President to address the nation on energy crisis

President Cyril Ramaphosa will address the nation at 20h00 this evening, 25 July 2022, on South Africa’s energy crisis.

The briefing by the President follows a number of consultations within government and with stakeholders and energy experts outside of government to find a collective solution to the energy crisis.

The President has held consultative meetings with business, civil society, labour and leaders of political parties represented in Parliament.

On 16 July 2022, President Ramaphosa visited Tutuka Power Station in Mpumalanga and Eskom Megawatt Park Headquarters in Johannesburg, and held engagements with Power Station managers to gain an understanding of the challenges affecting Eskom’s generation fleet.

The President will announce measures to address the country’s ongoing issues relating to energy crisis.

The SABC will provide a live feed for all media.

The President’s address will also be broadcast and streamed live on PresidencyZA digital platforms.

Source: The Presidency Republic of South Africa

Over 50 million in Eastern Africa to face acute food insecurity in 2022

NAIROBI, Over 50 million people are in danger of experiencing high levels of acute food insecurity this year across seven Inter-Governmental Authority on Development (IGAD) countries in the Horn of Africa.

The affected states include Kenya, Djibouti, Ethiopia, Somalia, South Sudan, Sudan and Uganda.

According to the 2022 edition of the IGAD Regional Focus on Food Crises under the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC), Kenya, Ethiopia, Somalia, South Sudan, and Sudan are facing the largest food crises (IPC 3) in the region and about 300,000 people are projected to face catastrophe (IPC 5) in Somalia and South Sudan in 2022.

There is a risk of famine occurring in eight areas of Somalia through September in the event of widespread crop and livestock production failures, spiraling food costs, and in the absence of scaled-up humanitarian assistance.

In a virtual meeting by IGAD, it emerged the situation in 2022, with 50 – 51 million people expected to face crises or worse marks a dramatic increase from 2021 when 42 million people suffered from high levels of acute food insecurity.

Workneh Gebeyehu, Executive Secretary of the IGAD said the combination of climate extremes, conflict, and macroeconomic challenges make it almost impossible for the otherwise very resilient communities to sustain multiple shocks.

“Our region has been hit like never before and the figures we are releasing today are heartbreaking, and I’m very worried they could increase even more as the outlook for the October to December rain season is bleak,” he said.

Last year, the IGAD region accounted for nearly 22 percent of the global number of people in crisis or worse with an estimated 10 million children under the age of 5 suffering from acute malnutrition.

In addition, 24 per cent of the world’s 51 million internally displaced people were also in IGAD countries, mainly Ethiopia, Somalia, South Sudan, and Sudan.

Dr Chimimba David Phiri, FAO Subregional Coordinator for Eastern Africa and FAO Representative to the African Union and UNECA said that the current food security situation across the Horn of Africa is dire after four consecutive rain seasons failed, a climatic event not seen in at least 40 years, or since the beginning of the satellite era.

“Now more than ever, we must implement short-term livelihood-saving responses with long-term resilience building aimed at addressing the root causes of food crises in our region,”Phiri noted.

The latest forecast by IGAD’s Climate Prediction and Applications Centre (ICPAC) is for a fifth consecutive failed rain season across the region, with the latest long-term forecasts for the 2022 October–December rainfall season indicating an increased chance of below-average rains.

Michael Dunford, the World Food Programme’s Regional Director for Eastern Africa said that the conflict, climate extremes, economic shocks, rising costs of commodities and now the impact of the conflict in Ukraine on food and energy prices are pushing millions towards starvation in Eastern Africa.

“Sadly, there is a very real risk of famine in the region, and we must do everything possible to prevent this from happening. At the same time, together we must start building the capacity to prepare and respond to future shocks which are increasingly inevitable because of a changing climate,” he added

The Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) is a set of standardised tools used to classify the severity of food insecurity using a widely accepted five-phase scale namely Minimal (IPC Phase 1), Stressed (IPC Phase 2), Crisis (IPC Phase 3), Emergency (IPC Phase 4) and Catastrophe/Famine (IPC Phase 5).

ICPAC provides climate services to IGAD member states (Djibouti, Ethiopia, Eritrea, Kenya, Somalia, South Sudan, Sudan, and Uganda), plus Burundi, Rwanda, and Tanzania.

Source: Nam News Network

Russian FM Lavrov Visits Egypt, Part of Africa Trip Amid Ukraine War

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov met with Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sissi and Foreign Minister Sameh Shukri in Cairo Sunday for talks focusing on efforts to end the Ukraine crisis, moves to resume grain exports from Russia and Ukraine, joint trade agreements, regional conflicts and a nuclear power plant which Russia has begun to build on Egypt’s north coast.

The first leg of Lavrov’s Africa visit, Cairo, centered on major issues facing Russia and Egypt, on both the economic and political fronts. Both countries do between $4 and $5 billion in annual trade and the Ukraine conflict and COVID-19 have caused disruptions to tourism, grain sales and energy exports.

Lavrov and Shukri indicated in a joint press conference Sunday that both sides were working to overcome issues of mutual concern:

Shukri said that the Ukraine conflict has affected Egypt’s food security, its energy needs, its trade with the outside world and created inflation and supply chain issues that need to be resolved.

Shukri went on to say that Egypt “would like to see a diplomatic solution to the Ukraine conflict based on common sense and dialogue,” and “ending military hostilities and settling political differences.”

Egyptian political sociologist Said Sadek told VOA that he thinks that visits this past week by President el-Sissi to France and Germany may have been part of an effort to mediate a diplomatic solution between Russia and Ukraine.

“I think that the visit by [el-]Sissi to Europe had to do with mediating the Ukrainian crisis, regardless of what the [cover story] may be, because if you look, he went to Germany and France. They are the ones leading Europe regarding the Ukraine crisis — after the Americans, of course — and Serbia, which is very close to the Russians.”

Lavrov, for his part, noted that he had discussed “putting a speedy end” to the Ukraine conflict with el-Sissi and all the factors involved in doing so. His comments came as Russia continues its attacks in Ukraine.

Lavrov said that Russia appreciates the speedy search for a peaceful settlement, taking into account the fundamental legitimate interests of all participants in the process, in the context of building a sustainable European security architecture on a fair basis.

Egypt’s Dabbah nuclear power plant, on which Russia recently began construction, was also reportedly a major topic of discussion between Lavrov and his hosts. Russia’s Rosatom is building the plant.

Middle East energy analyst Paul Sullivan, who is with the Washington-based Atlantic Council think tank, told VOA that “nuclear power plants give the building country, in this case Russia, 80 to 100 years of leverage in the receiving country.” He added that “Russia and China dominate the export of nuclear power plants… [which] is a great source of political, diplomatic and economic power for both countries.”

Lavrov is also expected to visit Ethiopia, where Egypt is hoping that he raises the subject of the controversial Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam, which Cairo worries will affect the quantity of water it receives on the Nile from the dam. Ethiopia – a nation of more than 110 million people – has said it needs the power from the dam for its development.

Source: Voice of America

Rhino Orphans Get New South African Home

Moving home is stressful for anyone — and rhinoceroses are no exception.

Vets in South Africa have just transferred more than 30 orphaned young rhinos to a sanctuary designed to keep the animals safe from poachers who killed their mothers.

The move took six weeks and required extraordinary planning, including the help of animal friends who accompanied the orphans.

“We can’t just move them all at the same time and go ‘boom, there’s a new home’,” said Yolande van der Merwe, who oversees their new home.

“You have to take it on very carefully because they’re sensitive animals,” she said.

Van der Merwe, 40, manages the Rhino Orphanage, which cares for calves orphaned by poachers, rehabilitates them and then releases them back into the wild.

This month, after its old lease expired, the non-profit moved to bigger premises, in a secret location between game farms in the northern province of Limpopo.

Benji, a white calf who is only a few months old was the last rhino to relocate.

At birth, rhinos are small, not higher than an adult human knee, and tip the scales at around 20 kilograms (44 pounds).

But they eat a lot and quickly pick up weight, ballooning up to half a tonne in their first year of life.

Given Benji’s recent loss, staff were worried he would freak out during the process that saw him anesthetized and loaded in the back of a 4×4.

But thankfully Benji’s friend, Button the sheep, was by his side throughout the move — and his presence helped ensure that everything went smoothly.

“Mostly, their mothers have been poached,” said Pierre Bester, a 55-year-old veterinarian who has been involved with the orphanage since its founding 10 years ago.

“(They) all come here, and you handle them differently… you put them in crèches, give them a friend and then they cope.”

‘Love and care’

South Africa is home to nearly 80 percent of the world’s rhinos.

But it is also a hotspot for rhino poaching, driven by demand from Asia, where horns are used in traditional medicine for their supposed therapeutic effect.

On the black market rhino horns fetch tens of thousands of dollars.

More than 450 rhinos were poached across South Africa in 2021, according to government figures.

At the sanctuary, orphaned calves are nursed back to health by a team of caregivers who sometimes pull 24-hour shifts, sleeping in the same enclosure as the animals to help them adjust.

“Rhinos have their calves at foot the whole day, 24/7, and that’s the kind of care they require,” said van der Merwe.

“So we need to give that intense love and care to get them through the trauma,” she said, adding some younglings showed signs of post-traumatic-stress-disorder.

When they are fit enough, the animals are released back into the wild. Up to 90 percent normally make it.

At the new sanctuary, Benji and his friends enjoy bigger enclosures with more space to roam.

They are fitted special transmitters to monitor their movement as part of an array of security measures to keep poachers at bay.

The orphanage asked AFP’s reporters not to disclose its new location.

Source: Voice of America

Minister of Foreign Affairs Nikos Dendias’ statement to journalists following the decoration ceremony of Professor of Fetal Medicine, Kypros Nicolaides

As we have historically known, a very large part of Hellenism, a thriving part of Hellenism, is the Diaspora Hellenism, which excels.

Such a worthy child of Hellenism, who lives, works, and serves society in England, I had the great honour of decorating today on behalf of the President of the Hellenic Republic, Ms. Sakellaropoulou. And I’d like to say, on behalf of the Government, that we are very proud, we are particularly proud of the work that Kypros Nicolaides is doing for the global community. He is perhaps the world’s first, and most well-known professor of Fetal Medicine. He has saved hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of children’s lives. He has honored Cyprus; he has honored Hellenism; He has honored Greece.

We are also organizing together an aid program in developing countries, under the umbrella of Hellenic Aid. We have selected eight countries where we will set up Fetal Medicine Clinics to support mothers and children. The Greek flag will be flown at all eight of these clinics, which are entirely funded by the Kypros Nicolaides Foundation; as proof of our country’s and Kypros Nicolaides’ contribution to the global community.

I’ll say it again: I am particularly proud to have had the pleasure of decorating him today.

Source: Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Hellenic Republic

Minister of Foreign Affairs Nikos Dendias’ address at the decoration ceremony of Professor of Fetal Medicine, Kypros Nicolaides

Mr. Ambassador of Greece to the United Kingdom,

My dear Professor,

Dear friends,

It is a great pleasure for me to be here in London tonight, to honor Kypros Nicolaides, Professor of Fetal Medicine at King’s s College. The Professor was born in Cyprus, in Paphos, and has rightfully acquired the title of the “Father of Fetal Medicine”. Every year, he performs hundreds of complex operations, saving numerous lives. He has authored thousands of articles and more than 30 books. Allow me to share a few points from the outstanding resume of his: In 1986, he was appointed Director of the UK’s first Fetal Medicine unit. He has been a Professor of Fetal Medicine at King's College since 1992.

In 1995, he established the UK Charity, the ‘Fetal Medicine Foundation’, through which:

? over £45 million has been allocated to projects in more than 50 countries worldwide,

? scholarships are awarded to train medical trainees in fetal medicine; and

? a World Congress on Fetal Medicine is held annually.

I believe I am not exaggerating in the slightest when I say that Kypros Nicolaides honors the Hippocratic Oath through his medical practice and his extensive charity activity. And the Ambassador of Greece is not exaggerating when he says that hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of children all over the world, owe him their lives.

Furthermore, his activity has not been limited to what we define as the developed world. He has also financed the operation of embryonic medicine centers in developing countries such as Zimbabwe and Rwanda. He has granted scholarships to over 150 Greek doctors. He has also donated equipment to the Fetal Medicine Unit of Attikon Hospital. In recognition of his contribution, this Unit was renamed the Kypros Nicolaides Clinic in 2019.

Recently, under the auspices of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the establishment of Fetal Medicine / Prenatal Care Units in eight additional countries has been launched, within the framework of the Ministry's development aid (Hellenic Aid). These Units will be established in Albania, Armenia, Ethiopia, Kenya, Kosovo, Moldova, North Macedonia, and Rwanda, with 100% funding from the Fetal Medicine Foundation, and with very many activities to be organized in all these countries.

Dear Friends,

The Professor has been honored, with high distinctions, by the international scientific community for his outstanding work, worthy of all praise and recognition. In 2020, he was elected a member of the National Academy of Medicine of the United States of America. His homeland, Cyprus, has honored him with the Grand Cross of the Order of Archbishop Makarios III. In addition, he received the ARGO 2021 Science Prize, awarded to distinguished Greeks living abroad.

For all the reasons mentioned above, as well as many others that time does not permit me to mention, I have the distinct honor, on behalf of the H.E. President of the HellenicRepublic, to confer on him the Gold Cross of the Order of the Phoenix.

Source: Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Hellenic Republic

Ministry of Foreign Affairs Spokesperson’s response to a journalist’s question regarding the Turkish Ministry of Foreign Affairs’ claims on minority education in Thrace

In response to a journalist’s question regarding the Turkish Foreign Ministry’s claims as regards minority education in Thrace, the Spokesperson for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Alexandros Papaioannou stated the following:

“Unfortunately, Ankara has entirely reversed reality once again in order to promote positions that do not stand up to scrutiny. We reject them in their entirety.

We underscore that the decision to suspend the operation of schools is taken applying exactly the same criteria throughout Greece, that is the non-completion of a minimum number of nine (9) students.

For the academic year 2022-2023, only in the Region of Eastern Macedonia-Thrace, in addition to the four (4) minority primary schools, the operation of twenty-nine (29) other non-minority primary schools is suspended as well.

Therefore, no one can claim discrimination against minority students.

These figures clearly demonstrate that the Greek State’s educational choices are made on an equal basis and without discrimination for all Greek citizens, with the sole aim of providing a high-quality education for the benefit of the pupils themselves.

Turkey should put an end to its misleading rhetoric and acknowledge the reality demonstrating that the Muslim Minority in Thrace, living in a free, democratic European country, enjoys fully its freedoms and rights, as do all Greek citizens.

On the contrary, the very few schools of the Greek minority in Turkey bear witness to the violent and systematic uprooting of Greeks from their ancestral lands.

We recall that in the coming school year, ninety-nine (99) primary schools will operate for the prosperous Muslim Minority in Thrace.

Only three (3) schools will operate in Istanbul, one (1) in Gökçeada (Imbros) and not even one in Bozcaada (Tenedos).

The Muslim Minority in Thrace numbers approximately 120,000 members.

The Greek Minority in Turkey does not exceed 3,000 people, while the two minorities were equal in number at the time the Treaty of Lausanne was signed.

Unfortunately for Turkey, the numbers themselves betray the irrefutable truth when it comes to who respects and applies the Lausanne Treaty.

The Hellenic Republic is a European state governed by the Rule of Law that fully protects and guarantees the human rights and freedoms of its citizens.”

Source: Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Hellenic Republic

Monkeypox Virus Could Become Entrenched as New STD in US

The spread of monkeypox in the U.S. could represent the dawn of a new sexually transmitted disease, though some health officials say the virus that causes pimple-like bumps might yet be contained before it gets firmly established.

Experts don’t agree on the likely path of the disease, with some fearing that it is becoming so widespread that it is on the verge of becoming an entrenched STD — like gonorrhea, herpes and HIV.

But no one’s really sure, and some say testing and vaccines can still stop the outbreak from taking root.

So far, more than 2,400 U.S. cases have been reported as part of an international outbreak that emerged two months ago.

Health officials are not sure how fast the virus has spread. They have only limited information about people who have been diagnosed, and they don’t know how many infected people might be spreading it unknowingly.

They also don’t know how well vaccines and treatments are working. One impediment: Federal health officials do not have the authority to collect and connect data on who has been infected and who has been vaccinated.

With such huge question marks, predictions about how big the U.S. outbreak will get this summer vary widely, from 13,000 to perhaps more than 10 times that number.

Dr. Rochelle Walensky, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said the government’s response is growing stronger every day and vaccine supplies will soon surge.

“I think we still have an opportunity to contain this,” Walensky told The Associated Press.

Monkeypox is endemic in parts of Africa, where people have been infected through bites from rodents or small animals. It does not usually spread easily among people.

But this year more than 15,000 cases have been reported in countries that historically don’t see the disease. In the U.S. and Europe, the vast majority of infections have happened in men who have sex with men, though health officials have stressed that anyone can catch the virus.

It spreads mainly through skin-to-skin contact, but it can also be transmitted through linens used by someone with monkeypox. Although it’s been moving through the population like a sexually transmitted disease, officials have been watching for other types of spread that could expand the outbreak.

Symptoms include fever, body aches, chills, fatigue and bumps on parts of the body. The illness has been relatively mild in many men, and no one has died in the U.S. But people can be contagious for weeks, and the lesions can be extremely painful.

When monkeypox emerged, there was reason to believe that public health officials could control it.

The tell-tale bumps should have made infections easy to identify. And because the virus spreads through close personal contact, officials thought they could reliably trace its spread by interviewing infected people and asking who they had been intimate with.

It didn’t turn out to be that easy.

With monkeypox so rare in the U.S., many infected men — and their doctors — may have attributed their rashes to some other cause.

Contact tracing was often stymied by infected men who said they did not know the names of all the people they had sex with. Some reported having multiple sexual interactions with strangers.

It didn’t help that local health departments, already burdened with COVID-19 and scores of other diseases, now had to find the resources to do intensive contact-tracing work on monkeypox, too.

Indeed, some local health officials have given up expecting much from contact tracing.

There was another reason to be optimistic: The U.S. government already had a vaccine. The two-dose regimen called Jynneos was licensed in the U.S. in 2019 and recommended last year as a tool against monkeypox.

When the outbreak was first identified in May, U.S. officials had only about 2,000 doses available. The government distributed them but limited the shots to people who were identified through public health investigations as being recently exposed to the virus.

Late last month, as more doses became available, the CDC began recommending that shots be offered to those who realize on their own that they could have been infected.

Demand has exceeded supply, with clinics in some cities rapidly running out of vaccine doses and health officials across the country saying said they don’t have enough.

That’s changing, Walensky said. As of this week, the government has distributed more than 191,000 doses, and it has 160,000 more ready to send. As many as 780,000 doses will become available as early as next week.

Once current demand is satisfied, the government will look at expanding vaccination efforts.

The CDC believes that 1.5 million U.S. men are considered at high risk for the infection.

Testing has also expanded. More than 70,000 people can be tested each week, far more than current demand, Walensky said. The government has also embarked on a campaign to educate doctors and gay and bisexual men about the disease, she added.

Donal Bisanzio, a researcher at RTI International, believes U.S. health officials will be able to contain the outbreak before it becomes endemic.

But he also said that won’t be the end of it. New bursts of cases will probably emerge as Americans become infected by people in other countries where monkeypox keeps circulating.

Walensky agrees that such a scenario is likely. “If it’s not contained all over the world, we are always at risk of having flare-ups” from travelers, she said.

Shawn Kiernan, of the Fairfax County Health Department in Virginia, said there is reason to be tentatively optimistic because so far the outbreak is concentrated in one group of people — men who have sex with men.

Spread of the virus into heterosexual people would be a “tipping point” that may occur before it’s widely recognized, said Kiernan, chief of the department’s communicable disease section.

Spillover into heterosexuals is just a matter of time, said Dr. Edward Hook III, emeritus professor of infectious diseases at the University of Alabama at Birmingham.

If monkeypox becomes an endemic sexually transmitted disease, it will be yet another challenge for health departments and doctors already struggling to keep up with existing STDs.

Such work has long been underfunded and understaffed, and a lot of it was simply put on hold during the pandemic. Kiernan said HIV and syphilis were prioritized, but work on common infections like chlamydia and gonorrhea amounted to “counting cases and that’s about it.”

For years, gonorrhea, chlamydia and syphilis cases have been rising.

“By and large,” Hook said, doctors “do a crummy job of taking sexual histories, of inquiring about and acknowledging their patients are sexual beings.”

Source: Voice of America