Waziri Mkuu wa Uingereza, Boris Johnson aamua Lockdown sasa basi

Waziri Mkuu wa Uingereza, Boris Johnson aamua Lockdown sasa basi

Kuwa "detected" na kuwa na "New Case" ni mambo mawili tofauti kabisa. Na ndiyo maana China wana kitu wanaita "Imported New cases"

Wenzetu walikuwa na "Projections" zao wakati Ugongwa huu unaanza. Kwa Marekani wao walikadiria watu zaidi 2.5 watakufa kwa COVID 19 kama hatua zozote zisigechukuliwa kupambana na Ugonjwa huo.

Lakini Mwisho walipoanza kupambana wakaishusha hadi laki 2.5 na mwishoni kabisa wameshusha mpaka 134,000. Kwa ivo si kwamba "Lock down" haijawasaidia.

Hapa kwetu jambo muhimu la kupambana na ugonjwa huu halifanywi. Watu hawapimwi kabisa kwa wingi unaotakiwa ili kujua ukubwa wa Tatizo!!
Hizo projections zilitolewa kwa nchi zote hapa duniani, na hakuna hata nchi moja ambako zilienda sawa, Sweden ambako hawajafungia watu, pia projections zao hazikutokea, hiyo sio sababu.

Lengo la "lockdown" ni kupunguza maambukizi mapya na hatimae kupunguza vifo, wewe unadhani idadi ya wamarekani na Waingereza wanaokufa kwako unahisi wamefanikiwa kupunguza maambukizi wakati Trump mwenyewe anakiri kwa hakutegemea kupoteza idadi kubwa ya watu kiasi hicho.

Obama ameshutumu utawala wao kwa kushindwa kupambana na Corona, wewe unasema wamefanikiwa kwa kigezo cha projections za WHO ambazo hakuna sehemu duniani ambako zilitabiri sahihi.

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Ulisema kwamba uta unlock vipi ikiwa hajafanya test kwa maana Tz, Sasa nataka kukuonyesha hata hao UK mbona wana unlock wakati hawajafanya hiyo, au hizo test kama nilivyoweka hilo bandiko sasa sijui kwa sababu ya ununda unajifanya refu hulielewi nk
Haya hapa nakuwekea sehemu ya hilo bandiko na nitalibandika tena n.a. hiyo quotation yako labda ununda utakutoka


_112078900_gettyimages-1210654957.jpg


"The UK government's new target of testing 200,000 people a day for Covid-19 is a source of "real frustration", according to a leading scientist.
The president of the Institute of Biomedical Science (IBMS), said knowing where, how and how often people will be tested is more vital than goal setting."

Mkuu kuna factor R ndiyo inayozingatiwa kwenye kuondoa lockdown. Factor hiyo inakuwa established kutokea kwenye mass testing. R ikiwa below 1 inamaanisha ugonjwa unapungua, wagonjwa hawaongezeki mahospitalini nk. Factor R imedadavuliwa vyema hapa:

Why lockdowns can halt the spread of COVID-19

Uingereza wako hapa kwa sasa:

"And yet when I look at where we are tonight, we have the R below one, between 0.5 and 0.9 – but potentially only just below one."

Tanzania tunaweza kuwa vibaya zaidi world wide.

Utakuwa umechanganya madesa mkuu. Hao unawaongelea siyo wapiga nyungu. Hao sayansi baba. Yaani kwao namba zinaongea.
 
Hebu someni hio habari vizuri, tumeruhusiwa kurudi kazini kama una usafiri wako mwenyewe na sio public transport, pia kwenye kazi kuwe na levels za kujikinga, serikali imetoa theory test kwa wafanyakazi wote ili aweze kufanya kazi kwa uwangalifu mkubwa,
Pili kutoka nje unlimited kufanya mazoezi, ikumbukwe UK wa maeneo mengi ya wazi ya kufanya mazoezi, usilinganishe na dar,


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Kwa akili za kawaida unadhani what will happen next? zaidi ya maambukizo mapya. Someni historia ya Spanish flu jinsi second wave iliyoua watu zaidi. Lockdown itafanya kazi kama itakuwepo hadi dawa ipatikane la sivyo ni upumbavu mtupu kuachia watu watoke uraiani wakati bado ugonjwa upo. Ni kama kutumia condom miezi 2 halafu ukapiga kavu bila kupima ngoma.
 
View attachment 1446952
Hivyo curve ni ya Uingereza, ndiyo kwanza inapaa.

Boris ameona uchumi unaporomoka.
Kwa jinsi kesi ya Acacia ilivyotikisa biashara ya madini, sidhani kama Boris hamfahamu.
Yaap wamefikia peak na wanaanza kuflatten.Pia sasa wana experience ya jinsi ya kutake care wagonjwa..
20200511_115201.jpg
 
Wanafungua nchi kwa sababu sasa wameshajua jinsi ya kudeal na wagonjwa,hospital zao wameziwezesha kuja kuweza kupokea wagonjwa. Na curve imeanza ku flatten.
Weka hapa hiyo curve tuione. Usitunge uongo wako ukatuaminisha.
 
Kwamba nchi zilifungwa zikiwa na wagonjwa less than 500 nchi nzima halafu zinafunguliwa zikiwa zina-report wagonjwa 500+ kwa siku.

Unafungua nchi ilhali hali ni mbaya kuliko kipindi unaifunga!

Hapo graph ime flatten kwa kuliganisha na before lockdown au swaumu nayo inachangia?
 
Uingereza kama ambavyo imekuwa kwa mataifa mengine kama ya USA, Italy, Germany, Spain, Rwanda, China nk hatimaye wamevishinda vita dhidi ya Corona na taratibu wanarejea jatika maisha yao ya kawaida kwa hadhari kubwa.

Kuna factor muhimu "R" - "the Reproduction Rate of the disease" kwenye maambukizi ya ugonjwa huu:

R = 1 Maambukizi hayaongezeki wala kupungua. Curve ya maambukizi inakuwa flat.

R > 1 Maambukizi yanaongezeka. Hali bado mbaya. Typical case Tanzania.

R < 1 Maambukizi yanapungua ugonjwa umedhibitiwa.

Why lockdowns can halt the spread of COVID-19

Uingereza kwa sasa wako na 0.5 < R < 0.9

"And yet when I look at where we are tonight, we have the R below one, between 0.5 and 0.9 – but potentially only just below one."

Wako vizuri ni sahihi kabisa kulegeza masharti ya vita kwani jitihada zao zimewalipa.

"It is now almost two months since the people of this country began to put up with restrictions on their freedom – your freedom – of a kind that we have never seen before in peace or war.

And you have shown the good sense to support those rules overwhelmingly."

Kongole kwao:

"We are shining the light of science on this invisible killer, and we will pick it up where it strikes."

Hii ni wakati sisi tunachochea nyungu na matunguli vilivyo.

"We have been through the initial peak – but it is coming down the mountain that is often more dangerous."

Maisha ya watu yanabakia kuwa muhimu kuliko kingine chochote:

"We have a route, and we have a plan, and everyone in government has the all-consuming pressure and challenge to save lives, restore livelihoods and gradually restore the freedoms that we need."

Pamoja na yote kama hali haitakwenda kama inavyotegemewa watarejea haraka kwenye lockdown kulikowawezesha kufika hapa. Kuudhibiti ugonjwa na kuokoa maisha ni suala kipaumbele mno:

"And of course we will be monitoring our progress locally, regionally, and nationally and if there are outbreaks, if there are problems, we will not hesitate to put on the brakes."

Hata hivyo, kama kawaida mavuvuzela yameirukia hotuba ya Boris Johnson out of context ili kupotosha ujumbe mardhawa uliomo mle ambao pia tungeweza kujifunza.

Mavuvuzela yanajifariji ati kuwa hatimaye Uingereza yamewashinda. Wanatamani angesema yamewashinda. Aibu kubwa kutamani Boris Johnson angesema ambayo hakusema.

Hotuba ya Boris Johnson lilikuwa somo tosha kwa rais Magufuli kujifunza toka kwa mtu aliyenusurika kifo na ugonjwa huu na nini cha kufanya kuutokomeza.

Siti ya mbele ni hotuba nzima ya bwana Johnson kama ilivyotolewa jana usiku.
 
Prime Minister Boris Johnson has addressed the nation on coronavirus.

It is now almost two months since the people of this country began to put up with restrictions on their freedom – your freedom – of a kind that we have never seen before in peace or war.

And you have shown the good sense to support those rules overwhelmingly.

You have put up with all the hardships of that programme of social distancing.

Because you understand that as things stand, and as the experience of every other country has shown, it’s the only way to defeat the coronavirus - the most vicious threat this country has faced in my lifetime.

And though the death toll has been tragic, and the suffering immense.

And though we grieve for all those we have lost.

It is a fact that by adopting those measures we prevented this country from being engulfed by what could have been a catastrophe in which the reasonable worst case scenario was half a million fatalities.

And it is thanks to your effort and sacrifice in stopping the spread of this disease that the death rate is coming down and hospital admissions are coming down.

And thanks to you we have protected our NHS and saved many thousands of lives.

And so I know - you know - that it would be madness now to throw away that achievement by allowing a second spike.

We must stay alert.

We must continue to control the virus and save lives.

And yet we must also recognise that this campaign against the virus has come at colossal cost to our way of life.

We can see it all around us in the shuttered shops and abandoned businesses and darkened pubs and restaurants.

And there are millions of people who are both fearful of this terrible disease, and at the same time also fearful of what this long period of enforced inactivity will do to their livelihoods and their mental and physical wellbeing.

To their futures and the futures of their children.

So I want to provide tonight - for you - the shape of a plan to address both fears.

Both to beat the virus and provide the first sketch of a road map for reopening society.

A sense of the way ahead, and when and how and on what basis we will take the decisions to proceed.

I will be setting out more details in Parliament tomorrow and taking questions from the public in the evening.

I have consulted across the political spectrum, across all four nations of the UK.

And though different parts of the country are experiencing the pandemic at different rates.

And though it is right to be flexible in our response.

I believe that as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom – Scotland, England, Wales, Northern Ireland, there is a strong resolve to defeat this together.

And today a general consensus on what we could do.

And I stress could.

Because although we have a plan, it is a conditional plan.

And since our priority is to protect the public and save lives, we cannot move forward unless we satisfy the five tests.

We must protect our NHS.

We must see sustained falls in the death rate.

We must see sustained and considerable falls in the rate of infection.

We must sort out our challenges in getting enough PPE to the people who need it, and yes, it is a global problem but we must fix it.

And last, we must make sure that any measures we take do not force the reproduction rate of the disease - the R - back up over one, so that we have the kind of exponential growth we were facing a few weeks ago.

And to chart our progress and to avoid going back to square one, we are establishing a new Covid Alert System run by a new Joint Biosecurity Centre.

And that Covid Alert Level will be determined primarily by R and the number of coronavirus cases.

And in turn that Covid Alert Level will tell us how tough we have to be in our social distancing measures – the lower the level the fewer the measures.

The higher the level, the tougher and stricter we will have to be.

There will be five alert levels.

Level One means the disease is no longer present in the UK and Level Five is the most critical – the kind of situation we could have had if the NHS had been overwhelmed.

Over the period of the lockdown we have been in Level Four, and it is thanks to your sacrifice we are now in a position to begin to move in steps to Level Three.

And as we go everyone will have a role to play in keeping the R down.

By staying alert and following the rules.

And to keep pushing the number of infections down there are two more things we must do.

We must reverse rapidly the awful epidemics in care homes and in the NHS, and though the numbers are coming down sharply now, there is plainly much more to be done.

And if we are to control this virus, then we must have a world-beating system for testing potential victims, and for tracing their contacts.

So that – all told - we are testing literally hundreds of thousands of people every day.

We have made fast progress on testing – but there is so much more to do now, and we can.

When this began, we hadn’t seen this disease before, and we didn’t fully understand its effects.

With every day we are getting more and more data.

We are shining the light of science on this invisible killer, and we will pick it up where it strikes.

Because our new system will be able in time to detect local flare-ups – in your area – as well as giving us a national picture.

And yet when I look at we are tonight, we have the R below one, between 0.5 and 0.9 – but potentially only just below one.

And though we have made progress in satisfying at least some of the conditions I have given.

We have by no means fulfilled all of them.

And so no, this is not the time simply to end the lockdown this week.

Instead we are taking the first careful steps to modify our measures.

And the first step is a change of emphasis that we hope that people will act on this week.

We said that you should work from home if you can, and only go to work if you must.

We now need to stress that anyone who can’t work from home, for instance those in construction or manufacturing, should be actively encouraged to go to work.

And we want it to be safe for you to get to work. So you should avoid public transport if at all possible – because we must and will maintain social distancing, and capacity will therefore be limited.

So work from home if you can, but you should go to work if you can’t work from home.

And to ensure you are safe at work we have been working to establish new guidance for employers to make workplaces COVID-secure.

And when you do go to work, if possible do so by car or even better by walking or bicycle. But just as with workplaces, public transport operators will also be following COVID-secure standards.

And from this Wednesday, we want to encourage people to take more and even unlimited amounts of outdoor exercise.

You can sit in the sun in your local park, you can drive to other destinations, you can even play sports but only with members of your own household.

You must obey the rules on social distancing and to enforce those rules we will increase the fines for the small minority who break them.

And so every day, with ever increasing data, we will be monitoring the R and the number of new infections, and the progress we are making, and if we as a nation begin to fulfil the conditions I have set out, then in the next few weeks and months we may be able to go further.

In step two – at the earliest by June 1 – after half term – we believe we may be in a position to begin the phased reopening of shops and to get primary pupils back into schools, in stages, beginning with reception, Year 1 and Year 6.

Our ambition is that secondary pupils facing exams next year will get at least some time with their teachers before the holidays. And we will shortly be setting out detailed guidance on how to make it work in schools and shops and on transport.

And step three - at the earliest by July - and subject to all these conditions and further scientific advice; if and only if the numbers support it, we will hope to re-open at least some of the hospitality industry and other public places, provided they are safe and enforce social distancing.

Throughout this period of the next two months we will be driven not by mere hope or economic necessity. We are going to be driven by the science, the data and public health.

And I must stress again that all of this is conditional, it all depends on a series of big Ifs. It depends on all of us – the entire country – to follow the advice, to observe social distancing, and to keep that R down.

And to prevent re-infection from abroad, I am serving notice that it will soon be the time – with transmission significantly lower – to impose quarantine on people coming into this country by air.

And it is because of your efforts to get the R down and the number of infections down here, that this measure will now be effective.

And of course we will be monitoring our progress locally, regionally, and nationally and if there are outbreaks, if there are problems, we will not hesitate to put on the brakes.

We have been through the initial peak – but it is coming down the mountain that is often more dangerous.

We have a route, and we have a plan, and everyone in government has the all-consuming pressure and challenge to save lives, restore livelihoods and gradually restore the freedoms that we need.

But in the end this is a plan that everyone must make work.

And when I look at what you have done already.

The patience and common sense you have shown.

The fortitude of the elderly whose isolation we all want to end as fast as we can.

The incredible bravery and hard work of our NHS staff, our care workers.

The devotion and self-sacrifice of all those in every walk of life who are helping us to beat this disease.

Police, bus drivers, train drivers, pharmacists, supermarket workers, road hauliers, bin collectors, cleaners, security guards, postal workers, our teachers and a thousand more.

The scientists who are working round the clock to find a vaccine.

When I think of the millions of everyday acts of kindness and thoughtfulness that are being performed across this country.

And that have helped to get us through this first phase.

I know that we can use this plan to get us through the next.

And if we can’t do it by those dates, and if the alert level won’t allow it, we will simply wait and go on until we have got it right.

We will come back from this devilish illness.

We will come back to health, and robust health.

And though the UK will be changed by this experience, I believe we can be stronger and better than ever before. More resilient, more innovative, more economically dynamic, but also more generous and more sharing.

But for now we must stay alert, control the virus and save lives.

Thank you very much.
 

Prime Minister Boris Johnson has addressed the nation on coronavirus.

It is now almost two months since the people of this country began to put up with restrictions on their freedom – your freedom – of a kind that we have never seen before in peace or war.

And you have shown the good sense to support those rules overwhelmingly.

You have put up with all the hardships of that programme of social distancing.

Because you understand that as things stand, and as the experience of every other country has shown, it’s the only way to defeat the coronavirus - the most vicious threat this country has faced in my lifetime.

And though the death toll has been tragic, and the suffering immense.

And though we grieve for all those we have lost.

It is a fact that by adopting those measures we prevented this country from being engulfed by what could have been a catastrophe in which the reasonable worst case scenario was half a million fatalities.

And it is thanks to your effort and sacrifice in stopping the spread of this disease that the death rate is coming down and hospital admissions are coming down.

And thanks to you we have protected our NHS and saved many thousands of lives.

And so I know - you know - that it would be madness now to throw away that achievement by allowing a second spike.

We must stay alert.

We must continue to control the virus and save lives.

And yet we must also recognise that this campaign against the virus has come at colossal cost to our way of life.

We can see it all around us in the shuttered shops and abandoned businesses and darkened pubs and restaurants.

And there are millions of people who are both fearful of this terrible disease, and at the same time also fearful of what this long period of enforced inactivity will do to their livelihoods and their mental and physical wellbeing.

To their futures and the futures of their children.

So I want to provide tonight - for you - the shape of a plan to address both fears.

Both to beat the virus and provide the first sketch of a road map for reopening society.

A sense of the way ahead, and when and how and on what basis we will take the decisions to proceed.

I will be setting out more details in Parliament tomorrow and taking questions from the public in the evening.

I have consulted across the political spectrum, across all four nations of the UK.

And though different parts of the country are experiencing the pandemic at different rates.

And though it is right to be flexible in our response.

I believe that as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom – Scotland, England, Wales, Northern Ireland, there is a strong resolve to defeat this together.

And today a general consensus on what we could do.

And I stress could.

Because although we have a plan, it is a conditional plan.

And since our priority is to protect the public and save lives, we cannot move forward unless we satisfy the five tests.

We must protect our NHS.

We must see sustained falls in the death rate.

We must see sustained and considerable falls in the rate of infection.

We must sort out our challenges in getting enough PPE to the people who need it, and yes, it is a global problem but we must fix it.

And last, we must make sure that any measures we take do not force the reproduction rate of the disease - the R - back up over one, so that we have the kind of exponential growth we were facing a few weeks ago.

And to chart our progress and to avoid going back to square one, we are establishing a new Covid Alert System run by a new Joint Biosecurity Centre.

And that Covid Alert Level will be determined primarily by R and the number of coronavirus cases.

And in turn that Covid Alert Level will tell us how tough we have to be in our social distancing measures – the lower the level the fewer the measures.

The higher the level, the tougher and stricter we will have to be.

There will be five alert levels.

Level One means the disease is no longer present in the UK and Level Five is the most critical – the kind of situation we could have had if the NHS had been overwhelmed.

Over the period of the lockdown we have been in Level Four, and it is thanks to your sacrifice we are now in a position to begin to move in steps to Level Three.

And as we go everyone will have a role to play in keeping the R down.

By staying alert and following the rules.

And to keep pushing the number of infections down there are two more things we must do.

We must reverse rapidly the awful epidemics in care homes and in the NHS, and though the numbers are coming down sharply now, there is plainly much more to be done.

And if we are to control this virus, then we must have a world-beating system for testing potential victims, and for tracing their contacts.

So that – all told - we are testing literally hundreds of thousands of people every day.

We have made fast progress on testing – but there is so much more to do now, and we can.

When this began, we hadn’t seen this disease before, and we didn’t fully understand its effects.

With every day we are getting more and more data.

We are shining the light of science on this invisible killer, and we will pick it up where it strikes.

Because our new system will be able in time to detect local flare-ups – in your area – as well as giving us a national picture.

And yet when I look at where we are tonight, we have the R below one, between 0.5 and 0.9 – but potentially only just below one.

And though we have made progress in satisfying at least some of the conditions I have given.

We have by no means fulfilled all of them.

And so no, this is not the time simply to end the lockdown this week.

Instead we are taking the first careful steps to modify our measures.

And the first step is a change of emphasis that we hope that people will act on this week.

We said that you should work from home if you can, and only go to work if you must.

We now need to stress that anyone who can’t work from home, for instance those in construction or manufacturing, should be actively encouraged to go to work.

And we want it to be safe for you to get to work. So you should avoid public transport if at all possible – because we must and will maintain social distancing, and capacity will therefore be limited.

So work from home if you can, but you should go to work if you can’t work from home.

And to ensure you are safe at work we have been working to establish new guidance for employers to make workplaces COVID-secure.

And when you do go to work, if possible do so by car or even better by walking or bicycle. But just as with workplaces, public transport operators will also be following COVID-secure standards.

And from this Wednesday, we want to encourage people to take more and even unlimited amounts of outdoor exercise.

You can sit in the sun in your local park, you can drive to other destinations, you can even play sports but only with members of your own household.

You must obey the rules on social distancing and to enforce those rules we will increase the fines for the small minority who break them.

And so every day, with ever increasing data, we will be monitoring the R and the number of new infections, and the progress we are making, and if we as a nation begin to fulfil the conditions I have set out, then in the next few weeks and months we may be able to go further.

In step two – at the earliest by June 1 – after half term – we believe we may be in a position to begin the phased reopening of shops and to get primary pupils back into schools, in stages, beginning with reception, Year 1 and Year 6.

Our ambition is that secondary pupils facing exams next year will get at least some time with their teachers before the holidays. And we will shortly be setting out detailed guidance on how to make it work in schools and shops and on transport.

And step three - at the earliest by July - and subject to all these conditions and further scientific advice; if and only if the numbers support it, we will hope to re-open at least some of the hospitality industry and other public places, provided they are safe and enforce social distancing.

Throughout this period of the next two months we will be driven not by mere hope or economic necessity. We are going to be driven by the science, the data and public health.

And I must stress again that all of this is conditional, it all depends on a series of big Ifs. It depends on all of us – the entire country – to follow the advice, to observe social distancing, and to keep that R down.

And to prevent re-infection from abroad, I am serving notice that it will soon be the time – with transmission significantly lower – to impose quarantine on people coming into this country by air.

And it is because of your efforts to get the R down and the number of infections down here, that this measure will now be effective.

And of course we will be monitoring our progress locally, regionally, and nationally and if there are outbreaks, if there are problems, we will not hesitate to put on the brakes.

We have been through the initial peak – but it is coming down the mountain that is often more dangerous.

We have a route, and we have a plan, and everyone in government has the all-consuming pressure and challenge to save lives, restore livelihoods and gradually restore the freedoms that we need.

But in the end this is a plan that everyone must make work.

And when I look at what you have done already.

The patience and common sense you have shown.

The fortitude of the elderly whose isolation we all want to end as fast as we can.

The incredible bravery and hard work of our NHS staff, our care workers.

The devotion and self-sacrifice of all those in every walk of life who are helping us to beat this disease.

Police, bus drivers, train drivers, pharmacists, supermarket workers, road hauliers, bin collectors, cleaners, security guards, postal workers, our teachers and a thousand more.

The scientists who are working round the clock to find a vaccine.

When I think of the millions of everyday acts of kindness and thoughtfulness that are being performed across this country.

And that have helped to get us through this first phase.

I know that we can use this plan to get us through the next.

And if we can’t do it by those dates, and if the alert level won’t allow it, we will simply wait and go on until we have got it right.

We will come back from this devilish illness.

We will come back to health, and robust health.

And though the UK will be changed by this experience, I believe we can be stronger and better than ever before. More resilient, more innovative, more economically dynamic, but also more generous and more sharing.

But for now we must stay alert, control the virus and save lives.

Thank you very much.
------



Ikumbukwe duniani kote ni JPM tu ndie alieasisi precaution hii ya chapa kazi lakini chukua tahadhari

Alionekana kituko dunia nzima mpaka chang'aa media ya kunyaland kuja na slogan ya ukaidi wa Magufuli, baada ya kuonja shubiri ya kuomba msamaha week nzima,

Chang'aa media hiyo iliajiri watu mitandaoni kumtukana na kumkashifu JPM

Nangoja hash tag ya ukaidi wa Borris mungu wao
Sas wewe mkuu hebu ona!

Una wagonjwa 5 unapiga watu lockdown
Wagonjwa wamepanda hadi 150k na vifo 28k unawatoa watu nje hizo akili au matope?

Ndio Maana Magu watu walimdharau ila taratibu watamwelewa tu.

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JPM ataeleweka sana...na TZ itaeleweka Sana......we have the best president
 
Hapo graph ime flatten kwa kuliganisha na before lockdown au swaumu nayo inachangia?
Hoja ambayo watu wengine hamsemi ni kwamba "Lock down" Ulaya na Marekani ilitokea kwa sababu mbili tu.

Sababu ya kwanza "Lock down" ilitokea kwa kuwa aina ya virusi vyenyewe ni vipya na hakuna mtu aliyekuwa anavijua kwa yakini. Ilikuwa ni ujinga kuwaacha watu wako nje kupambana na ugonjwa ambao haujulikani unaambukizwaje ili watu wako waweze kujilinda.

Viongozi wengi wa Ulaya na Marekani waliona hakuna njia nzuri ya kujipanga ili kupambana na Ugonjwa ambao hata WHO ndiyo kwanza walikuwa wametoka kuupa jina la COVID 19 bila ya kuwashauri watu wabaki majumbani. Na watu wakumbuke kwamba "Lock down" haikuanza mara moja bali hatua kwa hatua kulingana na hali halisi ya mambo ilivyokuwa.

Kwa nini mnafikiria kwamba "Lock down" haijasaidia kupunguza idadi ya watu waliokufa huko Ulaya na Marekani??
 
Mkuu kuna factor R ndiyo inayozingatiwa kwenye kuondoa lockdown. Factor hiyo inakuwa established kutokea kwenye mass testing. R ikiwa below 1 inamaanisha ugonjwa unapungua, wagonjwa hawaongezeki mahospitalini nk. Factor R imedadavuliwa vyema hapa:

Why lockdowns can halt the spread of COVID-19

Uingereza wako hapa kwa sasa:

"And yet when I look at where we are tonight, we have the R below one, between 0.5 and 0.9 – but potentially only just below one."

Tanzania tunaweza kuwa vibaya zaidi world wide.

Utakuwa umechanganya madesa mkuu. Hao unawaongelea siyo wapiga nyungu. Hao sayansi baba. Yaani kwao namba zinaongea.
Sasa hizo factors kama ni science na wewe sio nunda unaweza kuweka kwa UK ipoje na inakupa jibu gani
Na kwa tanzania factors ni zipi na ina kupa jibu gani.
That is were u can compare issues na sio kuandika kitu hypothetically au bila ku compare na hali yetu ipoje, badala ya kushutumu tu au kujiona upo pabaya kumbe sio kweli.
 

Prime Minister Boris Johnson has addressed the nation on coronavirus.

It is now almost two months since the people of this country began to put up with restrictions on their freedom – your freedom – of a kind that we have never seen before in peace or war.

And you have shown the good sense to support those rules overwhelmingly.

You have put up with all the hardships of that programme of social distancing.

Because you understand that as things stand, and as the experience of every other country has shown, it’s the only way to defeat the coronavirus - the most vicious threat this country has faced in my lifetime.

And though the death toll has been tragic, and the suffering immense.

And though we grieve for all those we have lost.

It is a fact that by adopting those measures we prevented this country from being engulfed by what could have been a catastrophe in which the reasonable worst case scenario was half a million fatalities.

And it is thanks to your effort and sacrifice in stopping the spread of this disease that the death rate is coming down and hospital admissions are coming down.

And thanks to you we have protected our NHS and saved many thousands of lives.

And so I know - you know - that it would be madness now to throw away that achievement by allowing a second spike.

We must stay alert.

We must continue to control the virus and save lives.

And yet we must also recognise that this campaign against the virus has come at colossal cost to our way of life.

We can see it all around us in the shuttered shops and abandoned businesses and darkened pubs and restaurants.

And there are millions of people who are both fearful of this terrible disease, and at the same time also fearful of what this long period of enforced inactivity will do to their livelihoods and their mental and physical wellbeing.

To their futures and the futures of their children.

So I want to provide tonight - for you - the shape of a plan to address both fears.

Both to beat the virus and provide the first sketch of a road map for reopening society.

A sense of the way ahead, and when and how and on what basis we will take the decisions to proceed.

I will be setting out more details in Parliament tomorrow and taking questions from the public in the evening.

I have consulted across the political spectrum, across all four nations of the UK.

And though different parts of the country are experiencing the pandemic at different rates.

And though it is right to be flexible in our response.

I believe that as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom – Scotland, England, Wales, Northern Ireland, there is a strong resolve to defeat this together.

And today a general consensus on what we could do.

And I stress could.

Because although we have a plan, it is a conditional plan.

And since our priority is to protect the public and save lives, we cannot move forward unless we satisfy the five tests.

We must protect our NHS.

We must see sustained falls in the death rate.

We must see sustained and considerable falls in the rate of infection.

We must sort out our challenges in getting enough PPE to the people who need it, and yes, it is a global problem but we must fix it.

And last, we must make sure that any measures we take do not force the reproduction rate of the disease - the R - back up over one, so that we have the kind of exponential growth we were facing a few weeks ago.

And to chart our progress and to avoid going back to square one, we are establishing a new Covid Alert System run by a new Joint Biosecurity Centre.

And that Covid Alert Level will be determined primarily by R and the number of coronavirus cases.

And in turn that Covid Alert Level will tell us how tough we have to be in our social distancing measures – the lower the level the fewer the measures.

The higher the level, the tougher and stricter we will have to be.

There will be five alert levels.

Level One means the disease is no longer present in the UK and Level Five is the most critical – the kind of situation we could have had if the NHS had been overwhelmed.

Over the period of the lockdown we have been in Level Four, and it is thanks to your sacrifice we are now in a position to begin to move in steps to Level Three.

And as we go everyone will have a role to play in keeping the R down.

By staying alert and following the rules.

And to keep pushing the number of infections down there are two more things we must do.

We must reverse rapidly the awful epidemics in care homes and in the NHS, and though the numbers are coming down sharply now, there is plainly much more to be done.

And if we are to control this virus, then we must have a world-beating system for testing potential victims, and for tracing their contacts.

So that – all told - we are testing literally hundreds of thousands of people every day.

We have made fast progress on testing – but there is so much more to do now, and we can.

When this began, we hadn’t seen this disease before, and we didn’t fully understand its effects.

With every day we are getting more and more data.

We are shining the light of science on this invisible killer, and we will pick it up where it strikes.

Because our new system will be able in time to detect local flare-ups – in your area – as well as giving us a national picture.

And yet when I look at we are tonight, we have the R below one, between 0.5 and 0.9 – but potentially only just below one.

And though we have made progress in satisfying at least some of the conditions I have given.

We have by no means fulfilled all of them.

And so no, this is not the time simply to end the lockdown this week.

Instead we are taking the first careful steps to modify our measures.

And the first step is a change of emphasis that we hope that people will act on this week.

We said that you should work from home if you can, and only go to work if you must.

We now need to stress that anyone who can’t work from home, for instance those in construction or manufacturing, should be actively encouraged to go to work.

And we want it to be safe for you to get to work. So you should avoid public transport if at all possible – because we must and will maintain social distancing, and capacity will therefore be limited.

So work from home if you can, but you should go to work if you can’t work from home.

And to ensure you are safe at work we have been working to establish new guidance for employers to make workplaces COVID-secure.

And when you do go to work, if possible do so by car or even better by walking or bicycle. But just as with workplaces, public transport operators will also be following COVID-secure standards.

And from this Wednesday, we want to encourage people to take more and even unlimited amounts of outdoor exercise.

You can sit in the sun in your local park, you can drive to other destinations, you can even play sports but only with members of your own household.

You must obey the rules on social distancing and to enforce those rules we will increase the fines for the small minority who break them.

And so every day, with ever increasing data, we will be monitoring the R and the number of new infections, and the progress we are making, and if we as a nation begin to fulfil the conditions I have set out, then in the next few weeks and months we may be able to go further.

In step two – at the earliest by June 1 – after half term – we believe we may be in a position to begin the phased reopening of shops and to get primary pupils back into schools, in stages, beginning with reception, Year 1 and Year 6.

Our ambition is that secondary pupils facing exams next year will get at least some time with their teachers before the holidays. And we will shortly be setting out detailed guidance on how to make it work in schools and shops and on transport.

And step three - at the earliest by July - and subject to all these conditions and further scientific advice; if and only if the numbers support it, we will hope to re-open at least some of the hospitality industry and other public places, provided they are safe and enforce social distancing.

Throughout this period of the next two months we will be driven not by mere hope or economic necessity. We are going to be driven by the science, the data and public health.

And I must stress again that all of this is conditional, it all depends on a series of big Ifs. It depends on all of us – the entire country – to follow the advice, to observe social distancing, and to keep that R down.

And to prevent re-infection from abroad, I am serving notice that it will soon be the time – with transmission significantly lower – to impose quarantine on people coming into this country by air.

And it is because of your efforts to get the R down and the number of infections down here, that this measure will now be effective.

And of course we will be monitoring our progress locally, regionally, and nationally and if there are outbreaks, if there are problems, we will not hesitate to put on the brakes.

We have been through the initial peak – but it is coming down the mountain that is often more dangerous.

We have a route, and we have a plan, and everyone in government has the all-consuming pressure and challenge to save lives, restore livelihoods and gradually restore the freedoms that we need.

But in the end this is a plan that everyone must make work.

And when I look at what you have done already.

The patience and common sense you have shown.

The fortitude of the elderly whose isolation we all want to end as fast as we can.

The incredible bravery and hard work of our NHS staff, our care workers.

The devotion and self-sacrifice of all those in every walk of life who are helping us to beat this disease.

Police, bus drivers, train drivers, pharmacists, supermarket workers, road hauliers, bin collectors, cleaners, security guards, postal workers, our teachers and a thousand more.

The scientists who are working round the clock to find a vaccine.

When I think of the millions of everyday acts of kindness and thoughtfulness that are being performed across this country.

And that have helped to get us through this first phase.

I know that we can use this plan to get us through the next.

And if we can’t do it by those dates, and if the alert level won’t allow it, we will simply wait and go on until we have got it right.

We will come back from this devilish illness.

We will come back to health, and robust health.

And though the UK will be changed by this experience, I believe we can be stronger and better than ever before. More resilient, more innovative, more economically dynamic, but also more generous and more sharing.

But for now we must stay alert, control the virus and save lives.

Thank you very much.
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Nangoja hash tag ya ukaidi wa Borris mungu wao
Hoja ambayo watu wengine hamsemi ni kwamba "Lock down" Ulaya na Marekani ilitokea kwa sababu mbili tu.

Sababu ya kwanza "Lock down" ilitokea kwa kuwa aina ya virusi vyenyewe ni vipya na hakuna mtu aliyekuwa anavijua kwa yakini. Ilikuwa ni ujinga kuwaacha watu wako nje kupambana na ugonjwa ambao haujulikani unaambukizwaje ili watu wako waweze kujilinda.

Viongozi wengi wa Ulaya na Marekani waliona hakuna njia nzuri ya kujipanga ili kupambana na Ugonjwa ambao hata WHO ndiyo kwanza walikuwa wametoka kuupa jina la COVID 19 bila ya kuwashauri watu wabaki majumbani. Na watu wakumbuke kwamba "Lock down" haikuanza mara moja bali hatua kwa hatua kulingana na hali halisi ya mambo ilivyokuwa.

Kwa nini mnafikiria kwamba "Lock down" haijasaidia kupunguza idadi ya watu waliokufa huko Ulaya na Marekani??

Mkuu swali la msingi hilo kama ungekuwa unauliza watu wenye akili zao ambazo tu wame happen kweli kutokufahamu.

Bahati mbaya unauliza misukule, waunga mkono juhudi kwa mapambio ya sifa no matter what (hata kama wan**akwa), Lumumba buku 7, watu wanaolipwa bonus kwa kila tusi nk.

Wakikupa majibu hata ya kiwango cha chekechea usiache kutustua mkuu.
 
Sasa hizo factors kama ni science na wewe sio nunda unaweza kuweka kwa UK ipoje na inakupa jibu gani
Na kwa tanzania factors ni zipi na ina kupa jibu gani.
That is were u can compare issues na sio kuandika kitu hypothetically au bila ku compare na hali yetu ipoje, badala ya kushutumu tu au kujiona upo pabaya kumbe sio kweli.

Wewe unaona hypothetical? Rwanda wanatutaka? Zambia je? Kenya nao? Au labda Uganda?

Au itakuwa wanatumiwa na mabeberu?

Hivi kuvaa miwani ya mbao msiweze kuona huwa mnalogwa?

Unaambiwa R (Rate of Reproduction of the disease) UK iko below 1 unajua inapatikana je? Unajua ya Tanzania ni ngapi?

Bado unadhani tuko vizuri?

Sawa mkuu. Sisi tuko vizuri hasa tokea ile hotuba ya Chatto hali yetu iko hivi:

Vifo 0
Maambukizi 0
Wagonjwa hospitali 0
Quarantine 0
Wanaofutiliwa 0

Ugonjwa umekwisha. Tumeshashinda vita. Hureee!

Viva Magufuli Viva!
 
Hiyo lockdown naona inamfaa Kila mtu kulingana na jinsi ulivyo jipanga,watu wengine tunaenda kazini kwa kuwa hatuna namna lkn Kama my angekuwa na akiba ya kutosha basi unajikarantini na family yako hadi hali itakapo tulia

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