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Fifteen years later, he became the first Black dean of Johannesburg and committed publicly to the fight against apartheid. The campaigning priest was arrested more than once but drew strength from his beliefs and fellow South Africans, he said. He condemned all forms of violence and confronted both the apartheid police and vengeful Black mobs "necklacing" alleged spies by throwing tires around their victims and setting them alight. By now firmly on the international radar, Tutu warned the apartheid leaders that racism defied the will of God and apartheid would not succeed.

The system of this country is evil," Tutu said during that period. What must we do, which we have not yet done? To tell the world that all we want is a new South Africa, where all, Black and white, will be able to live as equals. In , Desmond Tutu was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, which recognized his work in the anti-apartheid struggle. Let us beat our swords into ploughshares.

The archbishop later remarked, with his characteristic good humor, that one day no one was listening and suddenly, after the prize, anything he said — "the oracle has spoken! After Nelson Mandela was sworn in as president, he asked Tutu to chair South Africa's landmark Truth and Reconciliation Commission to look into the crimes of apartheid.

For the Archbishop, the harrowing testimony was traumatic, and he broke down and wept with the survivors. Deeply humbled at their resilience, at the magnanimity of spirit that they have shown," he said. In a interview with Morning Edition , he said the experience never shook his faith in God. Tutu has had health problems. Halfway through the Truth and Reconciliation process, he was diagnosed with prostate cancer in and successfully received treatment.

Resilience and his sense of humor helped. It had few medicines and supplies," he says. And the emergency room, packed with people, didn't have enough masks to protect everyone from COVID spread, he says. In the Ministry of Public Health, for example, no one is getting paid," he says.

What's more, new Taliban workers delegated to health care facilities often have no relevant experience. That means, for example, that COVID surveillance figures are nearly impossible to interpret by international agencies trying to track the pandemic. In addition, he says, "Some directors of hospitals have little to no hospital administration experience.

Even with five weeks on the ground, the team that Spiegel was part of could not investigate differences in health care in every region and remote rural area.

Nor could it assess the impact and extent of Taliban policies such as restrictions on where women can travel and work. The Taliban have put severe restrictions on education for girls and placed restrictions on female health care workers as well. For example, some female midwives were not allowed to do home visits without a male escort, according to a September article in the medical journal BMJ 's opinion blog.

In addition, many Muslim women prefer female medical workers and some refuse to get care from a male provider. Spiegel said he visited a comprehensive health center outside Kandahar.

The midwife said that so far the Taliban were not stopping family planning in that facility. But in remote areas? I don't know," he says. So far, he says, it seems there are vast regional inconsistencies in how many female providers are allowed to deliver care and how female patients are treated. His personal view: "We need more nuanced sanctions to help the most vulnerable while continuing to pressure the Taliban to be more inclusive, particularly to women and girls.

Susan Brink is a freelance writer who covers health and medicine. Search Query Show Search. Public Affairs. Radio Schedule. Community Calendar. A surge in coronavirus cases in the U. As many people traveled over the weekend, health officials and state leaders issued serious warnings about the coronavirus as the U.

In early November, the country was averaging about 70, cases. The jump in cases in recent days is being blamed, in part, on the omicron variant. It's expected to become the dominant strain in the U. Over the weekend, sporting events and live theater announced postponements or outright cancellations because of infections among athletes and staff, as well as cast and crew members.

Cory Booker and Elizabeth Warren announced they tested positive for the coronavirus with both experiencing mild symptoms. Both said they were fully vaccinated and received a booster shot. Given the jump in new infections, President Biden will announce new steps on Tuesday to "help communities in need of assistance," White House press secretary Jen Psaki said.

He will also issue a warning "of what the winter will look like for Americans that choose to remain unvaccinated. Early data shows that while omicron has the ability to easily evade immune protection and booster shots, those infected may be less likely to experience severe disease and hospitalization. According to scientists' most pessimistic projections , the U.

The now-former director of the National Institutes of Health, Dr. Francis Collins, who retired over the weekend, warned Americans to take the pandemic seriously. If they don't, the country could see 1 million daily infections soon, he told NPR. But the virus is not tired of us. It's having a great old time changing its shape every couple of months, coming up with new variants and figuring out ways to be even more contagious.

Some of Broadway's biggest shows like Hamilton announced cancellations over the weekend because of positive tests among cast and crew members, according to New York Times reporter Michael Paulson.



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