Tuesday 8 June 2021

Europe’s Vaccine Nightmare Is Coming to An End

 Contributors: Alberto Nardelli

Updated on May 14, 5:42 AM EDT

What You Need To Know

After a sluggish start, the European Union’s vaccination campaign finally picked up the pace. By mid-May, the EU’s rate of vaccination was broadly in line with the U.S. and the U.K. after having trailed both for months. It also clinched a deal with Pfizer-BioNTech for a further 1.8 billion doses through to 2023 and hopes to conclude negotiations with the U.S. biotechnology company Novavax soon.

Major member states, including Italy, France and Germany, are now inoculating hundreds of thousands people a day.

With the EU now in a double dip recession and with most of the continent still facing restrictions, the latest data will be most welcome after the EU dealt with a slow vaccine rollout.

Unlike Britain and the U.S., the EU’s procurement efforts didn’t prioritize domestic deliveries first. As of March, some 77 million doses were exported from the EU to 33 countries, in addition to millions of jabs for lower income countries through the Covax facility. Since January, the EU introduced rules whereby companies need permission to export. So far, only one delivery has been blocked.

As national governments pick up the pace of their inoculation campaigns, the EU is still hoping to hit its target of inoculating 70% of the adult population by the end of the summer.

By The Numbers

  • 31.5 millionThe number of Covid cases in the EU and the European Economic Area as of May 14, according to the ECDC.
  • 213 millionThe number of vaccines delivered to the EU as of May 14.
  • 180 millionThe number of shots administered by EU member states as of this week.

Why It Matters

The EU’s slower vaccine rollout means that plans to reopen the bloc’s economies will trail behind the U.S. and the U.K., potentially adding billions more to the cost of recovering from months of lockdown.

Any further delays also risk fuelling political instability and anti-EU sentiment as national politicians shift the blame to Brussels. Further risks are heightened trade spats between allies, making it more difficult to focus efforts on cooperating on other common challenges, piling more pressure on industries that are hoping Europe opens up soon.

    The challenge is ensuring improved pandemic performance doesn’t go to waste.

    Wednesday 2 June 2021

    Dr. Pamela Odhiambo - Women Representative Migori County




    Oh yes. My ex boss and I might not have ended on palatable terms (over salary increment issues) but the reason I've always kept my mouth shut from defending myself even when I was trolled senseless over why I left her fold is the respect I have for her.

    Two things she actually sat me down and taught me. That there's no shame in starting from the bottom and working your way up.
    She told me she married her now Prof. Husband when he had ONE SUFURIA. He would make skuma wiki, put it in a plate, rinse the Sufuria then knead ugali.
    It is a story hard to believe if you look at where they are now. That woman started from teaching primary, to high school to lecturing at JKUAT and now she's a leader.
    Discipline. Partnership. Dedication. Hard work
    All while married and has given birth to ELEVEN CHILDREN. Let me take that again, Dr. Pamela Odhiambo has 11 BIOLOGICAL kids. And she's not 50 yet
    Her husband also grew from teacher to lecturer to a Professor of Math and now VC, Meru University
    Most women get comfortable once they marry and have kids. The husband pursues his career growth, while you remain behind with your ka Dip or one degree then you complain that men change wakiomoka. When he was growing, where were you?
    I'm always convinced a progressive man will not stop you from conquering the moon if you wish and will offer his shoulder for you to climb so that you can reach the galaxy. So long as you remain committed as a wife, spouse, partner and mother. Ubaya ni most of you when you get status, you begin to disregard your men
    Exactly why I always insist, MARRY CHARACTER. Tabia na utu jameni, pesa huja ikitafutwa. Process over ready made works for me. Personally, I want to be an active stakeholder in what we will have as a couple. I've always been a proponent of WE DID IT! and not I did it, I made you. That "we" factor is the beauty of any meaningful relationship and life journey
    If she or he has potential and you share fundamental values, IT WILL Work.
    Tanzanian President Suluhu got most of her education while married and I'm sure the husband today is happy he was the wind beneath her wings
    Second thing she told me. That if I ever get married, I should never use sex as a weapon or tool for blackmail. I believe she practices this(11 kids hakunywa kwa Fanta)
    Nanio knows, we will fight but I'll fwok him. Then I'll go back to sulking but come on, most times, by the time he's done driving me nuts, I'd have forgotten why I was mad in the first place or, I'll now be in a position to listen to him plead his case. A very potent conflict resolution tool coitus is. I've never understood why women hoard that thing, kwani si ni hiyo ilikutoa kwenyu?
    I also learned naysayers cannot dim your shine. I remember there was not a Migori politician insulted on social media like her in 2017. They called her ugly shemale, mother of disciples, fake PhD holder, guess who still became the Woman Rep. Koro Wan Kara uyanywa, ok bimonowa realize our potential in the fullness of time
    Have a great week ahead Y'all
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    Long walk to the village as ban on vehicles bites

     


    Migration. A man walks with his family to the village on Jinja Road on Sunday. The lockdown and curfew imposed by government has triggered mass exodus of people from towns to rural areas. PHOTO BY ERIC DOMINIC BUKENYA

    The lockdown and curfew imposed by government to combat the spread of the coronavirus pandemic has triggered mass exodus of people from towns to rural areas.

    This comes after President Museveni on April 1, ordered the closure of shopping malls, arcades, hardware shops, lodges, salons, none food stores, garages, and put a night curfew for 14 days as part of the measures against Covid-19.

    The President has also suspended public and private transport, including movements in and out of country for 32 days, among other stringent measures.

    The vulnerable urban dwellers, who are mainly unsalaried workers depending on daily wages to buy food have been making desperate journeys to their rural homes, with hope that they will return when things normalise.

    Mr Henry Manana, a 45-year-old businessman, operating a salon in Mbale Central Market, at the weekend said he forced his family members to walk about 30 kilometres from Mbale Town to Busiita village in Sironko District after he run short of money and food.

    “I told my wife and children to go back to the village because I know in the village, they can have what to eat, even if it is little,” he said.

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    It is evident there is unprecedented influx of town dwellers to the distant rural villages because a walk in the suburbs of Mbale, Tororo, Jinja, Lira districts, among other towns, showed few people engaging in business that were not banned.

    Mr Paul Muniola, a resident of Kiteso Cell in Mbale Town, who is also a landlord in the area said most of his tenants went to their villages.

    “Most of my tenants are low-income earners. They cannot afford to pay rent and sustain themselves when they are not working,” he said. He said towns have become lifeless. “There is no partying any more. No drinking. We do not even move around. We are living in fear,” Mr Muniola added.

    Survival tactics
    Daily Monitor has also learnt the locals are paying exorbitant fees to boda boda riders to sneak them out of towns. Mr James Mudabo, a boda boda rider, said they are risking their lives to sustain their families.

    “We are not allowed to carry passengers now but if you want me to risk, then you have to pay well and I take you to your village,” he said.

    In Tororo, Mr Mathias Okongo, a resident of Chawolo Village in Mulanda Sub-county in Tororo District, said he decided to return home from Kampala. “I boarded a cargo truck, which brought me up to Bugiri Town and I started footing from there up to home,” he said, while pointing at his swollen feet.

    The Budama South MP, Mr Jacob Oboth Oboth, said when residents travel to their villages, it is a sign of respecting the Presidential directives. “I am happy people have shunned congested places, especially in urban areas,” he said.

    In Dokolo District, people are trekking more than 300 kilometres from different parts of the country to get to their homes.

    Among them is Ronald Okii, Oscar Ayo and Ambrose Agonga. They decided to walk home from their workplace in Nakawa Division, Kampala, after it was closed last week.

    The trio have been working as carpenters with a construction company. When government announced a 14-day total lockdown to stop the further spread of coronavirus, they decided to go home on foot.

    “We starved throughout the journey because we did not have enough cash on us,” Mr Agonga said on Saturday, adding: “We have already reached Amolatar and by Sunday (yesterday), we should be home.”

    Mr Okii said: “We slept on people’s verandas because we knew nobody on Kampala-Nakasongola highway.”

    In Lira Town, Mr Patrick Opio, a resident of Wigweng Village in Ojwina Division, said the lockdown has affected his livelihood since he can no longer afford to support his family.

    In Amuru District, many people have abandoned the trading centres.

    “I have been selling non-essential goods and when they stopped us from transacting any business, I opted to engage in farming,’’ Ms Alice Amuge Akello said.

    The chairperson of Amuru District, Mr Michael Lakony, said many urban dwellers have returned to the village. “I have asked locals to have their ears on the ground and report any suspicious case of Covid-19,’’ he said.

    In Gulu District, accessing different villages is not easy. “Roadblocks have been put on major roads to check who is entering a particular sub-county and you are tasked to explain where you are coming from,’’ Mr Andrew Lakwonyero, a resident of Palaro Sub-county, said.

    Registration
    In Buikwe District, the chairperson of Bukaya West, Mr Jimmy Okee, said he has not registered any returnee. “The village security committee has urged everybody to report any returnee to his office,” he said.

    The chairperson of Bukaya East Village, Njeru Municipality, Mr Ernest Ssenyonjo, urged the community to deny any visitors entry into their homes. “Government is currently looking for people who have come into contact with Covid-19 patients and want to hide among our community,” he said.

    However, many returnees in different districts told Daily Monitor that they returned to their villages to seek refuge and not to spread the disease.

    Mr Waiswa Mukooli, who walked from Jinja Town to Itonko Village in Namutumba North Ward, said coping in cities has become risky and expensive.

    “In village, there is free food, shelter and freedom to move, unlike in towns where people are locked up indoors. Much as a curfew is on, people in villages visit their neighbours during day and some even move past the 7:00pm curfew time,” he said.

    Different chairpersons in Namutumba have also embarked on a campaign of putting returnees on an indoor quarantine. The chairperson of Kigalama Village, Mr Peter Mutaka, said about 20 returnees have been put under quarantine after walking from Kampala.

    “What I have done is to isolate these people for 14 days as we monitor them. We have also asked their family members not to associate with them until the14 days have elapsed, after which we will take them for a coronavirus test,” he said.

    In Mbarara District, Ms Peninah Muhairwe, said: “My journey from Mbarara Town to my village started at around 5.am on Tuesday (March 31), from Biafra Cell in Kamukuzi Division. I reached home at 11.am. My husband travelled in a cargo vehicle,” she said.

    In Fort Portal District, Mr Baguma Diploma, a taxi driver, said: “I had to move on a truck carrying goods up to Biiso, where I started to walk on foot for more than 10 kilometre until a motorcycle was sent from home to pick me,” he said.

    Compiled by Fred Wambede, Cissy Makumbi , Joseph Omollo, Bill Oketch, Robert Owot, Denis Edema, Philip Wafula & Ronald Seebe, Charity Akullo and Patrick Ebong, Andrew Mugati & Rajab Mukombozi.

    No-go area
    In Nwoya District, visitors from towns are being tasked to explain their movements before they are allowed to settle in the villages.
    In Pader District, if you have been staying in Kampala, you are not allowed to cross through the district for fear of spreading the disease. “If one is coming from Kampala and outside Uganda, they are not being allowed because he or she might be a carrier of the disease,’’ Mr Robert

    Gwok-lebi, the parish councillor of Gem-onyot Parish in Acholibur Sub-county, said.

    In Busoga Sub-region, villages are also on the lookout for returnees.
    Mr Dauda Mukibi, the chairperson of Bulafa Village in Namutumba Sub-county, said: “Returnees from cities which have been pronounced to have Covid-19 cases like Kampala and Iganga have been blocked from entering my village. We are only welcoming those from other towns,” he said.

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    Tuesday 1 June 2021

     

    Pan African Parliament members sit inside the house following its postponement in Midrand, Johannesburg on June 1, 2021. The house was adjourned following chaotic and violent scenes that played out during the leadership rotation elections. 






    What you need to know:

    A clip aired by South African channel News24 showed representatives hassling one another, with South African legislator Pemmy Majodina, the ANC chief whip, claiming she had been hit by her Senegalese counterpart Djibril War.

    Claims of gender-based violence have rocked the Pan-African Parliament after representatives tussled over the next president of the institution’s bureau.

    The incident happened during a session on Monday as the legislators listened to a presentation by an ad-hoc committee formed to harmonise proposals on how to elect the next president.

    A clip aired by South African channel News24 showed representatives hassling one another, with South African legislator Pemmy Majodina, the ANC chief whip, claiming she had been hit by her Senegalese counterpart Djibril War.

    According to her, she was trying to stop an altercation between Mr War, a Senegalese politician, and a Zimbabwean legislator.

    “I went in there to make peace. As I was trying to separate them ... it was at this stage that I was hit by the Hon Djibril (Cisse),” Majodina told News24, threatening to sue.

    The Senegalese, however, promptly apologised on the floor and later told the channel the incident was an accident that took place as he tried to stop a colleague recording the chaos on phone.

    Pan African Parliament members stand inside the house following its postponement in Midrand, Johannesburg on June 1, 2021. 

    Phill Magakoe | AFP



    "Shocking scenes"

    The incident, however, soiled a day in which the Pan-African Parliament, the legislative body of the African Union, which is based in Johannesburg, was trying to elect a president to take over from Zimbabwe’s Fortune Charumbira.

    AU Commission chair Moussa Faki Mahamat expressed concerns about the chaos, saying the representatives have to follow the law.

    “The shocking scenes of violence at the Pan-African Parliament today tarnish the image of this honourable institution.

    “I appeal to all parliamentarians to recover their composure and comply with the rules and procedures of the institution,” Faki said of the incident.

    Charumbira, currently the Fourth Vice President, has been acting since April 2020 when the holder of the post, Algeria’s Bouras Djamel was recalled to his country.

    Vote system

    The bone of contention was whether the delegates should adopt a rotational policy or stick to the traditional majority-vote system.

    Under the majority system, all regions of Africa except the south have held the presidency, represented by Tanzania, Chad, Nigeria, Cameroon and Algeria. But the rules of procedure are such that candidates, regardless of regions, can compete with the one, with the highest votes clinching the seat.

    Vice presidents are chosen from the top four contenders for the post and ranked from the highest votes gained.

    Southern African representatives ganged around Zimbabwean Charumbira but the move was opposed by west African representatives. A presentation by Zimbabwe’s Barbara Rwodzi was interrupted by a member from west Africa.

    South Africa’s vocal opposition leader Julius Malema interrupted the session, demanding that there had been an attack on a female colleague.

    Malema, a representative from the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) demanded an adjournment. Later, other delegates claimed they felt unsafe from South African colleagues. The session adjourned.

    Although, usually, all citizens of the African Union member States qualify to contest, the debate was on whether Haidara Aichata Cisse of Mali can remain a candidate when his country has had a coup.

    President of the Pan African Parliament Cameroonian Roger Nkodo Dang (C) speaks with others inside the house following its postponement in Midrand, Johannesburg on June 1, 2021. 
     

    Phill Magakoe | AFP


    Regional balance

    Usually, member states who experience coups have their voting rights suspended until they return to civilian rule. It doesn’t state whether candidates from those countries can contest. In the past, candidates from troubled countries have been accepted for other AU contests.

    Ahead of the elections, a legal advisory from the AU Commission told members to stick to the tradition of balancing regional representations.

    Composed of five representatives per member States that ratified the Pan-African Parliament protocol, with at least one woman, the Parliament is the deliberative organ for the African Union. Each of the member’s term begins and ends like their home legislative terms.

    Although the main decision-making body of the Parliament is the Plenary (composed of all representatives) chaired by the president, the organ is also led by the bureau, which is composed of the president and four vice presidents who all represent the five regions and is the management and administrative arm of Parliament.

    It needs a stable run of affairs to implement its functions, such as overseeing implementation of AU policies, and adopting AU budgets and rules of procedure.

    amutambo@ke.nationmedia.com

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    Oginga Odinga's house in Jerusalem to be demolished in NMS urban renewal plan

     


    What you need to know:

    • More than 1,500 houses set to be flattened in the ongoing urban renewal programme.
    • Residents believe that the move to demolish the estates is politically motivated.

    The doyen of opposition politics in Kenya Jaramogi Oginga Odinga’s old home in Jerusalem estate, Nairobi, is among the more than 1,500 houses set to be flattened in the ongoing urban renewal programme.

    In their place, Nairobi Metropolitan Services (NMS) plans to erect six-to-16 storey residential buildings. 

    Situated some 10 kilometres from Nairobi's central business district, the “orange” house stands out among the sturdy concrete buildings in Jerusalem and Jericho neighbourhoods earmarked for demolition by August. 

    Developed in 1950s, the two estates were once homes to prominent Kenyan leaders and civil servants. Jaramogi, the former vice president, lived there several decades ago. But now, the NMS believes the houses in these estates are "unfit for human habitation".

    According to residents, however, the houses are still “strong and habitable”, and should not be interfered with. 

    The original inhabitants may be long gone, but the sentimental value their relatives have attached to their homes is palpable. 

    At the Odinga house, Ms Everlyne Awino Agola, the current occupant, says she is comfortable staying there. She is the daughter of Ngire Agola Odinga, a younger brother of Dr Oburu Oginga and former Prime Minister Raila Amolo Odinga.

    According to the mother of four, the house is more than a home to the Odingas, partly because it reminds them of Jaramogi’s “humble personality, who preferred living the simple life” and partly because whenever her uncle, Mr Odinga is on the campaign trail, he stops by “for blessings” and to receive supporters and treat them to a cup of tea. 

    Under Jaramogi’s name

    Like Everlyne, Margaret Mwangi inherited her house in Jericho from her parents. Having lived in the house on Lumumba drive since 1979 as a child, she says, she knows no other home. She grew up here, and, it is where she is raising her children and grandchild.

    Jericho estate, according to the chairperson of Jericho residents, Ms Jane Achieng’, has about 1,350 occupants. Jerusalem has 600 households. 

    The residents will lose a part of their identity -- the place they once called home.

    The Odinga house is still registered under Jaramogi’s name as a way of honouring him.

    According to the chairperson, a vital part of history is just about to be erased.

    “Notable names in Kenyan politics, including former presidents Daniel Moi and Mwai Kibaki, and several others, lived here,” she said. “We don’t want to lose that history. It gives our country its identity.”

    Several tenants of the estates that have a date with the bulldozer are opposed to the “upgrade” plan by the NMS. 

    The residents also believe that the move to demolish the estates is politically motivated.

    Affordable housing

    "See, the push to improve these areas was only heightened when Raila Odinga was admitted in hospital," said one resident of Jerusalem.

    "We're wondering, how in the era of the Handshake, Raila Odinga could be quiet, yet his turf is under siege.”

    NMS, in a public participation had hinted at flattening the structures by August. The area, NMS said, is targeted for its free spaces.

    "The increased houses would mean so much people coming here. But the public amenities, with the current population, are already stretched.

    "We are already paying a lot for these old homes, we reckon that the new units will be even costlier,” said the chairperson.

    "Affordable housing narrative flopped when Pangani estate was upgraded," she said. "In fact, those who benefited were not the residents of the area. We're bound for the same."

    Already calls to have Jerusalem Estate and Jericho Lumumba Estate be retained as monuments of historical importance have attracted the attention of the National Museums of Kenya. 

    NMS plans to construct 62,000 highrise apartments to replace the old estates under the NMS Eastland Urban Renewal Plan.


    dogetta@ke.nationmedia.com

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