Botswana President Isolating After Testing Positive for Coronavirus

Officials in Botswana on Monday announced President Mokgweetsi Masisi is isolating at his official residence after testing positive for the coronavirus.

Botswana government spokesperson John Dipowe said Masisi received the result after routine testing.

“Members of the public are assured that his excellency the president does not have any symptoms and will continue to receive close medical monitoring by his medical doctors,” Dipowe said. “The self-isolation is a precautionary measure in accordance with Botswana’s COVID-19 health protocols.”

This is the first time Masisi has tested positive, although he has gone into self-isolation as a precaution on several occasions.

In Masisi’s absence, Vice President Slumber Tsogwane will act as president.

Botswana, which along with South Africa was the first country to report detecting the new omicron variant of the coronavirus in November, has seen a sharp increase in COVID-19 cases in recent weeks.

Officials, however, say hospitalizations and deaths have remained low.

Source: Voice of America

Suspect Charged in Connection With Fire at South Africa Parliament

South African investigators say a fire that destroyed significant parts of Cape Town’s historic parliamentary precinct Sunday may have been caused by arson. Police say they have arrested a suspect who was found with stolen goods.

Brigadier Nomthandazo Mbombo, from the Directorate for Priority Crime Investigation in Cape Town also known as The Hawks, listed the charges against the suspect.

“A 49-year-old suspect was arrested and charged with house-breaking and theft, arson and will also be charged under the National Key Points Act. The suspect was allegedly caught with suspected stolen property after he gained entry to the parliament precinct unauthorized. He was spotted by members of the protection and security services when they noticed the building was on fire,” he said.

The National Key Points Act deals with safeguarding certain installations against sabotage or other hostile acts.

Natasha Mazzone, the chief whip of the main opposition Democratic Alliance party, spoke outside the parliament gates.

“We now know that the water sprinkler system was turned off so clearly it was designed for destruction of our parliament, as I look up, I could cry…And what gives me hope is that the statue of Madiba stands strong and was untouched by the fire. And he’s looking on as we rebuild and rebuild we will. And we will be a better parliament than we were before,” said Mazzone.

By Madiba, she was referring to the late South African President Nelson Mandela.

Officials, including Cape Town’s mayor, offered potential meeting sites for parliament.

“Mayor Geordin Hill-Lewis has offered his city council chambers as well as the City Hall which seats over a thousand. We also have the virtual platform which we’ve all become very used to but sit we will and hold the government to account we certainly will,” said Mazzone.

Public Works Minister Patricia De Lille addressed the media at a briefing at parliament Monday afternoon.

“The temperature inside the building is still plus/minus a hundred degrees Celsius, down from what it was yesterday at over 400 degrees Celsius but what they’ve done in the meantime is to use a drone that they are putting inside the building to assess the structure of the building until the temperatures can cool down,” she said.

She said a team of engineers has been brought on board and will focus on the repairs that need to be done, the cost and the time it will take for completion. De Lille said they’ve also brought in a fire expert who will determine exactly where the blaze started, together with a fire forensic team.

“We are being informed by the professional teams that we can expect a preliminary report by Friday morning about their preliminary findings and that report will then be shared also with Madam Speaker and the presiding officers, and we will then decide together what to do, once we’ve seen the full extent of the cost,” she said.

The suspect is due to appear in the Cape Town Magistrate’s Court on Tuesday.

Source: Voice of America

A City in the Clouds, New Year Resolutions & a Night Out in Town

The mist that covered the city a few days ago was quite some scenery. This was not Florence, Paris, New York, Barcelona and nor was it London, Rome or Venice. This is Asmara. The city covered with fog early in the morning looks something out of a Hollywood movie set. Clean boulevards, pantile roofs, palm trees and cafes dotting the sidewalk. It is December and there is a rather festive feel to the cool breeze of air.

Asmara’s famous building — the Fiat Tagliero — built as a garage in 1938 by architect Guiseppe Pettazi once pumped petrol beneath two vast concrete wings. Legend has it that the architect put removable pillars under the wings during construction to hold them steady. Upon completion he then used a gun to force his workers to knock them away. The wings to this very day are still standing still on a building that looks like an airplane than a petrol station. Visit the Tagliero at six in the evening as it turns a golden color against the deep blue evening sky and, possibly for the only time in your life, a garage will leave you breathless.

Imagine the city during Christmas and New Year’s. Those cafes along the sidewalks of Harnet Avenue, decorated by Christmas lights and red decorations, yellow taxi’s, red buses whizzing back and forth dropping off and picking up passengers while the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Rosary is playing Christmas carols over the speakers. Once again you find yourself asking whether you have seen this in a block buster Christmas Hollywood movie.

As in many parts of the world, Christmas and New Year are celebrated fervently here in Asmara. In the past, traditional Christmas was celebrated just like any other religious holiday in Eritrea. And if you now go to the villages on Christmas day you don’t see any difference in the manner of celebrating Christmas, Easter or even New Year.

Just to check I asked my very old aunt who has all her life lived in her home village:

“How do you celebrate Christmas in your village?”

“We slaughter a sheep or a goat, or a chicken.”

The old lady told me that Easter was more important than Christmas because “that’s when our savior rose from the dead!” For all she cared Christmas was just a feast like the rest. The priests get up at midnight and conduct mass and the villagers, mostly women, spend the night there, praying.

“Is that all?” I asked.

“What else do you expect,” she said.

“Do people fast before Christmas?”

“Of course they do, it is called Tsome Tahsas (the fast of December)” she replied.

“Okay, what do they preach in the church?” I asked going back to the previous topic.

The old lady told me that most of the mass is conducted in Ge’ez, our Latin, and it is meant to sooth the soul. But from time to time they preach in Tigrigna and tell the congregation to love one another and follow the straight path to salvation. But on Christmas night they narrate a special version of the nativity.

According to the old lady (probably she must have mixed various biblical stories), Jesus was born in the wilderness among the grazing cattle and when the enemy came to kill him Our Lady carried him on her back and disappeared.

“Where did they go?” I interrupted.

First she vanished from their sight. Then she wandered all over the world for seven years. When she reached Mount Sinai, Gabriel the Announcer and Michael the Archangel met her and accompanied her to her house keeping her safe….

Although not all together authentic, I like her story just the same because it was told with love and innocence. If I were to tell her the true story she would have liked it.

“How about Christmas trees?” I continued.

“We know nothing about Christmas trees,” she replied.

And then she went on to say that as regards using plants for decoration, the villagers covered the floor of their houses with setti (bulrushes). The first Christmas trees she saw was in Asmara and it didn’t impress her one bit.

I think Christmas trees arrived with the Italians and foreign missionaries who accompanied them. The Swede who brought Protestantism (in its European version) to Eritrea must have contributed a lot to the popularity of pine trees here, and then they miraculously found an Eritrea version of pine trees near Beleza and AdiNifas. This was an answer to a long prayer and Christmas tree was here to stay. However, I still find it strange why the Swedish missionaries didn’t introduce Santa Clause to their humble congregation. The laughing old man from the North Pole rarely appears in Eritrean Christmas.

New Year is celebrated almost the same here too as in other parts of the world. The slight difference is that New Year’s resolutions are not that much known in our culture. The old usually wish for a prosperous, healthy and peaceful year. Few, however, try their best to make New Year resolutions.

Enter Tesfai, a pathological drinker. Tesfai went to the clinic for a blood test around December. The doctor simply told him that after meticulous search, he could, to his profound dismay, find some traces of blood in his almost shriveled veins.

Tesfai was told he was going to expire in two years’ time if he continued to drink in the same manner. That was when he decided to make a New Year’s resolution to stop drinking. Tesfai is now gainfully employed and living his best life.

Another part of the city, another wretched soul. This time it is Tekle, a human locomotive who always carried two patches of cigarettes in case he forgot one in the last bar he visited. Tekle experienced pain in the chest and had some problems breathing, so he went to the doctor’s for a lung x-ray.

“What’s up doc?” yelped Tekle. “Anything wrong with my dignified lungs?”

“This is a miracle!” exclaimed the doctor. “I must report this to the Nature Magazine?”

“What miracle?” asked Tekle perplexed.

“You must be an amphibian to have lungs of this shape and texture,” sighed the doctor and told Tekle the bad news.

Tekle smoked his last cigarette on New Year’s Eve and vowed to give up smoking as a New Year’s resolution.

“Gone are the days when a swashbuckling film featuring Errol Flyn sent us to seventh heaven,” my dad would add. Frankly speaking I have no idea who Errol Flyn is.

“Simon dear, will you be a good boy and slaughter the bleating sheep for our Christmas dinner?” suggests the mother, a shining knife in her hand.

“No way,” roars Simon who feels the job too demeaning for a youth like him who only yesterday took Danait, his date, to Asmara Palace.

Suppose Danait dropped by as he struggled with the sheep to slaughter it. It’s a nightmare. May be Danait would tell him that she would never see him again. No way is he taking that chance.

Source: Ministry of Information Eritrea

Messages of Condolences on passing away of Mr. Romodan Mohammed-Nur

Ambassadors, Charge d’Affairs, Consuls, members of the diplomatic corps, as well as heads of the UN offices in Eritrea are expressing condolences to the people and Government of Eritrea on the passing away of veteran freedom fighter and one of the pioneers and prominent leaders of the Eritrean Liberation struggle, Mr. Romodan Mohammed-Nur. The members of the diplomatic community and the heads of the UN Offices expressed their condolences during signing of the Book of Condolence that is opened at Denden Hall in Asmara.

Source: Ministry of Information Eritrea