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WALES ACCUSES UK GOVERNMENT OF ATTACKING DEMOCRACY

 Cyprus Mail 9 September 2020 - Reuters News Service



Wales said the British government’s internal market bill, which breaks international law over Brexit, will sacrifice the union of the United Kingdom by stealing powers from the devolved administrations of Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland.

“Let me be clear – the UK government plans to sacrifice the future of the union by stealing powers from devolved administrations,” Jeremy Miles, Wales’ counsel general and minister for European transition, said of the bill which will be published on Wednesday.

“This bill is an attack on democracy and an affront to the people of Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland, who have voted in favour of devolution on numerous occasions.”


CORONAVIRUS - NORTH ANNOUNCES 38 NEW CASES, CLOSES SCHOOLS UNTIL OCTOBER 1

 Cyprus Mail 9 September 2020 - by Evie Andreou


The north on Tuesday announced 38 new coronavirus cases, the highest daily number so far, as it postponed the opening of schools until October 1 and said they were closing casinos and night clubs until the same date.

Of the 38 new cases 15 are local, 19 are contacts of people who already tested positive and are in quarantine, and the rest are people who arrived from abroad.

This brings the total of cases to 475.

Following the increased numbers in coronavirus cases recorded in the north in recent days, new measures were announced after a ‘cabinet’ meeting.

According to reports in the north, all schools will open on October 1. Primary education pupils in first and second grade who went back to school on Monday will be the only ones to continue going to classes. Private teaching institutes, study centres and nurseries will also remain open.

Casinos, night clubs, discos and other music and dancing places will too close until October 1.

Weddings are being postponed until after October 1, and election rallies and mass meetings are cancelled until after that date.

The new measures also concern the closure of playgrounds. Sports events will be held without spectators until October 1 but there no restrictions for individual sports.

It was also announced that people who need to quarantine will bear the cost themselves, expect for university students and people who travel abroad for health reasons.

Private sector employees who belong to vulnerable groups and need to stay at home will receive an allowance just as people working in the public sector.

In the meantime, parents of children going to the first and second grades have been reluctant to send them to school. According to Turkish Cypriot media, several schools saw only up to half of the expected numbers of pupils arriving for classes.


POLICE LOOKING FOR PALESTINIAN FOR HOME BURGLARIES

 in-cyprus 9 September 2020 - by Annie Charalambous

Police are looking for Abudahroul Ramsi H.S., aged 44, from Palestine, in connection with the burglary of two homes, possession of break-in tools and cause of malicious damage.

Police also said on Wednesday that the suspect (photos) is of average build with short dark hair and brown eyes.

Anyone with information is urged to contact Nicosia CID on 22-802222 or the closest police station or the citizens’ hot line on 1460.



PERSON SOUGHT IN CONNECTION WITH SHOPLIFTING AND THEFT

8/9/20

As part of an investigation into cases of shoplifting and theft from cash registers investigated by the Famagusta Crime Detection Department, photographs of a suspected person (tattooed on his right hand) are released, obtained by CCTV.

Anyone who knows anything that can help locate them is kindly requested to contact Famagusta POLICE at 23-803039 or the Citizen's Contact Line at 1460 or the nearest Police Station.






PAUSE IN ASTRAZENECA VACCINE TRIAL NOT NECESSARILY A SETBACK, SAYS HANCOCK

in-cyprus 9 September 2020 - by Annie Charalambous


 

Britain’s Health Secretary Matt Hancock said on Wednesday that AstraZeneca’s decision to pause its coronavirus vaccine trials was a challenge but would not necessarily set back efforts to develop a vaccine.

AstraZeneca Plc said it had paused global trials, including large late-stage trials, of its experimental coronavirus vaccine due to an unexplained illness in a study participant.

“It is obviously a challenge to this particular vaccine trial,” Hancock said on Sky News when asked about the pause in the trial. “It’s not actually the first time this has happened to the Oxford vaccine.”

Asked whether it would set back the vaccine development process, he said: “Not necessarily, it depends on what they find when they do the investigation.” (Reuters)

THOUSANDS FLEE AS FIRE RIPS THROUGH OVERCROWDED GREEK REFUGEE CAMP IN LESBOS

 in-cyprus 9 September 2020 - by Annie Charalambous



Thousands of migrants fled fires on Wednesday that tore through a camp under coronavirus lockdown on Greece‘s island of Lesbos, while the prime minister called an emergency meeting with ministers though there were no immediate reports of casualties.

The fire broke out at the overcrowded migrant camp of Moria just after midnight Tuesday, fire brigade officials said.

By early morning, most of Moria was reduced to a smouldering mangled mass of burnt containers and tents, with a few people picking over the debris for their personal possessions, TV images showed.

There were no reports of injuries or fatalities, while the cause of the blaze which burned tents and containers was not immediately clear.

Moria was “probably totally destroyed”, Migration Ministry official Manos Logothetis told the state-run Athens News Agency.

Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis called a crisis meeting for early Wednesday.

Initial reports suggested fires broke out at different locations in the sprawling camp after authorities tried to isolate a number of individuals who tested positive for COVID-19.

“The fire is still raging, the camp has been evacuated. All these people are on the national road towards Mytilini. There are police out who are not letting them through. These people are sleeping left and right in the fields,” said Panagiotis Deligiannis, a witness from Moria.

At least 25 firemen with 10 engines, aided by police, battled the flames both inside and outside the facility, the fire brigade said, adding that firemen were pushed back by migrants during their efforts.

People were seen leaving the camp, carrying their luggage, Reuters witnesses said.

“The situation was out of control,” policeman Argyris Syvris told Open TV, adding that police were forced to release about 200 persons detained in a separate quarter of the camp who were to be repatriated to their countries.

The Moria facility, which hosts more than 12,000 people – more than four times its stated capacity – has been frequently criticised by aid groups for poor living conditions.

The facility was placed under quarantine last week after authorities confirmed that an asylum-seeker had tested positive for the novel coronavirus. Confirmed infections have risen to 35 since then.

Lesbos, which lies just off the Turkish coast, was on the front line of a massive movement of refugees and migrants to Europe in 2015-2016. Due to the pandemic, since March 1, all migrants reaching the island have been quarantined away from the camps.

In the Moria camp, aid groups have warned that social distancing and basic hygiene measures are impossible to implement due to the living conditions.

(Reuters)

PUBLIC POOL LEGISLATIVE AMENDMENT STILL PENDING AFTER WHOLE 10 YEARS

 in-cyprus 9 September 2020 - by Maria Bitar



A legislative amendment on public swimming pools is finally coming under discussion before Parliament 10 years after initial debate on the issue, Philenews reported on Wednesday.

Last year, when health authorities had asked to be briefed on where the process stood they were told, among other, that some documents relevant to the issue were lost.

The Health Service have sent a reminder to the Ministry of Interior and informed MPs as well that “the issue is being examined by the Ministry without, however, any development being observed, for quite a long time”.

The current Legislation for public swimming pools dates back to 1992, while relevant regulations date back to 1996, the Service added.

The incumbent legislation is described as “anachronistic” and includes many distortions, which create serious problems not only for officials called upon to implement it, but also for citizens.

Health Services informed Parliament that the first meeting to discuss the issue took place on June 3, 2010 at the Ministry of Interior and an ad hoc committee was then set up to handle the whole issue.

The ad hoc committee had a meeting with then Minister of Interior Neoclis Sylikiotis during which it was decided that new legislation that reflects today’s reality should be promoted.

The amendments proposed in essence were to categorise the pools depending on the housing units they serve and their use, as well as to modify some technical regulations that concern the quality and characteristics of water, the way of checking its quality, etc.

Some steps alongside a first draft of the amended legislation were completed and moved along and then the process completely stalled from 2017 onward.

POLICE HAND OUT 22 FINES FOR BREACH OF CORONAVIRUS RESTRICTIONS

 in-cyprus 9 September 2020 - by Annie Charalambous



Police reported 16 people and 6 premises all across Cyprus over the last 24 hours for violations of measures in place to contain the Covid-19 pandemic. They had carried out a total of 548 checks.

A police spokesperson told CNA that in Nicosia district out of 79 checks 7 people and 5 premises were reported, in Limassol district out of 160 checks 3 persons were reported and in Larnaca district out of 183 checks 2 people were reported.

In addition, in Pafos district out of 92 checks 1 shop and 1 person were reported, in Famagusta district out of 54 checks 3 people were reported while in the area of Morphou out of 80 checks no reports were made.

Furthermore, Port and Marine police carried out 91 checks with no reports made.

Measures in place to contain the COVID-19 pandemic in Cyprus make it mandatory for employees of businesses who come in contact with the public or who prepare food and beverages to wear protective masks.

All citizens are required to wear protective masks when shopping indoors.

CYPRUS, GREECE, ISRAEL SIGN TRILATERAL MILITARY COOPERATION PROGRAM

 in-cyrus 9 September 2020 - by Annie Charalambous



Cyprus, Greece and Israel have signed a program of trilateral military cooperation for the year 2021.

A statement issued late on Tuesday by the Hellenic National Defence General Staff also said that the trilateral military cooperation program is expected to further upgrade the military cooperation of the Armed Forces of Greece, Cyprus, and Israel, through joint military exercises and operational activities.

A meeting of delegations of the three states at the Greek Ministry of National Defence preceded the signing of the cooperation program, it added.

CORONAVIRUS HAS AN EFFECT EVEN ON OCTOBER 1 INDEPENDENCE PARADE

in-cyprus 9 September 2020 - by Annie Charalambous



 

The coronavirus pandemic changes everything including the way the Mediterranean island’s October 1 independence day military parade should take place, Philenews reported on Wednesday.

The health protocols to be put in place despite the fact the popular parade takes place outdoors will come under review at a Defence Ministry meeting on Friday.

Health authorities do not exclude the possibility of the annual parade to be postponed but the Defence Ministry seems to be against this.

“The parade takes place outdoors but crowds gather and it is difficult to maintain social distancing rules but the Ministry really wants it to take place,” an insider said.

“The question is under what conditions this should be done, along with the exact number of attendees to be allowed. Plus, it could be shorter in duration than in previous years,” added the insider.

The parade is held on Iosif HadjiIosif Avenue in Strovolos, Nicosia.