Ethiopian News, Current Affairs and Opinion Forum
Zmeselo
Senior Member+
Posts: 33606
Joined: 30 Jul 2010, 20:43

Foreign student to write book on Wuhan's fight against COVID-19

Post by Zmeselo » 18 May 2020, 02:49



Foreign student to write book on Wuhan's fight against COVID-19

By LIU KUN in Wuhan and ZHANG XIAOMIN in Dalian | China Daily Global

http://global.chinadaily.com.cn/a/20200 ... 55ed4.html

2020-05-15

Editor's note: In this series, we share stories and experiences showing how expats are dealing with the novel coronavirus pneumonia outbreak.


Henok Neguse Negash. Provided to China Daily

An Eritrean student who experienced the outbreak, spread, and curbing of COVID-19 in Wuhan, Hubei province, is planning to publish a book to tell what happened as the city was fighting the virus.
If the virus couldn't kill us, it makes us stronger,
said Henok Neguse Negash, 34, a doctoral candidate at Zhongnan University of Economics and Law.
The book will be named Straight from the Horse's Mouth.
When the city announced a lockdown on Jan 23, he and his friends thought it might last only for a few days or a week. They did not expect the situation to get worse.

About three months later, his home country, Eritrea, announced a nationwide lockdown.
Locking down a city must be a very hard choice, but it is the most effective one,
Negash said.
Chinese people always say shede, or 'give and take', one cannot take without giving. In this way, China has managed to curb the epidemic and even helped other countries later. I am personally very appreciative of China's approach.
When Negash and other overseas students were asked to stay in their dormitory, the university staff helped them access online platforms for shopping, studying and sharing information, he said.

Negash said he prayed for China every day. He exercised, read books, watched movies, listened to music and played the guitar. He said he also called his family in Africa every day to let them know he was safe and well in Wuhan. He also did his best to help his friends around him.

One month later, while talking to his friends, Negash realized he needed to do something special to make a record of the time and the people affected. They thought people would one day forget what happened, so they wanted to make a record.
Many people lost their family members and friends. I regard Wuhan as my second hometown. Personally, I can feel the pain,
he said.

Negash first came to Wuhan in 2011 and obtained a master's degree in finance and economics two years later. He went home and worked as a teacher in a business school. In 2017, he decided to return to Wuhan and learn more.
I have special feelings toward this city. Every time I left, I soon began to miss it. I eat Chinese food every day, and my favorite is reganmian, hot dry noodles,
he said.

Negash referred to the city's slogan,
Wuhan, different every day!,
saying it is a dynamic city that is changing for the better every day.

What happened in the city deeply touched Negash and his friends, he said. What impressed him the most was that medical workers from around the country came to support Wuhan. Even newlyweds left their hometowns and families to fight the novel coronavirus with no hesitation, he said.

When Negash proposed the book, many of his friends wanted to contribute, including a doctoral candidate from Fiji, a teacher from South Africa, an undergraduate student from Samoa and a doctoral candidate from Algeria.

Nine of them decided to write eight stories.
In fact, some of us are not in Wuhan but stranded in Southeast Asia while traveling there or back in their motherland. However, as witnesses or observers, we all have different perspectives on the real-life conditions of ordinary people during the fight against the epidemic,
Negash said.
We are still collecting material as the pandemic is still not over. Our friends from other countries are sharing their stories too. People from different countries are sharing same stories. We will continue to write and record,
he said.

Zmeselo
Senior Member+
Posts: 33606
Joined: 30 Jul 2010, 20:43

Re: Foreign student to write book on Wuhan's fight against COVID-19

Post by Zmeselo » 18 May 2020, 03:01







Neil Ferguson's Imperial model could be the most devastating software mistake of all time

The boss of a top software firm asks why the Government failed to get a second opinion before accepting Imperial College's Covid modelling.... https://www.telegraph.co.uk/technology/ ... e-mistake/

Zmeselo
Senior Member+
Posts: 33606
Joined: 30 Jul 2010, 20:43

Re: Foreign student to write book on Wuhan's fight against COVID-19

Post by Zmeselo » 18 May 2020, 06:59


ንህዝብኻ ኣብ ዝሓሸ ኣቀሚጥካ ተወፋይነት ብተግባር!
ካብ ገድሊ ስጋብ ሕጂ ብዛዕባ ሂወቶም ከይሓሰቡ ኣብ ስራሕ። ዕድመን ጥዕናን ይሃብኩም።
(Fiseha Weldemichael: @fiseha20)

___________________




Eritrea's senior delegation met with First Vice President of the Sovereign Council, Mohammed Hamdan Deglo, and Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdock in Khartoum yesterday and today. The discussions focussed on bilateral ties and regional cooperation.
(Yemane G. Meskel: @hawelti)
Last edited by Zmeselo on 18 May 2020, 10:45, edited 2 times in total.

Zmeselo
Senior Member+
Posts: 33606
Joined: 30 Jul 2010, 20:43

Re: Foreign student to write book on Wuhan's fight against COVID-19

Post by Zmeselo » 18 May 2020, 07:11



GLOBAL HEALTH

Only Six Nations Have Evaluated Readiness for Global Pandemic


The 2003 funeral of a doctor who died of SARS infection in Hong Kong during the pandemic. Only six countries have taken steps to evaluate their abilities to withstand a global pandemic, according to a report sponsored by the World Bank.Credit...Bobby Yip/Reuters

By Donald G. McNeil Jr.

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/07/31/heal ... dness.html

July 31, 2017

Of the world’s countries, only six — three rich ones and three poor ones — have taken the steps they should have to evaluate their ability to withstand a global pandemic, according to a recent report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/ ... onal-level sponsored by the World Bank.

Just three wealthy countries — Finland, Saudi Arabia and the United States — have gone through two external evaluations of their readiness to face pandemics, one for human diseases and one for animal outbreaks, the study found.

As of last April, only three poor countries — Eritrea, Pakistan and Tanzania — had undergone both evaluations and had described how they planned to find the money to rectify their weaknesses.

The unusually concise and crisp report, “From Panic and Neglect to Investing in Health Security,” was written by experts from the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund, the African and Asian development banks, and finance officials from various governments.

Under Dr. Jim Yong Kim, its current president, the World Bank has strongly advocated creating emergency funds to fight disease outbreaks. In 1987, Dr. Kim helped found Partners in Health, https://act.pih.org/page/content/malawi ... ooglegrant which provides medical care in Haiti and other poor countries and which fought Ebola in West Africa in 2014.

The external evaluations are done in cooperation with the World Health Organization and the World Organization for Animal Health, a Paris-based United Nations agency. (Even diseases that infect only animals can damage economies by curtailing meat exports, for example, or driving up domestic food prices.)

The annual number of disease outbreaks around the globe has more than tripled since 1980, and air travel spreads contagions across oceans far more often.

To convince countries that preparedness pays, the report included estimates of the economic damage various epidemics had done. For example, the viral pneumonia SARS — which ultimately killed only 774 people — shrank China’s gross domestic product by 0.5 percent in 2003.

The report also broke down costs on a per capita basis. A major flu pandemic, for example, would cost Afghanistan only $12 per citizen, but the United States $248.

The American government pays 60 percent of the $4 billion disbursed each year to stop pandemics; the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation alone is the third-biggest donor, covering 10 percent of the costs. Britain pays 13 percent. Canada, Japan, Australia, South Korea and Norway pay the rest.

Zmeselo
Senior Member+
Posts: 33606
Joined: 30 Jul 2010, 20:43

Re: Foreign student to write book on Wuhan's fight against COVID-19

Post by Zmeselo » 18 May 2020, 07:33



MN24 - Milan, eyes on the new Ibra: Alexander Isak

By: Mario Labate

https://www.milannews24.com/mn24-milan- ... nder-isak/

17 May 2020


© foto www.imagephotoagency.it

(Software translation)

Ibrahimovic's future seems to have been decided that he will leave Milan. The Rossoneri however point to his heir: Alexander Isak

After the words of Sinisa Mihajlovic https://www.milannews24.com/mihajlovic- ... dal-milan/, Zlatan Ibrahimovic's farewell to Milan has become increasingly concrete. The Serbian coach, in fact, confirmed how the Swede has now decided to leave the Rossoneri colors at the end of the current season. A farewell certainly not painless for il Diavolo, which next year in the new Rangnick project will have to find a player who can replace him.

Alexander Isak: Ibrahimovic's heir

According to what was collected by the editorial staff of Milan News 24, Milan the heir of Ibra would have even identified him: he is Alexander Isak, born in 1999 from an Eritrean Swede family, currently working for Real Sociedad. Present in the ranking of the 60 best talents of his generation, Isak is 190 centimeters tall and equipped with an excellent individual technique that recalls, in potential, that of the much more famous Ibrahimovic.

Discovered from Borussia

Raised in the AIK youth football team, Isak was first discovered by Borussia Dortmund who, after paying him around 1.8 million in January 2017, shortly afterwards turned him on loan to Willem II in Eredivisie. At just 18, Isak's first vintage in the Netherlands was undoubtedly extraordinary as evidenced by the 14 goals and 7 assists scored in just 18 appearances.

The experience in Spain

Back from the Netherlands, however, Dortmund decided not to bet on him and decided to sell him outright to Real Socidedad for just 6.5 million. Even in Spain the streak of Alexander Isak remains formidable: 14 goals and 3 assists in the 34 appearances overall between the Liga and the King's Cup, so as to earn the attention of his idol Zlatan Ibrahimovic who will see him on more than one occasion during the course of his 11 appearances with the Swedish national team.

Milan's interest

Tall, strong and with a great sense of goal, Alexander Isak respects all the stakes set by Elliott and that, starting this summer, Ralf Rangnick will have to meticulously follow https://www.milannews24.com/mn24-rangni ... ovo-staff/ to build Milan's future technical project. The most difficult obstacle, however, remains the cost of the tag currently set at around 30 million euros (rescission clause at 70) but considering the low amount spent (6.5 million) by Sociedad to withdraw it from Dortmund, aiming for a downward negotiation which will equally generate a huge capital gain does not seem so impossible. For an Ibra that leaves, therefore, there could be another that arrives: Alexander Isak.
Last edited by Zmeselo on 18 May 2020, 10:47, edited 2 times in total.

Zmeselo
Senior Member+
Posts: 33606
Joined: 30 Jul 2010, 20:43

Re: Foreign student to write book on Wuhan's fight against COVID-19

Post by Zmeselo » 18 May 2020, 10:41







ሰኑይ 18 ግንቦት ሰፊሕ ሸፈነ ዘለዎ ዝናብ ኣብ ኣስመራን ከባቢኣን፡ ጥሉል ክራማት #EritreaShinesAt29 #HappyEritreanIndependenceMonth
Credit: Mezekr Tarik





ካብ ህንጻ ዓንበርበብ ሼር ካምፓኒ ከባቢ ማይ ጥምቅት ክሳብ መንገዲ መናሃርያ ዝነበረ ኣዝዩ ዘይጥጡሕ ጽርግያ፡ ብዘመናዊ ኣገባብ ምስናይ ምሕዳስ መስመር ረሳሕን ጽርዩን ማይ መተሓላለፉ፡ ምሉእ ብምሉእ ተጸጊኑ።
Credit: Sultan Grande MO

Zmeselo
Senior Member+
Posts: 33606
Joined: 30 Jul 2010, 20:43

Re: Foreign student to write book on Wuhan's fight against COVID-19

Post by Zmeselo » 18 May 2020, 13:48







Post Reply