Essential The Africa the Media Doesn't Tell You About

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5 Million Nigerians Oppose Monsanto’s Plans to Introduce GMO Cotton and Corn

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Lorraine Chow) Millions of Nigerians are urging the Nigerian government to reject Monsanto’s attempts to introduce genetically modified (GMO) cotton and maize into the country’s food and farming systems.

One-hundred organizations representing more than 5 million Nigerians, including farmers, faith-based organisations, civil society groups, students and local community groups, have submitted a joint objection to the country’s National Biosafety Management Agency (NABMA) expressing serious concerns about human health and environmental risks of genetically altered crops.

The groups’ petition follows Monsanto Agricultural Nigeria Limited’s own application to NAMBA that seeks to release GMO cotton (Bt cotton, event MON 15985) into the city of Zaria as well as surrounding towns. Another application seeks confined field trials of two GMO corn varieties (NK603 and stacked event MON 89034 x NK603) in multiple locations in Nigeria.

In a press release, the groups said they are particularly alarmed about the commercial release of Bt cotton into Nigeria, which is being phased out in Burkina Faso due to the “inferior lint quality” of the GMO cultivars.

“We are totally shocked that it should come so soon after peer-reviewed studies have showed that the technology has failed dismally in Burkina Faso,” Nnimmo Bassey, the director of theHealth of Mother Earth Foundation, one of the leading opposition groups, said in a statement. “It has brought nothing but economic misery to the cotton sector there and is being phased out in that country where compensation is being sought from Monsanto.”

He asked in the statement: “Since our Biosafety Act has only recently entered into force, what biosafety legislation was used to authorize and regulate the field trials in the past in accordance with international law and best biosafety practice?”

Former Nigerian president Goodluck Jonathan signed the National Biosafety Management Bill into law last year, basically opening the doors to GMOs cultivation in the country.

The groups noted Monsanto’s crops are genetically enhanced to tolerate the use of the herbicide glyphosate which was declared as a possible carcinogen by the World Health Organization’s International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) last March.

“Should commercialization of Monsanto’s GM maize be allowed pursuant to field trials, this will result in increased use of glyphosate in Nigeria, a chemical that is linked to causing cancer in humans,” Mariann Orovwuje, Friends of the Earth International’s food sovereignty co-coordinator, said in a statement.

“Recent studies have linked glyphosate to health effects such as degeneration of the liver and kidney, and non-Hodgkin lymphoma. That NABMA is even considering this application is indeed unfortunate and deeply regrettable, knowing full well about the uncontrolled exposure that our rural farmers and communities living close to farms will be exposed to.”

Besides the potential contamination of local maize varieties, the groups argued that the health risks of introducing GMO maize into Nigeria could be “enormous” considering that maize is a staple food in their diet.

Coupled with a lack of resources to adequately control and monitor the human and environmental risks of GMO crops and glyphosate, the groups argued that Nigeria doesn’t have a platform to test for glyphosate or other pesticide residues in food and food products, nor do they have an agency that can monitor the herbicide’s impact on the environment, including water resources.

On the flip side, GMO-advocates tout that biotechnology is not only safe for human consumption and the environment, it’s also a solution to malnutrition and global food security, as these crops have been genetically tinkered with to provide certain nutritional benefits and/or spliced-and-diced to resist certain pathogens and other roadblocks.

For instance, Monsanto’s Water Efficient Maize for Africa, a five-year development project led by the Kenyan-based African Agricultural Technology Foundation, aims to develop a variety of drought-tolerant maize seeds. The project receives funding from the Gates Foundation, United States Agency for International Development and Howard G. Buffett Foundation.

In an interview with Wall Street Journal’s Rebecca Blumenstein, Bill Gates explained his viewsabout GMOs:

“What are called GMOs are done by changing the genes of the plant, and it’s done in a way where there’s a very thorough safety procedure, and it’s pretty incredible because it reduces the amount of pesticide you need, raises productivity (and) can help with malnutrition by getting vitamin fortification

“And so I think, for Africa, this is going to make a huge difference, particularly as they face climate change … The U.S., China, Brazil, are using these things and if you want farmers in Africa to improve nutrition and be competitive on the world market, you know, as long as the right safety things are done, that’s really beneficial. It’s kind of a second round of the green revolution. And so the Africans I think will choose to let their people have enough to eat.”

But in the video below, Bassey objects to the argument that GMOs are necessary to ensure food security and nutrition in Africa and that the continent can feed itself without the aid of multinational biotech companies.

“Genetically engineered crops are not engineered to help anybody,” he says about six minutes into the video. “They are engineered to help the industry that produces the crops.”



Watch here:



5 Million Nigerians Oppose Monsanto’s Plans to Introduce GMO Cotton and Corn | GOVERNMENT SLAVES

GLYPHOSATE IT BINDS MINERALS AND CUTS OFF THE PRODUCTION OF NEUROTRANSMITTERS AND HORMONES....A VISUAL CONNECTION OF THE ROUTES OF DISEASES AND CANCER

GLYPHOSATE IT BINDS MINERALS AND CUTS OFF THE PRODUCTION OF NEUROTRANSMITTERS AND HORMONES....A VISUAL CONNECTION OF THE ROUTES OF DISEASES AND CANCER
 

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Liberia: Don't Outsource Primary Education System

It is completely unacceptable for Liberia to outsource its primary education system to a private company, said the United Nations Special Rapporteur on the right to education, Kishore Singh. "This is unprecedented at the scale currently being proposed and violates Liberia's legal and moral obligations," he stressed.

Liberia's plan is to privatise all primary and pre-primary schools over the next five years. Public funding will support services subcontracted to a private company - the Bridge International Academies. "Public schools and their teachers, and the concept of education as a public good, are under attack," the expert cautioned.

"Such arrangements are a blatant violation of Liberia's international obligations under the right to education, and have no justification under Liberia's constitution," the Special Rapporteur stated. "This also contradicts political commitments made by Liberia and the international community to the fourth UN Sustainable Development Goal which is on education and related targets."

"Provision of public education of good quality is a core function of the State. Abandoning this to the commercial benefit of a private company constitutes a gross violation of the right to education," emphasised Mr. Singh.

The human rights expert noted that "it is ironic that Liberia does not have resources to meet its core obligations to provide a free primary education to every child, but it can find huge sums of money to subcontract a private company to do so on its behalf," he said.




"These sums could be much better spent on improving the existing system of public education and supporting the educational needs of the poor and marginalized," suggested the Special Rapporteur.

Mr. Singh called on the Government of Liberia to approach the UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) for technical assistance and capacity building, instead of entering into such partnerships with for-profit providers in education, "devoid of any legal or moral justification."

"Before any partnership is entered into, the Government of Liberia must first put into place legislation and policies on public private partnerships in education, which among other things, protect every child's right to education," Mr. Singh said.

"There also needs to be an independent body or institution established to receive complaints of potential violations of the right to education that might result from this development," he added.

The Special Rapporteur emphasised that "education is an essential public service and instead of supporting business in education, governments should increase the money they spend on public educational services to make them better."

http://allafrica.com/stories/201603280584.html
 

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Angola LNG sells natural gas to Électricité de France

MARCH 29TH, 2016
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Angola LNG and EDF Trading, a subsidiary of the Électricité de France (EDF) group, signed a contract of sale and delivery of liquefied natural gas shipments, the Angolan company in a statement.

The signed contract covers the delivery of various natural gas shipments between the 2016 and 2018, according to the statement issued in Luanda.

Artur Pereira, CEO of Angola LNG Marketing Ltd, is quoted in the statement saying that this contract is “an important milestone for the parties” as it was signed shortly after the recent re-entry into operation of the Soyo processing unit, after a stoppage of two years.

The announcement was made in Beijing by the Oil minister, Botelho de Vasconcelos, when he said Angola LNG would resume production in June 2016.

Angola LNG was set up to collect, process and sell about 5.2 million tons of liquefied natural gas per year, in addition to propane, butane and condensates, from its manufacturing facilities in Soyo.

The project is considered one of the most modern in the sector and has a fleet of seven tankers and three LNG and compressed butane loading docks.

The company’s partners are Chevron US (36.4 percent), Sonangol (22.8 percent), BP Exploration, ENI of Italy and Total of France with 13.6 percent each. (macauhub/AO)

Angola LNG sells natural gas to Électricité de France | Macauhub English
 

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Zuma’s journey ends here - Malema
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Zuma’s journey ends here - Malema | IOL
31 March 2016 at 12:54pm
By:Getrude Makhafola and Shain Germaner
Johannesburg – The Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) on Thursday welcomed the ruling by the Constitutional Court ordering President Jacob Zuma to pay a portion of state money spent on upgrades at his Nkandla residence, and further called on the president to step down immediately.

“Zuma’s journey ends here… Zuma’s case ends here. Anyone who wants to question this matter any further would be questioning the court,” EFF leader Julius Malema told reporters at a briefing following the judgment.

“We call on Zuma to step down and to do that with immediate effect.”



The Constitutional Court rightly affirmed the powers of Public Protector Thuli Madonsela, he said.

“We are happy that the powers of the Public Protector have been confirmed, we are also happy that the process for Zuma to pay back the money has been clarified. He failed to uphold and defend the constitution.”

Malema said the ANC should recall Zuma, or else the EFF would table a motion of impeachment in Parliament.

The Democratic Alliance earlier indicated that it had launched impeachment steps against Zuma.

“Today’s ruling is clear in this regard. President Jacob Zuma’s action amounts to a serious violation of the constitution, and constitutes grounds for impeachment,” DA leader Mmusi Maimane told reporters outisde the Constiturional Court on Thursday.

Maimane said: “If I were him I would be drafting a resignation letter”.

He added: “As we always maintained the president acted outside the prescripts of the law. Now is not the time for MPs to fail the nation again. It is time for them to act now and remove Zuma from office.”

United Democratic Movement leader Bantu Holomisa said the ruling was a victory for democracy and called on the ruling ANC to remove Zuma from office.

“All that is left for President Jacob Zuma is to pack his bags and go because he has been given a red card,” said Holomisa.

Cope leader Mosiuoa Lekota said: “This judgment is a relief … it has saved our democracy. It has made it clear that it does not matter how much of a majority you have, because that majority is useless if it does not stand for the interests of the people of this country”.

Now that the Constitutional Court has ruled against Zuma, the way has been opened for opposition parties to begin impeachment processes, but according to constitutional law expert Pierre de Vos, these processes could be futile.


Zuma dropped off billions in Dubai, Malema claims
2016-03-31 15:17
Karabo Ngoepe, News24


Johannesburg - President Jacob Zuma visited the United Arab Emirates to drop off R6bn belonging to the Guptas, EFF leader Julius Malema claimed on Thursday.

"Zuma was in UAE recently in Dubai. That was not an official visit, it was a personal one. Zuma took money to UAE. That is where they are dumping money. The Guptas have taken R6bn to Dubai,” Malema told reporters at a press conference following the Constitutional Court judgment.

"Zuma goes to Dubai on some unexplained trip. Why did Zuma go to Dubai? Because when Zuma travels, he doesn’t get searched by customs. He left with bags of money to be dumped in Dubai. That is where they are dumping our money with the Guptas."

The presidency could not be immediately reached to get comment on Malema's claims.

On Monday, the Presidency said Zuma had gone to the UAE for a working visit. It was said he was set to hold talks with UAE Prime Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum and with the country's business community to consolidate political and economic ties and promote South Africa as a tourism destination.

Zuma was accompanied by International Relations Minister Maite Nkoana-Mashabane, Trade and Industry Minister Rob Davies, State Security Minister David Mahlobo, Police Minister Nathi Nhleko, and Home Affairs Minister Malusi Gigaba.

Zuma's visit to the UAE followed a two-day state visit to Saudi Arabia.

Malema disputed that Zuma had gone there to discuss South Africa as a tourism destination.

"He goes there and says he is talking about tourism, where was the minister of tourism? That’s a personal trip aimed at stealing money from this country. Zuma wanted to capture [the] Treasury and have access directly to the Reserve Bank so that they can literally take the money straight into Dubai not through this thing of tenders, its delaying them," he said.

"They are dumping money in Dubai. Listen to us South Africa; we will prove it with time. We are saying to you Guptas have put R6bn which left without following channels of the Reserve Bank. They didn’t follow the procedures."
Zuma dropped off billions in Dubai, Malema claims


“It is the leadership of the ANC (and not the EFF, DA or ANC members of the National Assembly) that will decide what political action - if any - should be taken against the president,” said De Vos.

“f the party leadership become convinced that it stands to lose serious ground in the local government elections or that it stands to lose its overall majority at the next national elections because of the Nkandla scandal, it may well be persuaded to act,” he added.



African News Agency and The Star
 

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Graduation day for Julius Malema

30 Mar 2016 09:54 Genevieve Quintal

The EFF founder will graduate from Unisa with a bachelor's degree in political science.


Economic Freedom Fighters leader Julius Malema will today graduate from the University of South Africa (Unisa) with a Bachelor of Arts degree.

Malema will attend the official graduation ceremony in Pretoria, at the Unisa main campus, on Wednesday evening, EFF national spokesperson Mbuyiseni Ndlozi said.

He said Malema was graduating with a BA degree and a major in political science.

“We are dealing with a person who has shown dedication.”

Juggling studies with politics
Malema had started studying for his diploma and then his degree when he was still part of the ANC and facing disciplinary charges as ANC Youth League leader.

He missed the verdict on his disciplinary hearing in November 2011 because he was writing exams. In April 2012, Malema was eventually expelled from the ANC, after losing his appeal.

The EFF was also turning three-years-old this year, so during the formation of the party, Malema was studying and writing exams.

He was also studying while facing corruption charges in the Polokwane High Court and during his SA Revenue Service court case.

The corruption charges against Malema were struck off the roll in August last year, while in June Sars withdrew its application to have the provisional sequestration order against him made final.

Elections, court, marriage
In December 2014, the firebrand leader got married.

“So it’s EFF, elections, it’s courts, it’s marriage… the guy is really strong like that,” said Ndlozi.

“The completion of this BA qualification amidst all other demands on him as a leader places him amongst the struggle heroes and heroines who never compromised to lead our people in the liberation struggle without academic qualifications.”

Ndlozi said Malema would continue his studies and had already enrolled for his honours degree.

In an interview with the SA Press Association last year, Malema said the EFF was “emphatic about the issues of education”.

Malema reportedly did not fare well in matric but this has not stopped him from pursuing his tertiary studies.

EFF deputy president Floyd Shivambu attained his Masters degree in 2014 in political studies at Wits University, while Ndlozi is a PhD student in Political Sociology also at Wits, and treasurer general Magdalene Moonsamy resigned as an MP to complete her articles in law. - News24
Graduation day for Julius Malema
 

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Italian workshop supervisor chains worker for failing to complete task


Ibrahim Sanou chained to a container as punishment
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By: Dotsey Koblah Aklorbortu Date : Thursday, 31 March 2016 13:32
Published in General News
An Italian workshop supervisor has provoked anger at a company in a Free Zone Enclave in the Western Region after chaining one of his subordinates to a container in the hot sun as punishment for failing to complete a task assigned him.

The alleged culprit, identified as Manilo Maggiorotto, did the unthinkable with the reason that whenever he assigned work to the victim, he abandoned his and found ways of helping others to do their work.

Therefore, the best way to prevent a recurrence was to chain him.

Seething with anger, employees of the multinational logistics company,Gateway Logistics Limited, operating as a Free Zone Company, have appealed to the Ministry of Employment and Labour Relations, the Ministry of Gender, Children and Social Protection and the Ghana Trades Union Congress (TUC) to ensure that justice was done the victim.

Alleged culprit

They described what Maggiorotto did as a re-enactment of the days of slavery – a dehumanising act which, they said, sent shivers down their spine.

“He must be apprehended to face the laws of Ghana,” they told the Daily Graphic.

“This is a Free Zone Company. He is in Ghana as workshop supervisor, an expertise that could easily be procured in Ghana but they brought him here and he constantly looks down on us and treats us as if we are nothing,” they said.

When the Daily Graphic contacted the company, its management acknowledged the incident but declined to comment further as they were dealing with the issue.

How it happened

Describing the incident to the Daily Graphic, one of the workers said their supervisor, on the day of the incident, assigned two of the company’s workers to carry out a task and later reassigned one of them to a different task.

To work as a team, the victim, whose name was given as Ibrahim Sanou, decided to help another employee so they could finish on time.

The source said when the Italian supervisor entered the yard, he realised that Sanou was not doing what he had asked him to do.

“He, therefore, called him, verbally assaulted him and asked him to go and bring the chain from the container. When Sanou returned, Maggiorotto put it around Sanou’s neck and locked it with a huge padlock. After that he dragged Sanou more than 100 metres to where he originally assigned him.”

“The sad part is that he hooked the end of the chain to a container in the sun and went back to his air-conditioned office, ” the source said.

The source said after Sanou had finished the work, the Italian asked one of the workers to go and unlock the chain so that the victim would go and carry out other tasks.

Workers

According to the workers, morale was currently down in the company and the victim, once jovial and energetic, was constantly depressed.

The workers were seeking justice and urged management of the company to ensure Maggiorotto left the workshop for his own safety.

That aside, he should apologise to the victim and appropriately compensate him.

When the Daily Graphic visited the company, the workers expressed the view that management was trying to influence the victim financially to say he was not interested in the case.

Dehumanising

At the office of the General Transport, Petroleum and Chemical Workers Union (GTPCWU) of the TUC, the Regional Industrial Relations Officer, Mr Hanson Richard, said the issue had been reported to the union.

“We are aware management is talking to the victim to withdraw the case, but this is a national issue and it is wrong to dehumanise a national to that extent,” he said.

Mr Richard said the union had explained the implications of any inducement to suppress the case and that the national union would take over the case.

“I will pursue the case to ensure that Sanou received justice after which they would demand the repatriation of Maggiorotto to serve as deterrent to others,” he said.

He said several meetings with the management of the company indicated that they were also taking up the issue and the GTPCWU would ensure the law was duly applied.

He recalled a recent case in Accra where a supervisor was reported to have slapped a worker with hot pizza and the locking of workers out without prior notice at various yards in Takoradi.

He urged expatriate workers to learn how to relate to their colleagues.

Company’s reaction

After several attempts to elicit the reaction of the company, the Managing Director, Mr William Moss, agreed to an interview with the Daily Graphic on March 23, 2016.

However, about 2:30 p.m, Mr Moss called to say he could no longer grant the interview without consulting the local union.

He expressed wonder as to what interest the newspaper had in the matter and ended the call.

Memo to workers

However, the Daily Graphic later intercepted a March 21 memo from the Managing Director notifying the employees that Mr Maggiorotto had relinquished his post and retuned to Italy with his wife.

“I would like to thank Manlio for all his efforts over the past years in the face of considerable difficulties. He brought new levels of engineering experience and competence to the maintenance function and it was through his dynamism that the workshop at Bokro was created,” it said, adding that “He will be greatly missed”.

- See more at: Italian workshop supervisor chains worker for failing to complete task - Graphic Online
 

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Zimbabwe may ask black owners to help repay ousted white farmers; economy now 50% smaller than 15 years ago

01 APR 2016 17:17GODFREY MARAWANYIKA AND BRIAN LATHAM

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Dan Swartz at his farm in Shonga, Nigeria. Several White farmers fleeing Mugabe's land seizures settled in central Nigeria. Zimbabwe has decided to compensate them. (Photo George Osodi/Bloomberg via Getty Images).


ZIMBABWE may ask black owners who settled on land confiscated from white farmers during state-sponsored invasions to help compensate them for their losses, Finance Minister Patrick Chinamasa said as the southern African country tries to repair relations with international lenders.

The government could also issue Treasury Bills to contribute to the payments to between 3,000 and 4,000 farmers who lost their land, Chinamasa told a meeting Thursday with officials from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in the capital, Harare.

More than 6,000 farms need to be assessed for compensation, he said. The government has already made payments to 240 white commercial farmers, Lands and Rural Settlements Minister Douglas Mombeshora said. The compensation plan is part of an effort by President Robert Mugabe’s government to restore relations with the IMF.

Since the southern African nation fell into default to the Washington-based fund in 1999, it has struggled to obtain finance to support an economy that is half the size it was 15 years ago.

Land Invasions “Government is fully committed to the re-engagement process, and this meeting is part of the initiatives that government has been exploring in order to normalise relations with the rest of the world, including our own farmers,” Chinamasa said.

Zimbabwe has pledged to repay at least $1.8 billion in debt to multilateral lenders by the end of June so that it will be eligible to seek new loans. The often-violent land invasions that began in 2000 cost the country about 300,000 farm jobs and at least a dozen lives.

The expropriations decimated production of tobacco, once Zimbabwe’s biggest export, and caused famines in a country that had been Africa’s second-biggest corn exporter. Output of paprika and roses also plummeted. Mugabe declared a state of national disaster last month due to the worst drought in almost two decades that’s killed cattle, withered crops and left millions of people needing food aid.

The government is struggling to meet monthly wage bills that consume over 80% of revenue, making compensation complicated, Chinamasa told delegates to the meeting. ”Of course, in that respect, we have to start talking about Treasury Bills,” he said. “The budget is tight.”

-Bloomberg

Zimbabwe may ask black owners to help repay ousted white farmers; economy now 50% smaller than 15 years ago
 

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$84m Of Ghana Oil Money Missing
According to a report on the operations of the extractive industry in the country, the government has not been able to verify the reception of the total revenue from the oil and gas companies.

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BY SAHARA REPORTERS, NEW YORKAPR 01, 2016


$84,382,088 out of the $900 million derived in 2014 from oil and gas extraction in Ghana is missing. According to a report on the operations of the extractive industry in the country, the government has not been able to verify the reception of the total revenue from the oil and gas companies.

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Ghanaian oil rig

The report, authored by the Ghana Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (GHEITI), which evaluates the government’s revenue flow as well as disbursements in the oil and gas industry, blamed Anadarko WCTP Limited as one of the major culprits.

“With the exception of Anadarko WCTP Limited, all oil and gas companies that made payments in 2014 reported to the GHEITI,” the report said.

Ghana recorded a production figure of 37,201,691 barrels (BBLS) of crude oil and 55,758.04 Million Standard Cubic Feet (MMSCF) of natural gas from the Jubilee fields in the year under review. According to the report, an additional 79,602 barrels of crude oil were produced from the Saltpond field.

The oil and gas sector’s contribution to the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) slacked from 8.2% in the 2013 to 7.25% in 2014.

The GHEITI report also called for more transparency from the government and the various oil and gas companies operating in the country. It urged prompt provision of information on the performance of the Ghana petroleum funds (GPF).

$84m Of Ghana Oil Money Missing | Sahara Reporters
 

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Angola secures financing in Japan for submarine cable project

APRIL 1ST, 2016
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Banco de Desenvolvimento de Angola (BDA) has contracted a loan of US$109.79 million from two Japanese banks to buy submarine fibre optic cables, the Angolan bank said in a statement institution released Thursday in Luanda.

The BDA also said that the loan from the Japan Bank for International Cooperation (JBIC) and the Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation (SMBC) has coverage from the Nippon Export and Investment Insurance (NEXI), has a sovereign guarantee from the Republic of Angola and is intended to finance the project of the South Atlantic submarine cable of the Angola Cables company.

Angola Cables’s submarine cable project will link Angola to Brazil. The company was created by five major Angolan telecommunications operators and which are currently part of its shareholder structure, and state company Angola Telecom has a majority stake.

Angola Cables has been member of the West Africa Cable System (WACS) since 2009, which is the owner of the undersea fibre optic cable connecting South Africa to the UK through several stations along the West African and Portuguese coast.

The BDA said in the statement that this deal starts a new phase in the bank’s operations, focused on raising funds in financial markets and international capital to apply them in the economy by funding structural projects. (macauhub/AO)

Angola secures financing in Japan for submarine cable project | Macauhub English
 

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5 Million Nigerians Oppose Monsanto’s Plans to Introduce GMO Cotton and Corn

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Lorraine Chow) Millions of Nigerians are urging the Nigerian government to reject Monsanto’s attempts to introduce genetically modified (GMO) cotton and maize into the country’s food and farming systems.

One-hundred organizations representing more than 5 million Nigerians, including farmers, faith-based organisations, civil society groups, students and local community groups, have submitted a joint objection to the country’s National Biosafety Management Agency (NABMA) expressing serious concerns about human health and environmental risks of genetically altered crops.

The groups’ petition follows Monsanto Agricultural Nigeria Limited’s own application to NAMBA that seeks to release GMO cotton (Bt cotton, event MON 15985) into the city of Zaria as well as surrounding towns. Another application seeks confined field trials of two GMO corn varieties (NK603 and stacked event MON 89034 x NK603) in multiple locations in Nigeria.

In a press release, the groups said they are particularly alarmed about the commercial release of Bt cotton into Nigeria, which is being phased out in Burkina Faso due to the “inferior lint quality” of the GMO cultivars.

“We are totally shocked that it should come so soon after peer-reviewed studies have showed that the technology has failed dismally in Burkina Faso,” Nnimmo Bassey, the director of theHealth of Mother Earth Foundation, one of the leading opposition groups, said in a statement. “It has brought nothing but economic misery to the cotton sector there and is being phased out in that country where compensation is being sought from Monsanto.”

He asked in the statement: “Since our Biosafety Act has only recently entered into force, what biosafety legislation was used to authorize and regulate the field trials in the past in accordance with international law and best biosafety practice?”

Former Nigerian president Goodluck Jonathan signed the National Biosafety Management Bill into law last year, basically opening the doors to GMOs cultivation in the country.

The groups noted Monsanto’s crops are genetically enhanced to tolerate the use of the herbicide glyphosate which was declared as a possible carcinogen by the World Health Organization’s International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) last March.

“Should commercialization of Monsanto’s GM maize be allowed pursuant to field trials, this will result in increased use of glyphosate in Nigeria, a chemical that is linked to causing cancer in humans,” Mariann Orovwuje, Friends of the Earth International’s food sovereignty co-coordinator, said in a statement.

“Recent studies have linked glyphosate to health effects such as degeneration of the liver and kidney, and non-Hodgkin lymphoma. That NABMA is even considering this application is indeed unfortunate and deeply regrettable, knowing full well about the uncontrolled exposure that our rural farmers and communities living close to farms will be exposed to.”

Besides the potential contamination of local maize varieties, the groups argued that the health risks of introducing GMO maize into Nigeria could be “enormous” considering that maize is a staple food in their diet.

Coupled with a lack of resources to adequately control and monitor the human and environmental risks of GMO crops and glyphosate, the groups argued that Nigeria doesn’t have a platform to test for glyphosate or other pesticide residues in food and food products, nor do they have an agency that can monitor the herbicide’s impact on the environment, including water resources.

On the flip side, GMO-advocates tout that biotechnology is not only safe for human consumption and the environment, it’s also a solution to malnutrition and global food security, as these crops have been genetically tinkered with to provide certain nutritional benefits and/or spliced-and-diced to resist certain pathogens and other roadblocks.

For instance, Monsanto’s Water Efficient Maize for Africa, a five-year development project led by the Kenyan-based African Agricultural Technology Foundation, aims to develop a variety of drought-tolerant maize seeds. The project receives funding from the Gates Foundation, United States Agency for International Development and Howard G. Buffett Foundation.

In an interview with Wall Street Journal’s Rebecca Blumenstein, Bill Gates explained his viewsabout GMOs:

“What are called GMOs are done by changing the genes of the plant, and it’s done in a way where there’s a very thorough safety procedure, and it’s pretty incredible because it reduces the amount of pesticide you need, raises productivity (and) can help with malnutrition by getting vitamin fortification

“And so I think, for Africa, this is going to make a huge difference, particularly as they face climate change … The U.S., China, Brazil, are using these things and if you want farmers in Africa to improve nutrition and be competitive on the world market, you know, as long as the right safety things are done, that’s really beneficial. It’s kind of a second round of the green revolution. And so the Africans I think will choose to let their people have enough to eat.”

But in the video below, Bassey objects to the argument that GMOs are necessary to ensure food security and nutrition in Africa and that the continent can feed itself without the aid of multinational biotech companies.

“Genetically engineered crops are not engineered to help anybody,” he says about six minutes into the video. “They are engineered to help the industry that produces the crops.”



Watch here:



5 Million Nigerians Oppose Monsanto’s Plans to Introduce GMO Cotton and Corn | GOVERNMENT SLAVES

GLYPHOSATE IT BINDS MINERALS AND CUTS OFF THE PRODUCTION OF NEUROTRANSMITTERS AND HORMONES....A VISUAL CONNECTION OF THE ROUTES OF DISEASES AND CANCER

GLYPHOSATE IT BINDS MINERALS AND CUTS OFF THE PRODUCTION OF NEUROTRANSMITTERS AND HORMONES....A VISUAL CONNECTION OF THE ROUTES OF DISEASES AND CANCER


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