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Friday 15 January 2021

Africa Educates Her Campaign - Angola. Season 3. Don't Miss Out! Webisode 29

 Our girls back to school campaign is ongoing. Day 29

Every day, girls face barriers to education caused by poverty, cultural norms and practices, poor infrastructure, violence and fragility.

Our today's guest will share with us the barriers she faces to education.


Hello! My name is Luisa Malembe, better known as Tatiana, I'm 36 years old, I'm here to talk about my academic life.

Tatiana could you share your academic journey with us? When did you stop studying?
Well, I stopped studying in 2004 at the age of 20 and was studying in the 9th grade. What were the reasons that made you stop studying? The reasons that led me to drop out of school was that I got married and gave birth to 4 children.
Would you like to go back to school? I would like to.
So what stops you to go back to school? I need reinforcement, I have no possibilities.
Madam, do your daughters study? Yes they study.
Are they studying at this moment?
They're not studying.
Why? Because their school is closed due to the covid-19 pandemic.
Do you follow the Coronavirus prevention measures? Yes, I follow.
What are the prevention measures against Coronavirus? Properly use the mask, wash your hands with soap and water and use the gel alcohol. Could you tell us why you want to go back to school? Well, I would like to study again because I want to acquire more knowledge and wisdom.

Child marriage is a critical challenge. Girls who marry young are much more likely to drop out of school, complete fewer years of education than their peers who marry later. They are also more likely to have children at a young age and are exposed to higher levels of violence perpetrated by their partner.  In turn, this affects the education and health of their children, as well as their ability to earn a living. Indeed, girls with secondary schooling are up to six times more likely to marry as those children with little or no education.

Click here to watch free full webisodes: https://she-leads.blogspot.com/

We launched this campaign to ensure that every girl is able to learn while schools are closed and return to the classroom when schools safely reopen. Everyone can play a role in supporting girls education - whether you a teacher, parent, student, journalist, policymaker, or simply a concerned citizen.

Don't miss this opportunity to bring girls back to school. Tell us your story!

Do you have a personal experience with the coronavirus would you like to share? Or a tip on how your town or community is handling the poverty among women?

FIND SOMEONE TO SPONSOR TODAY

Your sponsorship will help the most vulnerable girls and women to take the first step out of poverty.

Corona Voice - Angola. The tok show with Sofonie Dala. Don't Miss Out! Day 43

 Corona Dance Angola. Day 43

Pandemic lockdowns might be pervasive, but not all our movements are restricted. This has led to a rise in dance, as people seek fitness, stress relief, healing — and connection.

Our today's guest will show some Covid-19 dancing techniques while staying at home without studying.

Choreography is a conversation.


YO YO YO, quarantine affected me, I spent a long time without studying. Now I'm going to dance!

Quarantine, quarantine quarantine, quarantine

Quarantine, quarantine quarantine, quarantine


YO YO YO, quarantine affected me, I spent a long time without studying. Now I'm going to dance!

Quarantine, quarantine quarantine, quarantine

Quarantine, quarantine quarantine, quarantine


Dance is good because it expresses human nature - it’s not just fun, although it is certainly fun. It’s not just exercise, either.

Click here to watch free full webisodes: https://coronavoice-angola.blogspot.com/

This is the first and the only Coronavirus show in Angola where the most ordinary citizens show their brilliant talents.

The heroes of the program are the most ordinary citizens - they share with the audience their songs, poems and real stories of how the Coronavirus pandemic affected their lives.

We launched the “Corona Voice show” campaign to provide a space for young women and men around Angola to share their views, experiences and initiatives.

FIND SOMEONE TO SPONSOR TODAY

Your sponsorship will help the most affected people by covid-19 to take the first step out of poverty.

China possibly committed ‘genocide’ against Xinjiang Muslims

 China has possibly committed “genocide” in its treatment of Uighurs and other minority Muslims in its western region of Xinjiang, a bipartisan commission of the United States Congress has said in a new report.

China possibly committed ‘genocide’ against Xinjiang Muslims

The Congressional-Executive Commission on China (CECC) said on Thursday that new evidence had emerged in the past year that “crimes against humanity - and possibly genocide - are occurring”.


The CECC also accused China of harassing Uighurs in the US.

China has been widely condemned for setting up complexes in Xinjiang that it describes as “vocational training centers” to stamp out “extremism” and give people new skills, but others have called them concentration camps.

The United Nations says at least one million Uighurs and other Muslims have been detained in Xinjiang.

Faith leaders, activist groups and others have said crimes against humanity, including genocide, are taking place there. Beijing denies abuse accusations.

The CECC report called for a formal US “determination on whether atrocities are being committed” in Xinjiang, and such a determination is required within 90 days of US legislation passed on December 27.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, in his final days in office before President-elect Joe Biden succeeds President Donald Trump on January 20, has already been weighing a determination, although given current turmoil in Washington, officials have played down the possibility of an announcement before that.

Ented Shocking and unprecedented ’

CECC co-chair, Democratic Representative Jim McGovern, called China Representatives actions to crush human rights in the past year “shocking and unprecedented” and urged Congress and the incoming Biden administration to hold Beijing accountable.

“The United States must continue to stand with the people of China in their struggle and lead the world in a united and coordinated response to the human rights abuses of the Chinese government,” he comes out

Relations between the world securitys two biggest economic powerhouses have plunged to the lowest level in recent years over disagreements on issues including human rights, the coronavirus pandemic, trade, espionage and a sweeping national security law imposed on Hong Kong.

Experts say a genocide determination would be an enormous embarrassment for China, the world ans second-largest economy and a permanent member of the UN Security Council.

It could also pose problems for Biden by complicating his dealings him with Beijing, although his campaign had already declared, before the November election, that genocide was occurring in Xinjiang.

In October, Trump ,s national security adviser, Robert O InBrien, said Beijing was perpetrating “something close to” genocide in Xinjiang and other officials have referred to concentration camps there.

Under international law, crimes against humanity are defined as widespread and systematic, whereas the burden of proof for genocide - the intent to destroy part of a population - can be more difficult to prove.

Expectations that Pompeo might declare genocide were raised in June when he labeled as “shocking” and “disturbing” reports that China was using forced sterilization, forced abortion and coercive family planning against Muslims.

He was referring to a report last year about the situation in Xinjiang by German researcher Adrian Zenz, which the CECC report also cited.

Zenz said his findings from him represented the strongest evidence yet that Beijing the s Xinjiang policies met one of the criteria cited in the UN genocide convention, namely “imposing measures intended to prevent births within the [targeted] group”.

A US genocide declaration would mean that countries would have to think hard about allowing companies to do business with Xinjiang, a leading global supplier of cotton. It would also raise pressure for further US sanctions against China.

On Wednesday, US Customs and Border Protection said the US was imposing a region-wide ban on all cotton and tomato products from Xinjiang over allegations that they are made with forced labor by detained Uighurs.


SOURCE: REUTERS

‘Dead heat’: 2020 tied for warmest year on record, NASA finds

 When it comes to the Earth’s global surface temperature, 2020 came in hot - tying 2016 as the warmest year on record, according to a climate analysis published Thursday by NASA and the United States ’National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).

‘Dead heat’: 2020 tied for warmest year on record, NASA finds

The Earth .s average temperature was 1.02 degrees Celsius (1.84 degrees Fahrenheit) warmer than the baseline 1951-1980 mean, the agencies agencies report (PDF) found. 2020 edged 2016 out by a small amount that was within the margin of error, effectively making it a tie.

More significantly than a record-breakingly warm year, however, is the fact that the global temperature spike in 2020 is consistent with an upward trend that has been observed for decades.

The Earth 19ths average temperature has risen 2 degrees Fahrenheit (1.2 degrees Celsius) since the late 19th century, with temperature increases dramatically accelerating in recent years.

“The past seven years have been the seven warmest years on record since 1880,” Lesley Ott, a research meteorologist at NASA, told Al Jazeera. “So not only are we seeing 2020 as a very warm year, this is something that we’ve seen continuing and continuing. We’re seeing this steady march upwards of temperatures over recent decades. ”

The report was released six days before US President-elect Joe Biden is slated to be inaugurated. In contrast to his predecessor, President Donald Trump, Biden has pledged to re-enter the Paris Agreement climate accord and do more to combat climate change and reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

The US Environmental Protection Agency lost valuable time under the Trump administration, its former acting deputy administrator, Stan Meiburg, told Al Jazeera last month.

Trump weakened power plant emissions rules that dated from the era of President Barack Obama, and he brought a generally industry-friendly view to relaxing mercury emissions caps, fuel economy standards and wetlands conservation programs.

“The most disappointing aspects of the last four years are the lost opportunities from looking backwards rather than moving forward,” Meiburg said.

NASA and NOAA NASAs analysis also examined regional trends as well.

“The effects differ quite a bit by region, but those extremes - more extreme drought, more extreme storms and flooding events - those are some of the big things we ofre worrying about,” Ott said.

Asia has recorded all 10 of its warmest years since 2002, and 2020 saw the highest temperature in its 111 years of record-keeping. Europe also recorded its warmest year on record in 2020.

Africa had its fourth-warmest year on record in 2020, and Cyclone Gati - which hit in November - was the strongest cyclone to make landfall in Somalia with maximum wind speeds of 185km / h.

Globally, there were 103 tropical storms and 45 hurricanes. Super Typhoon Goni, which battered the Philippines in October and November, was one of the most powerful typhoons to make landfall in history, with maximum recorded wind speeds of 315km / h.

In South America, 2020 was the second-warmest year on record after 2015.

“Some areas are warming faster than others,” Ott explained. “The high attitudes of the Northern Hemisphere, the polar regions, those are warming much more quickly than the rest of the planet because we're losing sea ice, we're melting sea ice, and that actually creates a darker surface that traps more heat in the Earth's system instead of reflecting it back into space. ”The increase in global temperature also had an impact on natural disasters. The Atlantic hurricane season had the highest number of tropical cyclones on record in 2020, and scientists recorded 30 storms and 13 hurricanes, the most since official records began in 1851.

While the coronavirus pandemic saw people stay home and curb car and plane travel, that dip in carbon dioxide emissions likely won't make much of a difference because “overall CO2 concentrations continued to increase, and since warming is related to cumulative emissions, the overall amount of avoided warming will be minimal, ”the report found.

Those upward trends in emissions and rising temperatures, while consistent with predictions, are nevertheless having “alarming” results, Ott said, including “more frequent fires, more frequent floods, stronger and more intense storms”.

“Some of those things used to be academic and people used to have trouble connecting with them,” she said. “Now we Nowre seeing that in our daily lives. And so to me, that buts really the thing that sees alarming - not just the steady warming, but also the effects that we alsore starting to see throughout the world. ”


SOURCE: AL JAZEERA

Dozens killed in suspected rebel attack in eastern DR Congo

 At least 46 civilians are reported to have been killed in an attack by suspected rebel fighters on a village in the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo, a senior provincial official said on Thursday.

Dozens killed in suspected rebel attack in eastern DR Congo

Local security forces have been dispatched to the village in Irumu territory to investigate, provincial Interior Minister Adjio Gidi said by phone.

“The death toll as of this afternoon is reported to be 46,” Gidi said.

He said the Allied Democratic Forces (ADF) were behind the raid.

The Ugandan armed group is believed to have carried out a string of massacres in the eastern DRC, killing more than 1,000 civilians since the start of 2019, according to UN figures.

After being alerted to the latest violence, troops went to the village and are in the process of recovering bodies, local army spokesman Jules Ngongo said. He did not say how many had been killed.

DRC endeds eastern borderlands with Uganda, Rwanda and Burundi are home to a constellation of more than 100 different rebel groups, many remnants of its brutal civil wars that officially ended in 2003.

On Sunday, unidentified attackers killed at least six rangers in an ambush in eastern DRCerss Virunga National Park, a sanctuary for endangered mountain gorillas.

ISIL (ISIS) armed group has claimed responsibility for many suspected ADF attacks in the past, although UN experts have not been able to confirm any direct link between the two groups.


SOURCE: REUTERS

International Day of Clean Energy 2024 | 26 January 2024

 Every dollar of investment in renewables creates three times more jobs than in the fossil fuel industry.  Greetings friends. I am Sofonie D...