• Lawyer: autistic daughter’s speech improved during lockdown

    Article was updated

    A mother has told how her autistic daughter has ‘blossomed’ during lockdown thanks to having more time with both of her parents.

    Emma Gill, 40, director of family law at Manchester-based firm Vardags, shares daughter Sophie, five, with her husband Richard.

    Speaking to FEMAIL, Emma, who lives with her family just outside Bolton, Greater Manchester, explained Sophie had benefited from having more time at home with her mother and father during lockdown.

    Emma Gill, 40, director of family law at Manchester-based firm Vardags, shares daughter Sophie, five, who has autism with her husband Richard. Emma, pictured at home with Sophie, told how her daughter had 'blossomed' thanks to having more time at home during lockdown

    Emma Gill, 40, director of family law at Manchester-based firm Vardags, shares daughter Sophie, five, who has autism with her husband Richard. Emma, pictured at home with Sophie, told how her daughter had ‘blossomed’ thanks to having more time at home during lockdown

    She said: ‘Seeing how Sophie’s language is developing is the best thing. This is such a unique opportunity in her lifetime to have extended time with both me and her dad together, one on one, talking to her all the time.

    ‘She’s like a little sponge at the moment. For example, we always ask her to take her plate into the kitchen. Sometimes it takes a little while for her to process it but then she goes and takes it in.

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/

  • Find great job opportunities in Europe (Video)

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  • Antibiotic resistance causes more deaths than malaria and HIV combined

    Antibiotic resistance causes more deaths than malaria and HIV/Aids combined. What Africa is doing to fight this silent epidemic

    Tom Nyirenda, Stellenbosch University

    Each year antimicrobial resistance – the ability of microbes to survive agents designed to kill them – claims more lives than malaria and HIV/Aids combined. Africa bears the brunt of this development, which thrives on inequality and poverty. Nadine Dreyer asked Tom Nyirenda, a research scientist with over 27 years’ experience in infectious diseases, what health organisations on the continent are doing to fight this threat to medical progress.

    What is antimicrobial resistance?

    Antimicrobial resistance occurs when bacteria, viruses, fungi and parasites change over time and no longer respond to medicines (including antibiotics). This makes infections harder to treat and increases the risk of disease spread, severe illness and death.

    In Africa, drug resistance is already a documented problem for HIV, malaria, tuberculosis (TB), typhoid, cholera, meningitis, gonorrhoea and dysentery.

    How big a problem is antimicrobial resistance?

    It is one of the top 10 global public health threats, and threatens to undermine years of medical progress.

    Nearly 5 million deaths were associated with antimicrobial resistance in 2019.

    The African continent bears the heaviest burden.

    The first comprehensive assessment of the global burden of antimicrobial resistance has estimated that in 2019 over 27 deaths per 100,000 were directly attributable to it in Africa. Over 114 deaths per 100,000 were associated with it.

    In high-income countries, antimicrobial resistance led directly to 13 deaths per 100,000. It was associated with 56 deaths per 100,000 people.

    The study showed that young children were particularly at risk. Half of the deaths in sub-Saharan Africa in 2019 were among children under the age of 5.

    How do inequality and poverty come into it?

    In many African countries, poverty and inequality propel the likelihood of antimicrobial resistance.

    Access to clean running water, proper sanitation and safe water management is a big challenge in many hospitals and clinics in African countries.

    And there is often a dire shortage of health workers. Wards are often overcrowded. As a result, infections spread faster. Some of these infections are resistant to antibiotics.

    Inappropriate use of antibiotics, inadequate health resources and limited access to the right medicines has also fuelled antibiotic resistance in sub-Saharan Africa.

    Substandard and falsified medicines, due to their inferior doses, can allow bacteria to adapt, persist, develop and spread. Studies show that the African continent is affected by such medical products.

    Global antibiotic shortages also encourage the use of inferior medicines.

    With weak regulation, over-the-counter prescription of antibiotics is highly prevalent in sub-Saharan Africa. The highest rates of over-the-counter antibiotics have been found in Eritrea (up to 89.2%), Ethiopia (up to 87.9%), Nigeria (up to 86.5%) and Tanzania (up to 92.3%). In Zambia up to 100% of pharmacies dispensed antibiotics without a prescription.

    Is there any good news?

    While tackling antimicrobial resistance on the African continent may be tougher than in other regions, many deaths are preventable.

    There have been some encouraging moves to protect health systems and communities against antimicrobial resistance.

    1. The African Union has established the African Union Framework for Antimicrobial Resistance Control. It aims to strengthen research; advocate for policies, laws and good governance; enhance awareness; and engage civil society organisations.
    2. Fighting antimicrobial resistance involves developing new antibiotics and making sure they reach the people who need them. This is what organisations like the Global Antibiotic Research and Development Partnership were created to do. We are seeing encouraging progress for an antibiotic against drug-resistant gonorrhoea, a high priority pathogen.

    Six South African sites were involved in the clinical trial.

    1. Measuring and monitoring antimicrobial resistance and antimicrobial use has an essential role. Here too there’s progress. The Mapping AMR and AMU Partnership consortium has recently published 14 new country reports on the situation across Africa.
    2. The European and Developing Countries Clinical Trials Partnership is funding clinical research for medical tools to detect, treat and prevent poverty-related infectious diseases in sub-Saharan Africa. The vital field of neonatal sepsis is included.
    3. It’s crucial to shift attitudes towards antibiotics so that they are used wisely. Organisations such as ReAct Africa and the South Centre have made good progress on this front.

    They advocate for responsible use of antibiotics as well as ways to prevent and control bacterial infections.

    In Kenya and other African countries, antimicrobial resistance champions raise awareness in schools, universities, clinics and communities.

    1. A bold move by African countries to establish and expand local manufacturing of medical products requires strict regulation so that it does not fuel drug resistance with sub-standard or fake products.

    What does the future hold?

    The antimicrobial resistance challenges in African countries are huge. But momentum to counter it is building.

    Crucial steps include:

    • greater investment
    • expansion of infection, prevention and control programmes, including good clinical prescription practices
    • improving access to essential antibiotics and diagnostic tools
    • the development of new antibiotics that can treat infections that are multi-drug resistant.

    This article is part of a media partnership between The Conversation Africa and the 2023 Conference on Public Health in Africa. The author acknowledges valuable input from Carol Rufell of the Global Antibiotic Research & Development Partnership Africa.The Conversation

    Tom Nyirenda, Extraordinary Senior Lecture in the Department of Global Health, Stellenbosch University

    This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

  • 300,000 Tanzanians were killed by Germany – News

    300,000 Tanzanians were killed by Germany during the Maji-Maji uprising – it was genocide and should be called that

    Klaus Bachmann, SWPS University of Social Sciences and Humanities and Gerhard Kemp, University of the West of England

    Political actors in Tanzania have in recent years demanded compensation from Germany for colonial atrocities committed in the early 20th century. In early 2017, the National Assembly of Tanzania stopped short of putting the label of genocide on the atrocities committed by German troops during the Maji-Maji uprising (1905–1907).

    During a visit to Tanzania recently, the German president, Frank-Walter Steinmeier, asked for “forgiveness” and expressed “shame” for the colonial atrocities committed in what was then German East Africa. This was in reference to the killing of up to 300,000 people during the Maji-Maji uprising.

    German involvement in Tanzania began in 1890 when Berlin decided to take over administration of east African territories which German traders and travellers had secured. To reduce the cost of administration, governance rested on a few German officers with unchecked power, along with African and Arab fighters (called Askari) to suppress resistance.

    Abuse of power was rampant in this system, which provoked rather than prevented resistance. By the end of the 19th century, German troops had brutally quashed an uprising of the Wahehe in southern Tanzania.

    In 1905, the Maji-Maji uprising began as a rebellion against Arab traders and cotton plantation owners of the south-eastern coast. Usually the insurgents would first uproot the cotton plants, and then raid farmhouses or office buildings. But the raids transformed into a peasants’ revolt as the violence progressed into the interior.

    The German response was brutal and catastrophic (page 265). A three-year-long mass starvation (page 274) devastated a large part of the southern territory. Entire areas were depopulated or ravaged by disease (page 274). In one location, 25% of the women became unable to fall pregnant. As many as 300,000 people were killed.

    We are widely published scholars of transitional justice and international criminal justice. Our historical and legal analysis of the suppression of the Maji-Maji uprising shows that there were indeed widespread instances of war crimes committed in the conflicts between the German military and various anti-colonial groups. It also shows that German conduct in that conflict can be described as genocidal in terms of intent and impact.

    There is a nuance to our finding. We could not find any genocidal directive from the imperial authorities in Berlin. But the evidence suggests that the atrocities committed against civilians were indeed intended to destroy an identifiable group in whole or in part. This is the core element of the current definition of genocide.

    Finding that the violent quashing of the Maji-Maji uprising would be regarded as genocide in the legal sense doesn’t have any practical implications, such as a legal obligation to pay compensation. Today’s international law doesn’t apply to what happened then. The implications are instead political and moral: if Germany’s colonial actions were to be regarded as genocide, the German public might be open to Tanzanian compensation claims, as they were to Namibia’s.

    Suppression as genocidal violence

    Many of the atrocities committed during this conflict could be construed as war crimes committed by both sides. But our focus was the possibility of a genocide.

    A resolution adopted by the UN General Assembly in 1946 noted that, historically,

    many instances of such crimes of genocide have occurred when racial, religious, political and other groups have been destroyed, entirely or in part.

    This resolution was precursor to the Genocide Convention of 1948. The convention defines the crime of genocide and serves as the basis for the prevention and punishment of genocide as a crime under international and domestic laws.

    Under international law, the Genocide Convention and its progeny don’t apply to states or individuals retrospectively. These laws cannot be invoked as a basis for a legal claim against Germany for events that occurred in the early 20th century.

    But characterising an atrocity as a genocide can serve as impetus for acknowledgement and some form of voluntary compensation.

    The genocide question

    We analysed first-hand archival records from Germany and Tanzania to examine whether German actions constitute genocide according to the Genocide Convention or the International Criminal Tribunals’ jurisprudence.

    German documents and letters from the time rarely distinguished between ethnic groups and usually referred to “Negroes” (Neger) and “Blacks” (Schwarze) in a sweeping way. Racialisation didn’t indicate victimisation in itself, because some of these populations were regarded as friendly to the German colonial authorities.

    One could conclude that the German authorities targeted their political (anti-colonial) opponents rather than a group that’s protected under the current definition of genocide. The protected groups are national, racial, ethnic or religious.

    But a more expansive reading of genocide law leads to a different conclusion.

    The first genocide conviction delivered by the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda was in the case of Akayesu. In this case the judges reasoned that the four protected groups should not be seen as inflexible categories. They stretched the limits to accommodate groups that have similar qualities to the groups explicitly protected.

    Subsequent decisions by international criminal tribunals followed that reasoning. They took into account the way the perpetrator saw the group.
    A group protected by the Genocide Convention does not have to exist objectively. It is enough if it exists in the mind of the perpetrator and he wants to destroy it in whole or in part.

    The “Blacks” the Germans had in mind when they wrote and spoke about their enemies did not exist as such a group. Instead they consisted of a plethora of ethnic groups, tribes and extended family clans. They had as much in common with each other as the Germans had with their colonising British neighbours in the Uganda protectorate.

    But in the German officers’ minds these “Blacks” did exist as such a group. That is why they would have been protected if the Genocide Convention and the respective jurisprudence had been in force then.

    This has relevance for the question of whether the German conduct during the Maji-Maji uprising was genocidal.

    The lack of genocidal directives doesn’t imply a lack of genocidal intent. Circumstantial evidence suggests the German administration wanted to destroy not only hostile individual members of a racialised group, but the group in whole or in part.

    The trial and appeals chambers of the International Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia accepted this kind of reasoning: the basis for establishing a perpetrator’s genocidal intent does not always have to be written evidence or witness testimony. Sometimes the perpetrator’s own behaviour allows such a conclusion.

    In Srebrenica it was the policy to separate men from women and children and then to kill the men in mass executions. In a patriarchal society like the Bosnian Muslims’ the whole Muslim group would not survive without its men.

    We apply a similar standard to the German conduct to eradicate the traditional leaders of the communities that took part in the Maji-Maji uprising. These communities would have perished without their leaders. In some cases, they did perish. And depriving these groups of their ability to make collective decisions and to “survive as groups” (rather than as individuals or nuclear families) was the explicit aim of the German commanders.The Conversation

    Klaus Bachmann, Professor of Political Science, SWPS University of Social Sciences and Humanities and Gerhard Kemp, Professor of Criminal Law, University of the West of England

    This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

  • Covid-19 Pay Freezes On UK Loans

    This Covid-19 Pay Freezes On UK Loans article has been updated

    On Thursday 9th April, anyone who was struggling to stay on top of the debt they had, whether it was credit cards or loans, and overdrafts, would benefit from payment freezes.

    This is part of the emergency package that the Financial Conduct Authority set up in response to the coronavirus pandemic. As of the 14th, those measures were extended to include other types of credit, including catalogue credit and store cards, with car financing measures following shortly after.

    Although the rules were introduced initially at the start of April and many of the country’s biggest banks adopted them early on, they were rolled out across the rest of the sector.

    Credit Cards and Personal Loans

    With regards to credit cards and personal loans, providers are obliged to offer a temporary freeze on payments for as much as 3 months, for any of their customers whose finances have been adversely affected by the pandemic. upmoney.co.uk  an online comparison company are there to help find you the right type of credit in these uncertain times. It also has been ruled that banks can’t suspend customer’s cards at this time either.

    It is your legal right, therefore, to ask for a 3-month repayment freeze on any kind of loan or credit such as home collected credit/doorstep credit, logbook loans, guarantor loans, catalogue credit, store cards, credit cards or personal loans.

    At the time of the ruling, payday loans were not covered by these temporary rules and there was no allowance for cars that had been bought via hire purchase or leasing. However, the FCA has said they will be looking into those areas as well along with other forms of lending.

    Although peer-to-peer loans are also not covered, the FCA has stipulated that it firms should help their customers experiencing financial difficulties.

    It is important to bear in mind that mortgage payment holidays, most payment freezes aren’t free. All customers are still expected to pay back the interest accrued after the break finishes.

    Overdrafts

    With regards to overdrafts, an arranged overdraft is able to ask for as much as £500 overdraft borrowing without accruing payment for as much as 3 months. If you have an arranged overdraft of less than £500, you are not expected to pay interest if you eat into the current limit you have on your overdraft. If the limit is less than £500 or you are without an overdraft, you could request an increase in the limit or a brand-new overdraft. For this, you will still undergo the same affordability checks.

    Credit Records

    Your credit record should not be affected if you take advantage of these payment freezes. According to the FCA, firms should make sure that the credit files of any customers using the measures are not affected.

    Times When Banks Are Allowed to Refuse

    There are some situations when banks can refuse payment freezes. Only, though, if it is not in the interest of the customer to do it. For instance, if it meant they had a higher debt burden overall instead of what they would have from other options. The FCA has noted that banks and lenders should provide over avenues of help for customers when they can’t off…

     

    More

    Covid-19 Pay Freezes On UK Loans and Credit Cards

     

  • New job vacancies this week: Spa manager, customer care, content creator, etc

    New job vacancies this week

    1) Spa Manager Spa therapist Eye lashes girl Dental nurse Spa therapist braider Auxiliary Nurse wanted at Lekki and Banana island

    2) Customer Care,Receptionist Secretary and Content Creator wanted at Ikeja GRA and Allen avenue Applicant must be computer literate and must have minimum of OND

    3) I Need a very beautiful female maid to work at banana🍌 island, Lekki Osborne Ikoyi Applicant should be honest hardworking and neat Applicant should be from Akwa Ibom, Cross River, Delta, Benue or Kogi only.

    4) I need 5 Club waitress at Apapa Omole Estate near Ojodu Berger Festac and Sangotedo Aja. Pls I need decent good-looking girls only.

    5) Chef laundry man house 🏠 keeper Bartender waitress and waiter cook cleaner wanted in an hotel at Omole Estate Ikeja Festac and Ikeja GRA.

    6) Male Supervisor wanted in a club at Berger, Awolowo way Ikeja and Magodo. Pls I need a serious minded person that has manage a club and a lounge before.

    7) Male PSP Supervisor wanted at Gbagada.

    8) I need 10 Nannies to work at Banana Island, Magodo, Omole, Ajah, Osborne Ikoyi, Parkview Ikoyi, Ikate and Jakande Lekki. .

    Applicant must have taken care a child before, must be friendly accommodating, honest and mostly very caring. This is with accommodation and feeding.

    Pls dm 08115779812 for more information.

  • Germany creates 20 in-demand jobs – work visa for foreign talents

    There are sectors in Germany that now lack enough experts. In view of this,  The country has created the following 20 job categories for those who are willing to relocate.

    The shortages in the job market are especially pronounced in these specific sectors:

    • Agriculture: Livestock production, forestry, and horticulture are witnessing a lack of skilled workers, particularly in roles such as livestock production, forestry technicians, and specialized horticulturists.
    • Construction: Various trades within the construction industry, including metalworking, automation, surveying, scaffolding, interior construction, glazing, pipeline construction, and plant, container, and apparatus construction, are facing a deficit of workers.
    • Transportation: The transportation sector is also grappling with a shortage of labour, particularly in roles related to freight forwarding, logistics, and drivers for earthmoving machinery.

    Though the three categories mentioned above here are adversely affected when it comes to having experts work in the industries.

    To check for more information, click here.

  • Canada hot job offers in 2023

    Are you looking for a job work in Canada? Here are the latest or new offers before the end of 2023…

     

    For people who enjoy writing, freelancing allows them to work on a variety of projects, offering their job or services on a project basis.

    Freelance writing, from blog posts to content production, allows you to demonstrate your skills while earning money and it even gives you a shot at becoming famous.

    Waitstaff/Servers

    Part-time work as a server or waitstaff in restaurants, cafes, and bars is available in Canada’s flourishing hospitality industry.

    See the full list of jobs you can do in Canada here

  • Communities to Have Access to PPP Loans

    Policy makers are trying to ensure that communities underserved by traditional banks are getting access to a small-business coronavirus loan-relief program, but it has turned out to be more of an art than a science.

    When the Small Business Administration released the application form for the forgivable loan program, there was no instruction for lenders to collect optional demographic information. The agency’s inspector general in a recent report noted that omission and said “it is unlikely that SBA will be able to determine…

     

    https://www.wsj.com/articles/policy-makers-aim-to-ensure-underserved-communities-have-access-to-ppp-loans-11590937200

  • Business owners look elsewhere after sluggish response for bank loans – News

    This news has been updated

    The sluggish response by banks in approving loans during the Covid-19 outbreak is leading business owners to look elsewhere according to new research published today, which also highlights the value of Software as a Service (SaaS) solutions.

    The research, commissioned by Encompass Corporation, shows that four in 10 businesses are planning to change their banking provider due to the slow support that has been offered throughout the Covid-19 outbreak.

    The Know Your Customer (KYC) RegTech software provider found that 41 per cent of companies were looking to make a switch due to the poor level of services delivered during the crisis.

    The data, which was obtained via a survey of 200 business decision makers in large and medium-sized companies, and conducted by independent polling company Censuswide, also revealed that 42 per cent admitted to waiting over two weeks for a business loan application from their current banking provider.

    Additionally, 46 per cent have noticed significant delays in their bank’s onboarding process since the start of lockdown.

    Almost half (49 per cent) of business decision makers also revealed that their bank has yet to directly offer financial support during the Covid-19 crisis, and 40 per cent agreed that their bank’s online digital services and support around Covid-19 has been poor.

    Slow progress
    The impact of slow onboarding, application and compliance processes on companies can be severe, and Encompass found that 45 per cent of companies are planning to make redundancies due to a lack of revenue in the coming months.

    Wayne Johnson, CEO, Encompass Corporation commented: “The COVID-19 crisis has had a big impact on all sectors of British industry, especially financial services. In fact, many banks are being forced to run a skeleton crew of remote workers, and a number are still operating outdated legacy IT systems, which are unable to cope with the influx in demand for banking services.

    “This move from on-premises to remote working has underlined the value of Software as a Service (SaaS) solutions. Standard, out of the box solutions can be up and running in a matter of days and be easily accessed remotely, via computers or mobile devices, without having to contend with firewall issues – something that has posed a significant challenge to many organisations.

    These factors could make all the difference when migrating employees to our ‘new normal’ and ensuring they have the data and systems they need to work effectively at their fingertips.

    Moving forward, finance professionals and institutions must continue to implement the necessary regulatory and automation technology in order to ease their workload and speed-up processes for clients and consumers.

    The right RegTech can improve efficiency and accuracy of administrative tasks, such as KYC checks and onboarding processes, and free-up all-important staff time to ensure all businesses and individuals can get instant and easy access to financial services at a time when they need it most.”

    https://www.techradar.com/