Egypt to export lifesaving insulin to Cuba

Egypt to export lifesaving insulin to Cuba
The insulin injections, produced in Egypt, will be exported to Cuba as part of a new pharmaceutical market expansion into Latin America. Above, Calixto Garcia hospital in Havana. (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 10 March 2024
Follow

Egypt to export lifesaving insulin to Cuba

Egypt to export lifesaving insulin to Cuba

CAIRO: Egypt will export lifesaving insulin injections to Cuba as part of a new pharmaceutical market expansion into Latin America.

The Insulinagypt injections, produced in Egypt and used to treat diabetes, will be exported through the United Company for Pharmaceuticals, an affiliate of the ACDIMA group.

Khaled Abdel Ghaffar, Egypt’s minister of housing, said: “This marks the beginning of a new phase of fruitful cooperation between the Egyptian state and Cuba, with the export of Egyptian-made human insulin.”

He added: “This achievement is significant as it represents the first presence of an Arab-African-Egyptian company supplying Cuba with medicines, namely the United Company for Pharmaceuticals, one of the companies affiliated with the ACDIMA group, led by Dr. Alfat Garab.”

Garab is the chairperson of ACDIMA, which will act as Egyptian representative for the pharmaceutical exports to Cuba.

In a statement, Garab said: “The Arab Company for Drug Industries and Medical Appliances is an Egyptian entity encompassing a collection of leading pharmaceutical manufacturing companies, including the Center for Bioequivalence and Afri Pharma for collaboration with African countries in pharmaceutical products and healthcare services.

“ACDIMA’s products are distributed in 80 countries worldwide, and its new project leads Egypt’s rapidly growing efforts to localize the latest technologies and gain the capacity to produce modern products, especially in the fields of oncology, biosimilars, and biologics, while strictly adhering to international regulations.

“We are delighted to collaborate with the Cuban side and are ready to cooperate with many Latin American countries.”

Ahmed Shawkat, Egypt’s deputy minister of health, told Arab News: “Egyptian insulin commands a market share ranging between 12 to 18 million vials annually, and is exported to 11 African countries, affirming a complete commitment to ensuring the availability of this essential medication to those in need, regardless of their geographical location.

“Providing human insulin to Cuba is of great significance to both Egypt and Cuba, and symbolizes a momentous instance of cooperation between the two countries.

“Moreover, the export of Egyptian insulin to Cuba not only serves as a stimulus for bilateral cooperation, but also represents a crucial step in providing lifesaving treatment for individuals suffering from the longstanding burden of diabetes, which affects millions globally.”

The opening of the export market is a “testament to Egypt’s unwavering commitment” to ensuring basic healthcare for all, Shawkat added.

“As members of the global community under the stewardship of our political leadership, we bear the responsibility to support each other, especially in times of need,” he said.

The deputy minister added: “Egyptian companies are keen on establishing international cooperation to enable the transfer and localization of technology and joint production of diagnostic tools, medications, and composite treatments for various cancer conditions, significantly impacting the achievements of various presidential campaigns and initiatives.”


WFP suspends Gaza movment after vehicle hit by bullets near Israeli checkpoint

WFP suspends Gaza movment after vehicle hit by bullets near Israeli checkpoint
Updated 17 sec ago
Follow

WFP suspends Gaza movment after vehicle hit by bullets near Israeli checkpoint

WFP suspends Gaza movment after vehicle hit by bullets near Israeli checkpoint
UNITED NATIONS: The United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) temporarily suspended movements across the Gaza Strip on Wednesday after it said one of its clearly marked vehicles was struck by at least 10 bullets while approaching an Israeli military checkpoint.
WFP said in a statement that the convoy of two armored vehicles had received “multiple clearances by Israeli authorities to approach” the checkpoint at the Wadi Gaza bridge on Tuesday evening.
“A clearly marked UN humanitarian vehicle, part of a convoy that had been fully coordinated with the IDF was struck 10 times by IDF gunfire, including with bullets targeting front windows,” UN Secretary-General spokesman Stephane Dujarric said, adding that the two occupants were unharmed.
“This is the latest incident to underscore that systems in place for coordination are not working, and we continue to work with the IDF to ensure that incidents like that do not happen again,” Dujarric told reporters.
“We have no way to assess the mindset of those who are shooting at us,” he added.
It is not the first incident of UN vehicles being hit since the start of the war between Israel and Hamas, triggered by the unprecedented October 7 attack.
In May, a UN staff member from India was killed when their vehicle was struck by what the United Nations said was tank fire in southern Gaza.

Burning oil tanker drifting but still afloat, British maritime agency says

Burning oil tanker drifting but still afloat, British maritime agency says
Updated 1 min 41 sec ago
Follow

Burning oil tanker drifting but still afloat, British maritime agency says

Burning oil tanker drifting but still afloat, British maritime agency says
  • UKMTO warns other vessels to transit area with caution
  • Greek-flagged Sounion, carrying 150,000 tonnes of crude, was attacked last week

AL-MUKALLA: The oil tanker that burst into flames in the Red Sea after an attack by the Houthis remains afloat but has begun to drift, a UK maritime agency said on Wednesday.

United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations said on X that it had “received reports from a passing merchant vessel, that MT SOUNION (IMO: 9312145) remains afloat, but is believed to be drifting in position 1500N 04139E at 0740 UTC.”

It warned ships to take caution while passing near the stricken vessel.

The announcement came as the EU naval mission in the Red Sea — Operation Aspides — reiterated its message that the Sounion posed a dual hazard to the Red Sea.

“All passing vessels in the vicinity are required to proceed with utmost caution, as the M/V SOUNION poses both a navigational risk and a serious and imminent threat of regional pollution,” it said on X.

The mission shared images of flames rising from the ship but said there was no evidence of an oil leak and that it was still moored and not drifting.

Yemen’s Houthi militia attacked the Greek-flagged tanker, which was carrying 150,000 tonnes of crude oil, last week. Its engine was damaged and the crew were forced to evacuate.

The Houthis said the ship was targeted because its parent company broke its restriction on sailing to Israeli ports. The Iran-backed militia has been targeting vessels with links to Israel or heading to Israeli ports in a bid to pressure the country into ending its war in Gaza.

Meanwhile, the UN’s Yemen envoy, Hans Grundberg, on Wednesday repeated his call for the Houthis to release UN personnel kidnapped by the militia.

His office issued a statement announcing the completion of his trip to Oman, where he met local officials and the Houthis’ top negotiator Mohammed Abdul Sallam to discuss peace efforts and de-escalation.

“Throughout all his meetings, the special envoy reiterated the UN secretary-general’s urgent call for the immediate and unconditional release of detained UN personnel,” it said.

The Houthis have seized almost 70 Yemeni aid and human rights workers employed by international organizations, including UN agencies and foreign embassies. While the UN, governments and other organizations have appealed for them to be released, the militia has threatened to prosecute them on the charge of spying for the US and Israel.

On Tuesday, the group’s news agency announced that Houthi Foreign Minister Jamal Amer had received the credentials of Ali Mohammed Ramadani as Iran’s new ambassador to Yemen in Sanaa.

Ramadani succeeds Hasan Irlu, who died in Yemen in late 2021.

The Yemeni government has regularly accused Iran, the only nation with a diplomatic presence in Houthi-held Sanaa, of moving Revolutionary Guard commanders into Yemen disguised as diplomats.


Tunisia arrests Italian for building irregular migrant boat

Tunisia arrests Italian for building irregular migrant boat
Updated 28 August 2024
Follow

Tunisia arrests Italian for building irregular migrant boat

Tunisia arrests Italian for building irregular migrant boat
  • Building illegal makeshift boats usually involves networks of local Tunisians and migrants from sub-Saharan Africa

TUNIS: Tunisian authorities have arrested an Italian man suspected of building a boat for irregular migrants trying to reach to Europe, a judicial source told AFP on Wednesday.
The 45-year-old who was not named “works in a boat building factory,” Farid Jha, spokesman for the public prosecutor’s office in Monastir, a coastal city in east-central Tunisia, told AFP.
He was arrested Tuesday after authorities intercepted a boat which he built from plastic resin that had been used in a bid by migrants to cross the Mediterranean for Europe, said Jha.
Three Tunisians who helped plan the crossing were also arrested, he said, adding that another suspect was still on the run.
Each year, tens of thousands of people set off by boat from Tunisia and neighboring Libya for Europe, with Italy their first port of call.
It is the first time a European citizen is arrested in Tunisia in connection with such irregular migration crossings.
Building illegal makeshift boats usually involves networks of local Tunisians and migrants from sub-Saharan Africa.
Sfax, Tunisia’s second largest city and a key departure point, is a hotspot for building makeshift boats, which often lead to shipwrecks and migrants dead or missing.
Since January 1, at least 103 makeshift boats have capsized and 341 bodies, including of 336 foreigners, have been recovered off Tunisia’s coast, according to the interior ministry.
More than 1,300 people died or disappeared last year in shipwrecks off the North African country, according to the Tunisian FTDES rights group.
The International Organization for Migration has said more than 27,000 migrants have died in the Mediterranean in the past decade, including more than 3,000 last year.


Hungry Gazans face crippling price rises as war rages

Canned products are displayed with 120 NIS ($32.81) illustrating how much they are worth in the local market in north Gaza.
Canned products are displayed with 120 NIS ($32.81) illustrating how much they are worth in the local market in north Gaza.
Updated 28 August 2024
Follow

Hungry Gazans face crippling price rises as war rages

Canned products are displayed with 120 NIS ($32.81) illustrating how much they are worth in the local market in north Gaza.
  • “We do not have vegetables, meat products, eggs or anything,” said Abu Issam, a Palestinian from northern Gaza
  • “Where are the governments? Where are the people? They are supposed to watch out for us, to have mercy on the people,” he said

GAZA: Most Palestinians shopping for hungry families can only stare at the meagre offerings in Gaza City’s street markets, frustrated that soaring prices and shortages of food are pushing essential supplies beyond their reach.
Prices of basic commodities have more than quadrupled since the conflict began, piling pressure on families already traumatized by Israel’s military campaign and a humanitarian crisis, with no ceasefire in sight, Gaza residents say.
“We do not have vegetables, meat products, eggs or anything,” said Abu Issam, a Palestinian from northern Gaza.
“Where are the governments? Where are the people? They are supposed to watch out for us, to have mercy on the people. Let me tell you something — yesterday I slept hungry.”
The price of three potatoes is currently at 150 Shekels ($41.01). Before the war, one kg (2.2 lb) of potatoes cost two Shekels ($0.55), residents said.
A jar of honey used to cost 25 Shekels ($6.84), now it is sold for 85 Shekels ($23.24), they said.
Residents said they are mostly relying on canned products that come through aid delivered to the territory, given the unavailability of other food products.
“We are now wishing for a grape that we used to grow in our lands… Your son asks for money to buy some things... but now even 5 Shekels for your son are not enough to buy even one product,” said Gaza resident Abu Anwar Hassanein.
A high risk of famine persists across Gaza as long as the war continues and humanitarian access is restricted, according to an assessment by a global hunger monitor published on June 25. The Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) added that more than 495,000 people in Gaza are facing the most severe, catastrophic level of food insecurity.
Even before the conflict, two-thirds of the population lived in poverty and 45 percent of the workforce was unemployed. After the war, Gaza’s economy could take decades to recover.
“We are unable to live, we are unable to buy anything. There’s nothing, we are not working,” said Palestinian laborer Mohammed Al-Katnany.
“You have the pregnant women, how are they supposed to grow their child while pregnant? How is she supposed to give birth? Diseases are everywhere,” said Hassanein.
More than 40,500 Palestinians have been killed during Israel’s offensive on Gaza, according to local health authorities, and the enclave has been laid to waste. Most of its 2.3 million people have been displaced several times and face acute shortages of food and medicine, humanitarian agencies say.
The latest war started after Hamas militants attacked southern Israel on Oct. 7 killing 1,200 and taking more than 250 hostages, according to Israeli tallies.


UN says Israeli raids risk worsening ‘catastrophic’ W. Bank situation

Palestinian children stand amid the destruction caused by an Israeli raid in the Nur Shams camp near Tulkarem
Palestinian children stand amid the destruction caused by an Israeli raid in the Nur Shams camp near Tulkarem
Updated 28 August 2024
Follow

UN says Israeli raids risk worsening ‘catastrophic’ W. Bank situation

Palestinian children stand amid the destruction caused by an Israeli raid in the Nur Shams camp near Tulkarem
  • “Many children have been killed while throwing stones at highly protected Israeli security forces,” Shamdasani said
  • “Israel, as the occupying power, must abide by its obligations under international law,” she said

GENEVA: Israel’s large-scale military operation Wednesday in the occupied West Bank “risks seriously deepening the already catastrophic situation” in the Palestinian territory, the United Nations said.
The Israeli military launched a series of coordinated raids across four cities — Jenin, Nablus, Tubas and Tulkarem — with the army saying it killed nine Palestinian fighters.
Israel’s operations in the cities “and the killing of at least nine Palestinians, two of them reportedly children, take the overall death toll in the West Bank since October 7 to 637,” UN Human Rights Office spokeswoman Ravina Shamdasani said in a statement.
“This represents the highest number of fatalities over a period of eight months since the UN first started recording casualties in the West Bank two decades ago.”
Violence has surged in the West Bank during the Gaza war sparked by Hamas’s unprecedented October 7 attacks on Israel.
“Many children have been killed while throwing stones at highly protected Israeli security forces, as have other Palestinians posing no imminent threat to life or serious injury,” Shamdasani said.
“Such unnecessary or disproportionate use of force and the increase in apparent targeted and other summary killings are alarming.”
She said thousands of Palestinians had been arbitrarily arrested and tortured, subjected to unrelenting settler violence, severe restrictions on movement and expression, their homes and property destroyed or seized, and forcibly displaced.
“Israel, as the occupying power, must abide by its obligations under international law,” she said.
“The Israeli security forces’ use of airstrikes and other military weapons and tactics violates human rights norms and standards applicable to law enforcement operations.”
Shamdasani said alleged unlawful killings needed to be thoroughly and independently investigated, and those responsible held to account.