be more contagious.

    “It is a very difficult situation in terms of the growth of the virus,” Hancock said.

    Asked whether the government was considering imposing a new national lockdown, he answered: “We don’t rule anything out.”

    The other parts of the United Kingdom are responsible for their own health policies.

    Northern Ireland and Wales are already under lockdown. The Scottish government is currently reviewing what to do next.

     

    Source: DW