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13 November 2014

Liberia says won’t extend state of emergency over Ebola


Monrovia - Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf said on Thursday she would not seek an extension to a state of emergency imposed in August over the outbreak of Ebola that has killed at least 2 836 people in the country.

The announcement in an address on state radio is a sign of progress in the fight against the disease, which has hit Liberia harder than Guinea or Sierra Leone, the two other countries at the centre of the worst outbreak on record.

First Ebola treatment trials to start in west Africa


Geneva - Global aid agency Doctors Without Borders said on Thursday it would begin unprecedented trials within a month on Ebola drugs and blood from survivors using patients in west Africa.

The trials in Guinea and Liberia are aimed at rushing out an emergency therapy that can be used in a battle which has taken more than 5 000 lives since December.

Central African Republic rebels block highways


Bangui - Seleka rebels in Central African Republic blocked two highways through the capital Bangui on Thursday and exchanged gunfire with UN peacekeepers, witnesses said, in a further bout of the violent disorder plaguing the country.

The fighters, based at Camp Beal in Bangui since their leader ceded power to a transitional government in January, were protesting at a plan to relocate some of their ranks to a southern province to improve security in the capital.

Liberia lifts Ebola emergency


Liberia lifts Ebola emergencyGeneva - Liberia lifted its state of emergency on Thursday, announcing huge gains in the fight with Ebola as Africa pinned its hopes on trials for a "miracle drug" to be tested on patients in Guinea.

The end of a raft of tough restrictions - the clearest sign yet that authorities in Monrovia believe they are beating the epidemic - follows a dramatic recent drop in new cases.

"I have informed the leadership of the national legislature that I will not seek an extension of the state of emergency," President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf announced on state-owned radio network ELBC.

12 November 2014

Mormon church admits founder Joseph Smith had 40 wives

 
Washington - The Mormon Church has admitted that founder Joseph Smith married about 40 women including a 14-year-old and others who were already the wives of his followers, having maintained for nearly 200 years that he was monogamous.

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints has tried to gloss over aspects of its history, including the polygamy practiced by Smith and Brigham Young, who helped found Salt Lake City, Utah, the headquarters of the Mormon church.