By The World Health Organization
In a busy intensive care unit in Eka Kotebe General Hospital, Addis Ababa, Dr Samuel Getnet, 28, a newly-recruited young and energetic physician anxiously monitors the mechanical ventilators, an indispensable form of life support for COVID-19 patients with respiratory distress.
“I never thought my professional journey would bring me to the place where I’m today at the center of COVID-19 pandemic management team treating and caring for the most severely ill patients who critically need my support and care. Despite the challenges and risks, I am grateful for the opportunity to serve my people at this critical time,” he said.
Biden is firing some top Trump holdovers, but in some cases, his hands may be tied Lisa Rein, Anne Gearan
Replay Video UP NEXT President Biden is trying to shake a Trump hangover in the federal government by acting to remove some holdovers and install his own appointees, but a quiet push to salt federal agencies with Trump loyalists is complicating the new president’s effort to turn the page. The Biden team, showing a willingness to cut tenures short, moved quickly last week to dump several of high-profile, Senate-confirmed Trump appointees whose terms extended beyond Inauguration Day in some cases by several years.
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President Joe Biden and VP Kamala Harris stand on stage during their inauguration on Wednesday, Jan. 20. | Andrew Harnik/Pool via Getty Images
Welcome to the
JOE BIDEN presidency. “Democracy has prevailed,” he declared at the open of his inaugural address.