Tag: US

  • U.S., Russian spacefarers to blast off for Int’l Space Station

    U.S., Russian spacefarers to blast off for Int’l Space Station

    A trio of U.S. and Russian spacefarers are set to blast off for the International Space Station from the Russian-operated Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan on Thursday at 1:05 pm (0805 GMT).

    U.S. astronaut Christopher Cassidy and Russian cosmonauts Anatoly Ivanishin and Ivan Vagner will travel aboard a Russian Soyuz spacecraft and are scheduled to dock with the ISS’s Poisk module after about six hours of spaceflight.

    The three men spent a month in quarantine ahead of the launch amid concerns over the highly infectious coronavirus, which has caused a global pandemic in recent months.

    “We feel fantastic,” Cassidy told a televised press conference a day before the launch.

    Journalists were not allowed to enter Baikonur as a precaution.

    The spacefarers, who are scheduled to spend 196 days aboard the space station, were as an additional precaution not allowed to say goodbye to their families in person.

    The space station orbits about 400 kilometres above Earth and has a mostly U.S. and Russian crew.

    The laboratory is tasked with conducting scientific experiments that would be impossible on Earth’s surface.

    The new additions to the ISS crew are to join U.S. astronauts Andrew Morgan and Jessica Meir and Russian cosmonaut Oleg Skripochka.

    Next week, on April 17, Morgan, Meir and Skripochka are scheduled to return to Earth. (dpa/NAN)

  • U.S. coronavirus death toll passes 10,000 mark

    U.S. coronavirus death toll passes 10,000 mark

    The death toll from the new coronavirus in the United States passed the 10,000 marker on Monday, according to a tally from Johns Hopkins University.

    The country has the highest confirmed positives in the world, with more than 347,003 cases of the virus and 10,335 deaths related to Covid-19, the respiratory disease caused by it.

    Public health officials and the White House are warning the upcoming weeks will likely see peak coronavirus outbreaks and hospitalisations in the U.S., with the death rate also set to sharply climb.

    There are growing signs of impending shortages of medical gear and staff.

    The U.S. had just 1,000 confirmed cases and about 30 deaths on March 10, with the outbreak spreading rapidly and across the country.

    New York is the current epicentre, while Louisiana, Michigan, Illinois and California are also hotspots, with more due to emerge. (dpa/NAN)

  • Americans should wear non-medical masks, but Trump will not

    Americans should wear non-medical masks, but Trump will not

    US President Donald Trump on Friday unveiled new guidelines saying that every American should wear non-medical face masks while in cramped public settings amid the coronavirus pandemic, while also saying he would not heed the “voluntary” advice.

    The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is recommending that Americans wear “a basic cloth or fabric mask that can either be purchased online or simply made at home,” Trump said during a press briefing, adding: “This is voluntary, I don’t think I’m going to be doing it.”

    The new guidance comes amid concerns that up to 25 per cent of people infected with Covid-19, the disease caused by the new virus, are not showing symptoms and could be unwittingly spreading it.

    Face coverings will help “slow the spread of the virus and help people who may have virus and do not know it from transmitting it to others,” the CDC guidelines stated.

    When asked why he does not want to wear a mask, the president emphasized that voluntary nature of the guidelines, adding that the covering would not fit the decorum of his office.

    “Somehow sitting in the Oval Office behind that beautiful resolute desk, the great resolute desk, I think wearing a face mask as I greet presidents, prime ministers, dictators, kings, queens. I don’t know, somehow I don’t see it for myself,” he said.

    The new recommendations come as New York continues to be the most hard-hit state in the US reporting 562 deaths on Friday, the state’s largest single-day death toll, Governor Andrew Cuomo told a daily press briefing.

    New York confirmed coronavirus cases also passed 100,000 on Friday, with over half of the infections in New York City.

    With the need for ventilators and other medical equipment remaining dire, Cuomo said he would sign an executive order allowing the state to take supplies from private hospitals and companies and redistribute them to hospitals most in need.

    The US Department of Defence on Friday said it was changing rules that led to delays in patients being admitted to the USNS Comfort after the ship was criticized for failing to relieve New York City’s swamped hospitals, as coronavirus cases continued to surge.

    The 1,000-bed hospital ship had only taken 20 patients aboard as of late Thursday, the New York Times reported citing officials, while city hospitals struggled to handle the thousands infected with coronavirus.

    This was due to strict rules preventing people infected with the virus or afflicted with some 49 other medical conditions from being accepted on the vessel.

    Delays were also caused by patients having to be screened for Covid-19 at local hospitals before being taken to the ship.

    On Friday, the Pentagon announced that “screening for care on the USNS Comfort will be modified and will now occur pier-side in an effort to reduce the backlog at some of the nearby New York hospitals.”

    Cuomo also said the Javits Center, a huge convention centre in Manhattan that was turned into a makeshift hospital for non-coronavirus patients, was now receiving Covid-19 patients along with the Navy hospital ship after the federal government granted his request.

    The governor said he believed the Navy did not want to accept those infected with the virus on the USNS Comfort because “it would be too hard to disinfect the ship afterwards.”

    New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio said he was “sure that ship will be very full soon.”

    “We’re going to need the Comfort and every other place in the city that we can get hospital beds up and running because we’re expecting a huge surge just in the next few days,” de Blasio told broadcaster MSNBC.

    Later, the mayor said the city would need 15,000 more ventilators and 45,000 more medical personnel to fight the pandemic through April and May.

    He called for a national enlistment programme for doctors and nurses to be sent to New York City.

    The city on Friday sent out an emergency phone alert to residents calling for more health workers to volunteer. (dpa)

  • US Senate passes historic stimulus as coronavirus deaths top 1,000

    US Senate passes historic stimulus as coronavirus deaths top 1,000

    The United States Senate on Wednesday unanimously passed an unprecedented stimulus bill to cushion the economic fallout of the coronavirus pandemic, as deaths in the country topped 1,000.

    The legislation – estimated at 2 trillion dollars – is a sweeping economic plan meant to stabilize households and businesses around the country as worries grow over a deepening economic recession that could reverberate around the globe.

    The package will include direct 1,200 dollar payments to most adults, with an additional 500 dollars per child, in a bid to pump money back into the economy.

    Another roughly 350 billion dollars will be available in loans for small businesses, which will be forgiven by the government if the money is used to keep employees on the payroll.

    Unemployment insurance will be boosted, allowing most people who have lost their jobs to maintain their full salaries for four months. Some 150 billion dollars will go to the health care system.

    The package will be coupled with up to 4 trillion dollars in lending from the Federal Reserve, according to White House economic adviser Larry Kudlow.

    “It will inject trillions of dollars of cash the economy as fast as possible to help American workers, families, small businesses and industries make it through this disruption,” Senate leader Mitch McConnell said Wednesday, after days of intense negotiations between lawmakers and the White House.

    “This is a war-time level of investment into our nation,” the Republican added.

    The package comes as the death toll on Wednesday topped 1,000, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University, as officials throughout the country say the outbreak is expected to worsen.

    New York Governor Andrew Cuomo blasted the stimulus package earlier on Wednesday as “terrible for the state,” the current epicentre of the coronavirus outbreak in the country.

    “We have 15 times the problem of the next state,” Andrew Cuomo told a news conference as New York’s number of confirmed coronavirus cases passed 30,800, which is over half the US total.

    Cuomo said the bill would give New York 3.8 billion dollars, an amount he called a “drop in the bucket.”

    He said the state needs up to 15 billion dollars to combat the crisis, which has already cost New York 1 billion dollars.

    California Governor Gavin Newsom, who oversees 40 million residents, said his state will get around 10 billion dollars, adding that funds are a good first step but more will be needed.

    He added that the state’s unemployment claims have skyrocketed past 1 million since March 13, as state-wide shutdown measures forced non-essential bushinesses to close.

    Wall Street rallied for a second straight day on Wednesday in a signal that the economic stimulus plan may quell the volatile financial markets.

    However markets may dip on Thursday as the Department of Labor releases weekly unemployment claim statistics, which may surge to historic levels.

    With the rate of new coronavirus infections in New York doubling about every three days, the state is increasingly desperate for resources, especially ventilators, to treat the influx of coronavirus patients.

    Cuomo said he spoke to Trump about a “rolling deployment” of resources around the country, starting with New York.

    “We need resources from the entire country right now because our apex is first and the numbers are highest,” he said, adding that “as soon as we get past our critical moment, we will redeploy that equipment and personnel to the next hotspot.”

    Cuomo’s comments came a day after a top White House official called on New Yorkers who have recently left the city to self-quarantine for two weeks to prevent the virus from spreading.

    There are over 65,000 confirmed coronavirus cases in the US, and over 920 deaths, according to John Hopkins University data.(dpa)

  • BREAKING: FG places travel ban on China, Italy, US, UK, nine others

    BREAKING: FG places travel ban on China, Italy, US, UK, nine others

    The Federal Government on Wednesday placed a travel ban on 13 high-risk Coronavirus countries.

    The countries are China, Italy, Iran, South Korea, Spain, Japan, France, Germany, Norway, the United States of America, the United Kingdom, Netherlands, and Switzerland.

    The government said the travel restriction was placed on countries with over a thousand cases of the novel Coronavirus.

    It added that the ban would take effect on Friday, March 20 and it would last for four weeks and was subject to review.

    The government also announced the temporary suspension of all visas issued to nationals from these countries.

    Details later…

  • China expels U.S. journalists from 3 top newspapers amid dispute

    China expels U.S. journalists from 3 top newspapers amid dispute

    China announced plans early on Wednesday to expel U.S. journalists from The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and The Washington Post in retaliation for U.S. curbs on Chinese media.

    The move by China is the latest escalation in a tit-for-tat war between the two superpowers about media operations.

    US journalists working at the three publications whose credentials are set to expire before the end of the year need to turn in their press cards within 10 days, the Chinese Foreign Ministry said in a statement on its website.

    China also demanded that three newspapers, along with Voice of America and Time magazine, provide information about their operations in China, including staff and finances.

    Beijing said the announcement was a direct retaliation for U.S. caps on Chinese media, announced earlier this month.

    U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo accused China of denying the world access to knowledge about what is happening inside that country due to the expulsion of journalists from three U.S. newspapers.

    “They deny the world the capacity to know what’s really going on inside of their country,” Pompeo said during a news conference.

    In February, China expelled three Wall Street Journal journalists in retaliation for a headline deemed offensive, even though they were not involved with either the headline or the article, starting the feud between the superpowers.

    The New York Times executive editor Dean Baquet condemned the decision, calling it a “grave mistake”.

    “The health and safety of people around the world depend on impartial reporting about its two largest economies, both of them now battling a common epidemic,” Baquet said, calling on both states to resolve the dispute. (dpa/NAN)

  • As coronavirus chaos spreads globally, Trump declares U.S. emergency

    As coronavirus chaos spreads globally, Trump declares U.S. emergency

    President Donald Trump declared a U.S. national emergency over the quickly spreading coronavirus on Friday, opening the door to more government aid to combat a pathogen that has infected more than 138,000 people worldwide and left over 5,000 dead.

    The impact of the coronavirus on everyday life deepened around the world. It was detected for the first time in several countries, with the World Health Organization (WHO) calling Europe the pandemic’s current epicenter. More schools and businesses closed, the global sporting calendar was left in tatters, and people faced greater restrictions on where they could go.

    “To unleash the full power of the federal government to this effort today, I am officially declaring a national emergency – two very big words,” Trump said in remarks at the White House Rose Garden, adding that the U.S. situation could worsen and “the next eight weeks are critical.”

    Trump, whose action makes available $50 billion in federal aid to states and localities, had faced criticism from some experts for being slow and ineffective in his response to the crisis and playing down the threat.

    The latest steps came two days after Trump announced travel restrictions blocking U.S. entry for most people from continental Europe. While Britain was among the countries exempted, Trump said on Friday that might change because infections there had risen “precipitously.”

    The president, who was photographed last Saturday at his private Florida club with a Brazilian official who has tested positive for the coronavirus, said he himself likely would be tested “fairly soon,” a reversal of his previous stance. But Trump, 73, said he did not plan to isolate himself, noting he was suffering no symptoms.

    Travel bans have hammered airlines and travel companies worldwide, while financial markets have been hit by panic selling this week.

    The three major U.S. stock indexes rallied more than 9% on Friday, rebounding from Wall Street’s biggest daily drop since 1987. But the indexes were still about 20% below record highs hit in mid-February.

    WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said Europe now had more reported cases and deaths than the rest of world combined, apart from China, where the coronavirus originated but where new cases have slowed to a trickle. The WHO called the death toll reaching 5,000 globally “a tragic milestone.”

    The WHO’s top emergency expert, Mike Ryan, said social distancing was a “tried and tested method” to slow the spread of a virus but “not a panacea” that would stop transmission.

    “Blanket travel measures in their own right will do nothing to protect an individual state,” Ryan said.

  • U.S. coronavirus death toll rises as 21 test positive on cruise ship

    U.S. coronavirus death toll rises as 21 test positive on cruise ship

    The death toll in the U.S. from the coronavirus rose to 17 on Friday, as the impact of the outbreak continued to have a knock-on effect across the country.

    Two deaths were reported in Florida, and four more deaths were reported in Washington state, the epicentre of the outbreak, where 14 people have died.

    One person has died in California.

    Off the coast of California, some 3,500 passengers and crew aboard the Grand Princess cruise ship, which has been held since Wednesday, remain in limbo after 21 people tested positive for the virus.

    The infected include 19 crew members and two passengers, Vice President Mike Pence said at a news conference on Friday.

    He said the ship would be docked in a non-commercial port and everyone aboard would be tested.

    “Those that need to be quarantined will be,” Pence added.

    Meanwhile, officials in the city of Austin announced the cancellation of the South by Southwest (SXSW) festival, a gathering centred around music, film and technology, which draws hundreds of thousands of people to the city.

    “This is the first time in 34 years that the March event will not take place,” the event organisers said in a statement, calling the decision “unprecedented”.

    The number of cases of coronavirus is growing around the  U.S.

    The Centers for Disease Control said there were 164 cases nationwide, while a database of cases assembled by Johns Hopkins University put the number at 336.

    In New York state, the number of infected people doubled to 44 and 4,000 people are in “precautionary” quarantines across the state, Governor Andrew Cuomo said on Friday.

    “Im not urging calm.

    “I’m urging reality, I’m urging a factual response, not an emotional response,” Cuomo said.

    According to reports in Los Angeles and New York City, public health officials have been struggling to provide adequate testing for the coronavirus and are restricting testing to certain patients.

    “We are increasing the supply,” Stephen Hahn of the White House coronavirus task force said on Friday, adding that more than one million tests would be available by the weekend.

    Earlier on Friday President Donald Trump signed an emergency 8.3-billion-dollar spending package to respond to the coronavirus outbreak, while insisting he saw no reason for the public to be alarmed.

    “You have to be calm. It’ll go away,” Trump said, adding that the country and the economy are in “great shape.” Trump said he believed markets would bounce back, even as they continue to sink deeper into correction territory.

    Authorities in King County in Washington – home to over 2 million people – have asked residents to work from home if they are able.

    Major companies including Microsoft and Google have asked many employees to work from home.

    California Attorney General Xavier Becerra warned that it is illegal for businesses to drastically raise prices on goods in light of the health emergency, as reports of price gouging for products like hand sanitizer have surfaced.

    Speaking from the capitol, Trump urged the Federal Reserve to continue to cut rates, following an emergency intervention within the week to lower the benchmark interest rate in a bid to stave off the impact of the virus on the economy.

    “It’s a very conservative approach, but it’s not a good approach,” Trump said about the central bank’s policy.

    He said other countries in Europe and Asia had lowered rates and that put the U.S. at a “competitive disadvantage”. (dpa/NAN)

  • US canvasses economic participation for women, girls

    US canvasses economic participation for women, girls

    The Deputy Public Affairs Officer, US Consulate, Lagos, Jennifer Foltz, says her country has continued to invest  millions of dollars to promote the rights of women and girls in Africa.

    She spoke on Wednesday at a book presentation entitled, ” She Evolves, ” held at the American Corner, Ibadan.

    Foltz said there was the need to break down all barriers that prevent women and girls from participating in the economy and which would benefit everyone.

    Speaking on the theme of the 2020 International Women Day, ‘Each for Equal,’ she said: “We are all responsible for our own thoughts and actions.

    “We can actively choose to challenge stereotypes bye bye, focus on productivity and celebrate women’s achievements everytime.

    “We need to choose both men and women, this is not just women’s issue of course, if we choose to advance women every little bit of the acts add up to something  big.

    “And when we break down all barriers that prevent women and girls from participating in the economy, everyone benefits.

    “So, whether at home or abroad, promoting women’s economic participation is the priority of the US government.

    “We promote the rights of women and girls as well as equality policy here in Africa, we invest millions of dollars to do that kind of work.

    “This is just another example of the work we are partnering with to do just that.”

    Foltz said the event was an avenue to connect, network and make relationships that last for a long time.

    “That is why we have American places all over Nigeria and all across the world so people can come together and really connect and network,” she said.

    Mrs Oluwayemisi Egunjobi, the publisher of the book, said the publication was about women evolving through different stages of life, highlighting the peculiarities and challenges of each decade of development.

    “Even me, reading through the different decades, I am gaining a lot of things every time I pick up the book to edit.

    “And I wished that I had read a book like that to prepare me. There is no preparation for life that can be enough.

    “But at least by proxy when you experience some things you can easily gloss over that kind of event in life,” she said.

    Egunjobi, who is also the Managing Director, Joycefitround Educational Services Ltd, advocated for self love from women.

    “I think it is important that every woman must think about how to make money.

    “But in making money we must learn that we are not men, we must learn that we need to bring up the next generation that must continue.

    “So we must be able to balance work and life as well as business, that is very key and important for me,” she said.

    The publisher stated that the author of the book, Mojoyin Oyadiran, had nursed the idea of the publication while in her 20s and reasoned that having co-authors from different decades of life would enrich women from all walks of life.

    Miss Lauretta Malaka, who read from the 20s decade chapter in the book, said the publication was an eye opener on issues that would shape one’s entire life, help to make good decisions and juggle roles in life.

    The 194-page book is divided into five chapters denoting the 20s, 30s, 40s and 50s decades of life.

    The book, a self development publication, is filled with practical knowledge that would help women navigate effectively and optimally through each decade of life.

    Authored by Oyadiran, other co-authors are Yetunde Omoarukhe, Oyindamola Ige, Ivana Osagie and De Gomeg. (NAN)

  • US seeks selfish gains as China goes all out to curtail coronavirus spread

    US seeks selfish gains as China goes all out to curtail coronavirus spread

    While China marshals a collective effort to combat the outbreak of novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV), some Western countries, led by the US, are seizing the opportunity to stir up trouble and attack China.

    The truth is, US system is not nearly as efficient as the Chinese system. The US method of resolving problems is to procrastinate. For example, US President Donald Trump’s administration simply chooses to build a border wall to resolve illegal immigration issues.

    Trump wanted to build the wall, but Democrats in the US Congress oppose it. Such a situation leads to procrastination and public complaints. Various interest groups often have different demands and goals on major issues. Thus, the US is often inefficient in resolving problems, including the spread of influenza in the US.

    The US always worries about economic cost when responding to public health issues and emergencies. For example, when the wildfires swept across California in 2018, the local government paid inmates only $1 an hour to fight the fires. In many parts of the US, even firefighting has been privatized and handed to profit-seeking corporations. This basic service now depends on how much people can pay.

    For the Chinese government, people’s safety is top priority. Only by completely eliminating the spread of the virus can the Chinese government fulfill its responsibilities.

    The US also tends to hype the human rights issue. The New York Times claimed that China’s lockdown of the city of Wuhan, in Central China’s Hubei Province “would almost certainly lead to human rights violations.”

    The statement is immoral and distorts the truth. Essentially, public health issues are not an issue of human rights. There must be efficient prevention and control.

    During the 2009 H1N1 pandemic, the US did not conduct inspections at airports and borders as soon as it could, which failed to contain the spread of the disease. During Hurricane Katrina in 2005, people’s houses were damaged by floods and robberies were rampant.

    Why didn’t the US talk about human rights then? When facing the challenge of survival, the rights of individuals must be subordinated to the needs of majority. This is the same in both Eastern and Western ethics. When it comes to life and death, we must first solve the problem of survival before considering how to live more comfortably.

    Although the US claims to be tolerant of diverse opinions, criticizing China is the mainstream political discourse. Whenever something goes wrong in China, many US media outlets and politicians consistently attribute the problem to China’s system.

    China is fighting the 2019-nCoV with confidence. However, some remarks emanating from the US are quite negative, a result of Washington’s prejudice, double standards, and binary opposition mind-set.

    Some US politicians tend to interpret non-political issues with a political thinking. They are unaware that such problems require global efforts. Certain US accusations against China are morally indecent, which may negatively influence the world’s efforts to jointly address the 2019-nCoV and other similar public health issues.

    Attacking China’s system clearly deviates from the general trend in which all countries around the world join hands to cope with public health issues. Such a move reflects that some US politicians lack a conscience and a spirit of self-reflection, especially so when considering the US itself has failed to properly handling similar problems.

    While the 2019-nCoV remains so far unchecked, all countries and regions should coordinate and cooperate to cope with the challenges of bringing it under control. The US should pay more attention to exchanging experiences with China to avoid similar outbreaks, rather than politicizing the issue and placing blame.

    Tackling the 2019-nCoV requires a systematic approach, and internal and external efforts must be jointly made. China should first handle its internal affairs. In the course of dealing with the epidemic, despite some twists and turns, the country’s general direction is very clear – to defeat the virus and restore public confidence.

    This crisis needs a national effort. Relevant policies and resources should be made and allocated step by step, leading to a sustainable and virtuous cycle. This is the fundamental direction we need to respond to outside doubt.

    Meanwhile, we should also publicize our fruitful work in an effective way, and inject the international community with more confidence in China’s actions.

    China should work with other countries and regions to cope with the 2019-nCoV and make timely and prompt counterattacks against forces with evil intentions. In this way, the world will see which countries are really working on public health issues, and which have ulterior motives. This is also an efficient way to respond to some US politicians’ groundless attacks against China, so that their accusations collapse onto themselves.

    The article was compiled by Global Times reporters Li Qingqing and Yan Yunming based on an interview with Li Haidong, a professor at the Institute of International Relations, China Foreign Affairs University.