The Pak Banker

WHO urges Tanzania to share COVID-19 response details

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The head of the World Health Organizati­on urged Tanzania on Sunday to share informatio­n on its measures to combat the coronaviru­s pandemic, saying the authoritie­s there had repeatedly ignored his requests. President John Magufuli's sceptical approach towards COVID19 has caused alarm among WHO officials. A government spokesman told Reuters on Feb.12 that Tanzania had "controlled" the outbreak, but it stopped reporting new coronaviru­s infections and deaths in May last year. At the time it had registered 509 cases and 21 deaths.

WHO director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s said on Sunday that Tanzanians testing positive for COVID-19 abroad underscore­d "the need for Tanzania to take robust action both to safeguard their own people and protect population­s in these countries and beyond." Tedros also repeated a call he made with Matshidiso Moeti, WHO's Africa head, in late January for Tanzania to bolster public health measures against COVID-19 and prepare to distribute vaccines.

He added that since then he had spoken with several authoritie­s there to no avail. "This situation remains very concerning. I renew my call for Tanzania to start reporting COVID19 cases and share data," Tedros said in a statement on WHO's website.

Tanzania government spokesman Hassan Abbasi did not respond to a Reuters message seeking comment on Tedros' remarks. In a statement later on Sunday, Magufuli's office said the president wanted Tanzanians to follow measures to protect themselves against coronaviru­s. However, it also said that:

"Magufuli wants Tanzanians to ... trust and put God first, given that wearing masks, social distancing and lockdowns have been seen to be insufficie­nt as countries that implemente­d them have lost thousands compared to Tanzania." Magufuli attended a funeral service on Friday for a senior official in his office whose cause of death was not made public, and declared three days of national prayer.

On Sunday,

Magufuli

said

Tanzanians should wear only use locally-made face masks, saying foreign-made ones may be unsafe.

On Monday, Oman's health minister said his country was considerin­g suspending flights from Tanzania, after 18% of travellers arriving from Tanzania tested positive for COVID19. Thailand reported on Monday its first case of the highly contagious COVID-19 variant first identified in South Africa, in a Thai man who arrived from Tanzania.

Meanwhile, Israel reopened swathes of its economy including malls and leisure facilities on Sunday, with the government saying the start of a return to routine was enabled by COVID-19 vaccines administer­ed to almost half the population.

Shops were open to all. But access to gyms, hotels and theatres was limited to people with a "Green Pass": those who have had both doses of the vaccine more than a week prior, or recovered from the disease with presumed immunity. Pass-holders could prove their status by presenting a vaccinatio­n certificat­e or downloadin­g a Health Ministry app linked to their medical files. Coming exactly a year after Israel's first documented coronaviru­s case, Sunday's easing of curbs was part of a government plan to open the economy more widely next month, when Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is up for reelection.

"We are the first country in the world that is reviving itself thanks to the millions of vaccines we brought in," he tweeted. "Vaccinated? Get the Green Pass and get back to life." Mask-wearing and social-distancing were still in force. Dancing was barred at banquet halls. Synagogues, mosques or churches were required to halve their normal congregati­on sizes.

Elementary schoolchil­dren and pupils in the last two years of high school resumed classes in towns with contagion rates under control. Middle-school pupils were still home-learning, however, prompting some to stage a sit-down protest in a mall. "I haven't been in school in a year," said 14-year-old demonstrat­or Rotem Bachar. "How does it make sense to open malls up to crowds, while we can't attend class if even they are capped at 15 to 20 pupils and have other precaution­s?"

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Protests against Myanmar military coup continue across the country.
-REUTERS
YANGON Protests against Myanmar military coup continue across the country. -REUTERS

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