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Covid-19 vaccine ‘best science news’ of 2020

12, November 2020

Covid-19 vaccine ‘best science news’ of 2020 0

Data indicating that a vaccine being developed against Covid-19 is highly effective is the “best science news of the year”, a pharmaceutical industry association chief said, voicing hope that other vaccine candidates would show equally good results.

“A vaccine that has 90 percent efficacy and is pretty safe, that is a historic breakthrough,” the head of the International Federation of Pharmaceutical Manufacturers and Associations (IFPMA), Thomas Cueni, said.

American pharmaceutical giant Pfizer and its German partner BioNTech announced Monday that their vaccine had proven 90 percent effective in preventing Covid-19 infections in ongoing Phase 3 trials involving more than 40,000 people.

“This was the best science news of the year,” IFPMA’s director general told AFP in an interview.

Hopes are also high that one or several of the vaccines under development will also help rein in the Covid-19 pandemic, which has killed nearly 1.3 million people out of the over 51.5 million infected.

There are currently more than 40 candidate vaccines against Covid-19 being tested on humans, with a handful in the most advanced Phase 3 trials.

Cueni acknowledged that more data was needed on the Pfizer and BioNTech candidate, which is based on an innovative technology that has never been approved for use before.

The companies based their announcement on interim results from the last step in their clinical trial before officially applying for approval.

– ‘Reason for optimism’ –

Cueni voiced confidence that any major safety concerns with the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine would have been known.

“We still need to see the (full) efficacy and the safety data,” Cueni said, but stressed: “There is now genuine reason for optimism that these vaccines are basically considered safe.”

He said there is still a long list of unknowns about the vaccine’s protection, including whether it will be equally effective in all age groups and how long the protection might last.

Another pressing question is whether it will not only protect a person from Covid-19 infection but also prevent that person from transmitting the virus.

But Cueni said the data so far indicated the vaccine candidate was far more effective in preventing Covid-19 infections than the 50-percent efficacy threshold required by some regulators before considering authorisation.

This was “big news”, he said, particularly “since I think there is reason to hope it won’t be the only one.”

“We will see more good results.”

Cueni said safety and efficacy data on at least four other vaccine candidates, being developed by Moderna, AstraZeneca, Novavax and Johnson & Johnson, would be known within the next few months.

– Vaccine hesitancy –

He was optimistic that enough data would soon be available to win approval for using one or more of the Covid-19 vaccines.

And the large developers had already scaled up their manufacturing capacities, and were each in a position to produce upwards of a billion doses next year, he said.

But Cueni acknowledged there were numerous logistical challenges to actually inoculating the huge numbers of people it would take to bring the pandemic to a halt.

And he voiced concern about high levels of vaccine hesitancy in many countries.

Pharmaceutical companies were taking that challenge particularly seriously, he said, insisting they were going “way above and beyond the normal regulatory requirements” in terms transparency and data-sharing from trials.

The industry understood the importance of ensuring any authorised vaccine is trusted, he said.

“This is not only about Covid-19.”

Without trust, “the negative spillover on vaccination overall would be disastrous.”

Source: AFP

The United States still has two self-declared presidents

12, November 2020

The United States still has two self-declared presidents 0

Tensions and divisions continue to mount in the United States, which still has two self-declared presidents. That’s even though vote counts remain unfinished, in a very tight race and in a uniquely-conducted vote which was preceded by months of controversy.

For the past week there has been enormous grassroots pressure, mainly coming from conservatives, that confidence in the electoral system has been so repeatedly undermined that a rush to judgment is not acceptable to many.

The state of Georgia announced they need to recount every ballot by hand, and lawsuits may force several other states to do the same. Democrats and seemingly all of the mainstream media are demanding President Donald Trump concede, with challenger Joe Biden maintaining a slight lead.

Top Republicans have refused to acknowledge Biden as the president-elect and thrown their support behind Trump to not concede. Many have insisted that Trump is within his rights to look into charges of “irregularities” in last week’s election.

Three of the past six presidential elections are now disputed. Many warn that massive alienation, instability and possibly violence could result if a large minority refuses to accept any final vote results which are not subjected to the check and balance of a judicial review.

Support for judicial review of the electoral process mainly falls along party lines. For decades the US has had endemic low voter turnout, but those who do vote have become extremely polarized, with the disputed election of the year 2000 often cited as a primary reason.

Without a concession, tensions and legal battles are likely to mount for weeks. On December 6 the Electoral College meets – the US does not decide their president by direct vote – and that institution has become increasingly unpopular due the 2016 disputed election.

One week after they went to vote, the US has become even more bitterly divided regarding their executive branch and electoral system.

Source: Presstv

Corrupt France: Key witness drops claims against Sarkozy in Libya campaign funding scandal

12, November 2020

Corrupt France: Key witness drops claims against Sarkozy in Libya campaign funding scandal 0

A leading witness retracted allegations on Wednesday that former French president Nicolas Sarkozy took millions in cash from Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi to finance his 2007 presidential campaign.

Earlier in the case, French-Lebanese businessman Ziad Takieddine had claimed he delivered suitcases carrying a total of €5 million from Tripoli to Sarkozy’s chief of staff in 2006 and 2007.

Takieddine, 70, who is in Beirut on the run from French justice related to another shady financing affair, released a video saying the instructing magistrate had twisted his words.

“I am saying loud and clear: the magistrate … really wanted to turn it the way he wanted and make me say things that are totally contradictory to what I said,” Takieddine said.

“There was no financing of Sarkozy’s presidential campaign,” he added.

The former president jumped on the first reports of Takieddine’s reversal from BFM TV and Paris Match, saying: “The truth is out at last.”

“For seven and a half years, the investigation has not discovered the slightest proof of any illegal financing whatsoever,” he posted on Facebook.

“The chief accuser recognises his lies,” Sarkozy added. “He never gave me money, there was never illegal financing of my campaign in 2007.”

Sarkozy said he would be instructing his lawyers to seek to dismiss the case against him and sue Takieddine for defamation.

French prosecutors last month said they had placed Sarkozy under formal investigation for “membership in a criminal conspiracy” after more than 40 hours of questioning over four days, prosecutors told AFP.

He was already facing formal investigations for “accepting bribes,” “benefitting from embezzled public funds” and “illegal campaign financing” from 2018.

The October legal moves were seen to increase the chance of a trial for Sarkozy, who was already poised to become the first former French president in the dock on corruption charges.

Prosecutors suspected that Sarkozy and his associates received tens of millions of euros from Gaddafi’s regime to help finance his first election bid.

Litany of legal woes

Sarkozy, who was president from 2007 to 2012, has always denied any wrongdoing.

He has been under pressure since 2012, when the investigative website Mediapart published a document purporting to show that Gaddafi agreed to give Sarkozy up to €50 million ($59 million at current rates).

But four years later, Sarkozy was a driving force behind the 2011 international military invention that drove Gaddafi from power and plunged Libya into civil war.

A trained lawyer, Sarkozy has fought the claims of Libyan funding by citing presidential immunity and arguing there is no legal basis in France for prosecuting someone for misusing funds from a foreign country.

He has faced a litany of legal woes since leaving office, including the Bygmalion Affair – allegations that executives at the Bygmalion public relations firm created fake invoices to mask overspending on Sarkozy’s failed 2012 re-election bid.

In a third case, Sarkozy faces charges of trying to obtain classified information from a judge on an inquiry into claims that he accepted illicit payments from L’Oréal heiress Liliane Bettencourt for his 2007 presidential campaign. Sarkozy was cleared over the Bettencourt allegations in 2013.

(FRANCE 24 with AFP)

President Biya’s late sister to be buried Friday

12, November 2020

President Biya’s late sister to be buried Friday 0

The final journey of the coffin that will carry the dead body of President Biya’s 102 years old sister the late Mrs Bidjang Regine Ndonda will begin in Yaoundé, the nation’s capital and end in Mvomeka’a in the South Region of French Cameroun.

Régine Ngonda, who died on October 31, 2020 in Yaounde due to an illness, will be buried on Friday, November 13.

Cameroon Concord News understand her funeral will officially begin today Thursday, November 12, 2020 at 11am with the removal of the body from the Yaoundé General Hospital, followed immediately by a requiem mass at the Saint Albert Parish in Mengon village, at 4pm and a vigil at 8pm.

By Rita Akana

Lokoman’s Underwear Market: Most comfortable for  male, female and children

11, November 2020

Lokoman’s Underwear Market: Most comfortable for male, female and children 0

It’s time to hit refresh underneath your trousers! Whether you’re in the West or back home in Cameroon, Lokoman has gotten you covered. The new Lokoman Design underwear is tailored to carry you along in your sporty or sophisticated appointments and rendez vous that you’re going for!

Upgrade your everyday basics with Lokoman Design’s range of male, female, and children underwear of the highest quality. Whether you’re replenishing your favourites or looking to experiment with new prints, with Lokoman design you’ve a blend of quality, beauty, elegance, finesse, comfort and fitting together at the most affordable price.

Lokoman’s unique and specially processed soft cotton, with a big elastic band coupled with its advanced sewing technique gives the large elastic band a single circle with a minor delineation. Lokoman’s product are exceptional with an interior soft cotton pad the keeps the genital comfortable in place and captures little liquid discharges to avoid pee dribbles.

Choose from multipacks of comfy boxer shorts, briefs and boxer briefs in a variety of colours!

Lokoman is a UK Liverpool based smart and intelligent designer of male, female, and children underwear of the highest quality.

Contact Parker Papa Douala– Kfirm in Cameroon via 237 76689322 and be the first to enjoy the Lokoman creation

US: Black asylum seekers disproportionately targeted as 50 Cameroonians are scheduled to be deported

11, November 2020

US: Black asylum seekers disproportionately targeted as 50 Cameroonians are scheduled to be deported 0

Nearly 50 Cameroonian asylum seekers are scheduled to be deported from the US.

Some of them are Southern Cameroons activists who face arrest warrants in La Republique du Cameroun and political persecution from French Cameroun government forces known for conducting extrajudicial killings.

Several have hinted that US Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents have tortured them into signing their deportation papers and forcibly took their fingerprints.

Last month, dozens of Southern Cameroonian asylum seekers were deported, many of whom are now missing. Advocates say Black asylum seekers are being disproportionately targeted with mass deportations.

US Supreme Court leans towards preserving Obamacare

11, November 2020

US Supreme Court leans towards preserving Obamacare 0

A more conservative Supreme Court appears unwilling to do what Republicans have long desired: kill off the Affordable Care Act, including its key protections for pre-existing health conditions and subsidized insurance premiums that affect tens of millions of Americans.

Meeting remotely a week after the election and in the midst of a pandemic that has closed their majestic courtroom, the justices on Tuesday took on the latest Republican challenge to the Obama-era health care law, with three appointees of President Donald Trump, an avowed foe of the law, among them.

But at least one of those Trump appointees, Justice Brett Kavanaugh, seemed likely to vote to leave the bulk of the law intact, even if he were to find the law’s now-toothless mandate that everyone obtain health insurance to be unconstitutional.

“It does seem fairly clear that the proper remedy would be to sever the mandate provision and leave the rest of the act in place,” Kavanaugh said.

Chief Justice John Roberts, who wrote two earlier opinions preserving the law, stated similar views, and the court’s three liberal justices are almost certain to vote to uphold the law in its entirety. That presumably would form a majority by joining a decision to cut away only the mandate, which now has no financial penalty attached to it. Congress zeroed out the penalty in 2017, but left the rest of the law untouched.

Source: AFP

Ivory Coast: West African nations, France call for dialogue as post-election clashes continue

11, November 2020

Ivory Coast: West African nations, France call for dialogue as post-election clashes continue 0

More clashes broke out over Ivory Coast President Alassane Ouattara’s reelection on Tuesday as West African nations and France called for dialogue to end tensions over his contested third term.

Ouattara secured the October 31 election by more than 94 percent, but the West African nation is mired in a dispute after opposition leaders rejected the vote, accusing him of breaching the two-term limit for the presidency.

Tensions have revived trauma over disputed elections in 2010 that unleashed a brief civil war in the West African country, claiming around 3,000 lives.

At least three people were killed in the central-eastern town of M’Batto between Monday and Tuesday when violence erupted between rival ethnic communities over Ouattara’s third term, police and local residents said.

“The situation is calm now and reinforcements are patrolling the area,” a gendarmerie spokesman said, confirming the total of three killed and 26 wounded.

Another nine people died in violence in two other towns on Monday as the country’s top court validated Ouattara’s election victory.

More than 8,000 Ivorians have fled to neighbouring countries, fearing election-linked violence, the UN refugee agency said Tuesday.

West African bloc ECOWAS offered warm congratulations” to Ouattara, but the 15-member group urged him to bring Ivorians together after the unrest that has killed around 50 people since August.

Ouattara, a former IMF economist first elected in 2010, has urged chief rival Henri Konan Bedie to drop the protests and hold talks to defuse the crisis.

“I will be the president for all Ivorians,” he said in a national broadcast on Monday evening.

There has been no official response from the main opposition party PDCI or its chief Bedie, an 86-year-old former president.

Bedie’s Abidjan home is still blockaded by security forces. Two other opposition chiefs have been arrested for suspected insurrection after rejecting the ballot and announcing a rival government.

But one opposition representative maintained a hard line.

“We do not recognise the election. We all know he (Ouattara) violated the constitution,” said N’Goran Djiedri, leader of one faction of the PDCI.

“Yes to dialogue, but the rule of law must be respected.”

Face-to-face talks

ECOWAS urged “all Ivorians to put peace and social cohesion above all and seek to resolve their differences through dialogue and legal channels”.

The UN, EU and African Union have all urged talks to stop tensions worsening in Ivory Coast, the world’s top cocoa producer, francophone West Africa’s largest economy and a business hub.

Western diplomats and government sources say talks are ongoing with both sides, though no solid progress has been made so far.

French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said Ivory Coast’s former colonial ruler considered Ouattara’s offer of dialogue went “in the right direction”, but hoped that “acts will contribute to appeasement”.

“Bedie and Ouattara could see each other and be seen with each other, to take the tensions down a level,” one Western diplomat said.

“The real discussion needs to happen between these two.”

The bitter rivalry has marked Ivorian politics for decades along with ethnic and regional loyalties.

In power since 2010, Ouattara had said that at the end of his second term he would make way for the next generation, raising hopes for an end to the long-running feuds.

But the sudden death of his chosen successor in July prompted a change of mind.

His bid angered opposition chiefs, stoking tensions over a possible post-election crisis similar to one in 2010-11 when then-president Laurent Gbagbo refused to accept defeat by Ouattara.

French troops eventually intervened and Ouattara loyalists were able to oust Gbagbo.

The country was already divided in two after a civil war—the north held by rebels and the south by Gbagbo’s forces.

Source: AFP

Trump lifts ban on BIR training program, says Yaoundé can now receive US military assistance

11, November 2020

Trump lifts ban on BIR training program, says Yaoundé can now receive US military assistance 0

The decision was made before the US presidential election; Donald Trump authorized the United States military to train officers from six so far blacklisted African states.

Just days before the US presidential election, the Trump administration said six African nations including Cameroon previously accused of recruiting children into their armies could now receive US military assistance. 

Former U.S. President Barack Obama had ordered 300 members of the armed forces to Cameroon in 2015 to counter the militant Nigerian Islamist group Boko Haram.

The mission was part of a broader regional effort to stop the spread of Boko Haram and other violent extremist organizations in West Africa.”

The US advanced team reportedly conducted airborne intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance operations in the Far North region.

However, the Trump administration blacklisted Cameroon and five other countries for recruiting children into their military. Critics now say the decision to lift the ban on Cameroon goes a long way to demonstrate how the Trump admin has been consistently inconsistent in its dealing with dictators like Biya.

By Chi Prudence Asong

Geneva: Biya’s security staff loses appeal for assaulting journalist

11, November 2020

Geneva: Biya’s security staff loses appeal for assaulting journalist 0

A Geneva court has rejected the appeal of six members of Cameroon president Paul Biya’s security detail who were convicted for assaulting a Swiss journalist during the president’s visit last year.

Robert Assaël, the lawyer of one of the defendants, confirmed reports of the judgment in local Geneva media on Tuesday. He added that the Geneva appeals court had violated international law with the judgment as the president’s staff enjoys diplomatic immunity, preventing them from criminal prosecution.

“It doesn’t matter if the head of state was on a private visit, was inside the hotel and was not approached [by the journalist].”

The journalist from Swiss public television, RTS, was assaulted by the president’s entourage in front of the InterContinental Hotel, where Biya was staying during a visit to Geneva in June 2019.

The journalist said members of Biya’s security team took his bag containing a mobile phone and wallet. The seized items were later returned. He sustained minor injuries.

‘Unacceptable’

The incident took place during a demonstration outside the hotel where Biya was staying by a group of protesters. The assault prompted Switzerland to summon the ambassador of Cameroon to Bern, where he was told that “such incidents are unacceptable, and that freedom of the press is protected and must be respected”.

The six employees were initially arrested in June 2019 and given suspended prison sentences. In July, Geneva prosecutors found the individuals (five men and one woman) guilty of coercion, damage to property and illegal appropriation. The Geneva judiciary found no justification for the response by Biya’s team.

According to reports in the French-language paper La Tribune de Genève, the defendants plan to appeal to the federal court.

Source: Swissinfo

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