Monday, April 27, 2020

How Chinese Colonization Of Africa Started: The African Leaders Who Laid Its Foundation In Beijing, China…


 

Ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo of Nigeria led a most ignorant, careless, corrupt and consequence-unconscious generation of African leaders and their hollow and shallow technocrats and economists who posed as advisers but without any iota of understanding of the traditional African economic dynamics to open up Africa for the hostile takeover we are experiencing today that has already claimed many African countries, negating and reversing the sacrifices of those great African patriots who fought for the decolonization of Africa .

 

This pathway to the colonization, slavery and programmed annihilation of Africans opened a very dangerous new gateway for fraud and a treasonous conspiracy involving China and the corrupt African political elites who get paid for every dollar Africa borrows in the name of infrastructural developments that are hardly seen beyond sign posts to nowhere like the ones we see in Nigeria, to cripple Africa and Africans economically.


The benefits that Africa’s successive ruling political elites get from the deadly conspiracy to borrow Africa and Africans into stupor is the reason none of them will speak favorably about revoking the fraudulent arrangement that is bleeding the continent to death and economically disenfranchising its people. 


We must end it now, and it is going to require a new generation of conscious and purpose-propelled African leadership driven by absolute patriotic instincts, knowledge, passion, self confidence, compassion for their people and their future and the future of Africa, competency, respect for the rule of law and exceptional contents of character anchored on transparency and accountability to make it happen”.

 

Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo with Chinese President Hu Jintao at the opening of the China-Africa summit in Beijing.
Photograph: AP / Elizabeth Dalziel


Like other African leaders, Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi returned home from a three-day summit in Beijing with enthusiastic praise for his hosts and an armful of new economic agreements. More Ethiopian agricultural products would be allowed into China duty-free, he revealed, and China had pledged some $500 mn for various development projects in Ethiopia. “China is an inspiration for all of us,” he added. “What China shows to Africa is that it is indeed possible to turn the corner on economic development.”


Fifty years after China established its first diplomatic ties with an African country, the third summit of the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation was held 3–5 November. It marked the biggest-ever gathering between Chinese and African leaders. All 48 African countries that have diplomatic relations with China took part — with most of their delegations led by presidents or prime ministers. In addition, hundreds of African businesspeople went for a two-day trade exhibit immediately following the summit, eager to explore new market outlets in the most populous country in the world, which has one of the fastest growing economies.


‘New type’ partnership

Building on several years of growing exchanges between China and Africa, the summit approved a three-year action plan to forge a “new type of strategic partnership.” That partnership, the plan says, would be based on pragmatic cooperation, equality and mutual benefit. The plan pledges that China will:


Double aid to Africa by 2009 (to about $1 bn)

Set up a $5 bn China-Africa development fund to encourage Chinese companies to invest in Africa


Provide $3 bn in preferential loans and $2 bn in preferential buyer’s credits to African countries


Cancel all debt stemming from Chinese interest-free government loans that matured by the end of 2005, for the 31 highly indebted and least developed countries (LDCs) in Africa that have relations with China (an amount estimated at around $1.4 bn)


Further open China’s markets to exports from African LDCs by increasing from 190 to 440 the number of products receiving zero-tariff treatment


Train 15,000 African professionals, double the number of Chinese government scholarships given annually to Africans (to 4,000) and send 100 senior agricultural experts and 300 youth volunteers

Build 30 hospitals, 30 malaria treatment centres and 100 rural schools.

China also vowed to support the African Union, the continent’s regional organization, including by building a new convention centre at the AU headquarters in Addis Ababa. It likewise reaffirmed its commitment to the New Partnership for Africa’s Development (NEPAD), the AU’s development plan.


The Forum on China-Africa Cooperation, which will hold its next summit in Egypt in 2009, is an important vehicle for dialogue on Africa’s behalf, noted UN Under-Secretary-General and Special Adviser on Africa Legwaila Joseph Legwaila, who represented the UN at the meeting. The forum, he said, lends a “strong voice” to the UN’s work to promote African interests among developed countries, including on aid, debt relief, market access and support for Africa’s anti-poverty efforts.


No strings

During visits to several African countries earlier in the year, Chinese President Hu Jintao reiterated his government’s longstanding “policy of non-interference in other countries’ internal affairs.” On that basis, all African governments that have diplomatic ties with China were invited to the Beijing summit, no matter what their records on democracy or human rights. That stance elicited some criticism, including from human rights groups and donor agencies.


“As long as China is so willing to invest in Africa, we must not miss out on the bounty. But we must engage with our eyes wide open.”
— Macharia Gaitho, managing editor, The Nation (Kenya)


Some African commentators have pointed to shortcomings in China’s economic involvement in Africa. They have cited the limited regard for environmental and safety standards of some Chinese companies, their tendency to bring in Chinese workers rather than hire Africans and the stiff competition that African manufacturers face from large quantities of low-priced Chinese imports.


While acknowledging such drawbacks, other Africans have welcomed the opportunity to diversify the continent’s external partnerships. They also appreciate the absence of explicit political or economic policy conditions on China’s part, in contrast to the sometimes heavy-handed approach of certain Western powers.


During the summit, the Chinese authorities signaled their willingness to pay greater attention to countering corruption and protecting the environment in their African activities. Premier Wen Jiabao said that projects implemented by Chinese firms would be conducted in an “open, fair, just and transparent” manner. The action plan pledged Chinese assistance in building African countries’ capacities to safeguard the environment and preserve biodiversity.


‘Eyes wide open’

Chinese foreign investment in Africa has grown spectacularly since the early 1990s. According to a recent study by the industrialized countries’ Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), flows of Chinese direct investment into Africa in 2003 reached $107 mn, more than 100 times the annual level in 1991. Today, some 700 Chinese firms are estimated to hold a total investment stock of $6.3 bn in Africa. The Beijing summit brought a dozen major new investment agreements totaling $1.9 bn. They included deals to build expressways in Nigeria, a telephone network in rural Ghana and an aluminum smelter in Egypt.


“As long as China is so willing to invest in Africa, we must not miss out on the bounty,” Mr. Macharia Gaitho, managing editor of the Kenyan daily Nation, commented. “But we must engage with our eyes wide open.”


‘More balanced’ trade

Trade between China and Africa is also expanding rapidly. Valued at only around $3 bn in 1995, total trade grew to an estimated $40 bn in 2005. Premier Wen stated during the summit that China hopes to increase that amount to $100 bn by 2010.


So far, the nature of these flows has been quite similar to those between Africa and its traditional trading partners, noted the OECD study, The Rise of China and India: What’s in it for Africa? For the most part, it found, Africa exported oil and other raw materials to China, while importing Chinese manufactured goods. Inexpensive Chinese textile and clothing products have become prevalent in many African markets, seriously jeopardizing the survival of Africa’s own manufacturers.


A columnist in the Nigerian Daily Trust newspaper, Mr. Charles Onunaiju, observed that unless steps are taken to alter this pattern of trade, “the relationship in future will come to resemble the Europe/America and Africa relations, that is, lopsided, dependent and even detrimental to Africa.”


China’s leaders are responding to such criticisms. The action plan calls for the growth of China-Africa trade “in a more balanced manner.” The decision to more than double the number of African products allowed into China duty-free was one concrete step in that direction. Another was a Chinese pledge earlier in the year to voluntarily cap clothing exports to South Africa.


Whatever questions Africans may still have about China’s economic relations with the continent, noted Mr. Legwaila, the high African turnout in Beijing “was a clear demonstration that China has succeeded in winning the confidence of its African partners.”



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More than 700 die in Iran after drinking alcohol to cure coronavirus


 

More than 700 people have died in Iran after ingesting toxic methanol, erroneously thinking it can cure the new coronavirus.


The national coroner’s authority said that alcohol poisoning killed 728 Iranians between February 20 and April 7.


Last year there were only 66 deaths from alcohol poisoning, according to the report.


Alcohol poisoning has seen a 10-fold increase in Iran in the past year, according to a government report released earlier in April, amid the coronavirus pandemic.


Iranian health ministry spokesman, Kianoush Jahanpour, said 5,011 people had been poisoned from methanol alcohol, adding that some 90 people have lost their eyesight or are suffering eye damage from the alcohol poisoning.


Hossein Hassanian, a health ministry adviser, said the final tally of people who lost their eyesight could be much higher.


Iran is facing the worst coronavirus outbreak in the Middle East with 5,806 deaths and more than 91,000 confirmed cases.


Methanol cannot be smelled or tasted in drinks. It causes delayed organ and brain damage. Symptoms include chest pain, nausea, hyperventilation, blindness and even coma.


Last Thursday, US President Donald Trump raised the possibility of injecting disinfectant into patients, causing an international uproar with manufacturers, doctors and government agencies rushing out warnings against consuming disinfectants like bleach.


In Iran, the government mandates that manufacturers of toxic methanol add an artificial colour to their products so the public can tell it apart from ethanol, the kind of alcohol that can be used in cleaning wounds.




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Rwandan police chief accused of sexual assault of child refugee at UN centre


 

Boy, 16, evacuated from Libya under EU scheme, alleges incident took place at Gashora transit facility during coronavirus curfew

 

An allegation that a Rwandan police commander sexually assaulted a child refugee has rocked an EU-funded scheme, under which hundreds of refugees and asylum seekers have been evacuated from detention centres in Libya.


The allegation was made by a 16-year-old Eritrean boy, who had returned to Gashora transit centre, south of Kigali, after a coronavirus-related curfew on 13 April.


Refugees say the boy was detained there along with three others – an Eritrean and two Sudanese boys – between 6.30pm and 10.30pm, and picked out by the police commander in charge.

 

“(He) ordered him to take off his clothes,” said a refugee leader who spoke to the teenager afterwards. “The kid did as he was told since he thought he was going to be searched, but then he was asked to take off his pants, which he refused. The commander slapped and beat him all over his body using a stick. Then he proceeded to take out his gun and threaten him with it, but [the teenager] managed to escape.”


UN refugee agency spokesperson Elise Villechalane said her office is “deeply concerned” about the “alleged case of sexual abuse against a refugee at the Gashora emergency transit mechanism. Our protection teams are present at the centre and appropriate measures have been taken to provide the alleged victim with all the necessary support, including legal and psychosocial assistance.”


Rwanda’s police force has accused the refugees of lying, saying they were unhappy with coronavirus-related restrictions and that the boy was drunk.

 

“They conspired to make up a story of physical and attempted sexual assault. Preliminary findings show that the complainant used the occasion to try to avoid punishment for violating curfew and instead raised other grievances about the food menu, medical services, and police presence at the camp,” the organisation said on Twitter.


The police said refugees had been playing music in the week commemorating the 26th anniversary of the Rwandan genocide. Refugees said they were listening to a preacher read prayers in the run-up to Eritrean Easter. “When everyone wants to pray they use the speaker and everyone prays in [their] room, because everyone was using social distancing,” said one man.


“Still the commander is there, circulating all the time,” another said.

The Rwandan government did not respond to requests for comment, but confirmed an investigation is underway.


Most of the refugees evacuated to Rwanda are survivors of sexual or physical abuse and spent months or years in Libya with smugglers known to torture victims who can’t pay large sums of money. They were then caught trying to cross the Mediterranean to Europe and were locked up in detention centres associated with the UN-backed Libyan government, where forced labour, food deprivation and other abuses have been reported.


Evacuees arriving in Rwanda have been interviewed for the chance to be resettled. The first groups left for Sweden and Canada earlier this year, before the pandemic forced resettlement to be put on hold.

 

On Thursday refugees in Gashora held a protest presenting seven demands, including a proper investigation, the removal of the commander from the centre, and for a UNHCR staff member to be present at all times for their safety.

 

They also asked for Alight (formerly the American Refugee Committee), responsible for the protection of minors, to be replaced. Refugees said the organisation is not active or responsive. Alight did not reply to the Guardian’s request for comment.


The Guardian has visited Gashora twice, most recently last month, shortly before the lockdown. Refugees have repeatedly said they are happy to follow restrictions. Many have had tuberculosis or other health problems, making them vulnerable.


On Saturday, refugees told the Guardian they were growing increasingly upset and frustrated that the alleged assault was not being taken seriously. “[There is] no fucking justice in this society,” said one Eritrean in his 20s. “They want to suppress our voice totally. They will fade this incident and we can’t do anything about it because we are refugees.”




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Monday, April 13, 2020

New York COVID-19 death toll reaches 10,056 – Gov. Cuomo


No fewer than 10,056 people have now died of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in New York, says the state governor, Mr Andrew Cuomo.

Speaking at his daily news briefing on Monday, Cuomo said the five-digit milestone was reached following the death of another 671 people overnight.


Recall that the New York death toll accounts for nearly half of the total US fatalities of 21,662, according to data compiled by John Hopkins University.


Cuomo said he was “hit hard on a personal level” by the death count crossing the 10,000 mark on Easter Sunday.


“I’m Catholic. Easter Sunday is the high holiday… To have this happen over this weekend is really, really especially tragic.


“And they are all in our thoughts and prayers,” he said referring to the victims and their families.


According to the governor, the number of confirmed cases stood at 195,031 as of the end of Tuesday, nearing another milestone of 200,000.


However, Cuomo said the “worst is over” and that there was a ray of hope in hospitalistion rates, which he said had remained flat.


He stated that 1,958 new patients were hospitalised on Sunday, the first time the daily figure has fallen below 2,000 since March 29.


The total number of hospitalisations also remained roughly flat at 18,825, a 24-hour net increase of just 118, according to him.


NAN reports that New York is the worst-hit state in the U.S. with no fewer than 195,031 infections, representing 35 per cent of the 555,371 confirmed cases nationwide.



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COVID-19: Fears in China over new cases, weeks after slow down


 

 

China on Monday reported the highest number of new Coronavirus cases in nearly six weeks.

 

This occurred as the country battles to prevent more COVID-19 infections, weeks after containing the pandemic.

No fewer than 108 people tested positive in the past 24 hours, Dpa reports.

 

The figure includes 98 travellers returning from abroad, according to the National Health Commission.


There are concerns about a resurgence of the disease since March 6, when authorities counted 143 new cases.


China now focuses on citizens returning from abroad.

 

The government had on March 28 banned the entry of foreigners.

State media reported that travellers crossing the border from Russia are spreading the virus in the city of Suifenhe in the north-eastern Heilongjiang province.


New infections are also feared in the southern metropolis of Guangzhou, in Guangdong province.

 

Africans have reportedly been evicted from their homes and turned away from hotels even if they hadn’t travelled abroad recently.

The Chinese Foreign Ministry, in a statement on Sunday, said that it’s expecting local authorities in Guangzhou to “reject all racist and discriminatory remarks”.


In Nigeria, the Embassy declared that the world’s most populous nation does not engage in discrimination.


Since the outbreak in December 2019, China has reported 82,160 Coronavirus cases including 3,341 deaths and 77,663 recovered patients.


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Sunday, April 12, 2020

U.S. coronavirus death toll now world’s highest



 

The U.S. now has now overtaken Italy to have the highest COVID-19 death toll in the world, according to data from multiple sources.

 

Tallies by Johns Hopkins University, New York Times and Reuters news agency, all show that the country had no fewer than 20,506 COVID-19-related deaths.

With this, Italy, which used to be top, has fallen one step behind with no fewer than 19,468 deaths as of Saturday afternoon.

 

On Friday, the U.S. also became the first county in the world to record no fewer than 2,000 deaths in a single day. 


As of Saturday evening, there were no fewer than 528,301 confirmed cases of the deadly virus across the country, according to the New York Times database.


New York remains the U.S. epicentre with no fewer than 180,458 cases which represents 34 per cent of the total, and 8,627 deaths representing 42 per cent of the country-wide fatalities.

New Jersey, Michigan, Massachusetts, California, Pennsylvania and Louisiana follow with no fewer than 20,000 cases each, and 2,183, 1,391, 686, 629, 506 and 806 deaths respectively.

 

Public health experts are warning that the U.S. death toll could reach 200,000 over the summer if stay-at-home orders are lifted after 30 days.

President Donald Trump has always argued that his country is reporting the highest figures because it is conducting more tests than any other in the world.

 

Data compiled by Worldometer, a reference website that provides real-time statistics for diverse topics, show that the U.S. had conducted over 2.6 million tests as of Saturday evening.

This is twice higher than tests carried out by Germany and Russia, the closest countries with no fewer than 1.3 million and 1.1 million respectively.

 

The website has no data on the number of tests conducted by China where the virus broke out in December.

China’s COVID-19 cases and deaths stood at 8,052 and 3,339 as of Saturday, figures dismissed by U.S. politicians and activists as a downplay.


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Monday, April 6, 2020

UK’s PM, Johnson, in intensive care after coronavirus symptoms worsened



British Prime Minister 

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who was diagnosed with coronavirus late last month, was on Monday moved to an intensive care unit after his condition worsened, his office said.


The 55-year-old has asked Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab “to deputise for him where necessary”, the spokesman said.


Johnson was admitted to London’s St Thomas’ Hospital on Sunday evening for tests, after suffering “persistent symptoms” of COVID-19, including a cough and temperature.


He tweeted at lunchtime that he was in “good spirits”, but at around 7pm (1800 GMT) he was moved to the ICU ward, according to a statement from Downing Street.


“Over the course of this afternoon, the condition of the prime minister has worsened and, on the advice of his medical team, he has been moved to the intensive care unit at the hospital,” a spokesman said.

The Conservative leader remains conscious at this time, Downing Street added, but was moved as a precaution in case he needs ventilation.


“The prime minister is receiving excellent care, and thanks all National Health Service (NHS) staff for their hard work and dedication,” the spokesman added.


Johnson asked Raab to deputise for him before he went into the ICU, Downing Street said.


[AFP]



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COVID-19: Africa will not be testing ground for vaccine ―WHO slams French scientists




 

The WHO director general, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, has condemned the comments by two French scientists suggesting the vaccine for coronavirus (COVID-19) should be first examined in-vivo in African patients of the virus.


The World Health Organisation (WHO) boss described such comments as racist and a hangover from the “colonial mentality” according to African News report.


Tedro, while disputing the argument also siad ““we will follow all the rules to test any vaccine or therapeutics all over the world suing exactly the same rule … whether it is in Europe, Africa or wherever.”

“To be honest I was so appaled and it was a time when I said we needed solidarity. These kind of racist remarks will not help. It goes against the solidarity…


“The hangover from colonial mentality has to stop. WHO will not allow this to happen.


“It was a disgrace actually, appalling to hear during the 21st century from scientists, that kind of remark. We condemn this in the strongest terms possible.

 

“But we assure you that this will not happen in Africa and will not happen elsewhere in any country, proper protocols will be followed and human beings will be treated as human beings because we are all human beings.,” he added.

 

Media have reported that in a broadcast the LCI channel, Camille Locht, head of research at the National Institute of Health and Medical Research (INSERM) in Lille, was questioned about a shield for coronavirus using the well-known BCG vaccine for tuberculosis.


Professors Jean-Paul Mira of Cochin Hospital in Paris and Camille Locht were debating possible COVID-19 cures on French television channel La Chaine Info last Thursday, and Mira asked: “If I may be provocative, should this study not be done in Africa?”

 

Locht then replied: “You are right. We are currently thinking similarly about a study in Africa regarding the BCG vaccine. There is a proposal that has gone out — or will. We will seriously consider it.”

Their comments drew a slew of criticisms on social media. A number of African sportsmen weighed in with that of Didier Drogba and Samuel Eto’o hogging major news headlines.


It is totally inconceivable we keep on cautioning this.

Africa isn’t a testing lab.


I would like to vividly denounce those demeaning, false and most of all deeply racists words.


Helps us save Africa with the current ongoing Covid 19 and flatten the curve. pic.twitter.com/41GIpXaIYv

— Didier Drogba (@didierdrogba) April 2, 2020

Mira had to close down public access to his Twitter account after receiving what he said were threats and insults.


He told the Huffington Post that he was deeply upset by the accusations made against him, and apologised if his comments had not been “clear.”



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