Africa CDC likely to declare mpox health emergency: director

Africa CDC likely to declare mpox health emergency: director
The African Union’s health watchdog said on Thursday it was “likely” to declare a public health emergency next week over the growing mpox outbreak on the continent. (AFP/File)
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Updated 09 August 2024
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Africa CDC likely to declare mpox health emergency: director

Africa CDC likely to declare mpox health emergency: director
  • The declaration of the health emergency was “likely” next week
  • At least 16 countries of the continent’s 55 nations have been affected with mpox

NAIROBI: The African Union’s health watchdog said on Thursday it was “likely” to declare a public health emergency next week over the growing mpox outbreak on the continent.
The decision will unlock funding to combat the outbreak, including the procurement of much-needed vaccines, and trigger a coordinated continental response to the virus.
Jean Kaseya, head of the Africa Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC), said during an online media briefing that the declaration of the health emergency was “likely” next week.
At least 16 countries of the continent’s 55 nations have been affected with mpox, according to the Africa CDC.
Some 38,465 cases and 1,456 deaths have been reported in Africa since January 2022.
Of these, 887 cases and five deaths were reported last week, according to data from Africa CDC.
“We are moving from two outbreaks per week to three new outbreaks per week,” Kaseya said, adding that there was a shortage of vaccines on the continent.
Formerly known as monkeypox, mpox is an infectious disease caused by a virus transmitted to humans by infected animals but can also be passed from human to human through close physical contact.
The disease causes fever, muscular aches and large boil-like skin lesions.
The World Health Organization announced Wednesday it was urgently convening an expert committee to advise on whether the growing mpox outbreak in Africa should be declared an international emergency.
“The committee will meet as soon as possible and will be made up of independent experts from a range of relevant disciplines from around the world,” WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told a press conference.
The committee will advise him on whether the outbreak represents a public health emergency of international concern (PHEIC) — the highest alarm the WHO can sound.
Only Tedros, as the WHO director-general, can declare a PHEIC, based on the expert committee’s advice. A declaration then triggers emergency responses in countries worldwide under the legally binding International Health Regulations.
Mpox was first discovered in humans in 1970 in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).
There are two subtypes of the virus: the more virulent and deadlier Clade I, endemic in the Congo Basin in central Africa; and Clade II, endemic in West Africa.
In May 2022, mpox infections surged worldwide, mostly affecting gay and bisexual men, due to the Clade IIb subclade.
Deadlier and more transmissible than previous forms, the mpox strain surging in the DRC since September, known as the Clade Ib subclade, is spread person-to-person.
The Clade Ib strain causes skin rashes across the whole body, unlike other strains where lesions and rashes are usually limited to the mouth, face and genitals.

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Swifties harness their power for Kamala Harris

Swifties harness their power for Kamala Harris
Updated 20 sec ago
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Swifties harness their power for Kamala Harris

Swifties harness their power for Kamala Harris
  • Swifties For Kamala began as a social media initiative founded by social media user

NEW YORK: Taylor Swift has yet to weigh in on the US presidential race, but some of her superfans are already stumping for Kamala Harris.
As of Wednesday midday “Swifties for Kamala” had raised more than $140,000 in favor of the Democratic White House hopeful.
They held an inaugural fundraising call the evening prior that was joined by some 27,000 viewers, launching the effort aimed at “turning our swiftie power into political power,” as the group’s political director put it during the meeting.
Stars like Carole King along with Senators Elizabeth Warren and Kirsten Gillibrand appeared in the virtual meeting.
“I am a swiftie, and Taylor and I are actually friends,” King, the legendary singer-songwriter behind hits including “I Feel The Earth Move” and “You’ve Got A Friend” said on the call.
“I’ve been a political activist for years. I’ve been a volunteer, I’ve been a door knocker, even as a famous person,” King continued.
“I’m telling you all this because if any of you are thinking of volunteering to be door knockers or phone callers, but you’re a little nervous about what you might say, please believe me: there is nothing to lose and everything to gain.”
Swifties For Kamala began as a social media initiative founded by social media user and swiftie Emerald Medrano in the hours after President Joe Biden dropped out of the race.
The effort blossomed across platforms, and with accounts that currently have more than 72,000 subscribers on X, and nearly 50,000 on Instagram.
Swift herself is not personally affiliated with the group.
“We’re a coalition of Taylor Swift fans committed to protecting the United States of America’s historical democracy by working together to help progressive candidates in local and national elections, including Vice President Kamala Harris for our country’s next president,” reads the group’s mission statement on their website.
The group has a policy platform section on their website urging the protection of LGBTQIA+ rights and reproductive freedom, as well as support for new immigrants and taking climate change seriously.
They also list “a permanent ceasefire between Israel and Hamas” as a priority.
Along with collecting donations they’re encouraging swifties to register to vote, and selling merchandise including shirts that say “In My Voting Era.”

A global megastar with hundreds of millions of social media followers and a wildly loyal — and chronically online — fan base, Swift can move any needle with the tiniest of efforts.
The right and the left have long wanted to count the “Blank Space” singer as their own — but for years Swift stayed conspicuously out of politics, including in 2016 when Donald Trump won the presidency.
Speculation abounded that the superstar was a closet Republican, until 2018, when she broke both her silence and the Internet by endorsing the Democratic opponent of far-right politician Marsha Blackburn in Tennessee.
Blackburn won anyway, but it ushered in a new chapter for Swift: she later explained handlers had urged her against wading into politics, telling her it could damage her career — particularly in the country music industry, which despite its complexities is often associated with conservatism.
Swift endorsed Joe Biden in 2020 and has conveyed pro-LGBTQ+ messages through her songs and music videos.
She also condemned the Supreme Court’s reversal of the federal right to abortion, and has encouraged droves of her fans to register to vote.
But Swift’s massive popularity has also meant she’s a regular target for political misinformation and right-wing conspiracy theories, often fueled by AI and amplified by the likes of Donald Trump.
Nabbing a Swift endorsement for Harris isn’t the goal of her organizing fans, they say.
“We are not waiting on Taylor to show her support for Kamala Harris. We are doing this outside of her, using the platform of swifties as a way to get people involved in the election,” Rohan Reagan, among the group’s social media managers, told Cosmopolitan recently.
Democratic Senator Ed Markey, who also joined the kickoff call, told swifties that “I am in awe of the community you have created online to share not just your love for Taylor Swift, but your commitment to building a better world.”
“This is the time, this is the place,” he continued. “The swifties are the leaders for us to win this election.”


Ethiopia fears ‘dangers’ of new Somalia peace mission

Ethiopia fears ‘dangers’ of new Somalia peace mission
Updated 51 min 35 sec ago
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Ethiopia fears ‘dangers’ of new Somalia peace mission

Ethiopia fears ‘dangers’ of new Somalia peace mission
  • New mission, known as AUSSOM, is due to replace in January an AU peacekeeping force that is deployed in Somalia to fight the Al-Shabab extremist group
  • Addis Ababa warned it was ‘fraught with dangers’ and accused Somalia of colluding with unnamed actors seeking to destabilize the volatile Horn of Africa

NAIROBI: Ethiopia on Wednesday warned that a new African Union-led mission for Somalia could worsen tensions in volatile East Africa, after Egypt said it sent military aid to the conflict-ridden nation.
The new mission, known as AUSSOM, is due to replace in January an AU peacekeeping force that is deployed in Somalia to fight the Al-Shabab extremist group.
Addis Ababa warned it was “fraught with dangers” and accused Somalia of colluding with unnamed actors seeking to destabilize the volatile Horn of Africa.
The concern came after Egypt — which has long been at odds with Ethiopia — sent military equipment to Somalia in a move likely to escalate tensions between Cairo and Addis Ababa.
“The region is entering into uncharted waters,” Ethiopia’s foreign ministry said in a statement.
“Ethiopia cannot stand idle while other actors are taking measures to destabilize the region,” it said, adding that it was monitoring the developments.
Cairo and Addis Ababa have been at loggerheads for years, trading incendiary words over Ethiopia’s mega-dam project on the Blue Nile, which Egypt says threatens its fragile water security.
Egypt has long viewed the massive $4.2-billion dam as an existential threat, as it relies on the Nile for 97 percent of its water needs.
Protracted negotiations over the dam since 2011 have thus far failed to bring about an agreement between Ethiopia and its downstream neighbors.
Relations between Mogadishu and Addis Ababa also nosedived after Ethiopia in January struck a controversial maritime deal with the breakaway Somali region of Somaliland.
Somaliland, a former British protectorate of 4.5 million people, has not had its independence claim recognized by the international community.
Egypt and Somalia have meanwhile drawn closer together and signed a military cooperation agreement this month.
It was not immediately clear what Egypt had sent to Somalia but Somali ambassador to Egypt Ali Abdi on Wednesday lauded the consignment as important.
“It is the first practical step to implement the outcomes of the Egyptian-Somali summit held recently in Cairo between President Hassan Sheikh Mahmoud and President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi,” the statement quoted Abdi as saying.
He added that Egypt will be the first country to deploy forces to support the Somali security after the withdrawal of the current AU force, known as ATMIS, according to a statement published by local media.
ATMIS, which operates with a mandate from the AU but is also mandated by the UN Security Council, is due to fully withdraw and hand over security responsibilities to the Somali army and police by the end of 2024.
The mission comprises troops from Burundi, Djibouti, Ethiopia, Kenya and Uganda.


Ethiopia says mega-dam doubles electricity output

Ethiopia says mega-dam doubles electricity output
Updated 28 August 2024
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Ethiopia says mega-dam doubles electricity output

Ethiopia says mega-dam doubles electricity output

NAIROBI: Ethiopia said it has more than doubled electricity production from its controversial mega-dam on the Blue Nile after two more turbines started operations.

The multibillion-dollar Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam, long a source of tensions with downstream nations Egypt and Sudan, is now generating 1,550 megawatts of electricity, GERD said in a post on X late Tuesday.

“The overall progress of the GERD has now transitioned from construction phase to operation phase,” it said, adding that construction of the concrete dam was now complete.

“The two turbines generating 400MW each have now started operations, adding to the already functional two turbines generating 375MW each, totaling an output of 1,550MW.”

The dam’s spillways were also releasing an extra 2,800 cubic meters of water to the downstream countries, it added.

Ethiopia first began generating electricity at the $4.2-billion project, which is located in the northwest of the country around 30 kilometers (18 miles) from the border with Sudan, in February 2022.

At full capacity, the huge dam — 1.8 kilometers long and 145 meters high — could generate more than 5,000 megawatts of power when all 13 turbines are operational.

That would make it Africa’s biggest hydroelectric dam and more than double Ethiopia’s current output.

Addis Ababa deems the GERD essential for the electrification and development of Africa’s second most populous country.

According to the World Bank, roughly half of the 120 million population still does not have access to reliable electricity.

The dam, which can hold up to 74 billion cubic meters of water, has been at the center of a regional dispute ever since Ethiopia broke ground on the project in 2011.

Egypt and Sudan have voiced concerns about its operation without a three-way agreement, fearing it could threaten their access to vital Nile waters, but on-off negotiations have failed to make a breakthrough.


Harris’ campaign hires Egyptian American lawyer for Arab voter outreach

Harris’ campaign hires Egyptian American lawyer for Arab voter outreach
Updated 28 August 2024
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Harris’ campaign hires Egyptian American lawyer for Arab voter outreach

Harris’ campaign hires Egyptian American lawyer for Arab voter outreach
  • Brenda Abdelall would be tasked with shoring up support from a community frustrated with US support for Israel’s war in Gaza

WASHINGTON: Kamala Harris’ campaign for US president has hired an Egyptian American lawyer and former Department of Homeland Security official to help lead outreach to Arab American voters who hold sway in some states that could help decide the Nov. 5 election, two sources told Reuters.
Brenda Abdelall would be tasked with shoring up support from a community frustrated with US support for Israel’s war in Gaza. Harris, a Democrat, has already hired Afghan American lawyer Nasrina Bargzie for outreach to Muslim Americans.
Harris’ campaign had no immediate comment on Abdelall’s hiring. Abdelall did not respond to a request for comment.
Harris is in a tight race with Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump. Votes from Muslim and Arab Americans could help decide the outcome in battleground states like Michigan, which has seen street protests over the Israel-Gaza war.
US President Joe Biden won a large share of the Arab and Muslim vote in 2020, but his support for Israel despite the huge death toll in Gaza has frustrated many community members. They launched an “uncommitted” campaign against him in the Democratic nominating contests.
Michigan, where Harris is due to visit next week, is home to one of the largest Muslim and Arab American populations in the US More than 100,000 voters cast their ballot “uncommitted” instead of Biden in the state’s primary.
Some activists say they hold Harris responsible for the Biden administration’s Israel policy and the crisis in Gaza. Following last week’s Democratic convention, pro-Palestinian activists said Harris had failed to demonstrate any break from the status quo.
Abdelall, Harris’ pick for Arab American outreach, most recently served as senior counselor to the Department of Homeland Security’s secretary. She joined the agency in January, 2021, shortly after Trump left office, to be chief of staff for the department’s civil rights office.
Abdelall, who grew up in Ann Arbor, Michigan, previously ran a food blog and website focused on Middle Eastern cuisine. She has taught Middle Eastern cooking classes at a culinary school in northern Virginia.
The war in Gaza began after on Oct. 7 after Hamas militants stormed from the enclave into southern Israel, killing 1,200 and taking more than 250 hostages, according to Israeli figures.
Israel’s Gaza campaign has since demolished swaths of the enclave, displaced nearly all its 2.3 million people multiple times, given rise to deadly hunger and disease and killed more than 40,500 people, Palestinian health officials say.


Indonesia’s anti-graft body plans to query president’s son about private jet trip

Indonesia’s anti-graft body plans to query president’s son about private jet trip
Updated 28 August 2024
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Indonesia’s anti-graft body plans to query president’s son about private jet trip

Indonesia’s anti-graft body plans to query president’s son about private jet trip
  • Details of the trip, some in social media posts by Kaesang’s wife, have sparked public anger

JAKARTA: Indonesia’s anti-graft agency plans to ask the youngest son of President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo to clarify his use of a private jet on a recent overseas trip as well as who paid for the travel, its deputy chief said on Wednesday.

The comments come days after nationwide protests led parliament to shelve plans for legislation that critics said would weaken opponents of Jokowi and also allow his son, 29-year-old Kaesang Pangarep, to run in regional elections.

“An official’s son went on a trip using a private jet,” the agency official, Alexander Marwata, told Reuters. “The people want to know whether the facilities used had something to do with his parent, as a state official.”

Details of the trip, some in social media posts by Kaesang’s wife, have sparked public anger.

“If those facilities have something to do with his parent’s job, that should be reported as receiving improper gifts,” Marwata added, referring to rules that ban officials from receiving gifts. “If they don’t, there’s no problem.”

Kaesang did not immediately respond to a request for comment. It was not immediately clear when he would be questioned.

The president’s office declined to comment.