ASUU VS FEDERAL GOVERNMENT

The Federal Government says the issue of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) would soon be resolved.

The Minister of Labour and Employment, Dr Chris Ngige, disclosed this on Tuesday during an interview on Channels Televisionā€™s Politics Today.

Ngige said the Ministries of Finance, Education, Labour and Employment and the Office of the Accountant General of the Federation will meet with the body.

ā€œThe issue of ASUU will soon come to an end,ā€ he said. ā€œTwo reasons ā€“ ASUU have called the Federal Government represented by Finance and the Accountant-General Office and their direct employers, the Ministry of Education to come for the test.ā€

Ngigeā€™s remarks come three days after ASUU said it had not called off its nationwide industrial action which started in March.

According to ASUU Vice President, Prof. Emmanuel Osodeke, the strike is still in force until the Federal Government meets their demands.

Minister of Labour and Employment, Chris Ngige

Also, President of the union, Prof. Biodun Ogunyemi, had vowed that the union would sustain its ongoing strike action until its requirements were met.

Ogunyemi said ASUU was asking the Federal Government to implement the 2012 universitiesā€™ needs assessment.

The ASUU leader had during a press conference on March 23, announced the nationwide strike, adding that the union rejected the use of force to enrol on Integrated Payroll and Personal Information System (IPPIS).

The National Universities Commission ordered universities across the country to close for a month, beginning from March 23, due to the outbreak of coronavirus.

President Muhammadu Buhari seeks approval for N147bn refund to Ondo, four other states

The president made this known in a letter on Tuesday sent to the speaker of the House of Representatives, Femi Gbajabiamila, and read on the floor of the house

From the breakdown, Ondo State, where the governorship election will hold next week, is to receive N7 billion.

The Senate had last year approved N10 billion to Kogi State, three days to its governorship election.

The approval was criticised by opposition lawmakers who asked that the approval be delayed untill after the election.

They were, however, outvoted by majority senators.

South Africa and Jobs!!!

Protesters display a placard near the Seraleng mining community on May 18, 2020, in Rustenburg, South Africa.

South Africa’s economy lost 2.2 million jobs in the second quarter of 2020 during the country’s coronavirus lockdown, the authorities say.It is the biggest fall in job numbers since the employment survey began in 2008.Restrictions were brought in to try and prevent the spread of the virus and the economy subsequently shrank at an unprecedented level.Most businesses were shut for five weeks from 27 March.It was one of the strictest lockdowns in the world.

The national statistics office’s figure for the number of people who have not been economically inactive indicated an even more dramatic economic decline.Between March and June that figure increased by 5.3 million people to 20.5 million.

The official unemployment rate actually dropped in that quarter from 23.3% from 30.1% in the first quarter of 2020.But this may just indicate that lockdown prevented people from looking for work.The fall in the unemployment rate “is not a reflection of an improvement in the labour market, but rather an effect of the national lockdown, since the official definition of unemployment requires that people look for work and are available for work”, said the statistics office.In May, South Africa introduced social relief of distress grants of 350 rand per month ($21; Ā£16) for people who are unemployed.There have been 653,444 recorded cases of coronavirus in South Africa – the 10th highest in the world. More than 15,800 people have died.South Africa was one of the first countries in the world to impose a lockdown, which at first included a ban on everything from dog walking to cigarette sales.The restrictions have been loosened gradually and from 20 September an overnight curfew was reduced, gatherings were allowed at 50% of a venue’s capacity, and restrictions on the sale of alcohol were eased

You don’t want to miss this; TRUMP VERSUS BIDEN

Tens of millions of US voters will tune in for the first of three presidential debates tonight

President Donald Trump and Joe Biden go head-to-head at 21:00-22:30 ET (02:00-03:30 in the UK)

The debates come with Mr Trump under fire after the New York Times revealed the extent of his tax avoidance.

The format for the first debate is six questions in six segments of 15 minutes each.

Believe me, it’s gonna be hot!!!

Fox News anchor Chris Wallace will moderate the event – he won praise for moderating a Trump-Clinton debate in 2016

MORE DEATHS IN THE UK

The UK announces 7,143 new cases and 71 more Covid-related deaths!!!

The cases are a daily record since mass testing began – but experts believe the figure was much higher in the spring. The daily deaths announcement was the highest since 1 July, when 97 deaths were confirmed

But hospital admissions fall in England for fourth day in a row

PM Boris Johnson apologises for “misspeaking” about new virus rules in north-east England

The world’s coronavirus death toll crosses one million, with the US, Brazil and India making up nearly half of the total

The UN secretary general calls it a “mind-numbing” figure and “an agonising milestone”

$5 test; WHO’s Milestone

A test that can diagnose Covid-19 in minutes will dramatically expand the capacity to detect cases in low- and middle-income countries, the World Health Organization (WHO) has said.

The $5 (Ā£3.80) test could transform tracking of Covid-19 in less wealthy countries, which have shortages of healthcare workers and laboratories. A deal with manufacturers will provide 120 million tests over six months.

The WHO’s head called it a major milestone.

Lengthy gaps between taking a test and receiving a result have hampered many countries’ attempts to control the spread of coronavirus.

In some countries with high infection rates, including India and Mexico, experts have said that low testing rates are disguising the true spread of their outbreaks.

The “new, highly portable and easy-to-use test” will provide results in 15-30 minutes instead of hours or days, WHO Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told a news conference on Monday.

Drugs manufacturers Abbott and SD Biosensor have agreed with the charitable Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation to produce 120 million of the tests, Dr Tedros explained.

The deal covers 133 countries, including many in Latin America which is currently the region hardest-hit by the pandemic in terms of fatality and infection rates.

“This is a vital addition to their testing capacity and especially important in areas of high transmission,” Dr Tedros added.

“This will enable the expansion of testing, particularly in hard-to-reach areas that do not have laboratory facilities or enough trained health workers to carry out tests,” he said.