Wednesday, 30 December 2020

Premier League makes new decision amid second wave of COVID-19



 Premier League chiefs have resolved not to shut down the season, despite clubs holding secret meetings about taking a ‘coronavirus break’, the UK Mirror reports.

Some clubs have discussed a two-week temporary halt in January, as the football is in serious danger of descending into farce.

The Premier League on Tuesday, announced a record number of positive tests, with 18 detected in the week between Monday, December 21 and Sunday, December 27.

But League bosses have no intention of suspending the season.

Government chiefs have also offered reassurance that there are no plans to stop top flight football or elite sport despite the rise in cases.

Manchester City’s clash at Everton on Monday night was called off, following an outbreak of the pandemic in the club’s first team bubble.

If further positive cases are confirmed, City’s game at Chelsea on Sunday will also be postponed, leading to more fixture pile-up for the Blues.

- PM NEWS

Kaduna’s ‘only surviving textile company’ sacks 300 employees



United Textile Limited (UNTL), the only surviving textile company in Kaduna state, has sacked about 300 of its 800 workforce, DailyTrust is reporting.

The report, published on Tuesday, quoted the company as saying the mass sack is part of efforts to restructure operations.

UNTL, which was founded in 1964, had initially shut down operations in 2007 but reopened in 2010.

In March 2020, the company shutdown again over lockdown restrictions imposed by Kaduna state government as part of efforts to mitigate the spread of coronavirus.

The textile company is reported to have reopened after pressure from the National Union of Textile Garment and Tailoring Workers of Nigeria (NUTGTWN).

“It (retrenchment) is as a result of the general economic problem,” a staff told DailyTrust.

“This is the only surviving textile company in Kaduna and we cannot even get raw materials because the farmers are complaining that bandits won’t allow them to go to their farms.

“Some of the workers have been here for a while and they have been laid off. To pay workers has become difficult because there is no work to do and there are no raw materials to work with.”

Another employee said the restructuring will have a negative multiplier effect.

“The development will affect more than 1,000 people because all the workers have dependants including wives, children and parents,” the staff said.

“I am sure many will find it difficult to survive because who do you think will give them a job? I hope the federal and Kaduna state governments would do something to salvage the situation.”

John Adaji, national president of NUTGTWN, said asides from scarcity of raw materials, the textile industry is facing other problems such as high production cost and imitation of products.

“You will see a fabric that is printed by UNTL and then some people will go ahead and imitate it and bring it into the country comfortably with no customs duty,” Adaji said.

“You will find that 90 percent of the fabrics in the market are imported and if we are to implement executive order 003, then Nigerian security sector alone could sustain textile companies but this is not the case.”

- THECABLE

Gunmen kidnap another businessman in Ibadan

 


Gunmen have kidnapped an Ibadan based business man, Mr. Wole Agboola.

DAILY POST learnt that the gunmen stormed Abaodo Area, Olukitibi village, in Akinyele Local Government Area and kidnapped Mr. Agboola.

Our correspondent gathered that Agboola was abducted on Sunday.

The abduction of Mr. Agboola comes a few days after the kidnap of Babalola Jumoke Oludele, a sister to a member of the State House of Assembly, Sunkanmi Babalola.

Our correspondent gathered that the abductors, who were in army uniform, took Mr. Agboola to an unknown destination.

The victim was taken away at gunpoint from his farm located around the Kola Daisi University, on the Ibadan-Oyo Express road axis of the State.

The source said the gunmen numbering about six, with guns and cutlasses, led 47-year-old Agboola into the bush after harassing all the persons working on the farm, including the farm guard.

As of the time of filing this report, the family source said the abductors have not reached the family members.

Oyo State Commandant of Western Nigeria Security Network (WNSN) also known as Amotekun, Col. Olayinka Olayanju confirmed the abduction.

Olayanju in an SMS sent to DAILY POST Monday evening confirmed that the victim was abducted from his farm.

He said, “It was yesterday evening not today.

“He was picked in his farm around Deeper Life Church.”

- DAILY POST

Argentina country of Pope Francis legalises abortion



 Argentina on Wednesday became the first major country in Latin America to legalize abortion.

The country’s Senate voted by 38 in favour to 29 against with one abstention to approve a bill allowing the procedure through the 14th week of pregnancy.

The vote bucked the traditionally strong influence of the Catholic Church in the region. The reigning Pope Francis is from Argentina.

The contentious vote followed a marathon debate that began at 4 p.m. (1900 GMT) on Tuesday.

As the result was read out, a crowd of thousands erupted in cheers outside the Senate building in Buenos Aires, waving the green flags that represented their campaign as green smoke rose above the crowd.

“We did it sisters. We made history. We did it together. There are no words for this moment, it passes through the body and the soul,” tweeted Monica Macha, a lawmaker with President Alberto Fernandez’ centre-left ruling coalition which supported the law.

The ruling could set the tone for a wider shift in conservative Latin America where there are growing calls for greater reproductive rights for women.

Across the region, abortions are available on demand only in Communist Cuba, comparatively tiny Uruguay and some parts of Mexico.

“Adopting a law that legalises abortion in a Catholic country as big as Argentina will energise the struggle to ensure women’s rights in Latin America,” said Juan Pappier, a senior Americas researcher at Human Rights Watch.

“Although there will certainly be resistance, I think it’s fair to predict that, as it occurred when Argentina legalized same sex marriage in 2010, this new law could have a domino effect in the region.”

Until now, Argentine law has only allowed abortion when there is a serious risk to the health of the mother or in cases of rape.

Pro-choice groups argue that criminalising abortion harms women from the most vulnerable groups who they say are instead often forced to seek dangerous illegal abortions.

Argentina’s powerful Catholic church argues the practice violates the right to life.

A change in the law was narrowly defeated in a Senate vote in 2018 after being approved in the lower house, but the latest bill was the first to have the backing of the ruling government.

Reported by Reuters/NAN

UK approves Oxford-AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine

 


The UK has approved the Oxford-AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine.

The vaccine is the second to be approved by the UK.

It is said to be between 62 percent and 90 percent effective against the virus.

Its approval means that it is safe and effective for public use.

The vaccine was developed by scientists at Oxford University.

The UK is said to have ordered 100 million doses of the vaccine which will be administered on 50 million people — two doses each.

Earlier in December, the UK health regulator approved the use of Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine which is said to be 95 percent effective.

The UK began vaccination of the most vulnerable group in the country earlier in the month.

So far, the UK has recorded over two million cases of COVID-19 and over 71,000 fatalities.

A new strain of the infection which is said to be 70 times more contagious has been discovered in the country.

- THECABLE

Discharged COVID-19 patients experience severe mental illness

 


A small number of discharged COVID-19 patients are experiencing severe mental illness symptoms, according to a report by New York Times.

The New York Times reports that multiple doctors have observed the symptoms in recovered patients who had no previously recorded history of mental illness.

Studies in the U.K. and Spain have found that a small number of hospitalized coronavirus patients developed “new-onset psychosis,” the Times notes, with similar anecdotal reports coming in from America’s Midwest.

The Times did not speak to any patients who had experienced psychiatric symptoms, but some physicians were given permission by their patients to describe their cases.

A 42-year-old mother in New York described continually seeing her children being murdered and said she heard voices telling her to kill her children and herself.

In New York City, a 30-year-old man tried to strangle his cousin after becoming convinced they were planning on murdering him.

A 49-year-old man described hearing voices and believed himself to be the devil.

The physician treating the 42-year-old mother, Hisam Goueli, told the Times the cases were unique due to the patients’ self-awareness of their mental health decline.

“People with psychosis don’t have an insight that they’ve lost touch with reality,” Goueli said.

Goueli also noted it was unusual that most of these patients were in their 30s and 40s. According to the physician, the symptoms that patients described were more often attributed to schizophrenia in younger people or dementia in the elderly.

Experts have stated that viral effects on the brain may be attributable to the immune system’s response or even the physical symptoms that patients experience.

“Some of the neurotoxins that are reactions to immune activation can go to the brain, through the blood-brain barrier, and can induce this damage,” said Vilma Gabbay, co-director at the Psychiatry Research Institute at Montefiore Einstein (PRIME).

Experts who spoke to the Times concurred with Gabbay’s assessment, saying a continued immune response after a patient has recovered could impact the brain, though the symptoms may be dependent on which region of the brain is affected.

Robert Yolken, a neurovirology professor at Johns Hopkins University, told the Times, “Some people have neurological symptoms, some people psychiatric and many people have a combination.”

The Times notes that similar cases were observed in past viruses such as the 1918 Spanish flu, SARS and MERS. Though the mechanism through which these symptoms are brought on is not well understood, experts told the Times that studying these patients could help better understand psychosis.

The duration in which patients suffer from psychiatric symptoms is not certain. One patient described in the Times piece recovered within 40 days while another was reportedly still struggling with psychotic symptoms more than two months after being hospitalized.

*This report was culled from thehill.com

FG suspends 100 passports of passengers over post-arrival COVID-19 test

 


The Federal Government has suspended the passports of 100 in-bound airline passengers who failed to take their post-arrival COVID-19 test.

Mr Boss Mustapha, Chairman, Presidential Task Force (PTF) on COVID-19, made this known at the PTF national briefing on Tuesday, in Abuja.

According to him, the names of the passengers would be published on Jan. 1, 2021, while suspension of the passports would last for six months.

“We have suspended the passports of 100 airline passengers who failed to take the COVID-19 test after their arrival.

“With effect from Jan. 1, 2021, the passports of the first 100 passengers, would be published in the national dailies.

Also, suspension of the passports would last for six months,” he said.

Recall that the Nigerian government had announced a partial lockdown in a bid to curb the second wave of coronavirus across the country.

The PTF Chairman, Boss Mustapha, issued the advisory on Monday at the PTF briefing in Abuja.

Mustapha said that President Muhammadu Buhari had authorised the Presidential Task Force to engage with the states and the Federal Capital Territory to assume full ownership of this stage of the response.

According to him, bars, night clubs, pubs and event centres, and recreational venues were considered super-spreaders of the virus.

He also ordered that Churches and Mosques should not be filled beyond 50 per cent of their installed capacity during worship.

- DAILY POST