The Proto-Communist Plan to Resurrect Everyone Who Ever Lived – VICE

Is there anything that can be done to escape the death cult we seem trapped in?

One of the more radical visions for how to organize human society begins with a simple goal: lets resurrect everyone who has ever lived. Nikolai Fedorov, a nineteenth-century librarian and Russian Orthodoxy philosopher, went so far as to call this project the common task of humanity, calling for the living to be rejuvenated, the dead to be resurrected, and space to be colonized specifically to house them. From the 1860s to the 1930s, Fedorovs influence was present throughout the culturehe influenced a generation of Marxists ahead of the Russian Revolution, as well as literary writers like Leo Tolstoy and Fyodor Dostoevsky, whose novel, The Brothers Karamazov, directly engaged with Federov's ideas about resurrection.

After his death, Federovs acolytes consolidated his ideas into a single text, A Philosophy of the Common Task, and created Cosmism, the movement based on his anti-death eschatology. Federov left the technical details to those who would someday create the prerequisite technology, but this did not stop his disciples: Alexander Bogdanov, who founded the Bolsheviks with Lenin, was an early pioneer of blood transfusions in hopes of rejuvenating humanity; Konstantin Tsiolkvosky, an astrophysicist who was the progenitor of Russia's space program, sought to colonize space to house the resurrected dead; and Alexander Chizhevsky, a biophysicist who sought to map out the effects of solar activity on Earth life and behavior, thought his research might help design the ideal society for the dead to return to.

The vast majority of cosmists were, by the 1930s, either murdered or purged by Stalin, muting the influence of their ambitious project but also leaving us with an incomplete body of work about what type of society resurrection requires or will result in, and whether that wouldas some cosmists believe nowbring us closer to the liberation of the species. Now, I think it is obvious thatdespite what todays transhumanists might tell youwe are in no position, now or anytime soon, to resurrect anyone let alone bring back to life the untold billions that have existed across human history and past it into the eons before civilizations dawn.

To be clear, I think cosmism is absolute madness, but I also find it fascinating. With an introduction to Cosmism and its implications, maybe we can further explore the arbitrary and calculated parts of our social and political order that prioritize capital instead of humanity, often for sinister ends.

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What? Who gets resurrected? And how?

At its core, the Common Task calls for the subordination of all social relations, productive forces, and civilization itself to the single-minded goal of achieving immortality for the living and resurrection for the dead. Cosmists see this as a necessarily universal project for either everyone or no one at all. That constraint means that their fundamental overhaul of society must go a step further in securing a place where evil or ill-intentioned people cant hurt anyone, but also where immortality is freely accessible for everyone.

Its hard to imagine how that worldwhere resources are pooled together for this project, where humans cannot hurt one another, and where immortality is freeis compatible with the accumulation and exploitation that sit at the heart of capitalism. The crisis heightened by coronavirus should make painfully clear to us all that, as J.W. Masonan economist at CUNYrecently put it, we have a system organized around the threat of withholding people's subsistence, and it "will deeply resist measures to guarantee it, even when the particular circumstances make that necessary for the survival of the system itself." Universal immortality, already an optimistic vision, simply cannot happen in a system that relies on perpetual commodification.

Take one small front of the original cosmist project: blood transfusions. In the 1920s, after being pushed out of the Bolshevik party, Bogdanov focused on experimenting with blood transfusions to create a rejuvenation process for humans (theres little evidence they do this). He tried and failed to set up blood banks across the Soviet Union for the universal rejuvenation of the public, dying from complications of a transfusion himself. Today, young blood is offered for transfusion by industrious start-ups, largely to wealthy and eccentric clientsmost notably (and allegedly) Peter Thiel.

In a book of conversations on cosmism published in 2017 titled Art Without Death, the first dialogue between Anton Vidokle and Hito Steyerl, living artists and writers in Berlin, drives home this same point. Vidokle tells Steyerl that he believes Death is capital quite literally, because everything we accumulatefood, energy, raw material, etc.these are all products of death. For him, it is no surprise were in a capitalist death cult given that he sees value as created through perpetual acts of extraction or exhaustion.

Steyerl echoes these concerns in the conversation, comparing the resurrected dead to artificial general intelligences (AGIs), which oligarch billionaires warn pose an existential threat to humanity. Both groups anticipate fundamental reorganizations of human society, but capitalists diverge sharply from cosmists in that their reorganization necessitates more extraction, more exhaustion, and more death. In their conversation, Steyerl tells Vidokle:

Within the AGI Debate, several solutions have been suggested: first to program the AGI so it will not harm humans, or, on the alt-right/fascist end of the spectrum, to just accelerate extreme capitalisms tendency to exterminate humans and resurrect rich people as some sort of high-net-worth robot race.

These eugenicist ideas are already being implemented: cryogenics and blood transfusions for the rich get the headlines, but the breakdown of healthcare in particularand sustenance in generalfor poor people is literally shortening the lives of millions ... In the present reactionary backlash, oligarchic and neoreactionary eugenics are in full swing, with few attempts being made to contain or limit the impact on the living. The consequences of this are clear: the focus needs to be on the living first and foremost. Because if we dont sort out societycreate noncapitalist abundance and so forththe dead cannot be resurrected safely (or, by extension, AGI cannot be implemented without exterminating humankind or only preserving its most privileged parts).

One of the major problems of todays transhumanist movement is that we are currently unable to equally distribute even basic life-extension technology such as nutrition, medicine, and medical care. At least initially, transhumanists vision of a world in which people live forever is one in which the rich live forever, using the wealth theyve built by extracting value from the poor. Todays transhumanism exists largely within a capitalist framework, and the countrys foremost transhumanist, Zoltan Istvan, a Libertarian candidate for president, is currently campaigning on a platform that shutdown orders intended to preserve human life during the coronavirus pandemic are overblown and are causing irrevocable damage to the capitalist economy (Istvan has in the past written extensively for Motherboard, and has also in the past advocated for the abolition of money).

Cosmists were clear in explaining what resurrection would look like in their idealized version of society, even though they were thin on what the technological details would be. Some argue we must not only restructure our civilization, but our bodies so that we can acquire regenerative abilities, alter our metabolic activity so food or shelter are optional, and thus overcome the natural, social, sexual, and other limitations of the species as Arseny Zhilyaev puts it in a later conversation within the book.

Zhilyaev also invokes Federovs conception of a universal museum, a radicalized, expanded, and more inclusive version of the museums we have now as the site of resurrection. In our world, the closest example of this universal museum is the digital world which also doubles as an enormous data collector used for anything from commerce to government surveillance. The prospect of being resurrected because of government/corporate surveillance records or Mormon genealogy databases is sinister at best, but Zhilyaevs argumentand the larger one advanced by other cosmistsis that our world is already full of and defined by absurd and oppressive institutions that are hostile to our collective interests, yet still manage to thrive. The options for our digital worlds development have been defined by advertisers, state authorities, telecom companies, deep-pocketed investors, and the likewhat might it look like if we decided to focus instead on literally any other task?

All this brings us to the question of where the immortal and resurrected would go. The answer, for cosmists, is space. In the cosmist vision, space colonization must happen so that we can properly honor our ethical responsibility to take care of the resurrected by housing them on museum planets. If the universal museum looks like a digital world emancipated from the demands of capital returns, then the museum planet is a space saved from the whims of our knock-off Willy Wonkasthe Elon Musks and Jeff Bezos of the world. I am not saying it is a good or fair idea to segregate resurrected dead people to museum planets in space, but this is what cosmists suggested, and its a quainter, more peaceful vision for space than what todays capitalists believe we should do.

For Musk, Mars and other future worlds will become colonies that require space mortgages, are used for resource extraction, or, in some cases, be used as landing spots for the rich once we have completely destroyed the Earth. Bezos, the worlds richest man, says we will have "gigantic chip factories in space where heavy industry is kept off-planet. Beyond Earth, Bezos anticipates humanity will be contained to O'Neill cylinder space colonies. One might stop and consider the fact that while the cosmist vision calls for improving human civilization on Earth before resurrecting the dead and colonizing space, the capitalist vision sees space as the next frontier to colonize and extract stupendous returns fromtrillions of dollars of resource extraction is the goal. Even in space, they cannot imagine humanity without the same growth that demands the sort of material extraction and environmental degradation already despoiling the world. Better to export it to another place (another country, planet, etc.) than fix the underlying system.

Why?

Ostensibly, the why behind cosmism is a belief that we have an ethical responsibility to resurrect the dead, much like we have one to care for the sick or infirm. At a deeper level, however, cosmists not only see noncapitalist abundance as a virtue in of itself, but believe the process of realizing it would offer chances to challenge deep-seated assumptions about humanity that might aid political and cultural forms hostile to the better future cosmists seek.

Vidokle tells Steyerl in their conversation that he sees the path towards resurrection involving expanding the rights of the dead in ways that undermine certain political and cultural forms,

The dead ... dont have any rights in our society: they dont communicate, consume, or vote and so they are not political subjects. Their remains are removed further and further from the cities, where most of the living reside. Culturally, the dead are now largely pathetical comical figures: zombies in movies, he said. Financial capitalism does not care about the dead because they do not produce or consume. Fascism only uses them as a mythical proof of sacrifice. Communism is also indifferent to the dead because only the generation that achieves communism will benefit from it; everyone who died on the way gets nothing.

In another part of their conversation, Steyerl suggests that failing to pursue the cosmist project might cede ground to the right-wing accelerationism already killing millions:

There is another aspect to this: the maintenance and reproduction of life is of course a very gendered technologyand control of this is on a social battleground. Reactionaries try to grab control over lifes production and reproduction by any means: religious, economic, legal, and scientific. This affects womens rights on the one hand, and, on the other, it spawns fantasies of reproduction wrested from female control: in labs, via genetic engineering, etc.

In other words, the failure to imagine and pursue some alternative to this oligarchic project has real-world consequences that not only kill human beings, but undermine the collective agency of the majority of humanity. In order for this narrow minority to rejuvenate and resurrect themselves in a way that preserves their own privilege and power, they will have to sharply curtail the rights and agency of almost every other human being in every other sphere of society.

Elena Shaposhnikova, another artist who appears later in the book, wonders whether the end of deathor the arrival of a project promising to abolish itmight help us better imagine and pursue lives beyond capitalism:

It seems to me that most of us tend to sublimate our current life conditions and all its problems, tragedies, and inequalities, and project this into future scenarios, she said. So while its easy to imagine and represent life in a society without money and with intergalactic travel, the plot invariably defaults to essentialist conflicts of power, heroism, betrayal, revenge, or something along these lines.

In a conversation with Shaposhnikova, Zhilyaev offers that cosmism might help fight the general fear of socialism as he understands it:

According to Marx, or even Lenin, socialism as a goal is associated with something elsewith opportunities of unlimited plurality and playful creativity, wider than those offered by capitalism. ... the universal museum producing eternal life and resurrection for all as the last necessary step for establishing social justice.

In the conversations that this book, cosmism emerges not simply as an ambition to resurrect the dead but to create, for the first time in human history, a civilization committed to egalitarianism and justice. So committed, in fact, that no part of the human experienceincluding deathwould escape the frenzied wake of our restructuring.

Its a nice thought, and something worth thinking about. Ours is not that world but in fact, one that is committed, above all else, to capital accumulation. There will be no resurrection for the deadthere isnt even healthcare for most of the living, after all. Even in the Citadel of Capital, the heart of the World Empire, the belly of the beast, the richest country in human history, most are expected to fend for themselves as massive wealth transfers drain the public treasuries that mightve funded some measure of protection from the pandemic, the economic meltdown, and every disaster lurking just out of sight. And yet, for all our plumage, our death cult still holds true to Adam Smith's observation in The Wealth of Nations: "All for ourselves, and nothing for other people, seems, in every age of the world, to have been the vile maxim of the masters of mankind."

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The Proto-Communist Plan to Resurrect Everyone Who Ever Lived - VICE

Govt. to extend state of emergency to May 30 – EyeWitness News

NASSAU, BAHAMAS A resolution to extend the state of emergency to May 30 is expected to be tabled in Parliament today.

The extension of the emergency orders would provide for the competent authority the prime minister to continue existing measures, including the 24-hour curfew and weekend lockdowns.

The lockdowns in effect every weekend between Friday at 9pm and Monday at 5am, require all non-essential workers to remain in their homes.

It remains to be seen if the complete lockdown will continue.

According to the resolution, obtained by Eyewitness News, the Emergency Powers Act provides that all emergency regulations, shall remain where the existence of a state of public emergency in The Bahamas as a result of the presence and effect of the virus in The Bahamas continues; and it continues to be necessary and expedient for securing public safety, the defense of The Bahamas, the maintenance of public order, the suppression of mutiny, rebellion and riot, and for maintaining supplies and services essential to the life and well-being of the community to continue in force.

A state of emergency was declared on March 17, after the country recorded its first case on March 13.

A resolution was passed in the House of Assembly and Senate on March 30, extending the order to April 8.

The order was extended again on April 6 to the end of the month.

During a Ministry of Health press conference last week, Dr Merceline Dahl-Regis, health consultant to the prime minister, said health experts recommended the lockdowns continue past April.

On Sunday, Prime Minister Dr Hubert Minnis announced some easement of the restrictions as he declared home stores, auto part stores and plant nurseries were allowed to open on certain days.

Cases of COVID-19 in the country climbed to 80 yesterday.

To date, 22 people have recovered. Eleven people have died.

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Govt. to extend state of emergency to May 30 - EyeWitness News

Extension of FIH Pro League augurs well for India with chance to face top sides, says Varun Kumar – Scroll.in

The extension of FIH Pro League by one year will augur well for the Indian hockey team in post-Coronavirus world as it would get a chance to compete with top teams before Tokyo Olympics, defender Varun Kumar said on Monday.

Last week, the International Hockey Federation extended the second edition of the Pro League by one year till June 2021.

Earlier, the Tokyo Olympic were also pushed back a year as countries called for global lockdown due to the pandemic.

Obviously with the Olympics getting postponed, a lot of things have changed including our year-round schedule. We are still not sure when we will be able to resume outdoor training, so we cant really say anything about the return of competitive hockey at all, Varun said.

However, with FIHs decision to extend the Pro League to 2021, I feel it will be important that we utilise our chances of getting to play against the best teams in the world, and make further improvements so that we are ready to give our best in Tokyo next year, he added.

The 24-year-old could not play a role in the Olympic Qualifiers due to a nerve damage in his right arm, but wants to ensure he is giving his best in order to be in the 16-member team which plays at the Tokyo Olympics next year.

We had a long national camp in Bhubaneswar before the Olympic Qualifiers last year, and we were preparing ourselves to face Russia. Everything was going well for me, but with 10 days to go for the matches, I felt some weakness in my right arm and told the team physio David McDonald.

He asked me to wait for a couple of days to see if it gets any better, but unfortunately it didnt, so I had to pull out of the team, said Varun.

It was definitely difficult for me because all year we had been thinking about qualifying for the Olympics, and when the moment actually came, I suffered the injury and couldnt help my side. But I am also very proud that we have so many great players in this team. It just makes it easy for the team because the quality isnt affected at all, Varun added.

Having missed the qualifiers, the youngster is now fully focused on getting fit and being selected in the Tokyo-bound squad.

I know I could only support the team from the sidelines during the Qualifiers, but now my job is to prepare my body and my mind in the best way possible so that I do not miss out on being on that 16-member team that takes the field in Tokyo, and then give my best for the side to finish on the podium there.

Having recovered from his injury at the start of the year in January, Varun was selected in the squad to play against Australia. However, the coronavirus outbreak stalled all sporting events including hockey.

When I had recovered completely from the injury, and had rejoined the camp in January, I was really eager to wear the blue strip again and represent my country in the FIH Hockey Pro League 2020.

I even managed to make my way into the 22-member squad which played against Australia, but then we were all struck with the coronavirus, and since then life has come to a stand-still for everyone, he said.

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Extension of FIH Pro League augurs well for India with chance to face top sides, says Varun Kumar - Scroll.in

Cutting green tape may be good politicking, but its bad policy. Here are 5 examples of regulation failure – The Conversation AU

Debate about how Australia will emerge from the coronavirus pandemic is heating up. As part of the economic recovery, business groups have renewed calls to cut green tape environmental regulation that new projects, such as new mines, must follow.

In response, federal environment minister Sussan Ley wants to introduce new legislation to cut green tape and speed up project approvals.

Read more: When it comes to climate change, Australia's mining giants are an accessory to the crime

However a major ten-yearly review of the federal governments key environment legislation is not due to be finished until October.

Cutting green tape is a long-held aim of the Morrison government, which claims excessive environmental regulation unfairly stifles businesses.

But this isnt the case. In my 30 years of experience researching water pollution, green tape has not translated into effective environmental regulation of industry. In fact, Im yet to see a coal mining operation thats effectively regulated after approved through the NSW and federal environmental assessment processes.

Here are five examples that show how existing environmental regulations have done little to prevent pollution and toxic chemicals from entering the environment.

My research on water pollution from coal mines in the Sydney basin routinely reveals inadequate environmental regulation. Ive repeatedly uncovered long-standing environmental issues the industry doesnt seem to learn from, such as pollution continually leaching from active and closed mines.

Read more: What should we do with Australia's 50,000 abandoned mines?

As part of my PhD research in 2002/3, I studied Canyon Colliery a coal mine deep in the Blue Mountains that closed in 1997. The mine constantly releases large volumes of toxic zinc and nickel contaminated water from the flooded underground workings into an otherwise pristine mountain stream.

This caused ecological damage in the Grose River, including a steep reduction in species and numbers of river invertebrates below the entry of the mine wastes into the river.

Its now 23 years since the mining stopped, but the pollution continues testimony of weak and ineffective environmental regulation. And it will probably last for centuries.

The Canyon Mine is just one of thousands of contaminated, derelict mining and industrial sites dotted around Australia lacking environmental controls.

Environmental regulation has become more stringent in the last 25 years thanks to legislation introduced by the Howard government in 1999, and NSWs Protection of the Environment Operations Act introduced in 1997.

But despite this legislation, many new and active mines that lead to environmental damage have been assessed and approved.

Research by my team at Western Sydney University has documented pollution from an active Blue Mountains coal mine, Clarence Colliery.

The mine caused severe metal contamination and ecological damage to the Wollangambe, a World Heritage River. Our research led to the NSW Environment Protection Authority (EPA) in 2017 imposing more effective restrictions on the release of toxic pollutants from the mine.

Despite approvals from both the NSW and federal governments, it seemed no one had noticed the magnitude of pollution from poorly treated mine wastes until our research was conducted. This caused ecological degradation to more than 20 kilometres of the highly protected Wollangambe River.

The Conversation contacted Centennial Coal, which owns Clarence Colliery, for comment. They directed us to their statements in 2017, when the EPA finished a five-year review of Clarences Environmental Protection Licence (EPL). Then, the company said:

As a result of this review Clarence will operate under a new EPL which will include agreed reductions in metal concentration limits for all water discharged to the Wollangambe. Salinity targets will also be set at 100 EC (electrical conductivity).

Clarence will also be required to comply with a Pollution Reduction Programme (PRP), also issued by the EPA, which will result in Centennial formalising options to address all water quality issues and to meet specific water quality milestones.

In 2010 I made a submission as part of the environmental assessment for an extension of BHP Billitons Bulli Seam coal mining operations (now owned by South 32).

This involved reading thousands of pages of consultant reports explaining how the expanded operation would attempt to avoid or minimise impacts to the environment.

The mine extension was approved. Despite the many green tape hurdles, the approved mine was allowed to discharge wastes which our research discovered contained pollutants that were hazardous to river life in the Georges River. These included salt, nickel, zinc, aluminium and arsenic polluting the upper Georges River.

Environmental groups took the coal mine owner to court in 2012, and I provided my evidence for the court case to the NSW EPA.

The EPA has since worked with the coal miner to reduce pollution from the mine.

Many were stunned on March 16 this year, when the NSW government signed off on new coal mine longwalls directly under Woronora Reservoir, part of Sydneys drinking water supply.

Longwall mining is the continuous mechanical removal of coal in underground mines that allows the roof of the mine to cave in after the coal is removed.

So what can they do to a river? Redbank Creek near Picton 65 kilometres southwest of Sydney provides a sad testimony.

For nearly a decade, I documented damage where falling ground levels (subsidence) caused by longwalls led to extensive damage to the creek channel.

The land surface fell more than one meter. This caused cracking, warping and buckling of the creek channel. It now rarely holds water in many stretches. Isolated stagnant pools in the creek now accumulate saline and metal-contaminated water containing little aquatic life except for mosquitoes.

The mine responsible for this damage, Tahmoor Colliery, is seeking to extend its operations and the NSW government is currently considering the development.

This mine also disposes of about four to eight megalitres of poorly treated wastes each day to the Bargo River, a popular freshwater swimming river for south-western Sydney.

Despite the existence of green tape, unforeseen problems have left Australia with many contaminated sites that may never be fully cleaned up.

Weve seen this in the dozens of locations across Australia where toxic PFAS chemicals have contaminated land, water, ecosystems and people.

Read more: A blanket ban on toxic 'forever chemicals' is good for people and animals

These were previously regarded as safe chemical additives, for example in fire fighting foam, particularly at military bases.

Such contamination is very expensive to remediate and in February this year landholders near three defence bases reached a financial settlement for the PFAS damage to their property.

Green tape is an emotive word implying unnecessary and slow environmental regulation that delays major projects.

Given my own direct experience involved poorly regulated coal mines, I shudder to imagine the environmental degradation fast-tracked environmental regulation will lead to.

The Conversation also contacted SIMEC, which owns Tahmoor Colliery. A spokesperson said:

Mining in NSW is governed by stringent state and federal laws enforced by a number of government departments and regulators. SIMEC Mining acquired the Tahmoor Coking Coal Mine two years ago and takes its environmental, compliance and social responsibilities seriously.

Tahmoor Mine has been operating for well over 40 years. We acknowledge that historical mine activity did impact Redbank Creek and that this was self-reported to the regulator. Since then, SIMEC has worked closely with the NSW Department of Planning, Industry and Environment (DPIE) to enact a comprehensive plan to rehabilitate the creek. Recent rainfall has demonstrated the success of this work and we are confident that the rehabilitation works will restore the creek.

While our operations do produce water as part of the mining process, this is treated and monitored in accordance with our licence conditions. The quality of this water is mandated by our environment protection licence issued and monitored by the NSW Environmental Protection Authority (EPA). Typically, the water monitoring results are well below those limits allowed by the licence. To further improve water quality, SIMEC Mining has committed to the installation of a new water treatment plant.

Water management has been a key focus for SIMEC in the planning of the proposed Tahmoor South extension. We have commissioned extensive specialist assessments to understand any potential impact on ground and surface water. If our extension is approved, these water assets will be carefully monitored throughout the life of the mine to ensure that should any issue occur, it is detected early and resolved efficiently.

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Cutting green tape may be good politicking, but its bad policy. Here are 5 examples of regulation failure - The Conversation AU

Coronavirus Ireland: Fears of lockdown extension over testing concerns – Irish Mirror

Fears of a lockdown extension continue to grow as doubts are raised over Ireland's coronavirus testing capabilities.

Experts believe a strong testing and contact tracing regime will be needed before there is any significant lifting of lockdown restrictions.

While the Irish Independent reports that lockdown restrictions will only be lifted very slightly, if at all, when the Government reviews them on May 5.

And although the HSE is planning to scale up to 100,000 tests per week by the middle of May, there are doubts over how this can be achieved.

Officials are considering the best route for swabs to take to laboratories, use of the ambulance service, and automation of the process when positive results come back and notifications go out for contact tracing.

Health Service Executive (HSE) chief executive Paul Reid said: "We are in a much better place."

But he admitted there had been "constructive tensions" with his sponsor, Department of Health, amid concerns about how exactly Ireland would reach its declared target for testing.

A total of 100,000 tests a week are expected to be reached by the third week in May, Mr Reid said, following agreement with the department on the road map and alignment of case definitions.

Meanwhile it was revealed this morning that the lockdown restriction Irish people most want lifted is the 2km movement limit.

Many also want to see the end of the restriction on small gatherings as the Government is set to review lockdown measures on May 5.

The findings are from phase two of the Corona Citizens Science Study, a population-wide survey conducted by research teams at NUI Galway and Dublin City University looking at the impact of the coronavirus pandemic and the associated restrictive measures on daily life in Ireland.

Half of the 35,000 respondents ranked the two kilometre limit on movement as their first choice to see removed while 37% wanted to see the limits on small gatherings lifted.

Respondents ranked a return to work and school, in third and fourth respectively with the reopening of shops, pubs and restaurants as the fifth preference.

And 10,830 people reported postponing medical treatment or check-ups with half of the group saying this was because the healthcare professional was not seeing any patients at the moment and 39% didnt want to create extra pressure in the health system.

Professor Anthony Staines, Professor of Health Systems, DCU and joint research lead said: These results show some of the real impacts of Covid-19 on our health and on our health services."

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Coronavirus Ireland: Fears of lockdown extension over testing concerns - Irish Mirror

Stream It Or Skip It: Bad Education on HBO, a Funny White-Collar-Crook Bio Featuring Hugh Jackmans Best Performance Yet – News Lagoon

Writer Mike Makowsky was a firsthand witness of sorts to the real-life events inspiring Bad Education, which debuted at the 2019 Toronto International Film Festival and now sees wide launch via HBO. He was a six-year-old student in Roslyn Public Schools when he first met Frank Tassone, and witnessed firsthand how revered and influential the superintendent was until he was busted in 2004 for embezzling millions from the district, engineering the largest school theft in American history. With Makwoskys close ties to the saga, and Hugh Jackman and Allison Janney cast as leads, will the movie be more than just another based-on-a-true-story story?

The Gist: Roslyn High School is fourth in the country in college-acceptance rates. Fourth! And its all due to Frank Tassone. He meticulously grooms himself in the morning, spritzing cologne on his neck and plucking stray nose hairs. He walks into his office, decorated with silver balloons shaped like 4s, a snow day magic wand and issues of Life Extension magazine. He says absolutely perfect things to a helicopter parent hyperventilating about her sons troubles in school. He inspires a young journalist from the school paper to write more than just a puff piece about the schools multimillion-dollar skywalk project. Hes thanked with a basket of candy from local real estate developers, who love him for making the district great and therefore inspiring skyrocketing property values.

At lunchtime, Frank sits in the football-stadium bleachers with assistant super/business manager Pam Gluckin (Allison Janney). He laments the health-food smoothie hes consuming. I would kill somebody for a carb right now, he says, and she feeds him a big honking bite of her pastrami-on-rye. He leads the local ladies book club, and attendees didnt even read the selection. Theyre in awe of him, in his crisp light-blue oxford with white collar and cuffs adorned with fancy cufflinks. He offers to help with the dishes, and the hostess leans in, but he leans away. The memory of his late wife is too fresh, he says.

He goes to Vegas for a conference, and dutifully attends snoozy lectures while his colleagues gamble. Afterward, he sits down for a drink and recognizes the bartender: Kyle Contreras (Rafael Casal), a former student from 15 years ago when he taught English. Frank remembers his name, because he remembers everybodys name, because he and Gluckin stay at work late so she can quiz him on everybodys name. He and Kyle have dinner, and then go back to Franks hotel room and make out and then the movie cuts away. Hey now.

So about that young journalist, Rachel (Geraldine Viswanathan). Shes no longer OK with writing a crappy puff piece, so she confidently plops down in Gluckins office and asks about project budgets and contractor bids. Gluckin is only slightly icy when she tosses Rachel the key to the firetrap basement records room, although if Rachel saw Gluckins seaside near-manse and Corvette convertible, she might have even more questions about how a public school administrators humble salary can indulge such extravagant tastes. I mean, Gluckins husband is a car salesman. Gluckins niece (Annaleigh Ashford) is the office secretary who helps Rachel make a zillion photocopies of school records with some big numbers on them, and it seems like only a matter of time before some of the people in charge around there are something that rhymes with glucked.

What Movies Will It Remind You Of?: Remember how Philip Seymour Hoffman totally owned Owning Mahowny, playing a buttoned-up gambling addict who bilked big stacks of cash from the bank he worked for? You dont? (Does anybody whos not a movie critic remember?) Well, watch the damn thing, and youll see a character whos pretty much the opposite of Frank Tarrone in a similar stressful situation.

Performance Worth Watching: This is easily one of Jackmans best performances possibly THE best, especially in the first act, when hes sparklingly charming. And the second act, when he tries to keep all the squirming puppies in the box And in the third act, when he shows how a life of subterfuge sad on one hand, infuriating on the other can quickly crumble, and he makes a hard left into villainy.

Memorable Dialogue: Skywalk is big. Gets us to first!, Frank chirps.

Sex and Skin: None.

Our Take: Director Cory Finley (Thoroughbreds) and Makowsky initially strike the perfect, slyly satirical gettin-away-with-it tone, then, as soon as Gluckin goes up in flames and locks angry eyes with Frank for throwing her under the bus, seamlessly segue to I-feel-like-Im-sitting-on-an-atomic-bomb-waiting-for-it-to-go-off suspenseful drama. They nurture uniformly excellent performances, from Jackmans multifaceted charisma to Janneys trademark irascibility to Ray Romanos fluster as the school-board president to Viswanathans earnestness, which anchors the story.

The filmmakers cleverly embed character bits in the movies little visual details. The way Frank is yanked off a beanbag chair while chatting with sixth-graders so he can be informed of Gluckins malfeasance, for example. Or, in a touch of shrewd symbolism, how he carefully applies concealer to his eye wrinkles. Or how Rachel spreads out the schools sketchy budget paperwork on the floor of her bedroom with a pile of period-specific Beanie Babies watching. This is a terrific movie, smart, character-driven, frequently funny and highly entertaining.

Our Call: STREAM IT. Bad Education bullseyes the sweet spot between realism and elevated drama, making it several cuts above the usual based-on-a-true-story fodder.

John Serba is a freelance writer and film critic based in Grand Rapids, Michigan. Read more of his work at johnserbaatlarge.com or follow him on Twitter: @johnserba.

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Stream It Or Skip It: Bad Education on HBO, a Funny White-Collar-Crook Bio Featuring Hugh Jackmans Best Performance Yet - News Lagoon

Norway proposes extension to its Arctic oil exploration boundary – Reuters

OSLO (Reuters) - Norway plans to extend its no-go zone for oil exploration in the countrys Arctic waters but stopped short of areas for which licences have already been granted to oil companies.

The government on Friday proposed an extension of the so-called ice edge boundary to the constantly changing southern fringe of the permanent ice sheet. Anything north of that line is considered off-limits for oil drilling.

However, the new line remains sufficiently far north that it does not affect existing exploration licences.

Its a good compromise, Oil and Energy Minister Tina Bru told a news conference.

The centre-right minority government is expected to gain cross-party support for the proposal, which has been under consideration for months, with the right-wing Progress Party having expressed fears that oil companies could be robbed of existing exploration acreage.

This is a better starting point for negotiations on a compromise, Progress Party MP Jon Georg Dale told broadcaster NRK on Friday.

The Norwegian Oil and Gas Association, an industry lobby group, welcomed the proposal ahead of a new oil exploration licensing round that the government plans to hold after the ice edge plan is approved by parliament.

But the news was less well received by environmentalists.

Greenpeace said the government has put the interests of the oil industry ahead of the science.

The Norwegian Polar Institute and the Norwegian Marine Research Institute had proposed the ice edge be moved even further south than in the governments plan.

The proposal was based on scientific research showing that sea ice has a more widespread impact on Arctic life than previously thought.

When spring comes, the area covered by drifting ice becomes abundant with life, with algae bloom supporting zooplankton growth, which in turn attracts fish, birds and sea mammals.

If they do not listen to the scientific advice in this incredibly important matter, they cannot say that they are taking climate and the green transition seriously, Frode Pleym, the head of Greenpeace in Norway, told Reuters.

The new line is drawn where sea ice appeared 15% of the time in April, its maximum winter extent, from 1988 to 2017. The previous line was based on 30% probability and the years between 1967 and 1989.

Editing by Gwladys Fouche and David Goodman

Original post:

Norway proposes extension to its Arctic oil exploration boundary - Reuters

A Brexit extension wouldn’t be the end of the world – Spectator.co.uk

Is there going to be an extension to the Brexit transitional period during which the UK must obey EU rules and keep stumping up cash for Brussels? The answer may appear obvious: David Frost, the UKs chief negotiator, has unequivocally and publicly ruled it out. As he tweeted on 16 April: 'Transition ends on December 31 this year. We will not ask to extend it. If the EU asks we will say no.'

But, this being politics, Frosts statement leaves a key question unanswered. Namely: Is there going to be an extension to the Brexit transitional period? I do not mean to cast aspersions on Frosts integrity here, but I merely note that in his early months as Prime Minister, Boris Johnson promised that we would leave the EU on 31 October, 2019 'come what may'. And then we didnt.

Few blamed him, recognising that the failure to leave was not his fault and that the strength of his public commitment had shaken Brussels out of a complacent belief that Britain would never leave without a deal, causing it to reopen Theresa Mays flawed deal.

So it would be a perfectly respectable negotiating tactic to publicly claim there are no circumstances in which an extension will be considered in order to pile more pressure on Brussels, while privately holding a slightly less unequivocal position.

The downsides of allowing an extension, which technically would need to be requested by the end of June, are many and obvious. First, it could shatter confidence in the Government among pro-Brexit voters given that the Tory manifesto of December categorically ruled it out. That could in turn reignite Nigel Farage, breathing new life into his defunct Brexit party and smashing the monopoly over Eurosceptic opinion that is the foundation of current Tory fortunes.

Secondly, for the UK to request such an extension by the middle of this year would be rightly seen as a huge sign of weakness, throwing us onto the defensive in future relationship negotiations. In effect, Boris Johnson would be re-running the horrible political half-life of Theresa May, degrading before our eyes from a supposedly decisive leader into a sad and useless remnant.

As people around Johnson have been saying, an extension would not appear to solve any fundamental problem with reaching a stable agreement on trade or anything else. Either each side is ready to do a deal, or it isnt. If the latter is true then far better to halt our contributions to the EU budget, move to WTO terms and negotiate mutually beneficial evolutionary improvements to terms of trade from there rather than just drift on in a morale-sapping stalemate.

So I do not, for a moment, expect the UK either to ask for or agree to an extension by the end of June, as stipulated in the Withdrawal Agreement. And neither should it. The British Government will instead keep the pressure on Brussels all the way through summer and autumn. And this time there will be no stitch-up between Hilary Benn, Dominic Grieve and the Commons Speaker to lessen the pressure on the EU by outlawing a 'no-deal' outcome.

However, if negotiations proceed well, with concessions being made to Britain by Brussels and it just turns out that the coronavirus pandemic really has compressed timelines to the point that otherwise-attainable beneficial outcomes are ruled out then are we really to believe that there will be no 'give' whatever in the 31 December deadline?

I think under those circumstances, were Boris Johnson to wish it, he and he alone could sell to the British public an extension of a few weeks certainly no more than three months to make up for lost time and allow the final loose ends to be tied up.

The media would, as they did in autumn 2019, no doubt try to bash him over the head with his own unmet deadline. But the public would see that it had, once again, concentrated minds across the Channel and would put up with it so long as they were confident Johnson was closing in on the Brussels jugular and about to deliver a winning hand for Britain.

So will there be an extension? Its unlikely but actually not impossible in spite of the words of David Frost. If there is one it will be declared at the eleventh hour. And the British public will tolerate it so long as it embodies the essential characteristics of life without legitimate government as identified by Thomas Hobbes in his poem Leviathan. In other words, it would need to be nasty, brutish and short.

Read more:

A Brexit extension wouldn't be the end of the world - Spectator.co.uk

Power shortages will remain a big challenge in a post-COVID-19 South Africa – The Conversation Africa

The decline in economic activity precipitated by the spread of COVID-19 and ensuing lockdown in South Africa is also affecting the countrys electricity supply dynamics. The power outages that were disrupting the economy just a month earlier are suddenly contained. Electricity demand in the lockdown period has decreased by about 7,500MW, corresponding to almost a quarter of its normal peak capacity.

Given that Eskom, the national power utility, is using the lockdown period for some of its regular plant maintenance routines, more reliable supply can be expected in the latter part of the year. Electricity demand is likely to remain suppressed after the lockdown but this relief wont extend for more than a few months.

The utility has had some success in keeping many of its vulnerable generating plants operational, and is adopting a more rigorous maintenance regime. But electricity production capacity remains critically low.

When the country finally emerges from COVID-19, it will face a severely damaged economy requiring a massive rebuild. The electricity supply shortage will once again rear its head.

Some help could be provided by renewable energy projects scheduled to come on stream this year.

These include 12 solar farms and 12 wind farms. The first two developments were completed in February.

Construction for these plants was initiated in 2018 following the leadership change in the ruling African National Congress, after a three-year delay.

While the 2,177MW of power provided by these 24 new solar and wind projects appears to be substantial, one must remember that this output corresponds to optimal generating conditions (fresh winds and an overhead sun). In reality, in view of variable weather conditions and the day/night cycle, these plants produce roughly the same amount of electricity as just one of the six units of a large coal plant such as Duvha running non-stop. This is less than the 1,000MW that corresponds to stage one of loadshedding (the phased limitation of supply).

Its therefore essential to expedite the process leading to the development of more generation capacity beyond those currently under construction.

One important hurdle that has been cleared is the adoption of the updated Integrated Resource Plan for electricity last year. This blueprint, which is supposed to be revised every two years, had previously not been updated since 2011.

Several drafts had been produced in the interim, but none were adopted by government. This was presumably because these interim drafts recommended an energy mix that excluded any new nuclear build, a programme that the administration of former president Jacob Zuma was strongly in favour of.

The now official Integrated Resource Plan envisages the steady growth of the renewable energy fraction at the expense of old coal plants, which would gradually be decommissioned.

In particular, the plan would add 1,600MW of wind power each year from 2022 to 2030, as well 6,000MW of new solar energy for that period (starting with 1,000MW in 2022).

Also envisaged for this nine-year time span are two new 750MW coal plants, with the first up and running in 2023, a total of 3,000MW from gas plants (the first of which is supposed to be operational in 2024), and 2,500MW from the Grand Inga dam on the Congo river.

Some relief of the power shortages will come from the presently partly operational Medupi and Kusile megaprojects, whose much-postponed commissioning is expected in the coming few years, and the planned life extension of the Koeberg nuclear plant (which will however not provide extra capacity). But these measures wont suffice to mitigate the closures of the old coal plants.

Some of the new builds are already in doubt. The Grand Inga project, tentatively scheduled for completion in 2030, is facing serious challenges. The future of the newly planned coal plants is also in question. As a primary driver of global warming, coal power is being increasingly maligned, and a large number of potential funding agencies now have policies not to support any coal project. That means that, at least in the medium term, newly initiated projects will be restricted to renewable energy and gas.

Solar and wind projects have a short construction time. The challenge is the regulatory and administrative hurdles that must be cleared before a project can go ahead. These relate to bid submission, review and selection, financial closure and signing of contracts with Eskom. Before the stalling of the Renewable Energy Independent Power Producer Procurement Programme in 2015, the time between the bidding call and plant commissioning was typically three years. That would make the projected 2022 completion date for the next batch or projects practically unachievable.

There are also concerns that the government and the electricity regulator arent demonstrating the required urgency to kickstart a new round of projects. Renewables are perceived as a direct threat to the coal industry, and trade unions allied to the governing party organising in the coal sector are particularly anxious about the inevitable energy transition. Theres also a feeling in some quarters that the mining and energy minister, Gwede Mantashe, a former mining sector unionist, is siding with the coal sector.

But there is a glimmer of hope. Mantashe has just issued two determinations for the procurement of considerable additional power generating capacity.

The first determination is for 2,000MW of emergency power of any technology. Its 2022 completion deadline cannot realistically be met by new builds, so it remains to be seen if the targeted capacity can be achieved by innovative short-term solutions, such as increasing the maximum capacity of existing plants.

The second determination is guided by the Integrated Resource Plan 2019: 4,800MW wind and 2,000MW solar required between 2022 and 2024, 3,000MW gas and 1,500MW coal up to 2027 and 513MW in storage capacity. With several procedural steps still required that show no sign of being expedited, its unlikely that proposals for new power plants will be requested before much later this year.

These plants will then most likely only become operational in late 2023, meaning that the power system will remain vulnerable until then.

See more here:

Power shortages will remain a big challenge in a post-COVID-19 South Africa - The Conversation Africa

Senators hope ECQ extension will be the last – Philippine Star

MANILA, Philippines Senators are hoping that cases of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) would continue to taper off and that the latest extension of the enhanced community quarantine (ECQ) will be the last so that enough resources would be left to jumpstart economic recovery.

The lawmakers also supported President Dutertes decision to extend the lockdown in Metro Manila and other high-risk areas while easing restrictions in others.

Senate President Vicente Sotto III said the entire country must exert all efforts to help contain the spread of COVID-19 in the last 21 days of ECQ even as he warned that the Filipinos way of life may not be the same again or a new normal may be enforced after restrictions are lifted.

Lives and health before economy. The economy can be revived later but a life lost cannot be resurrected. Only Jesus does that, Sotto said.

Senate President Pro Tempore Ralph Recto said the extension was expected but the governmentwill eventually have to allow people to get back to work little by little, and plan for the next three years.

Expect a new normal with physical distancing, wearing masks, lack of consumer confidence, worker confidence and investor confidence. The government must prepare for mass testing, isolation and treatment. Invest more on healthcare infrastructure. Incentivize health workers, nurses, doctors etc. and provide worker subsidies, interest free loans for businesses and repurpose industries, Recto said.

Sen. Panfilo Lacson said the country wasstill a thousand miles away from flattening the curve and despite the missteps and shortcomings of some government agencies, it cannot be denied that ECQ has contributed its share in minimizing the spread of the virus.

As the country takes the cautious, calculated step of extending quarantine, the government must at the same time expedite relief and succor to the vulnerable sectors, Sen. Grace Poe said.

She said poverty has been exacerbated by this pandemic, thus concerned agencies should work double time so that all forms of assistance reach target families who are in need.

Congressmen also welcomed yesterday the decision of President Duterte to again extend quarantine.

Speaker Alan Peter Cayetano said the quarantine has been effective in preventing spread of the disease so far.

The ECQ is working, so lets help one another in making it successful, he told reporters in Camp Bagong Diwa, Taguig City where he donated food supplies for police Special Action Force.

Valenzuela City Rep. Wes Gatchalian, House trade and industry committee chairman, said the health of the people is the primary concern of the government but he also urged the Inter-Agency Task Force (IATF) on Emerging Infectious Diseases to consider adjusting rules on specific trade sectors in order to sustain the needs of communities under the extended quarantine.

Ako Bicol party-list Rep. Elizaldy Co, one of the original proponents of the selective and modified quarantine scheme, lauded the decision of President Duterte to extend the ECQ in Metro Manila and other provinces while gradually easing stay-at-home orders in areas with zero or very few cases of COVID-19.

Last April 14,Co pushed for conditional quarantine lifting to restart economic activities in select areas and help ease governments burden during the COVID-19 pandemic. These include island-provinces with zero to one case of COVID-19 in the last 15 days or in the case of municipalities only those with zero cases.

The objective of quarantine lifting is to allow people, albeit in limited numbers and in select localities, to return to their jobs. Were fighting a protracted war and until no vaccine is invented, governments limited resources cant support and feed all those who were displaced. We need to save government funds for the longer battle, Co said.

Albay Rep. Joey Salceda said the ECQ extension is necessary to save lives at the expense of large economic losses that could anyway be recovered in years to come.

Salceda explained that while the two-month quarantine could result in P1.2 trillion in economic losses, health standards should first be met before ECQ could be lifted.

The health outcomes will decide everything. Any temporary recovery that takes place when we lift the ECQ prematurely is illusory. We need sustained recovery, because certainty is the foundation of lasting economic recovery. Thats why I support the decision tool that the IATF is adopting, he pointed out.

Salceda suggested four measures to be put in place during the extended ECQ period comprehensive measures to protect at-risk and vulnerable population, strict compliance with non-pharmaceutical interventions like wearing face mask and social distancing, full protection for frontliners and readiness for peak capacity and mass testing of at least 0.22 percent of pupulation.

Foreign Affairs Secretary Teodoro Locsin Jr. backed yesterday the extension of ECQ in Metro Manila and other high risk provinces until May 15.

What a relief. I believe in it and advocated it, Locsin said in a post on Twitter.

He said he has informed his counterparts from the US and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) about the extension of the ECQ in some parts of the country during their recent videoconference.

The DFA said 818 more Filipino workers were repatriated from the United Kingdom, Equatorial Guinea, Democratic Republic of Congo and Australia and arrived at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport on Thursday afternoon and early yesterday morning.

The militant Bagong Alyansang Makabayan (Bayan) yesterday lamented that thebiggest problems right now under the COVID-19 quarantine are inadequate mass testing, slow social amelioration for the poor, the economic slowdown and relentless assaults on human rights. With Edu Punay, Helen Flores, Rhodina Villanueva, Czeriza Valencia

See the article here:

Senators hope ECQ extension will be the last - Philippine Star

Covid-19: NCDC hints at extension of lockdown – Vanguard

NCDC DG, Dr. Chikwe Ihekweazu*As Labour warns FG against using Pension Funds as Palliatives*We wont touch it, SGF assures*5, 000 health workers get Life Insurance Cover*FG asks farmers to get ready for farming seasonBy Omeiza Ajayi

Barely two days to the end of the second round of a 14-day shutdown of the nations capital, Abuja as well as Lagos and Ogun states, the Nigerian Centre for Disease Control NCDC has hinted at the likelihood of the extension of the current lockdown, saying Nigeria has not gotten to the point where its containment protocols could be relaxed.

This was even as the Nigeria Labour Congress NLC warned the federal government against deploying the Contributory Pension Fund as Palliatives in the fight against the Novel Coronavirus.

On its part, the Federal Government which promised not to touch the pension fund, announced that Nigerias insurance industry has offered a life insurance to 5, 000 health workers who are in the front line of the fight against Covid-19.

Government also asked farmers in the country to get set to return to farm as the planting season begins, saying the Federal Ministry of Agriculture has put in place several farming incentives.

These were some of the disclosures yesterday in Abuja at the daily briefing of the Presidential Taskforce on Covid-19.

Lockdown continues

Speaking at the event, Director General of the NCDC, Dr Chikwe Iheakwazu said while relevant authorities are working hard to get to a point where the restriction measures can be eased, the country was yet to get to that point.

He said; I will like to start by thanking everyone for their continued sacrifice on this journey and their continued cooperation with the lockdown as advised and instituted by Mr President and many other Governors across the country.

As we travelled round the country over the last four days, we could really see how difficult it has been and how hard Nigerians have been trying to do their best. We know it is a difficult journey but we also know that we will eventually exit this stage and we return to our normal lives, but that stage is still a while to come and I ask for your endurance, your support, your patience. A lot of efforts are going on across the world to find new therapies, to find vaccines and everybody is pushing very hard in this direction. So, we need to stay firm.

Spreading the virus, we do when we go out. We are an outgoing society. We live and work outdoors. So, staying at home and thinking about every movement we make is very important especially when we feel the need to travel. I recognize how difficult these things are at the moment. Many families I know personally have not been able to bury their dead, they have rescheduled their marriages, baptisms and everything they are doing. So, in a way it feels like life has been suspended or we have suspended so many of the things that we hold dear. I am sure that as leaders, we recognise the sacrifices being made by all Nigerians but we have to encourage each other to continue. Continue until we get to the position where we can relax some of that, but to get to that place, we have to continue in the short term, he added.

Life Insurance

In his opening remarks, Chairman of the Taskforce and Secretary to the Government of the Federation SGF, Mr Boss Mustapha said the paperwork for several allowances meant for health workers have been concluded.

He said; Today, the welfare of our front line heroes, the health workers came to the front burner. I am pleased to inform you that the Federal Ministry of Health working in conjunction with other MDAs and the Health sector professional bodies have signed an MOU for various allowances and other incentives. The full details will be unveiled to you by the Hon. Minister of Health soon.

I am however pleased to inform you that, in addition to what the Federal Government is doing, the Insurance Industry has responded massively to the call for support. The PTF has received the Life Insurance cover to the frontline workers on COVID-19 for a maximum of 5000 health workers who are employed to fight against the COVID-19 pandemic.

The premium in the sum of N112,500,000 for the cover has been fully paid by the Nigerian Insurance Industry in line with the principle of No Premium, No Cover.

The PTF wishes to thank the Insurance Industry immensely and calls on other sectors of the economy to rise up to support the efforts to fight COVID-19. I also call on our frontline health workers to double their efforts just as we assure them of our determination to protect them, he added.

Agric incentives

I also wish to use this opportunity to restate that food security and self-sufficiency remain important to our national life. I therefore urge all our farmers to begin to prepare for their return to the farms as the planting season begins. The Federal Ministry of Agriculture has put in place arrangements for access to farm inputs, extension and other services, Mustapha added.

Nine Nigerian infected in China

Minister of Foreign Affairs, Geoffrey Onyeama dismissed reports that 72 Nigerians had tested positive for the Novel Coronavirus in Guangzhou, China, saying official figures indicate that those affected are only nine. He however conceded that Nigerian Consular officials in the Chinese Province explained that some Nigerians were asymptomatic.

He said; We have been in touch with our Consulate in Guangzhou which is the epicentre of this whole thing happening in China regarding Nigerians and Covid-19, and the official figure that was given was nine Nigerians. They added that a number of Nigerians were asymptomatic but the figures that we have are nine, he said.

On his part, Minister of Health, Dr Osagie Ehanire said the ministry has already deployed Covid-19 starter packs to all tertiary health institutions in the country.

We have now deployed Covid-19 starter packs to all tertiary institutions and Federal Medical Centres, to complement what was earlier sent to each State. The starter packs consist of medical consumables and disposables, to ensure that our frontline healthcare workers are protected.

The Covid-19 capable national laboratory network led by NCDC has capacity to test over 1,500 samples per day in 13 laboratories, but the present utilization is barely 50%, since we averagely test about 600 samples daily, being the samples receivied per day. Efforts are on to increase the number of functional laboratories in the country, however, we need to meanwhile improve surveillance, sample collection strategy and transport logistics to laboratories and reduce the turn around time for the tests. In our strategy, testing positive is followed by Isolation and treatment, as needed, he added.

Pension Fund

President, Nigerian Labour Congress NLC, Comrade Ayuba Wabba warned the federal government against touching the Contributory Pension Fund in its bid to galvanise resources against Covid-19.

He said; The Contributory Pension Fund is the money that belongs to the Pensioner. It is in the Pensioners Retirement Savings Account and it is structured in such a way that he would continue to draw this money through out his life. So, we need to control those funds and we need to also make sure that the workers who are contributing this money, at the end of the day when they are no longer working, they should be able to have something to rely on. So, clearly, I think it should not be used for this purpose (Covid-19), he said.

Responding, the SGF said the federal government will not touch the said funds.

He said; We have looked at the issue of the Pension Fund. As a matter of fact, we even got the Minister of state, Education, to do us a position paper and our conclusion was that the time is not even right for us to go there because the entire world, in terms of our economy, health system has been disrupted by Covid-19 and the consequences, nobody can imagine until probably when the dust is settled. I am being honest with you. The consequences are all over the world.

Vanguard

Related

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Covid-19: NCDC hints at extension of lockdown - Vanguard

Simon Walker writes: Feeding the habit in times of social isolation – Newcastle Herald

news, local-news,

Lockdown has created some routine challenges in our household over the last month which we've been rising to with varying degrees of success. Problem drinking hasn't been one of them. That's because I stockpiled the minute I realised this pandemic thing was going to get serious. Beer, wine, cooking sherry - I'm not proud. It was more a practicality thing. But it's interesting what a prepper will hoard when they sense the apocalypse is nigh. Fair to say I was probably less concerned about a water outage, and by the way, is it beer o'clock yet? The fear at the outset was that along with everything else they would close my local bottlo. Turned out bottle shops were deemed not places of social congregation, leading me to wonder if authorities had ever been to my local bottlo. Staying home, shopping less but buying more has extended into fruit and veg too, leading to concerns about problem eating. Someone's got to chew down the pantry. No sooner do we finish one meal then word goes out about what's for dinner tomorrow. You've got to have something to look forward to in social isolation. Unfortunately this puts pressure on the lockdown chef, most of whom only have a limited number of deadset, sure-fire, crowd-pleasing winners in the cooking repertoire. That well can run dry pretty quick as days and meals roll into one. Before you know it, the rotation is back to ground zero - potato. And with repetition comes the risk of copping heat from your captive eating audience. Problem drinking helps ease the sting of criticism, but as a rule, it's recommended most of the sauce goes in the actual sauce, not the sorcerer. Maintaining the kitchen magic has led to another questionable method of breaking routines in our household - problem baking. It's an extension of problem eating that's evolved to fill the gaps round morning and afternoon tea. And when I say "fill the gaps", I mean "pack the saddle bags". Biscuits, cakes, fondue, a straight packet of castor sugar guzzled like a can of Solo - anything to tame those sweet-tooth receptors. All in the name of a cup of tea. I don't mean to make light of the situation because that's not where this is heading. After a month of problem drinking, eating and baking, lockdown has led, inevitably almost, to problem exercising. A challenge at the best of times. But the mirror doesn't lie - there's clearly another curve that needs flattening and we've been giving it a crack every afternoon. Exercise I mean. And when I say crack, I also mean groan, because exercise hurts after being cooped up all day. There's a worry we've all grown a bit too. And not just spiritually. Taking the edge off lockdown routine has made us more rounded human beings in many ways. More from Simon Walker: The complete That's Life archive

https://nnimgt-a.akamaihd.net/transform/v1/crop/frm/5j9qeAa2aY4LpWZ52cph4N/9dae0c6f-e30b-4ace-b3f6-e3518ce65d81.jpg/r0_123_2100_1310_w1200_h678_fmax.jpg

OPINION

April 26 2020 - 4:00PM

Lockdown has created some routine challenges in our household over the last month which we've been rising to with varying degrees of success.

Problem drinking hasn't been one of them. That's because I stockpiled the minute I realised this pandemic thing was going to get serious.

Beer, wine, cooking sherry - I'm not proud. It was more a practicality thing. But it's interesting what a prepper will hoard when they sense the apocalypse is nigh.

Fair to say I was probably less concerned about a water outage, and by the way, is it beer o'clock yet?

The fear at the outset was that along with everything else they would close my local bottlo.

Turned out bottle shops were deemed not places of social congregation, leading me to wonder if authorities had ever been to my local bottlo.

Staying home, shopping less but buying more has extended into fruit and veg too, leading to concerns about problem eating. Someone's got to chew down the pantry.

No sooner do we finish one meal then word goes out about what's for dinner tomorrow.

You've got to have something to look forward to in social isolation.

Unfortunately this puts pressure on the lockdown chef, most of whom only have a limited number of deadset, sure-fire, crowd-pleasing winners in the cooking repertoire.

That well can run dry pretty quick as days and meals roll into one.

Before you know it, the rotation is back to ground zero - potato. And with repetition comes the risk of copping heat from your captive eating audience.

Problem drinking helps ease the sting of criticism, but as a rule, it's recommended most of the sauce goes in the actual sauce, not the sorcerer.

Maintaining the kitchen magic has led to another questionable method of breaking routines in our household - problem baking.

It's an extension of problem eating that's evolved to fill the gaps round morning and afternoon tea. And when I say "fill the gaps", I mean "pack the saddle bags".

Biscuits, cakes, fondue, a straight packet of castor sugar guzzled like a can of Solo - anything to tame those sweet-tooth receptors.

All in the name of a cup of tea.

I don't mean to make light of the situation because that's not where this is heading.

After a month of problem drinking, eating and baking, lockdown has led, inevitably almost, to problem exercising.

A challenge at the best of times.

But the mirror doesn't lie - there's clearly another curve that needs flattening and we've been giving it a crack every afternoon.

And when I say crack, I also mean groan, because exercise hurts after being cooped up all day. There's a worry we've all grown a bit too. And not just spiritually.

Taking the edge off lockdown routine has made us more rounded human beings in many ways.

View original post here:

Simon Walker writes: Feeding the habit in times of social isolation - Newcastle Herald

Staying connected in disjointed times – The Courier=Times

The Extension Office is still hard at work for its clients and the community at large, trying to stay connected. We are just having to adapt how we meet the needs of our clients. Programs are currently on hold, canceled or postponed, but we are still able to provide information to clients about the topics of health and wellness, food, nutrition, food safety, diabetes, canning, and so much more.

It can be difficult to adjust to the frustrating times that we are currently living through but we encourage people to focus on the positive things in your life. You may be having financial struggles at the moment, but hopefully you do not have loved ones suffering from coronavirus.

You may be depressed because you are stuck at home but you could look at the positive of how much time you have on your hands at the moment. One of the biggest reasons I hear from people as to why they are not getting their exercise, eating better, or planning their meals is because they dont have enough time. So, there is absolutely no excuse now. Use your time and enjoy the slow-paced life we have, spending more time with your family, working in the garden, reading some good books, cleaning your house, or doing whatever other things you have been meaning to do lately. However, if you are feeling the strain of life, join us this month and learn how to Stress Less.

The Family Consumer Science program usually hosts an in-person monthly Lunch N Learn workshop and we will continue to do so this month as well. It will look a little different because we will be hosting it online using the Zoom Conference meeting website. This months workshop will focus on how to stress less and we will provide information on how stress management tips, how stress affects your health, and signs to watch out for. So, we invite you to grab your healthy lunch and join us in our Zoom meeting. If you wish to receive the meeting link and invite, simply send me an email at jennifer.brown@ncsu.edu.

If you have any questions or want some information sent to you, either electronically or through the mail, you can email me at jennifer.brown@ncsu.edu or follow us on a variety of social media sites: Facebook and Instagram @persongranvillefcs or Twitter and YouTube @PersonCountyFCS.

Try the following recipe courtesy of the West Virginia Extension at https://extension.wvu.edu/food-health/recipes/. Remember, for more information on Food for Thought programs, activities and recipes, check us out online at http://facebook.com/persongranvillefcs or email jennifer.brown@ncsu.edu

Peach Oatmeal Bake

Serves 8

3 cups old-fashioned rolled oats

2 tsp baking powder

1 tsp ground cinnamon

1/2 tsp allspice

1/2 tsp nutmeg

2 cups 1 percent milk

1 large egg

2 Tbsp. honey

1 lb. frozen or fresh or sliced peaches

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Combine the oats, baking powder, cinnamon, allspice and nutmeg. Create a well in the center of the dry ingredients and add the milk, honey and egg. Stir to combine. Stir in peach slices. Spray an 8-inch by 8-inch pan with cooking spray or line with parchment paper and pour batter into pan. Bake for 35-40 minutes.

Nutrition information: 190 calories, 3.5g fat, 34mg cholesterol, 180mg sodium, 4g fiber, 7g protein

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Staying connected in disjointed times - The Courier=Times

Coronavirus briefing: Lockdown extension talks and calls for international unity – BBC News

If you want to get this briefing by email, sign up here

It has been two-and-a-half weeks since restrictions on people's movements were announced. And the government's emergency Cobra committee will discuss whether the lockdown ought to be extended beyond its initial three weeks. Leaders of the devolved nations will join the discussions, although First Minister Mark Drakeford has already confirmed measures will remain in place across Wales. With UK temperatures forecast to reach 25C (77F) in place, the public is being urged to "stay home this bank holiday weekend" in a new advertising campaign.

Latest figures show another 938 people in the UK have died in hospital with coronavirus, the highest daily death toll yet. It brings the total to 7,097. Amid suggestions the virus is having a disproportionate impact on people from ethnic minority backgrounds, we examine the data. Prime Minister Boris Johnson remains in hospital, and was making "steady progress" in intensive care - according to the latest Downing Street update on Wednesday night.

Pressure on intensive care units, combined with the need to suppress patients' immune systems during the outbreak, could force the UK's organ transplant network to shut down, according to the body that runs it. Meanwhile, you can see the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge speak to the children of key workers and thank their teachers in a video call to a Lancashire school.

In Italy, which has recorded more coronavirus-related deaths than any other nation, there are some hopeful signs, with the daily death toll falling from 919 a fortnight ago to 542 in the past 24 hours. However, Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte says the national lockdown, imposed on 9 March, can only be eased gradually. He says the EU must act in a co-ordinated way to help countries worst hit by the outbreak, or risk falling apart.

There are fears for countries in South Asia, where porous borders might make the virus harder to control. Meanwhile, the head of the World Health Organization has urged an end to 'politicisation' of the virus, in the face of criticism from US President Donald Trump. Follow all the global developments on our live page, as Australian police seize the "black box" recorder from a cruise ship in a bid to find out why it allowed ill passengers to disembark in Sydney.

Get news from the BBC in your inbox, each weekday morning

The lockdown has played havoc with supply chains, with the disruption causing some farmers to pour thousands of litres of fresh milk down the drain. Meanwhile, as Britons take up home baking en masse, supermarkets are struggling to source enough flour. With mills working around the clock, we discover the surprising reason for shortages on shelves. Another unexpected consequence could be a resurgence in the nation's wild flowers. Find out why.

Meanwhile, we find students angry at the prospect of paying rent on rooms lying empty for the summer term. And a campaign group wants social networks to introduce dedicated buttons to flag up bogus coronavirus-related posts, in light of figures suggesting nearly 60% of young adults saw misleading information in the first week of the lockdown. Remember, you can find trustworthy information about the outbreak and advice on life under lockdown at our dedicated page.

By Rachel Schraer, health reporter, BBC News

The idea warmer weather might stop the coronavirus seems to have faded as the virus has spread around the globe. But could new research contain a glimmer of hope?

It's too early to know for sure whether the new coronavirus is seasonal. To really know that, we'd have to watch how cases change in one place across the year. But we can look at its spread in different climates across the world for clues.

Read the full article

Why do we talk about 'fighting' illness?

Throughout the day, BBC Radio 5 live hears tributes to doctors, nurses and other NHS workers, such as cleaners and porters. The latest Coronavirus Newscast takes a look at the global picture. And The Food Chain podcast pays homage to the heroes of farming, trucking, supermarkets and restaurants keeping people fed and watered.

Most papers focus on the continuation of lockdown conditions, with the i, Daily Express and Daily Mirror all drawing the same conclusion that there is "no end in sight". It will certainly be a matter of weeks, according to both the Times and Daily Mail. No matter how long restrictions remain in place, the Metro reckons being stuck at home as temperatures soar will make for "the longest Good Friday". Meanwhile, the Sun urges readers to continue the recent custom of applauding NHS workers at 20:00 BST on Thursdays and asks them to raise money in the process.

How Europe failed the coronavirus test (Politico)

Borders didn't stop the pandemic. But they might block the trade of medical goods (NPR)

How Greece managed to flatten the curve (Independent)

It's not surprising tigers at the zoo got coronavirus (Mashable)

Sign up for a morning briefing direct to your phone

Quizzes seem to be the go-to form of entertainment over group video calls, so Newsbeat enlists Eggheads host Jeremy Vine to describe how to run one that's actually good. If you've been listening to the radio more often recently, or comparing today's hits to classics from your formative years, you might enjoy our delve into industry body the BPI's yearbook to find the most influential year in pop. Or, for really imaginative forms of amusement, choose from the BBC Archive's clips suggesting seven things to do in self-isolation.

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Coronavirus briefing: Lockdown extension talks and calls for international unity - BBC News

Letters To the Editor | Opinion – westvalleyview.com

Whats wrong

with society?

Editor:

Everybody, take a good look around and carefully commit your current situation to memory. Because for the rest of your life, when someone asks you, What is the stupidest thing youve ever seen? the present state of affairs today will be the correct response.

Our society has declared war on the common cold variant COVID-19. Maybe its a bad cold, but still, like most colds, its no big deal for 99% of the people, and most of the remaining 1% are susceptible to just about any medical issue due to their advanced age and pre-existing conditions. Each year this is dealt with as a normal, routine situation during cold and flu season. However, now, for whatever reason, weve pulled out all the stops, spared no expense, and thrown caution to the wind for COVID-19.

Im not against taking reasonable precautions to deal with any illness. We should quarantine ourselves when sick, wash our bodies and clean our spaces regularly and avoid interactions with minimal benefit. However, we always need to consider differentiating between reasonable precautions and unreasonable measures. Canceling all large gatherings and closing meeting places of healthy people does very little to fight the virus, but greatly reduces real benefits to the participants, especially if it is workplace or a school.

The hypothetical benefits of giving aged and sickly people a slight life extension has to be considered against the actual costs of the measures we are presently enforcing. Giving a couple thousand people their 87th Christmas is not much comfort to the tens of millions of breadwinners who are out of work for months and wont be able to afford holiday gifts for their families this year. Maybe these elderly survivors will read one or two more books before they pass on, but it would be much better for all of us if tens of millions of students were reading their books in the classroom right now instead of playing alone at home.

Economics is the dismal science, but we need to review our current policies to avoid sacrificing prosperity for the younger generations just to extend slightly the life of the oldest. If we are going to throw away our freedoms and liberties, we should at least demand something good in return. Right now, we are approaching martial law with nothing to show for it except a looming recession.

I choose to remain an optimist. Expanded testing is only going to continue boosting the rates of survival and recovery because, surprise, most of us only seek medical attention when we are really sick, not just a little under the weather with a cold. Indeed COVID-19 itself is not virulent enough to have a lasting physical impact on our society, so we cannot allow the government and media sensationalized fear of COVID-19 to drive our society to ruin. We shouldnt be needlessly prohibiting the important relationships and activities in our lives for no good reason. We should not allow ourselves to be driven apart by some common cold virus. Instead, we should come together for all that is good in our society and the best our civilization has to offer.

Charles Peabody

Goodyear

Give President Trump past due

credit for pandemic

Editor:

Im sure many of you are sick and tired of all of the critics who complain about every single move that President Trump makes.

Im talking about the never Trumpers. They have every right to not agree with the president, but during not only a national crisis, its a worldwide crisis, and they wont get off his back and let him do his job.

If anybody thinks they can do a better job, please step up and show all of us! But, I want you to step up and do it just like President Trump has done it for almost four years, with every single wrench thrown in his way and all of the obstructions, witch hunting and fake news; Russia hoaxes and Ukraine hoaxes that trail back to the Bidens corruption; a fake whistleblower who disappeared from the face of the earth after President Trump was acquitted; Pelosi, Schiff, Nadler and Schumer secret bunker meetings trying to overthrow the government; and every nasty Democrat-choreographed coup detat the Democrats dreamed up. I want to see anybody who thinks they can do better do it the same way President Trump has had to work daily.

While the Democrats worked to impeach President Trump, he was already working on the coronavirus. He has daily press briefings with the most intellectual people in the medical field guiding him on national TV, taking questions after they speak and still we have criticism.

If President Trump delivered the cure or a vaccination to stop the spread of coronavirus on a golden platter, that would not be good enough for his critics. Its time for America to stand behind its leader and give credit where credit is past due. Imagine for just a second where America would be without the quick action of President Trump stopping all flights from Wuhan, China, when this virus broke out. He had your back, and you wont give him the credit he deserves.

He got the $2 trillion aid package approved after Pelosi tried to sneak in $1.5 billion for abortions and several billion for New Green Deal, which have nothing to do with saving the lives of coronavirus patients. How killing unborn babies helps cure coronavirus when people forgot to use birth control is truly amazing.

This is the Democratic Party at work. How redecorating the Kennedy Center for Performing Arts cures a pandemic is mind boggling. How cutting down emissions from jet planes keeps coronavirus patients out of hospitals with the Green New Deal sneaked into the $2 trillion aid package for the American people who are out of work related to a pandemic is supposed to put food on the tables of Americans who lost their jobs, just how do Democrats thank Pelosi for such foolishness?

Ill tell you how. Republican President Trump to the rescue.

James Logan

Buckeye

History 101

Editor:

Every industrialized country on the planet has some form of single-payer health care except the United States. Germany has since the 1880s. Not only do they have better outcomes, but theyre also at about half the price. Not only is it morally the right thing to do, its also fiscally the responsible thing to do. To say its impossible is, to me, un-American. We should be doing it better than everybody else. There is no free-market solution. If youre in an ambulance dying, youre not going to ask which hospital is cheapest or best.

Damion Armstrong

Avondale

Troubling traffic

Editor:

I represent several homeowners who have concerns about child safety and property values with the city of Buckeye opening up Van Buren to Verrado. Speeding is out of control. The police did a test and gave out 40-some tickets in a two-day period. There are two bus stops in this area, and lately I had a pickup truck run the stop sign, drive through my backyard 8-foot-tall block wall, scrape the side of my house and take out my front block wall. We are getting nowhere with the police, city and city council.

Jim Harrison

Buckeye

Put isolation to good use

Editor:

Despite the vast tragedy and extreme upset surrounding the outbreak of COVID-19 here in Arizona, I imagine it is something of a clich in trying to always look at the bright side of things. So, let me put it this wayand I suppose I am looking for positivity because at least the season of spring is upon usenjoy the weather before triple-digit heat smacks you right across your face.

Everyone is walking or riding a bike! Or in some measure in looks like this. With gyms closed, I guess this was to be expected. But neighborhoods are full of chalk on sidewalks and plenty of room to navigate your feet or bike with plenty of distance to spare. There is such freedom of mind and body in getting out there and doing your thing. Can you fully adjust to not being able to open the door to your gym? Not really. And thats OK. And heres why.

Life is about adjustment and regrouping skills. If youre used to going to the gym every day but now you cant, you basically have two options: do nothing and wait for the green light to open the gym door again or accept the adjustment and regroup accordingly. I believe the latter option is the smartest, and also folks who do not go to the gym anyway should take this opportunity to throw on a pair of sneakers and start their own journey to fitness of mind and body.

You often hear, Were all in this together. While this is most certainly true, also consider that saying you dont have time to walk or ride a bike really doesnt make much sense. It kind of falls flat. The truth is you dont have time not to get your mind and body moving. Young or old. Overweight or underweight. And everyone else in between. Popular wisdom states it takes 21 days to form a habit that sticks. What are you waiting for? Start: This is the five-letter word you must take to heart.

Some of us exercise too much and some of us do not exercise enough. This is why there is merit in meeting in the middle. Again, the clock of your life and the clock of your loved ones and actually the clock of reality itself that always ticks no matter what you are thinking is the real deal. The world doesnt stop for anyone. Going back in time is completely impossible.

So, use this time in front of you to replace words with action. Get outside in your neighborhood and blaze your own trail no matter the speed in which you move your feet. The fact that you decided to turn off the news or put your cellphone on the table for 30 minutes is your best 30 minutes spent at this very moment. Its then your duty to do 30 minutes again tomorrow and the day after and go from there. The only one stopping you is you. Dont do that anymore. Its go time!

Tony Zizza

Avondale

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Letters To the Editor | Opinion - westvalleyview.com

Dogs and Cancer – JSTOR Daily

Cancer, at its simplest, begins with DNA mutations that cause uncontrolled replication of abnormal cells, resulting in tumors and illness. There is no single cancer: each is dependent on the cell type affected and the type of mutation that causes it, which is why there is no single cure for it either. There are standard treatments that can be used for many cancers, such as surgery, chemotherapy, and radiation. Targeted treatments can be highly specific and very successful. For example, Gleevecwhich is used to treat chronic myeloid leukemia (CML)stops the activity of the protein responsible for CML, and can restore patient life expectancy to normal.

Because we share many of the same cell types with our pets, they also develop some of the same cancers: bone (osteosarcoma), skin (melanoma), brain tumors (gliomas), and even prostate cancer (dogs and humans are the only two animals who develop it). Canine cancers are sadly very similar to human cancers, more so than cancer in mice, a traditional model organism of biomedical research. They are also increasingly common: one in four dogs at some point in their lives, and 50% of dogs over 10 years old, will be diagnosed with cancer. While some breeds of dog have a predisposition for particular cancer(s), others may have a higher risk of cancer overall.

Comparative oncology, an interdisciplinary field, builds on these parallels between dogs and humans, and other animals as well: those who also develop spontaneous cancers such as cats and horses, as well as those who dont develop any cancers, or are highly resistant, such as whales, elephants, and crocodiles.

Cancer research for dogs, such as clinical trials, done by veterinary oncologists can not only offer their patients the possibility of life extension or remission, but also allows dog owners who might otherwise be unable to afford costly treatment to provide more extensive care. Once completed, the findings from these trials can then be used to help inform human clinical trials.

Yet, just as human drug trials can be compromised by poor design, or small sample sizes, or lack of randomization, so too can canine trials. A recent meta-analysis of 168 cancer trials found many of these same problems were present, and suggested a number of improvements, including increasing the size of the trials to include more dogs, guidance that not only would improve the data, but might mean more dogs get better.

JSTOR is a digital library for scholars, researchers, and students. JSTOR Daily readers can access the original research behind our articles for free on JSTOR.

By: Joshua D. Schiffman and Matthew Breen

Philosophical Transactions: Biological Sciences, Philosophical Transactions: Biological Sciences Vol. 370, No. 1673, Theme issue: Cancer across life: Peto's paradox and the promise of comparative oncology (19 July 2015)

Royal Society

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Dogs and Cancer - JSTOR Daily

"Life Won’t Be Same Ever": Odisha First To Extend Lockdown Till April 30 – NDTV News

Coronavirus lockdown: Odisha became the first state to extend the lockdown over COVID-19

The Odisha government today announced it has extended the lockdown over the COVID-19 pandemic till April 30, becoming the first state to do so as the number of patients infected by the novel coronavirus continues to rise across the country.

Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik has asked the centre not to start train and air services till April 30. "Odisha cabinet decides for extension and also recommends to union government to do the same," the state government said in a statement.

"Coronavirus is the biggest threat that the human race has faced in more than a century. Life will not be the same ever. All of us must understand this and face it boldly together. With our sacrifice and with the blessing of Lord Jagannath, this too shall pass," Mr Patnaik said in the statement.

"Educational institutions will remain closed till June 17. Food security of people is of outmost importance. Agriculture, animal husbandry, MGNREGS related activities to be facilitated following social distancing norms," the state government said. "As earlier, free movement of goods transport will be allowed," it said.

At least 42 people have been infected by the novel coronavirus in Odisha. Two have died.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Wednesday suggested that the lockdown to check the spread of coronavirus will be extended and restrictions will not be lifted in one go after April 14. Several hotspots have been singled out in cities across the country for greater effort on isolating them completely.

Odisha is among the states that have made face masks compulsory for people stepping out of their homes. The others are Delhi, Mumbai, Chandigarh and Nagaland.

In a video meeting with leaders of all parties, PM Modi reportedly said he would consult with chief ministers but by all accounts the lifting of the lockdown "is not possible". He will hold a meeting with chief ministers on Saturday.

Many states and experts have requested an extension of the lockdown, given the rapid spread of virus cases and warnings that the infection could peak in the coming weeks.

15,80,550Cases

11,39,004Active

3,46,922Recovered

94,624Deaths

Coronavirus has spread to 184 countries. The total confirmed cases worldwide are 15,80,550 and 94,624 have died; 11,39,004 are active cases and 3,46,922 have recovered as on April 10, 2020 at 1:38 am.

5,865 591Cases

5,218 504Active

478 67Recovered

169 20Deaths

In India, there are 5,865 confirmed cases including 169 deaths. The number of active cases is 5,218 and 478 have recovered as on April 9, 2020 at 5:00 pm.

DistrictCases

Mumbai496

Pune131

Mumbai Suburban65

Thane31

Sangli24

Ahmednagar20

Nagpur16

Aurangabad8

Latur8

Palghar7

Raigad6

Satara5

Yavatmal4

Buldhana4

Osmanabad4

Hingoli2

Ratnagiri2

Washim1

Sindhudurg1

Nashik1

Amravati1

Kolhapur1

Jalna1

Jalgaon1

Gondia1

Details Awaited*294

1135

946

117

72

DistrictCases

Chennai152

Coimbatore59

Dindigul44

Tirunelveli38

Erode32

Tiruchirappalli30

Ranipet28

Namakkal27

Tiruppur27

Madurai24

Theni22

Karur22

Chengalpattu19

Thoothukudi16

Villupuram16

Cuddalore13

Thiruvallur12

Thiruvarur12

Thanjavur11

Nagapattinam11

Salem11

Virudhunagar11

Tiruvannamalai9

Kanchipuram7

Vellore6

Kanniyakumari6

Sivaganga5

The Nilgiris4

Tirupattur4

Kallakurichi2

Ramanathapuram2

Ariyalur1

Details Awaited*55

738

709

21

8

DistrictCases

South170

Central99

North64

New Delhi55

Shahdara53

South West23

West18

South East17

East15

North East14

View post:

"Life Won't Be Same Ever": Odisha First To Extend Lockdown Till April 30 - NDTV News

Spain, Italy to extend lockdowns amid renewed rise in cases – Stars and Stripes

Stars and Stripes is making stories on the coronavirus pandemic available free of charge. See other free reportshere. Sign up for our daily coronavirus newsletterhere. Please support our journalismwith a subscription.

Spain is poised to extend a nationwide lockdown and Italy is moving toward doing the same as Europe's rising infection rate complicates plans to begin reversing stringent restrictions on public life.

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez will ask parliament on Thursday for an extension to a state of emergency through April 25. His Italian counterpart, Giuseppe Conte, is preparing to prolong the national lockdown from a current expiration date of April 13 for another two weeks, according to officials, who asked not to be identified discussing a confidential issue.

The persistent increase in cases complicates efforts by European leaders to gradually ease the rules that have been put in place to slow the spread of the virus. The restrictions are having a devastating impact on economies across the region, and politicians are under pressure to relax them as quickly as possible.

The continent has been hit hard, suffering more than 65% of worldwide deaths and Spain, Italy, France and Germany trail only the U.S. in infections.

New virus cases in Germany climbed the most in five days, according to figures Thursday from Johns Hopkins University. Italy said Wednesday that it recorded 3,836 new infections, the highest in three days.

In Spain, total cases rose to more than 150,000 and deaths surpassed 15,000, underscoring the severity of Europe's most extensive outbreak, even if daily figures declined.

In Germany, where the economy is expected to shrink by almost 10% in the current quarter, Chancellor Angela Merkel is due to consult with regional premiers on Wednesday on how soon and to what extent current restrictions can be eased.

Economy Minister Peter Altmaier sought to tamp down a debate on loosening the lockdown, saying it would send the "wrong signal" as the government asks people to stay home over the Easter holiday and daily infection rates continue to "swing."

"There's a silver lining on the horizon, even if it's too early to sound the all clear," Altmaier said in Berlin after a meeting of the government's coronavirus task force. "It's also better for the economy if we're disciplined and hold on for a few more days rather than starting too early."

In Italy, only selected companies in the food and pharmaceutical sectors, as well as possibly some shops, will likely be allowed to reopen next week, the officials said. Conte may approve a new decree as early as Friday, they said.

Italy needs to define which industrial sectors could restart production, Conte told the BBC. If scientists confirm that the country can start a gradual return to activity, "we might begin to relax some measures by the end of this month," he said.

Health Minister Roberto Speranza is particularly cautious on relaxing the lockdown, one of the officials said, insisting on the need for data on the spread to improve further before considering whether to gradually reopen more businesses from early May.

An easing of the lockdown may be on a regional basis, the official said. The business-rich north of Italy has been the worst-hit by the virus. The government is considering recommending that people carry masks and gloves with them for protection in closed areas, including shops.Members of the medical and scientific committee advising the government are urging caution. The lockdown bans movements within Italy, and virtually confines people to their homes save for work, health or emergency reasons.

"The only thing we are certain of is that the lockdown measures are efficient, and to stop the epidemic we have to bring down the rate at which the infection spreads," Luca Richeldi, a pulmonolgist at Rome's Agostino Gemelli hospital and a member of the committee, said in an interview. "Some changes in mid-April would be justified, but they have to be small and for activities that can guarantee social distancing and protection measures, otherwise it's practically certain there will be a new outbreak," he added.

Portugal, which declared a state of emergency on March 18, tightened containment measures further from Thursday through Monday. The government wants to limit movement during the Easter holiday weekend by closing airports to all passenger travel and banning movement between municipalities.

Schools in the country, which so far hasn't been as badly hit by the outbreak as neighboring Spain or Italy, will remain closed through the month of April and Prime Minister Antonio Costa may indicate later on Thursday when they might start reopening.

Luxembourg will become the first EU country to start systematic mass tests on its population, regardless of whether they show coronavirus symptoms or not.

The move is important, as mass testing to isolate carriers and prevent new surges is a condition for the lifting of restrictions on movement, according to a draft "exit strategy" memo by the European Commission, seen by Bloomberg.

The European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control now recommends the widespread use of face masks to reduce the spread of the infection.

While face protection is seen only complementary to other measures, such as social distancing and personal hygiene, "the use of face masks in the community could be considered, especially when visiting busy, closed spaces, such as grocery stores, shopping centers, or when using public transport," according to the EU agency.

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Spain, Italy to extend lockdowns amid renewed rise in cases - Stars and Stripes

Shock as Ninewells nurses find protective masks with expiry dates from 2016 on box – Evening Telegraph

NHS Tayside has moved to allay staff concerns over a batch of protective masks discovered to have been four years past their use-by date.

A group of terrified nurses at Ninewells were shocked after they peeled off a sticker on a box of masks which had an expiry date of August 2021 to reveal an original expiry date of August 2016 printed underneath.

However, Scotlands chief deputy medical officer Dr Gregor Smith had written to seniormedical staff last month, saying the equipment had been subject to rigorous assessment and shelf-life extension by the manufacturer, and was safe to use.

One nurse contacted the Tele to say she and colleagues felt furious and sick when they found the 2016 date.

The Ninewells nurse, who asked not to be identified, said the discovery was made aftersome of the masks were stained when they were taken out of the box.

She said: We found stained masks, then looked at the boxes, and thats when we peeled off the stickers.

Were furious and feel sick that they would treat us like that we should have been toldabout this. Its left colleagues terrified.

A former staff nurse at one of the hospitals busiest wards said the situation was awful.

The woman, who recently retired, said: Im still in touch with former colleagues, a lot of whom are treating people with coronavirus, as a lot of non-essential surgery has been postponed so they have capacity for people with Covid-19.

At a time when we are hearing about rising deaths, including frontline health care staff, the last thing they need is further worry like this.

Dr Smiths letter was sent to territorial board chief executives, medical directors, directors of public health, primary care leads, heads of procurement, logistics and stores managers, resilience officers and GP practice managers.

Dr Smith said in his letter: I am writing to you today regarding concerns which have been raised around the stock of facemasks which is being issued to GP Practices this week from national stockpiles.

The stock which has been issued was manufactured by Cardinal/Medline and had an original expiry dating back, typically to 2016. They now have a shelf-life expiry date sticker, typically with a date of 2021.

I would like to clarify that this stock has been subject to rigorous assessment and shelf-life extension by the manufacturer and is therefore safe to use. I hope this allays any concerns you may have.

A spokesman for NHS Tayside said: We have been assured by the Scottish Government thatthis stock of face masks is safe to use as it has been subject to rigorous assessment andshelf-life extension by the manufacturer.

This information has been shared with all staff.

In these troubled times, when many people are struggling to get out for their paper, we are pledging to help readers by providing a FREE digital edition of the Evening Telegraph for our readers, with hundreds taking us up on the offer. Click below to register

From the Editor: The Tele is on your side thats why were offering our ePaper FREE for three months

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Shock as Ninewells nurses find protective masks with expiry dates from 2016 on box - Evening Telegraph

Alkane Resources regional drilling south of TGO returns further broad, high-grade gold – Proactive Investors Australia

The results will be included in a maiden resource estimate for the San Antonio prospect, which is expected shortly.

Alkane Resources Limited () has received further broad, high-grade gold results from resource definition drilling on San Antonio and Roswell prospects south of the Tomingley Gold Operations (TGO) in Central West NSW.

Assays from the final 6,608 metres at San Antonio of the overall initial 60,000-metre program have been received and will be incorporated in a maiden resource calculation at the prospect, which is expected shortly.

Best of the latest results are 18 metres at 12.7 g/t gold from 117 metres, including 5 metres at 35.5 g/t from 120 metres, and 19 metres at 4.90 g/t from 104 metres, including 6 metres at 10.8 g/t from 113 metres.

The San Antonio resource is expected to add to the Roswell inferred resource of 7.02 million tonnes at 1.97 g/t gold.

Roswell and San Antonio are immediately south of the TGO mine and processing facility.

Tomingley Gold Project covers about 440 square kilometres stretching 60 kilometres north-south along the Newell Highway from Tomingley in the north, through Peak Hill and almost to Parkes in the south.

The project contains Alkanes operating TGO, initially an open pit mine with a 1 million tonnes per annum processing facility that has now transitioned to underground.

For the past two years Alkane has conducted an extensive regional exploration program with the objective of defining additional resources that have the potential to be mined via open pit or underground operations and fed to TGO.

This has yielded broad, shallow high-grade intercepts that demonstrate potential for material project life extension and show that a return to open pit mining and/or underground extension is possible with appropriate resource confirmation, landholder agreement and regulatory approvals.

Alkanes 60,000-metre resource definition drilling program has been designed to define initial inferred resources at both prospects and the company has received highly encouraging results.

Other San Antonio results:

The company assayed 3-metre composite reverse circulation (RC) samples, however, where strong mineralisation was observed by the site geologist, it was directly assayed at 1-metre intervals.

Assaying of 1-metre re-split samples of 3-metre composites is ongoing.

These results are from 30 RC drill holes for 5,461 metres and two diamond cored drill holes for 1,147 metres at the San Antonio prospect.

The second phase of infill resource drilling across Roswell and San Antonio comprising a further 50,000 metres is continuing.

Link:

Alkane Resources regional drilling south of TGO returns further broad, high-grade gold - Proactive Investors Australia