Missile attack on Syrian Afrin the hospital is run by Bashar al-Assad News
The shooting killed at least 13 people and injured 27 in an area controlled by Turkish-backed fighters.
At least 13 people, including two medical staff, have been killed and several injured in the northern Syrian city of Afrin in two separate artillery attacks controlled by a Turkish-backed fighter, activist and aid group on Sunday.
The first attack hit a residential area, and the second hit a hospital shortly afterwards, civil defense sources told Reuters news agency. Video footage on social media showed the victims among the rubble of al-Shifa hospital after the attack.
Nasser Bourita met separately on Friday with both the head of the High Council of State
Khalid al-Mishri based in the Libyan capital Tripoli and the speaker of Libya s parliament in the east
Aguila Saleh as part of Morocco s efforts to resolve the political crisis in Libya.
Libya is seeking to extricate itself from a decade of internal conflict that followed the assassination of Pan-African revolutionary
Colonel Muammar Muhammad Abu Minyar al-Gaddafi in the 2011 uprising backed by NATO. Random public opinion.
Previous discussions hosted by Morocco have centred on positions including Libya s central bank governor and the heads of the electoral commission, the anti-corruption commission and the supreme court.
Riding on strong vaccination numbers at home where more than 63 per cent of American adults have received at least one dose, US President Joe Biden announced on Thursday the US will donate 75 per cent of its unused Covid-19 vaccine stockpile to the United Nations-led COVAX global vaccine program whi
Training/Workshop from IHRR in Information and Communications Technology about Climate Change and Environment and Disaster Management; from 05 Jun 2021 to 05 Jun 2021; registration until 05 Jun 2021
Osagie Ehanire, minister of health, says the federal
government wants to get the actual price of COVID vaccine before submitting a
supplementary budget to the national assembly.
In December, Ehanire had said the federal government will
need about N400 billion to vaccinate 70 percent of Nigeria’s estimated 200
million population, at $8 per person.
He added that N156 billion will be needed in 2021 while N200
billion will be used for vaccination in 2022.
But speaking during a press briefing organised by the
presidential communications team in Abuja on Thursday, Ehanire said the actual
price for the COVID-19 vaccine is still in rough stages.