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General News of Friday, 3 April 2020

Source: rainbowradioonline.com

Be bold, tell the west to start coronavirus trials from their countries - Gyampo

Professor Ransford Gyampo Professor Ransford Gyampo

Outspoken professor at the University of Ghana, Professor Ransford Gyampo has challenged African leaders to be bold and resist any attempt by foreigners to use Africans for trials into vaccines meant to cure the coronavirus.

The lecturer in a short post on Facebook said African leaders should tell the foreign leaders to test the vaccines on their citizens before heading to Africa.

He believes the number of cases recorded in such countries are enough for them to start the trials from their countries.

To him, foreigners aren’t wiser than Africans as we have beat them academically in classrooms we shared with them.

The end of the global pandemic he further opined will shape power and influence world politics.

”Let the vaccines be tested first on their populace. Let our leaders boldly tell them that the end of this pandemic will shape power and influence in world politics. We sat in the same classrooms with some of their best brains in school and beat them academically. They aren’t wiser than us.”

Since the last situational update, Ghana has confirmed nine additional COVID-19 cases, all from the Greater Accra region. Four (4) of them have no history of travel nor contact with any confirmed case.



Other four (4) have no travel history but are contacts of confirmed cases in Ghana, and one travelled to Ghana from Benin within the past 14 days.

As at April 2, 2020, Ghana has recorded 204 cases COVID-19 with five (5) deaths. The number of regions reporting cases remains five (5) (Greater Accra, Ashanti, Northern, Upper West and Eastern).

The Greater Accra Region has most of the cases (183) followed by the Northern Region (10), Ashanti Region (9), Upper West Region (1) and Eastern Region (1).

Most of the cases are reported from routine / enhanced surveillance activities. Cases from travellers under mandatory quarantine remain 89.