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JULY RECORDS HIGHEST AVERAGE DAILY MAXIMUM TEMPERATURES SINCE 1983

in-cyprus 3 August 2020 - by Maria Bitar



In July 2020 temperatures reached or even exceeded 40°C.

According to a press release by the Press and Information Office, July was the month with the highest average daily maximum temperatures recorded since 1983.

The average daily maximum temperature in July this year was 39.7 °C.

In July the thermometer reached or exceeded 40°C, more times than any other July from 1983 onwards, while during this month most warnings were issued for high temperatures.

Source: CNA

CORONAVIRUS - CHARGES BEING CONSIDERED AGAINST SPREADER FROM THE US

Cyprus Mail 3 August 2020 - by Evie Andreou



A woman who arrived from the US but failed to self-isolate infecting 14 other people so far is being investigated for possible offences, Justice Minister Emily Yiolitis said on Monday.

Responding to a question on Twitter about the conduct of the woman, the minister said she has been placed in self-isolation and is under supervision.

“A probe is underway through testimonies and the contact tracing process to see if charges can be substantiated against her, and if yes, which ones,” Yiolitis said on Twitter.

“Rest assured that where responsibilities arise on such a serious matter, they will be attributed,” she said.

Yiolitis also said she was waiting for a report from the health ministry about tracing her contacts so she can look into whether a case can be substantiated against her.

She recalled that people found violating the self-isolation decree can be fined €300 or jailed for a year and/or fined up to €50,000.

Six of the 26 new cases announced on Sunday were contacts of the woman.

According to the health ministry, the woman violated her quarantine, “visited various areas, organised and attended a party and a dinner.”

So far, the cluster she started numbers 14 people, in Limassol and also reportedly in Larnaca. Among them is a 13-year-old girl who is being treated at the Makarios children’s hospital, reports said.

Yiolitis also announced on Monday that the police will be conducting intensive random spot checks all over Cyprus to confirm that people from category C countries and close contacts of confirmed patients are indeed self-isolating at the accommodation address they provided upon entry to the country.


COMING FROM UK AND NEED COVID TEST?


The following may assist those who are coming to Cyprus from the UK and need a Covid test.

Cypriot nationals and permanent residents of Cyprus can take a Covid test on arrival at Larnaca or Paphos, although they will have to pay for the service.


1  NHS test is acceptable.  See below and also see article in Cyprus Mail: https://cyprus-mail.com/2020/07/31/coronavirus-cyprus-will-accept-uk-nhs-negative-tests-with-specific-details/



3  UK Government site has useful information:  https://www.gov.uk/foreign-travel-advice/cyprus/entry-requirements

5  Internet searching of 'Covid test near me' may bring up possible sites for local and private testing facilities, although cost and quality of service may vary.


And don't forget you will need to complete the Cyprus flight pass:  https://cyprusflightpass.gov.cy/

STATE TO SUBSIDISE MORE WORK-SUSPENDED HOTEL EMPLOYEES

in-cyprus 3 August 2020 - by Maria Bitar



The government has decided to increase the minimum amount hotel employees are entitled to in unemployment benefits from €360 to €500 from July onward, and this gives those who have exhausted them a breathing space.

This latest decision affects thousands of employees, especially in the area of Famagusta, who were not participating in Ministry of Labour special schemes, subsidising 60% of salaries.

An employer is now obliged to include them in the suspension work scheme, so that they can get unemployment benefits again in November and not be left penniless in winter, according to Philenews.

Apart from tourism, another important sector that has taken a hit because of the anti- coronavirus measures is that of agriculture – a sector of primary importance for Famagusta region’s villages.

According to Liopetri mayor, Kyriakos Trisokkas, 80-90% of the approximately seven thousand inhabitants of the village depend on agriculture and tourism. And this means that both sectors are already suffering, with the situation getting worse and worse.

Georgios Ttakas, Sotira’s mayor, told Philenews that it is questionable as to how much public finances can withstand.

For now, he added, it seems that people are holding up under the financial strain due to the pandemic but there are messages coming in already that show this will not go on indefinitely as many households are running out of the funds to support themselves.

SOUVLA LUNCH - Kamares Club - 6 August



SOUVLA LUNCH
Kamares Club
Thursday 6 August 1230-1500

€10pp - must be pre-ordered at Reception or on 26 880576 by Wednesday 5 August.

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.