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US lifts travel ban on Malawi and other African Countries

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By Staff Reporter

The White House announced today that the United States will lift its travel restrictions on South Africa, Botswana, Zimbabwe, Namibia, Lesotho, Eswatini, Mozambique and Malawi that were imposed last month following the discovery of the new COVID-19 Omicron variant.

Last Tuesday, President Biden said he was “considering reversing” the travel restrictions, telling reporters “I’m going to talk with my team in the next couple of days.”

The restrictions will be lifted on New Year’s Eve.

US travel ban that effectively banned almost all non-U.S. citizens, who had recently been in South Africa, Botswana, Eswatini, Namibia, Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique and Zimbabwe, was heavily criticized by the World Health Organization (WHO) and southern African leaders as ineffective and severely damaging to local economies.

Other countries, including the UK, imposed similar travel bans on southern African countries in the wake of the first detection of the Omicron strain. The United Kingdom lifted its travel restrictions last week, due to community transmission of the new COVID-19 variant within the country.

President Joe Biden

Senior US administration official said that the temporary travel ban “served its purpose,” adding that “it bought time to understand the science, it gave time to analyze the variant.”

According to the White House spokesman Kevin Munoz, the CDC ultimately recommended lifting the restrictions because of progress US health experts have made in understanding the Omicron strain, and because of how much the new COVID-19 variant has spread across the world.

Omicron strain of the COVID-19 virus is now also spreading rapidly throughout the United States.

While breakthrough infections among vaccinated people have become common, they have rarely led to severe illness or hospitalization, but a huge majority of those being hospitalized are unvaccinated.

The lightning-fast spread of the new COVID-19 strain, along with more people gathering indoors during winter, has led to a major infection spike.

The seven-day rolling average for US COVID-19 cases climbed past 160,000 this week, according to data from Johns Hopkins University. That’s more than double the average in late November.

Supreme Court stops Norman Chisale fake certificate case proceedings

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By Brenda Kaonga

The Supreme Court of Appeal has stopped court proceedings in the alleged fake certificate case against Norman Chisale, former body guard of ex- president Peter Mutharika pending an appeal.Chisale is answering three charges before the Senior Magistrates Court in Lilongwe.

The charges are Personation of a Person Named in a Certificate Presenting False Information to a Person Employed in the Public Service and Intimidation.However, Chisale applied at the Supreme Court of Appeal for leave to appeal against a decision of the High Court and for a stay order on the proceedings in the magistrate court pending the appeal.Earlier, the high court allowed the state to amend its charge sheet and re-open its case after trial was already concluded in the magistrate court.

Norman Chisale

The court also directed the state to comply with the law which states that once the charge sheet has been amended it should be read to the accused and the accused should take fresh plea. But Chisale is of the view that once the state closes its case, the only legal way forward was for the magistrate court to deliver its ruling on whether or not he has a case to answer not the re-opening of the states case.

In his ruling, Justice Lovemore Chikopa of the Supreme Court of Appeal has stalled the case in the magistrate court and has allowed Chisale to appeal the decision by the high court. Speaking in an interview, Chancy Gondwe, lawyer for Chisale said the way the case was heard in the magistrate court was not in accordance with the law.

Brian Banda loses State House Press secretary role to Anthony Kasunda

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By Staff Reporter

After completing six months of further studies at Peking University in China, Presidential Press Officer Brian Banda has come back to be welcomed with news that he will no longer be the main man . Anthony Kasunda who was drafted in to temporarily hold the role in Banda’s absence has performed so good leaving President Chakwera with no choice but to give him the role permanently.

Sources close to Office of the President (OPC) sources confided 247Malawi News Kasunda’s Professinal handling of the role had impressed President Chakwera and that he now trust the former Daily Times and Nation investigative journalist after putting him in an acting position for the past three months.

Brian Banda loses role to Kasunda

It is suggested that during Kasunda reign, the state house has seen less media blunders and communication from the state house has been on point . Brian Banda is know for making statements on the usual media briefings that were later to be retracted, with issue of the President cabinet reshuffle being one of them

It is not clear which position Brian Banda will be given since his post is no longer available. It is rumoured that he might be posted to OPC as another role at the state house would come as a demotion since all the high media roles are already covered

Anthony Kasunda is a very experienced media and PR Specialist, he was Blantyre City Public Relations manager before moving to state house

Anthony Kasunda

Archbishop Msusa offers Christmas Present to his home village in Mangochi

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By Maxwell Kudzala

Archbishop Thomas Luke Msusa of Blantyre Arch Diocese on Wednesday distributed bags of fertilizer to 75 elderly people in his home village of Traditional Authority Jalasi in Mangochi.

The fertilizer distribution of two bags to each beneficiary at Msusas home village of Iba, Group Village Head Mponda, came following financial support from Msusas partners in Chicago in the United States of America.According to Msusa, the fertilizer donation to his home area was part of Christmas festive season celebration, saying most farming families were prepared to plant maize following the first rains.“A bag of sugar would have been enough, but at this moment people need fertilizer so that they apply in their fields and this is why I thought of giving them fertilizer,” he said.

Archbishop Thomas Luke Msusa of Blantyre Arch Diocese donating Fertiliser

Appreciating the donation, a representative of Group Village Head Mponda, Aida Selemani thanked Msusa for the generosity, saying the donation had come at the right time when most of the elderly in the area had no means to buy fertilizers. Each beneficiary received two bags of fertilizer (NPK and Urea) per government standards.

National Statistical Office launches multiple indicator survey report

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By Mphatso Nkuonera

Minister of Health Khumbize Chiponda Kandodo on Thursday hailed National Statistical Office (NSO) for timely completion of Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey (MICS) amidst the Covid-19 pandemic.

The MICS tracks many child welfare & SDG indicators. Key among findings, the survey found that Malawi has only met 17 percent of the 169 Sustainable Development Goals but the country has made progress in child education, mortality rate, and child health.

Present at the launch Hon Khumbize Chiponda

Chiponda emphasized that statistics are crucial in policy making, planning and implementation of sustainable development goals which can build Malawi.

Commissioner of Statistics Mercy Kanyuka, said the findings are pivotal towards attaining of the country’s developmental agendas hence it is important that all stakeholders follow up on the report.

UNICEF’s Country Representative Rudolf Schwenk concurred with Kanyuka saying it requires all stakeholders to join hands in order to achieve a very health population as the country now understand a number of issues statistically from the survey report.

“Every intervention we support has to be founded in evidence. It is only when we know that a certain percentage of children has no access to critical services that we can mobilize resources and partnerships to support the government,” said Schwenk

UNICEF’s Country Representative Rudolf Schwenk

The Malawi Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey (MICS) was carried out in 2019-20 by the National
Statistical Office as part of the Global MICS Programme. Technical support was provided by the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), with government funding and financial support of UNICEF, the Royal Norwegian Embassy (RNE), German Agency for International Cooperation (GIZ), Global Alliance for Vaccinescand Immunizations (GAVI) and the United States Agency for International Development (USAID).

The Global MICS Programme was developed by UNICEF in the 1990s as an international multi-purpose household survey programme to support countries in collecting internationally comparable data on a wide range of indicators on the situation of children and women. MICS surveys measure key indicators that allow countries to generate data for use in policies, programmes, and national development plans, and to monitor progress towards the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and other internationally agreed upon commitments.