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Friday 7 July 2023

More Than 10 Million People Sign Up For Twitter Rival, Threads In The First 7 hours Of The App’s Launch

 More than 10 million people have registered accounts for Meta’s new Twitter rival, Threads, just seven hours after its launch, according to Billionaire Mark Zuckerberg.



The CEO, who goes by the handle “Zuck on Threads,” made the announcement on Wednesday night,, July 5 as he wrote a flurry of posts and replies coinciding with his new app’s debut. “10 million sign ups in seven hours,” Zuckerberg wrote with a “mindblown” emoji.

Earlier that day, he said Threads had seen two million registrations in its first two hours, then five million in its first four hours. Threads is linked to Instagram, which Meta said in October has around two billion monthly active users. The new app allows users to create Threads accounts with their Instagram usernames, as well as connect with people they follow on the image-based platform.

“Our vision is to take the best parts of Instagram and create a new experience for text, ideas, and discussing what’s on your mind,” Zuckerberg said in a Wednesday evening Instagram post.

The launch of Threads comes as Twitter still the most widely used text-based social media app prevented free users from viewing more than 800 tweets a day and revamping its verification system.

Twitter estimated that it had around 237.8 million daily active users in 2022, just before Elon Musk bought the platform.

Source: BBC

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Nigeria’s Tinubu suspends new 10 percent plastic tax to cut costs

Tinubu, who took office in May, has embarked on Nigeria’s boldest reform agenda in decades to boost sluggish growth in Africa’s largest economy.



Nigeria’s President Bola Tinubu has ordered the suspension of a newly introduced 10 percent tax on single-use plastics and excise duty on some locally manufactured products to reduce business costs in Africa’s biggest economy, his spokesman said on Thursday.

One of the biggest plastic polluters on the continent, Nigeria generates some 2.5 million tonnes of plastic waste annually, some of which ends up in the sea, official data shows.

Presidential spokesman Dele Alake said Tinubu signed executive orders suspending a green tax on single-use plastics including plastic containers and bottles that was introduced in March.

The orders also suspended the implementation of a 5 percent telecoms tax and stopped an increase in car import duties and excise duties on selected goods manufactured locally.

“As a listening leader, the president issued these orders to ameliorate the negative impacts of the tax adjustments on businesses and chokehold on households across affected sectors,” Alake told the press.

Tinubu, who took office in May, has embarked on Nigeria’s boldest reform agenda in decades, including the removal of a popular petrol subsidy and restrictions on foreign exchange trading, in a bid to boost sluggish growth in Africa’s largest economy.

At his inauguration, the president had promised to reset the economy, raising hope among investors and citizens after a series of policy missteps that led to two recessions under the eight-year tenure of his predecessor, President Muhammadu Buhari.

Since the subsidy was removed, petrol prices have nearly tripled in Nigeria, angering unions and causing a spike in transport costs. It has also hit small businesses and millions of households who rely on petrol generators for power due to intermittent grid supply.

There would be no further tax rises without wider consultations, Alake said, adding that Tinubu would pursue business-friendly policies.

SOURCE: AL JAZEERA AND NEWS AGENCIES

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Chinese owner of iconic MG car brand to build Europe plant

 China’s largest car manufacturer SAIC Motor says it will build its first factory in Europe, after sales of its vehicles on the continent jumped.



The state-controlled company – which owns the iconic MG brand – says the new plant will produce electric vehicles. However, a spokesperson told the BBC that SAIC has not yet decided whether MG models would be made at the site. MG, which has roots dating back over a century, was made in the UK until production was moved to China in 2016.

On Thursday, an SAIC spokesperson told the BBC that the firm was still in the process of securing a site in Europe and finalising other details about the project.

“We have many brands including MG, IM and Maxus. We are still deciding which will be built at the factory,” the spokesperson added.

Sales of its vehicles outside China surged by 40% in the first three months of the year, according to SAIC.

The MG brand accounted for the majority of overseas sales, as the number of the cars sold in Europe more than doubled in the same period, the company said.

The latest announcement comes almost seven years after SAIC halted MG assembling at the Longbridge plant in Birmingham.

In 2016, MG said assembly in the UK was no longer “required” and that cars would arrive in the country “fully built (and) ready for distribution”.

A 1973 MG Midget 1275 in country lane.

The Longbridge plant built cars including MG and the original Mini. It was set up in 1906 and survived World Wars One and Two.

In the years that followed, the site fought off post-war economic depression and the emergence of the motor industry abroad.

It also recovered from strike action, mergers, takeovers and drops in its share value.

Production at the plant was halted after MG Rover collapsed in 2005. The brand was eventually bought by SAIC.

In 2011, the MG6 was launched. It was the first MG car in 16 years to be assembled at Longbridge.

The five-seater vehicle was designed in the UK but its parts were made in China.

Chinese carmakers – including SAIC, Geely and Great Wall – have seen their market shares grow in recent years.

Exports from China have been boosted by the demand for electric vehicles and sales to Russia as many Western countries imposed sanctions on Moscow after the invasion of Ukraine.

China exported more than a million vehicles in the first three months of this year, official figures show. As a result it overtook Japan as the world’s biggest exporter of cars.

As well as its manufacturing plants in China, SAIC also has production facilities in Thailand, Indonesia, India and Pakistan.

The Chinese firm, which has joint ventures with German motor giant Volkswagen and US car maker General Motors, sold 5.3 million vehicles globally last year.

Europe was its largest overseas market with more than 100,000 vehicles sold, according to SAIC.

Source: BBC

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Twelve African states to get new malaria vaccine

 The World Health Organization (WHO) and its partners say around 18 million doses of the world’s first malaria vaccine will be delivered to 12 African nations by 2025.



Among them are Malawi, Ghana and Kenya, where the Mosquirix vaccine has already been used in pilot schemes.

With demand outstripping supply, priority will go to countries with the greatest need, and where maximum impact will be achieved.

Mozambique and Sudan have been excluded because of their high vaccine drop-out rates.

The WHO says the vaccine – developed by the British firm GSK – could save one life for every 200 children vaccinated.

Malaria kills around half a million African children under five each year.

Source: BBC Dorcas Wangira Africa health correspondent

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‘People are dying’: South Africa workers protest economic woes

Africa’s most industrialised nation is facing rolling electricity blackouts, high unemployment and interest rates, as well as growing social unrest due to soaring costs of living.


Johannesburg, South Africa – Hundreds of members of the Congress of South African Trade Union (COSATU), the country’s largest labour union, gathered at its head office in the commercial capital Johannesburg on Thursday to demand interest rate cuts, electricity reforms, and job additions.

The union also mobilised workers across South Africa’s nine provinces and major urban centres, such as Cape Town, Durban, Kimberly, Mafikeng and Rustenburg, to present a common front nationwide.

The protests came on the heels of President Cyril Ramaphosa signing off on a 3.8 percent salary increase for all public office holders including judges and parliamentarians because of “serious economic challenges facing the country”, according to a July 1 statement from the presidency.

Negotiations between COSATU and the government had led to an increase in the national minimum wage from 23.19 rand ($1.21) per hour to 25.42 rand ($1.33) per hour, as announced on March 1.

But union officials have said prevailing economic conditions including high interest rates have offset the effect of the latest increase which targets.

South Africa’s economy expanded by 0.4 percent within the first quarter of 2023, at a time when public sentiment was expecting a recession. As Africa’s most industrialised nation implements its post-COVID-19 economic recovery strategy, it is bedevilled by rolling electricity blackouts, high unemployment and interest rates, as well as growing social unrest due to soaring costs of living.

At the Johannesburg protests, Duncan Luvuno, COSATU’s second deputy president said workers have to cover increases in medical aid expenses, bank loans, transportation and food prices.

“As COSATU, we rally behind workers and want them to form part and parcel of the fight happening in the boardrooms,” he said.

Protesters who gathered outside the union headquarters came from different parts of the province and were dressed in all red, black and yellow colours of the trade union. The marchers chanted struggle songs as they made their way across the busy streets of Johannesburg.

The union members held placards including some which read: “The right to protest is our constitutional right!” “Cosatu demands dependable energy supply” and “End poverty, job losses and inequalities. Organise or Starve!”

“The cost of living for workers is too high,” Amos Monyela, the union’s chairperson for Gauteng province told Al Jazeera. “The government and private sector need to invest in the economy instead of relying on inflation targeting by the Reserve Bank.”

According to Tshiamo Diole, a member of the South African Democratic Teachers Union, one of the bodies under COSATU, the protest march was planned to remind the government of the “slow pace of change” and “high unemployment and low economic growth”.

During the protests, Diole said Ramaphosa, a founding member of COSATU, had “little regard” for workers.

“The problem with him is that he is not fit to run the country where it is now,” he told Al Jazeera, “Whenever revolutionaries reach the table, they tend to forget about the struggles of workers.”

For Selina Khosa, shop steward and member of the South African Commercial, Catering and Allied Workers Union, another COSATU affiliate, the electricity crisis is “causing damage to businesses” and contributing to increased crime rates.

Khosa said Ramaphosa was performing well in government but ought to do more to help struggling workers. “Businesses are suffering, people are dying, and crime is high because it’s dark outside.”

The protesters also went to the offices of the South African Local Government Association and Premier of Gauteng province David Makhura, to request the removal of the Municipal Systems Act – which delineates the powers of local municipalities.

Union officials said the law bars municipal employees, who are COSATU members, from joining community meetings within the municipality and said it was meant to limit bargaining power.

“The municipal amendment act is an anti-thesis of democratic governance,” one told Al Jazeera.

The union also urged the government to implement the recommendations of a report by a commission of inquiry into the controversial “state capture”, a buzzword for grand corruption within the governing party, the African National Congress (ANC).

Meanwhile, the ANC hosted a meeting with a rival labour union, the South African National Civic Organisation, on Thursday, as part of efforts to help the group resolve its internal leadership disputes and join the party as an ally in the 2024 national elections.

SOURCE: AL JAZEERA

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Veteran anti-apartheid ex-minister Pahad dies

 South Africa’s former Minister in the Presidency and anti-apartheid veteran Essop Pahad has died at the age of 84, according to a statement from President Cyril Ramaphosa’s office.



“We mourn the passing of a veteran of our struggle,” President Ramaphosa said, citing Mr Pahad’s contribution to South African democracy.

“Security crackdowns, banning and exile shaped Essop Pahad’s contribution over decades to our struggle and, as Parliamentary Counsellor to President Thabo Mbeki and Minister in the Presidency, to the early design and impact of our democratic state.”

Mr Pahad is described as “a thinker and strategist” who first started his political revolutionary journey 65 years ago, when he became a member of the Transvaal Indian Congress, which fought against white-minority rule.

He later joined the ANC, the party of President Ramaphosa, and was arrested and then exiled in the 1960s for his activism.

However, he continued his political activities for the then-banned ANC.

He returned to South Africa in 1990 – the same year the country’s ban on the ANC was lifted and the start of the decade that saw the lifting of apartheid and introduction of a democratic government.

Mr Pahad later served as Minister in the Presidency while former President Thabo Mbeki was in office from 1999 to 2008.

Source: BBC

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Huawei Launches Four Intelligent Optix Innovative Practices Of F5.5G, Accelerating 10Gbps Take-Off

At the Huawei Product & Solution Innovation and Practice launch event held during 2023 MWC in Shanghai, Huawei took the opportunity to launch four Intelligent OptiX innovative practices of F5.5G, in scenarios of smart home, small and micro enterprises, smart manufacturing and metro network.



Richard Jin, President of Huawei Optical Business Product Line, stated that 1Gbps has been everywhere, and 10Gbps is taking off. In the past year, Huawei’s F5.5G innovations, such as FTTR F30/B30, 50G PON, Alps-WDM, and 400G/800G, have been widely adopted in Asia, Europe, Middle East, Africa, and Latin America. It deeply changed people’s life and work. We hope more carriers and partners to join the F5.5G innovation and practice and work together to embrace “10Gbps Everywhere”.

Ÿ terms of smart homes, over 4.6 million household users are using Huawei FTTR to create 1Gbps home Wi-Fi connection. In Brazil, Oi and Huawei took the initiative to put FTTR into commercial use in Latin America. They leveraged the ultra-high bandwidth, ultra-wide coverage, ultra-high concurrency, and 5A-level services to build smart homes featuring whole-house ultra-gigabit and whole-house intelligence for users, thereby improving efficiency, consumer satisfaction and ARPU for Oi.

Ÿ   In terms of small and micro enterprises, tens of thousands of enterprises have adopted Huawei FTTR solution. Leveraging B30’s advantages such as ultra-gigabit Wi-Fi, 300 concurrent terminals, and app-based intelligent O&M, China Unicom Henan released the FTTR B30 fusion package applicable to various scenarios including offices, supermarkets, convenience stores and security protection. Over the past six months, China Unicom Henan has attracted nearly 10,000 enterprise users, and increased consumer satisfaction by 20%, enabling the digital transformation of small and micro enterprises.

Ÿ  In terms of smart manufacturing, China Telecom Research Institute worked with Huawei to complete the world’s first 50G PON–based industrial Internet pilot. Huawei’s 50G PON provides 10Gbps bandwidth for campuses, provides reliable and flexible access for industrial Automated Optical Inspection (AOI), and achieves a 10-fold improvement in inspection efficiency, realizing positive benefits for smart manufacturing. At present, Huawei has been conducting the innovation verification for its 50G PON solution together with over 30 partners around the world.

ŸUsing Huawei’s Alps-WDM, China Unicom Chongqing has built metro networks with the optimal TCO. Huawei’s Alps-WDM increased the single-wavelength rate from 10G to 100G at the integrated access site, and created a bandwidth resource pool shared by multiple areas for on-demand usage. It also helped created an ultra-low latency circle with “1ms coverage of the main city, 2.5ms coverage of the entire city, and 3ms coverage of Chengdu- Chongqing dual cities”. Till now, Huawei’s Alps-WDM has dozens of commercial applications worldwide.

The 10Gbps era is just around the corner. Huawei calls on all parties in the industry to innovate and enrich F5.5G application scenarios together and apply F5.5G to all aspects of the digital economy. In doing so, we can embrace “10Gbps Everywhere”.

Source: Peacefmonline com

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Nigeria confirms outbreak of deadly diphtheria

 The Nigerian health authorities have announced an outbreak of diphtheria in the capital, Abuja, after the death of a four-year-old child.



The highly contagious infection can cause breathing difficulties and heart problems that can be fatal, particularly in children.

The Nigeria Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (NCDC) said there had been multiple outbreaks across the country since late last year, with almost 800 confirmed cases and at least 80 deaths.

It said the vast majority of cases were among people who had not been vaccinated – despite diphtheria being covered by the country’s routine childhood immunisation programme.

The NCDC has urged the public to remain vigilant and ensure that people with symptoms to report early to health facilities for prompt diagnosis and treatment.

Source: BBC

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Africa And Caribbean Should Stop Blame-Game – Kagame

 Rwandan President Paul Kagame has pushed for closer ties between Caribbean and African countries at the 45th Caribbean Community (Caricom) conference in Trinidad and Tobago, and called on both regions to stop blaming others for their problems.



“We should not be comfortable blaming others for our problems, including the harm we inflict on ourselves,” President Kagame said.

“The starting point here is how we govern our own individual countries, striving to be the best we can be, with a culture of accountability,” he added in a statement.

“We need to come together in real terms and focus on concrete initiatives which address the challenges that nations like ours face today,” Mr Kagame said.

He highlighted that both regions need to advocate for more inclusive borrowing terms when countries need to take loans and greater cooperation on tackling climate change.

He also spoke about opportunities for both regions to improve connectivity when it comes to “transport and telecommunications”.

He also mentioned Haiti, which Rwanda has previously said it was willing to support in terms of security and peacekeeping, according to the Miami Herald.

President Kagame said his country “cannot look away” and that Rwanda’s own painful history shows that “nothing is beyond repair”.

Haiti has descended into increasing lawlessness since the assassination of President Jovenel Moïse in July 2021.

Source: BBC

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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...