Author: Amanda Cartey

  • World Cup 2022: Denmark to wear ‘toned down’ jerseys in protest at hosts Qatar

    Denmark will wear “toned down” shirts for the World Cup to protest against host Qatar’s human rights record and its treatment of migrant workers.

    Kit provider Hummel has also designed a third, all-black kit, to represent the “colour of mourning”.

    Hummel said it “does not wish to be visible” in a tournament it claims “has cost thousands of lives”.

    “We support the Danish national team but that isn’t the same as supporting Qatar as a host nation,” it said.

    As part of the design, the Denmark badge is also “toned down”. Their playing kit will be a plain red home shirt and an all-white second kit.

    Denmark’s training kit sponsors will also withdraw their logos to give room for messages critical of Qatar.

    Qatar officials have previously disputed the figures on the death of migrant workers working on World Cup facilities, saying the actual total figure at the time in 2021 was 37.

    Hummel said: “We wish to make a statement about Qatar’s human rights record and its treatment of the migrant workers that have built the country’s World Cup stadiums.

    “We believe that sport should bring people together. And when it doesn’t, we want to make a statement.”

    However, the Qatar 2022 supreme committee, which organises the tournament, disputed Hummel’s claims about the deaths of migrant workers.

    “We have engaged in robust and transparent dialogue with the Danish Football Association (DBU),” a statement said.

    “We wholeheartedly reject the trivialising of our genuine commitment to protect the health and safety of the 30,000 workers who built stadiums and other tournament projects.

    “We have worked diligently alongside the Qatari government to ensure that the tournament delivers a lasting social legacy.”

    The committee also urged the DBU to “accurately convey the outcome of their extensive communication and work with the [committee]” to Hummel.

    BBC Sport has approached Fifa for comment.

    How have other nations responded?

    Denmark have previously said they will put “extra pressure” on Fifa over human rights concerns in the build-up to the World Cup, which starts on 20 November.

    England captain Harry Kane plans to wear a OneLove armband during the World Cup as part of a campaign started by the Netherlands to promote diversity and inclusion, and stand against discrimination.

    Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany, Norway, Sweden, Wales and Switzerland are also supporting the initiative.

    Qatar has been heavily criticised over the country’s human rights record, including strict anti-LGBT laws and concerns over the treatment of migrant workers.

    The secretary general of the World Cup told the BBC in March that criticism has been “ill-informed” and the nation “should not be apologetic” about hosting the tournament.

    Seven new stadiums are being built for the event, as well as a new airport, new roads and about 100 new hotels. Qatar’s government says 30,000 foreign labourers have been hired just to build the stadiums – most come from Bangladesh, India, Nepal and the Philippines.

    Human rights groups have complained about the treatment of foreign labourers in Qatar, and the number who have died there.

    In February 2021, the Guardian said 6,500 migrant workers from India, Pakistan, Nepal, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka had died in Qatar since it won its World Cup bid.

    The number is based on figures provided by the countries’ embassies in Qatar.

    However, the Qatar government said the total was misleading, because not all the deaths recorded were of people working on World Cup-related projects.

    The government said its accident records showed that between 2014 and 2020, there were 37 deaths among labourers at World Cup stadium construction sites, only three of which were “work-related”.

    BBC Arabic has also gathered evidence which suggests Qatar’s government has under-reported deaths among foreign labourers.

    England’s Football Association has backed calls for compensation to be awarded for “any injury or death related to any construction project” for the World Cup.

    Source: BBC

     

  • Four reasons why Hearts of Oak sacked Samuel Boadu

    Samuel Boadu became the first coaching casualty of the 2022/2023 Ghana Premier League season. Boadu was shown the exit on Monday, September 26, 2022, after a three-game winless streak.

    Hearts of Oak were defeated by Aduana Stars before drawing with Great Olympics and Asante Kotoko.

    Collins Atta Poku, a popular Ghanaian sports journalist, speaking on Sompa FM revealed that, while the poor results were a factor in Boadu’s dismissal, there were other factors as well.

    Here are four factors that led to Samuel Boadu’s sacking according to Atta Poku

    Results

    According to Attah Poku, the primary reason for Boadu’s dismissal was the lack of results. They are yet to win a match this season and concluded last season with a worrying inconsistency which made them finish out of the top four.

    He claimed that Hearts of Oak’s management, particularly Alhaji Akambi, had warned the technical team several times that they would be fired. As a result, the team led by Boadu knew they had outlived their welcome at the club.

    He wasn’t making good use of his players

    Attah Poku also alleged the management was dissatisfied with the coach’s system and player selection.

    He cited an incident in which he claims Akambi objected to Boadu’s use of new striker Outching Yassin. He claims Akambi questioned why Boadu chooses to play Outching, who is tall despite the fact that he does not want his players to put crosses into the box.

    Salifu Ibrahim’s injury

    According to the popular Ghanaian sports broadcaster, Samuel Boadu and the management are at odds over Salifu Ibrahim’s treatment.

    Although he did not elaborate further, he claimed that Boadu bypassed management to visit Salifu’s family and speak with them regarding the player’s injury.

    Salifu Ibrahim, who has been a key component of Samuel Boadu’s success at Hearts of Oak has been on the sideline due to a long-term injury.

    He recently resumed light training and set for his return after missing virtually the whole of last season.

    Slow renewal of contract

    Attah Opoku also claimed that the Hearts of Oak management believes some players’ refusal to renew their contracts is due to Samuel Boadu’s fate with the club.

    He claims that some players inquired about the manager’s fate before beginning negotiations.

    Hence, management had to let him go to know which players are ready to continue at the club.

     

    Source: Ghanaweb

  • 10 miracles by okomfo Anokye you probably didn’t know

    At the mention of Okomfo Anokye’s name, the common miracle that comes to mind to most people is the chanting of a golden stool from the heavens and the burying of a sword that nobody has been able to draw out till date.

    But the greatest Okomfo (fetish priest) that ever lived on this land did more miracles than what most people are aware of and here are a few more you probably didn’t know.


     1. Plantain Miracle

    Right in front of a big crowd, Komfo Anokye cooked a plantain, planted it and it immediately germinated, grew, ripened and was harvested.

    Photo: YouTube

    Photo: YouTube

    2. He once commanded rain to stop during a festival

    Image: indiaToday

    Image: indiaToday

    3. Teleportation

    As a boy, he and his parents went to the farm and when it was dark, it began to rain, he disappeared into the forest and came back with some leaves and asked his parents to put the leaves in their armpits and asked them to close their eyes. When they opened it, they were back home. Talk about teleportation and that’s one right there.

    vivian jill surprised face shocked

    4. Drained water out of a stream

    He drained the Agyempansu stream in Kumasi, brought it back and named it Suben, which is still flowing till date.

    miss-j-alexander-shocked

    5. The magical palm tree

    Okomfo Anokye once poured the dregs of palm-wine on to the ground and immediately there grew an oil-palm tree. It is alleged that the oil-palm tree stands now near the main street at Awukugua by his shrine “Obuabeduru“. It is harvested yearly and the fruit distributed to the seven Stool holders, known as Adadifo, and the Chief of the town.  He then used his own wooden sandals (Nkronnua) to climb up that oil-palm tree and left some imprints of his feet on the trunk. These are still visible on the tree at Awukugua.

    say what face shocked surprised face

    6.  Oware Game

    He moulded an Ɔware game board out of a stone with his bare hands, which can still be seen at Awukugua.

    Image: NdaniTV/YouTube

    Image: NdaniTV/YouTube

    7. He could walk through rain without getting wet.

    liwin kwaku manu shout

    8. Magical palm wine

    It is alleged that on ceremonial days, if the people of Awukugua were short of palm-wine, Okomfo Anokye would climb up that oil-palm tree by the street with his wooden sandals on, and would bend a branch and use it as a pipe through which the palm-wine would flow, and people would collect it beneath the tree.

    Giphy/YouTube

    Giphy/YouTube

    9. Magical water

    In a sacred place called Ayete at Awukugua, Okomfo Anokye used to perform some mysterious rites in connection with a very big rock. He would perform an invocation and go into a trance until water came out of the rock. The water was used for cooking the nuts of the palm tree at the place of the seven Adadifo. If the water failed to come then it was a bad omen, and Awukugua should be purified.

    liwin-shrine

    10. He could dash a raw egg against a rock and it won’t break

    komfo_anokye

     

     

    source:OMGvoice.com

  • Thomas Partey expected to make injury return for Arsenal against Tottenham

    Ghana star Thomas Partey could be available for Arsenal when they face Tottenham Hotspurs in the North London derby on Saturday.

    Partey was ruled out of the Black Stars friendlies against Brazil and Nicaragua due to injury.

    The midfielder who recently recovered from a thigh problem, was in the starting lineup for the Brazil tie last Friday but was withdrawn after he felt uncomfortable during warmup.

    The former Atletico Madrid star was granted permission to leave Ghana camp in France for further assessment.

    Footballghana.com understands the Gunners are hopeful Partey will be fit in time for the north London derby this weekend after assessing the player.

    Partey has featured four times this season for the Premier League giants.

    Source: footballghana.com

  • Afriyie Barnieh, Afena-Gyan not Black Stars standard – Dan Owusu

    Legendary Ghana forward Dan Owusu has casted doubts about the capabilities of Daniel Afriyie Barnieh and Felix Afena-Gyan at the Black Stars.

    The duo made the Black Starsfor friendlies against Brazil and Nicaragua. Ghana suffered a 3-0 defeat to the South American giants but recovered to beat Nicaragua 1-0.

    Afena-Gyan, who plies his trade for Italian side Cremonese featured in the Black Stars defeat to Brazil whiles Afriyie Barnieh made a cameo in the narrow win to Nicaragua on Tuesday.

    In an interview with Koforidua-based Bryt FM, Dan Owusu, who won the Ghana Premier League goal king gong for three consecutive times emphasized both Barnieh and Afena-Gyan are not up to the national team standard.

    “I joined the Black Stars as a young player but I didn’t get playing time because there were senior players. When they faded out, we succeeded them, and that is how national team should be”

    “Afriyie is doing well but I think this is not the time to play him at the Black Stars. He is very smallish and players like that normally struggle. To me, it is about being with the team for long and knowing the philosophy”

    “Both Barnieh and Afena-Gyan are not up to the national team level. I think they should just under study the senior players and I believe with time, they will get there”

     

    Source: FootballGhana

  • Ghanaians in Spain hail Kudus, Inaki Williams for performance against Nicaragua

    Some Ghanaians based in Spain have expressed satisfaction with the performance of the Black Stars in their 1-0 win over Nicaragua on Tuesday, September 27, 2022.

    The Black Stars managed to beat the North American side courtesy of a deflected curler from winger Fatawu Issahaku.

    The victory turned out to be Otto Addo’s second in charge of the team and brought an end to a winless run of four matches.

    In an interaction with Dan Kwaku Yeboah after the game, some of the supporters singled out Inaki Williams and Mohammed Kudus for praise.

    Though they would have wished for more goals, they were impressed with the overall output of the team.

    They however advised coach Otto Addo to work on improving the final balls of the team as they believe the team was let down by poor finishing.

    The sentiments of the Spain-based Ghanaians aren’t different from that of coach Otto Addo who rated his team 7/10 for their performance in both games against Brazil and Nicaragua.

    Otto Addo believes that his team performed well and will improve on their performance in subsequent matches.

     

    Source: Ghanaweb

  • 2022/23 Ghana Premier League: GFA announces match officials for week four

    The Referees Committee has announced Match Officials for Matchweek four of the Ghana Premier League.Below are the Match Officials:

    REFEREES, VENUES & OTHER OFFICIALS
    DATE: MONDAY, OCTOBER 3, 2022MATCH: SAMARTEX FC VS GREAT OLYMPICS

    VENUE: AKOON PARK, TARKWA

    REFEREE: MAXWELL OWUSU

    ASSISTANTS: COURAGE KUEDUFIA & ALES OSAM

    4TH REFEREE: EMMANUEL QUANSAH

    MATCH COMMISSIONER: ALEX AZAMETI

    VENUE MEDIA OFFICER: STEPHEN AGYAM

    GFA CAMERAMAN: ISHMAEL ODARTEY MILLS

    DATE:  SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2022MATCH: ACCRA HEARTS OF OAK VS BIBIANI GOLD STARS

    VENUE: ACCRA SPORTS STADIUM

    REFEREE: EMMANUEL TAMPURI

    ASSISTANTS: STEPHEN BALANGUENA & EMMANUEL ARKAIFIE

    4TH REFEREE: JACOB ADUNTERA

    MATCH COMMISSIONER: AUGUSTINE ASANTE

    VENUE MEDIA OFFICER: SENA RICHARDS

    LIVE ON STARTIMES

    DATE: SUNDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2022MATCH: BECHEM UNITED VS KOTOKU ROYALS

    VENUE: NANA FOSU GYEABOUR PARK

    REFEREE: ADAARI ABDUL LATIF

    ASSISTANTS: ALI TIMUAH BAAH & SETH ABLETOR

    4TH REFEREE: BENJAMIN K. SEFAH

    MATCH COMMISSIONER: JAMES MORNAH

    VENUE MEDIA OFFICER: PRINCE AGYEMANG

    GFA CAMERAMAN: PAUL EGBENYA

    DATE: SUNDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2022MATCH: NSOATREMAN FC VS KARELA UNITED FC

    VENUE:  NANA KRONMANSAH PARK

    REFEREE: GABRIEL OPOKU ARHIN

    ASSISTANTS: ROLAND ADDY & PASCAL MAWULI

    4TH REFEREE: LAUD NETTEY

    MATCH COMMISSIONER: DAWDI ABDUL RAZAK

    VENUE MEDIA OFFICER: MASAWUDU ISSAH

    GFA CAMERAMAN: EMMANUEL LARTEY

    DATE: SUNDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2022MATCH: KING FAISAL FC VS ASANTE KOTOKO

    VENUE: BABA YARA STADIUM

    REFEREE: EMMANUEL OTOO

    ASSISTANTS: EMMANUEL DOLANGANU & GABRIEL BOATENG

    4TH REFEREE: ABDUL LATIF QADIRI

    MATCH COMMISSIONER: WILLIAM LANTEQUAYE

    VENUE MEDIA OFFICER: OBED ACHEAMPONG

    LIVE ON STARTIMES

    DATE: SUNDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2022MATCH: MEDEAMA SC VS ADUANA FC

    VENUE: AKOON PARK, TARKWA

    REFEREE: JULIAN NUNOO

    ASSISTANTS: PAUL ATIMAKA & ATO YAWSON

    4TH REFEREE: IMORO OSMAN

    MATCH COMMISSIONER: EGBERT LARYEA

    VENUE MEDIA OFFICER: STEPHEN AGYAM

    GFA CAMERAMAN: ISHMAEL ODARTEY MILLS

    DATE: MONDAY, OCTOBER 3, 2022MATCH: LEGON CITIES FC VS BEREKUM CHELSEA

    VENUE: EL WAK STADIUM

    REFEREE: ANDREWS AWURISA

    ASSISTANTS: SULEMANA SALAU DEEN & THEOPHILUS AKUGRE

    4TH REFEREE: NYAABULE MOHAMMED IBRAHIM

    MATCH COMMISSIONER: RICHARD IDDRISU

    VENUE MEDIA OFFICER: EMMANUEL DOSE

    GFA CAMERAMAN: EMMANUEL OSEI

    DATE: MONDAY, OCTOBER 3, 2022MATCH: TAMALE CITY VS RTU

    VENUE: ALIU MAHAMA STADIUM

    REFEREE: MOHAMMED MISBAU

    ASSISTANTS: MUMUNI FUSEINI & MIKAAL II FAUZAN

    4TH REFEREE: JOSEPH KWOFIE

    MATCH COMMISSIONER: TASEMBEDU OSMANE

    VENUE MEDIA OFFICER: MUNTAKA MOHAMMED

    LIVE ON STARTIMES

    DATE: SUNDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2022MATCH: DREAMS FC VS ACCRA LIONS

    VENUE: THEATRE OF DREAMS

    REFEREE: BASHIRU DAUDA

    ASSISTANTS: ISAAC NYAMEKYE & DAVID ADDICO

    4TH REFEREE: EDWARD ANNAN

    MATCH COMMISSIONER: EMMANUEL ASANTE

    VENUE MEDIA OFFICER: DELALI PHRANK AWUTEY

    GFA CAMERAMAN:

    Publisher‘s logo

    Source: footballghana

  • Will Berlusconi work more ‘miracles’ at Monza?

    Former Italy prime minister Silvio Berlusconi and his old AC Milan cohort Adriano Galliani took control at Monza four years ago

    Former Italy prime minister Silvio Berlusconi and his old AC Milan cohort Adriano Galliani have already helped make history at AC Monza – but the club’s president and chief executive officer are not ready to stop there.

    After guiding the club to Serie A promotion for the first time in their 110-year existence, manager Giovanni Stroppa has already been sacked by the ambitious duo after just one point from six matches.

    And his replacement – the unknown Raffaele Palladino – enjoyed a dream start with victory over Juventus last time out as Berlusconi’s love for the unknown shows signs of paying off once more.

    Claudio Ranieri, who led Leicester to the Premier League title, and Brighton’s new boss Roberto de Zerbi were heavily linked with the role but, having previously handed the likes of Arrigo Sacchi and Fabio Capello their big breaks, Berlusconi has again showed he is not scared of doing things his way.

    Berlosconi’s huge ambitions

    Situated 12 miles north-east of Milan, the city of Monza, best known for being the home of Italian Formula 1 races, now has a football team with big ambitions courtesy of the millions of euros and contacts Berlusconi brings.

    Berlusconi, who oversaw five Champions League titles and eight Serie A championships as Milan owner between 1986 and 2017, and Galliani, his former chief executive at I Rossoneri, have already taken their new club from Serie C to Serie A.

    It took the pair four years and a financial investment of about 70m euros to clinch Serie A promotion through their play-off win against Pisa in May – but on the night of promotion Berlusconi immediately stated: “Our next goals are winning the league title and to qualify to the Champions League. I am a winner.”

    The summer transfer window provided Stroppa with a revamped squad, filled with high-profile players such as Armando Izzo from Torino, Pablo Mari from Udinese, Stefano Sensi from Inter Milan, Matteo Pessina from Atalanta, Andrea Petagna from Napoli and Gianluca Caprari from Hellas Verona.

    “Our priority was to sign Italian players,” Galliani said recently. “A foreign player normally needs a few months to slot in, but we now have 15 games in a very short period. We need to hit the road running, otherwise you risk to compromise it all in the first three months.”

    And that is exactly what was happening. After the first six games, Monza suffered five defeats and managed one draw, had the worst attack and worst defence of the league and lost much of the enthusiasm generated last summer.

    Now it’s Palladino task to reignite it.

    Has Berlosconi found another gem?

    When Sacchi was appointed Milan boss by Berlusconi in 1987, he had never managed in Serie A, having previously only played amateur football. He went on to win eight trophies in four seasons with the club, including Serie A and two European Cups.

    A similarly controversial appointment followed, with managerial novice Capello handed the reigns after a stint with Milan’s youth teams. His tenure brought four more league titles and another European Cup.

    Berlusconi’s claim in 1995 that he was “simply an entrepreneur who does miracles,” might not sound too far fetched after all.

    View more on twitter

    His latest appointment, Palladino, arrived at Monza as a player in 2019 but was plagued by injuries and forced to retire.

    He stayed on at the club as an under-15s coach, and then climbed the ladder to the U19s and then became boss of the senior team.

    He could have not dreamed of a better debut either, guiding Monza to their first ever Serie A victory by beating the mighty Juventus at home in their final fixture before the international break.

    Asked to describe his football philosophy, Palladino explained: “I have played for five years under Gian Piero Gasperini at Genoa and six under Ivan Juric at Genoa and Crotone – I have to play like them.”

    That means high intensity, pressing, a lot of running and short passes. He used to field his U19s with a 3-4-3 formation – will that be possible in top flight football too?

    He’s young, he knows the club from the inside and he played with Pessina at Spezia and Izzo at Genoa. He’s ambitious, he has models to follow and the schedule is on his side.

    After beating Juventus, the next opponents are Sampdoria, Spezia and Empoli and if “he is not an interim solution,” as Galliani guaranteed during his presentation, he will have plenty of time to develop his team.

    If a good beginning bodes well, and if Berlusconi, at 86, has not lost his nose for picking the most unexpected people for the most difficult tasks, Palladino and Monza might have just started writing the next chapter in their successful football story.

      Why did Sala’s plane never arrive?: Follow the investigation into the fatal crashSue Barker’s life on and off the court: Lauren Laverne chats to the legendary tennis player and presenter

    Source: bbc.com

  • Haaland’s record start – and it could get better

    Erling Haaland scored twice in his last game for City, against Sevilla in the Champions League

    Erling Haaland prepares for his first derby against Manchester United on Sunday – after a record-breaking start at Manchester City.

    Haaland seemingly breaks records every time he steps on the pitch for City, with 14 goals in his first 10 games before the international break.

    So what landmarks has the Norwegian 22-year-old, who is already on his fifth club, already achieved and what else is possible this season? BBC Sport takes a look.

      You can now get Man City news notifications in the BBC Sport app – find out more

    What records has he already broken this season?

    Haaland has scored 11 goals in his first seven Premier League appearances, taking the old record of Mick Quinn from December 1992. He shares the record for most goals in his first 10 Premier League games with Quinn, Papiss Cisse and Diego Costa – with three games to spare.

    His nine goals in his first five games were also a record – and made him the top scorer in August of any Premier League season.

    Haaland is the first player to score in his first four away games in the Premier League.

    He also broke a few records on his Champions League debut at Sevilla, with a double in a 4-0 win, and more with the late winner against his old side Dortmund.

    Haaland became the first player to score multiple times on his Champions League debut for three different clubs – after a hat-trick for Salzburg against Genk and two goals for Dortmund against Paris St-Germain.

    That took him to 25 Champions League goals in just 20 games – smashing the old record of Ruud van Nistelrooy and Roberto Soldado, who scored 16 in their first 20 games.

    He is the youngest player to score 25 goals in the competition, beating the record of Kylian Mbappe, who in turn took the landmark off Lionel Messi.

    His goal against Dortmund took him to 26 goals in 21 games.

    He has already equalled the record for most goals in his first 30 Champions League games – with nine games left to score once and break Van Nistelrooy’s record.

    Haaland also has the record for fewest Champions League games needed to score 10, 15 and 20 goals. Nobody else has scored multiple goals in four successive appearances in the competition.

    He is also the first City player to score on both his Premier League debut and Champions League debut for the club.

    Haaland’s previous goalscoring records

    He had an even better start to his time in Germany. Haaland is the only player to score on his Dortmund debuts in the Bundesliga, German Cup and Champions League (as well as scoring in the German Super Cup).

    He was the first player to hit a hat-trick on his Bundesliga debut as a substitute (coming on after 56 minutes at Augsburg).

    He holds the record for most goals in his first two, three, five and six Bundesliga games games (five, seven, eight and nine goals respectively).

    He took 50 games to score his first 50 Bundesliga goals, also a record – and, at 21, was the youngest player to score so many.

    Haaland is the youngest player to score four times in a Bundesliga game (20 years and 123 days, against Hertha Berlin).

    He barely stuck round long enough at his first three clubs to set many records – barring several Champions League landmarks with Salzburg.

    He left Bryne at the age of 16 after no goals in 16 games. At Molde he netted 20 goals in 50 matches and at Salzburg he scored 29 goals – including five hat-tricks – in just 27 games.

    International record? Yes, he has one of them too. His nine goals in one game against Honduras in 2019 remains a record for a Fifa Under-20 World Cup match.

    He has netted 21 goals in 23 games for Norway’s senior team.

    What records can he break?

    Haaland could smash the record for Premier League goals in a season if he carries on like this.

    The record is 34 – by Andy Cole in 1993-94 and Alan Shearer the following season. But that was when there were 42 league games.

    Haaland ‘only’ needs 24 goals in his next 31 games to beat that.

    The record for a 38-game Premier League season is Mohamed Salah’s 32 in 2017-18.

    He might find it tough to match the record for the top-five European leagues – Lionel Messi’s sensational 50 goals in the 2011-12 La Liga.

    Nobody has won the Premier League Golden Boot with a record of a goal a game or better. Harry Kane was closest with 29 goals in 30 games in 2016-17.

    Haaland’s current rate of scoring in the English top flight would see him end on 60 goals.

    Tommy Johnson’s 38 goals in 1928-29 remains the City record for a player in one season in all competitions.

    The record for Champions League goals in a season might be tougher to come by – with Cristiano Ronaldo netting a remarkable 17 goals in 11 games in 2013-14.

    So what other records could he break this season?

    The most goals scored by a player in a calendar month was Luis Suarez in December 2013. Haaland was only one goal off that mark in August but he has a good few months to try to beat that.

    The most goals scored in the first 20 Premier League games by a player is Kevin Phillips’ 19 and in 30 games it is Cole’s 28.

    Cole has the record of fewest games needed to score 30 Premier League goals (32) and it might be ambitious to think of it this season but Shearer and Cole took 45 games to score 40 goals.

    Jamie Vardy has the record for scoring in most consecutive Premier League games with 11. Haaland is on five.

    Shearer netted a record five hat-tricks in 1995-96. Haaland already has two.

    The most goals in a Premier League game is five, shared by several players including Aguero against Newcastle in 2015-16.

    In the Champions League Van Nistelrooy has the record for fewest appearances to 30 goals (34) and 35 goals (42). If Haaland scores another nine goals he would break or equal those marks too.

    Haaland could also close in on the Norway goalscoring record this season. He is only 12 goals off Jorgen Juve’s national record of 33 goals in the 1920s and 30s.

      Our coverage of Manchester City is bigger and better than ever before – here’s everything you need to know to make sure you never miss a momentEverything City – go straight to all the best content

    Source: bbc.com

  • Nigerian laments police brutality, torture, 13 months remand in Prison as ‘robbery prank goes wrong’ in Lagos

     

    The family of one Daniel Christopher of Ohaozara Local Government Area of Ebonyi State has accused the Nigeria Police Force, Lagos State Command of arraigning and remanding their son in prison custody on an attempted robbery charge because they could not pay a N250,000 bail fee.

    Daniel’s family, who spoke to SaharaReporters on Wednesday, lamented that their son had been in prison custody for 13 months without trial after he was detained in a dinghy police cell for 34 days for what they described as “a prank gone wrong.”

    They accused the police of torturing Daniel in the cell.

    Daniel’s sister, Igwe Blessing, told SaharaReporters that trouble started when he went out to shoot a prank video in preparation for D9ja Spirit Talent Hunt at a Point of Sale (PoS) centre at MOT Junction, Epe, on August 3, 2021. Unfortunately, POS attendant took him for a thief and raised the alarm, accusing him of attempting to rob her.

    This led to a mob attack despite showing evidence that he was shooting a prank video.

    Blessing noted that after assaulting Daniel, he was taken to the police station, where he was tortured. She added that all efforts made by her brother to prove his innocence were rebuffed, as the policemen refused to watch the recorded video of the prank.

    “They instead on transferring him to the office of the defunct notorious police anti-robbery squad (SARS) in Ikeja after the family could not pay N250,000 demanded his bail,” she said.

    Daniel’s fiancée, Semilla Iribhogbe, who corroborated Blessing’s statement, said that while at the disbanded SARS, Daniel was detained for 34 days under physical and mental torture, adding he was later allegedly forced to sign a confessional statement, admitting he wanted to rob the POS shop.

    Iribhogbe alleged that after signing the ‘confessional statement’, the police IPO asked him to call his family to bring N250,000 for his bail otherwise he would be arraigned in court for attempted robbery.

    In an appeal for help made to SaharaReporters, Daniel narrated his ordeal at the hands of police operatives at the infamous premises where the defunct notorious police unit, Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS) used in Lagos, describing it as hell.

    The 27-year-old artist narrated: “We were getting ready for a talent hunt (D9jaspirit Talent Hunt) that was supposed to kick off by September with a management team comprising a media manager one Mr Debo and myself, then sponsor one Mr John.

    “Me and my media manager agreed on getting contents on standby before the talent hunt would kick off as that was supposed to give us ground on our pages while on the show.

    “I was to get some contents and forward them to the media manager for editing. I came up with a one-man stunt robbery prank video. Every character that fit into the skit was to get a N50,000 reward for appearance.

    “With an A9 bug camera which at the time was perfect for 1080 mobile resolution. I also had on me an iPhone 12pro, 500g hard disk, 64 gig flash drive, N50,000 cash, a small Nokia phone and a wooden toy gun I carved myself for the prank which was flexible; it can be broken into two and also stick back.

    “It was on August 3, I set out for my first shot. My first shot was at a POS centre. I went to the POS centre and the lady there allowed me in. Then I introduced myself as an artist with my camera set in front of my face cap.

    “Then I went on to ask about her experience on the job and her biggest challenge working as a POS agent. She even told me how one of her colleagues lost money to a fake alert and was forced to pay with her salary.

    “I asked these questions to know how to compensate her afterwards. Then I went on with the main script.

    “Hey, give me your bag or I shoot you, then she flared up and ran outside. Then I started shouting that it was a prank. I broke the wooden gun into two to show her it was a fake gun but she wouldn’t stop, she grabbed my shirt and held on.

    “Her shouts attracted a crowd who rushed to the scene from different angles. I tried to explain to them but the beating was too much, I was beaten into a coma. I kept shouting that it was a prank and that I was an artist. I tried to explain that it was supposed to be an entry video for my application to D9ja Spirit Talent Hunt.”

    Daniel noted that all his pleas and explanations were not taken as the crowd insisted that he was lying, and that “musicians don’t do this kind of thing”.

    He continued, “I was able to get them to take me to a police station nearby. When we got there, I tried to get the cops to recover my items which the POS attendant and some other members of the crowd had snatched from me.

    “Unfortunately, the policemen didn’t even want to hear me as the first thing they did was beat me up and tie me with a cable. They flogged me with a machete.

    “Later that day, they asked me to call one of my family members or friends to come and bail me with the sum of N250,000. Without my phone and with the mental torture I had suffered, I couldn’t think of any number offhand. Then I begged them to take me to Rehearsal Studio in Lekki where I went with my media manager to shoot a viral video earlier that week but they refused.

    “I found my 64gig flash drive which was the only thing I held close to my hand even when the mob were beating me. The cops took it from me.

    “Three days later, I was in detention and could not provide the N250,000; that was on the 6th of August. The Divisional Police Officer (DPO) instructed his men to transfer me to SARS in Ikeja.

    “In the evening, I was transferred to Ikeja, where they started torturing me all over again. I was isolated and tortured every day for 34 days. They forced me to sign a statement they wrote under intense torture after spending 34 days in isolation with no communication with my family and friends; no food, no water and no bath. Then I was taken to court and was remanded in Kirikiri prison on the 9th of September 2021.”

    “It was in prison that I was able to use the welfare platform to finally reach my management and family members,” he explained.

    Meanwhile, his fiancée lamented that for the 13 months Daniel spent in detention, it was adjournment upon adjournment without trial.

    Iribhogbe further lamented that a lawyer, one Mr Chijike Jiakponna they engaged to defend Daniel made things worse for them.

    She said, “Jiakponna asked me to pay him N800,000 to defend him but immediately after we paid him N450,000, he vanished. He has never shown up in court, not even once. When Daniel asked for a refund, he started manufacturing different arguments. Now we have no money to engage legal services as Jiakponna has refused to refund the N450,000 paid to him.”

    She appealed for Nigerians’ intervention, adding that her fiancée has never committed a crime either in Lagos or any other state.

    Efforts to get the reaction of the Jiakponna were unsuccessful as he did not answer his calls or reply to a text message sent to his mobile line.

    Source: Sahara reports

  • Why “Good vibes only” can make you feel so bad

    If we’re lucky, we’ve all spent time with the kind of open-minded, thoughtful, optimistic people who support us through hard times and encourage us to be our best selves.

    But just as likely, we’ve encountered the other kind of “positivity”–the type of person with an obsessive focus on cheerfulness, who tells us to “buck up” instead of listening when we bring up a serious topic, which leaves us feeling alienated and disconnected (as I described in a previous post). However, the mechanisms of this kind of toxic positivity bear looking into more closely, as they often involve a tactic known as invalidation.

     

    Source: pathdoc/Shutterstock

    But invalidation isn’t usually a deliberate, mean-spirited effort to crush someone else’s independence. Toxic positivity, or the refusal to acknowledge another person’s unhappy or anxious feelings (due to a superficial adherence to optimism, such as a “good vibes only” attitude), is also an insidious form of invalidation.

    One might say that positive intentions don’t always have positive effects: invalidation doesn’t always arise from bad faith. People who invalidate others’ feelings may legitimately believe that their efforts will help–like the person who says, “Don’t worry, you’ll find someone new,” when you’re in tears after a breakup.

    You may have felt the temptation to say things like this–to offer reassurance in hopes of making someone feel better. Unfortunately, all too often, such a remark can shut them down by cutting off your empathy.

    Relying on artificial positivity in close relationships runs a host of risks. By staying optimistic and bright and telling yourself things like “everything happens for a reason,” you’ll create your own world of artificially positive emotions. You’ll push away any bad (but real) feelings, making you more likely to attract the same artificial positivity from others.

    Your relationships may become more superficial, as other people sense they cannot be real around you. If so, they’d only be following the rules you’ve set out: be positive instead of being yourself. You’ll make it impossible for friends or close others to come to you for help. And if, now and again, processing a bad experience can allow a person to change or to develop a new perspective, you’ll fail to help your friends grow in this way.

    Some forms of artificial positivity may actively cause problems, too. If you’ve ever had someone advise that “happiness is a choice,” you might be familiar with the hurt that arises from a remark like that–the shame and guilt you may begin to feel at having negative emotions. It’s bad enough to be coping with something that makes you feel low, but being told by a close friend that it’s possible just to switch on happiness instead, can make you feel blamed and awful for feeling bad.

    But as I’ve said previously, it is possible to change how you communicate to cut down on artificial, “toxic” positivity. First and foremost, if someone is trying to share something with you, let them speak–especially if they ask you to listen. Don’t try to shut off their negative emotions right away. Hear them out. As you do, try to acknowledge that they’re going through a difficult time. You might do this with words or only a sympathetic expression and a nod as you listen–in short, with compassion.

    If you can’t offer practical help–if there’s nothing you can do to help them feel better–it may be appropriate to admit that it’s hard to know what to do or say. Also, try not to confuse empathy with agreement. You may not agree with everything they say or feel. You can still try to understand how they feel! Acknowledging that someone else is unhappy is not the same as endorsing their point of view or agreeing that they should be unhappy.

    Try to take stock of your feelings as you listen; the more aware you are of what you’re going through inside, the more naturally you may be able to connect to your empathy. It’s okay to have negative feelings, even if you feel uncomfortable. It’s also okay–in fact, it’s right–to feel some of the sadness or worry that another person communicates.

    Emotions are signals that can offer valuable information about your experience of the environment. That’s as true for you as it is for the person needing you to hear them out. Your negative feelings won’t go away until and unless you acknowledge and understand them.

    Source: Psychology today

  • Breaking free from emotional labor to find authenticity

    Most people hate being told to smile. Yet traditionally, many jobs expect one to maintain a cheery persona full of pep and enthusiasm, especially jobs requiring interaction with the public.

    However, recent changes in the nature of service jobs and workers’ reprioritization of values have made these jobs less desirable, if not unbearable! Most employees have experienced the familiar strain of acting in a way that’s not even remotely authentic to how they are actually feeling.

    In 1983, sociologist Arlie Hochschild coined the term “emotional labor” in her book, The Managed Heart: Commercialization of Human Feeling, which focused on emotional labor in the workplace, particularly in service industries. Emotional labor is the process of managing feelings and expressions to fulfill the emotional requirements of a job.

    Employers expect employees to regulate their emotions in specific ways during interactions with customers, co-workers, and managers. This includes expressing emotions you don’t feel, like enthusiasm when hearing about a new project you have been assigned or regretting when a customer complains about something that was not your fault.

    Emotional labor also involves suppressing your true feelings, like anger when a customer insults you or glee when a dishonest co-worker gets caught. This is all done, consciously and strategically, to create positive feelings in the customers or clients so that the business can succeed–and so you can keep your job!

    We often define jobs involving emotional labor as those requiring face-to-face or voice-to-voice contact with the public and the expectation that the worker produces an emotional state in another person, such as a happy, satisfied customer.

    You can perform emotional labor in two ways: surface acting and deep acting.

    Surface acting is when employees display the emotions required for a job without changing how they actually feel. For instance, a service person might be thrilled to recite the house salad’s ingredients all night long but smiles to make their customers feel welcome and cared for.

    Deep acting is a more effortful process in which employees change their internal feelings to align with organizational expectations, producing more natural and genuine emotional displays. For instance, you may feel distressed if you are going through a difficult personal challenge.

    Instead, you can take a few minutes to put your personal feelings aside and remember the purpose of your job, why you like it, what your responsibilities entail, and how you contribute positively to the lives of others. Then you act from that place inside you.

    Both surface and deep acting are designed to reach the same end: happy customers and positive bottom-line outcomes. However, research has shown that surface acting is more harmful to employee health (Hülsheger & Schewe, 2011). Regularly acting in ways inconsistent with how you actually feel can negatively impact your physical and mental health. So what can you do instead?

    First, pick a job that you enjoy that is consistent with your values. If that is not possible, try some deep acting in the mirror. Breathe, ground into your body, and use self-talk to create a set of affirmations to remind you of your greater purpose. Also, make sure you have a healthy outlet for your true feelings. In my new book, Mirror Meditation, I explain how to use the mirror to face yourself and work with difficult emotions, including those related to emotional labor.

    For example, Clara worked in the service industry. She needed the job to cover college expenses. Clara hated it but knew it wouldn’t last forever. She was starting to feel numb and irritable. Clara came for mirror meditation instruction to get some support. I suggested she explore her true feelings through video journaling before she dove into deep acting.

    Every night after her work shift ended, I suggested that she make a 10-minute video just expressing anything on her mind or in her heart. This turned out to be a very powerful exercise for her. She did not realize how deeply some of her customers’ comments were affecting her–or much of a strain it was to smile all night long.

    At the end of the night, her cheeks hurt from smiling. Clare hadn’t even noticed it before. She often talked for longer than 10-minutes–sometimes just ranting to release all the pent-up emotions she’d be suppressing all night. By watching her videos later from a calm, centered place, Clara felt compassion for herself and appreciation for how hard she was trying to do a good job.

    Her videos gave her a broader perspective. Eventually, she even found humor in some of her kooky customer interactions. She learned to take it all a bit more lightly.

    Copyright 2022 Tara Well, PhD

    References

    Arlie Russell Hochschild. The Managed Heart: Commercialization of Human Feeling. University Of California Press; 2012. doi:10.1525/9780520951853

    Hülsheger, U. R., & Schewe, A. F. (2011). On the costs and benefits of emotional labor: A meta-analysis of three decades of research. Journal of Occupational Health Psychology, 16(3), 361–389. https://doi.org/10.1037/a0022876

    Source; Psychology today

  • The ironic effect of kindness in interrogations

    Harsh Interrogations

    I recently gave a talk to the Society for Police and Criminal Psychology. While there, I could enjoy a talk by another speaker on the state of the art of criminal interviewing and interrogation. It occurred to me that the research on interrogating criminal suspects gives us powerful insights into how to get the truth from people in our everyday lives.

    Interrogations are conducted to extract truthful and accurate information. Historically, the most common approach was for the interrogator to use an adversarial approach to questioning that often involved deception, pressure tactics, threats, psychological manipulation, physical abuse, and even torture. Those approaches were based on two folk psychology beliefs.

    First, people who have done something wrong will always be reticent to share the truth. The second was that harsh adversarial approaches were the only way to get a reluctant interviewee to come clean. The use of adversarial approaches often led to ethical violations, false confessions, harm to the interviewees, and loss of respect and legitimacy for the interviewing agency.

    New Research on Rapport

    Over the past several decades, researchers have developed new techniques and conducted research showing that the old interrogation techniques were certainly harmful at times. Still, they were less effective than the more benign approaches.

    In the early 1990s, the British psychologist Ray Bull worked with a team of psychologists and police detectives in England to develop a set of interrogation and interviewing techniques based on sound science. They conducted an exhaustive review of the research relevant to interrogations from various fields such as psychology, marketing, and criminal justice.

    Based on their research, they developed a new interviewing technique called the PEACE model (preparation and planning, engage and explain, account, closure, and evaluate). A central feature of the PEACE model is rapport. The group found that the scientific evidence on interviewing and interrogation made clear that establishing rapport (showing friendly warmth, care, understanding, and empathy) with the interviewee yielded much better results than adversarial techniques.

    Research on the Benefits of Rapport in Interrogations

    Researchers found that using a rapport-based approach yielded three to five times as much useful information in the interviews when it came to interviewing criminal suspects. Furthermore, researchers found that an adversarial often undermined cooperation by suspects.

    They determined that around 30 percent of suspects were already planning to be truthful at the beginning of an interview. Another 30 percent were willing to be truthful, depending on how the interrogators treated them. That is, 60 percent of suspects were open to being honest at the start of an interview. However, once interrogators started to use harsh interrogation techniques, all of that goodwill vanished, and the suspects were much less likely to cooperate.

    Implications for Getting the Truth in Everyday Life

    What can this research on interrogations and interviewing tell us about getting the truth from people in our everyday lives? First, it may be the case that most want to come clean and be honest. They are just stalled from doing so by worries about an antagonistic audience.

    The research suggests that if we can use genuine empathy, warmth, and understanding toward people, they are much more inclined to come forward with the truth.

    Perhaps the next time you find yourself in the role of the interrogator trying to get to the bottom of some apparent dishonesty by a child, a romantic partner, a friend, or a colleague, instead of taking an adversarial or accusatorial position, building rapport may more directly lead to the truth coming out.

    References

    Brimbal, Laure & Kleinman, Steven & Oleszkiewicz, Simon & Meissner, Christian. (2019). Developing rapport and trust in the interrogative context: An empirically-supported alternative to customary interrogation practices. 10.1093/oso/9780190097523.003.0006.

    Admin. (2020, April 22). Why Rapport Building is an Effective Strategy in Detainee Interviews. https://www.cvsa1.com/interviewing-and-interrogation/why-rapport-buildi…

    David, G. C., Rawls, A. W., & Trainum, J. (2018). Playing the Interrogation Game: Rapport, Coercion, and Confessions in Police Interrogations. Symbolic Interaction, 41(1), 3–24. https://www.jstor.org/stable/90018564

    Source: Psychology today

  • 5 things that may increase brain inflammation

    When we experience inflammation in our joints, we may have redness, swelling, and pain. If we have inflammation in our skin, we might get an itchy or otherwise annoying rash. But what happens if there is inflammation in our brains?

    In recent years, scientists have shown that inflammation in our brains may be a significant contributor to everything from risk for dementias like Alzheimer’s to mood issues like depression to trouble making healthy decisions. That’s a big deal, because these brain issues are major contributors to our quality of life.

    Some factors in our lives that contribute to brain inflammation may be unavoidable, and some may have occurred long ago. But there are still several things that we can do to help keep levels of brain inflammation in check. Here are 5 great examples of things worth paying attention to:

    1. A low-quality diet. The food we eat is likely a major contributor to our overall immune state as well as the immune state of our brains. It’s thought that a diet rich in processed food (think added sugar, refined carbohydrates, seed oils, processed meats) may contribute to inflammation in our brains, while a diet rich in leafy greens, nuts, fruits/berries, whole fish/omega-3s, polyphenols, gut-healthy fiber (consider adding some fermented foods for an extra gut-health bonus) as well as flavorful spices like cloves, cinnamon and turmeric may have the opposite effect. For inspiration, check out the Mediterranean diet, which is especially rich in all of these key healthy nutrients.

    2. Poor metabolic health. Research shows that our metabolic health (our body’s ability to extract nutrients from and generate energy from our food) is tightly linked to our immune health, including levels of inflammation. We now know that most of us are likely to be metabolically unhealthy, and that this may have carryover effects for our risk of brain diseases, in part by way of inflammation. Key variables that influence metabolic health include our diet (especially the way our food influences insulin and blood sugar levels), whether or not we get exercise, and even our levels of psychological stress.

    Some basic strategies to help improve metabolic health include paying attention to and limiting your added sugar intake, lowering your daily consumption of simple carbohydrates like white bread, pasta, muffins, cakes cookies, and cereal, and engaging in daily movement practices.

    3. Exposure to smoke and substances (especially excess alcohol use). Research shows that exposure to smoke (either because we smoke cigarettes or smoke in air pollution) may increase levels of inflammation in our brains. Similarly, it’s been proposed that exposure to certain drugs may have a damaging effect on our brains by way of the immune system. Though the use of some of these drugs is less common, we likely need to be careful about drinking too much alcohol which may increase inflammation in the brain. It’s still debatable if there really is a “brain safe” level of alcohol consumption.

    Some basic steps include getting help quitting smoking (if you smoke), doing your best to reduce exposure to air pollution (check your local AQI) whenever possible—including considering a HEPA filter in your home, and limiting alcohol consumption as viable.

    4. Too much weight around our bellies. Our fat cells are immunologically active cells, and this appears to be especially the case for our belly fat. White fat cells deep in our bellies and around our internal organs are thought to contribute to inflammation in our bodies, which may negatively impact inflammation in our brains. While weight loss is a challenging conversation, some strategies worth considering as it relates to decreasing our belly fat include cutting back on refined carbohydrates and added sugar, as well as limiting alcohol consumption.

    5. Chronic stress. One of the most powerful connections between brain inflammation and what we put into our bodies concerns stress. When we experience chronic stress, which can happen for a wide variety of reasons, it appears to increase inflammatory pathways in the brain. Though some stress may be unavoidable, a few practices worth trying include limiting exposure to stressful news and social media (especially before bed) and trying a stress mitigation technique like mindfulness, time in nature, or breathwork.

    Source: Psychology todsy

  • 7 psychological factors that affect pain sensitivity

    Pain has a protective role. Because of pain, we can receive warnings that trigger our reflexes to escape potential danger. Like hunger and thirst, pain motivates us to come up with an action plan to get rid of it. All pain is real, no matter what is causing it. And most pain has a pathological origin. Pain can also be associated with emotional, cognitive, and social components. There are significant differences in the perception of pain between people. Pain also varies in the same individual, depending on the circumstances.

    1. Fear of pain

    Fear and anxiety about pain may account for a good deal of individual variations in how much pain we feel. The typical emotional reaction to pain includes anxiety, fear, and frustration. When in pain, we frequently experience thought intrusions of “what if” possibilities (“what-if” my abdominal pain is a sign of a serious illness?). The anxiety of pain is generated by the unknown and grows worse as the pain persists. Pain can be lessened when we feel safe. For example, a patient experiencing severe pain at home may experience lesser pain upon entering the emergency room.

    2. Attention to pain

    An important function of pain is to demand attention. Paying close attention to the pain sensations may increase pain intensity. The process begins when pain interrupts the person’s attention and forces them to focus on their body. The pain is then judged as a threat, which makes them more vigilant and urges them toward addressing the injury. Attention distraction from pain is one of the most used strategies for managing pain. Because you can only attend to only one thing at a time. For example, people who are injured in the heat of sports competitions, or in battle, often don’t notice their injury until the action stops. Injections are less painful when we don’t watch them.

    3. Interpretation

    Once the pain stimulus has been attended to, cognitive processes are used to interpret what it means. Cognitive processes are central in explaining why we sometimes experience mild pain as severe pain, or a serious injury as involving little or no pain. For example, one might interpret a bad stomachache as stomach cancer rather than just eating a bad pizza due to lactose intolerance. In essence, the person imagines the worst possible result that could happen (pain catastrophizing). Thus, catastrophizing may be an important target for treatment.

    4. Pain avoidance

    Pain avoidance stems from the fear of pain. Pain avoidance can be beneficial at first, as it can help the healing process. But this can go from bad to worse. The avoidance behavior, in turn, leads to more avoidance, and ultimately more pain. Like classical conditioning, when a person is injured, they begin to associate the injury with the activity that caused it, and they will avoid that activity. For example, if you hurt your back doing a yoga pose, you may start avoiding yoga entirely, or even all sports. Pain avoidance comes at the expense of reduced life enjoyment. Exposure therapy or exposing patients to activities they’ve been avoiding because of pain has been shown to be helpful.

    5. Expectations

    The subjective experience of pain is largely shaped by our expectations. Sometimes this can result in a self-fulfilling prophecy where people experience what they expect will happen, even in the face of contrary evidence. That is why placebos are so effective. In fact, a placebo is an effective pain therapy without any side effects. The placebos are effective because people believe in them.

    6. The effect of love

    The emotion of love can also reduce pain perception. Love, like safety, can ease the pain. For example, research shows that pain is reduced when partners hold hands. People who spend a greater portion of their day thinking about a romantic partner experience more pain reduction.

    7. Music and pain perception

    Music can be a powerful factor in alleviating pain. Music activates reward regions of the brain that overlap with pain relief centers. Music that expresses joy triggers positive memories and can affect mood and the ability to handle pain. Listening to pleasant music can also make time go faster. In short, music distracts from pain and elevates mood. Because anxiety is frequently related to increased pain perception, relaxing music can reduce pain perception. Your preference matters; if you don’t care for classical music, it could have the opposite effect.

     

    Source: Psychology today

  • 7 ways to cope with natural disaster stress

    If you are one of the thousands of people who must evacuate yearly due to natural disasters, it can be traumatizing. As a therapist and someone who has evacuated several times, here is what can help with your heightened stress level.

    Keep up some of your daily routines.

    Right now, adhering to your usual routine seems unattainable. How are you supposed to have any kind of a routine right now? Our routines are made of little bits of activity. Sometimes we don’t realize what our routines are until it becomes harder to complete them. Do you usually do yoga in the mornings? Do you stretch before you get out of bed? You can recreate that even if you are miles away from home. Having structure helps us through stressful times, and routines add a little of something from home. Your routine may not look exactly like what you are used to, but any bits of normalcy you can add to an abnormal situation will help.

    Be gentle with yourself.

    You probably aren’t feeling like yourself. You’re wondering if you will even have a home left or what amount of damage it may have sustained. Understandably, you may have been irritable and snapped at your family. When you are under the threat of a natural disaster, adrenaline kicks in, and you can go on autopilot. You may not even remember parts of the last few days. Be kind to yourself. You are in a highly stressful situation and may say something you don’t mean. Own it, apologize, and focus on the here and now. Beating yourself up about it prevents you from moving forward.

    Seek contact with kind people.

    You are vulnerable right now, and negativity from others can have an even more significant impact on your mood than usual. Even in an evacuation, you can still seek kind people. That doesn’t mean you are connecting with people who sugarcoat things. You want to talk with people that just listen. Listening without judgment is a gift we can give each other. If you don’t have a positive person to reach out to, speak kindly to yourself in your inner voice.

    Take a look at what you can control.

    Many things seem out of control right now. You may have had to leave precious mementos, especially if you had to evacuate immediately. You don’t know if or when you can return home. You don’t even know what your home will look like when you return. You may be experiencing deep grief. You may not know when a sense of normalcy will return. Sometimes it helps to differentiate between what you can and cannot control. While we can’t control natural disasters, we can control how we treat ourselves. We also have some control over our inner dialogue. Practicing lovingkindness toward yourself can make a big difference in how you feel.

    Limit your news viewing.

    You may be clamoring for information on what is happening to your hometown. There is a difference between refreshing a hurricane tracking page every three hours and leaving the news on for most of the day. You most likely aren’t receiving new information, and repeatedly hearing traumatic news can affect your mental health. Be selective about where and when you get your updates, and step away from sensationalism and repetitive news.

    Be aware that evacuating can trigger past trauma.

    When you are faced with a natural disaster, it can trigger past trauma. A trauma trigger can happen even if the original traumas you experienced were not due to a natural disaster. The feeling of being vulnerable and out of control can seem to bring you right back to your original trauma. It’s important to share your experiences with a mental health professional. Talking through trauma with a trained person you trust can help you process it and possibly decrease its impact. If you are thinking about hurting yourself, please call the Suicide and Crisis Lifeline at 988 or 988lifeline.org.

    Sometimes it isn’t anyone’s fault.

    We tend to want to find a person or thing to blame when bad things happen. It helps us make sense of a chaotic world. It’s a challenge to accept that sometimes bad things will happen to us for seemingly no reason. You may blame yourself or your loved ones for things beyond anyone’s control. Feeling this way is entirely normal. But also know that sometimes you could have done everything right, and you would still face this incredible stressor. What can make a difference is finding meaning even in what appears to be an impossible situation. What is something you can take away from this situation that may enrich your life long term? It’s okay if you can’t think of the answer right now. It’s something to think about as you adjust to your “new normal.”

     

    Source: Psycology today

  • 7 simple rules of sexual consent

    Sexual consent is the mutual, freely expressed agreement by all parties involved to engage in intimate activities: a lack or blatant disregard for sexual consent results in sexual assault and rape.

    It never fails to surprise me when I bring up the topic in my classes how many university students are unfamiliar with what constitutes sexual consent. Maybe then it’s less surprising that many adults I talk to have an equal misunderstanding of the details of sexual consent.

    There’s a lot of blame to go around–from a lack of comprehensive sex education in our schools to the accepted proliferation of myths about consent in our culture. Few things in the sexual realm lend themselves to a negative impact on individuals’ sexuality, selfhood, and life itself than violations of sexual consent. So, it’s a good time to address some of the most basic rules of sexual consent.

    1. One cannot consent if they are underage. An individual categorized as a minor cannot legally offer sexual consent. Even if they say “yes,” consent is not legally given. And one must know the age of consent where they are. The age of consent is not only different from country to country. It varies from state to state.

    2. One cannot consent if they are intoxicated. This one is a little complex. Alcohol diminishes one’s capacity to make rational decisions. Therefore, an intoxicated person cannot consent as they cannot offer reasonable judgment or provide clear communication.

    It’s the same that applies to anyone with mental incapacity. How much alcohol is too much, or how intoxicated is a person before they cannot give consent? It’s a fair question, and there’s a subjective nature to it all.

    Does this mean that if you meet someone in a bar and both parties have a couple of drinks, any resulting sex is non-consensual? No, but it may be better to be cautious–especially if it’s someone you are just meeting and do not know well. You would not want to wake up the next day next to someone who doesn’t remember giving consent or who regrets their incapacitated judgment.

    If there is any doubt, do not engage in sexual touching or sexual intercourse. Remember, you are responsible for obtaining explicit consent free of complications.

    3. One cannot consent if they are unconscious. An unconscious person has no ability to know or understand what is happening. Furthermore, an unconscious person does not have the ability to withdraw consent. Sex with an unconscious person is always non-consensual.

    4. Consent can be withdrawn at any time. I do mean anytime. This includes even when you are in the midst of a sexual act. Even if your partner says “no,” you must stop. You may not like it, but once the stop sign goes up, you no longer have consent.

    5. One cannot consent if they are being coerced, threatened, or manipulated. You do not have consent if you threaten or trick someone into having sex. Even if they say “yes,” if they were manipulated into doing so, that is not an offering of consent.

    6. Present consent does not indicate future consent. If someone expresses consent one day, this does not mean that offering consent covers all future meetings. If someone consents to sex on Monday, that does not indicate they consent to have sex with you on Friday. Consent must be offered prior to any sexual interlude. This is true in long-term relationships and marriage–yes, marital rape is a real thing.

    7. No is never Yes. Maybe is never Yes. It could not be said more plainly. No is always No. It’s not a flirtation or playing hard to get. If they say “no,” the answer is no. And maybe is not, yes. Unless they have the ability to consent and say “yes” on their own accord, you do not have consent. Thus endeth the lesson.

    Cottonbro/Pexels

    Source: Cottonbro/Pexels

    And make no mistake about it, the reason for someone disregarding the rules of consent are not just because they have not been educated about sexual consent. There are many reasons that an individual chooses to dismiss when consent has not been offered. Most often, it’s about power.

    Rape, after all, is not about sex–it’s about power. For some, it comes from a sense of entitlement. Drugs, alcohol, or peer pressure may play a role. The individual may be adhering to hegemonic scripts, or they may have been socialized in a culture where sexual violence is normalized.

    There are multiple paths to sexual assault. Every one of those paths disregards consent. The rules of sexual consent provide a guideline on securing consent when consent is offered freely and explicitly and under what conditions consent cannot be given. For the sexual well-being of everyone, partners and potential partners need to have open, ongoing conversations around consent.

    For those who are victims of sexual assault and rape, the following resources are available to you:

    • National Sexual Assault Hotline: 1-800-656-4673 (HOPE)
    • Rape, Abuse, and Incest National Network (RAINN.org)
    • National Sexual Violence Resource Center (nsvrc.org)

     

    Source: Africanews

  • IMF staff agreement with Mozambique that could unlock $63.8M

    Mozambique and the IMF team reached Monday a staff-level agreement on the economic and financial policies that could support the approval of the First Review of the program under the ECF arrangement.

    The ECF also known as Extended Credit Facility provides financial assistance to countries with protracted balance of payments problems.

    “All quantitative and structural benchmarks set for the first review have been met and good progress was made on the broader structural agenda. Looking ahead, the macroeconomic environment remains challenging.”

    “The authorities aim to continue implementing their ambitious economic reform agenda, including a sovereign wealth fund law, reform of public sector remuneration, and the amendment of the public probity law.”

    The agreement awaits the approval of the IMF Executive Board in December, which would enable the disbursement of about US$63.8 million.

    The Washington-based institution welcomed the Bank of Mozambique (BM) response to contain inflation which it called “proactive”.

    The (IMF) granted May a 432 million euro loan to Mozambique, a first since it withdrew six years ago at the time after finding undisclosed debts in the so-called “hidden debt” scandal involving the government.

     

    Source: Africanews

  • Malians celebrate return of interim Prime Minister

    Mali’s interim Prime Minister, Abdoulaye Idrissa Maïga, is back home after his speech at the UN’s General Assembly.

    In his speech, Idrissa Maïga praised the military junta’s successes against the jihadists and his country’s regained sense of sovereignty.

    “I would like to thank his Excellency Colonel Assimi Goita, President of the transition and of course all the Malian people. We are doers and after having carried out a mission, to receive such a welcome, necessarily we did not expect it at all. We did our duty . I think in all honesty that this is too much of an honour for my modest self”, said the interim prime-minister, Abdoulaye Idrissa Maïga, on his return.

    In Mali, the interim prime-minister’s speech drew praise for what was described as “raw truths”, his courage and eloquence.

    On the streets of Bamako, people celebrated his return to the country. Many voiced their support.

    “We went out to welcome our Prime Minister. The hero. A true African, and a true Malian”, shouted resident Seydou Thiama.

    “He honoured us at the United Nations General Assembly. It is a welcome of gratitude. May God save Mali” added Aminata Samaké.

    “He put everyone in their place. Anyone who does not respect Mali will not be respected and vice versa. That is all!”, voiced Abdoulaye Diarra, another resident in the capital.

    Mali is emerging from a six-month trade and financial embargo imposed by ECOWAS, but relations continue to be strained between an organisation that is pushing for the return of civilians to power and a regime that is promising elections in 2024 after reneging on its initial commitments.

    Since the 2020 coup and particularly the second one in 2021 that the military consolidated their grip on a country facing the spread of jihadism and crises of all kinds.

    Since then, the military have cut ties with France and its European allies and turned to Russia for help.

     

    Source: Africanews

  • UN’s Global Africa Business Initiative to spur continent’s sustainable growth

    Today’s edition of Business Africa is specially dedicated to the role that business can play in solving some of the continent’s biggest challenges.

    The Global African Business Initiative which brings together key stakeholders in the development of the continent was launched last week by the United Nations Global Impact.

    The initiative comes at a time that leaders on the African continent are working overtime to harness the content’s assets like a youthful population and vast natural resources to address challenges like poverty and conflict.

    – Addressing climate financing gaps in Africa –

    One of the key challenges that African countries face as they seek to mitigate effects of climate change is inadequate financing. While several development partners from the West have pledged vast resources to this cause, these are often not fulfilled. In this report, we explore the possibility of optimising the private sector to raise the finance needed to adapt.

    – Bad road stalls trade, transport for Cameroon, Guinea and Nigeria –

    For 10 years now, Cameroon has been losing customs revenue as repair works on the Mora-Kousseri axis that links Cameroon, Nigeria and Chad, have stalled.

    Travellers, traders and even the government are all desperate for a solution that would halt the losses that are now over 350 billion in CFA Francs.

    Source: Africanews

  • Cameroon: Fashion designers imagine the trends of 2050 and street artists thrive

    Cameroon’s capital Yaoundé was the place to be for urban music fans and art lovers. The La Zone festival which is produced by the Douala art Festival (Domaf) was aimed to be a smaller yet intense version of the annual Douala event.

    The festival was also highly influenced by the Abidjan Market for Performing Arts (MASA) a cultural platform for promoting African performing arts.

    “It is the first time that we replicate the experience of the Massa zone outside of Abidjan, so it is good that it takes place in Yaoundé the capital on a busy avenue, which is a lively spot”, the La Zone PR manager, Bonas Fotio, exclaimed proudly.

    On Saturday and Sunday (September 23-24), everyone passing by the busy avenue Kennedy in Yaoundé was captivated by the drum beat and the murals.

    Street art works like a piece by Guy Kouekam et Keulion on the facade of the French cultural institute in Yaoundé were eye-catching.

    Clothes of the future

    In addition to visual arts and music, street fashion was the other highlight of the event. The theme of this first edition of the La Zone festival was: tomorrow is yesterday. 3 fashion designers joined forces to imagine what fashioncould look like by the mid-21st century.

    “We went with the flow of the DOMAF festival theme which is tomorrow is yesterday, Kris Ka, a fashion designer says. So, we designed garments trying to figure out what clothing in 2050 could look like.”

    “We work with everything, from wood, to aluminium, or kitchen utensils, BRISTEL says. We call it upcycling. You’ll wonder why upcycle: because clothes or objects that were created do not have the right to die”.

    Clad in flashy colours and with unusual attires, models were essential parts of the project. They were on the same page that the designers, to them: the designer leaves a mark in his creations and they should not be bound to die.

    “Anything anyone creates should not be forgotten because it bears the image of its creator, Junior Sikombe argues. He let his spirit work, so we have to promote his work, that’s it.”

    Consequently, nothing is lost here everything can be transformed from clothes, to shoes, fabric or even objects.

    If the future was on everyone’s mind it is because the La Zone by Domaf festival organizers were inspired by the UN’s sustainable development goals and paired up with civil society actors when setting up the event.

    Over the week-end, the public loafed around the Kennedy avenue discovering music genres, traditional Cameroonian dances and participating in workshops.

     

    Source: Africanews

  • “The Woman King” reigns supreme at North American box office

    “The Woman King, a historical epic about female warriors in a West African kingdom fighting slave traders, ruled the U.S. box office this weekend.

    The Sony film, which depicts the real-life warriors of the 19th-century kingdom of Dahomey – located in present-day Benin – grossed $19 million, according to preliminary figures from Exhibitor Relations released Sunday.

    Oscar-winning actress Viola Davis plays Nanisca, a seasoned warrior who trains the next generation of recruits to fight a larger rival African kingdom and European slave traders.

    In an interview with AFP on Wednesday, the actress explained that she spent six years trying to convince reluctant studios and producers to invest in the project.

    The feature film largely stole the show from “Barbarian,” a low-budget horror film that topped the box office last week and landed in second place this week with $6.3 million from Friday to Sunday.

    In third place was the strange and bloody “Pearl.” Ti West’s film, which is about a farm stay, cinematic ambitions, axes, pitchforks, and alligators… collected just over $3.1 million for its release.

    Next came “Coup de théâtre,” a Searchlight comedy set in 1950s London, where the adaptation of a play is interrupted by a series of murders, which a slightly tipsy detective and his overly passionate assistant attempt to solve. The film also took in some $3.1 million in revenue.

    In fifth place was “Bullet Train”, an action film starring Brad Pitt from Sony, with $2.5 million.

    Here are the rest of the Top 10.

    6 – “Top Gun: Maverick” ($2.2 million)

    7 – “Krypto and the Super-Animals” ($2.2 million)

    8 – “Ball of Hell” (1.7 million)

    9 – “Minions 2: Once Upon a Time Gru” (1.3 million)

    10 – “Moonage Daydream” (1.2 million)

    Source: Africanews

  • Sudan’s Wazza instrument ushers in the harvest season

    Sudan’s Wazza instrument ushers in the harvest season. This traditional instrument comes from Sudan’s Blue Nile southern state and has been used for generations.

    The sound of traditional Sudanese instrument Wazza fills the air in the streets of  Khartoum.

    The horn-like instrument has been used in Sudan for generations to usher in the harvest season.

    Mohamed Adam Soliman is a music professor at Sudan’s University of Science and Technology: He tells us about the origins of this instrument.

    “It’s a man-made instrument in the Blue Nile state by the ethnic Funj group, either the Barta, or Albroon, or the Gumuz and many other communities in the area. It (the Wazza instrument, ed.) is an outcome of the environment. It’s made from the gourd in a long, rectangular or cylindrical shape which is planted in a specific way”, he said.

    The instrument comes from Sudan’s southern Blue Nile state. Instruments can vary in size, with some as long as two metres.

    In the village of East Ganis, in Blue Nile State, Youssef Moussa Ismail, is a traditional Wazza maker.

    “The instrument is made from the gourd which is cultivated at the beginning of the rainy season. As it grows, we pound a stake into the ground and then place a canopy of tree branches and dry grass on top for the gourd to grow and climb. We are now making a new Wazza from the newly (cultivated, ed.) gourd, because it has to be re-made every year as (the instrument, ed.) wears out due to being subjected to water and humidity. So we must make new ones every year”, said Moussa Ismail.

    Wazza players perform in a band of up to 13 members.

    Some players also use animal horns to tap their Wazza to create rhythms.

     

    Source: Africa news

  • Crisis in Delta State as Warri royal family protests 30 land hectares taken by Okowa-backed traditional chief

    There is crisis presently between the Okumagba royal family of Okere-Urhobo kingdom and the family of Emmanuel Oritsejolomi Uduaghan, the “elema” of Warri kingdom over the alleged grabbing of over 30 hectares of land belonging to the Okumagba family in Warri, Delta State.

    According to the Okumagba royal family, Uduaghan, a high-ranking chief and custodian of tradition, and also appointee of the Olu of Warri, for the past 10 years has used top officials of the Governor Ifeanyi Okowa led government to intimidate and arrest one of their sons, Louis Okumagba, who is at the forefront of the land dispute.

    Speaking with SaharaReporters on behalf of the Okumagba royal family, Louis Okumagba said, “The said land is opposite Don Domingo College in the heart of Warri acquired from the Okumagba family by the then government of Bendel State before the creation of Delta State and since a larger portion of the land has not been used for public purposes for which it was acquired, I applied for a part of it to be released to him and it was then that the elema of Warri kingdom, Emmanuel Oritsejolomi Uduaghan surfaced from nowhere to lay claim to the land.

    “It was on a portion of the land that the Delta State School of Nursing and Delta State Board of Internal Revenue headquarters are located close to the College of Education, Warri. My application was already granted and the Certificate of Occupancy about to be issued when Emmanuel Oritsejolomi Uduaghan stepped in to fraudulently lay claim to the land, bribing his way through to compromise some officials of the state ministry of land, survey and urban development who confirmed that Emmanuel Oritsejolomi Uduaghan has no valid C of O and title to the land and that their hands were tied.

    “Emmanuel Oritsejolomi Uduaghan was parading four different C of Os with questionable numbers and particulars, and none of the C of Os in his possession has been confirmed to have originated from the state ministry of land and survey. I applied for the land in 2016 and everything was approved because what I applied for was just 10 acres of land. The commissioner office, through one Joshua Ekakitie wrote a letter to the zonal area planning officer and surveyor in the Ministry in Warri, directing them to carry out a joint inspection of the said land for due diligence check and report back to the ministry. Their report was thereafter sent to Asaba and approval was given for the land to be allocated to me.

    “But as soon these government officials in Okowa government, Okowa’s director of protocols, Ifeanyi Eboigbe, former commissioner for lands and survey and PDP candidate for Ndokwa East constituency in the forthcoming 2023 house of Assembly election, Chika Ossai, the Isoko North PDP chairman and chairman of the state land use Act, Godwin Ogorugba and some staff of the state ministry of land I had cried to and earlier promised to assist us get our land back went behind us and got bribed with parcels, they turned against us and have covered up and ceded the land to Emmanuel Oritsejolomi Uduaghan. These are officials who know that the land belongs to us.”

    As at the time of filing in this report, all calls and messages put to the “elema” of Warri kingdom, Emmanuel Oritsejolomi Uduaghan for reactions were not responded to.

    Meanwhile, the governor’s director of protocols, Ifeanyi Eboigbe, the PDP candidate for Ndokwa East constituency in the forthcoming 2023 house of Assembly election, Chika Ossai and the chairman of the state land use Act, Godwin Ogorugba, all denied the allegations, describing it as baseless and unfounded.

     

    Source: Ghanaweb

  • How did African teams do in their friendlies ahead of the Qatar World Cup?

    Preparations for the November Football World Cup are not going smoothly for all African teams.

    Friendly matches were held on Tuesday, September 27, as part of the Qatar World Cup preparations. The international tournament is set to kick off on November 20.

    Cameroon suffered a second defeat in less than a week. The Indomitable lions were beaten by South Korea 0 – 1 at Seoul World Cup Stadium in South Korea.

    After the Super Sonny’s tie with Costa Rica, the South Korean were happy to end their last friendly match on a positive note. On Friday it is the Uzbek squad who defeated the Cameroonians 2 – 0.

    In Vienna (Austria) on Tuesday, Senegal was held in check by Iran. Aliou Cisse’s men did not open the score, but benefited from a goal by Iranian Morteza Pouraliganji in the 55th minute.

    Azmoun scored for Iran in the 64th minute enabling his team to end the match on a draw (1-1) against the Teranga Lions.

    Ghana won 1-0 against Nicaragua. Fatawu Issahaku scored for the Black Stars during the first half played at the Estadio Francisco Artés Carrasco in Lorca.

    And Tunisia, was atomized by Brazil at the Parc des Princes (France) 5 goals to 1.

    Morocco held Paraguay in check at the Benito Villamarin stadium in Seville after its victory against Chile (2-0) last Friday.

    World Cup final draw

    Five African teams have gained places in groups A, D, F, G and H. Cameroon, Ghana, Morocco, Senegal and Tunisia.

    The African champions will evolve in group A. Senegal will face hosts, Qatar, the Netherlands and Ecuador.

    In Group D, Tunisia will be playing against defending champions, France and Denmark plus Australia.

    In Group F, Morocco faces a battle against Canada, Belgium and Croatia.

    Cameroon will face record holder Brazil in Group G as well as Switzerland and Serbia.

     

    Source: African news

     

  • Ukrainians told to be ready to fight for Russia

    Ukraine’s progress in the southern regions of Kherson and Zaporizhzhia has been far more limited than its successes in the north-east.

    Front line positions come under regular fire as both Russia and Ukraine attempt to push forward. The BBC’s Abdujalil Abdurasulov gained rare access to the front line in Kherson, a region where Ukrainian men have been told they could be drafted to fight for the Russian army.

    An old Soviet self-propelled howitzer called Gvozdika or “Carnation” is rolled out in an open field and put into position. Its barrel tilts up. “Fire!” comes the command.

    The gunners hastily move away after the last shot, acting quickly.

    Although the advance of Ukrainian forces in the south is very slow, their artillery units remain busy.

    Stus, commander of the gunners, explains that the Russians target his infantry and they respond in order to silence them.

    Their job is very much felt at the front line. Soldiers walk across the vast field under the cover of a line of trees. They pay no attention to the sound of missiles flying above their head nor the thud of explosions. The fighters say a Russian observation post is 500m away and they might be within the range of small arms.

    The Ukrainians move quickly to reach a destroyed farm building that they took back just a week ago. Now, they are digging trenches and carrying sandbags in order to fortify their new position.

    Stus, commander of the gunners standing next to the “Gvozdika” howitzer
    Image caption,

    Stus, commander of the gunners, says troops “shouldn’t underestimate our enemy”

    But Ukraine’s advancement in the south is moving slowly.

    All talk about counter-offensive here helps to deceive Russians and achieve gains in the East, laughs Vasyl, a deputy commander of the regiment.

    “But we have some success here as well. We continue liberating villages with small steps but it’s very difficult – every victory we have is covered with blood,” he adds.

    Many Ukrainians who remain behind the Russian front line, in the occupied territories, are anxiously waiting for this counter-offensive.

    “We’re euphoric when Ukraine hits the occupied territories,” says Iryna, a resident of Melitopol in the south. “It means that Ukraine has not forgotten us. We all know that living near military infrastructure and buildings is not safe, so most civilians have moved out from those locations.”

    But for people in the occupied territories, the longer they wait, the harder it is to survive. Many believed that the counter-offensive would happen in August. But when that didn’t happen, people started to flee towards Ukrainian controlled territories and areas further to the West.

    Among them was Tatyana Kumok from Melitopol. The Israeli citizen was visiting her hometown when the Russian invasion started in February. She stayed in the city and distributed aid to residents but in September, she and her family decided to leave. One of the main reasons for leaving was Russia’s promise to hold a so-called referendum.

    “As soon as it’s done, the Russians will introduce new bans according to their laws and try to legitimise the occupation,” she says.

    With the city turned into a giant military base, she says it is clear that Russian troops won’t abandon the city easily.

    “It was obvious the city won’t be liberated this fall,” she adds.

    Tatyana Kumok helping distribute aidImage source, Tatyana Kumok
    Image caption,

    Tatyana Kumok and her family fled Melitopol just before Russia decided to hold a so-called referendum

    Even a silent resistance to Russian occupation is getting dangerous now.

    In September many families were forced to send their children to Russian-administered schools even though their children would be exposed to the Kremlin’s propaganda.

    “If you don’t send your child to school, it’s a litmus test for you – it means you have pro-Ukrainian views,” explains Ms Kumok. “I know parents who had to tell their seven-year-old child not to talk about things discussed at home with anyone at school. Otherwise the child could be taken away. That was really awful.”

    A picture taken during a visit to Berdyansk organized by the Russian military shows children at a newly opened kindergarten in Berdyansk, Zaporizhia regionImage source, EPA
    Image caption,

    Children at a newly opened nursery in Russian occupied Berdyansk of Zaporizhia region

    The crackdown on people who do not support Russian rule is rising.

    “There is a sharp increase of arrests since August following the successful Ukrainian air strikes,” says Bohdan who is still living in Kherson. He spoke with the BBC via a messenger app and his real name is not being revealed for his safety.

    Bohdan says that earlier detentions were based on a list of names that the Russian military had. But now anyone can be arrested and thrown into a basement for interrogation.

    Russian soldiers recently came to the house of Hanna (not her real name) in Nova-Kakhovka, a city in Kherson region, to check who was living there.

    “They didn’t go inside the house but it was still scary. I don’t even walk with my phone now,” she said via a messenger app.

    A woman casts her ballot during voting in a so-called referendum on the joining of Russian-controlled regions of Ukraine to Russia, in a hospital in Berdyansk, Zaporizhzhia regionImage source, EPA
    Image caption,

    A woman in Russian occupied Zaporizhzhia casts her ballot during voting in a so-called referendum

    The self-styled referendum is bringing a new threat to the local population – mobilisation. Many men could be drafted to fight for the Russian army.

    Russian soldiers are already going house to house in some villages and writing down the names of male residents, local residents say. They claim soldiers have told them to be ready for a call-up after the referendum.

    Men aged 18-35 are reportedly not allowed to leave the occupied territories any more.

    Iryna left on 23 September, the first day of the so-called referendum, with her husband and two children. They wanted to stay in order to look after her paralysed 92-year-old grandmother.

    “But when Putin announced the call-up, and we already knew about the referendum, it was clear there would be a mass mobilization and men would be detained right on the street irrespective of their age,” she says.

    “We could survive without gas and electricity, we could find solutions for that. But not for this. That was our red line,” says Iryna.

    Vasyl, a deputy commander of the regiment in uniform smiling at the camera
    Image caption,

    Vasyl, a deputy commander in the Ukrainian army says “every victory we have is covered with blood”

    The Russian call-up will pose more challenges for the Ukrainian counter-offensive.

    It will certainly escalate the war and more people will die, Ukrainian soldiers say.

    “We shouldn’t underestimate our enemy,” says Stus, commander of the gunners. “Those new recruited Russian soldiers will have guns and grenades, so they will pose a threat, which we will have to eliminate”.

    As the gunners wait for new tasks with their howitzer hidden in the bushes, Russian troops hit a nearby Ukrainian village with Grad missiles. The gunners are silent as they listen to the series of explosions.

    That terrifying sound was just another reminder that the success of the Ukrainian troops will depend on how quickly they can make Russian artillery and rocket launchers go silent.

     

    Source: BBC

  • Kabuga: From petty trader to Rwanda’s elite – Origins of an alleged genocide financier

    The fertile and lush lands of northern Rwanda are well known to infamous Felicien Kabuga.

    The 89-year-old whose trial opens in the Hague on Thursday grew up here in Nyange village before making a fortune.

    He was charged with genocide and crimes against humanity for allegedly using his wealth to fund the 1994 genocide.

    An accusation that remains surreal to his cousin.

    “They say he used to buy machetes to kill people, but he was a trader. He bought machetes, hoes and all sorts of things to resell them

    “When people say he bought machetes for the purpose of killing people…I can’t confirm that”, he adds. Jean Baptiste Munyaneze says.

    Born to a farming family, Kabuga’s first jobs included peddling items door to door and selling cigarettes and used clothing at a market in his native Byumba region in northern Rwanda.

    French news reports of the time say he owned a tea plantation as well as apartments and warehouses.

    Rich and influential man in Rwanda

    Whenever Munyaneze steps into Kabuga’s former family house, memories resurface.

    “He used to organise parties and invite all of his neighbours. And at these parties he talked to everyone. There were always a lot of us but he gave a warm welcome.”

    By 1994 he was said to be one of the richest men in Rwanda and as much as his wealth grew, so did his political connections.

    One of his daughters had married the oldest son of Rwandan president Juvenal Habyarimana, whose assassination triggered the  genocide.

    Another daughter married Augustin Ngirabatware, the planning minister, who was sentenced to 30 years in prison for his role in the bloodshed targeting Tutsis and Hutus.

    At the time when the genocide broke, Kabuga headed the National Defence Fund, to which he and other businessmen contributed. The structure allegedly bought machetes and uniforms for the army and Hutu militia.

    Broadcasting calls for murder

    Beholding the vast green scenery, Alphonsine Musengimana, a tea picker still remebers the times under Kabuga.

    “I have been working on this plantation since I was fifteen years old. At the time, Kabuga was the owner and he paid us well”.

    “I don’t know anything about his crime, Musengimana insists. I got married in this region but I’m not from here.”

    According to the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR), whose work was later taken over by the MICT, Kabuga “contributed to the Interahamwe’s killing and harming of persons identified as Tutsis by organising meetings … to raise funds to purchase arms.”

    Jean Damascene Bizimana, executive secretary of the National Commission for the Fight Against Genocide, told AFP agency that Kabuga had funded “tonnes of machetes and grenades which were imported and distributed across the country as weapons”.

    Many of the victims were hacked to death with machetes.

    “Kabuga served as president of RTLM and as such had de facto and de jure control of programming, operations, and finances of RTLM,” the ICTR indictment said.

    He is also accused of directly supervising Interahamwe massacres in Gisenyi, northwestern Rwanda, and in the Kigali district of Kimironko.

    After the genocide, Kabuga’s properties were seized and sold. He fled the country and thanks to his affluence and influence, he avoided arrest attemps by police and moved from Rwanda to Switzerland, the DRC, and Kenya.

    He was living under a false identity outside Paris when he was arrested and transferred to the Mechanism for International Criminal Tribunals (MICT) at the Hague in 2020.

    Kabuga is accused of helping create the notorious Radio-Television Libre des Mille Collines (RTLM) that incited people to “kill Tutsi cockroaches” in its broadcasts.

    Rwanda’s 1994 genocide which claimed more than 800,000 lives.

    Source: Africa news

  • Niger halts oil product deliveries to Mali on security grounds

    Niger has decided to suspend the transit of petroleum products destined for neighboring Mali for security reasons, in the face of the threat of jihadist groups.

    The news was confirmed to the AFP news agency Tuesday by customs sources.

    In a memo dated 21 September, the Niger Customs Directorate General announced the suspension of the issuance of transit permits for petroleum products granted to users in Mali.

    Products destined for the United Nations Stabilization Mission in Mali (Minusma) are not concerned by this suspension, the memo added.

    In addition, the note announces the suspension of already issued authorizations for the supply of petroleum products in Mali and which are not intended for the UN mission.

    This decision was taken three days before the invective of the Malian interim Prime Minister, Colonel Abdoulaye Maïga, against Niger’s President Mohamed Bazoum. Speaking at the UN’s 77th general assembly, he accused Mr. Bazoum of being a “foreign who se réclame from Niger”.

    Praising “the Nigerien people who is a brother to Mali”, Colonel Abdoulaye Maïga added President Mohamed Bazoum’s “actions” reinforced the suspicions the Malian authorities had that he is not “Nigerien”.

    This accusation dates back to 2019 when Bazoum was chosen by his party to be the candidate to the presidential election. Several members of the opposition then attempted to have his candidacy invalidated, accusing the candidate of having provided a false certificate of nationality.

    Their request was finally rejected by the Constitutional Court in December 2020 as “unfounded,” but the suspicions persist.

    “Security reasons”

    “This measure is really motivated by security reasons, not anything else,” said a customs source on condition of anonymity, adding that deliveries to the Minusma will be “escorted to the border of Mali”.

    In Niger and neighboring Burkina Faso, several sources report frequent hijackings of trucks carrying hydrocarbons by jihadist groups.

    Niger and Mali have been facing attacks by jihadist groups affiliated with the Islamic State (EI) and al-Qaeda for years.

     

    Source: Africa news

  • ‘I was trafficked, raped, and left for my abusers to find’

    Two years ago, Isobel, a British woman in her early 20s, went to the police and told them how a gang of men had sexually exploited her.

    Warning: This story contains descriptions of violence and sexual violence

    For the previous four years the gang had relentlessly trafficked her across England, driving her to towns and cities where she was raped hundreds of times in takeaways, warehouses and in empty flats, by men who paid her abusers. The gang of men, of Pakistani heritage, subjected her to extreme violence and regularly poured petrol over her, threatening to kill her if she disclosed the abuse.

    Isobel, not her real name, went to the police after seeing news that a grooming gang in another part of the country had been jailed. She says after reporting what happened, however, nobody got in touch with her for three weeks. When a police officer finally did contact her, Isobel says she felt victim-blamed and was asked why she was still in contact with her abusers.

    Isobel was keen to see her perpetrators prosecuted, but says when she asked police how they were going to keep her safe – by providing a safehouse during their investigation – no plan was put in place. The gang knew where she lived and despite being temporarily free, she lived in fear.

    The police also failed to refer Isobel to the National Referral Mechanism (NRM), a government framework that provides victims of modern slavery – including sexual exploitation victims – with vital support to rebuild their lives, including access to safehouses, counselling, financial support and legal aid.

    British nationals are more likely to be referred to the NRM than victims from overseas – 31% of potential victims who were referred in 2021 were British nationals. Of those referred to the NRM because of sexual exploitation, the BBC’s File on 4 found there were 462 British girls and women in 2021 – compared with 46 non-British nationals.

    But Robyn Phillips, director of operations at the Human Trafficking Foundation, says there is a perception that trafficking has to cross international borders – and it is access to safehouses that British victims find most difficult to secure.

    ‘Let down’

    The gang discovered Isobel was talking to the police and began sending her threatening messages. Isobel told the police, but when no safeguarding measures were put in place, she withdrew from the investigation and the case was dropped. She was forced back into a life of exploitation by the gang and she became pregnant.

    Isobel told her abusers she was expecting a baby, but says as one of them was the likely father, they were fearful that DNA evidence would identify them. She says the gang punched her in the stomach telling her: “I’m gonna beat it out of you – it’ll be the devil child.”

    Isobel suffered a miscarriage and went to a Sexual Assault Centre, where she was finally referred to the NRM. She was also introduced to Jess Phillips, Labour’s shadow minister for domestic violence and safeguarding, who thought Isobel’s case was “so horrifying” that she went to meet her.

    After talking to the MP, Isobel decided to go back to the police and try and get support from the NRM to rebuild her life. But it wasn’t easy. ”I asked my National Referral Mechanism worker about legal aid,” says Isobel. “She started to be angry and was like ‘you don’t need that legal advice, because you’re not an immigrant’.”

    The National Referral Mechanism

     

    • The National Referral Mechanism (NRM) is a Home Office framework for identifying and referring potential victims of modern slavery and ensuring they receive the appropriate support
    • A person who is suspected to be a victim is referred to the NRM from a first responder agency, which can be police forces, immigration authorities, the National Crime Agency, local authorities or charities such as the Salvation Army, NSPCC or Barnardo’s
    • Once a referral is made, it is assessed and someone who is believed to have been a victim of trafficking or modern slavery is first given a reasonable grounds decision and can access support before being given a conclusive grounds decision, where it is accepted they were a victim

    Ms Phillips says the NRM was originally designed for victims from abroad and there is a failure to provide services for “this kind of active exploitation”.

    “There’s victim-blaming at lots of different levels, whether that’s police, whether that is the sort of service provision that’s meant to sit around exploitation and trafficking, and in [Isobel’s] case, it has just failed her at every point,” she says.

    A year after she had been referred to the NRM, Isobel still hadn’t received the help she was entitled to. The police investigation, which had resumed after her miscarriage, fell apart after officers failed again to put safeguarding measures in place. Now at her most vulnerable, her abusers turned up at her home again and drove her to a town where she was raped by a group of men.

    She called the police and her NRW worker, who got in touch with the Salvation Army, which runs the government’s modern slavery support contract. Isobel says the Salvation Army offered her a safehouse but was told she had to give up her phone. Initially she refused to do so, and she says when she called back to say she had changed her mind she was told it was too late.

    Stock image of a woman on the phoneImage source, Getty Images
    Image caption, Isobel was finally offered a place at a safehouse, but was told she had to give up her phone (picture posed by a model)

    Emilie Martin, from the Salvation Army, says it is not common practice for someone to be asked to give up their mobile phone, but where it does happen the individual will be issued with a replacement. She says the NRM also “provides the same needs for individuals who are British nationals and those who aren’t”.

    The Home Office said it is “committed to tackling modern slavery and helping victims recover” and expects “police forces to investigate cases of sexual exploitation, pursue perpetrators and support victims”.

    The National Police Chiefs Council said a dedicated national team has been set up to improve the response to modern slavery across all police forces and ensure the “ruthless criminals behind these offences are brought to justice”.

    But Maggie Oliver, a former Greater Manchester Police detective, who exposed the Rochdale grooming scandal – which resulted in nine men being convicted of sex trafficking 10 years ago – says British victims of sexual exploitation in the UK are viewed differently to those being trafficked into the country.

    She says authorities fail to understand that victims need protection wherever they come from. “If it happened to my daughter, I would think very, very carefully about whether I involved the police, because I think the damage victims suffer is often made ten times worse by the authorities that let them down.”

    Isobel’s future remains unclear. She says she’s constantly checking over her shoulder to see if there’s anyone following her and that while she would like to see her abusers jailed, she’s “got no trust in the police because they’ve literally just failed me from day one”.

    More than anything, she says she just wants to be safe.

    Source: BBC

  • Nigeria’s Biyi Bandele: A storyteller to his bones

    Nigerian writer Molara Wood pays tribute to author and filmmaker Biyi Bandele, whose film premiered in Canada weeks after his death.

    Bandele’s final film is an adaptation of Nobel laureate Wole Soyinka’s play, Death and the King’s Horseman.

    It explores real-life events in the 1940s Oyo Kingdom in West Africa, in which the king’s horseman was required by tradition to die by ritual suicide and follow the Alaafin (ruler of Oyo) into the afterlife.

    Bandele, in a tragic twist, did not live to see the release of perhaps his most triumphant film, which premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) in September, a month after the director’s death at the age of just 54. He was buried in Nigeria’s main city, Lagos, on Friday.

    Bandele’s daughter, Temi, was in the Canadian city for the bittersweet showcase of the film, described by Variety magazine as “a passion project” for the director.

    Paying tribute on Twitter, TIFF’s chief executive officer Cameron Bailey said: “Biyi Bandele was doing something so rare in world cinema: large-scale adaptations of African literature meant for the whole world.”

    An artist of many parts, Bandele, who lived in London, was a significant figure in the UK literary scene, and was also known for his achievements of the past decade in the Nigerian movie industry.

    For several decades, he blazed his own path in a career marked by artistic virtuosity and reinvention.

    “I am first and foremost a writer,” said Bandele, a prodigious talent who made his mark as a playwright, novelist, screenwriter, photographer and director.

    Scene from Bandele's final filmI

    His death in Lagos, Nigeria, on 7 August came not long after Netflix released the original limited series, Blood Sisters, which he co-directed, while he also had a new novel in the works.

    News of his passing came in a Facebook post signed by his daughter, Temi, who described the death as “unexpected,” and praised her father as “a storyteller to his bones, with an unblinking perspective, singular voice and wisdom, which spoke boldly through all of his art”.

    The news sent shockwaves through the African writing community, and among the literati in London.

    Bandele arrived in London in 1990 as winner of the International Student Playscript Competition. He was 22, until then a student of Obafemi Awolowo University in Ile-Ife, Nigeria.

    Among 100 African writers who paid tribute in the online journal Brittle Paper was Nigerian author Richard Ali, who lauded Bandele’s best-known book, Burma Boy, as “one of the finest novels about WW2 that shows the peculiar experience of [African] soldiers”.

    In a post on Instagram, Booker Prize winner Bernardine Evaristo wrote: “He was very much part of our arts community here in the UK and Nigeria. I always had huge respect for his prolific, super-talented and fearless creativity.”

    Bandele’s agent Jessica Craig recalled her early encounter with Burma Boy: “I was fascinated by the historical importance and authenticity, having never before known about Nigerian soldiers fighting in WWII for the British army.”

    She wondered why the book “is not cherished as a classic of British and African literature”. Based on the war experience of Bandele’s father, the novel was the first to explore the role of African soldiers in the Burma Campaign, which saw Allied forces defeat Japanese troops.

    A worthy successor of the great Nigerian playwrights, including Soyinka and Femi Osofisan, Bandele was a precocious forerunner to the country’s current literary stars.

    He was a bridge between generations of Nigerian writing, literary genres and art forms, as well as African and Black British writing.

    Molara Wood

    Molara Wood
    Bandele had an imaginative childhood, spent listening to his mother’s stories of gods and spirits – fantastical elements that would later infuse his work”
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    As fascinating as any character he ever created, the author was born Biyi Bandele-Thomas in 1967 in Nigeria’s Kaduna state – in Kafanchan – a railway town that sounds like something from a fable.

    “I left when I was about 15, but it’s defined every single aspect of my life,” he said of his birthplace.

    It was an imaginative childhood, spent listening to his mother’s stories of gods and spirits – fantastical elements that would later infuse his work.

    Visiting the local library with his father, he was drawn to a book about bicycles – the most common mode of transport in Kafanchan at the time.

    The young Bandele became an avid reader, deciding by the age of seven that he wanted to tell stories.

    He had his first short story published in a regional newspaper at the age of 12. He had written the first draft of what became his debut novel – The Man Who Came in From the Back of Beyond – by the time he was 14. The manuscript came with him to Britain after he won the playscript competition for Rain.

    He published two more novels by the end of the 1990s, and styled his name, simply, as Biyi Bandele.

    He wrote about a dozen plays, including Brixton Stories, Oronooko, and Marching for Fausa.

    Over the span of a decade, he worked with the Royal Shakespeare Company, the Talawa Theatre Company, and the Bush Theatre.

    His stage adaptation of Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart opened at the Royal Court Theatre in June 1997.

    Danny Boyle directed Bandele’s first screenplay – Not Even God Is Wise Enough – about a day in the life of a Nigerian living in London.

    His 1999 novel, The Street, is set in Brixton in south London, where he lived. He was a perceptive chronicler of the Black experience in Britain.

    Biyi Bandele attends the UK Premiere of "Half Of A Yellow Sun" at Odeon Streatham on April 8, 2014 in London, EnglandImage source, Getty Images
    Image caption,

    Bandele made a film out of fellow Nigerian author Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s famous novel

    With Boyle’s encouragement, Bandele went into filmmaking, adapting and directing Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s Half of a Yellow Sun, starring Thandiwe Newton, Chiwetel Ejiofor and Anika Noni Rose.

    Beset with difficulties, the film nonetheless came together, shot on location in Nigeria, thanks to the doggedness of its director.

    The new Soyinka adaptation is remarkable for Bandele’s bold decision to return to the original Yoruba of the historical episode depicted. It is the first Yoruba language feature programmed at TIFF.

    A notable feature of Bandele’s Kafanchan childhood was a bar owned by his family, where he observed colourful, marginal characters up close, including sex workers and pickpockets.

    “The most important thing that taught me was never to generalise about people, so that if you find prostitutes in my work, or you find thieves, they are first of all human before they are a type,” he told the BBC in 1998.

    Central to his work was the desire “to have ordinary people reinvent their lives”.

    Little wonder his photographs of ordinary people on Lagos Island have won plaudits for their warmth and the dignifying eye of his camera.

    Bandele’s unpublished novel, Yoruba Boy Running, based on the life of the first African Anglican bishop of West Africa, Samuel Ajayi Crowther, was picked up by publisher Hamish Hamilton before the author’s death.

    The novel, along with his larger body of works, should be a fitting epitaph for the uniquely gifted talent that was Biyi Bandele.

     

    Source: BBC

  • Guinea ex-leader detained ahead of trial – lawyers

    Lawyers for Guinea’s former president, Moussa Dadis Camara, say he has been sent to jail ahead of his trial for his alleged role in a stadium massacre 13 years ago.

    His co-accused will also be detained until the end of the trial, which starts on Wednesday.

    An international commission found that 156 people were killed and thousands injured during the opposition protest. More than 100 women were raped.

    Witnesses said the security forces blocked the stadium and shot people or killed them with knives.

    Mr Camara denies the allegations.

    Source: BBC

  • Attack on Burkina Faso convoy kills 11 soldiers

    Burkina Faso’s government says 11 soldiers were found dead and around 50 civilians are missing following a suspected jihadist attack on a convoy.

    Twenty-eight other people, including 20 soldiers, were wounded in the Monday attack and a search for the missing people is ongoing.

    The vehicles, which were escorted by a military patrol, had been taking supplies to residents in the north of the country.

    The ambush followed an attack on another army-supported convoy on Sunday that wounded four people.

    Burkina Faso’s military government took power in a coup last January, promising to end an Islamist insurgency which has killed thousands of people and displaced two million more since 2015.

    Source: BBC

  • UNAids boss lashes out at Ugandan MP

    The UNAid’s executive director, Winnie Byanyima, has lashed out at a Ugandan MP saying he lacks “the skills, competence & integrity of an MP”.

    MP Mwesigye Frank had accused the opposition leader Bobi Wine of double-speak using Ms Byanyima’s photos.

    The UN boss, who is a Ugandan national and married to politician Kizza Besigye, had met President Yoweri Museveni and later took a photo with Bobi Wine.

    The MP shared her photos suggesting that she had met both leaders at the same venue.

    Ms Byanyima clarified that she had first met the president and later in the day ran into the opposition leader at the airport.

    Here is her tweet calling out the MP:

     

     

    Source: BBC

     

  • Nigeria hikes lending rate amid high inflation

    The Central Bank of Nigeria has raised interest rates for local bank lending to 15.5%, its highest level yet, just two months after it was pegged at 14%.

    It comes as Nigeria’s inflation continues to spike – exceeding the 20% mark as at August.

    The bank’s governor Godwin Emefiele said the monetary policy committee voted unanimously to raise the rate after deliberating on the impact of the widening margin between policy rate and the inflation rate.

    “The committee thus agreed unanimously to raise the policy rate to narrow the interest rate gap and rein in inflation,” Mr Emefiele said in a statement.

    Nigeria’s economy continues to struggle amid dwindling reserves and poor foreign exchange earnings.

    Local banks are also slow in lending to businesses, insisting on stringent processes including the provision of adequate collateral.

    Business owners say borrowing at high interest rates puts their businesses at risk.

    Source: BBC

  • Over 500 dead in Libya torture, executions – report

    A leading rights group campaigning against torture says that law enforcement agents and militias in Libya killed at least 581 civilians between the start of 2020 and March this year.

    The World Organisation Against Torture says the number of those killed includes people executed in detention facilities or tortured to death.

    The report is the first to focus on extrajudicial killings in Libya and is based on a two-year investigation carried out by Libyan civil society organisations, which interviewed survivors and witnesses.

    The report says that the cases it was able to document are only the tip of the iceberg.

    Source: BBC

  • Hurricane Ian: Cuba suffers complete blackout after storm

    Cuba is completely without power after Hurricane Ian pummelled the western end of the island, its government has announced.

    The electrical system is experiencing total collapse, officials said, after one of the main power plants could not be brought back online.

    Two people were reported dead and buildings were damaged nationwide.

    The category three hurricane, packing wind speeds of up to 195km/h (120mph), is now bearing down on Florida.

    On Cuban state television on Tuesday, the head of the electrical energy authority announced that an island-wide blackout had occurred as a result of the national electrical system’s breakdown, leaving 11 million people in the dark.

    A journalist with a state-run news agency reported that 100% of the electrical circuits in the country were out of service and that “the Antonio Guiteras thermo-electric power plant… could not be synchronised”.

    Based in Matanzas, 100km east of the capital Havana, Antonio Guiteras is the most important energy plant in Cuba. Its shutdown means there is currently no electricity generation anywhere on the island.

    The owner of the famous Finca Robaina cigar producer posted photos on social media of the havoc wreaked by the hurricane in the tobacco farms.

    “It was apocalyptic, a real disaster,” wrote Hirochi Robaina.

    Forecasters had warned that some regions of Cuba could see up to 30cm (12in) of rain under Hurricane Ian.

    Mayelin Suarez, a resident of Pinar del Rio, said Monday night, when the storm hit, was “the darkest of her life”.

    “We almost lost the roof off our house,” she told Reuters. “My daughter, my husband and I tied it down with a rope to keep it from flying away.”

    Cuban President Miguel Diaz Canel visited the province and vowed that it would rise “above adversity”, the Cuban presidency tweeted.

    Predicted path of Hurricane Ian. Updated 27 September
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    A 43-year-old woman in the province was killed after the walls of her home collapsed. A farmer in the town of San Juan y Martínez was electrocuted while trying to shut off a wind turbine used for irrigation, the New York Times reported.

    The hurricane has been gathering force in the south-eastern Gulf of Mexico after leaving Cuba, says the US National Hurricane Center (NHC).

    On Tuesday night the storm was passing over the Florida Keys, a string of islands off the southern tip of the state.

    It is projected to make landfall on Florida’s west coast late on Wednesday.

    The NHC says that Ian could be a category four hurricane by the time it strikes Florida’s western coast, with wind speeds topping 130mph. Some 2.5 million people in Florida are under evacuation orders.

    A satellite image of the storm
    A satellite image of the storm

    Florida Governor Ron DeSantis warned in a news conference on Tuesday that the storm is “the real deal”.

    He declared a state of emergency for all of Florida over the weekend and has activated 5,000 National Guard troops.

    The Tampa area could receive its first direct hit from a hurricane since 1921, officials say, and might see 3m (10ft) of storm surge along the coast.

    Meteorologists have said flash flooding is possible in the Florida peninsula and Florida Keys as the hurricane approaches.

    The neighbouring state of Georgia has also declared a state of emergency and placed 500 National Guard troops on standby.

    The White House has made its own emergency declaration, which will help federal and state officials co-ordinate disaster relief and assistance.

    President Joe Biden, a Democrat, spoke with Gov DeSantis, a Republican, on Tuesday evening, and the two committed to “continued close co-ordination”, the White House said.

    The Caribbean is still reeling from the effects of Hurricane Fiona, which tore through the region last week.

    Moving northward to parts of the Atlantic Canada coastline and eastern Quebec, Fiona claimed two lives, washed homes into the sea and downed power lines over the weekend.

    Source: BBC

  • Malawi’s John Chilembwe gets statue in London’s Trafalgar Square

     

    Central London’s historic Trafalgar Square is set to get a new statue on Wednesday.

    But this time, it is not a monument to one of the UK’s war heroes or kings. Instead it will be a larger-than-life statue of Malawian Baptist preacher and pan-Africanist John Chilembwe, who fought against British colonial rule.

    The sculpture, named Antelope, will be the square’s newest Fourth Plinth – which is regarded as one of the world’s most famous public art commissions.

    Since 2003, the Fourth Plinth has been showcasing different pieces of artwork every two years. While it was originally intended to display a statue of King William IV, it remained empty due to insufficient funds and now exhibits temporary art, selected through public consultation and the commissioning group.

    Chilembwe’s five-metre statue will mark the first of an African in Trafalgar Square.

    Cast in bronze, Antelope restages a famous photograph taken in 1914 of Chilembwe standing next to British missionary John Chorley, outside his church in Mbombwe village in southern Malawi.

    In the picture, Chilembwe is wearing a wide-brimmed hat, breaching a colonial rule which forbade Africans to wear hats in front of white people.

    John Chilembwe and John ChorleyImage source, Wikimedia Commons
    Image caption, John Chilembwe, seen with John Chorley, led an uprising against colonial rule
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    While the two stand together in the photo, when it comes to the statue the sculptor has added a twist that means that the image of the Malawian catches people’s eye.

    Malawian-born artist Samson Kambalu designed the piece to make Chilembwe much larger than Chorley. His statue stands at five metres towering over that of Chorley’s.

    “By increasing his scale, the artist elevates Chilembwe and his story, revealing the hidden narratives of underrepresented peoples in the history of the British Empire in Africa, and beyond,” says the Mayor of London’s website.

    Although the monument takes centre stage in London, Chilembwe remains an unknown figure to many.

    “Many people may not know who John Chilembwe is. And that is the whole point,” says Kambalu, an associate professor of fine art at the University of Oxford in England.

    Chilembwe is widely acknowledged as one of the first Africans to fight against colonial injustices in the 20th Century, staging an uprising against the British in Malawi (formerly Nyasaland) in 1915.

    Although the uprising was short-lived, his actions reverberated across the continent and beyond.

    Chilembwe is considered to have influenced several figures of black liberation, including Jamaican political activist Marcus Garvey, and John Langalibalele Dube, the founding president of what went on to become the African National Congress (ANC) in South Africa.

    A view of Antelope at the National Gallery on May 24, 2021 in London, EnglandImage source, Getty Images
    Image caption, The sculptor has played with the scale of the photograph and increased the size of Chilembwe
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    Chilembwe was born in the early 1870s, and grew up in southern Malawi’s Chiradzulu District.

    He was one of four children, with his father originating from the Yao people and his mother from the Mang’anja community.

    Growing up in Chiradzulu, Chilembwe was heavily influenced by Scottish missionaries who went to Malawi following in the footsteps of explorer David Livingstone.

    It was here that Chilembwe first met a radical missionary, Joseph Booth, whose famous dictum was “Africa for Africans”.

    Chilembwe became one of Booth’s early protégés, and the two eventually travelled to the US, where he studied theology in Virginia.

    During his time in the US, Chilembwe witnessed the struggles of African Americans during the reconstruction period after the abolition of slavery.

    Several years later, he left the US emboldened to tackle the colonial injustices he saw in his own country.

    Once back in Malawi, an ordained Chilembwe worked to establish a mission in Chiradzulu.

    He built a brick church, several schools, and planted crops of cotton, tea and coffee, with financial backing from the US.

    Anti-colonial resistance

     

    He returned to find fast-growing resistance against the British regime, derived from new laws which pushed Malawians off their land, while many were also forced to work on white-owned plantations under poor conditions.

    Chilembwe had further grievances with the colonialists after the outbreak of World War One, where Malawian soldiers were taken to fight against the German army in what is now Tanzania.

    Publicising his discontent, he wrote a letter to the only newspaper in circulation at the time. It is thought that shortly after his letter he began planning his rebellion, which began in January 1915.

    However, Chilembwe’s attempt to attack white settlers was quickly foiled and British forces raised the alarm early on.

    His uprising claimed only a few casualties, and the British army put out a reward for Chilembwe and his supporters.

    A few days later, he was shot dead by African soldiers while trying to cross into what is now Mozambique.

    Although his rebellion was unsuccessful, historians say that Chilembwe’s attempt created the groundwork for Africa’s independence movements. Malawi became independent in 1964.

    Today, Chilembwe’s legacy can be seen across Malawi. Several roads have been named after him, while his photo appears on the country’s currency, the kwacha, as well as stamps.

    Malawi moneyImage source, Peter Jegwa/BBC
    Image caption, Chilembwe’s image appears on Malawian bank notes

    John Chilembwe Day is also celebrated every year on 15 January.

    However, historians say there is an ongoing debate about his relevance.

    “Every year on Chilembwe Day, the newspapers and online publications will write essays to debate his legacy,” says Malawian historian Muti Michael Phoya.

    “While most agree that he is very important in Malawi’s history, some say he staged his uprising too early,” continued Mr Phoya. “But Kambalu’s sculpture may rekindle this dialogue and we may see renewed interest in his story.”

    Kambalu agrees saying he hopes the statue “will start a conversation in Britain that is still coming to reckoning with their colonial past.

    “The sculpture brings to light the forgotten histories of the empire, and society is looking for that recognition.”

     

    Source: BBC

  • Eating rice is more dangerous than cocaine – Osofo Kojo Bentil

    Founder and Leader of Onyame Kese Krom with the central tenet and brand name MEKRA known as Osofo Kojo Bentil has revealed that eating rice is more harmful to the human body than cocaine.

    To him, rice is more dangerous than cocaine because it contains twenty-five (25) cubes of unnatural sugar that causes great damage to the human system.

    The man who describes himself as a person with the heart and mission to serve people in this generation argued that due to society misconceptions, the populace have been made to believe that rice is healthier than cocaine.

    Osofo Kojo Bentil said since cocaine is easy to resist and therefore nobody worries much when they don’t take it in their system, it is not dangerous as compared to rice.

    “Do you know that rice is more dangerous than cocaine? It’s a fact because every bowl of rice contains 25 cubes of sugar, that’s unnatural sugar and do you know what those unnatural sugars do in our body. It causes harm” he said on Okay FM’s ‘Best Entertainment Show’ hosted by Halifax Ansah-Addo.

     

    Source: Ghanaweb

    DISCLAIMER: Independentghana.com will not be liable for any inaccuracies contained in this article. The views expressed in the article are solely those of the author’s, and do not reflect those of The Independent Ghana

     

  • Making babies while pursuing my PhD was tough – NSMQ mistress

    National Science and Maths Quiz (NMSQ) mistress, Professor Elsie Effah Kaufmann, has disclosed that dealing with childbirth while pursuing her doctorate degree was very challenging.

    Prof. Kaufmann who started her PhD at age 26 in the United States said she had her firstborn while in her final year.

    She stated that juggling between taking care of her family and pursuing her dreams became a daunting task, hence the decision to fly her mother to the United States to help.

    “After my masters, I moved on to having my PhD, but then, I started making babies so it dragged me behind. At that time, I was 26 years old. I had my firstborn during the last year of my Ph.D. The second one was during my post-doctorate and the last one was born in Ghana,” she stated on the Delay Show which aired on September 25, 2022.

    “I’m still surprised anytime I think about how I’m able to do all these, particularly fusing family life with work and school. Also, my mother helped me a lot. I had to negotiate with her to come to stay with us in the U.S to help take care of the children because it was becoming too much and she was the one in search of grandchildren,” she added.

    Professor Elsie Kaufmann has two daughters and a boy with a white American.

     

    Source: Ghanaweb

  • Rethinking tourism as a pathway for development

    Tourism is considered one of the fastest-growing economic sectors. In 2019, before the COVID-19 pandemic, the sector contributed a percent to global GDP and about a percent of Africa’s GDP. This changed when the global pandemic hit, bringing with it unprecedented lockdowns and international travel restrictions.

    As a result, many tourism-dependent economies lost considerable revenues and millions of jobs. Tourism-dependent economies in Africa were not spared. After only three months of the pandemic, countries across the continent lost more than $55 billion in travel and tourism revenues. This had a huge impact on social spending and livelihoods.

    Building resilience in the tourism sector is a critical pathway for African countries to build forward better and recover faster from crises. ‘Rethinking Tourism’, the theme for this year’s World Tourism Day celebrated on 27 September is very timely. It highlights the importance of repositioning tourism in our society to harness its potential as a tool for inclusive growth and sustainable development.

    Tourism development to transform economies

    Only a few African countries are at the forefront of sharing their culture, heritage, wildlife, environment, and natural resources through tourism. For many, tourism still conjures pictures of foreigners enjoying exotic destinations far removed from ordinary citizens. Local communities that are custodians of natural wealth and culture have failed to benefit from this tourism.

    These communities are not equipped to engage the tourism industry as workers or suppliers. Stories abound of conflict between wildlife conservationists and local communities. This shows that the current tourism model is not sustainable.

    Yet tourism development offers a significant opportunity to transform economies and create sustainable livelihoods. According to tourism sector experts, regions with higher domestic and intraregional demand are more resilient and bound to recover faster from crises like the COVID-19 pandemic.

    It is time to focus more on the domestic and regional tourism market as an engine of development. This will help to reverse the trend in most African countries where domestic tourism has been ignored in favour of international tourism which is susceptible to global disruptions.

    Diversifying Africa’s tourism market and adding value to Africa’s natural assets is not only necessary but is long overdue.

    Towards sustainable, profitable, and inclusive tourism

    Growing Africa’s tourism market could build on numerous existing opportunities to protect natural wealth and promote unique locations and tourism experiences across Africa.

    In Ghana, for instance, the Community Resource Management Areas (CREMA), supported by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), are already working to ensure the sustainable use and management of natural resources. The CREMA model brings together communities with a common goal that ensures habitats are secured and allows members to benefit from the use of natural resources.

    This improves livelihoods and wellbeing. Integrating eco-tourism can help these communities to showcase their natural wealth. Similarly, the annual traditional festivals observed by different ethnic groups in the country provide a unique opportunity for sharing Ghana’s remarkable history and culture with tourists.

    These festivals are marked with music, dance, storytelling, and traditional sports as well as vibrant displays of traditional attire and jewellery. The events provide an opportunity to stimulate the local economy through the sale of contemporary arts, handicrafts, local cuisines, and music.

    To ensure sustainable tourism on the continent, there is a need to prioritise and balance the need for environmental conservation, cultural preservation, meaningful community participation, and equitable distribution of benefits among stakeholders.

    Sustainable practices like ecotourism are a good example of how to support community development by enhancing the benefits of maintaining natural systems through tourism.

    Development pathway

    Looking to the future, working in three key areas could help unlock tourism in Africa to advance human development. These include:

    Build community ownership and stewardship: Acknowledging the role of the community in stewardship of tourist resources including natural landscape and cultural sites reinforces a sense of pride in the community and helps to ensure more sustainable land use practices. Empowering local governments and traditional authorities will help to optimise this untapped opportunity to leverage environmental conservation in their regions to attract tourists.

    Invest in local and community-driven initiatives: Governments and tourism stakeholders need to shift from externally driven initiatives towards co-creating with local actors to develop tourism products and services.

    There is a need to go beyond community engagement to support community-driven initiatives such as cottage industries like the Kente weavers, jewellery makers, potters, and sculptors. There is a tremendous opportunity to promote eco-resorts and community-run enterprises.

    Preserve and share traditional knowledge and culture: Africa’s rich arts and culture are unique and must be preserved to be shared with the world. The development of cultural tourism products and services based on Africa’s diversity in film, music, dance, festivals, traditional sports, and celebrations is a great opportunity to engage domestic tourists and those from other African countries.

    Using technology and digital media to promote cultural tourism can also help to keep Africa’s culture alive for generations to come.

    Conclusion

    Unlocking Africa’s tourism potential and enhancing its resilience and sustainability in the post-COVID era requires strategic investments in preserving natural assets, supporting community-led initiatives, and showcasing Africa’s rich heritage and culture.

    The African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), coupled with Africa’s young, digitally savvy population and growing middle class will drive the future of domestic and regional tourism in the continent. Now is the time to open more opportunities in the sector by engaging this next generation of tourists.

     

    Source: UNDP Ghana

  • Kenya’s Jennifer Riria to be honoured by YAWC as Model African Woman of the Year 2022

    The Group Chief Executive Officer of Echo Network Africa (ENA), formerly Kenya Women Holding which is a woman-led, women-serving development institution, Dr. Jennifer Riria, has been nominated to be honoured at the 6th Annual Continental Convocation of the Young African Women Congress (YAWC).

    The event is set to take place in Accra, Ghana from 2nd to 6th October 2022 under the theme, “Network for Empowerment: Eliminating Barriers to Women’s Development”.

    She will be honoured in relation to her interventions in improving the socio-economic situation of women and girls in Kenya, having been admitted into the EY Global Hall of Fame.

    A special event dubbed, “Jennifer Riria Day” will be held in her honour on Tuesday 4th October within the period of the congress.

    Dr Riria is distinguished as a Microfinance Banker and Practitioner, Researcher and Gender Specialist. She has led Kenya Women Finance Trust Microfinance (KWFT) Bank for over three decades, and propelled it from an unprofitable NGO to a medium-sized Bank, serving low-income women and their families all over Kenya. KWFT has served over 3 million women and disbursed over US$ 3 billion over a period of 30 years. As the CEO she spearheaded the transformation of KWFT from a microfinance institution to a regulated middle-sized bank (2004-2009).

    She has served in many other leadership roles both in financial, public, and health institutions for which she has been recognised locally and internationally. Dr Riria is the Patron of the Democracy Trust Fund (DTF) a semi-autonomous organization that supports and positions women to participate in democratic processes.

    Additionally, Dr Riria is the Chairperson of the Africa Women Leaders Network – Kenyan Chapter. Recently she re-launched the “Jennifer Riria Foundation” whose focus is to enhance young women’s leadership through innovations and connecting them with the private sector. Working with and touching people’s life is her passion. Dr. Riria served on many Boards including the Women’s World Bank Board which is an international microfinance network of microfinance institutions and banks for 21 years, which she was the Chairperson.

    The “Jennifer Riria Day” will be the second in a series of events to recognise and celebrate astute women of Africa for their contributions to women empowerment for national and global impact. The first, having been conferred on the first female Chief of Staff of the Republic of Ghana, Hon. Akosua Frema Osei Opare in 2019. The day is specifically named after the woman proposed to be celebrated at the specific congress to leave an imprint on the minds of delegates on the achievements of the honouree.

    The Young African Women Congress is a Pan-African event opened to young women of African descent. It is a platform which fosters knowledge-sharing and cultural exchanges among nations and generations. Major activities at the congress include keynote presentations, panel sessions, career workshops, group brainstorming sessions as well as Project Story Presentations by delegates. There is also a full-day trip to interesting sites to promote Africa’s heritage and tourism.

    Its main objective is captured in its motto: Empowering Women for Continental Development and Integration for a Better World.

     

    Source: ExLA Group

  • Kenyans ‘clash’ over plans for monthly prayers at the presidency

    Kenya’s social media space has been the center of debate around the role of religion in politics.

    This follows an announcement over the weekend by First Lady Rachel Ruto that monthly prayer sessions will be held at the State House, the presidential complex located in Nairobi.

    “The doors of State House are open and know that you have Mama Rachel here that will always open the doors for you when the president is busy,” she told a congregation.

    The first such prayer session was held on Sunday, September 25, as thousands joined the First Couple for prayers and thanksgiving.

    The first couple are evangelical Christians and President William Ruto has attributed his faith as having played a key role in his election victory, the BBC Africa page reports.

    Supporters of the monthly meetings and their opponents alike have been sharing their views and why it is an issue or not.

    Source: Ghanaweb

  • Man who killed 13 at Russian school is former student – Investigators

    Russian investigators on Monday afternoon, disclosed the identity of the man who killed 13 people in a shooting at a school in the city of Izhevsk.

    The 34-year-old man was once a student at the school. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said the man, “apparently belonged to a neo-facist organization or group.”

    According to investigators, the man was wearing a black shirt with Nazi symbols and a balaclava.

    Source: GNA

  • How Labour Party Chairman sold House of Reps ticket to APC Defector in Edo for millions of Naira

    A former Edo State House of Assembly Speaker, Rt Hon. Uyinmwen Ativie, paid millions of Naira to be listed as the Labour Party’s House of Representatives candidate for Uhunmwode/Orhionmwon federal constituency in Edo State, some members of the party have alleged.

    SaharaReporters gathered that one Murphy Imasuen emerged the winner of the primary election of the federal constituency supervised by Independent National Electoral Commission officials.

    Rather than submit the name of the elected candidate, the name of Ativie who recently joined the party from the ruling All Progressives Congress was submitted to INEC by Labour Party leadership led by its National Chairman, Barrister Julius Abure.

    The action is against the provisions of Section 33 of the 2022 Electoral Act which states that a political party cannot remove or substitute a candidate that emerged from a valid primary.

    Whereas Section 31 of the Electoral Act only allows for substitution when a candidate dies or when he or she withdraws from the race and informs INEC in writing.

    The section reads: “A candidate may withdraw his or her candidature by notice in writing signed by him and delivered personally by the candidate to the political party that nominated him for the election and the political party shall convey such withdrawal to the commission not later than 90 days to the election.”

    Documents seen by SaharaReporters also showed that Ativie contested the APC primary election for the federal constituency but lost to Chief Billy Osawaru.

    Her name listed by INEC is also against the new electoral law which states that it is not possible to contest in the primaries of a party, lose and try again in another party.

    “Elizabeth Ativie recently resigned from the APC on the 6th day of September 2022 after losing the primary election to one Dr Billy but to the surprise of all, her name was listed by INEC as Labour Party candidate for our federal constituency.

    “We had a meeting after that but to our surprise, Ativie told us there is nothing we can do. She told us that it was the National Chairman who invited her to his hotel in Abuja and offered to her the blank ticket of Orhionmwon/Uhunmwonde House of Representatives, while state chairman Ugbaloi collaborated with the decision by issuing her a June 6 backdated Labour Party membership card. She also said she paid millions of Naira to get the ticket and showed us receipts of some transactions.

    “All the party tier leaders and stakeholders of Orhionmwon/Uhunmwonde constituency are firmly on Murphy Imasuen’s side, and are vehemently and irreconcilably determined to damn every consequence and undertake litigations all the way from the lowest to the highest court of Nigeria before, during and after the oncoming 2023 general elections,” a LP member told SaharaReporters.

    However, in a leaked audio obtained by SaharaReporters, Labour Party National Chairman was heard pleading with the winner of the primary election conducted by INEC, Murphy Imasuen, to forfeit the ticket to Ativie.

    Abure promised Imasuen juicy offers and asked that he would be refunded with any amount he had spent on his aspiration.

    His supporters were also promised different positions on the party.

    Imasuen however turned down all the offers and vowed to sue the party.

    Another source told SaharaReporters that the original winner of Labour Party had been under different threats from supporters of Abure and Ativie.

    Meanwhile, members of the party in Orhionmwon and Uhunmwode Local Government Areas have insisted on Imasuen as its candidate for the federal constituency and not the former lawmaker, who joined the party penultimate week after abandoning her earlier party, APC.

    The Labour Party in a statement jointly signed by Orhiakhi Osaigbovo, Chairman Orhionmwon; Austin Oronsaye, Chairman Uhunmwode; Ken Omusi, state youths leader and two others, denied Ativie, who claimed she is the party’s candidate for the constituency for the 2023 general elections.

    “The party wishes to state that the duly elected candidate for Orhionmwon/ Uhunmwode Federal Constituency is Hon Murphy Imasuen who emerged during the substitution primaries held in Abudu, Orhionmwon Local Government Area on the 13th June 2023,” the statement read.

    “We wish to state that it has come to our notice that the duly elected candidate representing Orhionmwon/ Uhunmwode Federal Constituency; Hon Murphy Imasuen was recently removed from the INEC list in Abuja and replaced by the name of Hon Elizabeth Ativie. In the interest of the party and public, we hereby state unequivocally the following:

    “That Hon Murphy Imasuen was duly elected and given the ticket to run for the Orhionmwon/ Uhunmwode Federal Constituency during the substitution Primaries held in Abudu on the 13th of July 2023.

    “That Hon Elizabeth Ativie at the time of the substitution primaries was unarguably absent because she was still a card-carrying member of the APC at the time.

    “That Ativie who recently resigned from the APC on the 6th day of September, which is less than two weeks ago urged her teaming supporters to remain calm while assuring that in a few weeks, she would let the whole world know her next political move.

    “We hereby make bold to say that we do not recognise Ativie yet as a member of the Labour Party Edo State chapter, talk more of being the House of Representative candidate for Orhionmwon/Uhunmwode Federal Constituency.

    “This to us is laughable and mere propaganda; we will not allow or tolerate any attempt by Elizabeth Ativie to repeat her fraudulent act in Labour Party as seen in the press statement signed by the APC state publicity secretary, Mr Peter Igbinigie.”

    They also appealed to security agencies to call Ativie to order in order to avert any breach of peace.

     

    Source: Saharareporters

  • Kenya’s President Ruto names new Cabinet

    Kenya’s President William Ruto on Tuesday, September 27, 2022, unveiled his new Cabinet two weeks after he was sworn in as Kenya’s fifth head of state.

    At a press conference, Dr. Ruto stated that Deputy President Rigathi Gachagua will, in addition to deputising him, chair intergovernmental relations and chair constitutional commissions.

    The president named Musalia Mudavadi as the Prime Cabinet Secretary, saying the position is the most senior office after the president and vice president.

    He also appointed the following Cabinet Secretaries (CSs)

    Professor Kithure Kindiki (Interior and National Administration)

    Njuguna Ndung’u (National Treasury and Planning)

    Aisha Jumwa (Public Service, Gender and Affirmative Action)

    Aden Duale (Defence)

    Alice Wahome (Water, Sanitation and Irrigation)

    Alfred Mutua (Foreign and Diaspora Affairs)

    Moses Kuria (Trade, Investment and Industry)

    Rebecca Miano (EAC, ASAL and Regional Development)

    Kipchumba Murkomen (Roads and Transport)

    Soipan Tuya (Environment and Forestry)

    Zacharia Mwangi Njeru (Lands and Housing)

    Peninah Malonza (Tourism, Wildlife and Heritage)

    Mithika Linturi (Agriculture and Livestock Development)

    Susan Nakhumicha Wafula (Health)

    Eliud Owalo (Communication)

    Ezekiel Machogu (Education)

    Davis Chirchir (Energy and Petroleum)

    Ababu Namwamba (Sports and Youth Affairs)

    Simon Chelugui (Cooperatives and MSMEs)

    Salim Mvurya (Mining)

    Florence Bore (Labour)

    The names will now be forwarded to Parliament for vetting and approval.

    President Ruto also appointed Harriet Chigai as the advisor on women’s rights, Monica Juma as the National Security advisor and Justin Muturi as the Attorney General and Mercy Wanjau as the Secretary to the Cabinet.

    He also announced that Inspector General of Police Hillary Mutyambai had applied to proceed on terminal leave for the remaining six months of his remaining contract, due to health problems. The president further announced that the Director of Criminal Investigations George Kinoti had handed in his resignation.

    Source: theeastafrican.co.ke

  • Zimbabwe president cancels Cuba trip over ‘hurricane threat’

    Zimbabwe’s President Emmerson Mnangagwa has cancelled his two-day state visit to Cuba, citing bad weather.

    Weather reports indicate Cuba will be hit by Tropical Storm Ian, which has strengthened into a hurricane.

    President Mnangagwa travelled to New York on September 19 for the 77th session of the United Nations General Assembly and he was scheduled to visit Cuba between Friday and Sunday.

    The 80-year-old ruler was still in New York on Sunday where his spokesperson George Charamba announced that the visit to Cuba had been cancelled.

    “Owing to prevailing weather systems affecting Cuba and zones near it, President Mnangagwa and his delegation will no longer travel to Cuba where he was slotted to pay a two-day state visit,” Mr Charamba tweeted.

    “The president is looking forward to another time to fulfil this needful fixture, which brings together two nations on the receiving end of America’s unilateral sanctions.”

    While in New York, President Mnangagwa, who is under US travel restrictions, was only limited to travelling a radius of 25 kilometres.

    The cancellation of the trip to Cuba came amid swelling rumours that Vice President Constantino Chiwenga was seriously ill.

    Retired General Chiwenga, who has been battling poor health for the past two years including lengthy stays in Chinese and South African hospitals, has not been seen in public since the president left the country.

    The VP also cancelled appearances at high-profile events where he was supposed to officiate.

    When a Twitter user said, “we hear that Number 2 is not feeling well”, Mr Charamba responded: “I don’t know what you hear, I am in America.”

    Retired General Chiwenga, who doubles as Health minister, led the 2017 coup that toppled long-time ruler Robert Mugabe.

    President Mnangagwa succeeded the late Mr Mugabe.

    The VP is considered to be one of President Mnangagwa’s likely successors.

    Mnangagwa will be running for a final term in next year’s elections.

     

    Source: Theeastafrican.co.ke

  • Former teacher turning her side hustle into a six-figure business

    Fifteen years ago, Patricia Farooq was a maths and science teacher at the Houston Independent School District but transitioned into entrepreneurship to bring in an additional stream of income.

    As a teacher, Farooq worked in primarily low socioeconomic areas. She taught fourth and fifth-grade math, and students were fallen behind in those areas. According to Farooq, this motivated her more because she wanted to close the huge gaps and provide a high level of education to children who couldn’t receive it outside school hours.

    Farooq pivoted into the culinary industry as a side hustle but as the returns became more and more lucrative, she decided to take it as a full-time job, resulting in the launch of Cupcake Kitchen in Third Ward.

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    “I started to transition into cooking because I was trying to come up with some other streams of revenue,” Farooq told abc13. “I started to cater in 2013 and Cupcake Kitchen opened in 2014.”

    Cupcake Kitchen started as just a bakery in 2013 but by 2019, she had expanded the business and now serves savory seafood and soul food dishes as well as jerk chicken wings and oxtails. Farooq is also planning to open a second location at Pearland.

    According to her, cooking has always been part of her. Recalling her days as a teacher, Farooq said she used to have a lot of gatherings like birthday parties, social gatherings and the Super Bowl among others in her house.

    “At the time, social media wasn’t as big as it is now, so I had the Food Network or a recipes book, and I had friends come over, and I would always cook things outside the box. My mother also had a restaurant while she was in education. I had that as my foundation to help me understand the business,” she told defender network.

    “I always wanted to do something outside of teaching that would bring me income for cooking and selling food. My schedule was a lot. I would wake up preparing people’s catering orders, go to work, and then come back home to finish,” she continued.

    Her food became popular although it took much of her time. Baking, on the other hand, wasn’t time-consuming and she was also convinced that it could take her out of the classroom as she didn’t want to retire as a teacher.

    Farooq was running a successful small business until the pandemic. Luckily for her, she was also running her business online but customers could not dine in her physical locations due to covid restrictions.

    “COVID impacted us more afterwards because people changed their spending habits regarding food. During the lockdown, people were at home every day ordering food online,” she noted.

    For other educators who want to turn their side hustle into a full-time business, Farooq’s advice is that “make sure you have a plan.”

    “Stay positive. Research and learn about the business. Don’t take criticism personally,” she further noted.

     

    Source: Face2faceafrica

  • Remembering the father of African geography, Prof. Akin Mabogunje

    It is the responsibility of African urbanization scholars, average Nigerians, and policymakers to do more than just pay respects to the inventor of contemporary building regulations. The continent owes it to Akin Mabogunje to take steps to realize his vision of inclusive cities.

    Professor Akinlawon Ladipo “Akin” Mabogunje was born on October 18, 1931, in Kano State. He was a Nigerian geographer.

    He served as the International Geographical Union’s first-ever African president. He became the first African to be chosen as a Foreign Associate of the American National Academy of Sciences in 1999. He was awarded the Vautrin Lud Prize and made a Foreign Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2017.

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    In 1948, Mabogunje graduated from Ibadan Grammar School, completing his secondary education. His geographic prowess became apparent at this point. He earned his doctorate in the same field from the University of London in 1961, and in 1965, he was appointed as the first geography professor in Nigeria at the University of Ibadan.

    He has produced numerous book chapters, journal articles, conference papers, papers that were solicited, research papers, books, and memoirs in national and international journals, magazines, and publications, among others.

    ‘Urbanization in Nigeria’ – 1968

    Mabogunje’s groundbreaking study was on urbanization in Nigeria. Part of it came from his doctoral dissertation, and more was added when he visited Northwestern University in the US in 1963 as a visiting scholar.

    The book offered a compelling account of Nigerian cities’ pre- and post-colonial histories. It also provided strategies for overcoming urbanization-related difficulties from an African perspective. It outlined the early 1960s as the beginning of urbanization in northern and southern Nigeria prior to colonization. It explained how colonial rules and regulations affected the layout of cities.

    In his book, Mabogunje argued that the mere existence of experts is insufficient to drive forth urbanization.

    He was also blatantly honest in his writing. He provided vivid, lovable, and emotional depictions of the streets of Ibadan and Lagos in Urbanization in Nigeria. Readers were urged to go through time with him and to understand the persistence of the problems facing those cities today.

    Other legacies

    The influence of Mabogunje goes well beyond his influential book.

    He provided urban and regional development consulting services to the Nigerian government and numerous states, educating politicians and bureaucrats on the potential impact and shaping of research institutes on policy.

    He also designed the building blocks on which Nigeria’s real estate industry was built. His efforts led to the establishment of organizations like the Federal Mortgage Bank of Nigeria.

    The Nigerian Real Estate Developers Association was established in 2002 as a result of his leadership of the Presidential Technical Committee on Housing and Urban Development.

    He had a crucial role in the conceptualization of Abuja, the capital city of Nigeria, while serving as an advisor to the Federal Capital Development Authority, between 1976 to 1984.

    Awards

    In 2017, he became the first African to win the Vautrin-Lud Prize, one of several honors he has received. The award is considered the highest honor in geography.

    President Muhammadu Buhari also praised Mabogunje for the significant roles he took in the structuring, growth, and demographics of the nation, on his 90th birthday in 2021. The professor’s book, “Urbanization of Nigeria,” according to Mr. Buhari, served as a reference for the work of the federal capital development authority and the national census board.

    Professor Mabogunje passed away in August 2022. He was 90 years old.

    Source: Face2faceafrica

  • Here is why Future sold off his music catalog for eight figures

    American rapper Future has sold off his music catalog to Influence Media Partners in a deal reportedly worth at least $10 million. Billboard also reports that the rapper could receive between $65-$75 million for his catalog.

    Billboard adds that the figure is based on the 38-year-old artist’s master recording catalog, which has earned him an estimated $4.4 million in publishing royalties over the last three years.

    The deal means that Influence Media Partners now owns the rights to the publishing royalties of Future’s 612 songs from 2004 to 2020. It includes his hit songs like “Life Is Good” and “Jumpman” with Drake, “King’s Dead” with Kendrick Lamar, “Selfish” with Rihanna, “Low Life” with The Weeknd and “Mask Off”.

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    In a press statement following the sale of his catalog, Future explained that he sold the rights to his own music because he wanted to make sure they were in good hands as he thinks about the next chapter of these songs.

    “I’m proud to partner up with Rene and the team at Influence Media and send a signal that this music Frhas timeless value. My music is my art, and these songs represent some of the most precious artwork of my career,” Future said in a statement concerning the deal.

    Rene McLean, who doubles as Influence Media partner and founding advisor, also added: “Future is a cultural icon. He continues to be a blueprint for impact and success in the music industry and has reinvented music in ways that no one has ever expected.

    “It is rare to find someone who moves music and culture at the same speed with his distinct vocal and melodic style. His prolific career and continued popularity more than 15 years into the game is a testament to his undeniable influence on the contemporary music and culture landscape.”

    Since hitting the hip-hop industry, Future has released eight studio albums. He has also done four collaborative albums and four commercial mixtapes. He has also done one reissued album and one soundtrack.

    Six of his albums have reached the No. 1 spot on the Billboard 200.

    Source: face2faceafrica

  • Here are gruesome experiences faced by enslaved Africans on ships across the Atlantic

    After sailing from Africa, it took between 35 days and 4 months for ships to reach their destination.

    The period largely depended on the number of stops and the destination. For instance, it could take about 35 days for ships to arrive in Brazil from Angola and 3 months for vessels leaving West Africa for Europe.

    It typically took more extended periods for ships sailing from Southern Africa to reach their destinations. Trips were made longer on account of weather and number of stops at ports to offload goods on rare occasions.

    Ships took commodities and livestock in addition to a few numbers of captured Africans, but at the turn of the 16th century, when slavery became a huge trade, ships were specially designated to carry Africans into bondage.

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    Many captains of ships, slave masters and surgeons on board were made to sign agreements to treat the Africans on board the ships well. Ships were often checked to ensure the safety of the Africans but the signed documents and checks did nothing.

     

     

    Source: Face2faceafrica