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Monday 20 May 2024

2021-03-14

[N] Phone records of Kumasi kidnappers land in Court
[N] Police gun down suspected robber at Awudome cemetery
[A] Nothing stops Ghana from legalizing Polygamy---Dr. Sa-ad Iddrisu
[A] Court fines Pastor for spreading faeces
[B] FDA calls on media to help flush out unregistered products from market
[I] Emirates will now let you pay to not sit next to a stranger
[N] Government to help Ghanaians pay house rents with new scheme
[B] Govt provides Ghs 42.8 million in operations and payroll support to STC et al

2021-03-13

[S] Team Akpokavie outlines five thematic areas for Ghana sports development
[S] CAF elects Motsepe as new president
[S] 2021 Gold Fields PGA Qualifiers tees off on March 17
[S] Ebusua Dwarfs unveil Japanese striker Jindo Morishita
[S] Brighton’s Tariq Lamptey out for the season
[N] Afenyo-Markin defends government’s decision to introduce new levies
[N] €890 million approved for construction of 33 health projects
[N] Soldier land grab: 'If La youth rise, there's little we can do' – Elders warn
[B] Gov’t introduces 10pesewas ‘borla’ tax to clean Ghana
[B] NLA to bring back Live Draws for 5/90 Lotto
[B] Minister gives Kejetia traders final warning ahead of demolition
[B] Domelevo lands top international job after forced retirement
[N] Suspected armed robbers arrested at Kasoa not soldiers – Ghana Armed Forces
[B] Trotros and Taxis to enjoy free income tax, hotels and restaurants to get 30%

2021-03-12

[A] There Can’t Be Another Shatta Michy, I Own The Brand – Shatta Michy Fires Trolls
[A] National Film Authority to ban all unclassified videos from 1st May
[A] Ghana Music Awards-USA gets official headline sponsor
[S] My target is to play in France – Danlad Ibrahim
[N] Akosombo School students who tested positive for COVID have recovered
[I] Biden eyes 4 July as ‘Independence Day’ from virus
[I] Royal family ‘very much not racist’, insists duke
[S] Covid-19 crisis present opportunity for CK Akonnor to experiment with squad
[N] Ghana goalkeeper Richard Ofori injury not serious – Orlando Pirates
[S] Hearts of Oak gem Raddy Ovouka earns Congo call-up
[N] Highest Paid Players in the Ghana Premier League
[S] Algerian side USM Algers unveil striker Kwame Opoku
[B] AfCFTA expected to significantly promote peace and security
[B] 2021 Budget will ensure recovery and macroeconomic stability
[A] Spotify and the future of African streaming
[N] Education Ministry Agency heads excited about NAPO’s performance
[B] We’ll soon provide food items to schools – Buffer Stock Company
[N] Parliament approves Regional Ministers-designate
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International

[ 2021-03-16 ]

UK defends Oxford Covid vaccine over fears of blood clots
British and European regulators rushed to the
defence of the Oxford-AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccine
last night as six more countries stopped using it
over unconfirmed links to blood clots.

Germany, France, Spain, Italy, the Netherlands and
Portugal announced temporary pauses pending an
investigation by the European Medicines Agency
(EMA), which is due to report by Thursday.

However, the European regulator said blood clots
seemed to be no more common among people who had
received the Oxford-AstraZeneca jab and insisted
that the benefits of it “outweigh the risks of
side-effects”.

Boris Johnson reiterated his support for the
Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine on a visit to Coventry,
where he toured the National Express depot
Boris Johnson reiterated his support for the
Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine on a visit to Coventry,
where he toured the National Express depot


The UK Medicines and Healthcare Products
Regulatory Agency (MHRA) said it did not think the
jab caused blood clots after studying data on 11
million people given it in Britain, and Boris
Johnson also supported the vaccine.

A spokesman for the World Health Organisation
(WHO) said there was no evidence the vaccine
caused blood clots and urged countries to keep
using it.

It means Britain and large European countries are
again divided over the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine,
which is widely mistrusted on the Continent after
rows about efficacy in older people. Ireland,
Denmark, Norway, Bulgaria and Iceland have also
temporarily stopped using it, delaying vaccination
programmes that are already far behind
Britain’s.

In other developments:

• Britain recorded 64 deaths yesterday, with the
seven-day total down by 29.6 per cent. There were
5,089 new cases, with the seven-day total 2.3 per
cent lower than the previous week.

• The Office for National Statistics said more
deaths were caused by Covid-19 in 2020 than have
been attributed to an infectious disease in any
year for more than a century.

• The governor of the Bank of England said the
economy would return to its pre-Covid size by the
end of the year.

• Experts said urgent action was needed to stop
cancer deaths rising for the first time in
decades.

• Ministers announced that Portugal would be
removed from a “red list” of banned
destinations, signalling the go-ahead for holidays
this summer.

All people over 56 have been invited to have the
jab, at sites such as the community vaccination
centre at Kingston University’s Penrhyn Road
campus
All people over 56 have been invited to have the
jab, at sites such as the community vaccination
centre at Kingston University’s Penrhyn Road
campus

The EMA said last week that it had been alerted to
30 cases of blood clots, including one death,
among five million people who had been given the
Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine. Last night it stressed
that “many thousands of people develop blood
clots annually in the EU for different reasons”
and the number among vaccinated people “seems
not to be higher than that in the general
population”.

SPONSORED


Jens Spahn, Germany’s health minister, said the
suspension had been imposed as a “purely
precautionary measure”, after the country’s
vaccines agency said further cases had come to
light.

President Macron of France said the suspension had
been imposed “as a precaution, hoping that we
can resume its use quickly if the EMA allows”.

Source - The Times, UK



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