Madagascar cyclone toll rises to 92 amid calls for aid

The death toll from Tropical Cyclone Batsirai has risen to 92 in Madagascar, authorities said Wednesday, as humanitarian organisations ramped up aid efforts with more than 110,000 people in need of emergency assistance.

The National Office for Risk and Disaster Management (BNGRC) released data from the hardest-hit regions revealing that 71 of the dead were in Ikongo district, near the east coast of the Indian Ocean island nation.

BNGRC director general Paolo Emilio Raholinarivo said that Batsirai, which made landfall on the weekend, had left 112,000 people needing emergency assistance and forced 61,000 from their homes.

“It’s devastation here,” said Brunelle Razafintsiandrofa, a lawmaker from Ikongo who spoke to AFP by phone.

“Most of the victims died after their homes collapsed.”

Many NGOs and UN agencies have begun to deploy resources and teams to help the victims of the cyclone which brought heavy rain and winds of 165 kilometres (102 miles) per hour.

France sent 60 emergency workers to help set up facilities for purifying drinking water, and to fly drones to assess damage in areas that are difficult to reach even at the best of times.

The tropical cyclone hit Madagascar on Saturday night, on a 150-kilometre long, sparsely populated and agricultural eastern coastal area.

As the cyclone moved inland, it caused flooding that ravaged rice fields in the country’s central “breadbasket”, raising fears of a humanitarian crisis.

– Food security ‘seriously affected’ –

German experts have arrived in the country, one of the poorest on the planet, to “support the humanitarian response in the Batsirai passage areas”, the BNGRC said.

Work is underway on the 20 roads and the 17 bridges that were cut and had isolated villages, it added.

“We know for sure that rice fields, that rice crops will be damaged, will be lost,” said Pasqualina DiSirio, director of the World Food Program in the country.

“This is the main crop for Malagasy people and they will be seriously affected in food security in the next three to six months if we don’t do something immediately.”

The UN agency distributed hot meals in Manakara, one of the most affected areas.

The French Red Cross launched an aid appeal, and deployed 87 tonnes of humanitarian aid from its facilities in Madagascar and the nearby French island of Reunion.

Numerous aid organisations, including Action Against Hunger, Handicap International, Save the Children and Medecins du Monde, were mobilised ahead of the cyclone, organising equipment and medicines.

Alongside the aid provided by the government, they provided assistance to the victims: food, primary health care and the distribution of kitchen equipment, blankets, hygiene products.

Some 77 percent of Madagascar’s 28 million people live below the poverty line, and the latest blow comes during a severe drought in the south which has plunged more than a million people into acute malnutrition, some facing famine.

Madagascar was still picking up the pieces after Tropical Storm Ana affected at least 131,000 people across the island late last month, with most of the 55 deaths occurring in the capital Antananarivo.

Ana also hit Malawi, Mozambique and Zimbabwe, causing dozens of deaths.

Source: Seychelles News Agency

To Mask or Not to Mask?

Facing growing pressure from impatient state governors, the Biden administration acknowledged for the first time that it is developing plans to guide the country away from the pandemic’s emergency phase toward a more relaxed national response, including ending the federal recommendation for wearing masks in most indoor settings.

“We are internally discussing, of course, what it looks like to be in the phase of the fight against the COVID pandemic where it is not disrupting everyone’s daily lives,” White House press secretary Jen Psaki told reporters Wednesday. “We recognize people are tired of the pandemic. They’re tired of wearing masks.”

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) currently recommends “universal indoor masking,” including in businesses and schools, “regardless of vaccination status and regardless of what states require.”

While some states follow the CDC guidance, pandemic health protocols have always varied by state with different requirements for masks, vaccines and testing.

Now more states are relaxing coronavirus health protocols, including New York, Massachusetts, New Jersey, California, Connecticut, Delaware, Illinois, Rhode Island and Washington. The rule changes, implemented by both Republican and Democratic governors, include lifting indoor mask requirements in certain settings, such as schools and businesses, as well as rescinding vaccine mandates.

Psaki insisted that while administration officials understand the need to be flexible, they are following the advice of medical experts who rely on scientific evidence.

“That doesn’t move at the speed of politics; it moves at the speed of data,” she said.

The CDC said it is working on new guidance.

“We are working on following the trends for the moment,” CDC director Dr. Rochelle Walensky said Wednesday.

Democrats joining Republicans

In the first two years of the pandemic, Democrats were more in favor of strict public health restrictions while Republicans largely rejected them.

But now, with vaccination rates higher than 70% in some states and polls showing public pandemic fatigue, Democratic governors and state officials are also relaxing measures to avoid a backlash.

“Public health is made up of two words. The health part we focus on a lot of science and the data, but we need to understand the public part as well,” Dr. Anand Parekh, chief medical adviser at the Bipartisan Policy Center, said to VOA.

Over the past week, an average of more than 227,000 new coronavirus cases has been reported each day in the United States, a decrease of 63% from the national pandemic peak of more than 806,000 cases in mid-January, according to data tracked by The New York Times. Hospitalizations are also declining significantly across the country.

“For the next few weeks, we should see a decrease in epidemic activity. All of the indicators seem to go down,” Alessandro Vespignani said to VOA. Vespignani is the director of the Network Science Institute at Northeastern University and leads a team of infectious-disease modelers who have been developing COVID-19 projections since the pandemic began.

Governors are seeing this trend, recognizing that their citizens are weary, and in the absence of CDC guidance, taking steps to relax restrictions.

“The CDC and the administration are trying to play catch-up to that reality,” Parekh said, underscoring that the federal response must focus not only on the moment but what it would look like a month from now.

“We see time and time again, federal agencies being late. We saw that with respect to omicron and testing just a couple of months ago,” he said.

Many public health experts are still advising caution.

The downward trend needs to be sustained over a period of several weeks and reduced even further before the nation can transition from pandemic to endemic response, said Dr. William Schaffner, professor of medicine in the Infectious Diseases Division at the Vanderbilt University School of Medicine.

“Endemic is where we kind of have a truce with the virus,” Schaffner said, and the strain on the health care system will be “substantially diminished.”

“At the moment I stand with the CDC,” Schaffner told VOA. “Let’s keep wearing our masks. Let’s allow the cases to really come down. Let’s do this for another month or two, to be absolutely sure, not only that we’re heading down but that we’ll stay down.”

Vespignani added, “We could see bumps in the road due to omicron-2, a mutated version of the omicron variant that has begun to circulate in some places.”

He said the easing of mitigations should be done in a way that makes sure we keep facilitating the quick decreasing trends in infections.

“It is more and more important to increase the number of vaccinated and boosted individuals,” he said. “This is the wall that we want to be as high as possible to protect us in case of any future wave of the pandemic.”

A recent Monmouth University poll found that 70% of Americans surveyed agree with the sentiment that “it’s time we accept that COVID is here to stay and we just need to get on with our lives.”

“Americans’ worries about COVID haven’t gone away. It seems more to be a realization that we are not going to get this virus under control in a way that we thought was possible just last year,” said Patrick Murray, director of the Monmouth University Polling Institute.

Just 52% supported face mask and distancing guidelines in their home state, down from a peak of 63% last September during the delta variant surge, the Monmouth poll found.

Countries changing restrictions

Some other countries are making similar moves. Spain and Italy – two European countries with high vaccination rates, declining infection numbers and lower hospitalization figures, are loosening measures this week to coexist with the coronavirus.

England, France, Ireland, the Netherlands, the Czech Republic and several Nordic countries, including Denmark and Sweden, have also taken steps to end or relax their restrictions.

China, meanwhile, is maintaining its most stringent protocols. During the Winter Olympics, Beijing is keeping its “zero-COVID” policy of testing, mass lockdowns and strict social restrictions as authorities worry about the ability of the Chinese health care system to cope and adapt to new strains.

Besides China, India, Canada, Germany, Angola and Indonesia are some of the countries with the strictest government COVID policies, according to the Government Stringency Index put together by researchers at the Blavatnik School of Government at the University of Oxford.

Nine metrics are used to calculate this index – school closures, workplace closures, cancellation of public events, restrictions on public gatherings, closures of public transport, stay-at-home requirements, public information campaigns, restrictions on internal movements and international travel controls.

While some European leaders have said that COVID-19 should be treated as an endemic, like influenza, the World Health Organization says that’s premature.

“We are now starting to see a very worrying increase in deaths, in most regions of the world,” WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said in remarks to media earlier this month.

“It’s premature for any country either to surrender, or to declare victory,” he said.

American public health experts said the debate in the U.S. to lift restrictions must take into account the steps being taken to prevent new variants.

“Only 10% of people in low-income countries around the world have been vaccinated,” Parekh said. “Until we can vaccinate the rest of the world, the threat of variants and the threat to the United States will still be there.”

Vanderbilt’s Schaffner said helping countries vaccinate their population is necessary not only for humanitarian reasons, but also self-interest.

“Those variants can come from abroad and be here in no time,” he said.

The U.S. remains the largest donor of vaccines. At least 414 million doses of vaccines have been shipped, about 34% of the 1.3 billion doses pledged by the administration.

Source: Voice of America

Thousands of people in southern Africa still face impacted water supplies in wake of tropical storm Ana – WaterAid

More than two weeks after tropical storm Ana hit Madagascar, Mozambique and Malawi, hundreds of thousands of people are still struggling with access to safe, clean water, as the storm damaged boreholes, sanitation and other facilities.

Restoring these facilities in the aftermath of the storm is vital to prevent the outbreak of water borne diseases such as cholera, WaterAid said.

In Malawi alone, many face an increased risk of disease outbreaks, having to walk for miles for safe water or drinking expensive bottled water. Tropical storm Ana impacted or destroyed an estimated 1,000 boreholes and twenty larger water supply facilities, which at least 500,000 people depend on. It also damaged close to 80,000 hectares of farmland.

In Mozambique, where the storm mainly hit in the provinces Zambezia, Nampula and Tete and flooded over 70,000 hectares of land, water systems were also impacted. In Zambezia alone, some 40,000 people were affected. Sanitation and water resources were contaminated or completely destroyed in homes, schools and health facilities as sanitation and water systems collapsed.

Madagascar was hit by tropical storm Ana, mainly affecting water systems in the capital, and last weekend by cyclone Batsirai, which impacted vulnerable communities in the southeast of the country.

WaterAid is responding in the aftermath of storm Ana through the provision of emergency water, sanitation and hygiene supplies, to help prevent the spread of disease. It also works to restore impacted water and sanitation facilities, and will run awareness raising campaigns in communities.

With climate change driving more erratic weather events, including heavy rains and flooding, it is paramount new facilities for water, sanitation and hygiene are set up in a sustainable way that can withstand the impacts of the climate crisis, WaterAid said.

“It is vital people have access to water and sanitation, no matter what the weather”, said Mercy Masoo, country director of WaterAid in Malawi. “Storm Ana has impacted that security for hundreds of thousands of people in Malawi alone, erasing some of the progress that was made over the past years. We can’t let that happen again with future climate shocks.”

The newly established Water and Sanitation Ministry in Malawi earlier this week warned populations living around rivers to refrain from settling or cultivating crops and to be alert for flooded waterways.

WaterAid’s Regional Programme Manager Elijah Adera, said: “The destruction of water and sanitation infrastructure in homes, schools, health care facilities and other public spaces increases the risk of water borne diseases.

“When a disaster of this magnitude strikes, affected populations urgently need access to clean and safe water, sanitation facilities and hygiene supplies. Especially for women and girls, who are usually hardest hit in disasters.

“This immediate support helps to mitigate or even prevent further disaster caused by disease.”

Storm Ana swept across Madagascar and Mozambique, killing dozens of people before it hit Malawi. WaterAid Mozambique is working with a partner in Zambezia province to help prevent the spread of diseases like cholera. In Madagascar, WaterAid has been providing clear water and hygiene kits to people who had to flee their homes in the wake of storm Ana.

Source: WaterAid

French Discoverer of HIV, Luc Montagnier, Dies at 89

French researcher Luc Montagnier, who won a Nobel Prize in 2008 for discovering HIV and more recently spread false claims about the coronavirus, has died at age 89, local government officials in France said.

Montagnier died Tuesday at the American Hospital of Paris in Neuilly-sur-Seine, a western suburb of the capital, the area’s city hall said. No other details were released.

Montagnier, a virologist, led the team that in 1983 identified the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), which causes AIDS, leading him to share the 2008 Nobel Prize in medicine with colleague Francoise Barré-Sinoussi.

The French minister for higher education and research, Frédérique Vidal, praised Montagnier’s work on HIV in a written statement Thursday and expressed her condolences to his family.

Inspired by discoveries

Montagnier was born in 1932 in the village of Chabris in central France.

According to his autobiography on the Nobel Prize website, Montagnier studied medicine in Poitiers and Paris. He said recent scientific discoveries in 1957 inspired him to become a virologist in the rapidly advancing field of molecular biology.

He joined the National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS) in 1960 and became head of the Pasteur Institute’s virology department in 1972.

“My involvement in AIDS began in 1982, when the information circulated that a transmissible agent — possibly a virus — could be at the origin of this new, mysterious disease,” Montagnier said in his autobiography.

In 1983, a working group led by him and Barré-Sinoussi at the Pasteur Institute isolated the virus that would later become known as HIV and was able to explain how it caused AIDS.

American scientist Robert Gallo claimed to have found the same virus at almost exactly the same time, sparking a disagreement over who should get the credit. The United States and France settled a dispute over the patent for an AIDS test in 1987. Montagnier was later credited as the discoverer of the virus, Gallo as the creator of the first test.

Shunned for recent views

Since the end of the 2000s, Montagnier started expressing views devoid of a scientific basis. His opinions led him to be shunned by much of the international scientific community.

As COVID-19 spread across the globe and conspiracy theories flourished, Montagnier was among those behind some of the misinformation about the origins of the coronavirus.

During a 2020 interview with French news broadcaster CNews, he claimed that the coronavirus did not originate in nature and had been manipulated. Experts who have looked at the genome sequence of the virus have said Montagnier’s statement was incorrect.

At the time, AP made multiple unsuccessful attempts to contact Montagnier.

Last year, he claimed in a French documentary that COVID-19 vaccines led to the creation of coronavirus variants.

Experts contacted by The Associated Press explained that variants found across the globe began emerging long before vaccines were widely available. They said the evidence suggests new variants evolved as a result of prolonged viral infections in the population and not vaccines, which are designed to prevent such infections.

Earlier this year, Montagnier delivered a speech at a protest against vaccine certificates in Milan, Italy.

Montagnier was emeritus professor at the Pasteur Institute and emeritus research director at the CNRS. He received multiple awards, including France’s highest decoration, the Legion of Honor.

Source: Voice of America

6sense Named G2’s 2022 Best Software Awards for Marketing Software

Customers continue to claim tremendous ROI, ease of use, and outstanding support with 6sense

SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 9, 2022 /PRNewswire/ — 6sense, the leading platform for B2B organizations generating predictable revenue, today announced it has been named to G2’s 2022 Best Software Awards. 6sense is the top-ranking ABM/ABX platform named to the Best Marketing Products list for 2022.

6sense | Predictive intelligence for B2B marketing and sales

This accolade follows 6sense’s December 2021 honor as a Leader across 11 categories in the G2 Winter 2022 Grid Report, including recognition as the number one Account-Based Advertising solution for the fifth consecutive reporting period.

These awards, based on feedback from thousands of B2B software buyers and users on G2, recognize the top software choices used by teams. Its annual Best Software List ranks the world’s best software companies and products based on authentic, timely reviews from real users.

“We’re honored to be recognized by customers using 6sense to transform their go-to-market strategy,” said Jason Zintak, CEO of 6sense. “Our mission is to transform the way organizations create, manage and convert pipeline to revenue and that requires a willingness to change. And change requires advocates, champions and evangelists. This recognition is for all the forward-thinking leaders achieving predictable revenue growth with 6sense in the RevTech Revolution.”

G2 releases their list of best software companies annually to recognize leaders in product performance and user satisfaction. Their annual best of software lists are based on data from more than one million authentic, verified customer reviews written and published between January 1, 2021 – December 31, 2021.

Highlights from verified customer feedback on the G2 platform:

“Our annual Best Software List aims to guide buyers on their purchasing decisions, knowing they can trust in the credibility and objectivity of our scoring algorithms. We applaud those companies named to our  2022 list, as they’ve earned the satisfaction among their customers as well as an impressive market presence,” said Godard Abel, co-founder and CEO, G2.

6sense is transforming account based marketing and selling. This is what marketers and sellers have been waiting for. Accurate insights and predictions and all the actions you need to orchestrate your end-to-end revenue strategy.”

Fuel ABM and your tech stack with 6sense. 6sense has allowed our team to completely REVolutionize your marketing and sales team’s processes for B2B marketing. With 6sense your marketing team will be directly supporting the sales team by surfacing in-marketing accounts and helping qualify them and build new pipeline.”

6sense enables a modern way to rationalize and manage outreach. My job requires me to cover many different accounts that can be difficult to organize, but 6Sense allows me to prioritize certain accounts based on the intent that a company is exhibiting.”

Read more reviews from 6sense customers on G2 here.

About 6sense
The 6sense Account Engagement Platform helps B2B organizations achieve predictable revenue growth by putting the power of AI, big data, and machine learning behind every member of the revenue team. 6sense uncovers anonymous buying behavior, prioritizes accounts for sales and marketing, and enables them to engage resistant buying teams with personalized, multi-channel, multi-touch campaigns. 6sense helps revenue teams know everything they need to know about their buyers so they can easily do anything needed to generate more opportunities, increase deal size, get into opportunities sooner, and compete and win more often. Visit 6sense.com for more information.

Logo – https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/266402/6sense___logo.jpg

Customertimes Announces New Consumer Health Projects Based on CT Software Products

NEW YORK, Feb. 9, 2022 /PRNewswire/ — Customertimes has recently undertaken projects with three global consumer health organizations in Western Europe to increase their existing OTC and prescription drug business segments and facilitate expansion into new, rapidly growing markets.

Customertimes will be implementing CRM solutions for multichannel pharmacy and HCP engagement. The new solutions will be based on CT Software’s award-winning suite of products, including CT Pharma, CT Mobile, and CT Presenter.

Additionally, all new customers will leverage CT’s proprietary multi-channel ordering solution, CT Orders, to increase efficiency for OTC and pharmacy rep visits. The timelines vary, but all three projects will reach go-live by Q3 of 2022.

“These projects further confirm our role as one of the industry leaders in CRM for Consumer Health, Pharma, and Medical Products,” says Alexey Patsko, CEO of CT Software. “We are committed to increasing the efficiency of our customers’ sales teams, and we know our products will significantly impact the value these companies are able to derive from their CRM.

“Customertimes offers a complete, industry-specific set of applications that extends Salesforce functionality and allows our customers to leverage the full power of the Salesforce ecosystem,” Patsko. “This is what gives us the edge over our competitors. Our applications make a significant impact on revenue growth and sales efficiency, allowing companies to scale quickly and expand into key markets.”

To learn more:

About Customertimes

Customertimes Corp. is a global consulting and software firm dedicated to making the top IT technologies accessible to customers. With more than 4000 projects completed and 1600+ highly skilled experts, our solutions are engineered to help clients realize true business transformation and achieve maximum value from their technology investments. An early entrant into the Salesforce consulting and implementation space in Eastern Europe and an award-winning product development organization, Customertimes Corp. currently has headquarters in New York City, along with regional offices in London, Paris, Toronto, Kyiv, Minsk, Riga, and Moscow. For more information, visit www.customertimes.com.

Media Contact:
Meriel Sikora
Customertimes
212-520-0059
meriel.sikora@customertimes.com