Oman reported zero Covid-19 deaths on Monday. Photo: Unsplash
Oman reported zero Covid-19 deaths on Monday. Photo: Unsplash
Oman reported zero Covid-19 deaths on Monday. Photo: Unsplash
Oman reported zero Covid-19 deaths on Monday. Photo: Unsplash

Oman reports zero Covid deaths for first time this year


Saleh Al Shaibany
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  • Arabic

Oman on Monday reported no Covid-19 deaths in the past 24 hours for the first time this year in a development that officials told The National will boost a call made last week for the sultanate to be taken off travel red lists.

The Health Ministry, however, warned the public to continue following safety precautions to keep the number of infections low.

The ministry reported 58 new cases in the past 24 hours, much lower than the more than 2,000 daily cases recorded in June.

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    A man shows the green pass on his phone before entering a shopping mall in Abu Dhabi, UAE. Khushnum Bhandari / The National

The total number of infections registered in Oman has reached 303,163, with 4,089 deaths since the pandemic started in late 2019.

“We would like to caution members of the public, while we reported no deaths today for the first time this year, to take the usual precautions of social distancing, avoiding large gatherings and wearing masks at all times,” Oman Television reported the ministry as saying.

Last week, Health Minister Dr Ahmed Al Saeedi held a press conference with foreign diplomats in Muscat to ask their countries to remove Oman from travel red lists.

“We are making huge progress in containing the coronavirus and we can see it is working because the infection numbers have significantly gone down,” he told the diplomats. “We would like the countries who have put Oman on the red list to remove it.”

Despite the minister's efforts, so far, no country that has placed Oman on its red list, including the UK, has removed it.

But a ministry official said he was confident that countries would be encouraged to do so following the registration of zero deaths on Monday.

“As a community, we are working very hard to take all the necessary precautions to control the virus,” Health Ministry spokesman Ahmed Alraisi told The National.

“Infections have come down by more than 80 per cent since the beginning of the year to reach this level we see today. I am confident Oman will come off of the red list of those countries very soon.”

Oman has already vaccinated 2.3 million people, or about 50 per cent of its population, with at least one dose of vaccine and it has opened even more vaccination stations all over the country.

From September 1, no one is allowed to enter public indoor spaces — including workplaces, malls, schools and universities — unless they have received at least one dose of vaccine.

The country also opened the land border with the UAE on September 1 after it was closed several times due to Covid-19.

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New UK refugee system

 

  • A new “core protection” for refugees moving from permanent to a more basic, temporary protection
  • Shortened leave to remain - refugees will receive 30 months instead of five years
  • A longer path to settlement with no indefinite settled status until a refugee has spent 20 years in Britain
  • To encourage refugees to integrate the government will encourage them to out of the core protection route wherever possible.
  • Under core protection there will be no automatic right to family reunion
  • Refugees will have a reduced right to public funds
Coffee: black death or elixir of life?

It is among the greatest health debates of our time; splashed across newspapers with contradicting headlines - is coffee good for you or not?

Depending on what you read, it is either a cancer-causing, sleep-depriving, stomach ulcer-inducing black death or the secret to long life, cutting the chance of stroke, diabetes and cancer.

The latest research - a study of 8,412 people across the UK who each underwent an MRI heart scan - is intended to put to bed (caffeine allowing) conflicting reports of the pros and cons of consumption.

The study, funded by the British Heart Foundation, contradicted previous findings that it stiffens arteries, putting pressure on the heart and increasing the likelihood of a heart attack or stroke, leading to warnings to cut down.

Numerous studies have recognised the benefits of coffee in cutting oral and esophageal cancer, the risk of a stroke and cirrhosis of the liver. 

The benefits are often linked to biologically active compounds including caffeine, flavonoids, lignans, and other polyphenols, which benefit the body. These and othetr coffee compounds regulate genes involved in DNA repair, have anti-inflammatory properties and are associated with lower risk of insulin resistance, which is linked to type-2 diabetes.

But as doctors warn, too much of anything is inadvisable. The British Heart Foundation found the heaviest coffee drinkers in the study were most likely to be men who smoked and drank alcohol regularly.

Excessive amounts of coffee also unsettle the stomach causing or contributing to stomach ulcers. It also stains the teeth over time, hampers absorption of minerals and vitamins like zinc and iron.

It also raises blood pressure, which is largely problematic for people with existing conditions.

So the heaviest drinkers of the black stuff - some in the study had up to 25 cups per day - may want to rein it in.

Rory Reynolds

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Updated: November 01, 2021, 12:26 PM