‫انضمت المملكة العربية السعودية إلى أكثر من 100 دولة في استقبال الزوار الذين تلقوا تطعيماً بلقاح “سبوتنيك V” عقب عمل مكثف من جانب وزارة الصحة في المملكة والصندوق الروسي للاستثمارات المباشرة، بدعم من وزارة الاستثمار السعودية

موسكو, 5 ديسمبر / كانون أول 2021 /PRNewswire/ — يعلن الصندوق الروسي للاستثمارات المباشرة (صندوق الثروة السيادية لروسيا) أن المملكة العربية السعودية منحت الموافقة على دخول الأفراد الذين تلقوا تطعيماً بلقاح “سبوتنيك V” الروسي اعتباراً من 1 يناير من عام 2022.

انضمت المملكة العربية السعودية إلى 101 دولة أخرى وافقت على دخول الأفراد الذين تلقوا تطعيماً بلقاح “سبوتنيك V” عقب التعاون والنقاشات المكثفة بين وزارة الصحة السعودية والصندوق الروسي للاستثمارات المباشرة، بدعم من وزارة الاستثمار في المملكة. وكان منح الموافقة على زيارة المطعمين بلقاح “سبوتنيك V” للمملكة العربية السعودية والخطوات المشتركة التالية في مواجهة الجائحة محور الاجتماع بين وزير الصحة السعودي فهد الجلاجل ووزير الاستثمار السعودي خالد الفالح والرئيس التنفيذي للصندوق الروسي للاستثمارات المباشرة كيريل دميترييف في الرياض في وقت سابق من شهر نوفمبر الجاري.

سيمكن القرار الذي تم التوصل إليه المسلمين من جميع أنحاء العالم الذين تلقوا تطعيماً بلقاح “سبوتنيك V” من المشاركة في أداء مناسك الحج والعمرة.

سيطلب من الأشخاص الذين تلقوا تطعيماً بلقاح “سبوتنيك V” عند دخول البلاد الخضوع لحجر صحي لمدة 48 ساعة وإجراء اختبار PCR.

تظهر الدول التي تفتح حدودها أمام المطعمين بلقاح “سبوتنيك V” العزم على مساعدة قطاع السياحة وأنشطة الأعمال فيها على التعافي بشكل أسرع. ومع فتح المملكة العربية السعودية حدودها أمام الأشخاص الذين تلقوا تطعيماً بلقاح “سبوتنيك V“، سيلعب هذا القرار دوراً مهماً في زيادة التدفقات السياحية وإقامة علاقات جديدة في نطاق الأعمال بين روسيا والمملكة، بما في ذلك من خلال أنشطة المجلس الاقتصادي الروسي السعودي.

يهدف المجلس الذي تم تأسيسه في عام 2019 إلى تطوير العلاقات الاقتصادية والتجارية الثنائية وكذلك الاستثمارات بين روسيا والمملكة العربية السعودية في جميع القطاعات. ويشارك في رئاسة المجلس الرئيس التنفيذي للصندوق الروسي للاستثمارات المباشرة كيريل دميترييف وصاحب السمو الملكي الأمير عبد الله بن بندر بن عبد العزيز وزير الحرس الوطني في المملكة.

وبوجه عام، يعد الفصل بين ترخيص اللقاحات المضادة لفيروس كورونا وشهادات التطعيم خطوة مهمة أخرى لتجنب التمييز ضد اللقاحات ودعم جهود الحكومات في إعادة فتح الحدود بأمان لكل من السكان المحليين والسائحين.

المتطلبات الرئيسة لـ 102 دولة تسمح بالزيارات بعد تلقي التطعيم بلقاح “سبوتنيك V“[1]:

Ø  يمكن للأفراد الذين تلقوا تطعيماً بلقاح “سبوتنيك V” زيارة ما يصل إلى 31 دولة دون الحاجة لأي موافقة إضافية تتعلق بكوفيد -19،

Ø  تطلب 71 دولة أخرى وجود نتيجة سلبية لاختبار PCR أو نتيجة إيجابية لفحص الأجسام المضادة أو لديها متطلبات إضافية عند الدخول.

تطلب 15 دولة فقط لقاحات أخرى لا تشمل اللقاح “سبوتنيك V“. وتعتمد 5 دول منها فقط (تمثل أقل من 9% من رحلات السفر الدولية)، بما في ذلك الولايات المتحدة الأمريكية (تمثل أقل من 3%)، بشكل كامل على قائمة منظمة الصحة العالمية للقاحات المعتمدة والتي من المتوقع أن يدرج اللقاح “سبوتنيك V” ضمنها خلال العام الجاري.

المصادر: وزارات الدول المعنية والمواقع السياحية.                           

[1]من المطلوب توفر تأشيرة و(أو) تصريح دخول آخر، كما يجب على الشخص تلبية المتطلبات الأخرى غير المتعلقة بقيود فيروس كورونا. ويستند تحليل فرص الدخول إلى المتطلبات بالنسبة لسكان معظم الدول، وقد لا يعكس القيود أو التسهيلات المطبقة لدول أو فئات محددة. هناك 27 دولة لا تزال حدودها مغلقة أمام الزوار من معظم البلدان الأخرى.

Sudanese in Philly want to support pro-democracy protesters back home. But they’re finding it hard to get people to care

Published by
The Philadelphia Inquirer

PHILADELPHIA — Levittown resident Elham Maaz said she couldn’t get in touch with relatives and friends in Sudan’s capital, Khartoum, for weeks after a military coup and subsequent internet blackout. All the while, Maaz, 17, read news reports of hundreds of thousands of pro-democracy protesters taking to the streets of Khartoum and other cities. The military responded to peaceful crowds with violence. Maaz knew some of her relatives would join rallies. She worried they would be among the injured or dead. “I couldn’t sleep, I couldn’t eat, I couldn’t function normally because I was in constant f… Continue reading “Sudanese in Philly want to support pro-democracy protesters back home. But they’re finding it hard to get people to care”

At least 20 drown as bus carrying wedding guests swept into flooded river in Kenya; 12 rescued

NAIROBI— More than 20 people drowned on Saturday when a bus travelling to a wedding in Kenya was swept away by fast-flowing waters as it tried to cross a flooded river.

Onlookers screamed as the yellow school bus hired to take a church choir and other revellers to the ceremony in Kitui County keeled over and sank as the driver tried to navigate the surging waters.

Some aboard the stricken bus managed to escape before the bus was quickly submerged, and were helped to safety.

“We have this terrible, terrible accident that happened here this morning,” Kitui governor Charity Ngilu told reporters.

“The bodies that have already been retrieved right now are over 23. We have more bodies in the bus,” she said, adding that efforts to recover the corpses would resume on Sunday morning.

She said 12 people had been rescued, including four children.

It remains unclear how many passengers were aboard the bus when it tipped into the Enziu River, about 200 kilometres east of the capital Nairobi.

Witnesses said the driver had stopped to negotiate the river, and was close to the other side when the bus was swept beneath the churning currents.

Deputy President William Ruto was among those to extend his condolences, and also urged motorists to apply extra caution on the roads with many parts of Kenya experiencing heavy rain.

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK

Feature: Chinese Films Appeal To Egyptian Audiences, Artistes at Cairo Film Festival

CAIRO– The small theatre of the Cairo Opera House seemed packed, as the audience were watching a group of short films, starting with China’s ‘Poem for a Distant Village,’ which is one of the 22 works, contesting in the International Short Film Competition, in the 43rd edition of Cairo International Film Festival (CIFF).

Directed by Liu Bing, the 30-minute fiction, which makes its world premiere at CIFF, tells a story of a producer who has to cancel a film project, due to the COVID-19 outbreak and returns to his native village with the director and cinematographer. The village life amid the crisis inspires them to make another film about childhood and death.

“It tells about a very important period we all have gone through, which is the COVID-19 lockdown,” Sami Creta, a programme manager at Alexandria’s Jesuit Cultural Centre, said.

He highlighted the importance of the participation of films “from an ancient culture like China.”

Among the films screened in the same programme was Egyptian short film, ‘It’s Nothing Nagy, Just Hang up!’ by Youhanna Nagy, who expressed his admiration of the Chinese short film.

Besides the inspiring storyline, Nagy said, he admired the Chinese film’s cinematography, as well as, the sound effects that show “the Chinese director’s awareness that sound represents half the quality of the film.”

In a movie theatre in downtown Cairo, an Egyptian young woman seemed relaxed, while watching ‘A Chat,’ a Chinese feature film screened during the festival.

“The film has put me in a peaceful mood. Its pace is perfect and the faces of the Chinese actresses and their costumes made me feel so comfortable,” Eman el-Badry, a filmmaking student, said, after watching the film.

Written and directed by Wang Xide and starring Ying Ze and Mu Ruini, the film was screened under the International Panorama section of CIFF 43, outside the official competitions, among 15 films from different countries, including Lebanon, Germany, France, Sweden and Spain.

‘A Chat’ is a story about three generations of women in a southern Chinese family, including Gu Qing, a quiet tailor in her 30s, who lives in a small town on her own. Her life is dull, until one day her niece, Sun Yue, comes from afar to learn sewing from her.

“I love China and when the Chinese do something, they make it excellent,” the Egyptian student said.

The 43rd CIFF, which screens over 100 films from more than 60 countries, has four main competitions, including the international competition for feature fiction, documentary films, and the international short film competition.

Egyptian veteran movie star, Hussein Fahmy, who was CIFF president for four years, hailed the Chinese cinema industry and said, he visited Shanghai International Film Festival (SIFF) twice and established close cooperation between CIFF and SIFF.

“The Chinese films are good and the cinema industry in China, as I saw in the studios I visited there, is very advanced,” the renowned Egyptian actor told Xinhua.

For his part, CIFF President, Mohamed Hefzy, said that, the festival pays great attention to the participation of Chinese films, noting that, the Chinese cinema industry now competes with Hollywood cinema, in terms of box office revenues.

The 43rd CIFF kicked off on Nov 26, and will conclude on Dec 5 (today).

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK

Ethiopia closes schools to boost civil war effort

ADDIS ABABA— Ethiopian authorities have closed all secondary schools so pupils can harvest crops for those on the frontline of the civil war, state-affiliated media says.

The closure will last for one week, according to the education minister.

More than 2 million pupils were already out of school due to the war which started in the northern region of Tigray last year, the government says.

As the fighting intensifies, government troops say they are taking towns from the Tigray rebels.

On Wednesday state forces announced they had recaptured the historic town of Lalibela, which contains churches that are Unesco world heritage sites.

In an interview, an Ethiopian army commander said the country’s defence forces would not relent in their advances after recent gains.

“I cannot say we will pause once we reach Mekelle [Tigray’s capital] or other places, rather we will recapture areas at the hands of Woyane [the Tigray People’s Liberation Front]. We will follow and get rid of them,” Lt-Gen Bacha Debele said.

The war has caused a humanitarian crisis with more than 300 schools that teach grade one to 12 destroyed as of October, according to a statement on the Ministry of Education’s Facebook account.

The government will work to restore the destroyed schools, the statement continued.

The war intensified after Tigray fighters said they were advancing towards the capital Addis Ababa in November.

They also launched an offensive to reach the Djibouti border in the east – which is crucial for getting supplies to landlocked Ethiopia.

This led to Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed saying he would join the war effort on the frontline, where he has since been pictured by state TV.

The TPLF has said it made a “strategic withdrawal” from some the areas which the army says it has recaptured.

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK

Morocco foils smuggling of about 9 tonnes of cannabis

RABAT— Moroccan police have foiled an attempt to smuggle 8.99 tonnes of cannabis near Casablanca, the police said Saturday in a statement.

The drugs were carefully hidden in large blocks of marble of about 10 tons each, intended for export to an African country, it added.

The operation occurred at a warehouse located in the village of Moualin El Oued near Casablanca, it said, adding that large sums of money and two cars with fake license plates were also seized.

Five people were arrested for their alleged involvement in international drug trafficking.

The statement added that two of the arrested were wanted by Moroccan police for their involvement in international drug trafficking, while a third one is the subject of an international arrest warrant issued by the French authorities in a case of voluntary manslaughter.

Despite the efforts to crack down on cannabis farming in the last decade, Morocco remains one of the world’s largest cannabis resin producer, according to the UN Office on Drugs and Crime.

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK