Saturday, May 2, 2020

Boris Johnson says the British government had a contingency plan in place for his death

boris johnsonPippa Fowles/10 Downing Street/Handout via Reuters

  • British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said in an interview with The Sun that the government had a contingency plan in place for his death.
  • Johnson grew severely ill with COVID-19 and spent several nights in intensive care receiving "litres and litres of oxygen for a long time," he said.
  • Johnson said the government had "a strategy to deal with a 'death of Stalin'-type scenario."
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

The British government had a contingency plan for Prime Minister Boris Johnson's death as his condition deteriorated while he battled COVID-19 last month in intensive care, Johnson said in an interview with The Sun newspaper published Saturday night.

Johnson returned to work on Monday, a month after testing positive for COVID-19. Johnson, 55, spent 10 days in isolation in Downing Street from late March, but was then was taken to London's St Thomas' Hospital where he received oxygen treatment and spent three nights in intensive care.

See the rest of the story at Business Insider

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Monty Bennett, Trump donor and largest recipient of PPP funds, will return money

monty bennett ashfordYahoo screenshot

  • The largest recipient of COVID-19 bailout loans, Trump campaign donor Monty Bennett, announced Saturday he would return all money received through the Paycheck Protection Program.
  • Business Insider recently reported that Bennett won the money after contributing significantly to Trump's re-election, and spent $50,000 to hire two of Trump's fundraisers to lobby the administration for bailout money.
  • This is a developing story.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

The hotel conglomerate run by a major campaign donor to President Donald Trump, Monty Bennett, announced Saturday it would return all the money it received through the Paycheck Protection Program.

"The Ashford Group of Companies announced today that all of its companies, including Ashford Inc. (NYSE American: AINC), Ashford Hospitality Trust, Inc. (NYSE: AHT) ("Ashford Trust"), and Braemar Hotels & Resorts Inc. (NYSE: BHR) ("Braemar"), will return all funds provided by the Small Business Administration's ("SBA") Paycheck Protection Program ("PPP") due to the agency's recently changed rules and inconsistent federal guidance that put the companies at compliance risk," Bennett's companies said in a statement emailed to investors.

See the rest of the story at Business Insider

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US authorises Ebola drug for coronavirus treatment

The US’s Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has authorised emergency use of the Ebola drug remdesivir for treating the coronavirus.

The authorisation means the anti-viral drug can now be used on people who are hospitalised with severe Covid-19.

A recent clinical trial showed the drug helped shorten the recovery time for people who were seriously ill.

However, it did not significantly improve survival rates.

Experts have warned the drug – which was originally developed to treat Ebola, and is produced by Gilead pharmaceutical company in California – should not be seen as a “magic bullet” for coronavirus.

The drug interferes with the virus’s genome, disrupting its ability to replicate.

(BBC News)

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The Central Bank of Sri Lanka Extends the Deadlines to Facilitate Covid-19 Affected Businesses and Individuals.

Considering the difficulties faced by some customers of financial institutions affected by the COVID-19 pandemic to obtain certain relief measures, the Central Bank of Sri Lanka has extended the deadline (30.04.2020) for submitting requests for debt moratoriums and 4% per annum refinancing facility for two months working capital, until 15 May 2020.

Further, where the validity period of cheques valued less than Rs.500,000 has expired, the banks are required to consider them as valid until 15 May 2020. These extensions were effected through the Circular No. 06 of 2020 dated 28.04.2020.

The eligible businesses and individuals are requested to contact their respective banks with necessary information/documents on a timely basis if they wish to avail themselves of the relief measures. These measures require the banks to extend the existing tenure of loans eligible for moratorium by the respective moratorium period. Thus, we urge the borrowers to repay the instalments subject to the moratorium during such extended period without any additional cost, so that by receiving such funds banks will also be able to strengthen their liquidity positions.

(News.lk)

 

 

The post The Central Bank of Sri Lanka Extends the Deadlines to Facilitate Covid-19 Affected Businesses and Individuals. appeared first on NewsWire.



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370 stranded people sent home. 52,000 register to leave Western Province

 

370 people who were unable to return home and stranded in the Western Province due to the curfew, was allowed to return to their homes today.

In the first stage, a group of pregnant mothers, patients and children trapped in the Kelaniya Police Division was sent to their villages.

They were transported by SLTB buses under police protection.

The operation is being supervised by Senior DIG Western Province Deshabandu Tennakoon.

Nearly 52,000 people have so far registered to leave the Western Province. Steps will be taken to send them home in a step by step process, Police said.

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COVID toes: New coronavirus symptom reported in some countries

Some doctors around the world have reported a new and unusual symptom in people with COVID-19: swollen, blue-black toes that resemble frostbite.

A pinkish-reddish rash develops on the toes which can turn blue or purple over time, and causes a burning sensation in some people, Dr Esther Freeman, a dermatologist at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, told The Washington Post.

He added that the inflammation usually disappears without treatment in two to three weeks. The cases have mostly been reported in people in their 20s and 30s.

They are believed to be caused by either inflammation or small blood clots in the extremities. However, there have been no studies conducted so far definitively linking the symptom to COVID-19.

The earliest known mention of this symptom was by French doctors in a press release by the National Union of Dermatologists on April 6. They said the rash had an “appearance of pseudo-frostbite” and “persistent, sometimes painful redness, and transient hive lesions.”

Dermatologists in Canada have also observed similar lesions in children. They believe ‘covid toes’ occur during the first two weeks of infection by the novel coronavirus and have advised testing those patients for the virus.

Studies from Spain, Belgium and Italy have described a surge in complaints about painful lesions on patients’ toes, heels and soles of the feet, reported The New York Times. So far these lesions have only been seen in people with mild to moderate cases of the disease.



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Three quarters of British truckers expect to go out of business within just 2 months due to the coronavirus outbreak

UK haulier lorry borderREUTERS/Jason Cairnduff

  • UK truckers are pleading with Boris Johnson's government to provide more financial support.
  • 75% expect to go out of business within two months due to the coronavirus, a new survey found.
  • Over half of the respondents said they expected their business to collapse within a month. 
  • Lorry drivers moving goods other than food and PPE are particularly at risk, with demand for goods like clothing having plummeted since the outbreak of the pandemic in the UK.
  • Opposition parties have called on ministers to give the haulage industry the support it needs to survive.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

UK truckers are warning Boris Johnson's government that they could go out of business in weeks without more financial support for dealing with the impact of the coronavirus on their industry.

The truckers are playing a vital role in transporting essentials like food and PPE around Britain during the coronavirus pandemic, but their futures still look bleak. Three-quarters say they don't expect their jobs to survive beyond two months, a stark new survey, conducted in the latter part of April and published this weekend, has found.

See the rest of the story at Business Insider

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PMs former MPs meeting : SJB, JVP to boycott, UNP to attend

Samagi Jana Balavegaya (SJB) led by Former Opposition Leader Sajith Premadasa will  lnot attend the former MPs meeting convened by the Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa, SJB said in a statement today.

Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa called all 225 members of the previous Parliament for a meeting on Monday at 10 am to discuss the current situation in the country.

“The practical course of action would be to reconvene Parliament under the former speaker,” SJB said in its statement.

JVP MPs have already announced that they will be boycotting the meeting on the 4th.

Meanwhile UNP General Secretary Akila Viraj Kariyawasam confirmed that UNP MPs will participate in the meeting. Majority of the UNP MPs of the last parliament are with Samagi Jana Balavegaya.

The post PMs former MPs meeting : SJB, JVP to boycott, UNP to attend appeared first on NewsWire.



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FDA approves antiviral Remdesivir for emergency use in COVID-19 patients

The US Food and Drug Administration approved on Friday an experimental antiviral drug, Remdesivir, for emergency use in COVID-19 patients.

The drug can now be given to patients who are hospitalised with severe symptoms and need supplemental oxygen therapy or a ventilator.

Emergency use authorisation means that unapproved drugs or products that might help treat a life-threatening disease can be used when no approved alternatives are available.

“Remdesivir has not undergone the same type of review as an FDA-approved or cleared product,” the agency said in a statement.

“The FDA decision is based on the totality of scientific evidence available showing that it is reasonable to believe that the product meets certain criteria for safety, performance and labelling and may be effective in treatment of patients during the COVID-19 pandemic.”

Earlier two clinical trials had shown that Remdesivir was effective in shortening the disease duration in hospitalised patients. These were carried out by the US National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and the other by Gilead Sciences, the company that manufactures Remdesivir.

Remdesivir, which was developed to treat Ebola, isn’t licensed or approved anywhere in the world yet. It belongs to a class of drugs known as nucleotide analogs which can block the production of viral DNA or RNA. This stops the virus from replicating.

Previously it has proved effective against Ebola, Marburg, MERS and SARS both in vitro and in vivo. The approval of Remdesivir is the latest step in a global push to find viable treatments and a vaccine for the novel coronavirus.

The US has reported around 1.1 million confirmed COVID-19 cases and nearly 65,000 deaths, the highest in the world.



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COVID-19 patients at Lahore’s Expo Hospital protest against inefficient management

Coronavirus patients at the Expo Field Hospital in Lahore came out in protest, complaining against the hospital’s inefficient management.

They claimed that the services being provided at the hospital were inadequate and not up to basic health standards.

Washrooms at the hospital are extremely dirty and don’t even have soap let alone sanitiser, a patient said.

Another complained that the food provided to patients was either stale or bad. “We have complained to the government multiple times but they haven’t even acknowledged our concerns,” he added.

The patients have demanded that the government let them go home if they can’t be taken care of. Quarantining at home is better than staying here, they said, adding that living in these conditions will never pull them out of the disease.

Previously, due to similar complaints Punjab Chief Minister Usman Buzdar had taken notice of the hospital, however, no changes have been made yet.



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Covid-19 Outbreak: Maharashtra Govt To Give Free Health Insurance To All Citizens In State

The health scheme will now include government, semi-government employees and white ration card holders in the scheme in a bid to prevent private hospitals from overcharging patients

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25 Covid19 patients yesterday, 15 recovered, Details 👇

25 Covid19 patients were identified yesterday increasing the total Infected patients number to 690.

Details of the patients identified yesterday According to Health Ministry.

  • 18 Navy personnal
  • 05 persons related to the Navy Cluster
  • 01 person from a quarantine center in the North.
  • 01 person from Mattakkuliya (He had worked in a company supplying Oxygen Tanks for Navy)

15 patients were discharged from the hospital yesterday taking the total recovered patients number to 172.

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Pandemic-era celebrities struggle to strike appropriate tone

As the coronavirus pandemic has forced populations worldwide indoors, many celebrities have harnessed their star power to try and raise spirits online, dubbing the illness a great unifier.

But expressions of solidarity have rung hollow for some social media users fatigued by content that’s perhaps well-intentioned but backdropped by hot tubs, crackling fireplaces, or backyard pools.

The most recent eye rolls came after the announcement that some 200 celebrities and politicians — including billionaire Oprah, superstar actress Julia Roberts and former US president George W. Bush — would participate in a 24-hour long “Call to Unite” livestream event starting this Friday to encourage donating to COVID-19 relief efforts.

“If only they knew ppl with money,” tweeted journalist Astead Herndon of the announcement.

And yet, we watch: more than 270 million people worldwide tuned in to a recent star-studded marathon special intended to celebrate essential workers that featured headliners The Rolling Stones and Taylor Swift performing from their homes.

Even for those loving to hate, the streamed sing-alongs and Instagram live soliloquys keep the internet rapt, perhaps temporarily alleviating the boredom of life indoors.

Whether messages of the rich and famous fascinate or leave a bad taste, that attention remains “says more about our culture than these actual celebrities,” according to professor Cheryl Thompson of Toronto’s Ryerson University.

“We might not want to admit it to ourselves,” Thompson told AFP, but “we look to them, in some ways, to be our gauge for what we should think and feel.”

‘Out of touch’

The scholar of creative industries pointed to Tom Hanks’ announcement in mid-March that he had contracted coronavirus, saying that news convinced many people the infection was serious.

Indeed, Jenna Anderson said the realities of coronavirus first hit her once Hanks — whom she called a “national-treasure type” — went public with his illness.

The 30-year-old previously living in Australia, where Hanks quarantined, is now isolating with her family in Houston.

But Anderson said while some content has been useful — stars’ descriptions of symptoms, for example — “most of what sticks in my mind are negative experiences where celebrities do seem a bit out of touch.”

The internet slammed talkshow personality Ellen DeGeneres when she joked self-quarantine in her glassy California mansion was like “being in jail.”

Arnold Schwarzenegger critized spring-breakers from his jacuzzi, cigar in hand, while a coterie of stars led by Gal Gadot became a laughingstock after dropping an awkward cover of John Lennon’s “Imagine,” including Zoe Kravitz perched by her fireplace while others appeared to be meandering across their estates.

Many stars “seem to really try to keep in the forefront of people’s minds in a way that seems unnecessary to me, based on what I assume about how much money they have and how successful they are,” Anderson said.

Still, Thompson said “we’ve always had this sense that celebrities come and take us away from the hard times.”

During World War II, for example, the US government called Hollywood stars to visit troops or promote war bond sales. 

Many celebrities today have deployed their wealth, including entertainment mogul Rihanna’s donation of medical equipment to New York state and $5 million to several relief organizations, or Beyonce’s $6 million donation to nonprofits.

Country icon Dolly Parton meanwhile is financing Vanderbilt University research efforts for a vaccine.

Beyond the cash, entertainment can soothe — and Thompson predicted the trauma of the current moment could fuel more intriguing art in years to come.

“The struggle has always brought with it amazing creative outputs,” she said. 

Until then there is plenty of celebrity content relying less on platitudes, and more on entertaining the masses by leaning into the absurd.

Britney Spears has been offering eyebrow-raising comic relief including an abrupt tale of the time she “burned down her gym” — no one was harmed — while “Mad Men” star January Jones has taken on the role of quarantine eccentric, offering a recipe for a “human stew” detox bath.

And “Jurassic Park” actor Sam Neill has been posting playful albeit slightly unhinged videos — including a bit where he voices a garden gnome who schools listeners on self-isolation.



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90 more factories in Sindh resume work amid COVID-19 lockdown

Businesses are gradually resuming operations in Sindh despite increasing coronavirus cases. The provincial government allowed on Friday 90 more factories to resume work.

This takes the number of total factories exempted from the lockdown to 528. The government had announced that the province-wide lockdown will remain in place till Eid.

Chief Minister Murad Ali Shah says the factories resuming work will strictly abide by the SOPs that prevent the spread of the virus.

Shopping malls have been closed for more than a month but Education Minister Saeed Ghani has said the government is mulling reopening them soon.

“For shopping, the government might consider opening a few businesses with SOPs,” he said while speaking on SAMAA TV’s programme Naya Din on Friday. “We will, however, make sure that there are no crowded shops.”

As of Saturday, 6,675 COVID-19 cases have been confirmed in Sindh.



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Nawaz Sharif’s surgery postponed due to coronavirus risk

Former prime minister Nawaz Sharif’s heart surgery has been postponed due to the coronavirus risk, his daughter Maryam Nawaz announced on Friday via Twitter.

She said that doctors had declared the former premier a high risk patient, which is why they were taking these precautions.

His treatment is, however, continuing, she wrote, asking people to pray for him.

Nawaz, a three-time premier and founder of the PML-N, is currently in London where he is undergoing treatment. He obtained bail and travelled abroad for treatment in 2019 and has yet to return.

Last week, NAB issued warrants for his arrest in a case involving Jang Group Editor-in-Chief Mir Shakil-ur-Rehman. He is accused of giving concessions to Rehman on 54 plots in Lahore’s Johar Town in 1986, when he was Punjab’s chief minister. NAB has also filed a petition in an accountability court to declare him an absconder in the case.



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Today’s outlook: Heatwave to hit Karachi, deceased Pakistanis’ bodies return

Here are some of the stories we are expecting to follow today (Saturday):

  • The bodies of seven Pakistani nationals who died of the coronavirus in New York will brought to Pakistan.
  • The Met Office has predicted a heatwave in Karachi from May 5 to May 8. Humidity is likely to increase during these days.
  • NAB says it has recovered Rs10 billion worth of wheat. The bureau says it has recovered Rs2 billion through plea bargains with mill owners.
  • The Sindh government claims the Centre’s Ehsaas Emergency Cash Programme led to a spike in coronavirus cases in the province. In recently released statistics, it was learnt that 4,044 COVID-19 patients of the 5,262 patients in Sindh are isolated in their homes. The government says its isolation wards at hospitals are now full.
  • US President Donald Trump claims he has evidence proving that COVID-19 was prepared synthetically at the Wuhan Institute of Virology in China. US intelligence agencies, however, say the virus was not man-made or genetically modified.
  • ICYMI: The United States has allowed PIA to operate direct flights for the first time. Click here to read the full story.


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Lockdown Impact: Universities In Delhi Planning To Conduct Online Exams

CM Arvind Kejriwal and his deputy Manish Sisodia held a video conference review meeting with the VCs regarding the academic matters, the government said in a statement.

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Friday, May 1, 2020

Biden asks the secretary of the Senate to direct a search for an alleged sexual harassment complaint filed by a former staffer

Joe BidenMatt Rourke/AP

  • Presumptive Democratic presidential nominee and former Vice President Joe Biden requested that records relating to an alleged complaint filed by a former staffer be found and released from the Senate records. 
  • Earlier today, Biden denied sexual assault allegations made against him by former staffer Tara Reade.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Presumptive Democratic presidential nominee and former Vice President Joe Biden asked the secretary of the Senate to locate an alleged harassment complaint from a former staffer Tara Reade.

In a letter sent Friday to Secretary of the Senate Julie E. Adams, Biden requests "that you take or direct whatever steps are necessary to establish the location of the records of this Office, and once they have been located, to direct a search for the alleged complaint and to make public the results of this search."

See the rest of the story at Business Insider

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CDC official admits that due in part to limited testing and delayed travel alerts, the US missed chances to slow the spread of the coronavirus

AP_20122642379709 1AP Photo/Evan Vucci

  • Limited testing and delayed travel alerts for areas outside China contributed to the jump in US cases starting in late February, said Dr. Anne Schuchat, the No. 2 official at the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
  • "We clearly didn't recognize the full importations that were happening," Schuchat told The Associated Press.
  • Schuchat noted that nearly 2 million travelers arrived in the US from Italy and other European countries during February. The US government didn't block travel from there until March 11.
  • "The extensive travel from Europe, once Europe was having outbreaks, really accelerated our importations and the rapid spread," she told the AP. "I think the timing of our travel alerts should have been earlier."
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

NEW YORK (AP) — The US government was slow to understand how much the coronavirus was spreading from Europe, which helped drive the acceleration of outbreaks across the nation, a top health official said Friday.

Limited testing and delayed travel alerts for areas outside China contributed to the jump in US cases starting in late February, said Dr. Anne Schuchat, the No. 2 official at the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

See the rest of the story at Business Insider

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India Records 2,293 Fresh Covid-19 Cases In 24 Hrs, Biggest Single-Day Spike; 122 CRPF Jawans Test Positive

Maharashtra remains to be the worst-affected state with a total of 11,506 Covid-19 positive cases so far. The state registered 26 new deaths in the past 24 hours.

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Congress' physician says they don't have the capacity to test all 100 senators, while some White House officials are regularly tested for coronavirus

capitol hillAP Photo/Patrick Semansky

  • Capitol Hill does not have the capacity to test all 100 senators for coronavirus, and tests results would take days to come back, several outlets reported. 
  • The Senate is supposed to reconvene on Monday. 
  • Testing will be prioritized for those who are sick or have symptoms. 
  • About half of the senate is over 65 years old and therefore more at risk of a severe case of coronavirus. 
  • The White House has access to rapid testing, and those who meet with President Donald Trump and Vice President Mike Pence are regularly tested. 
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

While the White House is able to test anyone meeting with President Donald Trump and Vice President Mike Pence for the coronavirus and get quick results, Congress' doctor has said there are only enough tests for the senators who are sick or have symptoms, Politico reported. 

Brian Monahan, Congress' attending physician, who The New York Times described as "a strait-laced Navy rear admiral," said there were not enough tests for all 100 senators, and they didn't have access to the rapid results tests, as the White House does, meaning results will take a few days. 

See the rest of the story at Business Insider

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