Marxuumad Masri ah (Egyptian Mummy), oo Geeriyootay Qarnigii 19aad, Imikana La Helay Sobabta Keentay Dhimashadeeda

Dr Granville's mummy: original drawings
 
Saynisyahanada dalkan Ingiriiska ayaa waxay daah fureen in Haweenay reer Masar ahayd (Egyptian Mummy) oo dhimatay qarnigii 19aad, aanay u dhiman xanuunkii markii hore lagu sheegay inay u dhimtay.  Khubarada caafimaadka oo baadhitaan ku sameeyay qalfoofkii iyo xubno haweenaydaas ka mid ah, oo lagu kaydiyay carwo(The British Museum), ku yaalla carriga Ingiriiska ayaa sheegay in sobabta dhimashadeedu aanay ahayn cudurka ‘Cancer’  oo kaga dhacay ‘ugxan sidayaasha’ (Ovarian Cancer), sida takhaatiirtii hore ee baadhay ku sheegeen.

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Mucjiso: Haweenay Uuraysatay Iyadoo Hadana Uur Leh…!

   Woman Falls Pregnant While Already Pregnant                                                                                                          

Waxa ay ka mid tahay mucjisooyin aad faro ku tiris ugu ah caalam weynaha iyo culuunta sayniska. Haweenaydan ayaa waxay wararku sheegayaan in iyadoo Uur leh, hadana ay dareentay calaamadaha Uur kale. Kadib markii la baadhayna waxa la ogaaday inay leedahay Uur Kale.  Labada Ilmood ee caloosha ugu jiraayi ma aha mataano,  kolba mid ayaa calool galay waxayna kala weyn yihiin  labo todabaad iyo badh kaliya. Mucjisada noocan ah ayaa waxay khubarada caafiimaadku  ku sheegeen in magaceeda ama marxalada keenta  la yidhaahdo;  “superfetation” Continue reading

Black power struggle: ‘I want to cut his nuts out’

 

 

Jesse Jackson’s outburst against Barack Obama has laid bare the jealousy felt by a generation of civil rights leaders towards the man who would be President. Leonard Doyle reports

Friday, 11 July 2008

EPA

Mr Jackson, who ran for the White House in 1984 and again in 1988, supports Mr Obama’s White House bid – at least in public

Ever since he loped on to the political stage in Chicago nearly 20 years ago, Barack Obama has had to contend with the jealousy of prominent black politicians. The Reverend Jesse Jackson seethed with resentment at the effortless way the younger man snatched the spotlight away from an earlier generation of black leaders whose roots lay in the civil rights movement.

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South Africa: Special Courts Likely for Xenophobic Crimes

South Africa: Special Courts Likely for Xenophobic Crimes

 

Franny Rabkin
Johannesburg

THE National Prosecuting Authority (NPA) and the justice department met yesterday to investigate ways to prosecute 1384 people arrested in the wake of xenophobic violence over the past two weeks.

NPA spokesman Tlali Tlali said the objective was to have dedicated resources set aside to have special courts and court officials to enable quick prosecution.

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South Africa: Troops sent onto Streets

South African troops have been deployed for the first time in an effort to stop attacks on foreigners that have left 42 dead and forced thousands to flee.

 Soldiers backed police in early morning raids at three hostels in Johannesburg, arresting 28 people and seizing drugs, arms and ammunition.

This is the first time soldiers have been used to stamp out unrest in South Africa since the 1994 end of apartheid.  Some 15,000 people have sought shelter from the attacks.

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Kenya:Losing billions of shillings in milk and dairy products

Maina Waruru, AfricaNews reporter in Nairobi, Kenya, photo: Fidelis Zvomuya
Kenya risks losing billions of shillings in milk and dairy products exports to the East African region and the middle east , a situation that is being blamed on a combination of factors.
Magoyi_cow_milk
Top among the reasons is poor rains being experienced in the country and a possibility of a looming drought ,post election violence in high producing  areas of rift valley, high prices of animal  feed and emergence of diseases caused by lack of personnel. Continue reading

Illegal Fishing

Africa: Illegal Fishing Costs Continent Sh62 Billion

 

Paul Redfern
London

The scale of illegal fishing across Africa is now so serious that it is in danger of decimating stocks across the continent, a new report says.

The report represents the first detailed quantitative analysis of the problem on a global scale and studies indicate that losses for sub-Saharan Africa total $1 billion per year.

Britain‘s minister for Trade and Development, Mr Gareth Thomas, said that the scale of illegal fishing could be double earlier estimates with weak international governance hampering progress in tackling the problem.

His comments follow publication of the ‘Global Extent of Illegal Fishing’ report which reveals that global annual losses from illegal fishing could be double earlier estimates at $10 to $23 billion (between Sh62 and Sh142.6 billion) annually.

The report follows a similar recent study by the Institute for Security Studies which says that that the scale of illegal fishing now threatens around 10 million African people who depend on fishing for an income.

ISS is currently monitoring the level of destruction of fish stocks off the Kenyan and Tanzanian coasts in a research project which will be published soon.

The culprits in the devastation of African fishing stocks are large-scale commercial fishing companies most of whom originate in the European Union and Asia.

Depleted stocks

Not only are such fleets overfishing in African waters, having depleted fishing stocks around European Union and East Asian shores, but the loss of fishing stocks is being compounded by the way the fishing fleets go about their business.

Firstly, the ISS report says that large amounts of unwanted fish are dumped at sea because they are not considered lucrative.

Secondly, is the way in which the fleets operate, using harmful fishing methods, such as nets and long-lines that indiscriminately damage the ocean bed or kill birds, dolphins and other marine animals.

Mr Thomas said that illegal fishing is a persistent global problem which is having a chronic effect on developing countries.

“People and countries who can least afford it are losing out – many developing countries generate more revenue from fish exports than coffee, cocoa, sugar, bananas, rubber and tea combined,” Mr Thomas said.

“For a family in Africa, it’s about the father no longer being able to go out and earn a living because the area’s been over-fished by illegal trawlers.

“Governments are not doing enough to protect their natural resources -countries such as Namibia, Iceland and New Zealand have understood this and ensured their fish boosts their economies, but many developing countries are missing out. We can turn this situation around but only if governments act now to protect their communities from criminal operators.”

Big trawlers

Ghanaian fisherman, Mr David Quaye, 63, said: “I come from a fishing family -my father was a fisherman and my brothers are fishermen and I am secretary of the local fishermen’s association.

A long time ago, when we were fishing there were no big fishing trawlers and if there were, there was a particular zone for them where they fish. Now these bigger, foreign fishing trawlers are mixed with the local fishermen.

“Illegal fishing has cost our fishermen a lot. Formerly they get fish, they get money, they send their children to school. But now they are not able to give to their family.” Mr Thomas said that the international trade in fish is worth over $80 billion a year with more than half of that from developing countries.

“DFID has led the way in developing the voluntary partnerships between the EU and exporting states to tackle illegal logging – we need to apply this approach to illegal fishing.”

But the ISS report said that part of the problem is that African governments “often simply lack the necessary capacity and expertise and are, therefore, easy targets for predatory fishing vessels.

The task of combating the myriad forms of criminal activities involved in commercial fisheries requires significant infrastructure and spending. An effective strategy to combat illegal fishing will also involve strong regional co-ordination.

“African governments also lack the necessary political will. This may partly stem from insufficient concern about sustainable and responsible use of the oceans.

However, equally worrying is the empirical link between proxies of ‘bad governance’ and rates of illegal fishing. Countries where corruption is endemic are particularly ineffective at combating criminal activities and the reason for this may include politicians and public officials being complicit in crimes.”

 

Source: AllAfrica.com

 

A Rotten Day For Gorod Boon!!!!

Cripes! Boris takes London (and rounds off a

rotten day for Gordon Brown)

 

 

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By Andrew Grice, Political Editor
Saturday, 3 May 2008

Boris Johnson rubbed salt into Gordon Brown’s wounds last night by winning a sensational victory over Ken Livingstone in the election for London Mayor.

 Labour’s gloom at suffering its worst council election results for 40 years deepened when Mr Johnson, the colourful Tory MP and journalist, ended the political career of Mr Livingstone after eight years as Mayor.

In a major coup which handed David Cameron a landmark double election victory, Mr Johnson won 1,168,738 votes (53 per cent) to Mr Livingstone’s 1,028,966 (47 per cent) after the second preferences of people who backed the other eight candidates were redistributed to the two front-runners.

Mr Johnson won 1,043,761 first-preference votes, Mr Livingstone 893,877. Brian Paddick, the Liberal Democrat candidate, trailed in third with 236,685.

After the result was declared just before midnight, Mr Johnson paid a generous tribute to Mr Livingstone and hoped London would continue to benefit from his “transparent love” of the city. He said his victory did not mean London was now “a Conservative city” but did mean the party could be trusted again.

An emotional Mr Livingstone said the fault for his defeat was “solely my own”. His voice trembling, he said: “You can’t be Mayor for eight years and then if you don’t win that third term, say it was somebody else’s fault.”

Labour sources said Mr Johnson had won by piling up a mountain of votes in outer London suburbs in a £1m campaign. Labour could not match the high turn-out of Tory supporters in its inner London strongholds. In Bromley and Bexley alone, the Tory candidate amassed a huge 81,382 majority over Labour, winning by 122,052 votes to 40,670 in the first Mayoral result declared.

Mr Johnson started the race as an outsider with little chance of ending Mr Livingstone’s reign at City Hall. Allowing him to become the Tory candidate was seen as a gamble by Mr Cameron after a chequered political career. Now the Tory high command will be keen to ensure Mr Johnson does not make embarrassing mistakes as Mayor, which could put a cloud over Mr Cameron’s attempts to portray the Tories as a government-in-waiting. A strong team of experienced advisers is expected to be appointed by the incoming Mayor.

Mr Livingstone’s fall from power will send shockwaves through Labour. His ratings were consistently 10 points ahead of his party’s national figures – yet he still lost. His defeat highlights the scale of the fight-back Mr Brown needs to give Labour a chance at the next general election.

A battered and bruised Mr Brown is struggling to restore his authority after suffering a humiliating setback in his first elections as Labour leader. In the party’s worst council results for 40 years, Labour lost more than 330 seats in local elections on May Day, finishing third with a 24 per cent projected share of the vote behind the Liberal Democrats (25 per cent) and the Conservatives (44 per cent).

Less than a year after he succeeded Tony Blair with high hopes of enhancing Labour’s electoral appeal, Mr Brown had to promise to listen to the unmistakable message from the voters who had rejected his party.

Mr Brown conceded that the local results were “disappointing”. Speaking in Downing Street, he said: “My job is to listen and to lead. We will learn lessons, we will reflect on what has happened and then we will move forward.”

Mr Brown pledged to steer the country through difficult economic times and prepare for the prosperity that would follow. “The test of leadership is not what happens in a period of success but what happens in difficult circumstances,” he said. He said he needed to show “strength and resolution as well as the conviction and ideas to take the country forward”.

Tessa Jowell, the Minister for London, conceded that the voters had given Labour “a pasting”. She said the Government had to conduct a conversation with ordinary people rather than inside “the Westminster village”.

Labour’s heavy losses exceeded the party’s worst nightmares. Officials had predicted the loss of only 200 seats because many of those contested were last fought in 2004, when Labour did poorly and won 26 per cent of the vote amid a backlash over the Iraq war. In the event, Labour did even worse on Thursday.

The huge 20-point gap between the two main parties sparked comparisons with similar results at the 1995 local elections. Two years later, John Major lost the general election.

Derek Wyatt, the Labour MP for Sittingbourne, ominously called the results Mr Brown’s “John Major moment”. He said: “Gordon has committed spectacular own goals and the public is punishing him for it.” He added: “We have to clear the crap out of the Cabinet … He has until the conference season [this autumn] and, if he is still 24 per cent down in the polls, the party will have to take some pretty brave decisions.”

There was unanimity among Labour MPs that Mr Brown’s decision to abolish the 10p-in-the-pound lower rate of income tax proved an electoral disaster. Labour’s vote dropped in many of the party’s working-class strongholds as people rebelled over a change which hit 5.3 million low-paid workers.

As ministers rallied round, there was no immediate threat to Mr Brown’s position. But the Labour MP Ian Gibson, a Brown ally, suggested the leadership issue might be reopened before the general election if Mr Brown failed to mount a successful fightback. “I’ll give him six months to do it or there will be really hard talking,” he said.

After his first electoral test as Liberal Democrat leader, Nick Clegg said his party had “regained momentum” by gaining 30 councillors, even though its projected national share of the vote was four points down on 2004. “We have confounded the critics … and gone forwards rather than backwards,” he said. He described Labour as “a government that has run out of steam that is in power and nobody knows why, that has lost touch with ordinary British families”.

Why all may not be lost …

1968

The Beatles may have been singing “You say you want a revolution, well, you know we all want to change the world”, but the British electorate did not want a changed world at all. They wanted to go back to the way things used to be. In London, the Conservatives picked up over 60 per cent of the vote, compared with Labour’s 28.5 per cent, which meant that Labour lost all but four of London’s 32 boroughs. The outcome was a harbinger of the 1970 general election result.

1981

An example of how misleading local election results can be. Labour did very well, seizing control of the Greater London Council and Liverpool among other prizes, taking every seat but one in Islington. The way that they ran these councils caused so much controversy that the party might have been better off nationally without them. The general election two years later was the worst for Labour since the 1930s.

1990

The Conservative Party chairman, Kenneth Baker, cleverly outspun Labour by pretending to believe that the real electoral tests were whether the Tories could hold on to Bradford, Westminster and Wandsworth. When they held the two London boroughs, the result was interpreted as a defeat for Neil Kinnock, pictured. However, Tory MPs in marginal seats knew the results were bad, which is why they removed Margaret Thatcher from office six months later.

1995

This was the slaughter of the Conservatives. They lost nearly 2,000 seats, and were left in control of almost no councils of any size apart from some London boroughs and Buckinghamshire council. There were numerous major cities in the north of England, including Manchester, Liverpool and Newcastle with no Tory councillors at all. This heralded the 1997 general election defeat. But there was an up side for the Tories: their results were so bad that they have made gains in every council election since.

2004

This week’s elections were not the first in which Labour fell behind the Liberal Democrats. They hit what was then a historic low in 2004, because of the unpopularity of the Iraq war and student fees, losing control of councils in areas seen as Labour’s heartlands, such as Newcastle, Leeds and Doncaster. This did not stop Tony Blair leading Labour to general election victory the following year.

Source: The Independent