Govt claims declining trend in COVID-19 cases among health workers 17th February 2021
A health worker receives a COVID-19 shot in Bandung city, West Java on February 17, 2021. (ANTARA FOTO/M Agung Rajasa/wsj) Jakarta (ANTARA) - The number of confirmed cases among paramedics has shown a decline with over 1.1 million health workers across the country receiving COVID-19 vaccine shots, Indonesian Health Minister Budi Gunadi Sadikin disclosed on Wednesday. Based on the data that we refer to, the number of confirmed COVID-19 cases among our health workers has indicated a declining trend, he said at an online press conference that ANTARA joined from Jakarta.
Damascus: Loyalists of President Michel Aoun have raised eyebrows in Lebanon yet again this time by floating the idea of extending his mandate, which ends in October 2022.
The idea has been making the rounds for weeks, in closed circles however, without ever being discussed openly until last week, when it was floated on television by MP Maroun Aoun, a relative of the octogenarian president and member of his Free Patriotic Movement (FPM).
Members of the FPM immediately jumped on the proposal, describing it as the logical thing to do in order to avoid a presidential vacuum in October 2022. The only alternative to Aoun ought to be his son-in-law Gibran Basil, head of the FPM who has an open ambition of replacing his father-in-law at the Baabda Palace.
عينت رئاسة الجمهورية الزميل أنطوان addiyar.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from addiyar.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
The Indonesian Health Ministry announced that 1,120,963 health workers have received COVID-19 shots as of Tuesday as the government is striving to intensify .
Respite for the displaced 13th February 2021
Some residents crossed a river using an emergency bridge after a flash flood cut off a suspension bridge in Alat village, Hulu Sungai Tengah district, South Kalimantan, on January 20, 2021 ANTARA FOTO/Bayu Pratama S/wsj. Fatimah, a resident of Kurau village in Kurau sub-district, Tanah Laut district, South Kalimantan, said she is reluctant to go back to her house, which has remained flooded for almost two months now. Until this time, my house remains inundated. At night, the floodwaters may reach knee height, she told
ANTARA in Kurau village, located about 43 kilometers from Banjarmasin, the capital of South Kalimantan province, on Saturday.