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Sunday, 12 April 2020
Google and Apple team up to develop tracing app for virus cases
Apple and Google are jointly developing technology to alert people if they have recently come into contact with others found to be infected with coronavirus.
They hope to initially help third-party contact-tracing apps run efficiently.
But ultimately, they aim to do away with the need to download dedicated apps, to encourage the practice.
The two companies believe their approach - designed to keep users, whose participation would be voluntary, anonymous - addresses privacy concerns.
Their contact-tracing method would work by using a smartphone's Bluetooth signals to determine to whom the owner had recently been in proximity for long enough to have established contagion a risk.
If one of those people later tested positive for the Covid-19 virus, a warning would be sent to the original handset owner.
No GPS location data or personal information would be recorded.
"Privacy, transparency and consent are of utmost importance in this effort and we look forward to building this functionality in consultation with interested stakeholders," Apple and Google said in a joint statement.
"We will openly publish information about our work for others to analyse."
President Trump said his administration needed time to consider the development.
"It's very interesting, but a lot of people worry about it in terms of a person's freedom," he said during a White House press conference.
"We're going to take... a very strong look at it, and we'll let you know pretty soon."
The European Union's Data Protection Supervisor sounded more positive, saying: "The initiative will require further assessment, however, after a quick look it seems to tick the right boxes as regards user choice, data protection by design and pan-European interoperability."
But others have noted that the success of the venture may depend on getting enough people tested.
Apple is the developer of iOS. Google is the company behind Android. The two operating systems power the vast majority of smartphones in use.
Some countries - including Singapore, Israel, South Korea and Poland - are already using people's handsets to issue coronavirus contagion alerts.
Other health authorities - including the UK, France and Germany - are working on initiatives of their own. And some municipal governments in the US are reportedly about to adopt a third-party app.
The two technology giants aim to bring coherence to all this by allowing existing third-party apps to be retrofitted to include their solution.
This would make the apps interoperable, so contact tracing would continue to work as people travelled overseas and came into contact with people using a different tool.
Apple and Google have been working on the effort for about two weeks but have not externally revealed their plans until Friday.
If successful, the scheme could help countries relax lockdowns and border restrictions.
Source: BBC news
How Funke Akindele Got into Trouble During Lockdown
On Saturday, April 2, Nollywood star actress and producer, Funke Akindele landed herself in trouble with the authorities after what many have described as a deliberate attempt to flaunt her influence against government regulations on the ravaging novel coronavirus (Covid-19) pandemic. Funke who is the face of a national campaign on social distancing during the coronavirus lockdown was arrested — for throwing a wild party packed with revelers. She had hosted a group of friends to mark her husband, Abdulrasheed Bello, popularly known as JJC Skillz’s 43rd birthday in the confines of her home in Amen Estate, Lagos. That soiree was packed with guests including Lagos politician Babatunde Gbadamosi, controversial singer Naira Marley, and fleshy actress Eniola Badmus, among others, dancing and drinking in close proximity.
Funke, 42, however sparked outrage when the video of the wild party surfaced online and went viral. The apparent hypocrisy sparked numerous online memes, with videos of her PSA splashed together with the packed party. The groundswell of calls for their arrest was overwhelming to the extent that Funke’s goodwill paled into insignificance. The couple was arrested on Sunday and the following day, Monday, arraigned at the Chief Magistrate Court in Ogba, Lagos on a one-count charge of holding a party at their residence with over 20 persons in attendance contrary to the social distancing directives made in pursuant to Regulation 8(1)(a) and (b) & 17(1)(i) of the Lagos State Infectious Disease (Emergency Prevention) Regulations 2020 and therefore committed an offence under Section 58 of the Public Health Law Cap P16 Vol. 9, Laws of Lagos State 2015. Both the actress and her husband pleaded guilty to hosting the party despite the coronavirus lockdown an act, which could lead to the spread of Covid-19. They were sentenced to 14 days of community service and fined N100,000 each by the magistrate court. They were also both ordered to make a tour to educate the public on the consequences of non-compliance of the restriction order.
Spotlight gathered that Funke’s ordeal might have a root in her recent refusal to honour her late father even in death. Some of those close to her believe her present crisis might be a spin-off of dishonouring her late father, Very Revd. Godwin Olusoji Akindele, whose funeral she allegedly shunned. Funke had announced the death of her father back in December 2019. But many were stunned when during the final rites on Friday, January 17, 2020 in Ikorodu, Lagos, Funke and her siblings were conspicuously absent to pay their dad the deserved last respect. They were also absent at the Service of Songs the previous day. Their non-attendance was said to have angered the Presiding Bishop, Rt. Rev. S.O Osundina, the Bishop of Ikorodu Diocese, Methodist Church Nigeria, and aborted the rest of the burial programme until Funke and her siblings do the needful.
It was learnt that Funke deliberately left Nigeria few days to the funeral of her dad for Dubai, UAE and returned only a week later. Why Funke and her siblings chose to dishonour their father remains unclear but this action, some claim, could have triggered the present punishment and likely chain reactions from the attendant curse that could follow later for disrespecting one’s parents, especially their funerals. Of course, some could dismiss this as a mere myth but not a few believe the coincidence in Funke’s error is too real to be ignored.
Source: The Sun newsonline
POPE FRANCIS PROSTRATED IN PRAYER
Pope Francis prostrated on the floor of an empty St. Peter’s Basilica on Friday (April 10) to pray at a scaled-down “Passion of the Lord” service commemorating Jesus’ last hours of life and his crucifixion.
The service is one of the rare times when the pope does not deliver a homily, leaving it to Father Raniero Cantalamessa, the preacher of the papal household.
“The pandemic of Coronavirus has abruptly roused us from the greatest danger individuals and humanity have always been susceptible to: the delusion of omnipotence,” Cantalamessa said.
“It took merely the smallest and most formless element of nature, a virus, to remind us that we are mortal, that military power and technology are not sufficient to save us,” he said.
The service is usually attended by cardinals, bishops and some 10,000 faithful.
But it was scaled back because of the coronavirus restrictions and attended by only about two dozen people, including papal aides reading from scriptures and a smaller than usual choir.
Saturday, 11 April 2020
World Bank Approves $50M for Kenya Covid 19 Fight
The World Bank has approved $50m requested by Kenya to fund containment efforts of the coronavirus pandemic. According to Health Minister Mutahi Kagwe, the funds will largely go into boosting capacity of frontline staff – i.e. buying protective gear for health workers, hand sanitizers, increasing bed capacity in hospitals is another area government will focus on.
According to a report by Africanews.com, Kenya’s health workers are said to have protested the lack of protective gear in hospitals. Many local media outlets have reported the protest
Friday, 10 April 2020
World Bank Criticised for approving loans that allows Pregnant Girls to go to school in Tanzania
The World
Bank has been accused of undermining human rights and has faced criticism from
local and international civil society groups over the Tanzania secondary
education quality improvement programme loan. Campaigners say approval should
not have been given without first securing a commitment from the government to
reverse its discrimination towards pregnant girls and end compulsory pregnancy
tests.
A public
notice released earlier this week by Tanzania’s education minister,
JoyceNdalichako, said: “The target [of the loan] is to reach more than 6.5
million secondary school students across the country, without discrimination
and shall include girls who drop out of school for various reasons, including
pregnancy.
“The
government is committed to ensure that they continue with their education as
prescribed in the project.”
Of the
60,000 students who drop out of secondary school every year in Tanzania, 5,500
leave due to pregnancy according to World Bank data.
Tanzania’s
ban on pregnant schoolgirls dates back to the 60s. Amid renewed criticism, it
was reaffirmed in a 2017 speech by Tanzania’s president, John Magufuli, who
stated that “as long as I am president … no pregnant student will be allowed to
return to school. We cannot allow this immoral behaviour to permeate our
primary and secondary schools.”
Human rights
lawyer Judy Gitau, regional coordinator at Equality Now, welcomed Ndalichako’s
declaration and said she was “cautiously optimistic” about “the first time the
government of Tanzania has publicly announced in an official state document
that it will include pregnant girls in secondary school education”
But ElÃn
Martinez, senior researcher at Human Rights Watch, said the Tanzanian
government’s positionremained unchanged. She referred to a recent tweet in
Swahili from Tanzania’s chief government spokesperson that indicated the
government has set up parallel systems for pregnant girls.
“Tanzania
will continue to arbitrarily deny pregnant girls the right to study in formal
public primary and secondary schools – and they will only have an option of studying
in a parallel system, which will now be built using the World Bank’s loan,”
said MartÃnez, adding that the “alternative education pathways” only offer a
condensed version of the curriculum, and at a cost.
The World
Bank has “undermined its own commitment to non-discrimination and to improving
the lives of ‘marginalised groups,’” she said.
Source: The Guardian
Monday, 6 April 2020
COVIOD 19: African countriesHit 3766 Cases, 95 Deaths
The Word Health Organization has revealed that COVID-19 outbreak is rapidly evolving on the African Continent since its last situation report announced on March 25th 2020, on the subject.
WHO says four new countries in the WHO African Region, namely Botswana, Burundi, Guinea Bissau and Sierra Leonne have reported confirmed COVID-19 cases.
Forty-two (89%) out of 47 Member States of the WHO African Region are now affected. The number of cases and deaths has more than doubled since its last report, with new confirmed COVID-19 cases and 65 new deaths reported in the WHO African Region.
As of 1 April 2020, a cumulative total of 3 766 confirmed COVID-19 cases with 95 deaths have been reported across the 42 affected countries in the region.
The most affected countries in the WHO African Region are: South Africa (1 353 cases), Algeria (584 cases), Burkina Faso (261 cases), Senegal (175 cases), Cote d’Ivoire (169 cases) and Ghana (152). Together, these countries account for 72% of the cases reported in the region.
source: allafrica.com
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