August rolls in with season’s second heatwave

Météo-France has predicted temperatures five or six degrees above normal for season during the week beginning July 31 and has issued an orange alert to warn of the dangers. Humidity will also be very high, up to 70 percent instead of the usual 50 percent, giving a tropical feel.

Carros recorded 33 degrees on Monday, and Lantosque 39 degrees. Temperatures in Monaco are expected to be above 30, and as high as 33 for the rest of the week. A thin veil of high cloud on Tuesday may mitigate the temperature just a little, with peak heat expected on Thursday and continuing until Sunday.

There will be little relief at night, with low temperatures of 25 degrees expected all week. The normal temperature for early August is 21°C at night. Residents are advised to take what precautions they can, including avoiding the outdoors during the hottest house of the day.

A few tips for coping with the hot weather:

  • Residents should avoid being outdoors during the hottest hours, from 11 am until 5 pm, and avoid energetic exercise.
  • Take a siesta in the early afternoon if possible
  • Drinking water before becoming thirsty is also essential to better help the body manage the warmer temperatures, so aim for at least one and a half litres of water each day.
  • Avoid alcohol, coffee, tea, sodas and sweetened drinks which dehydrate the body
  • During periods of intense heat, it’s advisable to check on relatives, particularly the elderly
  • Pet owners should limit dog’s exercise, keep an eye on the water dish and cool them off in a tub or with a wet towel. Dogs sweat mainly through their paws so a fan may not be an effective coolant.
  • The Princess Grace Hospital Centre number is +377 97 98 99 00.

 

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Monaco’s Public Parking gets validated

SPP (1)

The ISO 9001 and ISO 14001 certificates for Monaco’s Parking Department have been validated for the seventh consecutive year.

ISO – the International Organization for Standardization – is an independent, non-governmental international establishment with a membership of 163 national standards bodies. Essentially, “International Standards make things work” by giving world-class specifications for products, services and systems, to ensure quality, safety and efficiency.

The ISO 9001 standard covers the Quality Management, issues such as client listening (satisfaction surveys, complaints …); management of processes (human resources, service to users …); supplier evaluation; involvement of staff; and continuous improvement of the system.

Also instrumental in facilitating international trade, the ISO 14001 for Environmental Management relates to control of any significant environmental impact, use of resources, assessment of suppliers, amongst other criteria.

After five days, the auditor noted among the service’s strong points a clear strategy to help protect the environment, such as using less energy and environmentally-friendly products for lighting, the use of management tools that allow optimised information management, and pricing policy and subscriptions in line with environmental policy.

The auditor also stressed the commitment of management to provide the best parking management, the involvement of personnel, the quality of parking equipment hardware, especially video, which offer a sense of security and a very good culture of environmental awareness.

In 2011, the Public Parking service was the first Governmental department in the Principality to obtain double certification.

In different languages, ISO would have different acronyms (IOS in English, OIN in French for Organisation internationale de normalisation), therefore the organisation’s founders settled on the form ISO, derived from the Greek isos, meaning equal.

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French Senate awards medal to Monaco’s Pavilion

Michel Laflandre, Executive Secretary of the France-Kazakhstan Interparliamentary Friendship Group, André Reichardt, Senator of the Bas-Rhin, Christophe-André Frassa, Senator representing the French established outside France, Pascal Lorot, Commissioner of the French Pavilion in Astana And Yves Pozzo di Borgo, Senator of Paris. Photo: MIE
Michel Laflandre, Executive Secretary of the France-Kazakhstan Interparliamentary Friendship Group, André Reichardt, Senator of the Bas-Rhin, Christophe-André Frassa, Senator representing the French established outside France, Pascal Lorot, Commissioner of the French Pavilion in Astana And Yves Pozzo di Borgo, Senator of Paris. Photo: MIE

Monaco’s Pavilion at the Special Exhibition Astana EXPO 2017 played host to a delegation of the French Senate led by Pascal Lorot, Commissioner of the Pavilion of France in Astana.

The visiting group was composed of Yves Pozzo di Borgo, Senator of Paris, André Reichardt, Senator of Bas-Rhin, Christophe-André Frassa, Senator representing the French outside France and Chairman of the inter-parliamentary group France-Monaco, and Michel Laflandre, Executive Secretary of the France-Kazakhstan Inter-parliamentary Friendship Group.

This meeting, which took place on Saturday, July 29, was marked by the presentation of the medal of the Senate to the representatives of the Monaco Pavilion.

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Monaco praised for efforts on malaria

Photo: Manuel Vitali/Direction de la Communication
Photo: Manuel Vitali/Direction de la Communication

Isabelle Rosabrunetto, Director-General for Foreign Affairs Relations and Cooperation, opened a meeting organised by the World Health Organisation (WHO) on the elimination of malaria in the Sahel.

Also present were Dr Magda Robalo, of the Communicable Diseases group in the WHO Regional Office for Africa, and Dr Kesete Admasu, Executive Director of the Roll Back Malaria Partnership Secretariat.

In delivering her keynote address last month, Dr Robalo reaffirmed that “WHO will continue to play its role as part of this new partnership platform and commended the Monegasque Government’s commitment in the fight against malaria in Africa, including this initiative to provide the Sahel countries with an appropriate framework for discussing the best approaches to making progress on the road to elimination.”

The aim of the meeting was to help accelerate efforts in the fight against malaria in seven Sahel countries – Cape Verde, Gambia, Mali, Mauritania, Niger, Senegal and Chad – four of which are priority countries for Monaco’s foreign aid programmes: Mali, Mauritania, Niger, and Senegal.

The meeting, which was attended by representatives of the Ministries of Health of those countries and WHO experts, took place over two days.

The fight against malaria is one of the flagship programmes of the Monegasque Directorate of International Cooperation. The Government of Mauritius has been supporting the WHO malaria programme since 2010.

During her opening remarks, Isabelle Rosabrunetto assured the participants of the “faithful partnership of Monaco, alongside the WHO and the Sahelian countries, to stem the scourge that plagues so many human beings “.

Malaria, a preventable and treatable disease, caused 429,000 deaths worldwide in 2015. Children are the most affected with 303,000 children under five years of age, one child every two minutes, succumbing to the disease. Sub-Saharan Africa pays the heaviest price with 92 percent of these deaths.

WHO aims to reduce the number of new cases of malaria and the deaths caused by malaria by 90 percent by 2030, but currently there are insufficient financial resources. To this end, WHO calls on affected countries and development partners to increase their investments to accelerate progress towards the elimination of malaria.

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Air France faces strike after all

Photo: Facebook Air France
Photo: Facebook Air France

The second-largest pilots’ union at Air France, SPAF, has called a strike from September 9 to 12. The union said that it is protesting against the loss of days off and insufficient salaries. The strike coincides with the first days back at school in France.

Air France’s biggest pilots’ union, SNPL, has made an agreement with the airline, which it signed on July 18. Anxious to avoid costly industrial action, Air France has called its accord with the bigger union “Trust Together”. SPAF cited this as a sign of weakness, which Air France will try to exploit.

Evidently rattled by the SPAF strike call, Air France’s management said on Monday, July 31, that it deplores the strike and that it is ready to address its concerns, adding that social dialogue with all employees’ bodies is one of its priorities.

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