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The race for a Covid-19 vaccine reflects the emerging n

Last month marked a watershed in global efforts to fight the Covid-19 pandemic. US pharmaceutical company Pfizer and its German partner BioNTech announced that they had successfully developed a Covid-19 vaccine that has a 95% efficacy rate (the highest success rate thus far). The vaccine has passed a late-stage clinical trial and the company has the capacity to produce more than 1 billion doses by 2021. This announcement ignited hope across a world that has been devastated by Covid-19 since it was first discovered in Wuhan, China, in late 2019. Moderna, another US firm, reported earlier in the same month that its vaccine candidate has a 94% efficacy rate. Russia’s Sputnik V was the first vaccine to show an efficacy rate of more than 90%, having reported a 92% success rate on 11 November for the interim trial results. The UK’s Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine has an efficacy rate of more than 70%, with capacity to produce around 3 billion doses by 2021.

ISSUES AT STAKE: Higher Education - Unfinished business of transformation

ISSUES AT STAKE: Higher Education - Unfinished business of transformation
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Chief Justice has right to pray in whatever manner he deems fit – expert

“I lock out any vaccine that is not of you.” “If there be any vaccine that is of the devil, meant to infuse triple-six in the lives of people, meant to corrupt their DNA, any such vaccine, Lord God Almighty, may it be destroyed by fire, in the name of Jesus.” He was speaking during a thanksgiving ceremony at Tembisa Hospital, which was televised on SABC. On Friday, at a media briefing to unpack the 2019/20 Judiciary Annual Report, Mogoeng was asked about his views on vaccines and the social media fallout following his prayer. The chief justice responded that he didn’t follow trends on Twitter.

Chief Justice Mogoeng a reverent, religious man , legal expert says amid vaccine prayer controversy

Chief Justice Mogoeng Mogoeng has defended his controversial prayer about Covid-19 vaccines.  A legal expert has described the chief justice as a reverent, religious man, who has held talks about his passion, religion and dedication to his faith .   But Judges Matter s Alison Tilley says judges should speak primarily through their judgments, as the code of conduct reflects. While Chief Justice Mogoeng Mogoeng continues to receive some backlash for praying about a Covid-19 vaccine, a legal expert has described the judge as a reverent, religious man, who has held talks about his passion, religion and dedication to his faith . Speaking to News24 on Friday, advocate Deon Pool said: There must sometimes be a bit of a differentiation between the man and the office. I hear what he says, he s a leader of our community, he s chief justice of this country and that is his view. To my mind, that doesn t indicate anything legal or a particular provision that would indicate anything lega

African Somaesthetics: Cultures, Feminisms, Politics

Biographical Note Catherine F. Botha (Ph.D., Philosophy, Radboud University Nijmegen) is professor of Philosophy at the University of Johannesburg, South Africa. She uses her expertise in the phenomenological tradition and its precursors in the continental tradition (most especially the work of Nietzsche and Heidegger) as a lens through which to approach the focus of her research - the philosophy of art, with a special focus on the philosophy of dance. She has published numerous articles and chapters in the philosophy of dance, with her most recent publication “The Dancing Body and the Transmission of Collective Memory in South Africa” appearing in the

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