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Former Moroccan Prime Minister Abderrahman El Youssoufi dies at 96

By - May 30,2020 - Last updated at May 30,2020

Former Moroccan Prime Minister Abderrahman El Youssoufi, whose socialist ideals and left wing politics landed him in prison, has died at the age of 96 after a long illness, media report (ANA photo)

CAPE TOWN — Former Moroccan Prime Minister Abderrahman El Youssoufi, has died after a prolonged illness on Friday at the age of 96, local media report.

The former prime minister died at Cheikh Khalifa hospital in Casablanca, after being hospitalised on Sunday, reported Morocco World News.

According to reports, El Youssoufi was hospitalised for pneumonia in 2016, but there has been no mention of the cause of death as yet.

Youssoufi was a member of the general secretariat of the National Union of People's Forces, which in 1975 became the Socialist Union of People's Forces (USFP).

His political activism cost him several arrests and jail terms during the reign of the late King Hassan II. He then went into exile in France for many years, North African Post reported.

Before serving the Moroccan people as prime minister, Youssoufi was a human rights lawyer, activist, and advocate for immigrant workers’ rights in France, writes Morocco World News.

In February 1998, the late HM King Hassan II had instructed him to form the government of alternation, which he presented to the Sovereign in March of the same year. After the death of the late HM King Hassan II, HM King Mohammed VI kept him at the head of the government, said Moroccan-based MAP news.

Youssoufi served as the prime minister of Morocco between 1998 until 2004.

In August 2019, on the 20th anniversary of his accession to Prime minister, King Mohammed VI paid tribute to Youssoufi by naming a brigade of new military graduates after him, writes Morocco World News.

His last public appearance was in January, when he presented a book about his political experience written by Driss Guerraoui, writes Morocco World News.

Iran announces collective prayers to restart nationwide

By - May 30,2020 - Last updated at May 30,2020

Mosques in low-risk areas of Iran were allowed to re-open their doors for prayer for the month of Ramadan but only for individual prayer (AFP photo)

TEHRAN — Iran's President Hassan Rouhani announced on Saturday that collective prayers will resume in mosques, even as confirmed new coronavirus infections rise again after a decline.

"It has been decided to open the mosques across the country... giving worshippers the chance to perform their daily prayers while respecting the required [hygiene] rules," Rouhani said in a televised speech.

Iran, hit by the Middle East's deadliest outbreak of the virus, began to loosen restrictions on human interaction in April, classifying areas as white, orange and red -- respectively indicating low, medium and high risk for coronavirus infections.

Rouhani said on Saturday that the reopening of mosques for daily prayer "would not only be in white zones", but did not elaborate on when the eased measures would take effect.

Authorities had progressively closed mosques across Iran after confirming the first coronavirus infections in February.

Mosques in areas falling into the white category were allowed to re-open their doors for prayer for the month of Ramadan -- April 25 to May 24 -- but only for individual prayer.

For Eid Al Fitr, the holiday marking the end of Ramadan, collective prayer was permitted in some areas.

A requirement that shopping centres close by 6pm would be lifted, Rouhani added, again without specifying when this measure will take effect.

The Iranian president also warned the population against believing that the country was rid of the virus, emphasising that it was here to stay.

He urged citizens to respect the rules on social distancing fastidiously.

A further 57 people who tested positive for the virus died over the last day, the health ministry said Saturday, taking the total confirmed death toll to 7,734.

The official figures show a renewed acceleration in virus cases since early May.

The ministry announced 2,282 new confirmed infections on Saturday, taking the total number of declared infections since February to 148,950.

On Friday, authorities announced new confirmed cases in the previous 24 hours had totalled 2,819, a near two-month high.

 

Egypt surpasses 20,000 mark in Covid-19 cases

By - May 30,2020 - Last updated at May 30,2020

Egyptian men wearing face masks wait outside a center of an NGO to receive cartons with foodstuffs (AFP photo)

CAPE TOWN — Egypt has surpassed the 20,000 mark in coronavirus infections and is the African country with the highest number of Covid-19-related deaths, which now stands at 845, the health ministry said in a statement released by the State Information Services.

The country has 20,793 confirmed cases of coronavirus infection.

Health Ministry spokesperson Khaled Megahed said 29 patients had died of the coronavirus in the past 24 hours.

Egypt recorded 1,127 cases on May 28, its highest daily infection rate since the country posted its first case on February 15.

According to the ministry, as many as 154 patients had been discharged from isolation hospitals, taking the number of recovered patients to 5,359 since the outbreak of the coronavirus in the North African country.

Megahed explained that the number of coronavirus patients who had been re-tested and received negative results stood at 6,019.

Meanwhile, Prime Minister Mostafa Madbouly on Thursday said that the government fully supported the efforts of all medical staff in the fight against the coronavirus.

Madbouly was speaking at a Cabinet meeting on Thursday, where he insisted that protecting medical staff against the coronavirus was vital and that beds for medical workers had been provide in isolation facilities.

The prime minister also reviewed recommendations to train intern doctors in emergency skills that will allow them to provide patients with critical care and enable them to control infections.

According to BBC news, Egyptian Health Minister Hala Zayed said that since the start of the outbreak, the ministry had ensured the allocation of a floor in every quarantine hospital with a 20-bed capacity to treat those infected among medical staff.

A World Redrawn: Re-think gender roles, says Tunisian feminist Bochra Belhaj Hmida

By - May 28,2020 - Last updated at May 28,2020

Tunisian feminist Bochra Belhaj Hmida has stepped away from politics but remains engaged on questions of gender roles in Tunisian society (AFP photo)

TUNIS — During Tunisia's coronavirus lockdown, feminist activist and former lawmaker Bochra Belhaj Hmida has been worrying about family violence, rethinking gender roles -- and crocheting.

Tunisia's lockdown, which has seen men and women confined to the domestic space together, offers a chance to rethink gender roles in a traditionally patriarchal society, Hmida told AFP in an interview.

"It's a subject that we don't talk about, and we can't have real change if we don't explore these questions in depth," she said.

Now is the time for people to reflect and speak out about family relations and domestic violence, she said, stressing that "we cannot continue like this".

Tunisia is seen as a forerunner for women's rights in the Arab world and Hmida -- who helped found the Tunisian Association of Democratic Women in 1989 -- a pioneer.

The North African country, birthplace of the Arab Spring protests that ousted several autocratic rulers, adopted a new constitution in 2014 which guarantees equality between men and women.

Hmida, a lawyer who was elected to parliament in 2014, chaired the commission charged with integrating into law the values of freedom and equality that characterised the 2011 uprising.

She has since stepped back from politics but maintains her concern for Tunisian society, where around half of women say they have been subject to at least one form of violence in their lives.

During the lockdown, Hmida has had the chance to re-engage with traditional home life, but on her own terms.

"In the morning, I start with the gardening. And I've discovered I still know how to crochet," she said.

"It's not very feminist of me but I've realised it's a pleasure and not an obligation. Today men are sewing and cooking, we can't have complexes about these things. If it's done for pleasure, it's a luxury."

Opportunity for change 

The lockdown has made Tunisia's youth more open to challenging gender norms, Hmida said, with young people the most receptive to taking up housework normally assigned to the other gender.

"The question is whether this will continue and become normal or whether it is just temporary," she said.

Unfortunately the confinement has also produced a fivefold increase in emergency calls for gender-based violence compared to the same period last year.

"Men already had an issue with women accessing the public space, but now they are forced to remain in a space typically reserved for women, many men are struggling to accept it," Hmida said.

The positive aspect is that more women have started speaking out, either online or via local organisations, she said.

"They are more aware regarding violence", said the retired lawyer, who once faced controversy defending a woman raped by policemen in a highly politicised trial.

But there has yet to be a fundamental reckoning with Tunisia's traditional gender roles and male-dominant power dynamics in families, she said.

 'Citizens must take charge' 

Making any kind of fundamental change to Tunisia's social structure would require clear political will, Hmida said.

But she does not see any such efforts by the state, whether on the social, financial or cultural level.

"I am shocked that in Tunisia or elsewhere, violence against women would be an issue to be relegated to the minister of women," she said.

"All sectors need to be involved to the highest level of government."

Journalists must question ministers on whether they have done anything proactive to combat gender-based violence, Hmida said.

Views on the role of men and women in the family are an area where progressives like Hmida diverge widely from Islamists. But many others are not yet ready for change, she said.

"We lack the collective will to redefine the family and review our priorities," she said.

Foremost among these must be healthcare, she said, which has been stretched thin by years of mismanagement and privatisation.

Environmental issues are also absent from public discourse in Tunisia, she said, while inequality is also neglected.

"Citizens must take charge" and lead the debate, she said.

Sudan says three jailed members of Bashir’s ousted regime have contracted coronavirus

By - May 28,2020 - Last updated at May 28,2020

Three senior members of former Sudanese president Omar Al Bashir’s ousted regime have contracted the coronavirus while in custody (ANA photo)

CAPE TOWN — Sudan’s prosecution service on Wednesday announced that three senior members of former Sudanese president Omar Al Bashir’s ousted regime have contracted the coronavirus, reported press-monitoring organisation the Middle East Monitor.

The members include Ahmed Haroun and Abdel Raheem Muhammad Hussein, both wanted by the International Criminal Court (ICC) for alleged crimes in Sudan’s Darfur region, according to the Middle East Monitor.

Ali Osman Taha, a former vice-president, has also contracted the virus.

Despite the members testing positive for the coronavirus, the prosecution service said they would remain in custody.

According to English-language daily newspaper Arab News, all three were under health quarantine in Khartoum hospitals.

Furthermore, Arab News reported that authorities had conducted tests on two other detainees, including the brother of Bashir, Ali Al Bashir, which came back negative, but authorities said these members would be placed in quarantine as a precautionary measure.

According to the prosecution service, all of the other detainees who formed part of the former regime refused to be tested for the coronavirus.

Meanwhile, authorities in Sudan said they were working on creating a police force to protect health facilities as attacks on health workers and facilities rise amid the coronavirus pandemic, reported news broadcaster Al Jazeera.

The decision by the transitional government came after health workers in the country threatened to go on strike in order to put pressure on the government to provide protection services for essential staff on the front lines against the coronavirus.

The number of coronavirus infections in the country stands at 4,346 as of May 28, according to real-time tracker Worldometer, and is rising gradually. There have been 200 new infections reported in Sudan in the past 24 hours. Testing is slow, with only 401 citizens tested since the start of the outbreak.

A total of 195 people in Sudan have died of the coronavirus, Worldometer reported.

Lebanon adopts law to lift banking secrecy for officials

By - May 28,2020 - Last updated at May 28,2020

Lebanese protesters have attacked banks during demonstrations against perceived government mismanagement and corruption (AFP photo)

BEIRUT — Lebanon's parliament on Thursday adopted a law to lift banking secrecy for public officials including over corruption or funding "terrorism", a lawmaker said, after months of protests in the crisis-hit country.

But the final text did not allow judges to independently order a disclosure, in a last-minute change that an activist criticised as making the law ineffective.

The law concerns "everyone who deals with public affairs, elected or nominated, lawmaker, mayor, judge, officer or adviser",  parliament budget committee chairman Ibrahim Kanaan said.

The bill covers cases of "corruption, as well as funding terrorism, money laundering, and funding electoral campaigns",  he told AFP.

Only the central bank's Special Investigation Commission as well as a National Anti-Corruption Commission still to be formed can implement the law, he said.

Mass protests against perceived government mismanagement and corruption erupted in October last year, as Lebanon hurtled into its worst economic crisis in decades.

Banks have imposed crippling banking controls on ordinary depositors, including a ban on transfers abroad and a progressive cap on dollar withdrawals.

But still reports have emerged of mass capital flight, angering campaigners.

Lawyer and activist Nizar Sayegh lambasted the final version of the bill.

"We've ended up with a law that isn't efficient," he told AFP.

The central bank's commission "has always had this ability to be able to lift secrecy as soon as there is the slightest doubt of money laundering",  he said.

But "they haven't done it, for example recently when billions were transferred abroad", he told AFP.

Thursday's session, held in a conference hall to follow coronavirus social distancing measures, was to discuss 38 measures in total.

These also include a controversial general amnesty bill, and another on capital controls.

After defaulting on its ballooning debt for the first time in March, Lebanon last month approved a rescue plan and this month entered talks with the International Monetary Fund(IMF) in a bid to secure billions in international aid.

"The discussions are constructive and cover many areas including capital controls, financial sector restructuring, and structural reforms," an IMF spokesperson said on Wednesday.

 

Conservative ex-Tehran mayor Ghalibaf elected Iran speaker

By - May 28,2020 - Last updated at May 28,2020

Iranian Mohammad-Bagher Ghalibaf (bottom centre) stands among members of the parliament after being elected as parliament speaker (AFP photo)

TEHRAN — Iran's newly formed parliament on Thursday elected former Tehran mayor Mohammad-Bagher Ghalibaf as its speaker, consolidating the power of conservatives ahead of next year's presidential election.

The vote further shifts the political balance toward conservatives who oppose the relative moderate President Hassan Rouhani at a time Iran is engaged in a bitter standoff with arch foe the United States which has reimposed painful economic sanctions.

State television said the 58-year-old received 230 votes out of the 267 cast to secure what is one of the most influential positions in the Islamic republic.

Ghalibaf is a three-time presidential candidate, former police chief and member of the Revolutionary Guards who served as Tehran mayor from 2005 to 2017.

He received the most votes from the capital in February's parliamentary election, which saw the lowest turnout in decades.

The record abstention was partly over the disqualification of many moderate and reformist candidates by the Guardian Council, a watchdog dominated by ultra-conservatives.

An alliance of "principalists" -- or conservatives -- and ultra-conservatives swept the election in the absence of any challenge from the reformist side.

The parliament, which shapes debate in Iran, had been closed for six weeks until April 7 as part of measures aiming to curb the spread of the novel coronavirus.

Iran has been hit hard by the Middle East's deadliest outbreak. According to the health ministry, the virus has so far killed 7,564 out of 141,591 confirmed infections.

Thursday's vote saw Ghalibaf succeed Ali Larijani, who had held the post since 2008.

The speaker not only directs the parliament's affairs but also has a seat at the High Council of Economic Coordination alongside the president and judiciary chief.

Established in 2018 by the supreme leader's decree, the Council is the highest authority on economic affairs and is meant to combat the impact of United States' sanctions imposed on Iran.

US President Donald Trump withdrew from a landmark nuclear agreement and reimposed sanctions on Iran in 2018, mainly targeting the crucial oil and banking sectors.

 

Jerusalem's Al Aqsa Mosque to reopen on Sunday

By - May 27,2020 - Last updated at May 27,2020

The Al Aqsa Mosque complex was shut for the Eid Al Fitr festival that marks the end of the holy fasting month of Ramadan (AFP photo)

OCCUPIED JERUSALEM — The Al Aqsa Mosque compound in Jerusalem will reopen on Sunday after a two-month closure due to the novel coronavirus, a senior official said on Wednesday.

"All the doors of the Al Aqsa Mosque [compound] will be opened at dawn on Sunday," Omar  Al Kiswani, the mosque's director, told AFP.

Details of the reopening have not yet been finalised, including whether the mosques on the site will be opened to worshippers or if the public will only be allowed into the courtyard where the faithful also pray.

The compound closed its doors in March as part of measures to limit the spread of the novel coronavirus.

Religious sites in Jerusalem began to reopen in recent days as the reported number of new cases declined, but the Al Aqsa Mosque compound remained shut during the Eid Al Fitr festival that began on March 24 for most Muslims and marks the end of the holy fasting month of Ramadan.

The site has often been a flashpoint in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

It is the third holiest site in Islam and where Muslims believe Prophet Mohammed ascended to heaven.

Palestinian authorities have confirmed fewer than 500 cases in the West Bank and Gaza, which have a combined population of more than 4.5 million.

 

After rare silence, Istanbul's Grand Bazaar prepares to reopen

By - May 27,2020 - Last updated at May 27,2020

This has been the longest closure in the bazaar's more than 550-year-old history, except for forced shutdowns following fires and earthquakes (AFP photo)

ISTANBUL — An eerie silence has fallen over Istanbul's Grand Bazaar, one of the world's oldest, largest and most visited markets, where a raucous mixture of languages, cultures and commerce has buzzed for centuries.

But there are now signs of life at the market as municipal workers roam its deserted alleys, spraying the floor, columns and walls ahead of the doors reopening on Monday for the first time in two months.

The bazaar -- home to almost 3,000 shops where more than 30,000 people work -- was closed on March 23 as part of measures to stem the spread of the novel coronavirus, which has killed over 4,300 people in Turkey.

Officials say it has been the longest closure in the bazaar's more than 550-year-old history, except for forced shutdowns following fires and earthquakes.

The market is usually visited by 150,000 people every day -- and by 42 million last year -- while traders shout out deals in dozens of languages to lure tourists into their stores.

Now the stores are all shuttered, except for about 20 stock exchange offices and jeweller's shops which have remained open for economic reasons, with only special customers received by appointment.

The bazaar has been disinfected every Wednesday during the shutdown, while janitors have cleaned every morning.

"God willing we will reopen our market in a healthy fashion on June 1," Fatih Kurtulmus, chairman of the Grand Bazaar's board, told AFP in an interview.

"I have faith that our country will begin receiving tourists from mid-June by paying attention to hygiene rules," he said inside the historic market.

Kurtulmus added that while not much activity is expected in the first weeks, "I believe tourists will fly to Istanbul by the end of June because they cannot do without... the Grand Bazaar, Hagia Sophia and Blue Mosque."

The bazaar is located on Istanbul's historic peninsula, home to the Sultanahmet Mosque, also called the Blue Mosque, and the ancient church-turned-mosque-turned-museum Hagia Sophia.

 'Heart of the economy' 

The Grand Bazaar was built in 1455, two years after the Ottomans seized Istanbul -- then known as Constantinople -- from the Byzantines.

The market thrived, expanding rapidly with the rising Ottoman Empire, and by the 17th century it had taken on its current shape, giving the bazaar its Turkish name Kapalicarsi (covered market).

"Our Grand Bazaar -- the heart of the economy, culture, history and tourism has never been shut down except for natural disasters," Kurtulmus said.

"We had to take a pause because of the COVID-19 that has shaken the world because we had to prioritise safety and health before the economy."

After Turkey announced its first confirmed case in mid-March, health scans were carried out on the market's traders.

Seven were confirmed to have coronavirus, Kurtulmus said, adding that they could have been infected by the many tourists in the packed confines of the market.

 'How will we pay rent?'

The bazaar will reopen under strict rules laid out by the health ministry, which include the mandatory use of face masks and a limit on the number of customers allowed inside.

Traders are worried as the bazaar is unlikely to see many tourists for some time, although Turkey is gradually easing its restrictions, including opening shopping malls.

"Tourism is the backbone of Grand Bazaar's economy. We will see when the tourists will come," said Ayhan Oguz, a jeweller on the bazaar's main alley.

"2020 seems to be a year of economic losses for us. If business returns to normal, tourism opens and flights resume by September, I believe we will also return to normal," he said.

Namik, another jeweller, had a gloomier outlook: "We are at low ebb. How will we pay the rents?"

"My shop remains open but there's no customers, there's no business," he added.

Kurtulmus pointed to all the history that the market has survived already.

"I have the confidence that the Grand Bazaar will get up a full head of steam and compensate for the economic loss by the end of the year."

78 per cent of Libya's Covid-19 infections are from Tripoli

By - May 27,2020 - Last updated at May 27,2020

ANA file photo

CAPE TOWN — The Libyan National Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) has said that 78.1 per cent of the country's Covid-19 infections were from the capital, Tripoli. 

On Tuesday, the centre said it had tested 66 new samples, 64 being negative for the virus, with two testing positive. The positive cases were reported to have had no prior contact with positive patients. 

Tripoli had registered 78.1per cent of the total number of coronavirus infections in the north African country since the first case was reported on March 24, reported English-Arabic online daily newspaper, The Libya Observer.

According to real-time tracker Worldometers, the country to date had 77 Covid-19 cases, 34 being active. Forty Libyans had recovered from the virus, while three had died of coronavirus-related complications. 

The country of  6,861,969 million has tested 5,154 citizens since the start of the outbreak.

Among other measures to contain the spread of the virus, the NCDC recently launched the Aspetar Covid-19 application, which connects citizens experiencing Covid-19 symptoms directly to the centre.  

The application allows users to determine the risk level of infection and to communicate with the centre's doctors, who are available 24-hours a day. 

Infections in Africa are relatively low compared to the rest of the world, but experts believe that the continent should brace itself for a peak, which will cause mass devastation and strain on its poor health systems.

The World Health Organisation (WHO) has said that despite Africa reaching the grim milestone of 100, 000 infections, with every country affected, the pandemic seems to be taking a different pathway on the continent. 

According to a recent report, early analysis by WHO suggested that Africa’s lower mortality rate may be the result of, among other things, demography, with the virus being more deadly on the elderly. 

The continent has the youngest populations in the world, according to the United Nations, with 60 per cent of inhabitants being under 25-years-old. 

 

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