Minister Barbara Creecy briefs media on South Africa’s position to COP 26, 22 Oct

Minister Creecy briefs international and local media on South Africa’s position to the International Climate Change Talks COP 26

Minister of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment, Ms Barbara Creecy will brief the media on South Africa’s position to the international climate change talks known as COP 26 on Friday, 22 October 2021.

South Africa, through the Department of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment (DFFE) will participate at the 26th Conference of Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) in Glasgow, Scotland, from 31 October to 12 November 2021, under the Presidency of the United Kingdom.

South Africa expects an outcome at COP26 that is negotiated in a transparent, inclusive and balanced manner, with priority given to all core issues under the UNFCCC and its Paris Agreement. These include securing new commitments of support by developed countries for implementation of the Paris Agreement by developing countries, addressing both mitigation and adaptation.

Ahead of its participation in the international Climate Change talks, COP 26 in Glasgow, South Africa’s efforts to address the effects of climate change on people and the economy in a manner which leaves no one behind, received a firm nod from Cabinet.

Source: Government of South Africa

Electoral Commission launches Results Operation Centre, 26 Oct

The Electoral Commission invites members of the media to attend the launch of the Results Operation Centre (ROC) ahead of the upcoming 2021 Municipal Elections.

At the launch, the Commission will announce the state of readiness as the countdown to Election Day on November 1 begins.

The launch further signals the official move by the Electoral Commission to the ROC for the remaining election activities until the announcement of results.

The event will take place as follows:

Date: Tuesday, 26 October 2021

Time: 13h00 – 14h45 (arrival and registration)

15h00 – 16h00 (Event goes live)

Venue: Tshwane Events Centre, Hall J, WF Nkomo Street, GATE 9, Pretoria West

Webinar link:

https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_zAITm4J3Qs6zX4AW2nL_7A(link is external)

After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the webinar.

Due to Covid-19 restrictions, only 30 members of the media will be allowed at the launch. No walk-in will be allowed. Only media that has confirmed attendance will be allowed at the launch.

Kindly confirm your attendance by email to Spokesperson@elections.org.za(link sends e-mail) by Monday, 25 October 2021 @ 14h00.

Ensuring free, fair and credible elections.

Source: Government of South Africa

Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs Phee’s Travel to Paris

Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs Molly Phee will travel to Paris, France October 22 and 23. She recently traveled to Ghana and Burkina Faso, her first visit to Africa in her current role. The Assistant Secretary and an interagency group will draw from her recent trip to discuss current and future cooperation with French counterparts.

Source: US State Department

Basic Education hosts pledge signing ceremonies in Bethlehem and Mothibistad, 22 Oct

Department Basic Education Minister and Deputy Minister to host pledge signing ceremonies in Bethlehem, Free State and Mothibistad, Northern Cape

Minister Mrs Angie Motshekga and Deputy Minister Dr Reginah Mhaule of the Department of Basic Education, will tomorrow Friday 22 October 2021 host a National Senior Certificate (NSC) Pledge Signing Ceremonies at Tiisetsang Secondary School, in Bethlehem, Free State and Thabo Moorosi Hall in Mothibistad in the John Taolo Gaetsewe Education District in Northern Cape, respectively.

There are seven hundred and thirty-five thousand, six hundred and seventy-seven (735 677) full-time candidates sitting for the 2021 NSC Exams, an increase by one hundred and twenty-eight thousand, four hundred and fifty-one (128 451). This is the third Matric exam to happen under the COVID-19 environment; and the DBE had to make changes, to mitigate the negative impact of COVID-19 pandemic on teaching and learning.

Minister Motshekga will be joined in Bethlehem by the Free State Education MEC, Dr Tate Makgoe and the Northern Cape MEC of Education will join the Deputy Minister Dr Mhaule in Mothibistad in the John Taolo Gaetsewe Education District.

Source: Government of South Africa

Up to 180,000 health workers may have died from COVID-19

Between 80,000 and 180,000 health and care workers may have died from COVID-19 between January of 2020 and May of this year, the World Health Organization (WHO) said on Thursday.

That grim estimate features in a new WHO working paper based on the 3.45 million coronavirus-related deaths reported globally to the UN health agency up to May; a figure that WHO said may well be at least 60 per cent lower than the actual number of victims.

To highlight the need for better protection, WHO was joined by global partners working to end the pandemic, to issue an urgent call for concrete action on behalf of workers in the sector.

Speaking to journalists in Geneva, WHO Director-General, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, reiterated that “the backbone of every health system is its workforce.”

“COVID-19 is a powerful demonstration of just how much we rely on these men and women, and how vulnerable we all are when the people who protect our health are themselves unprotected”, he added.

Vulnerabilities

WHO and partners said that apart from huge concern over deaths, an increasing proportion of the workforce continue to suffer from burnout, stress, anxiety and fatigue.

They are calling on leaders and policy makers to ensure equitable access to vaccines so that health and care workers are prioritized.

By the end of last month, on average, two in five of these workers are fully vaccinated, but with considerable difference across regions.

“In Africa, less than one in ten health workers have been fully vaccinated. Meanwhile, in most high-income countries, more than 80% of health workers are fully vaccinated”, Tedros informed.

For him, more than 10 months since the first vaccines were approved, “the fact that millions of health workers still haven’t been vaccinated is an indictment on the countries and companies that control the global supply of vaccines”.

Action from the G20

In 10 days’ time, the leaders of the G20 leading industrialized nations will meet. Between now and then, roughly 500 million vaccine doses will be produced.

That’s the number needed to achieve the target of vaccinating 40 per cent of the population of every country, by the end of the year.

Currently, 82 nations are at risk of missing that target. For about 75 per cent of those countries, it’s a problem of insufficient supply. The others have some limitations that WHO is helping solve.

Speaking to journalists via videolink, Gordon Brown, former UK Prime Minister and currently WHO’s Ambassador for Global Health Financing, said it would be a “moral catastrophe of historic proportions” if G20 countries cannot act quickly.

These nations have pledged to donate more than 1.2 billion vaccine doses to COVAX. According to WHO, so far, only 150 million have been delivered.

With wealthy countries stockpiling millions of unused doses, close to expire, Mr. Brown said they should start an “immediate, massive, concerted” airlift of vaccines to low income countries.

If they don’t do it, Mr. Brown argued, they will be guilty of an “economic dereliction of duty that will shame us all.”

Mr. Brown also warned that “the longer vaccine inequity exists, the longer the virus will be present.”

Annette Kennedy, President of the International Council of Nurses (ICN), and Heidi Stensmyren, President of the World Medical Association (WMA), also spoke to journalists at the WHO weekly COVID-19 briefing.

Source: UN News Centre