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ITALY INAUGURATES NEW GENOA BRIDGE TWO YEARS AFTER DEADLY COLLAPSE

France 24 3 August 2020 -News Wires


© Massimo Pinca, REUTERS


Italy inaugurates a sleek new bridge in Genoa on Monday, though relatives of the 43 people killed when the old viaduct collapsed say the pomp and ceremony risk overshadowing the tragedy.

Jets trailing the colours of the Italian flag will roar overhead as the national anthem plays, almost two years to the day the Morandi highway gave way during heavy rain, hurling dozens of cars and several trucks onto railway tracks below.

President Sergio Mattarella will be the first to officially cross the new bridge, designed by famed Italian architect Renzo Piano, who gave it a curved, gleaming underbelly evoking the hull of a ship in tribute to Genoa's maritime history.

The names of the victims will be read aloud — though many of their loved ones will not be present.

"We won't be at the inauguration, we don't want the tragedy to be transformed into a carnival," said Egle Possetti, whose sister died in the August 14, 2018 disaster along with her husband and their two children.

"You can have this sort of big party if you knock down the bridge because it's old, you build a new one, and no one's died."

The Morandi bridge had been riddled with structural problems for decades, leading to expensive maintenance, and its collapse threw the spotlight on Italy's creaking infrastructure.

The tragedy also ended the longstanding concession of highway maintenance by a company majority-owned by the powerful Benetton family.

The new high-tech structure will have four maintenance robots running along its length to spot weathering or erosion, as well as a special dehumidification system to limit corrosion.

 It is expected to open to traffic on Tuesday or Wednesday.

'An atrocious sight'

Architect Piano, a Genoa native whose building designs include the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris and The Shard in London, has described his new creation as a "child born of tragedy".

"It was horrific. I remember the sounds, the smells, terrible things," said Silvano Ruffoni, one of the first paramedics on the scene when, at just after 11:30 am, some 250 metres (820 feet) of the vast concrete structure crumbled into the void.

"We were met by such an atrocious sight. The bridge was gone. We were thunderstruck," he said in an interview with the local daily Il Secolo XIX last week.

The new viaduct, he said, was "a sign of rebirth".

But Possetti, who is a spokeswoman for a victims' relatives group, said she would "never cross that bridge".

"How could you be there and not think of everything that happened, and that destroyed your family," she told AFP.

The Morandi was hailed a marvel of engineering when it opened in 1967, but an investigation into the disaster found it was neglected.

Autostrade, which runs almost half of Italy's motorway network, has been accused of failing to maintain it properly, amid allegations of falsified safety reports and in-house pressure to slash maintenance costs.

Atlantia, the parent group of Autostrade, is controlled by the wealthy Benetton family, which finally bowed to pressure last month to relinquish control of its besmirched toll-road operator, which will be nationalised.

Autostrade is under investigation, along with several transport ministry officials, for culpable homicide.

The preliminary probe is due to wind up in October, before a trial begins early next year, Possetti said.

(AFP)

CYPRUS DOWNGRADES GREECE TO CORONAVIRUS CATEGORY B COUNTRY - Updated for those currently in Greece

in-cyprus 3 August 2020 - by Annie Charalambous



As from Thursday, Greece will be included in category B of countries whose travellers need to provide negative coronavirus tests upon arrival to Cyprus.

The downgrade from category A was essential after several people who arrived from Greek destinations tested positive to coronavirus, the Health Ministry announced late on Sunday.

The negative coronavirus test certificate should not be older than 72 hours.

On Monday, it was officially announced that people who are already in Greece and will return after Thursday will not have to pay for the coronavirus tests they need to take upon their arrival.

This followed strong reaction by people who have already travelled to Greece.

The Health Ministry had already made clear that random tests at airports on passengers arriving from Greece will also increase between Monday and Thursday.

Traditionally, Greek islands are Cypriots’ favourite summer holiday destination.

Both countries kept a lid on a first wave of infections by imposing blanket lockdowns from mid-March to May, but rates have been creeping up after a lull from late May to late July.

On Saturday Greece reported its highest single-day spike in weeks, of 110 new cases, while Cyprus reported 25 new cases on Friday, the first time it has been in double digits in weeks.

Cyprus has a three-tier risk system in grouping countries where travel is either unrestricted, allowed with a PCR test, or permitted with a PCR test and compulsory 14 day quarantine. Greece has now moved to the ‘B’ category from the ‘A’ category. The list is regularly updated.

 

 

95 OCTANE PETROL AND DIESEL PRICES UP IN JULY

in-cyprus 3 August - by Annie Charalambous



The price of 95 octane petrol and of diesel in Cyprus was on the rise in the month of July, the Cyprus Consumers Association said on Monday.

Specifically, there was an increase in petrol by 1.0 cents, and in diesel by 2.6 cents, it added.

The average retail price for petrol 95 in the EU was 1.271 euro a litre and in Cyprus 1.070 euro.

Diesel averaged 1.137 euro a litre in the EU and 1.087 in Cyprus. Heating fuel cost 0.577 euro in the EU and 0.630 in Cyprus.


PARALYMPICS - SPECIFIC COVID-19 MEASURES MAY BE NEEDED FOR TOKYO, ORGANISERS SAY

Reuters 3 August 2020


© Reuters/ISSEI KATO FILE PHOTO: The Ariake Arena is lit up with the Olympic symbol colors in Tokyo

By Jack Tarrant

TOKYO (Reuters) - The Tokyo Paralympics may require specific COVID-19 measures to help keep athletes safe as they move between venues, organisers said on Monday.

The 2020 Summer Olympics and Paralympics have been pushed back to next year because of the novel coronavirus pandemic.

Paralympics organisers said on Monday the schedule would remain largely the same for next year. The opening ceremony will take place on Aug. 24 and the Games will feature 539 events at 22 different venues.

Games Director Hidemasa Nakamura said additional measures against the virus may be needed during the Paralympics because of the extra time required to move para-athletes between venues.

"There might be some specific measures that are needed depending on what type of sport or competition it is," he said.

"We are having discussions with IFs (International Federations) and the IPC (International Paralympic Committee) and others to provide a safe and secure environment."

Nakamura added changes to the schedule may be necessary.

Japanese para-taekwondo athlete Mitsuya Tanaka, who joined the news conference remotely, hoped the Games could be a chance to show the world that coronavirus can be defeated.

"I think showing ourselves making the effort and taking on the challenge with courage, this is something we can contribute to the world," said Tanaka.

"Once COVID-19 settles, it will be a good opportunity for us to show we have won over COVID-19. This is something I can show as a para-athlete."

(Editing by Peter Rutherford)

FORMER POPE BENEDICT IS SERIOUSLY ILL

Cyprus Mail 3 August 2020 - by Reuters News Service

FILE PHOTO: Pope Benedict XVI (R) poses with Tanzania's President Benjamin William Mkapa during an official meeting at the Vatican October 1, 2005. REUTERS/Max Rossi/File Photo

Former Pope Benedict XVI is seriously ill after returning to the Vatican from a visit to Germany, German newspaper Passauer Neue Presse reported on Monday, citing his biographer.

Benedict, aged 93, has become very frail and his voice is barely audible, author Peter Seewald told the daily.

But at a meeting with Seewald on Saturday, German-born Benedict appeared optimistic, and said he might pick up writing again if he regains his strength, the report said, adding he was suffering from shingles.

Benedict came to his native Bavaria in June to pay his ailing brother Georg Ratzinger a final visit. Ratzinger, aged 96, died shortly afterwards.

It was Benedict’s first trip outside Italy since 2013, the year he resigned the papacy.


VIETNAM VIRUS OUTBREAK HITS FACTORIES, AUSTRALIAN STATE CLOSES LARGE PARTS OF ECONOMY

Cyprus Mail 3 August 2020 - Reuters News Service

A woman wearing a protective mask sells vegetables during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak in Hoi An tourism town, Vietnam July 31, 2020. Paul Mooney/Handout via REUTERS. NO RESALES NO ARCHIVES. THIS IMAGE HAS BEEN SUPPLIED BY A THIRD PARTY.

A novel coronavirus outbreak that began in the Vietnamese city of Danang more than a week ago has spread to at least four city factories with a combined workforce of about 3,700, state media reported on Monday.

Four cases were found at the plants in different industrial parks in the central city which collectively employ 77,000 people, the Lao Dong newspaper said.

Vietnam, praised widely for its decisive measures to combat the coronavirus since it first appeared in late January, is battling new clusters of infection having gone more than three months without detecting any domestic transmission.

Authorities on Monday reported one new case linked to Danang, a tourism hot spot where a case was detected on July 24, Vietnam’s first domestically transmitted case in 100 days.

The source of the new outbreak is unclear but it has spread to at least 10 different places, including the capital, Hanoi, and the business hub of Ho Chi Minh City, infecting 174 people and killing six.

Twenty-three percent of the latest infections are asymptomatic, the government said in a statement.

The country of 96 million has confirmed at least 621 infections, with six deaths.

Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc said on Monday early August was a “decisive time” to contain the new outbreak, which he said could have a more “critical impact” than previous waves of infection.

Vietnam has carried out 52,000 tests for the coronavirus in the past seven days, according to a Reuters analysis of official data.

The government said on Saturday it planned to test Danang’s entire population of 1.1 million people, part of “unprecedented measures” to fight the outbreak. The city imposed a lockdown last week, closing entertainment venues and banning movement in and out of the city.

Authorities said on Sunday that the strain of virus detected in Danang was a more contagious one, and that each infected person could infect 5 to 6 people, compared with 1.8-2.2 for infections earlier in the year.

Australia’s second most populous state will close retail shops, limit construction projects and curtail manufacturing around the city of Melbourne in order to slow the spread of coronavirus, the state premier said on Monday.

Victoria state said on Sunday it would impose a nightly curfew and tighten restrictions on people’s movement.

State Premier Daniel Andrews, however, said large industries would have to close for the next six weeks. Victoria has recorded several hundred new COVID-19 infections each day for the last few weeks.


CYPRUS GETS EBRD AND EU FINANCING FOR NATURAL GAS

Cyprus Mail 3 August 2020 - by Gina Agapiou

The gas terminal will be built at Vasilikos

Cyprus’s dependency on oil for energy will be reduced after a €374 million landmark project introduces natural gas to the country for the first time.

Cyprus will benefit from cleaner air and reduced energy costs thanks to the introduction of natural gas to the country, with a project jointly financed by the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD), the European Investment Bank (EIB) and the European Union (EU).

The EBRD is providing a €80 million loan to the Natural Gas Infrastructure Company of Cyprus (ETYFA) for the acquisition of a floating storage and regasification unit (FSRU) and the development of related infrastructure. The FSRU will be permanently anchored about 1.3 km off the coast of Limassol in Vasilikos Bay and will connect directly to the adjacent Vasilikos power station, the largest power plant in Cyprus.

The EU is extending a €101 million grant for the project under the Connecting Europe Facility. The remaining project costs will be funded by a €150 million loan from the EIB and a €43 million equity contribution from the Electricity Authority of Cyprus (EAC).

ETYFA is jointly owned by the Natural Gas Public Company (DEFA) of Cyprus and EAC, both state-owned entities.

“After a number of years of hard work, we managed to lay the foundations for developing this project of major importance for the energy future of Cyprus” Chairman of DEFA and ETYFA Symeon Kassianides said on Friday.

Currently, about 90 per cent of the island’s electricity supply relies on the importation of petroleum products and its energy system is isolated, without interconnections for electricity or gas. The new investment will allow Cyprus to replace expensive and polluting heavy fuel oil with cleaner natural gas.

The project is expected to reduce the country’s CO2 emissions by 10 per cent and lead to a substantial reduction in local air emissions (sulphur dioxide, particulate matter and nitrogen oxides). In the longer term, the flexible gas-fired Vasilikos power plant will play a key backup role as Cyprus moves increasingly to wind and solar power as part of an accelerating green transition in the EU.

“I would like to thank the European authorities and the EBRD for enabling us to come closer to the realisation of a national vision that will allow Cyprus to make the transition to a new energy era” added Kassianides.

“This is a milestone project for Cyprus and we are proud to support it. The project will be a major step forward in Cyprus’s decarbonisation trajectory. It will reduce both global and local pollution without compromising the island’s long-term transition to a low-carbon energy sector” EBRD Head of Energy for Europe, the Middle East and Africa, Harry Boyd-Carpenter, said.

The remaining project costs will be funded by a €150 million loan from the EIB and a €43 million equity contribution from the Electricity Authority of Cyprus (EAC).


CORONAVIRUS - FIVE NEW CASES IN THE NORTH

Cyprus Mail 3 August 2020 - by Annette Chrysostomou



Five new cases of the coronavirus were detected in the north on Sunday, authorities announced in the evening.

According to the announcement, 1,531 people were tested in 24 hours, and of these five tested positive.

They had all been in contact with other confirmed case and are already in quarantine.

The total number of cases in the north is 151 while four people have lost their lives.


NEW DIALYSIS UNIT TO BE BUILT AT PAPHOS HOSPITAL

Cyprus Mail 3 August 2020 - by Annette Chrysostomou



Building work on a new dialysis unit at Paphos general hospital will start at the end of this year and is expected to be completed within 30 months, head of the nephrology department Lakis Gioukas said on Monday.

The construction of the unit was the result of a meeting held at Paphos hospital attended by Gioukas, the director of the hospital Spyros Georgiou and representatives of state health services Okypy, the health ministry and the department of public works.

Tenders are expected to be completed by the end of October, Gioukas explained, adding it is going to be a modern European-standard unit for renal patients.

It will be constructed on an area of about 860 metres and will have 27 hemodialysis stations, a peritoneal dialysis ward, a ward for minor surgeries and outpatient facilities.

It will be housed in a building next to the ICU.

There has been great interest by private constructors and Health Minister Constantinos Ioannou for the project, the head of the nephrology department said.

For years, there have been calls for a new dialysis unit at the state hospital as there has been an urgent need for more dialysis machines to keep up with demand.

Dialysis patients have held numerous protests, complaining about overcrowding at the existing unit. They warned there are health and safety risks, the beds are too close to each other and they are catching germs and diseases from each other.


TIKTOK OWNERS WILL RELOCATE TO LONDON FROM BEIJING

in-cyprus 3 August 2020 - by Annie Charalambous



TikTok owner ByteDance will move its headquarters to London from Beijing under a deal approved by British ministers, The Sun newspaper reported.

ByteDance’s founders are to announce their intention to set up shop in London soon, the newspaper said, adding that the move was likely to upset U.S. President Donald Trump who has considered banning TikTok in the United States.

It was not immediately possible to reach TikTok for comment.

Microsoft Corp said on Sunday that it would continue discussions to acquire popular short-video app TikTok from Chinese internet giant ByteDance, and that it was aiming to conclude the negotiations by Sept. 15.

(Reuters)