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US CDC issues second-highest Marburg travel advisory for Rwanda

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As a result of the Marburg disease epidemic in Rwanda, the United States government has announced that its agency will be issuing its second-highest level of travel advisory, advising citizens to avoid unnecessary travel. Rwanda is located in East Africa.

According to the US Department of Health and Human Services, the CDC will begin screening visitors who have visited Rwanda within the last 21 days before they enter the country.

The organisation advised travellers to Rwanda to take extra care when they visited the nation last week when it released its “level 2” travel advisory.

Since the first epidemic of the Ebola-like illness in Rwanda was discovered in late September, 46 cases and 12 fatalities have been documented. The death rate in Marburg might reach 88%.

Fruit bats carry the virus, which subsequently spreads to people who come into touch with the bodily fluids of infected people.

Rwanda has started to distribute vaccination doses against the virus, giving priority to those who are most at risk, healthcare staff who are most exposed, and those who have close contact with confirmed cases.

The first known outbreak of viral hemorrhagic fever in Rwanda was discovered in late September; to yet, 36 cases and 11 fatalities have been reported. The death rate in Marburg might reach 88%.

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Musings From Abroad

Uganda, Turkey announce $3 billion electric train agreement

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Uganda announced on Tuesday that it had reached a $3 billion agreement with a Turkish business to construct an electric railway line that would connect the landlocked nation to Kenya, its neighbour.

According to Transport Minister, Katumba Wamala, the Standard Gauge Railway (SGR) track will connect Malaba on the Kenyan border with Kampala, the capital of Uganda.

“We signed a contract with Yapi Merkezi from Turkey for construction of a 272-kilometre (170-mile) line at euros 2.7 billion,” or $3 billion, Wamala told AFP.

He claimed that work on the line, which is a 1,700-kilometer regional rail project, is scheduled to start in November and that Yapi Merkezi had stated that the project would be finished in four years.

“With the railway network in place, Uganda hopes to overcome the long delays of transporting goods from Mombasa,” Wamala said, referring to Kenya’s Indian Ocean port city which is a major gateway for Ugandan trade.

According to Yapi Merkezi, the agreement includes both the delivery of train cars and the building of the railway. The trains can travel at speeds of up to 120 km/h and can carry 25 million tonnes of cargo annually.

“This should enable us to cut cargo transport costs by half,” Ramathan Ggoobi, permanent secretary at the Ugandan finance ministry, said in a government video shared online.

“I am telling you we are the second most expensive route in the world… now we should be amongst the most competitive.”

The Turkish company and Tanzania reached a separate agreement to build an electric railway connecting the nation’s major hubs, which was followed by the Ugandan accord.

In July of this year, services on the SGR line that links the capital Dodoma with Tanzania’s biggest metropolis Dar es Salaam commenced.

In 2022, Tanzania also came to an agreement worth $2.2 billion with a Chinese company to construct the last segment of the SGR line, which will connect Tanzania’s main port to its neighbours.

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Musings From Abroad

Cancelled Brazil mines contract may cost S’Africa’s Sibanye $522 million

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Following the cancellation of a $1.2 billion agreement to purchase Appian’s Brazilian nickel and copper mines, investment firm, Appian Capital Advisory, has filed a $522 million compensation claim against South African miner Sibanye Stillwater, the company announced on Monday.

Last week, the London High Court mandated that Sibanye pay Appian for the lost deal, with a hearing scheduled for November 2025 to decide the exact amount of damages.

“Appian currently claims damages of up to $522 million,” Sibanye spokesperson James Wellsted told Reuters. “Sibanye’s case is therefore that Appian is entitled to either no or significantly reduced damages.”

An Appian representative declined to provide a statement.

In what would turn out to be its largest venture into the battery mineral business, Sibanye announced in October 2021 that it would be purchasing the mines owned by affiliates of funds advising them.

It backed out of the deal three months later, claiming that the Santa Rita mine’s instability would have had a significant negative influence on operations going forward.

According to Wellsted, the claims Sibanye obtained include pre-judgment interest, expenditures and expenses related to the mines’ administration and resale procedure, and the difference between the agreed-upon purchase price and the market value of the shares in the mines.

The financial obligations place additional strain on Sibanye CEO Neal Froneman, who is already dealing with growing losses brought on by a decline in the price of platinum group metals.

According to Wellsted, Sibanye intends to contend that Appian violated a fundamental tenet of English contract law, which requires a claimant to take reasonable measures to lessen its losses.

“Appian is required to mitigate its loss by accepting offers for the mines at fair market value and to account for any profits it has made from its continuing ownership of the mines,” he added.

 

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