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‘Report yourself or we take you to the media’: Health ministry threatens escaped coronavirus-positive mutineers with punishment and media coverage

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The ministry of health has asked escaped coronavirus patients to report surrender themselves with ‘immediate’ effect or risk serious consequences which could include having their identities made public.

The health ministry said on Tuesday afternoon 40 people are mingling with members of the public even after they tested positive for coronavirus.

“Several efforts have been made in the past month by the Ministry of Health’s COVID-19 Response Team to reach and/or convince the abovementioned individuals to voluntarily comply, however all efforts have turned out futile,” top ministry of health official Modou Njai said in a statement.

Njai added: “The Ministry continues to treat these matters with utmost and grave concern and thus, the Ministry is hereby giving an order and ultimatum to all those concerned, that they are required to report themselves to the health authorities with immediate effect and failure of which will lead to serious consequences, including the publication of names and identifying information of all those at large.

“Therefore, all positive cases should self-report by calling the following numbers (1025; 3011261; 3632098), and those travelers who entered into the country and are yet to undergo sample collection must immediately report to Metzy Hotel or call the aforementioned numbers for further clarification.

“The Ministry would like to stress that this serious and ruthless misconduct will no longer be condoned under any circumstances. Anyone found not willing to cooperate with COVID-19 regulations will have their names and identifying information published on the media and thereafter, drastic measures will be taken against anyone that is non-compliant.

“Accordingly, the public is hereby reminded that the Public Health Emergency Act (Dangerous Infectious Diseases) Protection Regulations 2020 empowers the Minister or Officers acting under his authority to take strict measures as to when and where necessary.

“We urge the public to become more cautious and adhere to the advised safety precautions especially that with regard to social distancing, wearing of face masks in public and avoiding large gatherings.”

40 people infected with coronavirus escape or refuse isolation as health ministry vows to take action

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Forty people have either refused isolation or have absconded from treatment centres, the ministry of health said in a statement on Tuesday.

According to the ministry, it has come to the attention of the “Senior Management of the Ministry of Health that there are confirmed positive COVID-19 cases who are currently at large and interacting with the public”.

“Out of the total positives confirmed between 20th January to 25th January 2021, there are 40 confirmed positive cases that have refused isolation or have absconded treatment centers.

“Similarly, the management is also aware that there are large number of travelers who recently arrived in The Gambia from hotspot countries that have refused to abide to official protocols and/or report to the health authorities for the mandatory test upon arrival,” the ministry said in a statement signed by Modou Njai the Director of Health Promotion

According to the top health official, “there are persons deliberately posing a great public health risk to the population by their respective decisions to either evade COVID-19 Health Officials for either transfer to isolation centres, or for testing upon arrival from hotspot countries, abscond the designated isolation centres, refuse to accept their confirmed positive results and/or refuse to comply with The Ministry of Health’s Case Management Policy and Guidelines upon notification of their positive coronavirus status”.

“Several efforts have been made in the past month by the Ministry of Health’s COVID-19 Response Team to reach and/or convince the abovementioned individuals to voluntarily comply, however all efforts have turned out futile.

“The Ministry continues to treat these matters with utmost and grave concern and thus, the Ministry is hereby giving an order and ultimatum to all those concerned, that they are required to report themselves to the health authorities with immediate effect and failure of which will lead to serious consequences, including the publication of names and identifying information of all those at large,” Njai said.

 

Senegal: Journalist commits suicide after work

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A host of the regional channel of RTS Fatick killed himself by hanging in his native village, Waxal Jam, in the commune of Patar, not far from Niakhar, according to Senego on Tuesday.

Sémou Diouf hanged himself from a tree near his family house after closing from work on Monday night.

He was in his 40s and leaves behind a wife and three children. No reason was immediately known for the suicide.

Police seek help in identifying man after being hit by car

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By Fatou Camara II

Police are looking for the family of a man who was hit by a car near Neme Green House on the Coastal Road highway.

Police are scrambling for clues about the admitted man as no documents were found on him. He was reportedly hit by a car between 11am and 12pm on Tuesday.

He is admitted at Edward Francis Small Teaching Hospital.

Anyone who recognises him can call 3969424. See man below;

Seedy Njie applauded over mature handling of interview

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National People’s Party big-shot Seedy Njie has been applauded over his ‘mature’ handling of an interview with a Paradise TV reporter.

Njie pushed back at Madinding Ceesay after she appeared to have charged NPP for drug trafficking. The reporter later apologised and the interview continued to its logical end.

The Fatu Network has now understood a number of people called Njie to applaud him over the way and manner he handled the awkward situation.

One person who spoke with the politician said Njie handled the situation with maturity and he thus called him to applaud him.

Njie himself confirmed speaking with a number of people over the issue.

Draft constitution: Ex-Nigeria leader Dr Goodluck Jonathan thanked for agreeing to ‘facilitate’ dialogue

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ECOWAS has thanked former president of Nigeria Dr Goodluck Jonathan for agreeing to ‘facilitate’ dialogue among the country’s stakeholders over the draft constitution.

Jonathan flew into the country twice in a bid to end a huge stalemate over the draft constitution following its national assembly collapse.

ECOWAS leaders including President Barrow converged virtually over the weekend for the 58th ordinary session of their authority.

“On The Gambia, the authority takes note of the political divergencies in the country regarding the revision of the Constitution as the country prepares for presidential and legislative elections at the end of 2021.

“It commends H.E. Goodluck Ebele Jonathan, former President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, for agreeing to facilitate dialogue among national political stakeholders on the contentious issues surrounding the draft Constitution, which is due to be put to a referendum in June 2021 before the presidential elections in December 2021,” a statement by the leaders said.

They also said: “The Authority welcomes the progress made and calls on all political stakeholders in The Gambia to build consensus on the draft Constitution.

“It calls on the relevant authorities to maintain dialogue for the adoption of the Constitution and the compliance with the electoral calendar.”

 

‘It’s not our business’: Coronavirus patients blast back after they’re allegedly told to pack and leave because ‘President Barrow is visiting’

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Fatou Camara II

Coronavirus patients at Bambo Hotel have alleged they were asked to pack and be moved to a different hotel because President Adama Barrow is visiting the area.

“This morning we are told to move to Lemon Creek because Barrow is visiting the area. That all of us should pack up and that they are told to move us to Lemon Creek,” one patient told The Fatu Network.

“We think that its grossly unfair because we are not here for free, we have paid for it, we are tested positive for a virus that spread like God knows how. People tested positive and now you want to put them in a vehicle and start transporting them and even just moving them is risky.

“Nobody seems to care about us. We are just dumped here and forgotten, no medication nothing, no monitoring nothing . This is the situation here so I thought it’s fair to let Gambians know about what is going on here.

“If President Barrow is supposed to have a meeting here, it is not our concern we are not supposed to go anywhere because under quarantine you dont go out. So if Barrow is going to have a meeting somewhere here it is not our business,” the patient said. Another patient confirmed the development.

The Fatu Network contacted Dr Abubacarr Jagne of the health ministry who dismissed the complaints coming from the patients in the centre .

“We don’t have staff for all the multiple centres to look after people at the same time. So we prefer to put them in one centre and apparently Lemon Creek has agreed to that service.

“They have 54 rooms that are ready to accommodate our staff. The reason is I’ve got lot of problems with Bambo and his management for patients and their care and that is the reason we have to look for an alternative so we have no intention or nothing to do with the president or wherever he is travelling. I am not aware even where the President is going to. Am not sure that would be my motivation to move them from there,” Dr Jagne said.

Trade ministry reveals the reason behind price increase for rice, oil and chicken leg

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The ministry of trade has said the coronavirus pandemic has caused a reduction in the supply of rice and other food commodities causing a rise in prices along the way.

“These increments are caused by both the exogenous and some local factors,” the trade ministry said in a statement on Tuesday.

Findings by The Fatu Network have shown how prices for food commodities have jumped sharply in recent weeks. There is shortage of chicken leg in the country and the trade ministry is saying there is a price increase for the product by up to 18%.

The trade ministry said: “Exogenously, the general increase in the prices particularly for rice and edible oil is a global phenomenon as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic.

“These products are mainly from South East Asia such as China, Malaysia, Pakistan and Thailand, some of whom have import export restrictions. This has resulted to reduced supply of these aforementioned commodities and thus the resultant price increase.”

According to the trade ministry, recent months have also seen a price increase in the global container market from an average of $2,000 per 40ft container to up to $9,000 from Asia to Europe as of January 18.

As a result, the shipping lines operating in The Gambia have increased the freight cost to Banjul since November 2020 from $5,000 to $11,000 per 40ft container, according to the trade ministry.

 

World lost equivalent of 255 million jobs in 2020: UN

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By AFP

The coronavirus pandemic took a huge toll on global jobs last year, the United Nations said Monday, with the equivalent of more than a quarter of a billion lost.

In a fresh study, the UN’s International Labour Organization (ILO) found that a full 8.8 percent of global working hours were lost in 2020, compared to the fourth quarter of 2019.

That is equivalent to 255 million full-time jobs, or “approximately four times greater than the number lost during the 2009 global financial crisis,” the ILO said in a statement.

“This has been the most severe crisis for the world of work since the Great Depression of the 1930s,” ILO chief Guy Ryder told reporters in a virtual briefing.

Since surfacing in China just over a year ago, the virus has killed more than 2.1 million people, infected tens of millions of others and hammered the global economy.

The UN labour agency explained that around half of the lost working hours were calculated from reduced working hours for those remaining in employment.

But the world also saw “unprecedented levels of employment loss” last year, it said.

Official global unemployment shot up by 1.1 percent, or 33 million more people, to a total of 220 million and a worldwide jobless rate of 6.5 percent last year.

Ryder stressed that another 81 million people did not register as unemployed but “simply dropped out of the labour market”.

“Either they are unable to work perhaps because of pandemic restrictions or social obligations or they have given up looking for work,” he said.

“And so their talents, their skills, their energy have been lost, lost to their families, lost to our society, lost to us all.”

The lost working hours last year shrank global labour income by a full 8.3 percent, the ILO said.

That amounts to a drop of some $3.7 trillion, or 4.4 percent of overall global gross domestic product (GDP), it added.

The emergence of several safe and effective vaccines against COVID-19 has raised hopes that the world will soon be able to rein in the pandemic.

But the ILO cautioned that the prospects for a global labour market recovery this year are “slow, uneven and uncertain.”

The organization pointed to the uneven impact the crisis had had on the world’s workers, affecting women and younger workers far more than others.

Globally, employment losses for women last year stood at five percent, compared with 3.9 percent for men.

Women are more likely to work in the harder-hit sectors of the economy, and also have taken on more of the burden of, for instance, caring for children forced to stay home from school.

Younger workers were also far more likely to lose jobs, with employment loss among 15-24-year-olds at 8.7 percent globally, compared with 3.7 percent for older workers.

Many young people also put off trying to enter the labour market given the complicated conditions last year, the ILO found, warning that there was truly an “all too real risk of a lost generation”.

Monday’s report also highlighted the uneven impact on different sectors, with accommodation and food services the worst affected, showing a drop in employment of more than 20 percent.

By contrast, employment swelled in the information and communication fields, as well as in finance and insurance.

Looking forward, the ILO called on countries to provide particular support to the hardest-hit groups and sectors, and also to sectors likely to be able to generate numerous jobs quickly.

It stressed the need for more support to poorer countries with fewer resources to promote employment recovery.

The report sketched out three recovery scenarios for 2021, depending on support measures provided at the national and international level.

The pessimistic scenario saw an additional 4.6-percent drop in working hours, and even the most optimistic scenario anticipated that working hours would contract by a further 1.3 percent this year, corresponding to 36 million full-time jobs.

 

Three COVID-19 patients on oxygen support, says health ministry

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Three people who have tested positive for coronavirus and receiving treatment are currently on oxygen therapy, the ministry of health has said.

The ministry of health in its latest report released on Monday said 36 new cases of coronavirus, pointing to a slow return of the disease.

Nearly 1000 people were tested of which 36 people including 28 men and eight women tested positive for the virus.

According to the health ministry, while 19 new patients got discharged from treatment centres, three COVID-19 patients are currently on oxygen therapy.

Ecomig transitioning to a police force is a stupid idea

What made sense in 2017 is beginning to be abused, and put the Gambia’s sovereignty and pride into question. The idea of the ECOMIG forces transitioning to a police force is very stupid, and frankly, even the politics of it is odious. In the early sixties, under the British empire, The Gambia was not seen in a position to function as a viable independent entity, thus tag as the improbable nation. Even though it has been a difficult journey but we held our own and proudly became the Republic of The Gambia

Back in 2017, the ECOMIG forces roaring into the Gambia was well received and seen as the only solution to see the wishes of the Gambian people respected. The majority of the Gambian people lost faith in the security apparatus of the Gambia, and frankly, the forces were also totally out of their element. Transitioning from a twenty-year rule under a dictatorship where command and control were under the tutelage from one person morphing into a fragile democracy trying to find its footing, ECOMIG forces made lots of sense. Four years later, our democracy is evolving and the promise of Gambia can be seen on the horizon, only if we have faith in ourselves.

The Gambia has never been like a Somalia, nowhere close to Iraq’s situation back in the early two thousand, or Afghanistan of today. Now is the time to wean ourselves from external forces, complete the security reform exercise and take the future of our country into our own hands. The future of a peaceful and stable Gambia ultimately is in our hands, and political jettisoning only undermines our trust in our security and police forces that for the past twenty years underwent the same sort of abuse and negligence.

MUSA JENG
FTPBTP

 

Photo debunked: Man seen with Abubacarr Jawara and President Barrow is not Banta Keita but Kisima Jawara, Abubacarr’s uncle

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Claims businessman Abubacarr Jawara met President Adama Barrow alongside wanted Banta Keita have been slammed as false.

A photo of Jawara and a man meeting with President Adama Barrow is being shared on social media with wild claims the man is Banta Keita.

However, sources close to the Jawara family have told The Fatu Network the man is Kisima Jawara. Kisima is an uncle to Abubacarr.

One person close to the Jawaras said: “It’s false. It’s unfortunate people can descend so low. He is not Banta Keita but Kisima Jawara who is an uncle to Abubacarra Jawara and the proprietor of Sen Fast Food.

“Some people in this country in their senseless dislike of Abubacarr are ready to go to any length to link him with Banta and by extension the government.”

The slow return of COVID! 36 new cases are seen of which 9 are travellers who jetted into the country from countries with new variant

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The ministry of health has said 36 new cases of coronavirus have been registered bringing the total number of COVID-19 cases ever confirmed in the country to 4,008.

According to the ministry on Monday, of the 36, eight of the cases was confirmed on January 22 while 22 and six were confirmed on January 23 and January 24 respectively.

Those who tested positive include 28 men and eight women according the ministry, with their ages ranging between 19 and 64 years.

Nine out of the 36 cases were mandatorily tested for travelling into the country from hotspot countries of the new coronavirus strain, the health ministry said.

IEC’s war with GPPA set to end as its single sourcing plan collapses paving way for four companies to bid for multi-million dalasis contract

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The Independent Electoral Commission has abandoned its plan of having ESI supply the commission with electoral materials for the December poll after four companies finally took part in a bidding exercise.

Sources told The Fatu Network four companies including IEC’s favoured company ESI competed for the multi-million dollars contract on Monday. ESI’s bid price was the most expensive standing at $2,995,000.

The other three companies who bidded are Ekemp Int Ltd, Smart Business Group and Dermalog who are all cheaper.

The IEC at the start of January delayed voter registration after the ministry of finance refused to give the commission money. GPPA advised the ministry not to do so because the IEC did not tender the contract.

The Fatu Network has now learnt a bidding exercise finally took place on Monday and the IEC is now locked in an evaluation of the bids which it must complete by midnight.

The communication officer at IEC Joe Colley did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

 

Chicken legs go scarce in Gambia, price goes up

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By Ousman Jatta

The ban on the importation of chicken products from Senegal is having a rippling effect on the price of chicken in the country, findings by The Fatu Network show.

Chicken is one of the most highly consumed livestock products in the country by most Gambian families but it’s now becoming more expensive to purchase.

According to Modou Jabai a retailer, there is a shortage of chicken in the market and because of that the price of chicken has gone up.

“The ban has led to a shortage of chicken in the country. For that reason, we now sell a kilo of chicken legs for 130, while in the past a kilo of chicken cost for only D90,” he says.

The outbreak of the H5N1 bird flu in Senegal has caused the death of thousands of chicken in that country and has seen the ministry of agriculture through the department of livestock services and the ministry of health as well as the National Disaster Management agency recently hold a news conference where they laid out government’s preparedness in ensuring the disease doesn’t get into the country.

LAMIN NJIE – OPINION: President Barrow repeatedly turning to ECOWAS for help points to our failure as a nation

Ecowas troops who entered the country four years ago had one clear task: to sack Jammeh and help the nation stabilise. The stabilisation part entailed reforming the country’s security institutions. The army. The police. And the NIA. And even others.

But after four years, only a brave man will say that programme has thrived. Not much has been achieved really. President Barrow himself will confirm this. That’s why he wants ECOMIG to stay.

But while Gambians are inclined to denounce ECOWAS and its new decision to keep soldiers here till the end of 2021 and beyond, it’s our security who should feel ashamed of themselves.

They created our current predicament. Their lack of love for country is what has now made our nation look like a failed state in the eyes of others.

If only our men and women in uniform saw country and not Yahya Jammeh, there would not have been an ECOMIG. Never mind transforming it into a police mission. They would therefore be last to ever complain.

As the security sector reform staggers, President Barrow can only turn to ECOWAS for help. But doing so repeatedly only points to our failure as a nation. Sadly.

‘You can’t silence me’: Ebrima Dibba laughs as he says plan to silence him has collapsed while also saying the person who can silence him isn’t born yet

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UDP’s Ebrima Dibba has reacted to claims he duped a Saudi woman thousands of Saudi riyals while working at the Gambian Embassy in Saudi Arabia.

Documents claiming Dibba took money of over 60,000 Saudi riyals from a money and refused to pay the money back was circulated online by NPP supporters.

But reacting to the claims, Dibba said, in an audio obtained by The Fatu Network: “The person who can silence me has not been born yet in this country. This plan has collapsed.

“Anyone who knows something would know that letter is forged. It’s a fraudulent letter. Why haven’t they put a letterhead on that letter? There is no letterhead and the date they put October 5, 2019 found me on a European tour with the party leader Alhagie Ousainou Darboe.

“The telephone number they put and they said when I was in Saudi Arabia I took that money but if that’s the case I didn’t have that telephone number yet. October 2019 had found me already sacked from work in Saudi.”

Draft constitution: ECOWAS leaders speak

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The authority of ECOWAS heads of state has called on political stakeholders in the country to find a common understanding over the draft constitution.

The draft constitution is in distress following its failure at the national assembly last year when loyalist President Barrow MPs voted against it. The MPs insist the charter was badly drafted.

ECOWAS leaders met on Saturday for their 58th ordinary session and a statement said the authority of the leaders “takes note of the political divergencies in the country regarding the revision of the Constitution as the country prepares for presidential and legislative elections at the end of 2021”.

“It commends H.E. Goodluck Ebele Jonathan, former President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, for agreeing to facilitate dialogue among national political stakeholders on the contentious issues surrounding the draft Constitution, which is due to be put to a referendum in June 2021 before the presidential elections in December 2021.

“The Authority welcomes the progress made and calls on all political stakeholders in The Gambia to build consensus on the draft Constitution. It calls on the relevant authorities to maintain dialogue for the adoption of the Constitution and the compliance with the electoral calendar,” the leaders said in their joint statement.

Dr Lamin J Sise brands NIA officers ‘wicked’ torturers who willingly brutalised innocent Gambians for money or favour

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TRRC chairman Dr Lamin J Sise said today hearing about the National Intelligence Agency has shown agents weren’t the innocent and ignorant enablers of the dictatorship as some portrayed themselves to be.

The probe has in recent weeks cast attention to the NIA, used by former President Yahya Jammeh to violate and abuse the rights of innocent Gambians. At least six people who worked with the agency pleaded guilty to torturing Gambians at the NIA, sometimes with the help of the junglers.

TRRC boss Dr Sise today said they were “wicked torturers who willingly brutalized innocent Gambians for money or favour”.

“Some perpetrators gave flimsy excuses that if they did not carry out the superior orders to torture a detainee, they would themselves be tortured. They claimed that they had no choice.

“But of course they have a duty not to implement unlawful orders and no amount of explanation can excuse the cruel and inhumane treatment they inflicted on their victims,” Dr Sise said.

 

Biden to sign order to halt non-US citizens from travelling to US due to coronavirus

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President Joe Biden on Monday will formally reinstate COVID-19 travel restrictions on non-U.S. travelers from Brazil, Ireland, the United Kingdom and 26 other European countries that allow travel across open borders, according to two White House officials.

The officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss the order, also confirmed Sunday that South Africa would be added to the restricted list because of concerns about a variant of the virus that has spread beyond that nation.

Biden is reversing an order from President Donald Trump in his final days in office that called for the relaxation of the travel restrictions as of Tuesday.

The decision to reverse the order is not surprising, but the addition of South Africa to the restricted travel list highlights the new administration’s concern about mutations in the virus.

The South Africa variant has not been discovered in the United States, but another variant — originating in the United Kingdom — has been detected in several states.

Reuters was first to report Biden’s decision to add South Africa to the list.

Biden last week issued an executive order directing federal agencies to require international air travelers to quarantine upon U.S. arrival. The order also requires that all U.S.-bound passengers ages 2 and above get negative COVID-19 test results within three days before traveling. (AP)

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