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Notions of a Platform


admin - August 17, 2017 - 3 comments

Early and developing possibilities for a new platform and mode of social engagement as well as social media in a current, still shifting landscape spanning culture, ethics, society, and technology.

Welcome

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Notions of a Platform, or Formulations on Foot in Aix-en-Provence, France

While on foot, running with a certain regularity from Parc Jourdan to Lac de Bimont, passing by Bibémus either or both ways, while on the way formulating ideas that could help us better engage (that ubiquitous verb now, hopefully made to be and feel once again, sometime in the emerging future, an action of importance, relevance and usefulness to myself as well as others), while thinking through a means for us to better and renewingly engage — be it with our bodies, with our environment,

with the people we cross on paths and streets, with what we call home or village, town or city, with our co-students and co-workers, with our education and training, with our art and culture, with our politics and religion, with our communities and polities — while thus conceiving on foot and designing when coming to rest a possible means to have us more productively discover, form, inform, participate in and understand the publics we are part of, or will become part of, the necessity of a better belief, theory and practice of technology began to assert itself.

Subject

What asserted was the need for communities and institutions as well as media, platforms and associated technologies that were deeply and humanely respectful. Respectful in the sense given to us by work following Immanuel Kant, which I had been rereading and continuing as part of my research in the field of medical humanities. Respectful in the sense also given to us by work in medical and bioethics, in which I had acquired a foundation during my doctorate in medicine and my training of workers active in the disciplines of healthcare.

Respectful, too, in the sense given to us by the history of human experimentation and its all too repeated diminishments or violations of human beings, be it in the name of care, knowledge or mere observation, a history that can be followed and painfully relived by way of the Oath and its revisions, by Burke and Hare as well as the dissecting tables at Columbia, by Anarcha, Betsy and Lucy as well the fields of Marion Sims, by Davenport, Gosney, Popenoe as well as Sanger, by Namibia and Nuremberg, by Tuskegee and Guatemala, by Beecher and Belmont,

Place

by Sarah Baartman and Henrietta Lacks, Leilani Muir as well as Dax Cowart, by Depo-Provera in Rhodesia and Pfizer in North Nigeria, and by Geneva, Helsinki, UNESCO and Yogyakarta — a repeating history of subhumanizing harm, its eventual discovery by a field or a public, an instance of declared outrage, a declaration of rights based on respect of all humans, then, after a period or at times simultaneously, a seemingly inexplicable violation of those recently declared rights, a history that I had been teaching students at Stanford to know and understand,

to be able to explain and teach to others, and a history with which, there as a professor at Stanford, I had become all too intimately familiar, having found myself the subject of experimentation of a different but not altogether new kind……and was further situating by doing research at the colonial archives in Aix-en-Provence. Respectful in the much more difficult-to-provide but still attainable, providable sense of medicine and care. That I found to be missing or scarce outside of clinics and hospitals. Missing or scarce, also, in the communities formed or affected by social media and their technologies. Was that sense of respectful, either now or in the near-future, attainable, providable on a platform for communal and social connectivity?

Time

The United Nations Secretary-General, Antonio Guterres, has convened a UN Climate Summit for September of 2019, with the proposed theme, ‘A Race We Can Win. A Race We Must Win.’ The Summit will draw from the commitment to climate change action the Secretary-General outlined in a September 2018 speech, the full text of which is provided here as well as via video below, both made available by the United Nations, the full text of which is provided here as well as via video below, both made available by the United Nations.

As may be evident in the speech, Guterres intends to take as foundations for global efforts both the UN Sustainable Development Goals and the 2016 Paris Agreement crafted within the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change. These prior efforts and their documented agreements are understood here to have set clear, attainable objectives for climate action across nations — goals that have nevertheless proven complex to coordinate, operationalize, and durably support.

Involved

The United Nations Secretary-General, Antonio Guterres, has convened a UN Climate Summit for September of 2019, with the proposed theme, ‘A Race We Can Win. A Race We Must Win.’ The Summit will draw from the commitment to climate change action the Secretary-General outlined in a September 2018 speech, the full text of which is provided here as well as via video below, both made available by the United Nations, the full text of which is provided here as well as via video below, both made available by the United Nations.

As may be evident in the speech, Guterres intends to take as foundations for global efforts both the UN Sustainable Development Goals and the 2016 Paris Agreement crafted within the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change. These prior efforts and their documented agreements are understood here to have set clear, attainable objectives for climate action across nations — goals that have nevertheless proven complex to coordinate, operationalize, and durably support.

Notes

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1. Floating note.

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2. Floating note.

Bird's Eye of Person Laying On Green Grass, Montreal, Canada, May 2017 (Martin Reisch)

State of Health

Overview

First confirmed on August 1, 2018 by the government of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, a serious Ebola outbreak has been ongoing for over a year now, beginning in and around the town of Mangina, in North Kivu Province, located in the northeastern region of the country, and spreading to Ituri Province and recently to Goma, a city of two million people located on the border with Rwanda. A recent Ebola-related death in the city has been a cause of great, inter- and transnational concern.

Onset

At the beginning of the epidemic, a philanthropic medical organization already established in the region, Médecins Sans Frontières, was able to rapidly join efforts with the DRC Ministry of Health and the World Health Organization to launch and maintain a program of accurate diagnosis, adequate urgent treatment, and effective prevention. The initial response and positive results had led an assessment by the World Health Organization, in October 2018, to declare that the situation on ground did not constitute a Public Health Emergency of International Concern.

Setbacks

But along with those encouraging signs have come eruptions in new epicenters (though still limited to North Kivu and Ituri provinces), postponed elections in some of those areas, civil unrest, and fear, mistrust and avoidance in some communities where persons need to be diagnosed and treated. The situation thus oscillates monthly between foreseeable containment and continued morbidity and mortality, with the outbreak maintaining moderate though concerning intensity.

Spread to Significance

By February of 2019 the epidemic had officially become the second largest Ebola outbreak in Africa and in modern history anywhere, behind only the West Africa Ebola epidemic of 2014-16. That prior epidemic ended with an estimated 28,616 reported Ebola cases in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone, with 11,310 deaths, and with over 10,000 survivors.

Latest Data

As of July 14 2019, the figures for the outbreak are: 2501 confirmed and probable Ebola cases • 1668 confirmed and probable deaths • fatality rate of 67% • 131 infected health workers • Current data from the WHO and DRC Ministry of Health.

Emergency Declaration

On July 17 2019, WHO’s Director-General, Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, and its Emergency Committee declared the Ebola outbreak in DRC a Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC). In its decision to declare the Emergency, the WHO specifically cited the confirmed Ebola case in Goma, near the DRC border with Rwanda, for concerns about transmission along the city’s popular transit routes throughout both country and region.

Possible Further Concern

On July 30 2019, response teams in DRC reported that a second Ebola case was confirmed in Goma; the person died the following day. Teams also report that a third case was diagnosed.

We provide further Publiks Updates below.

Publiks Updates

Most Recent

17July 2019: INTERNATIONAL TELECONFERENCE — WHO’s Director-General, Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, and its Emergency Committee concluded that the DRC Ebola outbreak had met the criteria to be declared a Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC). Per WHO guidelines, a PHEIC is declared only in the case of “an extraordinary event that poses a public health risk to other countries through international spread and that potentially requires a coordinated international response.” In its review of the situation in the DRC, the Committee commended the efforts of the DRC Ministry of Health, WHO, and partners in rapid response, treatment, surveillance, vaccination and other prevention protocols, despite considerable population density and movement in certain affected areas, insufficient detection, treatment and prevention resources and procedures in several health facilities in the region, community access and outreach difficulties, political and security issues, and underfunding and inadequate resources. See full account below.

Year 2019

— 17 July 2019

17July 2019: INTERNATIONAL TELECONFERENCE — WHO’s Director-General, Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, and its Emergency Committee concluded that the DRC Ebola outbreak had met the criteria to be declared a Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC). Per WHO guidelines, a PHEIC is declared only in the case of “an extraordinary event that poses a public health risk to other countries through international spread and that potentially requires a coordinated international response.” In its review of the situation in the DRC, the Committee commended the efforts of the DRC Ministry of Health, WHO, and partners in rapid response, treatment, surveillance, vaccination and other prevention protocols, despite considerable population density and movement in certain affected areas, insufficient detection, treatment and prevention resources and procedures in several health facilities in the region, community access and outreach difficulties, political and security issues, and underfunding and inadequate resources.

The Committee noted, however, that a year into the epidemic there is new incidence and reinfection of Ebola at the epidemic’s epicenters as well as worrying sings of possible extension. Of particular concern are cases associated with neighboring areas in Uganda and with Goma, a city of two million on the border with Rwanda and a significant thorough-way for the DRC and the international region. Though there is, as yet, no evidence of actual Ebola transmission spreading from this DRC outbreak beyond its epicenters, these cases have already led to WHO recommendations and to prompt surveillance and prevention programs in non-epicenter DRC, Goma, Rwanda, and Uganda — the success of which would be considerably increased via international and global coordination and attention. The Committee thus concluded that the conditions for PHEIC have been met.

The WHO Director-General accepted the Committee recommendations, declared the PHEIC today, and in his public statement reiterated their concern, recommendation, and warning that such a declaration not lead to restrictions in travel or trade or closure of borders — which significantly hampered treatment and prevention efforts during the epidemic of 2014-15 in West Africa.

For more details on the meeting, please see the Statement of the Emergency Committee. For the public statement by WHO’s Director-General, Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, please see the transcript of his speech.

— 7 July 2019

7July 2019: NORTH KIVU AND ITURI, DRC — WHO report a total of 2418 Ebola cases, including 2324 confirmed and 94 probable. A total of 1630 deaths were reported for an overall case fatality ratio of 67%). Of the cases with known age and sex, 56% (1363) were female, and 29% (700) were children aged less than 18 years. Incidence keeps rising among health workers: 131 have been infected with Ebola (5% of total cases).

— 23 June 2019

23June 2019: NORTH KIVU AND ITURI, DRC — WHO report resumed violent community resistance incidents in certain affected areas, coinciding with increased surveillance and response activities and confirmed Ebola cases. Armed groups’ movements have constrained access to health areas and the security situation remains tense where attacks had occurred in early June 2019.

WHO now has a total of 2247 Ebola cases, including 2153 confirmed and 94 probable, and 1510 deaths (overall case fatality ratio 67%). Of those cases with known age and sex, 57% (1273) were female, and 29% (654) were children aged less than 18 years. There have now been 126 health workers affected (6% of total cases).

— 16 June 2019

16June 2019: NORTH KIVU AND ITURI, DRC — WHO report a total of 2168 Ebola cases, including 2074 confirmed and 94 probable, and 1449 deaths (fatality ratio 67%). Of those cases with known age and sex, 57% (1226) were female, and 29% (632) were children aged less than 18 years. 121 health workers have been affected (6% of total cases).

On June 14, the WHO Director-General convened a meeting of the Emergency Committee under the International Health Regulations (IHR). The Committee expressed deep concern about an outbreak that, notwithstanding some positive epidemiological trends, continues to persist and possibly extend. It noted community acceptance and security issues, as well as lack of adequate funding and strained human resources. There is now a cluster of confirmed cases in Uganda, which the Committee described as not unexpected.

The Committee concluded that the outbreak is indeed a health emergency in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and the neighboring region, but that the situation does not meet all the criteria for a Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC). The Committee offered public health advice to be strictly followed by all countries and partners involved.

Please see the Committee statement here.

— 12 June 2019

12June 2019: KASESE DISTRICT, UGANDA — A day earlier, the Ministry of Health of Uganda confirmed their own official index case of Ebola, in Kasese District, at the border with the DRC.

The patient was a 5-year-old boy who had recently visited the DRC to attend the burial of his grandfather, a confirmed Ebola case (death on June 1). The boy and his mother had re-entered Uganda on June 10, intending to return home, but the child presented instead at a hospital with nose bleeding, blood vomiting, blood in stool and urine, muscle pain, headache, fatigue and abdominal pain. The young patient was immediately referred to a designated Ebola treatment centre (ETC), with blood specimens taken that same day. By June 11, test results revealed the sample to be positive for Ebola virus, Zaire strain. Uganda’s Minister of Health and the WHO Representative in Uganda held a joint press conference at 9pm on June 11 to formally declared an Ebola outbreak in the country. By the early morning of June 12, the child died.

Two family relations (mother and a sibling) developed symptoms and were isolated in the ETC on June 11. Blood specimens tested positive for Ebola on June 12. Another suspected case has been admitted, with test results pending. Eight contacts have been identified and are being closely monitored.

The Ministry of Health of Uganda, WHO and other partners have developed and deployed a rapid response team to the affected district and border area of Uganda/DRC.

— 26 May 2019

26May 2019: NORTH KIVU AND ITURI, DRC — WHO report a lower rate of increase in cases, but again caution that such decreased incidence could be due to surveillance teams’ constraint and access issues caused by earlier security incidents. Figures reveal a total of 1920 cases, 1826 confirmed and 94 probable cases, with 1281 deaths (fatality ratio 67%). Among cases with known age and sex, 58% (1113) were female and 29% (565) were children aged less than 18 years. 105 healthcare workers have been affected.

— 12 May 2019

12May 2019: NORTH KIVU AND ITURI, DRC — WHO report disruption in access due to several security incidents. Response teams thus experience “stop and go” movement through the affected northeastern areas of DRC and thus predict that the rate of reported cases will be higher for at least a few weeks. Figures now include 1705 cases, 1617 confirmed and 88 probable, with 1124 deaths producing a fatality ratio of 66%. Cases with known age and sex reveal 56% (951) being female and 29% (502) being children aged less than 18 years. 101 healthcare workers have contracted Ebola.

— 28 April 2019

28April 2019: NORTH KIVU AND ITURI, DRC — WHO continue to report new cases, still limited to the two northeastern provinces. Figures include a total of 1400 confirmed and 66 probable cases and 957 deaths (for a fatality ratio of 65%). Among cases with known age and sex, 56% (815) were female, and 28% (416) were children aged less than 18 years. 92 healthcare workers were affected, resulting in 33 deaths.

— 18 April 2019

18April 2019: NORTH KIVU AND ITURI, DRC — WHO report continued rise in incidence, though limited geographically to affected areas within the two provinces. Reported figures for the North Kivu and Ituru Ebola outbreak include 1290 confirmed and probable Ebola cases, with 725 (56%) being female and 361 (28%) being children under the age of 18 years. 833 confirmed deaths and an overall case fatality ratio is 65%. Infections among healthcare workers rises to 89 (7% of total cases), with 32 deaths. 379 patients discharged from Ebola Treatment Centers (ETCs).

— 28 March 2019

28March 2019: NORTH KIVU AND ITURI, DRC — WHO report a rise in the number of new cases in the preceding week, citing challenges to public health response from sporadic violence and community mistrust. Reported figures for the North Kivu and Ituru Ebola outbreak include 1029 confirmed and probable Ebola cases, with 584 (57%) being female and 307 (30%) being children under the age of 18 years. 642 confirmed deaths and an overall case fatality ratio is 62%. Infections among healthcare workers rises to 78 (8% of total cases), with 27 deaths.

— 14 March 2019

14March 2019: NORTH KIVU AND ITURI, DRC — Outbreak continues with moderate intensity, though WHO report that coordinated public health response continues to make gains, with 10 of the 20 health zones affected by the outbreak reporting no new cases in the past 21 days and a lower frequency of cases reported in past five weeks, when compared to January 2019. Reported figures for the North Kivu and Ituru Ebola outbreak include 927 confirmed and probable Ebola cases, with 525 (57%) being female and 280 (30%) being children under the age of 18 years. 583 confirmed deaths and an overall case fatality ratio is 63%.

— 28 February 2019

28February 2019: NORTH KIVU, DRC — Outbreak continues with moderate intensity. Reported figures for the North Kivu Ebola outbreak include 879 confirmed and probable Ebola cases, with 499 (57%) being female and 264 (30%) being children under the age of 18 years. 553 confirmed deaths and an overall case fatality ratio is 63%.

— 14 February 2019

14February 2019: NORTH KIVU, DRC — Outbreak continues with moderate intensity. Reported figures for the North Kivu Ebola outbreak include 823 confirmed and probable Ebola cases with 517 confirmed deaths. Overall case fatality ratio is 63%. To date, there have been 283 discharges from Ebola Treatment Centers (ETCs), the persons being subsequently enrolled in monitoring and support programs. 68 health workers have been reported as infected. For a sense of the geographic scope of the outbreak within the affected provinces: Ebola cases have been reported in 118 of 287 health areas across 18 health zones; 37 of the health areas reported infections in the past 21 days.

— 3 February 2019

3February 2019: NORTH KIVU, DRC — Reported figures for the North Kivu Ebola outbreak include 785 confirmed and probable Ebola cases with 484 confirmed deaths. The figures make this Ebola outbreak the second largest in history. Per a WHO report, an Immunization Commission has been effective in vaccinating response staff and a cumulative total of 73 309 people since the outbreak’s beginning.

— 28 January 2019

28January 2019: NORTH KIVU, DRC — Reported figures for the North Kivu Ebola outbreak include 743 confirmed and probable Ebola cases with 461 confirmed deaths.

— 14 January 2019

14January 2019: NORTH KIVU, DRC — Reported figures for the North Kivu Ebola outbreak include 658 confirmed and probable Ebola cases with 402 confirmed deaths.

Year 2018

— 25 December 2018

25December 2018: NORTH KIVU, DRC — Reported figures for the North Kivu Ebola outbreak include 585 confirmed and probable Ebola cases with 356 confirmed deaths.

— 16 December 2018

16December 2018: NORTH KIVU, DRC — Reported figures for the North Kivu Ebola outbreak include 539 confirmed and probable Ebola cases with 315 confirmed deaths.

— 26 November 2018

26November 2018: NORTH KIVU, DRC — Reported figures for the North Kivu Ebola outbreak include 421 confirmed and probable Ebola cases with 241 confirmed deaths.

— 11 November 2018

11November 2018: NORTH KIVU, DRC — Reported figures for the North Kivu Ebola outbreak include 333 confirmed and probable Ebola cases with 209 confirmed deaths.

— 28 October 2018

28October 2018: NORTH KIVU, DRC — Reported figures for the North Kivu Ebola outbreak include 274 confirmed and probable Ebola cases with 174 confirmed deaths.

— 17 October 2018

17October 2019: WHO ANNOUNCEMENT — WHO announces the results from an assessment of then-current response and numbers by a WHO International Health Regulations Emergency Committee — that the Ebola situation in North Kivu Province does not constitute a Public Health Emergency of International Concern. Per the Committee chair, factors against making that specific declaration included confirmation that not a single case of Ebola had been exported from the DRC to another country and a concern that such a declaration would affect travel, transport, and other access routes essential to the Ebola response.

The non-declaration raised concerns among observers and the WHO Director-General, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, who headed the announcement personally, seemed aware of them. In an additional Twitter posting also dated October 17, the director stated: “I have accepted the Emergency Committee’s recommendation not to declare a public health emergency of international concern. But this does not mean WHO is not taking the outbreak in seriously. We still have more than 250 people working in DRC to end this outbreak.”

As of the date of this WHO announcement, there were 216 confirmed and probable Ebola cases with 139 confirmed deaths reported.

— 20 September 2018

20September 2018: NORTH KIVU, DRC — MSF opens another ETC in Butembo in partnership with the Ministry of Health. Overall, the DRC Ministry of Health is leading the response to this Ebola outbreak, coordinating with the WHO and organizations like MSF with nearby facilities and the ability to respond quickly and adequately to detected cases.

— 14 August 2018

14August 2018: MANGINA, DRC — MSF, already established in the North Kivu Province, opens an Ebola Treatment Centre (ETC) in Mangina.

— 7 August 2018

7August 2018: NORTH KIVU, DRC — The Ebola strain in the North Kivu Province outbreak is confirmed via analysis to be of the Zaire type.

— 1 August 2018

1August 2018: DRC — The DRC Ministry of Health officially declares an Ebola outbreak focalized near Mangina, North Kivu Province. It is the country’s second official outbreak in 2018 and its tenth in forty (40) years. The Ministry of Health is careful to make this outbreak distinct from its ninth official outbreak in the Equateur Province, stating that at the moment there is no confirmation that the two are linked.

— 30 July - 2 August 2018

30July-2 August 2018: NORTH KIVU, DRC — A joint Ministry of Health/World Health Organization investigation on site finds 6 more suspect cases, of which 4 test positive.

— late July 2018

Late July 2018: MANGINA, DRC — Members of the female patient’s family later develop similar symptoms and also die soon after their presentation.

— 25 July 2018

25July 2018: MANGINA, DRC — The female patient is discharged but dies at home, after presenting symptoms now more consistent with Ebola hemorrhagic fever.

— 19 July 2018

19July 2018: MANGINA, DRC — Per the records of a local health center, a female patient from Mangina, North Kivu Province, in the northeastern region of the DRC, is admitted with a diagnosis of heart disease.

— May 2018

May 2018: EQUATEUR PROVINCE, DRC — Retrospective studies — consisting primarily of reviewing charts of probable and confirmed cases for characteristic signs, symptoms, diagnosis, and follow-up, where available — indicate that a start of the outbreak could be pinpointed to a period between late April and May of 2018, among a cluster of cases in the Equateur Province of the DRC. Notably, the Equateur Province had a distinct, thus-far contained outbreak of Ebola, and the province is not in the northeastern region of the DRC, where another Ebola outbreak will later grow to a size warranting worldwide attention and intensified responses from the Ministry of Health, MSF, and WHO. A possible explanation is to be had by looking through the WHO analysis of these retrospective studies, in which a confirmed case in Mbandaka, Equateur Province is singled out as a notable concern. For its nature as a sizeable urbanized center and its location along major transport avenues (rivers, roads, and air routes of domestic and international importance) led WHO and observers to, early on, countenance direct routes of transmission and increased risk of spread throughout the Democratic Republic of the Congo, to regions that include where an outbreak will come to establish itself.

We provide further data visualization and comments below.

Cases:Deaths Over Epidemic Period

Cases:Deaths Over Epidemic Period

Cases:Deaths at Epidemic Onset

Cases:Deaths at Epidemic Current

Data and Analysis

Overview

First confirmed on August 1, 2018 by the government of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, a serious Ebola outbreak has been ongoing for over a year now, beginning in and around the town of Mangina, in North Kivu Province, located in the northeastern region of the country, and spreading to Ituri Province and recently to Goma, a city of two million people located on the border with Rwanda. A recent Ebola-related death in the city has been a cause of great, inter- and transnational concern.

Onset

At the beginning of the epidemic, a philanthropic medical organization already established in the region, Médecins Sans Frontières, was able to rapidly join efforts with the DRC Ministry of Health and the World Health Organization to launch and maintain a program of accurate diagnosis, adequate urgent treatment, and effective prevention. The initial response and positive results had led an assessment by the World Health Organization, in October 2018, to declare that the situation on ground did not constitute a Public Health Emergency of International Concern.

Setbacks

But along with those encouraging signs have come eruptions in new epicenters (though still limited to North Kivu and Ituri provinces), postponed elections in some of those areas, civil unrest, and fear, mistrust and avoidance in some communities where persons need to be diagnosed and treated. The situation thus oscillates monthly between foreseeable containment and continued morbidity and mortality, with the outbreak maintaining moderate though concerning intensity.

Spread to Significance

By February of 2019 the epidemic had officially become the second largest Ebola outbreak in Africa and in modern history anywhere, behind only the West Africa Ebola epidemic of 2014-16. That prior epidemic ended with an estimated 28,616 reported Ebola cases in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone, with 11,310 deaths, and with over 10,000 survivors.

Latest Data

As of July 14 2019, the figures for the outbreak are: 2501 confirmed and probable Ebola cases • 1668 confirmed and probable deaths • fatality rate of 67% • 131 infected health workers • Current data from the WHO and DRC Ministry of Health.

Emergency Declaration

On July 17 2019, WHO’s Director-General, Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, and its Emergency Committee declared the Ebola outbreak in DRC a Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC). In its decision to declare the Emergency, the WHO specifically cited the confirmed Ebola case in Goma, near the DRC border with Rwanda, for concerns about transmission along the city’s popular transit routes throughout both country and region.

Possible Further Concern

On July 30 2019, response teams in DRC reported that a second Ebola case was confirmed in Goma; the person died the following day. Teams also report that a third case was diagnosed.

We provide further comments and sources below.

Conclusions

Thus Far

Along with the above key principles, the Policy on Independence and Freedoms requires your adherence to correlative freedoms and liberties delineated below.

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Along with the above key principles, the Policy on Independence and Freedoms requires your adherence to correlative freedoms and liberties delineated below.

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Thus Far

Along with the above key principles, the Policy on Independence and Freedoms requires your adherence to correlative freedoms and liberties delineated below.

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I.

Conclusions

The company ethics and policies are carefully crafted, then adhered to by a range of individuals and divisions working in varied relation to The Ikoku Group to establish, develop and provide a private company dedicated to fostering care and creativity, ethics and innovation.

II.

Questions

Who take as their basis the most robust conceptions of respect, humanity, integrity, civil liberties and civil rights — up to and beyond what the law protects and provides for — as they carry out and embody the mission and purposes of The Ikoku Group.

III.

Suggestions

And who also join in ongoing efforts to ensure that The Ikoku Group, its Divisions and its Products and Services remain safe, secure and respectful places to do work, to express and discuss, to teach and learn, to form, inform and even alter local and global communities.

Sources and Readings

Overview

For this news series’s sources, and further reading on the issues raised by this outbreak, see the following:

Further Reading

TBA

The United Nations bolsters a global community committed to climate change action by holding a special summit this September.

On the United Nations 2019 Summit on Climate Change and Action

ISSUE • The Environment
PLACE • New York, NY, USA
DATE • September 23, 2019
ORGANIZATION • United Nations

State of Event

The United Nations Secretary-General, Antonio Guterres, has convened a UN Climate Summit for September of 2019, with the proposed theme, ‘A Race We Can Win. A Race We Must Win.’ The Summit will draw from the commitment to climate change action the Secretary-General outlined in a September 2018 speech, the full text of which is provided here as well as via video below, both made available by the United Nations.

As may be evident in the speech, Guterres intends to take as foundations for global efforts both the UN Sustainable Development Goals and the 2016 Paris Agreement crafted within the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change. These prior efforts and their documented agreements are understood here to have set clear, attainable objectives for climate action across nations — goals that have nevertheless proven complex to coordinate, operationalize, and durably support.

“Let us use the next year for transformational decisions in boardrooms, executive suites and parliaments across the world. Let us raise our sights, build coalitions and make our leaders listen. I commit myself, and the entire United Nations, to this effort. We will support all leaders who rise to the challenge I have outlined today.”

The 2019 Summit is therefore meant to serve as a catalyst: to further spur member nations — as well as trans- and international regions, cities and towns, enterprises and institutions, investors, public officials and citizens — to actively support and carry out climate action remedies.

The Summit’s stated areas of specific interest include energy transition, climate finance and carbon pricing, industry transition, nature-based solutions, cities and local action, and resilience.

“Dear friends, there is no more time to waste. As the ferocity of this summer’s wildfires and heatwaves shows, the world is changing before our eyes. We are careening towards the edge of the abyss.”

It is worth taking the time with the announcement speech to note how Secretary-General Guterres has positioned himself — and the United Nations organization — as a powerful, incessant and possibly persuasive voice on the matter of climate action. This positioning of the UN is not without both ardent supporters and diplomatic as well as policy friction. As of the Summit’s announcement, not all UN member nations are party to the Paris Agreement and Kyoto Protocol.

Furthermore, the cosignatories of both accords have also had to receive news of announcements, in 2017 and 2001respectively, of the United States’s withdrawal from their hitherto agreed-upon schedule of climate-sensitive incentives and restrictions. Still, planning for the 2019 Summit at the UN’s New York City headquarters continues. And this particularly resonant section of Guterres’s speech remains a guide for its agenda:

“It is not too late to shift course, but every day that passes means the world heats up a little more and the cost of our inaction mounts. Every day we fail to act is a day that we step a little closer towards a fate that none of us wants — a fate that will resonate through generations in the damage done to humankind and life on earth.”

“Our fate is in our hands. The world is counting on all of us to rise to the challenge before it’s too late. I count on you all.”

The United Nations and its Secretary-General have with this mandate invited Member Nations and potential partners to their headquarters in New York City.

And they offer further details and updates on ongoing preparations for the UN Summit via the event’s official site.

Sources & Further

For this article’s sources, and further reading on the issues raised by the United Nations Climate Summit, we encourage you to visit not only the official sites of the United Nations itself and its 2019 Summit on Climate Action, but also and most importantly, the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change.

There you will be provided access to the originating documents and ongoing updates on two key subsets of the Framework: namely, the United Nations Paris Agreement on Climate Change and the United Nations Kyoto Protocol on Climate Change. We also provide here access to official US White House transcripts of, first, an Announcement and Discussion by United States President George W Bush regarding Global Climate Change (June 2001) and, second, a Statement by United States President Donald J Trump on the Paris Climate Accord (June 2017). Both transcripts will help provide a sense of the then specified rationale for the Presidents’s withdrawal of the United States from the Kyoto and Paris accords.

An additional framework utilized by the UN Secretary-General for the Summit draws directly and explicitly from the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals, as they were originally declared, and as they have been continually revisited and revised, for example, as we see in the United Nations 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development (2015). Access to an assortment of activities engendered by the declaration and revision of these Goals can be had via the official United Nations site for Sustainable Development.

Finally, we provide access to the official transcript of United Nations Secretary-General Guterres’s Remarks on Climate Change (September 2018) along with its video recording. And we point you to a growing compilation of speeches on climate change given by Secretary-General Guterres.

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Sofia Helin
Sofia Helin
Guest
7 years ago

When, while the lovely valley teems with vapour around me, and the meridian sun strikes the upper surface of the impenetrable foliage of my trees, and but a few stray gleams steal into the inner sanctuary.

Sofia Helin
Sofia Helin
Guest
Reply to  Sofia Helin
7 years ago

A wonderful serenity has taken possession of my entire soul, like these sweet mornings of spring which I enjoy with my whole heart. I am alone, and feel the charm of existence in this spot, which was created for the bliss of souls like mine. I am so happy, my dear friend, so absorbed in the exquisite sense of mere tranquil existence, that I neglect my talents. I should be incapable of drawing.

Sofia Helin
Sofia Helin
Guest
7 years ago

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