• From refugee camps to developed nations, COVID-19 keeps world on edge | CIDRAP

    The camp, located in the north of the country near the border with Iraq, is home to about 74,000 refugees, many of them displaced women and children from Syria and Iraq.

    The patient is a 29-year-old woman who is being treated in an isolation area of the camp where a nongovernmental organization and the WHO are supporting patient care. Health workers are identifying contacts and will be monitoring them for symptoms, as well as working with camp residents on how to protect themselves.

    In other Middle East developments, Ahmed Al-Mandhari, MD, PhD, director of WHO EMRO, said in a statement today some countries in the region have experiences surges after lifting restrictions or are experiencing them following other emergency situations.

    https://www.cidrap.umn.edu/news-perspective/2020/08/refugee-camps-developed-nations-covid-19-keeps-world-edge

    #Covid-19#Monde#Moyen-Orient#Santé#UNHCR#Camp#Pandémie#santé#Quarantaine#migrant#migration

  • PANIQUE BÉNÉFIQUE

    Cette psychose générale, cette obsession mortifère, cette méfiance paranoïaque des autres, s’est construite ces derniers temps, sur une interprétation truquée des chiffres, faisant passer les positifs aux tests pour de graves malades. Une épidémie sans malades ni morts n’existe que dans la tête de ces fanatiques corrompus du pouvoir, qu’il soit politique ou médiatique. Cette peur panique profite à la fois aux actionnaires des trusts pharmaceutiques qui comptent bien ramasser le pactole avec des vaccins douteux voir dangereux, mais aussi aux pouvoirs qui restreignent brutalement les libertés, répriment à tout va, détruisent la vie, durcissent l’esclavage du travail, répandent le chômage invisible tout en appauvrissant la majorité de la population pour les meilleurs profits raflés par des multi-milliardaires qui jubilent allègrement.

    _

    #coronavirus #covid19 #virus #pandémie #vaccins #épidémie #masques #confinement #GestesBarrières #décès #mortalité

  • Vuelta al cole : Todos los niños mayores de seis años llevarán mascarilla en clase aunque estén en un grupo burbuja | Educación Secundaria, Bachillerato y FP | EL PAÍS
    https://elpais.com/educacion/2020-08-27/todos-los-ninos-mayores-de-seis-anos-llevaran-mascarilla-en-clase-aunque-est

    La jolie photo c’est pour expliquer qu’en Espagne le masque sera obligatoire à partir de 6 ans dans les écoles... (L’OMS préconise de ne pas en faire porter avant l’âge de 12 ans).

    Todos los alumnos mayores de seis años tendrán que llevar puesta la mascarilla en clase aunque formen parte de uno de los llamados grupos de convivencia estables o burbuja (cuyos integrantes no pueden mezclarse con miembros de otras clases) a partir de septiembre. Así lo han acordado este jueves el Gobierno y las comunidades autónomas en la Conferencia Sectorial de Educación, según han asegurado fuentes presentes en la reunión.

    #pandémie #dystopie #espagne

  • Coronavirus en France : mesures renforcées à Marseille et dans les Bouches-du-Rhône
    https://www.lemonde.fr/planete/article/2020/08/25/le-coronavirus-en-france-le-pays-va-doubler-sa-production-de-masques-sanitai

    Coronavirus en France : mesures renforcées à Marseille et dans les Bouches-du-Rhône

    Nooon, c’est pas possible, avec la potion miracle du bon Dr Raoult ça ne peut pas arriver !

    #coronavirus, #covid19 #pandémie #marseille

  • Coronavirus cases in Israel top 100,000- Al monitor

    The number of COVID-19 cases Israel has registered since its initial outbreak topped 100,000 on Friday, the Health Ministry said, as the government weighs reimposing restrictions to curb the spread of the virus.

    Israel reported 1,496 new cases on Friday, bringing the total number to 100,716 confirmed infections and 809 deaths. The new numbers reveal that more than 1% of the country’s population of 8.85 million people have at some point been infected with the virus, noted The Jerusalem Post.

    https://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2020/08/israel-coronavirus-100000-lockdown-netanyahu-czar-virus.html

    #Covid-19#Israel#Chiffre_officiel#Seconde_vague#Pandémie#Santé#confinement#migrant#migration

  • COVID-19: Highest death toll in Kurdistan Region, as WHO and KRG launch COVID awareness campaign - Kurdistan 24

    Rising cases in Dohuk Province

    The ministry said in a statement that it had conducted 4,699 new tests across the region, with 458 returning positive: 199 were in Dohuk province, marking a significant increase in cases there. Some 127 new cases were reported in Erbil and 91 in Sulaimani.

    The ministry also said that 27 people had died of the virus over the past 24 hours—the highest coronavirus death count in one day, raising the total to 930 fatalities from the disease across the Kurdistan Region.

    COVID-19 is highly contagious, and health authorities have repeatedly explained what needs to be done to control its spread: wear a face mask; practice social distancing; and regularly wash hands.

    https://www.kurdistan24.net/en/news/b9c71dfc-6154-4ff2-a778-0479ce648f5f

    #Covid-19#Iraq#KRG#Dohuk#Seconde_vague#Camps#déplacés#Pandémie#Santé#migrant#migration

  • #CoronaCapitalism and the European #Border_Regime

    As the coronavirus pandemic continues to affect people’s lives all over the world, the violence against migrants and refugees has intensified. This article explores #CoronaCapitalism and the Border Regime in a European context. Corporate Watch uses the term “border regime” as a shorthand to mean all of the many different institutions, people, systems and processes involved in trying to control migrants.

    This article only shares the tip-of-the-iceberg of migrant experiences during the coronavirus pandemic and we know there are many other untold stories. If you would like to share your news or experiences, please contact us.

    Mass Containment Camps

    As the world descended into lockdowns in an attempt to prevent the spread of the virus, tens of thousands of people have been confined in camps in the Western Balkans and Greece, as well as smaller accommodation centres across Europe. New and existing camps were also essentially locked down and the movement of people in and out of camps began to be heavily controlled by police and/or the military.

    The Border Violence Monitoring Network (BVMN) has been trying to track what is happening across the Balkans. They write that in Bosnia-Herzegovina, “more than 5,000 people were detained in existing temporary refugee reception centres. They include about 500 unaccompanied minors and several hundred children with families. Persons in need of special care, patients, victims of torture, members of the LGBTQ population, persons diagnosed with mental disorders, and victims of domestic violence have also been locked down into ‘EU-funded’ camps.” Police officers guard the centres and emergency legislation enables them the right to ‘physically force persons trying to leave the centres to return.’

    120,000 people are locked down in containment camps across Greece and the Greek Islands. Disturbing accounts of refugee camps are ever-present but the pandemic has worsened already unbearable conditions. 17,000 refugees live at Moira Refugee Camp where there are 210 people per toilet and 630 people per shower. Coronavirus, uncertainty over suspended asylum applications and the terrible living conditions are all contributing to escalating violence.

    In detention centres in Drama and Athens in Greece, the BVMN report that, “Respondents describe a lack of basic amenities such as running water, showers, or soap. Cramped and overcrowded conditions, with up to 13 inmates housed in one caravan with one, usually non-functioning, toilet. Requests for better services are met with violence at the hands of officers and riot police. On top of this, there have been complaints that no special precautions for COVID-19 are being taken, residents inside told BVMN reporters that sick individuals are not isolated, and are dismissed as having ‘the flu’.”

    While movement restrictions were lifted for Greek residents on 4th May, lockdown is still extended for all camps and centres across Greece and the Islands. This decision triggered thousands of people to protest in Athens. Emergency legislation adopted at the start of March in Greece effectively suspended the registration of asylum applications and implied immediate deportation for those entering the Greek territory, without registration, to their countries of origin or to Turkey.

    Detention and the deportation regime

    While major country-wide lockdowns are an unusual form of restriction of movement, for decades European states have been locking people seeking safety in detention centres. Immigration Removal Centres are essentially prisons for migrants in which people are locked up without trial or time-limit. In the UK the detention system is mostly run for profit by private companies, as detailed in our UK Border Regime book.

    Despite preparing for a pandemic scenario in January 2020, it took public pressure and legal action before the British government released nearly 1000 people from detention centres. As of the end of May, 368 people were still locked up in the profit-making detention centres and many more are living in ‘accommodation centres’ where they have been unable to access coronavirus testing.

    During the pandemic, people have been revolting in several detention centres across France and Belgium. Residents at a refugee centre in Saxony-Anhalt in Germany went on a hunger strike in April to protest against a lack of disinfectant. Hunger strikes have also taken place at detention centres in Tunisia, Cyprus and France.

    Women in a police holding centre for migrants in Greece went on hunger strike in June. In a statement, they wrote: “We will continue the hunger strike until we are free from this captivity. They will either set us free or we shall die”.

    People staged a rooftop protest at a detention centre in Madrid at the start of the outbreak. This was before all the detention centres in Spain were, for the first time in their history, completely emptied. To put this into context, Spain had 6,473 detainees in 2019. Legal challenges have been leveraging the EU Returns Directive which allows detention pending deportation for up to 18 months, but stipulates that if “a reasonable prospect of removal no longer exists…detention ceases to be justified and the person concerned shall be released immediately”.

    With a worldwide reduction in flights, deportations became unfeasible, however, many are afraid that the deportation machine will restart as things “return to normal”.

    Worsening life in the ‘jungle’

    People living in squats and other improvised accommodation have also faced sweeping operations, with people being rounded up and taken to containment camps.

    For those that remained on the street, pandemic restrictions took their toll. In Greece, movement amidst the pandemic was permitted via letters and text messages. For people who did not have the right paperwork, they were fined 150 euros, sometimes multiple times.

    Similarly, in the French city of Calais, people who did not have the right paperwork were commonly denied access to shops and supermarkets, where they may have previously used the bathrooms or bought food to cook. With many volunteer groups unable to operate due to movement restrictions, the availability of food dramatically reduced overnight. Access to services such as showers, phone charging and healthcare also rapidly reduced.

    People in Calais also faced a rise in evictions: 45 evictions were recorded in the first two weeks of lockdown. These expulsions have continued throughout the pandemic. On Friday 10th July 2020, a major police raid in Calais forced more than 500 people onto buses to be taken to ‘reception centres’ across the region.

    In Amsterdam in the Netherlands, some migrants were forced to live in night shelters and made to leave during the daytime – facing constant risks of contracting COVID-19 and police harassment in the city. They protested “I would stay at home if I had one”.

    Many migrant solidarity groups working on the ground lost huge numbers of volunteers due to travel restrictions and health concerns. Access to material donations such as tents, which are commonly collected at the end of festivals, also reduced. A constant supply of these resources is needed because the police routinely take the migrants’ tents away.

    Militarisation of borders

    The pandemic has seen an increase in military forces at borders and camps, persistent police violence and the suspension of ‘rights’ or legal processes. Using ‘State of Emergency’ legislation, the health crisis has been effectively weaponised.

    In March at the beginning of the pandemic in Europe, FRONTEX, the European Border and Coast Guard Agency deployed an additional 100 guards at the Greek Land Border. This is in addition to the agency’s core of 10,000 officers working around Europe.

    In their 2020 Risk Analysis Report, FRONTEX wrote that “the closing of internal borders is binding border guard personnel, which some border authorities have long stopped planning for”. This illuminates a key complexity in border control. For years, Europe has shifted to policing the wider borders of the Schengen Area. As the virus spread between countries within that area, however, states have tried to shut down their own borders.

    Police forces and militaries have become increasingly mobilised to “protect these national borders”. In Slovenia, this meant the military was granted authority to ‘process civilians’ at the border through the government’s activation of Article 37a of the Defence Act. While in Serbia, the army was deployed around border camps to ensure mass containment. 400 new border guards were also dispatched to the Evros land border between Greece and Turkey in addition to an increase in fencing and surveillance technologies.

    Escalating Police Violence

    Although migrants are no strangers to police brutality, national states of emergency have enabled an escalation in police violence. In mid-April an open letter was published by the Eritrean community of the Calais jungle reporting escalating police brutality. It describes the actions of the CRS police (Compagnies républicaines de sécurité); the general guard of the French police, infamous for riot control and repression:

    “They don’t see us as human beings. They insult us with names such as monkey, bitch etc. And for the past few weeks, they have started to threaten our lives by beating us as soon as the opportunity arises. When for example they found a group of two or three people walking towards the food distribution, or in our tents, when we were sleeping. They accelerate in their vehicles while driving in our direction, as if they wanted to crush us. They also took people with them to places far from Calais, and beat them until they lost consciousness.”

    The statement continues with a chronological list of events whereby people were beaten up, hit, gassed, had their arms broken, and were struck on the head so hard they lost consciousness and were taken to hospital by ambulance.

    With fewer people on the streets during the pandemic, police evictions that were not previously possible due to street-level resistance became successful. This was evidenced in the eviction of the Gini occupation at the Polytechnic University in Exarchia, Greece, a location that the police have not dared enter for decades. Dozens of migrant families were rounded up and taken to a detention centre.

    Violent pushbacks across borders

    There has also been an increase in illegal and violent pushbacks. Pushbacks are the informal expulsion (without due process) of individuals or groups to another country. This commonly involves the violent removal of people across a border.

    For example, on April 22nd in North Macedonia, a group of people from Palestine, Morocco and Egypt were pushed back into Greece. Two men were approached by officers in army uniforms and forced onto a bus where officers began to beat them with batons and guns. So much force was used that one man’s arm was fractured. The other members of the small group were later found and abruptly woken by officers. One man was stamped on and kicked across his body and head. Their shoes were removed and they were told to walk the 2km back to the border where they were met with the other group that had been taken there.

    A group of 16 people in Serbia (including one minor) were told they were being taken to a new camp for COVID prevention. They were then forced into a van and driven for nine hours with no stops, toilet or water. They were released at a remote area of hills and told to leave and cross the border to North Macedonia by the officers with guns. When found attempting to cross again days later they were told by police officers, “Don’t come again, we will kill you”.

    In Croatia, police have also started tagging people that they have pushed back with orange spray paint.

    There are also reports that Greek authorities are pushing people back to Turkey. According to the Border Violence Monitoring Network, many people shared experiences of being beaten, robbed and detained before being driven to the border area where military personnel used boats to return them to Turkey across the Evros river. In mid April in Greece, approximately 50 people were taken from Diavata camp in the morning and removed to a nearby police station where they were ordered to lie on the ground – “Sleep here, don’t move”. They were then beaten with batons. Some were also attacked with electric tasers. They were held overnight in a detention space near the border, and beaten further by Greek military officers. The next day they were boated across the river to Turkey by authorities with military uniforms. Another group were taken to the river in the dark and ordered to strip to their underwear.

    As pushbacks continue, people are forced to take even more dangerous routes. In Romania in mid-April, a group were found drowning in the Danube River after their boat capsized. One person was found dead and eight are still missing, while the survivors suffered from hypothermia.

    Danger at Sea

    During the pandemic, increasing numbers of disturbing accounts have been shared by migrants experiencing violence at sea. Between mid March and mid May, Alarm Phone (a hotline for boat people in distress) received 28 emergency calls from the Aegean Sea.

    On the 29th April, a boat carrying 48 refugees from Afghanistan, Congo and Iran, including 18 children, tried to reach Lesvos Island in the early hours of the day. They were pushed back to Turkish waters:

    “We were very scared. We tried to continue towards Lesvos Island. It was only 20 minutes more driving to reach the Greek coast. The big boat let a highspeed boat down, which hunted us down. There were six masked men in black clothes. They stopped us and made many waves. With a long stick they took away our petrol and they broke our engine. They had guns and knives. Then they threw a rope to us and ordered us to fix it on our boat. Then they started pulling us back towards Turkey. After a while they stopped and cut the rope. They returned to the big boat and took distance from us. It was around 6am.

    Then two other boats of the Greek coastguard arrived which were white and grey and drove very fast towards us, starting to make circles around our boat. They created big waves which were pushing us in the direction of Turkish waters. Our boat was taking in water and the kids were screaming. Our boat started breaking from the bottom. We were taking out the water with our boots. We threw all our belongings in the sea to make our boat lighter. Many of us had no life vests. A pregnant lady fainted. The Greeks continued making waves for a long period. A Turkish coastguard boat arrived and stood aside watching and taking photos and videos for more than six hours. Only after 13:30 o’clock the Turkish coastguard boat finally saved us. We were brought to Çanakalle police station and detained for five days.”

    During two months of lockdown, civil monitoring ships (volunteers who monitor the Aegean sea for migrants arriving via boat) were not permitted. In Italy, ports were closed to rescue ships, with many feared lost at sea as a result. Allegations have also emerged that Greece has been using inflatable rafts to deport asylum seekers. These are rafts without motors or propellers that cannot be steered.

    The Maltese Army also hit the headlines after turning away a boat of migrants by gunpoint and giving them the GPS coordinates for Italy. This is after recent reports of sabotaging migrant vessels, and pushing back migrant boats to Libya resulting in 12 people dying. The Maltese government recently signed a deal with the Libyan government to “to coordinate operations against illegal migration”. This includes training the Libyan coastguards and funding for “reception camps”.

    The threat of the virus and worsening conditions have also contributed to a record number of attempts to cross the Channel. The courage and commitment to overcome borders is inspiring, and more successful crossings have taken place during the pandemic. Between March 23rd (when the UK coronavirus lockdown began) and May 11th at least 853 migrants managed to cross the Channel in dinghies and small boats.

    State Scapegoating and the empowerment of the far right

    Far-right politicians and fascist activists have used the pandemic as an opportunity to push for closed borders.

    The election of a new Far Right government in Slovenia in March brought with it the scapegoating of refugees as coronavirus vectors. News conglomerate, NOVA24, heavily publicised a fake news story that the first COVID-19 patient in Italy was a Pakistani person who came via the Balkan route.

    Meanwhile, Hungary’s Government led by Vicktor Orbán moved to deport resident Iranians after claiming they were responsible for the country’s first coronavirus outbreak.

    In Italy, Matteo Salvini, the populist leader of the opposition Lega party tried to blame the movement of migrants from Africa across the Mediterranean as a “major infection threat” shortly before the country was overwhelmed with the pandemic and its rising death toll.

    The racist scapegoating ignores data that proves that initially the virus was transmited predominatnly by tourists’ and business people’s globe-trotting in the service of global capitalism and the fact that those whose movement is restricted, controlled and perilous, who do not have the power and wealth, are the most likely to suffer from the worst effects of both the virus itself and the shut downs.

    The Aftermath of Asylum suspension

    Access to asylum has drastically shifted across Europe with the suspension of many face-to-face application processing centres and appeal hearings. This ‘legal limbo’ is having a severe impact on people’s lives.

    Many people remain housed in temporary accommodation like hotels while they wait for their claim to be processed. This accommodation is often overcrowded and social-distancing guidelines are impossible to follow there. One asylum seeker in South London even shared to The Guardian how two strangers were made to share his double bed for a week in one room. One of the people was later taken to hospital with coronavirus.

    Closed-conditions at Skellig Accomodation Centre, a former hotel in Cahersiveen, Co. Kerry, Ireland enabled the rapid spread of the virus between the 100 people living there. Misha, an asylum seeker confined there, said she watched in horror as people started falling sick around her.

    “We were sharing bedrooms with strangers. We were sharing the dining room. We were sharing the salt shakers. We were sharing the lobby. We were sharing everything. And if you looked at the whole situation, you cannot really say that it was fit for purpose.”

    People were ordered to stay inside, and meanwhile coronavirus testing was delayed. Protests took place inside and locals demonstrated in solidarity outside.

    Asylum seekers in Glasgow have been protesting their accommodation conditions provided by the Mears Group, who Corporate Watch profiled in 2019. Mears Group won a £1.15 billion contract to run the refugee accommodation system in Scotland, Northern Ireland and much of the north of England. Their profiteering, slum landlord conditions and involvement in mass evictions have been met with anger and resistance. The pandemic has only worsened the experiences of people forced to live in Mears’ accommodation through terrible sanitation and medical neglect. Read our 2020 update on the Mears Group here.

    In the UK, the Home Office put a hold on evictions of asylum seekers during lockdown. The Red Cross stated this spared 50,000 people from the threat of losing their accommodation. Campaigners and tenants fear what will happen post-corona and how many people will face destitution when the ban on evictions lifts this August.

    In addition, a face-to-face screening interview is still needed for new asylum claims. This creates an awful choice for asylum seekers between shielding from the virus (and facing destitution) or going to the interviews in order to access emergency asylum support and begin the formal process. While meagre, the £37.75 per week is essential for survival. One of the reasons the Home Office make face-to-face applications compulsory is because of biometric data harvesting e.g. taking fingerprints of asylum seekers. One asylum seeker with serious health problems has had to make three journeys from Glasgow to Liverpool in the midst of the pandemic to submit paperwork.

    Access to food and other support is also very difficult as many centres and support services are closed.

    Barriers to Healthcare

    It is widely recognised that systemic racism has led to the disproportionate deaths of Black, Asian and minority ethnic people throughout the pandemic. Research has shown Black people are four times more likely to die than white people, and Bangladeshi or Pakistani groups are three times more likely. Many people from these communities are migrants, and many work in the National Health Service and social care sector.

    Research by Patients not Passports, Medact, Migrants Organise and the New Economics Foundation has shown that many migrants are avoiding seeking healthcare. 57% of respondents in their research report that they have avoided seeking healthcare because of fears of being charged for NHS care, data sharing and other migration enforcement concerns. Most people are unaware that treatment for coronavirus is exempt from charging. They also often experience additional barriers including the absence of translation and interpretation services, digital exclusions, housing and long distances from care services.

    Undocumented migrants are incredibly precarious. A project worker interviewed for the Patients not Passports Report shared that:

    “One client lived in a care home where she does live-in care and she has been exposed to Corona but has stated that she will not seek treatment and would rather die there than be detained.”

    Elvis, an undocumented migrant from the Philippines, died at home with suspected coronavirus because he was so scared by the hostility of Government policies that he did not seek any help from the NHS.

    For those that do try to access healthcare, issues such as not having enough phone credit or mobile data, not having wifi or laptops for video appointments, and simply not being able to navigate automated telephone and online systems because of language barriers and non-existent or poor translation, are having a very real impact on people’s ability to receive support. Fears of poor treatment because of people’s past experiences of discrimination and racism even if they access the services is another barrier.

    Exploiting Migrant Labour

    The exploitation of migrant labour has always been essential to sustaining capitalist economies. The pandemic generated contradictory responses from politicians and capitalists alike. Germany’s agricultural sector lobbied hard for opening the border after they were closed, leading the country to lift its ban and let in over 80,000 seasonal workers from Eastern Europe. Yet dilapidated living conditions and overcrowding are sparking new COVID-19 outbreaks, such as the 200 workers that contracted the virus at a slaughterhouse in western Germany.

    In mid May, the Italian government passed a law regularising undocumented migrants, whereby undocumented workers have been encouraged to apply for six-month legal residency permits. There are believed to be about 600,000 undocumented workers in Italy but only people doing ‘essential’ work during the pandemic can apply, mostly in the agricultural sector. Thousands of people live in makeshift encampments near fruit and vegetable farms with no access to running water or electricity.

    Working conditions carry risks of violence. On 18 May, five days after Italy’s regularisation law passed, a 33-year old Indian migrant working in a field outside of Rome was fired after asking his employer for a face mask for protection while at work. When the worker requested his daily wage, he was beaten up and thrown in a nearby canal.

    Conclusion

    The coronavirus crisis has exposed and intensified the brutality required to sustain capitalism – from systemic racism, to violent border controls, to slave labour for industrial agriculture, the list goes on. Despite extremely difficult conditions, undocumented migrants have formed strong movements of solidarity and collective struggle in many European countries. From revolts in detention centres to legal actions to empty them, people are continually resisting the border regime. As people reject a ‘return to normal’ post pandemic, the fall of the border regime must be part of a vision for freedom and liberation in a world beyond capitalism.

    https://corporatewatch.org/coronaborderregime
    #capitalisme #covid-19 #coronavirus #frontières #Europe #migrations #violence #asile #réfugiés #camps #camps_de_réfugiés #containment #rétention #campements #technologie #militarisation_des_frontières #Grèce #Turquie #violences_policières #police #refoulements #push-backs #Balkans #route_des_Balkans #santé #accès_aux_soins #travail #exploitation #pandémie #Frontex #confinement #grève_de_la_faim #fermeture_des_frontières

    ping @isskein @karine4 @rhoumour @_kg_ @thomas_lacroix

  • Pourquoi les pays du Sahel ont mieux résisté au coronavirus
    https://www.lemonde.fr/afrique/article/2020/08/24/pourquoi-les-pays-du-sahel-ont-mieux-resiste-au-coronavirus_6049776_3212.htm

    Sur la bande sahélienne, les tout premiers malades ont été décelés en février au Burkina, en mars au Tchad, et le virus a ensuite circulé à bas bruit, sans montée spectaculaire comme ont pu en connaître les Etat-Unis, l’Europe ou quelques pays africains comme l’Afrique du Sud et le Nigeria, pourtant voisin. « Dans la plupart des pays du Sahel, les mesures de confinement et la fermeture des frontières ont été décidées très tôt, avant même qu’il y ait un nombre important de cas. Et cette politique a eu des effets positifs sur la propagation du virus », souligne le docteur Mihigo.
    Si chaque pays a réagi avec sa culture, la célérité a été un point commun à tous. Ainsi, au Tchad, les lieux de culte, les écoles et les commerces ont été fermés dès le lendemain de l’enregistrement de la première contamination, le 19 mars. Et en Mauritanie, tout un dispositif a été rapidement déployé. Médecin-conseil à l’ambassade de France à Nouakchott, Raymond Najjar le qualifie volontiers d’« exemplaire ». « Le gouvernement a fermé ses couloirs aériens en avril, puis ses frontières intérieures, au point que plus personne n’a pu circuler dans le pays jusqu’en juillet », résume-t-il. Au Niger, pas de tergiversations non plus : les mosquées ont été fermées durant deux semaines et Niamey, la capitale, est restée isolée du reste du pays la première quinzaine d’avril.

    #Covid-19#migrant#migration#sante#circulation#frontiere#afrique#sahel#pandemie

  • La Sicile défie Rome en décidant de fermer tous ses centres de migrants

    Le président de la région Sicile, #Nello_Musumeci, a défié dimanche le gouvernement italien en publiant un arrêté de fermeture sur son territoire de tous les centres d’accueil de migrants, qu’il juge propices à la diffusion du coronavirus.

    https://twitter.com/Musumeci_Staff/status/1297247841807749127?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E12

    Des sources du ministère italien de l’Intérieur ont immédiatement précisé que cette mesure régionale était invalide, car de la #compétence de l’#Etat. « D’ici demain minuit, tous les migrants présents dans les « hot spots » et dans tous les centres d’accueil de Sicile devront être impérativement transférés vers des installations situées en dehors de l’île », peut-on lire dans l’arrêté d’une trentaine de pages.

    Interdiction d’entrer même avec des ONG

    Le texte ambitionne aussi d’interdire à tout migrant d’« entrer, de transiter et de faire escale sur le territoire de la région sicilienne avec des embarcations, grandes et petites, y compris celles des ONG ».

    Le président de Sicile explique sa décision par le fait qu’il « n’est pas possible de garantir le séjour sur cette île dans le respect des #mesures_sanitaires de prévention de la #contagion ».

    Dans un commentaire sur les réseaux sociaux, M. Musumeci (élu président de région grâce à une alliance de droite et d’extrême-droite) a estimé que "la Sicile ne peut pas être envahie pendant que l’Europe détourne le regard et que le gouvernement ne procède à aucune expulsion". Une prise de position qui lui a valu le soutien de Matteo Salvini, le chef de La Ligue (extrême droite) et ex-ministre de l’Intérieur qui s’était employé à empêcher les débarquements de migrants dans les ports italiens.

    1200 migrants à Lampedusa

    De nombreuses petites embarcations de migrants, essentiellement des Tunisiens, continuent d’accoster sur l’île de Lampedusa, au sud de la Sicile. Il y avait dimanche environ 1 200 migrants à Lampedusa, après le transfert d’environ 300 personnes depuis vendredi vers des structures d’accueil en Sicile.

    Le navire Sea-Watch 4, appartenant à une ONG allemande, a fait savoir dimanche qu’il avait actuellement à son bord 104 migrants dont 37 mineurs, retrouvés samedi et dimanche en mer au large des côtes libyennes.

    Des dizaines de migrants hébergés dans les centres siciliens se sont avérés positifs au coronavirus ces dernières semaines.

    https://www.letemps.ch/monde/sicile-defie-rome-decidant-fermer-centres-migrants

    #villes-refuge #Sicile #Italie #asile #migrations #réfugiés #covid-19 #centres_pour_réfugiés #centres_d'accueil #contamination #coronavirus #pandémie #fermeture #hotspots

    Une #résistance qui n’est pas celle de l’accueil, mais celle qui se fonde sur la rhétorique de l’invasion...

    ping @thomas_lacroix @isskein @karine4

    • Sicile : la #justice italienne rejette un #arrêté #anti-migrants

      La justice italienne a rejeté jeudi un récent décret du président régional de la Sicile ordonnant la fermeture de tous les centres d’accueil de migrants, ont rapporté les médias italiens. Les mesures annoncées par le gouverneur « semblent dépasser le cadre des compétences conférées aux régions », a estimé le tribunal.

      Dans une décision rendue jeudi 27 août, la justice italienne est allée à l’encontre de la volonté du président régional de la Sicile, #Nello_Musumeci. Saisi par le gouvernement, le tribunal administratif de Sicile a ordonné la suspension d’un arrêté ordonnant la fermeture de tous les centres d’accueil de migrants de Sicile (https://www.infomigrants.net/fr/post/26812/le-president-de-la-region-de-sicile-ordonne-la-fermeture-de-tous-les-c).

      Le 23 août, le gouverneur de Sicile Nello Musumeci, avait publié cet arrêté, effectif sur le territoire de l’île qui s’étend jusqu’à Lampedusa, jugeant que les centres d’accueil de migrants contribuaient à la diffusion du coronavirus.

      L’arrêté exigeait le transfert de tous les migrants présents dans les hotspots et les centres d’accueil en Sicile « vers des installations situées en dehors de l’île », et entendait leur interdire d’entrer, de transiter et de faire escale" dans la région « avec des embarcations, grandes et petites, y compris celles des ONG ».
      Pas d’’’aggravation concrète de la propagation du Covid-19’’

      Dans sa décision, le tribunal administratif a estimé « qu’aucune enquête rigoureuse n’a démontré l’existence d’une aggravation concrète (...) de la propagation du Covid-19 au sein de la population locale du fait du phénomène migratoire ».

      Les mesures annoncées par le gouverneur Musumeci « semblent dépasser le cadre des compétences conférées aux régions » dans la gestion du risque sanitaire lié au Covid-19. Elles ont par ailleurs « un impact décisif sur l’organisation et la gestion du phénomène migratoire sur le territoire italien, qui relève de la compétence exclusive de l’État (...) », toujours selon le tribunal.

      Ce tribunal doit se réunir à nouveau le 17 septembre, à la demande de la région de Sicile qui entend présenter d’autres documents pour plaider sa cause.
      Des dizaines de migrants hébergés dans les centres siciliens se sont avérés positifs au coronavirus ces dernières semaines. De nombreuses petites embarcations de migrants, essentiellement des Tunisiens, continuent d’accoster sur l’île de Lampedusa, au sud de la Sicile.

      https://www.infomigrants.net/fr/post/26931/sicile-la-justice-italienne-rejette-un-arrete-anti-migrants

    • Le président de la région de Sicile ordonne la #fermeture de tous les centres d’accueil

      Invoquant « une invasion » et des risques sanitaires dans le cadre de la pandémie de coronavirus, le président de la région Sicile, en Italie, a ordonné, dimanche, l’évacuation et la fermeture immédiate de tous les hotspots et centres d’accueil pour migrants sur son territoire, y compris ceux sur l’île de Lampedusa. Une mesure « non valide » selon Rome.

      « La Sicile ne peut pas continuer à subir cette invasion de migrants. » Le président de la région Sicile, Nello Musumeci, a déclaré, samedi 22 août sur sa page Facebook, qu’il faisait évacuer et fermer tous les hotspots et centres d’accueil de son territoire, débordés, dit-il, par l’afflux de migrants. Ces infrastructures sont également, selon lui, propices à la diffusion du coronavirus puisqu’il n’y est actuellement pas possible de garantir le respect des mesures sanitaires et gestes barrières.


      https://twitter.com/Musumeci_Staff/status/1297247841807749127

      « D’ici demain minuit, tous les migrants présents dans les hotspots et dans tous les centres d’accueil de Sicile devront être impérativement transférés vers des installations situées en dehors de l’île », peut-on lire dans l’arrêté publié dimanche.

      En date du 23 août, quelque 1 200 migrants se trouvaient sur la seule île de Lampedusa, au sud de la Sicile, qui voit accoster de nombreuses embarcations de fortune avec à leur bord essentiellement des Tunisiens. Environ 300 autres personnes avaient déjà été transférées 48 heures plus tôt vers des structures d’accueil en Sicile.

      Des sources du ministère italien de l’Intérieur ont immédiatement précisé que cette mesure régionale de fermeture des centre d’accueil et hotspots n’était pas valide, car il s’agissait d’une compétence de l’État, indique l’AFP.

      Mais alors que des dizaines de migrants hébergés dans les centres siciliens se sont avérés positifs au coronavirus ces dernières semaines, Nello Musumeci accuse le gouvernement national et l’Union européenne de « détourner le regard » sur les récents afflux de migrants « largement sous-estimés », a-t-il encore écrit sur Facebook. Le dirigeant appelle Rome à fermer ses ports aux navires humanitaires ayant secouru des migrants comme l’avait décrété l’année dernière l’ex-ministre de l’Intérieur, Matteo Salvini. Ce dernier s’est d’ailleurs fendu de plusieurs tweets pour exprimer toute sa solidarité avec le président sicilien.

      https://twitter.com/matteosalvinimi/status/1297485230933184512

      Le navire Sea Watch 4, de l’ONG allemande éponyme, a fait savoir dimanche qu’il avait actuellement à son bord 104 migrants dont 37 mineurs, secourus samedi et dimanche en mer au large des côtes libyennes. L’équipage pourrait rapidement demander leur débarquement en Italie et à Malte.

      https://www.infomigrants.net/fr/post/26812/le-president-de-la-region-de-sicile-ordonne-la-fermeture-de-tous-les-c

  • Elon Musk est la personne qui a gagné le plus d’#argent pendant la #pandémie
    https://www.businessinsider.fr/elon-musk-est-la-personne-qui-a-gagne-le-plus-dargent-pendant-la-pan

    Beaucoup de milliardaires se sont enrichis pendant la pandémie de #coronavirus [...] selon une nouvelle analyse du think tank de gauche, l’Institute for Policy Studies (IPS), publiée lundi 17 août.

    [.,,]

    La montée en flèche des revenus des milliardaires semble encore plus frappante si on la compare à l’impact économique de la pandémie sur les #États-Unis

    56 millions d’Américains ont demandé des allocations de #chômage au cours des 21 dernières semaines. Un nombre sans précédent, dépassant de loin les 37 millions de demandes déposées pendant les 18 mois de la Grande #Récession qui s’est terminée en 2009. Dans le même temps, les experts prédisent que plus de 28 millions d’Américains pourraient perdre leur #logement après avoir pris du retard sur leur loyer depuis l’expiration du moratoire fédéral sur les expulsions.

    Bien que les gains d’Elon Musk dépassent de loin ceux de tout autre milliardaire, le natif d’Afrique du Sud est loin d’être le seul membre du club des trois virgules à s’être enrichi au cours des cinq derniers mois.

    Au 13 août, Jeff Bezos, le patron d’Amazon, avait vu sa fortune augmenter de 68% depuis la mi-mars, tandis que la fortune de Mark Zuckerberg a augmenté de 75%, atteignant un nouveau record, selon IPS. Grâce à l’augmentation récente de leur richesse, les 12 Américains les plus prospères du monde, valent à eux tous plus de 1 000 milliards de dollars, selon les calculs d’IPS.

    Twelve U.S. Billionaires Have a Combined $1 Trillion - Inequality.org
    https://inequality.org/great-divide/twelve-us-billionaires-combined-1-trillion

    March 18th, 2020 marked the beginning of the Covid-19 lockdown and historic filings for unemployment — and also the intervention of the Federal Reserve with monetary actions to stabilize markets.

  • NatureGate et la fable du confinement aveugle
    https://diasp.eu/p/11503822

    NatureGate et la fable du confinement aveugle

    Auteur(s) : Gérard Delépine pour FranceSoir

    ANALYSE : Par sa morbidité et sa mortalité la crise du Covid, ne constitue qu’un accident sanitaire comparable aux grandes grippes de l’ère moderne des transports aériens [1]. Elle a cependant réalisé un véritable crash test des institutions démocratiques, de l’économie mondiale, de l’éthique de la recherche et de la fiabilité des plus grandes revues médicales.

    http://www.francesoir.fr/opinions-tribunes/naturegate-et-la-fable-du-confinement-aveugle

    #confinement #coronavirus #covid #covid-19 #covid19 #Lancetgate #Naturegate #epidemie #pandemie #confinementaveugle #suede #paysbas #france (...)

    • https://www.franceinter.fr/emissions/l-edito-m/l-edito-m-21-octobre-2019

      lundi 21 octobre 2019

      [...]

      A ceci près que #France_Soir se présente comme un « quotidien d’information général 100% numérique ». Sans journalistes ? Ça, c’est inadmissible. Quand la presse et les chaines d’info se plantent sur Xavier Dupont de Ligonnès, le public hurle à la « fake news ». Non, c’était une erreur journalistique, pas une information volontairement trompeuse. Énorme différence. Mais on n’écoute rien et on confond tout. Monsieur Azalbert : à « France Soir » ôtez le M de « média », le M de « marketing » suffira. C’est peut-être un détail pour vous. Mais pour nous, ça veut dire beaucoup. ||

  • Les leçons de l’épidémie : la grande peste de Londres vue par Daniel Defoe
    https://theconversation.com/les-lecons-de-lepidemie-la-grande-peste-de-londres-vue-par-daniel-d

    Des rues désertes, des volets fermés, des portes cadenassées, des hurlements de démence qui portent dans le silence d’une ville vidée de ses habitants et ces convois de cadavres dont la puanteur se mêle aux fumigations pratiquées par les habitants pour désinfecter l’atmosphère. Nous sommes en 1665. Et l’on ne se sait à peu près rien du mal qui s’abat sur Londres.

    Une chronique quotidienne de l’épidémie
    Publié sous un pseudonyme en 1722, le Journal de l’année de la peste est à la fois une chronique, une fiction documentée (Daniel Defoe n’a que cinq ans en 1665), un récit d’édification et un avertissement lancé aux autorités londoniennes. En 1720, la peste débarquait en Provence et prélevait en quelques mois la moitié de la population de Marseille. Quelques années auparavant, en 1712, elle avait déjà fauché des milliers de vies dans les ports polonais, suédois et dans les villes des principautés allemandes. Defoe s’y intéresse de près, accumule les témoignages (notamment la Loïmologia de Hodges), publie des articles et un opuscule, Préparatifs convenables pour la peste. Peine perdue pour ce génial polygraphe, la calamité n’atteindra finalement jamais Londres.

    Longtemps dénigré pour sa faible valeur documentaire (tout y serait exagération) et littéraire (un style maladroit et redondant), le Journal de l’année de la peste est pourtant un texte mûrement pensé, fruit de plusieurs tentatives d’écriture dans des formats et des styles différents. Camus, qui s’en inspira, ne s’y était pas trompé. Jean Delumeau en fit une source essentielle pour penser L’histoire de la peur en Occident (1978).

    #peste #pandémie #guerre_aux_pauvres

    • Taleur je regardais les nouveautés aux éditions Allia
      https://www.editions-allia.com/fr/livre/870/lecons-dune-pandemie

      “Inondations, famines, tremblements de terre et éruptions volcaniques ont joué leur part en matière de destruction humaine, dont l’entendement peine à mesurer l’horreur, et pourtant, jamais auparavant ne s’était produite une catastrophe à la fois aussi soudaine, aussi dévastatrice et aussi universelle. Le plus stupéfiant dans cette pandémie, c’est le mystère total qui l’entoure. Nul ne semble savoir ce qu’est la maladie, d’où elle vient, ni comment y mettre fin. Les esprits anxieux se préoccupent de la survenue d’une nouvelle vague.”

      #pandémie #livre

  • UNHCR MENA COVID-19 Emergency Response Update #11 - UNHCR

    UNHCR has called upon States to urgently release refugees and asylum-seekers who are being unlawful and arbitrarily held in detention, asking that States act in accordance with international law and that amidst the COVID-19 pandemic, vulnerable refugees are not placed at heightened and unnecessary risk.

    REPORT

    https://reliefweb.int/report/syrian-arab-republic/unhcr-mena-covid-19-emergency-response-update-11-5-august-2020

    #Covid-19#Monde#Moyen-Orient#Santé#UNHCR#Camp#Pandémie#santé#Quarantaine#migrant#migration

  • affordance.info : Rentrée à l’université : irrespirable et sans filtre.
    https://www.affordance.info/mon_weblog/2020/08/rentree-universite.html
    https://www.affordance.info/.a/6a00d8341c622e53ef0263e95d81fe200b-600wi

    Comment se fait-il qu’à une semaine des rentrées scolaires et universitaires, en plein regain de l’épidémie, aucune étude publique sur ces questions n’ait été commanditée, aucune réflexion menée, aucune solution proposée ? Comment se fait-il qu’en France, à une semaine des rentrées scolaires et universitaires qui vont se dérouler dans des environnements humains saturés et plus ou moins bien « masqués », et alors même qu’aucun poste supplémentaire ne sera accordé, qu’aucun équipement dédié ne sera financé autrement qu’à la charge des établissements eux-mêmes**, comment se fait-il que cette question absolument centrale de l’aération, de la ventilation et de la filtration ne soit inscrite dans aucun agenda alors même qu’en plus de répondre à une des questions centrales que pose cette épidémie planétaire, elle répondrait aussi aux normes environnementales qui restent à inventer à l’heure d’une asphyxie globale de la planète ?

  • First case of Coronavirus appears among residents Syrian Al Hol camp - Save the childreen NGO

    After earlier cases of COVID-19 among health workers in Al Hol Camp, the first reported case of COVID-19 of a resident of the camp was confirmed today, Save the Children can reveal, as the number of cases reported across North East Syria rises to over 100.

    #Covid-19#Syrie#Rojava#Pandémie#Santé#camp#Al-Hol#migrant#Politique#réfugiés#migration

    https://www.savethechildren.net/news/first-case-coronavirus-appears-among-residents-syrian-al-hol-camp

  • Health Authority in northeast Syria buries coronavirus dead with precautionary measures in Syria’s north Aleppo - North Press Agency

    The Co-chair of Health Authority in the Autonomous Administration, Hevin Hussein, said that a specialist medical team has buried the bodies of those deceased from coronavirus and placed them in marked graves.

    In a special statement, she told North Press on Saturday that the medical team implemented precautionary measures by wearing appropriate personal protective equipment (PPE) according to standard precautions (gloves, disposable gowns, masks, eye protection and disposable shoes) before sterilization of the body.

    #Covid-19#Syrie#Décès#Incinération#Pandémie#migrant#migration

    https://npasyria.com/en/blog.php?id_blog=3109&sub_blog=12&name_blog=Health%20Authority%20in%20nort

  • 119 infected with Covid 19 in NE, Syria - ANHA

    The Health Authority in North and East Syria recorded 18 new cases of coronavirus, and thus the number of infections rose to 119, and it also announced that five cases had recovered.

    #Covid-19#Syrie#Rojava#Secondevague#Kurdes#Pandémie#migrant#migration

    https://hawarnews.com/en/haber/119-infected-with-covid-19-in-ne-syria-h18422.html

  • Global deforestation accelerates during pandemic | Financial Times
    https://www.ft.com/content/b72e3969-522c-4e83-b431-c0b498754b2d?segmentid=acee4131-99c2-09d3-a635-873e61754

    Forests have been razed at an alarming rate across Asia, Africa and Latin America during the coronavirus pandemic, according to new research, as environmental law enforcement has been sidelined and villagers have turned to logging for income in parts of the tropical world.

    Since the start of the coronavirus pandemic, forest loss alerts have increased by 77 per cent compared to the average from 2017-2019, according to data from Global Land Analysis and Discovery (GLAD) — a worldwide warning system for the depletion of tree cover — and compiled by conservation body WWF Germany.

    #déforestation #forêt #pandémie

  • To stop the spread of COVID-19 and associated stigma in Somalia, communities need the facts | The Storyteller
    https://storyteller.iom.int/stories/stop-spread-covid-19-and-associated-stigma-somalia-communities-need

    The lack of accurate, factual information about public health emergencies presents a very real and present risk for people in Somalia, especially among the estimated 2.6 million internally displaced persons (IDPs) and the thousands of migrants that transit through the country every year. Health messages broadcasted through media outlets do not reach everyone. Rumours and hearsay spread faster than any virus, putting people’s lives in danger and bringing stigma and shame to those who contract COVID-19.
    These are features of the COVID-19 pandemic response which has produced 3,212 positive cases in Somalia and claimed the lives of 93 people since March. While COVID-19 awareness is generally high here, recent findings from the International Organization for Migration (IOM) show that four months after the first confirmed case, there are still many vulnerable populations who have not received this information, particularly those living in displacement sites. Worse still, misconceptions about how the disease spreads remain pervasive across the country. Many young migrants crossing into Somalia, mainly from Ethiopia, told IOM that they were unaware of the COVID-19 pandemic. When surveyed in March, IOM found that only 19 per cent had heard about the disease. This number has increased to 46 per cent since the exercise started.

    #COvid-19#migrant#migration#somaliie#ethiopie#OIM#stigmatisation#information#pandemie#vulnerabilite#refugie#sante

  • US Action Against IS Financier Shows Jihadists’ Cash Flow Continues from Turkey - VOA

    Camp smuggling

    The al-Hol camp also accommodates nearly 60,000 internally displaced persons (IDPs) from other parts of Syria and some refugees from Iraq. Camp authorities say they have physically separated IS family members from the rest of the camp’s residents.

    There are at least two hawala offices that openly conduct business in the non-IS section of the camp, but money often gets smuggled from those offices to IS family members as well, according Thomas McClure, a Syria-based researcher with Rojava Information Center.

    “The foreign women aren’t allowed to receive money,” McClure said, “but when they want to receive money, the Syrian and Iraqi people get it from the hawala offices in the Souq [a market in the camp] and give it to them for a cut for smuggling them.”

    Some of the IS families reportedly receive outside donations that amount to more than $3,000 a month, while an average family in the camp spends one-tenth of that amount, according to a report published by North Press Agency, a local news site.

    Hawala also provides a useful means of sending humanitarian support to IDPs and refugees, say some analysts. While banning them outright is not advised, experts say the business can be regulated in a way that prevents IS access to outside donations.

    “The hawala money transfer system is crucial to remain open for the women to be able to purchase what they need for their families,” Anne Speckhard, director of the Washington, D.C.-based International Center for the Study of Violent Extremism (ICSVE), who has visited the al-Hol camp for research, told VOA.

    “But it should be regulated so large sums are not transferred,” she added. “Likewise, large sums make it very possible to bribe those receiving the money and those who would smuggle the women out.”

    #Covid-19#Syrie#Rojava#Pandémie#Santé#camp#Al-Hol#migrant#Politique#réfugiés#migration

    https://www.voanews.com/extremism-watch/us-action-against-financier-shows-jihadists-cash-flow-continues-turkey

  • Health workers in Syrian camp for ISIS families test positive for COVID-19 -Al Monitor
    Humanitarians warn that poor conditions in the camp put it at great risk for an outbreak of the virus. These are the first known cases there.

    Three health workers tested positive for COVID-19 on Aug. 3, UN spokesperson David Swanson told Al-Monitor.

    These are the first known cases of the virus in the camp.

    Al-Hol hosts more 65,000 people in a desert area of northeast Syria near the Iraqi border. The mostly women and children in the camp have varying degrees of affiliations with IS. Most of the population is from Iraq and Syria, but there are thousands of foreigners as well. The area is within the territory of the Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria. The Kurdish-led statelet’s Syrian Democratic Forces, who are backed by the United States, hold thousands of IS fighters in detention centers as well as their families in al-Hol and other camps.

    The workers who tested positive are Syrian nationals working for the Kurdish Red Crescent humanitarian organization, an autonomous administration official responsible for camps told Al-Monitor. They are now isolating at home and are in “good condition" after testing positive at a hospital in the city of Hasakah, the official said.

    #Covid-19#Syrie#Rojava#Pandémie#Santé#camp#Al-Hol#migrant#Politique#réfugiés#migration

    https://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2020/08/al-hol-islamic-state-is-camp-syria-covid-19-coronavirus.html

  • Coronavirus outbreak in northeast Syria: 12 cases confirmed, bringing total to 66 - North Press Agency

    - The Health Authority of the Autonomous Administration in North and East Syria announced 12 coronavirus cases confirmed in the region despite strict measures.

    Jiwan Mustafa, head of Health Authority, said in a statement that “12 new coronavirus cases were confirmed on Friday in northeast Syria, bringing the total number to 66.”

    Mustafa said that the 12 cases were in the Jazira region, including eight in Qamishli, one in Tel Kochar,and three cases in Raqqa.

    #Covid-19#Syrie#Rojava#Secondevague#Kurdes#Pandémie#migrant#migration

    https://npasyria.com/en/blog.php?id_blog=3095&sub_blog=12&name_blog=Coronavirus%20outbreak%20in%20

  • Sixteen thousand security members to control anti-coronavirus curfew in northeast Syria - North Press Agency

    A senior Kurdish official in northeast Syria said on Thursday that 16,000 members of the Internal Security Forces (Asayesh) were deployed to control the process of the curfew imposed in the region.

    Kan’an Barakat, co-head of Interior Authority, noted that hundreds of checkpoints were added to the entrances of the cities, towns and villages to control the curfew to stop the spread of coronavirus in the region.

    “All the Asayesh departments are on alert,” he said.

    The Autonomous Administration imposed a full curfew on Thursday in accordance with the increase of the number of the confirmed coronavirus cases to 54 cases in north and east Syria.

    #Covid-19#Syrie#Rojava#Secondevague#Couvrefeu#Pandémie#migrant#migration

    https://npasyria.com/en/blog.php?id_blog=3089&sub_blog=12&name_blog=Sixteen%20thousand%20security%

  • Syria in Context Investigation: COVID-19 Spreads out of Control in Damascus - Syria in context

    The COVID-19 outbreak in government-controlled areas of Syria is now out of control and overwhelming the limited capacities of the war-torn country’s health care sector. In today’s update, Syria in Context estimates that over the past week, the Damascus region alone likely suffered hundreds of excess deaths attributable to Coronavirus, suggesting that tens of thousands of residents of the capital may have already been infected. These estimates, based on local reporting and our own supplemental investigations, outpace the official numbers released by the Syrian Ministry of Health and the World Health Organization (WHO), which record a mere 944 confirmed cases and 48 deaths, by orders of magnitude. Local health services, suffering shortages of protection equipment (PPE) and tests, as well as rampant corruption, are already overwhelmed.

    As it becomes increasingly clear that the virus is far more prevalent than is being reported, an urgent increase in supplies and a radical change in approach to mitigating the outbreak, as well as increased transparency, are needed to prevent the growing catastrophe.

    #Covid-19#Syrie#Damas#Secondevague#Pandémie#migrant#migration

    https://tande.substack.com/p/syria-in-context-investigation-covid