• Samoa records its first Covid-19 case – imported from Australia | World news | The Guardian
    http://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/nov/27/samoa-records-its-first-covid-19-case-imported-from-australia
    https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/d31fc551ef61f8aa022dee1f9a515e7032ac1f12/219_0_1488_893/master/1488.jpg?width=1200&height=630&quality=85&auto=format&fit=crop&overlay-ali

    Samoa has confirmed its first case of coronavirus – a case imported from Australia – after nearly 11 months keeping Covid from its shores.The positive case was detected in a 70-year-old Samoan citizen who travelled to Apia from Melbourne, landing in the capital on a repatriation flight on 13 November.“We confirm that there is one positive case after we tested all 274 passengers in quarantine yesterday, in view of the end of their quarantine period tomorrow,” the chief executive of Samoa’s ministry of health, Leausa Dr Take Naseri told a press conference on Friday.
    Earlier in the week, there’d been significant confusion over whether Samoa had recorded a case of Covid-19.A sailor who had been on the same flight back to Samoa had initially tested positive, but this was later inconclusive.
    “The sailor on his left nostril tested positive and on his right one tested negative,” Samoa’s prime minister Tuila’epa Sailele Malielegaoi declared on television.Naseri said the 70-year-old positive case and his wife have been moved to a dedicated Covid-19 isolation ward at the Tupua Tamasese Meaole II Hospital.“His wife tested negative. He has an underlying condition, but at this time, he has no symptoms, no fever, cough, and displays no symptoms like pneumonia and flu.”
    The hotel in Apia, Samoa, where the country’s first case of Covid-19 has been confirmed. The patient, a 70-year-old male Samoan citizen, has been moved to isolation.Naseri said healthcare staff, hotel employees, and airport workers had been placed on high alert over potential interactions with passengers currently quarantined.Samoa has now moved to alert level 1 on its national risk matrix, with the public asked to practice social distancing and wear face masks.After months keeping the virus from the archipelago’s shores, the confirmation of a positive case has engendered a sense of disquiet, if not panic, in the Samoan capital. Security guards outside government buildings are asking people to wear masks, and dispensing hand sanitise – lifestyle changes familiar around the world for months now, but new to Samoans.Like many Pacific nations, Samoa quickly shut its borders as the pandemic began to spread, leveraging its geographic isolation to keep the virus out.Many Pacific nations have fragile public health systems, and populations with significant levels of comorbidities. There remain fears an unchecked outbreak could quickly overwhelm any medical response.But the isolation has devastated Pacific economies, leading to calls from business leaders, particularly in tourism-dependent countries, to relax restrictions. Governments, too, have been torn between the imperative to repatriate thousands of citizens stranded abroad, and keeping their islands free from the virus.

    #Covid-19#migration#samoa#australie#pacifique#insularite#sante#systemesante#santepublique#rapatriement

  • #Kazakhgate : la commission occulte qui inquiète #Airbus
    https://www.mediapart.fr/journal/france/231117/kazakhgate-la-commission-occulte-qui-inquiete-airbus

    Les juges d’instruction ont trouvé la trace d’une commission suspecte de 8,8 millions d’euros versée par Airbus dans le cadre d’une vente de #satellites au Kazakhstan. Le PDG du groupe, Thomas Enders, a été entendu comme témoin par les policiers de l’office anticorruption.

    #France #Corruption #EADS #Eurocopter #Hong_Kong #Lyès_Ben_Chedli #Nicolas_Sarkozy #paradis_fiscaux #Patokh_Chodiev #Samoa

  • PPgis.net Blog : Samoan villages get involved in climate change modelling

    http://participatorygis.blogspot.nl/2015/04/samoan-villages-get-involved-in-climate.html

    During the first week of March the Samoa Tourism Authority (STA) hosted a Participatory 3D Modelling (P3DM) workshop with technical guidance provided by the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment (MNRE). The workshop is a part of the ’Enhancing the resilience of tourism reliant communities to Climate Change risks ’- project, funded by the Global Environment Facility (GEF) through the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP). The project targets small tourism operators in six Tourism Development Areas (TDA) in Upolu and Savai’i. The areas covered by the project and where 3D models have been and will be made include Manono-tai, Lalomanu and Saleapaga; Sataoa and Saanapu; Lano and Manase; Falealupo and Satuiatua; and Fa’ala and Vailoa, Palauli.

    The objective of the project is to enhance the resilience of tourism-reliant communities to climate change risks by integrating climate change considerations into development policy and instruments, and Investing In adaptation actions supporting tourism-reliant communities.

    During the workshop representatives from local tourism-reliant communities built a three dimensional representation of their area. In the process they were be able to appreciate the impact that climate change might have from the ridges to the reefs and to plan out how best to improve the resilience of small tourism operators and the surrounding villages.

    A similar workshop was held in the island of Manono one week before with great success. Sara Ferrandi, UNDP focal point for the project said, “The strong engagement of young people in the construction, as well as the contribution of women and elderly representatives with their understanding of their territory and traditional knowledge, were remarkable. This participatory process allowed the communities in Manono to combine map interpretation with open discussion on land use planning scenarios”.

    #Samoa #Turism #Participatory_3D_Modelling #Climate_change