Home Blog Page 2666

Kofi Kinaata speaks to University of Texas students about his music

0
Kofi Kinaata speaks to University of Texas students

With a career spanning over 15 years, Kofi Kinaata, is sharing his experience in the music industry with the rest of the world.

The four-time Vodafone Ghana Music Awards (VGMA) Songwriter of the Year winner, has shared photos of himself delivering a speech to a class of American university students on live video.

Kofi Kinaata is the only Ghanaian musician who has won the VGMA Songwriter of the Year award four times.

In 2021, he received the Vodafone Green Award for his role in using music to promote environmental awareness and sustainability.

Credit: citinewsroom.com

Nigeria bans use of foreign models and Actors in advertisements

0
Foreign models banned

Just last week, Nigeria‘s Federal Ministry of Information and Culture posted a statement to Twitter, announcing that the country’s Advertising Regulatory Council of Nigeria (ACRON) has issued a formal ban of using foreign models and voice-over actors in Nigerian media.

For many years, advertisements often aired in Nigeria feature white actors and are narrated by those with a British accent.

However, with the new ban in place starting this October, the country is enforcing a new rule that bars white or non-Nigeria models and voice-over artists to be in advertisements as a way to foster local talent.

The move is a major step for the country that appears to want to take back the narrative of representation in the country’s native population.

In an interview with the Times, the president of the Association of Advertising Agencies of Nigeria, Steve Babaeko said, “10 to 20 years ago if you checked the commercials, I would say they were almost 50/50 in terms of foreign faces and all the voiceovers were British accents.” This was because most Nigerian brands were more inclined to use foreign faces.

With the new ban, many are seeing that the country is finally “catching up with national sentiment.” The new ban takes effect starting on October 1, in hopes that it will be the first step toward allowing African history and stories to be told by its people.

If companies choose to disobey the ban, they would be required to pay a tariff for every foreign model used in an advertisement.

Credit: hypebeast.com

Kenyan presidential poll winner promises to respect court ruling

0
Kenyan presidential poll winner promises to respect court ruling

William Ruto, who was declared winner of Kenya’s presidential election in August, says he will respect the Supreme Court’s decision expected Monday confirming or invalidating the results of the vote, disputed by his rival Raila Odinga.

Ruto, the outgoing vice president, was proclaimed the victor by the Independent Electoral Commission with about 233,000 votes (50.49 percent to 48.85 percent) ahead of Odinga, a veteran opposition figure backed this year by incumbent Uhuru Kenyatta and his Jubilee party.

But Odinga rejected the outcome of the 9 August vote and filed a petition at the top court alleging fraud in the vote tallying process.

He said the electoral commission’s servers had been hacked to enter falsified results and that about 140,000 votes had not been counted.

“Tomorrow, the Supreme Court will deliver its judgement on the presidential election petition.

Because we are a country that adheres to the law, we will equally respect the decision of the court,” said William Ruto after a Sunday service in the central city of Nakuru.

“That is how we will be able to have an all-inclusive country. There is no bigger or lesser Kenyans, all Kenyans are equal before the law.”

Credit: rfi

Pope Francis beatifies his predecessor John Paul I

0
Pope Francis leading a mass for the beatification of Pope John Paul I

Pope Francis has beatified John Paul I, the happy and humble pontiff known as “the smiling pope”, whose death after just 33 days as leader of the world’s Roman Catholics gave rise to decades of speculation and rumour.

At a ceremony in St Peter’s Square on Sunday, which marked the last formal step before canonisation, Francis praised John Paul I’s brief but cheerful papacy.

“With a smile, Pope John Paul managed to communicate the goodness of the Lord,” he said during mass.

“How beautiful is a church with a happy, serene and smiling face, that never closes doors, never hardens hearts, never complains or harbours resentment, does not grow angry or impatient, does not look dour or suffer nostalgia for the past.”

Born Albino Luciani on 17 October 1912, in the northern Italian town of Canale d’Agordo, John Paul I went on to become Patriarch of Venice, cardinal and then the head of the Roman Catholic church.

Credit: theguardian.com

Seven police officers killed in Colombia explosives attack

0
A police officer walks near the wreckage of a car bomb that exploded close to a police station in Colombia

At least seven police officers have been killed in an explosives attack in western Colombia, President Gustavo Petro has said, the deadliest attack on security forces since he took office promising to end the country’s nearly 60-year conflict.

 

Police sources said the officers were killed on Friday when the vehicle in which they were travelling was hit by explosives.

 

“I forcefully reject the attack with explosives in San Luis, Huila where eight police died. Solidarity with their families,” Petro said on Twitter on Friday, quoting a death toll of eight that was later revised.

 

“These acts are a clear sabotage to total peace. I have asked authorities to go to the area to take on the investigation.”

 

Petro, a former member of the M-19 rebel movement, has pledged to seek “total peace” by restarting talks with National Liberation Army (ELN) rebels, applying a 2016 peace accord to former Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) fighters who reject it, and negotiating the surrender of crime gangs in exchange for reduced sentences.

 

Credit: aljazeera.com

0
Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky

Russia wants to destroy the normal life of every European citizen, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has said.

“It is trying to attack with poverty and political chaos where it cannot yet attack with missiles,” Mr Zelensky said in his regular address on Saturday.

He was speaking hours after Russia said that its main gas pipeline to Europe would not reopen as planned.

Europe accused Russia of using its gas supplies to blackmail Europe amid the Ukraine conflict, which Moscow denies.

Energy prices have soared since Russia invaded Ukraine on 24 February and scarce supplies could push up costs even further.

There are growing fears families in the EU will be unable to afford the cost of heating this winter.

Governments across the continent are contemplating what measures to take to alleviate the crisis.

Germany – one of the countries worst affected by the Russian supply disruption – announced a €65bn (£56bn) package of help on Sunday.

Chancellor Olaf Scholz said Russia was no longer a reliable energy partner.

Credit: bbc.com

Hamas executes two ‘Israel collaborators’ in Gaza

0
Israel often targets sites in Gaza it says are used to launch rockets against Israeli cities

Two Palestinian men accused of collaborating with Israel have been executed in the Gaza Strip, the Hamas-run interior ministry says.

A statement did not name the men – it only gave their initials and age – but said they had given information that had led to the killing of Palestinians.

Three others were also executed – on charges of murder.

Human rights groups have previously condemned such executions by Hamas – the militant group which runs Gaza.

Since 2007 when they asserted control over Gaza, the Hamas-run authorities have carried out at least 27 executions, most recently in April 2017.

The two men accused of spying for Israel were arrested in 2009 and 2015 and “convicted by a court of treason and conspiring with foreign parties”, the interior ministry statement said.

Four were hanged and one was executed by firing squad because he was a policeman, it added.

Credit: bbc.com

Trump calls Biden “enemy of state” over FBI raid

0
Donald Trump

Donald Trump has called President Joe Biden an “enemy of the state” at his first rally since the FBI searched his Florida resort for sensitive files. Speaking to thousands of supporters in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, the ex-president accused Mr Biden of weaponising the FBI against him.

The raid was “one of the most shocking abuses of power by any administration in American history”, Mr Trump claimed. He was in the state to promote two Republican candidates.

Dr Mehmet Oz is running for the US Senate, and state Senator Doug Mastriano is in the race to become Pennsylvania’s next governor. Both spoke only briefly – as always, the rally on Saturday night was really about one person: the headliner.

Mr Trump, 76, spent the first part of his nearly two-hour speech criticising the FBI search early last month.

FBI agents conducting the search found dozens of empty folders marked as classified, and top secret files were recovered from his personal office.

Mr Trump, who is being investigated over his handling of classified records, denies wrongdoing.

Credit: bbc.com

Health benefits of Medicinal plant – Milk Bush

0
Milk bush

There are many plants around us, which are full of thorns. Do you know, such thorny plants would lighten your health! Yes, today we will be talking about a plant, which is recognised as the lucky plant for homes. It is called Milk bush or Sehund.

We generally use it as ornamental plant, and to ward off evil eye. We don’t know, but this very plant can do miracles for your health. Now, let us talk about this plant in detail.

Appearance of the plant:

It is a small, muscular plant which grows 6-20 ft tall. The stem and branches are thorny, with joints, round and with distinct five segments.

The thorns are small, occur in pairs near the leaves on thin vertical raised lines. The leaves are 6-12 inch long, muscular, oblong and are aggregated as a group at the tip of the stem.

The plant bears green flowers which are upward facing.

Where are these plants found?

The plant of Milk bush is planted around gardens demarketing boundaries. It is a very popular herb found all over India in dry lands.

Spiritual significance:

You will see many people hanging its branches at homes, or planting the herb in small pots. It is believed that this plant ward-off evil eyes and negativity from the place.

Scientific name– Euphorbia neriifolia

Properties of Milk bush:

It is purgative, strong and promotes digestion.

The nature of milk bush is hot, sour and heavy.

It is anti-toxic in nature and treats several disorders.

benefits of Milk bush plant:

Treatment for Eye pain

Mix the ash of sweet oil in its juice and let it dry.

Use the dried powder as eyeliner.

It cures eye pain.

Good for Psoriasis

Mix the juice of sehund with equal amount of mustard oil.

Cook it and apply on the skin.

It is very effective in different types of skin problems, especially the psoriasis.

Clears and melts moles

Apply its milk on the moles and boils which develop as hard eruptions on the skin.

It melts the moles and clears the skin.

Treats Ulcers

Grind its leaves, Indian beech and jasmine in cow’s urine.

Make a paste and apply this on boils and ulcers.

Aids in Intestinal worms

Grind its root with asafoetida to form a paste.

Apply this on the stomach.

It kills the intestinal worms in children.

Cures Toothache

Dip a piece of cotton in its milk and then burn it.

Place this burnt cotton in the mouth on the paining tooth.

It cures the toothache.

Aids in muscle swelling

Apply its milk on the affected area, where swelling is noticed.

It dissolves the swelling and stiffness.

Treatment for Ear pain

    Heat its juice and put 2 drops in paining ear.

It cures the pain effectively.

Eases Tooth extraction

Apply its milk on the loose tooth.

The tooth immediately gets loosened and can be easily extracted.

Be careful that the milk doesn’t spill on any other tooth.

Good for cough

Heat its 2 leaves on fire and then crush them.

Extract the juice of it.

Mix a little amount of salt to this juice and give this to the patient.

It treats cough effectively.

In this way we saw the numerous health benefits of sehund plant. This is really an effective and medicinal plant.

If you also are annoyed of any of the disease listed above, then must give this herb a try. Share your experience with us and share the post in all social medias. Take care and live well!

Source: www.theayurveda.org

Feature: A perpetual war for an impossible peace

0
Supporters of Iraqi Shia cleric Muqtada al-Sadr help injured protestors during clashes with anti-riot forces.

The scenes of violence and chaos at the heart of Iraq’s capital Baghdad earlier this week were terribly disturbing but hardly surprising.

Tensions have been building throughout this bruised nation over the past year; a formidable nation that has been deformed by war and violence over the past two decades and more, with no end in sight.

The immediate crisis began after the October legislative elections. Some of the Iran-backed parties blamed their losses on a “fraudulent election” engineered by “America and its clients”.

They tried to paralyse the government and parliament until their demands were met, but when the prime minister ordered security forces to break their siege of the Green Zone that hosts the government buildings, he was targeted by a drone attack in a failed assassination attempt. It backfired.

The decision of the country’s Supreme Court to certify the elections allowed their rival, the populist cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, whose party won the most seats, to build a broad coalition along with predominantly Sunni and Kurdish parties in order to form a majority government.

However, the constitution stipulates that the parliament must first elect the president, which requires two-thirds of members to be present, allowing the Iran-backed Coordination Framework to block government formation simply by absenting itself from parliamentary sessions.

After a months-long impasse, the impulsive and angry al-Sadr ordered all of his 73 members to quit in protest and called for the dissolution of parliament and the holding of new elections.

However, when the Iran-backed Shia coalition led by former Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki tried to name a new prime minister last month, al-Sadr’s supporters stormed parliament, leading to more violent confrontations.

The security forces intervened and al-Sadr doubled down on his earlier announcement of quitting politics, putting the country on the path to the unknown.

It may well get worse. In a leaked audio recording that sparked outrage in Iraq, al-Maliki, the leader of the Iran-backed Coordination Framework, warned that the country will descend into “devastating war” if the political project of Muqtada al-Sadr and his potential Kurdish and Sunni coalition partners is not defeated. Al-Maliki is supported by various militias that have reportedly been involved in acts of violence and political assassinations.

Those Iran-backed militias, known as Hashd al-Shaabi – “The Popular Mobilisation Forces” – were armed and financed by both Iraq and Iran to fight the so-called Islamic State (ISIL/ISIS). ISIL was destroyed after three years of fighting, but the war has left its ugly marks on Iraq, further bruising its society and devastating its attempts at recovery.

ISIL itself had come out of a decade of war and sectarian violence following the US invasion and occupation in 2003, which left the country in utter shambles.

The American failure has also enhanced the influence of Iran, its nemesis in Iraq. As the US rushed to exit the country after more than a decade of blunder, Iran doubled down, expanding its influence at the expense of Iraq’s stability and prosperity.

The last two decades of imperial, sectarian and civil wars were preceded by two other decades of regional war and violence.

It started with the horrific Iraq-Iran war in the 1980s, the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait and the US-led war to liberate it, followed by crippling sanctions throughout the 1990s.

This has systematically drained the country’s manpower and resources, ruined its economy, torn apart its society and sapped the spirit of its people.

It is tiring to merely list these long episodes of war and violence, so you can imagine how incredibly exhausting and dispiriting it must have been for generations of Iraqis to live and die through it.

It is as if Iraq and the rest of this ill-fated region are doomed to live in perpetual violence after a century of Western colonial, imperial and proxy wars. The region has not enjoyed a single year, a single day without conflict and violence ever since.

At the heart of the Iraq and Middle East tragedy is a simple but serious misunderstanding about war in the West and the East alike.

It is certainly easier to start a war than to end it, as the saying goes, but a conflict does not actually end when the fighting stops and smug leaders reach new accommodation.

The tragedy and the mindset of war live on in the broken and impoverished society left behind.

Fear and violence continue to occupy and harden peoples’ hearts and minds, bruising their spirits, deforming their values and skewing their loyalties.

In Iraq and much of the Middle East, this has meant people – especially the young – finding shelter in their clan, tribe, sect or faith; joining the local militia, gang or shady racket; basically, doing anything to overcome that dreadful feeling of constant fear and insecurity.

Soon enough, new and more violent faultlines are drawn, as societies flounder, and armed militias form political parties, paving the way to more vengeful conflict and violence. It is a perpetual war for an impossible peace, let alone a peace of mind.

These are the true “birth pangs of a new Middle East“, which US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice celebrated in 2006.

That was after the US global War on Terror and its invasion and occupation of Afghanistan and Iraq began to spill over to other parts of the Middle East, starting with Israel’s aggression first against Palestine and later against Lebanon. Gory and gruesome.

Indeed, Iraq and much of the region – including Syria, Yemen, Libya, Lebanon, Palestine, Afghanistan, Iran and Sudan – continue to suffer from a variety of wars driven and shaped mostly by violent Western cynicism and rogue Middle Eastern authoritarianism.

It is heart-wrenching to see Iraqis turn against each other again and again, as if politics is war by other means. It is not.

If anything, politics is and must be the antidote for war and violence in the region and beyond.

Source: www.aljazeera.com

The Ghanaian Chronicle