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Posts Tagged ‘Mozambique’

Wheat prices: Field events

Volatile wheat prices are as much a cause for alarm as are high prices

FEW rural pleasures match seeing a golden field of grain, rustling and ripe for reaping. But the harvest season in the northern hemisphere is being marked by turmoil on global wheat markets.

A big reason is to be found in one of the world’s largest wheat exporters, Russia. Hit by fires and drought which have wiped out a third of the grain crop, the authorities there have banned exports, first temporarily and now until next year’s harvest. As a result, wheat prices spiked: they have nearly doubled since the low point in June of $4.26 a bushel. That has prompted global jitters. When the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) called a special meeting to discuss rising prices, headlines suggested that the world was facing a food crisis to rival that of 2007-08. Riots in Mozambique in recent days, perhaps prompted by spiralling food costs (see article), added more fodder to the fears. …

Intelligence tested

Infectious disease may explain why some countries have cleverer populations

HUMAN intelligence is higher, on average, in some places than in others. And researchers at the University of New Mexico have come up with an explanation, published in the Proceedings of the Royal Society. Comparing the average IQ in a particular country with its disease burden (based on the reduction in life expectancy caused by 28 infectious diseases) reveals a striking correlation. At the bottom of the IQ list is Equatorial Guinea, followed by St Lucia, with Cameroon, Mozambique and Gabon tied for third last. These countries also have among the highest burdens of infectious diseases. At the opposite end of the scale, Singapore, South Korea, China and Japan show the highest intelligence scores and relatively low levels of disease. America, Britain and a number of European countries also place in the top left-hand corner of the chart. For more on this, see article.

With Tharoor’s resignation, Africa loses an ardent friend

With the resignation of Shashi Tharoor as minister of state for external affairs, India’s Africa policy has lost an ardent advocate who was an eloquent supporter of the country’s renewed engagement with the 54-nation African continent.
Tharoor, a former United Nations diplomat, stepped down Sunday night ending a weeklong political drama surrounding a controversial financial deal [...]

18 Disastrous Invasive Species (That Happen To Be Delicious)

Invasive species are a major problem the world over. They kill local plants and animals, clog streams, destroy habitats, and devastate anything natural in their path. Sometimes they were introduced for a purpose, sometimes they escaped into the wild — but they always cause trouble. However, there is sometimes one redeeming feature of the proliferation [...]

Trey Anastasio Band | 02.16 | New York, NY

Images by: Max Flatow

Trey Anastasio Band :: 02.16.10 :: Terminal 5 :: New York, NY

Trey Anastasio Band, featuring the Classic TAB lineup of Trey (guitar and vocals), Russell Remington (tenor saxophone and flute), Jennifer Hartswick (trumpet and vocals), Russ Lawton (drums), Tony Markellis (bass) and Ray Paczkowski (keyboards) with new member Natalie Cressman (trombone and vocals), who replaced her father, Jeff Cressman, played a sold out show last night (2/16) at New York’s Terminal 5.

It was a longer than normal show with the first set clocking in around a whopping two hours and the second set going for about another 70 minutes. Trey played a number of new and older TAB songs in addition to some Phish favorites done acoustically, a cover of Dire Straits‘ “Sultans of Swing,” and a big version of Zeppelin‘s “Black Dog” to close the second set.

Setlist

Set I: Shine, Cayman Review, Push On ‘Til the Day, Alaska, Mozambique, Gotta Jibboo, All That Almost Was, Drifting, Liquid Time, The Birdwatcher, Night Speaks to a Woman, Tuesday, Brian and Robert*, Strange Design*, Sample in a Jar*, Chalkdust Torture*, Wilson*

Set II: Sand, Alive Again, Last Tube > Show of Life, Sultans of Swing, Ether Sunday, Black Dog

E: Magilla, First Tube


* Trey Solo On Acoustic Guitar

JamBase | Big Red/Big Apple

Go See Live Music!

Trey Anastasio Band Tour Dates ::: Trey Anastasio Band News ::: Trey Anastasio Band Show Reviews


Eagles keen to get off to a flyer

Defending champions Egypt and Nigeria clash in the Africa Cup of Nations Group C curtain raiser under the scorching afternoon sun at the brand-new Ombaka Stadium in Angola today.  Both teams are expected to progress to the knockout stages of the continental showpiece at the expense of MozambiqueDefending champions Egypt and Nigeria clash in the Africa Cup of Nations Group C curtain raiser under the scorching afternoon sun at the brand-new Ombaka Stadium in Angola today. Both teams are expected to progress to the knockout stages of the continental showpiece at the expense of Mozambique

Healthier, wealthier and wiser

Where quality of life has improved most since 1990

NORWEGIANS live the best lives in the world, according to the UNDP’s “Human development index” published on Monday October 5th. Rich western countries as usual score well in the UN’s measure of health, education and wealth data for 2007. But other countries can claim notable improvement in the past two decades. Of the 116 nations for which there are data, Mozambique has improved the most, scoring almost 50% higher in the 2007 index than it did in 1990. Many other African countries have also seen increases in their quality of life. China has seen its score rise by 27% on the back of strong economic growth. Six nations have slipped backwards, as AIDS or an ailing economy has driven down life expectancy and wealth.

Progress made

More children are reaching their fifth birthday than ever before

MORE children are surviving beyond their fifth birthday, according to a new report from the United Nations Children’s Fund (Unicef). The child mortality rate—the number of under-fives dying per thousand live births—declined from 90 in 1990 to 65 in 2008, a drop of over a quarter. The number of deaths has fallen from 12.5m in 1990 to 8.8m last year, the lowest since records began in 1960. The biggest improvements are in Latin America and the former Soviet Union, where mortality rates have fallen by more than half. Progress in sub-Saharan Africa, which now accounts for half of all deaths, has been slower, but Niger, Malawi, Mozambique and Ethiopia have seen reductions of more than 100 per 1,000 livebirths since 1990. The report notes that despite big improvements in preventing malaria, one of the three main causes of deaths, much more needs to be done to treat the other two causes, pneumonia and diarrhoea.

East Africa gets high-speed web

Mobile phone ad in Nairobi, generic

The first undersea cable to bring high-speed internet access to East Africa is going live.

The fibre-optic cable, operated by African-owned firm Seacom, will connect South Africa, Tanzania, Kenya, Uganda and Mozambique to Europe and Asia.

The firm says the cable will help to boost the prospects of the region’s industry and commerce.

The cable – which is 17,000km long – took two years to lay and cost more than $650m.

Seacom said in a statement the launch of the cable marked the "dawn of a new era for communications" between Africa and the rest of the world.

The services are being unveiled in ceremonies in the Kenyan port of Mombasa and the Tanzanian city of Dar es Salaam.

School benefits

The cable was due to be launched in June but was delayed by pirate activity off the coast of Somalia.

The BBC’s Will Ross in Nairobi says the internet revolution trumpeted by Seacom largely depends how well the service is rolled out across the region.

To the disappointment of many consumers, our correspondent says some ISPs (internet service providers) are not planning to lower the cost of the internet, but instead will offer increased bandwidth.

But businesses, which have been paying around $3,000 a month for 1MB through a satellite link, will now pay considerably less – about $600 a month.

The Kenyan government has been laying a network of cables to all of the country’s major towns and says the fibre-optic links will also enable schools nationwide to link into high quality educational resources.

But our correspondent says it is not clear whether the internet revolution will reach the villages, many of which still struggle to access reliable electricity.

map showing Africa's new fibre-optic cables


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Broadband ahoy

Kenyan man on a mobile phone, generic

The first of three undersea cables bringing high-speed internet to eastern Africa goes live on Thursday. The BBC’s Anne Waithera, in the Kenyan capital Nairobi, finds a nation impatient to join the broadband revolution.

In a busy cyber cafe in Nairobi dozens of people, mostly young, are hunched over computers surfing the net.

I try to strike up a conversation with one of them but he will not even look my way. Without looking up from the monitor he signals with his hand that I should wait until he is done.

"You’ll see a lot of YouTube and Facebook stuff now made for Africa by Africans"

Idd Salim
Symbiotic Media Consortium

Africa’s broadband future

This is perfectly understandable. It costs slightly less than $1 to surf for about an hour in a cyber-cafe in Nairobi and internet connection speeds are very slow.

But he is ready to talk after he pays his bill.

"It’s not good. It’s hanging and keeps wasting time and frustrating me," he says.

Another frustrated user complains: "I’ve spent more than 15 minutes instead of 10."

But things are about to change for these internet users.

The Seacom undersea fibre-optic cable goes live on Thursday, promising changes that will be felt right across eastern and southern Africa.

See map of Africa’s new fibre-optic cables

The switch will take place simultaneously in the Kenyan port city of Mombasa, Dar es Salaam in Tanzania, Maputo in Mozambique and Mtunzini in South Africa.

The switchover from relying mainly on satellites to the submarine cable is expected to massively increase connection speeds.

Cables being laid on the ocean floor

One of the biggest setbacks of satellite connections is that a change in weather almost always leads to unstable connectivity.

It is hoped that cyber-cafe owners will transfer the benefits to their customers, as they will be making a huge savings on international links.

"When the fibre-optic cable goes live this means the speeds will be fantastic, we’ll have a higher turnover of clients and that translates to increased income," says Fred, a cyber-cafe manager.

These benefits will also be felt by millions of phone users, who will enjoy cheaper international connections and quicker voice transfers.

"The fibre-optic connection enables faster voice transfer unlike satellite, which has an average response time of 650 milliseconds, thus introducing some delays in our voice communication," says Mahmoud Noor, Seacom’s cable-station manager in Mombasa.

Mr Noor says the new service will reduce this to an average of 90 milliseconds for calls between Europe and eastern Africa, and an even faster response of less than six milliseconds between Dar es Salaam and Mombasa.

Potential squandered

In Kenya, various sectors of the economy are expecting a major boost following the launch of the undersea cable, and investors are anxious about it.

Mombasa workers haul in an undersea cable, June 09

"At the Nairobi stock exchange there is a possibility that things like day-trading will be introduced, where you make an order and in two minutes you will know if it has been sold or not," says Idd Salim of the Symbiotic Media Consortium, a software firm in Nairobi.

"That is not possible right now because you have to make an order today then wait for two or three days for it to clear."

Mr Salim says that Africa’s potential is being hindered by the absence of fast internet connectivity and this technological advance will open new avenues.

"For instance computer programmers cannot start a video service or a powerful website because the connection is slow," he says.

"You’ll see a lot of YouTube and Facebook stuff now made for Africa by Africans.

"Look at things like medicine – people will be able to be diagnosed from their homes because now we can have virtual hospitals."

The use of the undersea cable is expected to be immediate, save for some ISPs (Internet Service Providers) who may want to test it within their networks for a few days first.

Last month the Teams fibre-optic cable was launched in the coastal city of Mombasa, but it has yet to go live.

map

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This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

UN ‘open to Uganda rebel talks’

Joseph Kony (photo: November 2006)

The UN has insisted it is committed to talks with Ugandan warlord Joseph Kony and his rebel group, despite disbanding its office dedicated to the process.

Uganda’s UN envoy Ruhakana Rugunda said Ugandans should rest assured that their government, the UN and international community were working for peace.

He said there was a peace deal on the table waiting for Mr Kony to sign.

Mr Kony’s Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) is blamed for displacing and killing thousands in a brutal 20-year conflict.

Channels ‘still open’

Although the LRA’s stated aim is to install a Bible-based theocracy in Uganda, its rebellion has spread to South Sudan, eastern Democratic Republic of Congo and the Central African Republic.

"How can Kony sign an agreement when there is no temporary ceasefire"

David Matsanga,
LRA negotiator

Former Mozambique President Joaquim Chissano was chosen to head a UN mission aimed at framing a peace deal with the LRA in 2006, but his office was wound down on Wednesday.

Mr Rugunda said there was no longer any need for the mission because there were no peace talks going on.

"There is no reason why President Chissano and his office should remain fully operational when Joseph Kony and his group have opted not to sign [the peace deal]," he told the BBC’s Network Africa programme.

But he added: "Ugandans should rest assured that their government, the international community, the UN and Security Council fully support a peaceful resolution of the conflict that Kony is responsible for."

He said the channels were still open for negotiations.

‘A sad day’

The talks stalled after LRA negotiators insisted that an international arrest warrant for Mr Kony be withdrawn as a condition of any agreement.

Rights groups have pointed out that all sides reached an agreement to try any cases involving Mr Kony or his men in Uganda.

They say the arrest warrant has been used as an excuse for the LRA not to sign a deal.

In his final briefing to the UN secretary general, Mr Chissano said the LRA leader had given the impression that he had little interest in the peace process.

He said military operations launched by Uganda against the LRA had uprooted and disrupted the rebels.

But he said there had been "vicious" LRA reprisals in DR Congo and South Sudan.

The LRA’s chief negotiator David Matsanga said the UN’s decision to close its office was a "sad day for the people of the region".

He called on the UN to withdraw the arrest warrant and said the Ugandan government should sign a truce.

"How can Kony sign an agreement when there is no temporary ceasefire" he said.

As peace talks faltered towards the end of 2008, violence in the region intensified.

Rights groups say the LRA has killed 1,200 people and displaced many thousands more since last December.

It has also stepped up its abductions of children and adults, they say.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Kenya seizes coffin-stashed ivory

Kenyan officials show the rhino horn

Kenyan authorities have seized 300kg (660 lbs) of illegal ivory hidden in coffins on a plane bound for Laos.

The haul included 16 elephant tusks and black rhinoceros horns. Officials said the blood on the ivory suggested the animals had been killed very recently.

The flight – which stopped in Nairobi – originated in Mozambique and was bound for Thailand and then Laos.

The haul of ivory may have had a value of about one million dollars (£614,000,000), Reuters reports.

Officials from Kenya’s Wildlife Service said the ivory might have come from Tanzania or South Africa.

The black rhino is found only in eastern and southern Africa.

The international ivory trade has been banned since 1989. The sale of ivory is illegal if the ivory is not from pre-1989 stockpiles.

However, some countries have done little to enforce the ban. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

DNA reveals trail of ivory smugglers

Scientists have used a revolutionary genetic technique to pinpoint the area of Africa where smugglers are slaughtering elephants to feed the worldwide illegal ivory trade.

Using a DNA map of Africa’s elephants, they have found that most recent seizures of tusks can be traced to animals that had grazed in the Selous and Niassa game reserves on the Tanzania and Mozambique borders.

The discovery suggests that only a handful of cartels are responsible for most of the world’s booming trade in illegal ivory and for the annual slaughter of tens of thousands of elephants. The extent of this trade is revealed through recent seizures of thousands of tusks in separate raids on docks in Taiwan, Hong Kong, Vietnam, the Philippines and Japan. These were aimed at satisfying the far east’s growing appetite for ivory, a new status symbol for the middle classes of the region’s swelling industrialised economies.

As a result, ivory prices have soared from $200 a kilogram in 2004 to more than $6,000. At the same time, scientists estimate that between 8% and 10% of Africa’s elephants are now being slaughtered each year to meet demand.

“In the past, law enforcement agencies – including Interpol – thought these shipments of ivory had been put together by traders cherry-picking small stockpiles across Africa,” said Professor Sam Wasser, director of the University of Washington’s Centre for Conservation Biology, where the DNA elephant map was developed.

“Our work shows that isn’t true. The vast majority of poaching is being carried out by a few big organisations – possibly one or two major syndicates – that are targeting one area and then hammering its elephants. It is grim, but it also suggests we can target our anti-poaching efforts very specifically by focussing efforts on these regions.”

At present, Tanzania is at the centre of the world’s ivory slaughter. However, other work by Wasser and his team indicates that different areas, including parts of Zambia and Malawi, have been targeted in the recent past.

Ivory poaching was halted by an international campaign in the 1990s after it reached a peak between 1979 and 1989, when more than 700,000 elephants were killed for their tusks. However, aid that helps African nations fight poachers has dried up and the illegal ivory trade has returned to its previous high levels.

Killing for tusks is a particularly gruesome trade. Elephants are highly intelligent animals whose sophisticated social ties are exploited by poachers. They will often shoot young elephants to draw in a grieving parent, which is then killed for its tusks. “Our estimates suggest that more than 38,000 elephants were killed using techniques such as this in 2006 and that the annual death rate is even higher today,” said Wasser.

His team’s technique – outlined in the current issue of Scientific American – involves two separate sets of analyses. First, volunteers and researchers across Africa collected samples of elephant dung. Each contains plentiful amounts of DNA from cells, sloughed from the intestines of individual animals. These provide material for DNA fingerprints, which have since been mapped for the whole of Africa. Animals from one area have very similar DNA fingerprints, the researchers have found.

As part of the second analysis, a section of tusk seized from smugglers is ground up and its DNA is carefully extracted. Again a DNA fingerprint is made and compared with those on the dung map, in order to pinpoint the origin of the elephant.

In this way, Wasser and his colleagues analysed ivory seized when more than 11 tonnes of tusks were found in containers in raids on Taiwan and Hong Kong docks in July and August 2006. About 1,500 tusks were discovered and all were traced to elephants from the Selous game reserve, a Unesco heritage site in Tanzania, and the nearby Niassa game reserve in Mozambique. However, Japanese authorities – who had made another seizure of ivory that summer in Osaka – refused to co-operate and have since burnt the 260 tusks they found before their origins could be established. “You can draw your own conclusions,” said Wasser.

Since then, major seizures of ivory have been made in Vietnam and the Philippines, both this year, and Wasser and his team are now preparing to use their DNA map to trace its origins.

“Ivory is now traded globally in the same illegal manner as drugs and weapons,” said Wasser. “It is shameful that this has happened and we need to press the countries whose elephants are being targeted this way and get them to halt this trade.”

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