The coping mechanisms the DRC is putting in place as it faces Ebola, measles and Covid-19 – The Mail & Guardian

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Ebola, a viral haemorrhagic fever of humans and other primates, has become endemic in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). The country has had 10 outbreaks in 40 years and has recently declared the 11th.

This is almost certainly due to the co-existence of humans and animals (primates and bats) carrying the Ebola virus. When humans come in contact with these animals – or fruit that’s been partially eaten by them – they face an increased chance of contracting the virus.

On top of this, the country has a measles outbreak of more than 300,000 cases and more than 6,000 deaths since 2019. Now the DRC is facing the Covid-19 pandemic, with 4,637 confirmed cases and 101 deaths at 13 June 2020.

This raises the question of how a country with limited resources can handle all the outbreaks at the same time. The same question applies to many African countries. For example, cholera, measles and Covid-19 outbreaks are happening in Cameroon and Nigeria, among other countries.

It also raises the question of whether earlier outbreaks prepare a country’s health system better or weaken it.

When faced with an outbreak such as Ebola, a country will put all its financial, human, and material resources into responding to – and ending – the crisis. This results in countries responding to one crisis at a time.

African governments should start shifting their attention to strengthening health systems. By doing so they will be better placed to respond to any pandemics while providing quality healthcare services to all.

The DRC has begun to make this shift in mindset. DRC community engagement, research and testing capacity that has been strengthened during the recent outbreaks has put the country in a better position to respond simultaneously to the most recent Ebola outbreak, as well as the measles outbreak and Covid-19.

But this requires significant financial resources.

How the DRC is changing its approach

The DRC has systematically gone about strengthening health infrastructure, engaging the community and doing better research.

Two steps stand out. Firstly, there is significant investment in laboratory capacity, as seen by the scale of testing in DRC by the Institut National de Recherche Biomédicale.

The second has been the development of genomic surveillance with DNA databases to perform surveillance. This provides the country with the opportunity to transform the way it responds to outbreaks including Ebola, Covid-19, cholera and measles.

In classic surveillance, epidemiologists track people and try to understand the links between them during an outbreak. Genomic surveillance allows researchers to quickly connect people affected by the same virus. They can then quickly tell the story of its transmission in the community. This helps explain the dynamic of the outbreak and how the virus moves from one person to another and from one community to another.

A third major development has been the building of community engagement to ensure that the community contributes to the response. This includes the work done by community health workers and the place given to community leaders in the response.

In the case of Ebola, members of the community are part of the team of people tracing the cases of Ebola during an outbreak. Their knowledge of their community speeds up the tracing of people who have been in contact with Ebola patients. They also facilitate the acceptability of national and international response teams to the community.

This is crucial especially in rural settings where there is usually a lack of trust of government.

The DRC has also strengthened its research system. Through various partnerships and collaborations with Epicentre, the United States National Institute of Health and the London School of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, the DRC Institut National de Recherche Biomédicale led by Professor Muyembe has made Ebola a curable disease. They implemented a randomised, controlled trial of Ebola virus disease therapeutics showing that the antibodies MAb114 and REGN-EB3 were superior to ZMapp in reducing mortality from Ebola.

Beyond the results of the trial the DRC has managed to create the capacity to run clinical trials including vaccine trials in the middle of an emergency.

These capacities should now be used to evaluate new therapeutics against Covid-19. This should include traditional medicine as well as diagnostic tools and vaccines that are critical to improving the response to Covid-19 while addressing cholera and measles at the same time.

Quality healthcare as a just cause

The steps the DRC has taken to improve the response to pandemics, including prevention of outbreaks, can also lead to universal health coverage that aims to provide quality healthcare services for all.

My hope is that the Covid-19 epidemic will force powerful people to realise they are part of the same world as people with less power. And that it will encourage authorities to reassign resources to health systems.

The DRC is one of many African countries that has not complied with the Abuja declaration they signed 19 years ago in which they committed to spend 15% of their gross domestic product on health. Only Ethiopia, Gambia and Malawi have in fact surpassed the 15% Abuja target. The DRC spends less than 4% of its GDP on the health sector.

Disease outbreaks should serve as an accelerator to provide quality healthcare for all people who live on the continent.

Yap Boum, Professor in the faculty of Medicine, Mbarara University of Science and Technology

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.



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Noah Donohoe’s heartbroken mother in emotional plea for help as Belfast searches resume

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The mother of missing teenager Noah Donohoe (14) has made an emotional plea for people to allow the police to search their houses in a desperate bid to locate him.

oah has not been seen since Sunday evening after leaving his home in south Belfast on his bicycle.

Police officers supported by air support unit, police dogs and the tactical support group have been searching the area alongside community rescue service colleagues and local volunteers.

Huge numbers of people joined searches on Tuesday throughout north Belfast. Police Superintendent Muir Clark said the “best side” of the community was displayed in those searches as people gave up their time to help with the search effort.

Noah’s mother Fiona Donohoe, posting on Facebook, said: “I am so overwhelmed by the support of people coming together to help find my son.

“It is actually giving me and my family the strength to fight for him to be found.

“I just wish at this stage people would start offering for their houses to be searched so that shelter could be eliminated.

“The police can’t ask to search but in this situation if people in the vicinity could find it in their hearts to say please search my house to eliminate areas of question.

“My heart is broken I am begging people do this I know I am asking a massive thing but if you knew my Noah he was the most thoughtful loving darling who does not deserve to be suffering or unfound.

“Please hear my plea I am speaking for Noah my baby. Please think if it was your child I would let them search my home from top to bottom.”

Noah’s family have said they are extremely concerned for Noah as this is completely out of character.

Noah left his home at around 5.30pm on Sunday on his black Apollo mountain bike wearing a black skateboarding helmet, khaki green North Face jacket, grey sweat shorts with an emblem on one leg, a tie-dye blue hoody, Nike trainers with a bright yellow ‘tick’ and carrying a khaki rucksack.

He was seen on Ormeau Avenue at 5.45pm on Sunday evening.

Close

Search and rescue teams in north Belfast search for missing Noah Donohoe on June 23rd 2020 (Photo by Kevin Scott for Belfast Telegraph)

He was then sighted again on Royal Avenue heading towards York Street a short time after.

Noah was then seen on North Queen Street heading towards the Limestone Road at 5.57pm.

An eyewitness believes they saw a young male matching Noah’s description fall of his bicycle on Sunday evening, possibly injuring his head, in the North Queen Street/York Street area, but police do not know a specific time.

Police believe the teenager got back on his bike, cycling into Northwood Road where he then abandons all his clothing, as he is seen a short time later cycling while naked. Police believe Noah then dropped his bicycle and left the area on foot.

No one has seen Noah since 6.08pm on Sunday.

Anyone with information is asked to contact police immediately on 101 quoting reference number 1619 of 21/06/20.

Belfast Telegraph

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Castle employees play house — and clean toilets — in grand estate closed to visitors

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(CNN) — Laura Jamieson and Michael Smith fell in love while working in an 800-year-old castle. But they never expected to live at their place of employment.

But that’s exactly what they’ve been doing since March 25, when, as a result of the coronavirus, they packed up their belongings and moved into Ashford Castle, a five-star-hotel on the northern shore of Lough Corrib in County Mayo, Ireland.

“Who else can say they spent lockdown in a castle?” says Smith, 28, the estate activities manager.

Temporary digs

In the real world, the couple, who’ve been dating for a year and a half, live in a flat in Cross, a tiny village about five kilometers from the castle.

Laura Jamieson and Michael Smith, employees at Ashford Castle (and also a couple), never expected to move into the stately digs.

Courtesy of Ashford Castle

Nothing prepared them for moving into the former country estate of the Guinness family, with a 32-seat cinema, two gourmet dining rooms, a spa, wine-tasting tunnels and 83 guest rooms.

It was transformed into a luxury hotel in 1939; past guests have included US presidents and celebrities such as Barbra Streisand and Brad Pitt. Pierce Brosnan, who shot an episode of the TV series “Remington Steele” at Ashford, returned to marry Keely Shaye Smith here in 2001.

Both Smith and Jamieson, who is in charge of guest services, were surprised — and thrilled — when general manager Niall Rochford asked them if they might consider moving in for a spell. They suspect it’s because they complement each other as a team.

“She does everything so well on the inside and I have a lot of experience on the outside and on the grounds, so it was almost perfect yin and yang,” says Smith. “We balance each other. So I have to believe that’s one of the reasons they asked.”

Having fun yet?

Was it scary at first being the sole occupants of a place so big? Slightly.

During the day, some of the hotel's staff comes by to perform various job functions, but the couple is largely alone.

During the day, some of the hotel’s staff comes by to perform various job functions, but the couple is largely alone.

Courtesy of Ashford Castle

For starters, there was the Dessert Fiasco.

“We’ve got a five-star kitchen, but between the two of us we’re a two-star chef,” says Smith, who grew up in Perthshire, Scotland. “Both of us have a sweet tooth so we tried banana bread. That was a disaster. When you set off a smoke alarm in the house, it’s just in the kitchen. But when you set it off in a hotel the whole place goes off.”

The castle, which dates back to 1228, is an enormous space for just two people.

The castle, which dates back to 1228, is an enormous space for just two people.

Courtesy of Ashford Castle

Then there was the Ghost of Ashford Past — or at least, the one in their heads.

“The castle dates back to 1228, and we’re staying in the Victorian wing,” says Jamieson, who has been at Ashford for five years. “You have all these paintings of the owners through the ages. You almost feel like you’re in somebody’s house and they’re watching you.”

Her boyfriend has been amusing himself by jumping out in front of her “to make sure she’s on her toes.”

“It’s worn thin pretty quickly,” Smith admits.

A day in the life of castle living

A typical day finds them awake by 8 a.m., when they stroll around the 350 acres of gardens and private woodlands and then head into the local for a coffee. It’s a regular eight-hour workday, replete with Zoom meetings and greeting colleagues who have come to the castle for a few hours. They might stop by the stables or the falconry school to see the hawks and owls.

A typical day finds Jamieson and Smith awake by 8 a.m. They will proceed to work a full eight-hour day.

A typical day finds Jamieson and Smith awake by 8 a.m. They will proceed to work a full eight-hour day.

Courtesy of Ashford Castle

Then the fun really begins.

As part of their additional caretaking responsibilities, they must vacuum floors, dust the Waterford crystal chandeliers, and run showers in each of the guest rooms. The true calorie burn comes from the 160 toilets they flush every day — just to keep everything in working order.

“It’s been good exercise for us,” says Smith, who estimates that they log between 25,000 and 30,000 steps on an average day, which could last until 7 or 8 p.m.

To keep the castle in good working order, Smith and Jamieson run all of the showers and flush all of the toilets (160 in total) each day.

To keep the castle in good working order, Smith and Jamieson run all of the showers and flush all of the toilets (160 in total) each day.

Courtesy of Ashford Castle

Once a week, they hold date night in the 32-seat cinema, which “looks like something out of the 1920s,” says Jamieson.

They bring in candy, popcorn, some wine and pretend they’re at a cinema, rather than in their own private movie theater. The first film they watched was John Ford’s “The Quiet Man,” starring John Wayne and Maureen O’Hara, which was filmed at Ashford.

They’ve also enjoyed “Game of Thrones” and “The Greatest Showman” — “things that are worthy of being on the big screen,” says Smith.

Date night often takes place in the empty cinema.

Date night often takes place in the empty cinema.

Courtesy of Ashford Castle

The couple met three years ago, when Smith first started working at the hotel. Jamieson was working in different departments, wearing a different uniform in each, and she soon caught Smith’s eye — although he was confused whether she was one person or a set of sisters. “But I managed to narrow it down,” he says, and finally worked up the nerve to ask her out.

The couple has decamped into a luxurious state room in the original wing of the castle (circa 1228), with antiques, tapestries, Connemara marble, Murano glass chandeliers, an antique grandfather clock, 15-foot ceilings and magnificent views of the lake.

Snapping pics with a Polaroid has been a fun post-work activity for the young couple.

Snapping pics with a Polaroid has been a fun post-work activity for the young couple.

Courtesy Laura Jamieson and Michael Smith

Before moving in they bought a Polaroid camera to document their experience. “We have been creating a memory book for ourselves,” says Jamieson. “This isn’t real life. It makes us look fancier than we are.”

The hardest part, they say, has been not being able to see their friends and family in person. But they FaceTime with them, usually from a different part of the property for a virtual tour.

Laura Jamieson and Michael Smith fell in love while working in an 800-year-old castle. But they never expected to live at their place of employment.

Michael Smith is from Scotland and Laura Jamieson is Surrey in England, but they fell in love across the Irish Sea.

Courtesy of the Red Carnation Hotel Collection

Imminent ‘eviction’

The Castle is scheduled to reopen on July 2. Right now, they are unsure when they’ll be evicted. “We’re avoiding asking the question,” says Jamieson.

Although the castle is set to reopen on July 2, the couple is not sure when they'll be asked to leave.

Although the castle is set to reopen on July 2, the couple is not sure when they’ll be asked to leave.

Courtesy of Ashford Castle

Beyond the novelty of playing Eloise, they’ve learned a lot about themselves as people and as a couple. “We are a relatively young couple and it’s been the craziest experience,” says Smith. “I’m not saying this is a Disney story. I’m sure there are time she wants me to go to the other side or send me to the dungeon. But we haven’t had any fights or got sick of each other.

But, he adds, “she could change her mind any time soon.”

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Pakistan faces internal, external challenges: FM

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ISLAMABAD             -              Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi on Tuesday said Pakistan was currently facing several challenges on internal and external fronts.

In a meeting with the newly designated Pakistan’s ambassadors to various countries, the Foreign Minister said that resolution of the issues of Pakistani community and protection of their rights are amongst our foremost priorities.

The FM gave directions to the newly nominated ambassadors about professional affairs and foreign policy priorities, especially the Kashmir issue.

Meanwhile, the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation’s Independent Permanent Human Rights Commission yesterday welcomed the comprehensive joint communiqué issued by the OIC Ministerial Contact Group on held Kashmir, held on June 22, which squarely condemned the prevailing gross and systematic human rights violations by India.

The IPHRC highlighted sufferings of Kashmiri Muslims due to communication blackout in held Kashmir.

It condemned extrajudicial killings of Kashmiris and rejected newly notified “Reorganization” and “Domicile Rules 2020” violative of human rights including the Fourth Geneva Convention.

The IPHRC urged OIC to compel India to halt its gross and systematic HR violations, refrain from altering geographic and demographic status of IOJ&K, provide access to UN/OIC fact finding missions and let Kashmiris exercise their legitimate right to self-determination.

 



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Wanheng Menayothin reverses his decision to retire after 54 straight victories, according to WBC

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Last Updated: 24/06/20 9:16am


Wanheng Menayothin is the WBC minimumweight champion

Wanheng Menayothin has reversed his decision to retire after 54 straight victories, according to the WBC.

Thailand’s WBC minimumweight champion had appeared to have bowed out of the sport following a successful career which had surpassed Floyd Mayweather’s unbeaten 50-fight record.

But the WBC has since confirmed that the 34-year-old intends to continue his reign as their title-holder.

The Asian Boxing Council said in a statement: “We are pleased to confirm that the current World Boxing Council minimum-weight world champion Wanheng Menayothin has not retired from professional boxing.

“The champ will look to make his next defense of his WBC world title in the coming months.”

Menayothin brought up his 54th victory last October

Menayothin brought up his 54th victory last October

Menayothin had suggested on social media that he had been feeling the physical burden of his relentless schedule.

“I have decided that it’s good to stop boxing,” Menayothin wrote. “My parents, siblings have never been in boxing.

“I’m decide everything for myself. I know how I feel. No one knows my body as much as I do.

“Everyone needs money. But I would like to heal my body.”

The Thai fighter could now press ahead with plans for a US fight

The Thai fighter could now press ahead with plans for a US fight

After signing a deal with Golden Boy Promotions, Menayothin had been expected to showcase his skills in America this year.

“He was set to make his US debut in April, we were excited about that but obviously it didn’t happen,” Golden Boy president Eric Gomez told Sky Sports.

“When you have a fighter like him with a remarkable record, it is very exciting.

“A few years back we heard of him. He has an incredible record.”

News of Menayothin’s U-turn has been welcomed by WBO rival Wlfredo Mendez, who has called for a unification clash.



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ICC Board Meet: Nomination process for next chairman is primary agenda

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By: PTI |

Published: June 24, 2020 1:36:28 pm





For being in the running for the chairman’s post, a member is required to have attended a minimum of two board meetings. (FILE)

Deliberation on the nomination process for its next chairman will top the agenda when the International Cricket Council’s all-powerful Board converges via video-conference on Thursday.

With the ICC already making it clear that a final decision on the fate of this year’s T20 World Cup will be taken next month, the primary agenda of discussion will be the nomination process for the chairman’s election. The post is currently held by India’s Shashank Manohar.

“I am still not sure whether the date of the election (or selection) will be announced tomorrow or not. Obviously the primary agenda is a discussion on the nomination process for Shashank Manohar’s replacement,” an ICC board member, privy to the developments, told PTI on conditions of anonymity.

“Obviously, since the members will meet, they will update (the board) about the situation in their respective countries. However, no concrete announcement is expected,” the source added.

Also, the board could be briefed on the investigations being carried on the leaks of classified e-mails, a member said.

For being in the running for the chairman’s post, a member is required to have attended a minimum of two board meetings and also needs to be nominated by a current or past director (board member) of the representative country.

Shashank Manohar is currently holding the ICC chairman’s post.

An ICC Board comprises chairman, 12 Test-playing nations, three associate members (Malaysia, Scotland and Singapore as per this turn), independent female director (Indra Nooyi) and chief executive Manu Sawhney.

The Chief Executive doesn’t have a vote in case of election. As of now, former ECB chairman Colin Graves is the front-runner to replace Shashank Manohar as the chairman of the world body but one can’t rule out BCCI president Sourav Ganguly either.

Neither Ganguly nor BCCI have outrightly negated the possibility of his candidature.

But a lot would depend on whether the Supreme Court of India accepts the Interim Application of the BCCI which pleads that the mandatory cooling-off period after six years in office be waived off for Ganguly and secretary Jay Shah.

Pakistan Cricket Board chairman Ehsan Mani has already ruled himself out of contention during a media interaction earlier in the week where he said that his priority is cricket in his country.

It is learnt that it won’t be a bad idea for Ganguly to throw his hat in the ring in case the cooling-off period is not waived off.

“We still don’t know whether Sourav Ganguly has any political ambitions or not. If he has, he can always be the ICC chairman for a year and then be a BJP chief ministerial candidate for the state assembly elections in West Bengal in 2021,” a BCCI insider said.

However, as of now Ganguly is unlikely to contest if he is not a unanimous choice for the post.

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The misconceptions behind the white lives matter banner

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Sky Sports News presenter Mike Wedderburn has posted a powerful video taking apart the misconceptions behind the “white lives matter” banner that was flown over a football match on Monday.

The video, posted in the aftermath of the incident during Manchester City v Burnley, went viral and here he further explains why Black Lives Matter is a cry for help and not an attack on white people:

There seems to be a misconception that Black Lives Matter means that white lives don’t.

That is the only reason I can imagine that someone would think it is a good idea to fly a banner over a football stadium only minutes after all the players and staff took a knee in support of a movement asking only for equality.

It’s not the “Black Lives Matter More” movement. It is simply that they matter.

Image:
A plane flew over Manchester City’s Etihad stadium with a banner reading ‘white lives matter’

George Floyd wasn’t a one off and don’t kid yourself that it only happens thousands of miles away. It happens here.

In 1981, Yvonne Ruddock, a black 16-year-old, was celebrating her birthday until an arson attack put paid to the celebrations. She was one of 13 killed. The police treated the victims as suspects.

More from Black Lives Matter

In 1985, the police shot and paralysed Cherry Groce in her own home in front of her children as they searched for her son who no longer lived with her. A week later a police raid resulted in Cynthia Jarrett’s death, another innocent black woman.

In 2011, reggae star Smiley Culture died in a police raid. In 2016, the former Premier League footballer Dalian Atkinson was tasered to death by the police. Dead black men. None of the officers involved were held accountable.

This is not a definitive list, it is just a snapshot. This is reality for black people. Young black males are taught how to make sure they don’t antagonise the police when they are stopped.

So, to the people who flew the banner over the Etihad: understand that black people want a level playing field, an equal chance. That is all. Not more than you, just the same opportunities as you.

You may have heard the phrase “white privilege” and been antagonised by it. Don’t be.

It doesn’t mean that you live in the lap of luxury and spend your life deciding which magnum of champagne you will have with your dinner. It means that life is tilted in your direction to such an extent that you probably don’t even notice.

When you walk around the shops is it assumed you are a criminal? Do the police stop you regularly because you look suspicious? If you are black the answer is yes. Is it for you?

A plane flies over the stadium with a banner reading 'White Lives Matter Burnley' during the Premier League match at the Etihad Stadium, Manchester.
Image:
Mike Wedderburn has explained why the flypast banner is offensive

In your business what colour are the people who have the power? What colour are the people who make the decisions? What colour is the manager of your favourite football team? What colour is the owner of your favourite football team?

The chances are that the answers are probably white and if you are white it has probably never crossed your mind to give it much thought. Have a think about it now. That is white privilege.

Black Lives Matter is not an attack on white people. It is a cry for help.

It is a declaration that we won’t take the current situation anymore. But nothing changes without the help of white people.

That’s why Burnley captain Ben Mee was so disappointed by the so-called “fans” of his club and their banner. In his words they are “just not getting it”.

If change is going to come then we need everyone to get it.

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Putin, having stayed safe behind Kremlin walls, declares victory over COVID-19

After months of coronavirus-related setbacks, Russian President Vladimir Putin was set to preside Wednesday over a long-awaited military blowout to celebrate 75 years since Nazi Germany’s defeat in World War II.

But as Russia emerges — perhaps prematurely — from almost three months of lockdowns to curb the spread of the virus, the parade has taken on additional meaning for the Kremlin: as a declaration of victory over the virus itself and a turning point in Putin’s reign.

The parade will kick off a weeklong nationwide vote on a series of proposed constitutional amendments that, among other things, would reset presidential term limits — allowing Putin, 67, if he so desires, to rule Russia until 2036.

In a triumphant address on the eve of the parade, Putin congratulated the nation on “the dignity with which you, the citizens of Russia, have passed through the most dangerous phase of the epidemic.”

“We are driving the virus back,” he declared, but he also warned that the pandemic isn’t over.

“We are still in for a rough ride. We have yet to nip it in the bud. But the end is in sight. We can soon return to normal life,” he said. “And I hope that together we can solve any problem that arises in the future. We have already demonstrated we can do that.”

Full coverage of the coronavirus outbreak

Putin announced the parade a month ago, on May 26, “since the situation in the country as a whole, including in the majority of the regions and in the armed forces, remains stable and is stabilizing in other regions after we reached the peak of the outbreak.”

But since then, Russia’s coronavirus situation hasn’t markedly improved. Rather than reporting 9,000 new cases per day, Russia’s daily new cases in recent days have fluctuated from 8,000 to 7,500.

Opposition figures, such as Alexei Navalny, have pointed to the figures and argued that the Kremlin is moving ahead with the parade to convince residents that it is safe to go out and participate in the constitutional referendum, which is scheduled for July 1, with polls opening Friday.

“Everyone knows that this madness is being carried out for one person,” Navalny wrote in a blog post Monday. “This parade has one viewer. He is sitting in his bunker. He stayed there for two and half months because he was afraid of getting infected himself.”

Two weeks ago, bowing to pressure from the Kremlin, Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin unexpectedly lifted the city’s lockdown, which on paper had been one of the world’s strictest. Since then, officials from the Kremlin on down have encouraged residents to return to normal life.

They’re being told it’s safe to return to restaurants and to their workplaces — and as of Tuesday, they’re even being told it’s safe to go back to the gym. But, in the Kremlin, greater precautions remain to keep Putin isolated from the virus even as Russians are encouraged to go to the polls.

With confused messaging swirling around the Russian media, almost no one seems to be wearing masks or taking distancing measures of any kind in central Moscow as people flood back into shopping centers, as well as terraces for summer drinks.

World War II veterans who will sit next to Putin at Wednesday’s parade have been quarantined for two weeks at a resort outside Moscow. And state media reported that everyone who visits Putin at his private residence must enter through a disinfection tunnel.

Moreover, the troops themselves, who will be on Red Square with Putin and other Russian leaders, will wear masks after having been quarantined during rehearsals for the parade.

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All of that, Navalny argued, is intended to set the tone for the constitutional vote: “He personally needs this parade, because he wants to start a vote to reset his term limits with something solemn.”

Navalny doesn’t appear to be alone in his skepticism. Even Sobyanin has urged Moscow residents to stay home and watch the parade on television, reminding them that it isn’t yet safe (or even officially permitted) to gather in masses.

And in at least 20 cities, authorities have canceled their Victory Day parades outright, citing concerns over the epidemic in Russia — which, despite Putin’s declarations of victory, remains the world’s third-largest outbreak.

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‘This is the end for the lockdown dictator’: NDZ dragged back to court

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The Liberty Fighters Network (LFN) are set for their second duel with Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma and the ANC government, after winning the first battle earlier this month. The civil activists shocked the nation in the Pretoria High Court some three weeks ago, after a judge ruled that our current lockdown laws were ‘invalid’.

Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma back in court over lockdown laws

At 10:00 on Wednesday, all parties will enter the courtroom. Except now, Dlamini-Zuma has a secret weapon with her. Cabinet is set to deploy high-profile lawyer Wim Trengrove to bolster their defence. It’s a move, however, that doesn’t faze LFN President Reyno De Beer – and he’s happy to continue representing himself:

“Reyno De Beer will be appearing again in person as an ordinary citizen without any formal legal qualification. It is imperative for De Beer to continue representing himself as he wants to show the people on the grassroots level that the people don’t need the luxury of an expensive legal team to get justice in South Africa.”

LFN

LFN predict the end for ‘lockdown dictator’ Dlamini-Zuma

In a statement published on Tuesday, the group talked up their chances of defeating Dlamini-Zuma once more, laughing off her appeal against the judgment. Refusing to mince their words, LFN called the senior politician a ‘lockdown dictator’, who was they believe will soon see an end to her ‘tyrannical reign’.

“We believe that Dlamini-Zuma should make peace with the fact that her reign as the lockdown dictator will come to an end very soon and will be remembered as the one in charge who has led government during its three months of human rights violations and tyranny against the people.”

LFN

Is lockdown still in place for South Africa?

Let’s hope they have saved some of those fireworks for the courtroom. De Beer has also claimed that lockdown, as of Wednesday, should not be enforced because Dlamini-Zuma and her legal team have now missed the deadline (Tuesday 23 June) to amend their rules and regulations in the Disaster Management Act.

The grace period of 14 business days has elapsed, and should NDZ lose her appeal, the government’s case for keeping the lockdown in place will have all but collapsed. Advocate Reg Willis CS, meanwhile, will represent LFN independently from De Beer’s one-man mission.



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Girl, 8, mum and grandfather found in backyard pool died of accidental drowning

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The East Brunswick Police Department and Middlesex County Prosecutor’s Office identified the victims as Bharat Patel, 62, his daughter-in-law Nisha Patel, 33, and her eight-year-old daughter.

The manner of death was accidental and the result of drowning, the county Medical Examiner’s Office said Tuesday.

The family had moved into the home just 20 days earlier, police said.

“This is a devastating day for our entire community and we are working to determine exactly what happened,” said East Brunswick Police Chief Frank LoSacco.

Monday afternoon, police received a call from a neighbor who heard screaming, police Lieutenant Frank Sutter told CNN.

Officers arrived at the home and found the victims unresponsive in a pool.

The three were pronounced dead shortly afterward.

There was another family member living in the house, but authorities didn’t say how that person was related to the victims.

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