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Author: LS

The New York Times: medical infrastructure in Libya is pretty weak

“On a recent visit to Libya, I met a family living in an improvised shelter in a displaced persons camp east of Tripoli. One of the tens of thousands Libyan families uprooted by war, the family of seven was living in a room barely 20 paces long and half as wide. A clothesline, a pile of mattresses, a hot plate and the stench of body odor filled the room. Outside, they faced a shortage of potable water and abusive taunts from locals,” the New York Times stated yesterday.

According to the statement, the New York Times stressed that the spread of the novel coronavirus will have a devastating effect on the Middle East’s communities of refugees and migrants. The pandemic may also bring into focus the legitimacy and governance deficit of increasingly troubled Middle Eastern regimes.

Libya’s medical infrastructure was already pretty weak. In the nine years since Qaddafi’s fall, it has been gutted by corruption, neglect and several rounds of civil war.

The fighting that followed saw scores of attacks on health facilities and emergency personnel by Hifter’s forces. The violence in Libya has worsened since the outbreak of the pandemic as the warring sides and their foreign backers exploit diplomats’ distraction.

The opposing political authorities in this divided land have taken some modest steps, like a curfew and a ban on large gatherings. But the response has been hampered by mounting economic woes caused by low oil prices, Mr. Hifter’s blockade of oil ports and the desire by elites on both sides to keep paying their fighters.

CBL Governor enquires about the government that will be dealt with

In a response to the statement issed by “Stephanie Turco Williams”, the Acting Special Representative and the Head of the United Nations Support Mission in Libya (UNSMIL) on the need to unify sovereign institutions including the Central Bank of Libya, the CBL Governor “Al-Siddiq Al-Kabir” stated that the country’s political division split all sovereign, executive and even legislative institutions.

Stephanie Williams claimed that the one-year long war had taken a heavy toll on an already struggling economy.

“The conflict has exacerbated institutional divisions and diverted spending to the war effort which itself is destroying rather than building much-need critical infrastructure. The existence of two separate central banks has prevented any rational monetary or fiscal policy reform and has instead contributed to a domestic banking crisis, which if left unaddressed, will result in potentially catastrophic financial loss,” Stephanie Williams said.

Al-Kabir stressed that the Central Bank took the initiative in calling for the reunification of the CBL board However, after auditing the accounts of the Tripoli as well as the eastern branch.

Al-KAbir did not only ask about the government that will be dealt with, but he also asked about its budget implementation as well as disbursements under the current political division, pointing out that he has no idea about the oversight bodies that would oversight and follow-up the CBL board.

In his statement, Al-Siddiq Al-Kabir greatly welcomed efforts to reunify the CBL board only if it would be under a legal framework.

A Libyan doctor working in Spain recovers from Covid-19

The Libyan Embassy in Spain announced that Dr. Hamza Hussein Kaal, a Libyan doctor at the Madrid Governmental Hospital, will return to work after he contracted Coronavirus two weeks ago.

The Libyan Embassy said on its official page on Facebook that Dr. Hamza Hussein Kaal was in a home-based quarantine after testing positive for the disease and then he recovered, pointing out that the doctor is one of the medical staff cooperating with the Libyan embassy in Madrid as he provides help to all members of the Libyan community in Spain.

It added that he contracted Coronavirus while working and is now in a complete recovery from the virus.

Sharara Oil Services Company: sufficient fuel supplies are available

Sharara Oil Services Company, one of the five main petrol station operators in Libya, assured consumers that fuel supplies are available in large quantities.

In a previous statement, the chairman of the Sharara Oil Services company, Adel Al-Zleitni, assured that fuel supplies were available sufficiently at the company’s operating stations, urging consumers not to be drawn behind “rumors”.

Oil falls after Saudi Arabia, Russia delay a meeting

Oil prices fell today after Saudi Arabia and Russia delayed a meeting to discuss output cuts that could help reduce global oversupply as the coronavirus pandemic pummels demand.

Brent crude LCoc1 fell more than $3 when Asian markets opened but recovered some ground, with traders hopeful that a deal between the top producers was still within reach.

At 10:12 GMT, Brent was down $1.23, or 3.6%, at $32.88 a barrel. U.S. crude CLc1 was $1.01, or 3.6%, lower at $27.33 a barrel, off a session low of $25.28.

The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies, a group known as OPEC+, is expected to meet on Thursday, instead of Monday, to discuss cutting production.

NOC receives more medical equipment to help with COVID-19

A second batch of medical equipment was received by NOC today. Thousands of people across Libya will benefit from these new medical supplies designed to help doctors and nurses deal with the COVID-19 pandemic.

On Sunday April 5, 2020, the Sustainable Development Department of the National Oil Corporation (NOC) received a range of medical supplies that had been purchased locally.

A large import of medical cargo is expected later this week. NOC will then start the distribution of this equipment to targeted areas across the Eastern, Southern and Western regions.

“NOC has purchased a large number of personal protection equipment for medical professionals, and a variety of items that will be very useful for clinics and hospitals,” said Mr Mokhtar Abdedayem, manager of NOC’s Sustainable Development Department.

Curfew hours reduced in Misurata

Following the recommendation of the anti-Covid-19 Supreme Committee, Misurata Municipal Council released a statement saying that the curfew imposed in the city will run between 2 p.m. until 7 a.m. starting from Saturday

As far as the working hours are concerned, it stated that they will be reduced from 9 a.m until 12 p.m.

COVID-19 sparked an economic crisis ‘like no other’

At Friday’s briefing, WHO officials and the IMF Director discussed the global financial measures that will be needed to blunt the economic impact of the current coronavirus crisis, ensuring protections for health systems and the world’s most vulnerable.

Economic measures must also account for the world’s most vulnerable, said Guest Kristalina Georgieva, Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), including emerging markets and developing economies.

Key to the IMF’s response includes:

1. Prioritized help for emerging markets and developing economies: these countries are hard hit by the crisis, with fewer resources, collapsing commodities export markets, lost capital and weakened health systems.

As a result, the IMF would prioritize resources for vulnerable countries. “The same way the virus hits vulnerable people with medical pre-conditions hardest, the economic crisis hits vulnerable economies the hardest.”

“Saving lives and protecting livelihoods ought to go hand-in-hand,” Georgieva added.

2. Emergency financing. Georgieva said the IMF was mobilizing emergency funding and had doubled the availability of those resources from $50 billion up to $100 billion, funds that could also help emerging markets and developing economies.

A record number of countries, 85, had reached out to the agency for financing at the same time. “The demand for our financing has skyrocketed,” said Georgieva.

“We have a $1 trillion war chest and we are determined to use as much as necessary in protecting the economy from the scarring of this crisis.”

3. Eased debt obligations for the IMF’s poorest members. Georgieva said that the IMF was mobilizing emergency financing assistance to countries and had increased its capability to ease debt service obligations for these members through the Catastrophe Containment Relief Trust. With the World Bank, she said, the IMF was advocating for a standstill of debt service from the poorest countries to official bilateral creditors.

“This is humanity’s darkest hour,” said Georgieva. “It is a threat to the entire world that requires us to stand tall and protect the most vulnerable of our fair citizens of this planet.”

Brega Petroleum Marketing Company: gasoline tank burns by a mortar shell

Yesterday, Brega Petroleum Marketing Company confirmed that the gasoline tank No.121 at its storage facility on airport road was hit by a mortar shell on April 04, 2020.

Brega Media Office stated that there were no fatalities, but critical infrastructure was compromised.

The storage, which contained 16 tanks, had only two tanks left for use, one for gasoline and one for diesel, which would affect that storage capacity and could cause a potential fuel shortage over the coming months.

It should be noted that the storage was evacuated after being targeted so many times.