2022: The MILESTONE YEAR

Jetex Annual Review

Dubai, United Arab Emirates, Dec. 29, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — The business aviation industry is currently going through the biggest transition in history, accelerated by the digitalisation, accessibility, and the exceptional travel conveniences that it offers against the backdrop of a gradual recovery from the health crisis. In many ways, it reflects the fourth industrial revolution, which is more significant, and its ramifications more profound, than in any prior period of human history.

With the private jet traffic setting new records in 2022, experts predict up to 8,500 new business jet deliveries until 2031, which amounts to an estimated total value of US$ 274 billion. At the same time, sustainability is at the top of the agenda to ensure that the industry develops in line with the decarbonisation goals set by IATA.

The record results could not have been achieved without the efficiency and exceptional ability of the business aviation industry to adapt and to remain connected to its customers, continuing to inspire their desire to travel and discover.

For the first time, Jetex invites you to discover the latest trends in private aviation, and what will shape the global industry in the future in its interactive annual review.

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About Jetex:

An award-winning global leader in executive aviation, Jetex is recognized for delivering flexible, best-in-class trip support solutions to customers worldwide. Jetex provides exceptional private terminals (FBOs), aircraft fueling, ground handling and global trip planning. The company caters to both owners and operators of business jets for corporate, commercial and personal air travel. To find out more about Jetex, visit www.jetex.com and follow us on Instagram, Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn.

 

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Oleg Kafarov - Director of Portfolio Development & Corporate Communications
Jetex
+971 4 212 4900
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Somali, Djibouti Presidents cut the ribbon of Intergovernmental Academy of the Somali Language

President of the Federal Republic of Somalia, H.E. Hassan Sh. Mohamud and Djiboutian President, Ismail Omar Guelleh on Thursday cut the ribbon of Inter-Governmental Academy of the Somali Language in Mogadishu.

The Speaker of Somalia’s Upper House of Parliament, Abdi Hashi Abdullahi, Prime Minister, Hamza Abdi Barre, Kenyan Minister of Defense, Law makers, Government officials and scholars are attending the inauguration.

This academy gathers regions in the Horn of Africa namely Somalia, Djibouti, Ethiopian and Kenya.

Presidents Hassan and Guelleh laid the foundation of this academy in 2015 and Mogadishu is recognized as where the ‘Somali Language’ was born.

Source: Somalia National News Agency

IOM East and Horn of Africa Drought Response – Situation Report (1-30 November 2022)

1,936,780 people reached by IOM in 2022

1,029,548 people reached in November 2022

55% of people reached are female

53% of IOM targeted people reached

SITUATION OVERVIEW

A historic drought has affected the Greater Horn of Africa since the end of 2020, with a fifth consecutive failed season now confirmed during the October to December 2022 rainy season. Yet another failed rainy season is forecast for March to May 2023. More than 36 million people are affected by the drought in the region, including 24.1 million in Ethiopia, 7.8 million in Somalia, 4.5 million in Kenya and almost 200,000 in Djibouti. Of these, more than two million people have been forced to leave their homes in search of life-saving assistance, including 1.3 million in Somalia, 534,000 in Ethiopia and more than 340,000 in Kenya. There has also been large-scale displacement across borders, with 24,000 people arriving from Somalia to Kenya (Dadaab Refugee Camp) since end-September 2022. In Somalia, a total of 214,000 people were found to face catastrophic food insecurity – Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) Phase 5 – during the October to December 2022 period. The length and geographical scope of the current drought already makes it more severe than the 2011 drought/famine, which is estimated to have led to the death of 260,000 people. As indicated by the Famine Review Committee (FRC) in a report dated 2 December 2022: “… if funding, outreach, management and coverage in all sectors and in particular in health and WASH are not scaled up, famine is a strong possibility and not only in the April-June 2023 period but well beyond that.” Indeed, been confirmed across the region. It is estimated that currently only one third of the people targeted in the region are reached by health and WASH support, and only about half with shelter support. IOM is at the forefront, with other humanitarian agencies, to prevent the current situation from tipping into famine. Urgent and sustained funding is required to allow IOM to maintain and further scale up its operations to meet the urgent needs of drought-affected populations.

Source: International Organization for Migration

Experts Weigh Risk of New COVID Mutations from China

The explosion of COVID infections in China since it relaxed its prevention and control measures has experts weighing the risks of new mutations that could prove to be more contagious or deadly that the currently dominant omicron strain.

According to an internal estimate from China’s top health officials reported by Bloomberg and the Financial Times, almost 250 million people in China may have caught COVID-19 in the first 20 days of December.

Ziyad Al-Aly, director of the Clinical Epidemiology Center at Washington University in St. Louis, told VOA Mandarin that infections are likely to soar further as millions of Chinese travel for the lunar New Year in just a few weeks.

A model from the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) at the University of Washington School of Medicine forecasts a major omicron epidemic to unfold in the coming months. The model shows that in the absence of renewed lockdowns and other stiff measures, the daily estimated infections could rise to 4.6 million by March 1, 2023.

Experts say the unprecedented surge increases the probability of a new virus mutation taking hold.

“When a virus is widely circulating in a population and causing many infections, the likelihood of the virus mutating increases,” the World Health Organization explained on its website last year. “The more opportunities a virus has to spread, the more it replicates – and the more opportunities it has to undergo changes.”

Al-Aly said that every time someone is infected, the virus has an opportunity to mutate, so an explosive increase in cases will undoubtedly increase the possibility of new mutations.

“We have not seen it yet, but that probability really is increasing dramatically now, just because the number of infections is exploding really, really quickly in a very, very short amount of time,” he said.

Peter Hotez, dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, also believes that the surge of cases in China is likely to prompt the emergence of new mutations.

“The unchecked spread of COVID among a large unvaccinated or under-vaccinated population in China could do this (promote new variants). Similar to the emergence of Delta among an unvaccinated population in India in early 2021,” he said in a tweet.

The mutated strain, delta, first discovered in India in October 2020, is considered to be one of the driving factors of the second wave of the epidemic in India. Last year, it became the main epidemic strain in more than 100 countries.

According to Bloomberg, Chinese authorities submitted 25 new genetic samples taken in the past month from Beijing, Inner Mongolia and Guangzhou to GISAID, a database where scientists from around the world share coronavirus sequences to monitor mutations. Peter Bogner, chief executive officer of GISAID, said there is so far no sign suggesting any new variant of any significance.

Past mutations led to the emergence of omicron, which is less lethal than earlier versions but spreads very easily, as the dominant strain. But there is no guarantee that a future mutation might not cause more severe illness and deaths.

A study last month by a team of scientists from Africa Health Research Institute in Durban addressed that possibility. This study has not yet been peer-reviewed.

In an email to VOA Mandarin, Alex Sigal, the leading scientist of study and a faculty member at the Africa Health Research Institute and associate professor at the University of KwaZulu-Natal, said, “Our study showed there is a possibility that a more pathogenic variant may arise based on viral evolution in someone who was immunosuppressed. Whether such a variant will actually emerge is unclear.”

Because China was able to minimize the number of infections over the past three years with its zero-COVID policy, its population has less natural immunity than in other countries where omicron has become dominant because of its ability to evade immunity.

Sigal said because of that, other variants will find it easier to compete against omicron in China, raising the chances of a new strain becoming dominant.

However, Sigal said, “Omicron subvariants are also extremely good at replication and transmission. Therefore, the most likely scenario is that they will still outcompete any completely new variants, and it will be more of what we know – infections which are mostly unpleasant but not as dangerous since they tend not to spread to the lungs.”

Jin Dong-Yan, virologist in the University of Hong Kong’s Department of Biochemistry, noted that China’s vaccination rate is 90%, although the Chinese vaccines are not as effective as some of those developed elsewhere. Nevertheless, in an email to VOA Mandarin, he said he sees a low risk of new variants emerging and even if one does, it “will most probably be less virulent or dangerous.”

David Dowdy, an infectious-disease epidemiologist at Johns Hopkins, told VOA Mandarin in an email, “On a single country basis, the current COVID wave in China might be the biggest we have ever seen. But on a global basis, the omicron wave last winter was certainly bigger. Meaning, there is certainly a risk of a new variant emerging during this wave, sparking a global outbreak. But thanks to global levels of immunity, that risk is lower than it might have been a year or more ago.”

Source: Voice of America