Author: IGIHE

  • Women reveal the horrors they endured as Shabaab sex slaves

    {When Salama Ali started investigating the disappearance of two younger brothers last year she made an awful discovery — not only were radicalised young Kenyan men leaving to join Al-Shabaab militants in neighbouring Somalia, but women were being seized and trafficked by the group as sex slaves.}

    Salama’s search for information about her brothers had to be carried out quietly and confidentially, as any hint of a connection with the Al-Qaeda-linked Al-Shabaab can arouse the suspicion of the security forces.

    So she met discreetly with other women in Mombasa and the surrounding area, sharing stories and seeking information about male relatives who had vanished.

    “We discovered there were lots of us,” Salama says.

    But Salama also uncovered something very different — stories of women who had been taken to Somalia against their will.

    {{Terrified to speak }}

    The women were both young and old, from Christian and Muslim communities, from Mombasa and other parts of Kenya’s coastal region. They were usually promised high-paid work in another town or abroad, and then kidnapped.

    Last September, Salama trained as a counsellor and set up a secret support group for returning women. Word spread and soon women began seeking her out and asking to join the group.

    Some arrived with babies, she says, some with HIV, and some with mental illness caused by their experiences. All are terrified to speak openly, because of the risk of being mistakenly identified as an Al-Shabaab sympathiser.

    Sarah, the wife of a former Al-Shabaab fighter, says there is an organised programme to breed the next generation of fighters.

    In a dark room with the curtains drawn, I meet this extraordinary group of women, who have a story that has never been told.

    {{Raped repeatedly }}

    “Men used to come and have sex with me – I can’t tell you the number,” says one, shaking her head as she recounts her ordeal. “For those three years, every man was coming to sleep with me.”

    “They’d bring two or three men for each woman every night,” says another. “We would be raped repeatedly.”

    Some women were forced to become the “wives” of Al-Shabaab militants, it appears, while others were held as slaves in a brothel.

    Al-Shabaab is fighting to create a fundamentalist Islamic state in Somalia and has launched attacks on neighbouring countries, which have all sent troops to fight them as part of an African Union force.

    {{Escaped captivity }}

    Kenya has borne the brunt of Al-Shabaab’s counter-attacks, and the Kenyan army is hunting fighters in the thick Boni Forest that straddles the border with Somalia.

    Flying over it, you can see lines cut through it — narrow pathways that militants apparently use for transport. The BBC has spoken to more than 20 women and all talk of being held in a thick forest or transported through it. This is most likely to be Boni.

    One new member of Salama’s group, Faith, has only recently escaped captivity.

    She was 16 when she was approached by an elderly couple and offered a job in Malindi, further up the coast. Desperate for work, the next day she boarded a bus with 14 other passengers and all were given drugged water to drink.

    People fear the government — those who went there willingly and unwillingly are both looked at as guilty.

    “When we regained consciousness, there were two men inside the room,” Faith says. “They blindfolded us with black scarves. They raped us in that room.”

    {{Giving birth }}

    Drugged again, Faith woke up in a small clearing in a dark forest and was told she would be killed if she tried to escape.

    Terrified, she spent the next three years alone cooking for a group of Somali men “with long long beards”.

    She had also become pregnant, as a result of being raped, and had to deliver her own child alone in the forest.

    “My grandmother was a traditional midwife, so I had a little bit of knowledge,” she says. “Everything I was doing in that forest was alone, so I just had to get out this baby alone.”

    Faith finally managed to escape with her daughter when a traditional healer foraging for medicinal roots in the forest came across her and showed her the way out.

    Her child, who grew up naked in the forest, now finds it hard to adapt to city life and struggles to fall asleep at night unless she is outside in her mother’s arms.

    She grew accustomed to “living like we were animals in the forest”, Faith says.

    A number of the women who spoke to the BBC had given birth in captivity.

    {{Dangerous }}

    Sarah, the wife of a former Al-Shabaab fighter, says this is no coincidence. There is an organised programme to breed the next generation of fighters, she says, as it’s hard to recruit people to live in camps in Somalia, and children are easy to indoctrinate.

    “In my camp, there [were] women who are sent to come and recruit other women,” Sarah says. “They want to multiply so they just want women to give birth.”

    Most of the 300 women in her camp were Kenyan, she says.

    Salama also provides support to those who have lost family members, including Elizabeth, who last saw her sister two years ago, before she left for what she thought was a job in Saudi Arabia.

    “She told us she was in a dangerous and bad place in Somalia, in an Al-Shabaab camp,” says Elizabeth. The line broke — and her sister has not been heard from since.

    {{Rehabilitation }}

    The government acknowledges there is a problem, but Evans Achoki, the county commissioner in Mombasa, says it’s hard to judge the scale of it, because the women won’t come forward.

    While there is an amnesty programme for fighters returning from Somalia, and some have been rehabilitated, there are also reports of men who have suddenly disappeared, or been shot dead.

    “People fear the government,” says Sureya Hersi of Sisters Without Borders, a network of Kenyan organisations working to counter radical extremism in Kenya’s coastal region.

    “Those who went there willingly and unwillingly are both looked at as guilty.”

    Former sex slaves seen from above.

    Source:BBC

  • Kenya:2 APs dead in new landmine attack in Liboi, Garissa

    {Two police officers died on Thursday morning after their vehicle ran over a landmine on the Malelei-Kulan road in Liboi, Garissa County.}

    Police sources told the Nation that two other officers in the vehicle were injured, one critically, and have been rushed to hospital.

    {{Restive }}

    North Eastern Regional Coordinator Mohamud Saleh told reporters by midday that officials were yet to get a full report on the attack.

    The deaths come barely a day after four Administration Police officers were killed in a similar attack near the Kulan Dam in Liboi.

    There was no immediate claim of responsibility, but Kenya’s eastern border with Somalia is notoriously restive and prone to attacks staged by Al-Qaeda-linked Shabaab militants.

    The attacks come days after police warned of increased terror activity in the area.

    Al-Shabaab militants “are dispatching operatives into parts of north eastern region to lay IEDs along routes used by our security patrols in efforts to frustrate our security operations at the border areas,” the police statement said.

    {{Warning }}

    Inspector-General of Police Joseph Boinnet warned that some members of the terrorist group had sneaked into the country and were planning attacks.

    In a statement, IGP Boinnet said the terror group was behind a series of attacks, including a recent attack in Mandera where a chief was killed.

    The IGP, however, said police were on high alert and asked the public to be vigilant and report suspicious people to the police.

    The Shabaab is fighting to overthrow the internationally backed government in Mogadishu but began attacking Kenya in 2011 after Nairobi ordered its troops into Somalia to fight the militants.

    The police vehicle that ran over a landmine in Liboi, Garissa County, on May 25, killing two officers.

    Source:Daily Nation

  • DRC ebola outbreak puts Health Department on high alert

    {Johannesburg – The South African Department of Health is on alert following the reported outbreak of the Ebola virus in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).}

    On May 12, the World Health Organisation (WHO) announced that nine suspected cases and three deaths of persons with Ebola virus disease (EVD) were reported from a remote forested area in the Likati Health Zone, Bas Uele Province in the north of the DRC, bordering Central African Republic.

    As of 20 May 2017, a total of 37 suspected EVD cases and four deaths have been reported, giving a case fatality rate of 11 percent.

    The reported cases are from five health areas, namely Nambwa (12 cases and three deaths), Muma (four cases and no deaths), Ngayi (16 cases and one death), Azande (three cases and no deaths), and Ngabatala (two cases and no deaths).

    No healthcare workers have been affected to date. The majority of the cases presented with fever, vomiting, bloody diarrhoea and other bleeding symptoms and signs.

    The outbreak currently remains confined to Likati Health Zone. The DRC Ministry of Health, the WHO, and various partners are working closely to control the outbreak through strengthened epidemiological surveillance, and implementation of a comprehensive logistics plan, including deployment of teams comprising experts in epidemiology, clinical management, social mobilisation and risk communication.

    This is the eighth EVD outbreak in the DRC since 1976. The last outbreak occurred in 2014, with 66 cases and 49 deaths.

    The DRC has successfully contained previous EVD outbreaks, and has capacity and resources to respond appropriately.

    There is a low risk of transmission to South Africa. However, the South African Emergency Departments and clinicians are advised to be on the alert for cases of fever and/or haemorrhagic symptoms amongst returning travellers from the area.

    It should be noted that malaria remains the commonest and most important cause of fever amongst persons returning from African destinations.

    South African Port Health authorities have been informed and continue to screen persons, who enter via airports, for fever.

    No travel restrictions are in place. Ebola virus is transmitted following direct contact with persons infected with the virus, through contaminated body fluids including blood, stool, urine, saliva and semen, or with an environment contaminated with body fluids.

    Symptoms develop 8-10 days after contact and include fever, weakness, myalgia, headache, sore throat, abdominal pain, rash and bleeding from mucous membranes.

    Treatment is supportive. Rapid implementation of infection control measures, as soon as the disease is suspected, is essential.

    Source:Iol http://www.iol.co.za/news/south-africa/drc-ebola-outbreak-puts-health-department-on-high-alert-9318148

  • How Burundi chaos is haunting Kenya’s trade ambitions

    {Kenya’s hopes of having neighbours sign the much-needed economic partnership agreement with the European Union now depend on how soon the bloc will lift sanctions on Burundi.}

    At a recent Heads of State Summit in Dar es Salaam, the East African Community resolved to hold any further discussions on the agreement only if Burundi’s situation is discussed in the same forum.

    {{Sanctions}}

    “The heads of state noted that the remaining partner states that have not signed the EU-EAC Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA) are not in a position to do so pending clarification of issues they have identified in the agreement,” says the communique issued after the leaders met in the Tanzanian port city.

    “The summit also agreed that the EU sanctions on Burundi should be discussed alongside the EPA discussions.”

    Kenya was represented by Deputy President William Ruto who used the forum to call for removal of the non-tariff barriers he argued were killing inter-community trade.

    Cabinet Secretaries Phyllis Kandie (East African Affairs), Aden Mohammed (Industrialisation), also attended.

    {{Trade pacts }}

    But the issue here was the delayed signing of EPAs.

    Burundi, a member of the East African Community should essentially have signed, alongside Kenya, Rwanda, Tanzania and Uganda, the Economic Partnership Agreement with the European Union.

    The Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA), is a set of trade pacts that allow African countries specific privileges to export to the European Union markets without being subjected to customs.

    They cover trade in goods and development cooperation and covers on agriculture, fisheries and economic and development cooperation.

    The EU was negotiating with a bloc and required all EAC members to sign.

    Only Kenya and Rwanda have signed as others claim the pact as it is may kill local industries.

    Yet Burundi is also on the EU’s sanction list for the violence that punctuated President Pierre Nkurunziza’ s third term bid in 2015.

    {{Violence }}

    In September 2015, the EU European Council imposed restrictive measures against Burundi, targeting four key leaders it argued fuelled the violence.

    These measures included a travel ban and asset freeze against those “whose activities were deemed to be undermining democracy or obstructing the search for a political solution to the crisis in Burundi.”

    “This approach also takes account of the obligations stemming from the Cotonou Agreement concerning respect for human rights, democratic values and the rule of law, and, in this context, of the possibility of starting the consultation procedures laid down in the Agreement, inter alia in Article 96,” the European Council said at the time, referring to the name of the initial agreement signed in the Benin capital in 2000 and which provides for EPAs.

    While the sanctions are to hold till end of October this year, EAC leaders now say Burundi’s isolation is another factor that should be dealt with first.

    Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni, who is the new chairman of the EAC Summit, was authorised to lead a delegation to Brussels to discuss the way forward, including discussing what these other countries disagree with.

    But there were still ultimatums.

    {{6 Months}}

    “In the event that an acceptable way forward is not reached with the EU within the next six months, the chairperson was authorised to explore the use of variable geometry in implementation of the EPA by EAC partner states working with the council of ministers,” the dispatch says.

    Variable geometry is a term used often within the European Union to describe a situation where irreconcilable differences exist among member states.

    In this case, the solution if often to allow groups of countries that agree with a certain goal to pursue it while allowing those opposed to it to hold back.

    The agreement provides duty- and quota-free access for Kenyan and EAC products to the EU market.

    It also creates new regional opportunities through more flexible rules of origin and accumulation framework.

    It guarantees that the EU will not apply export subsidies on products destined for the EAC market.

    {{Kenya }}

    But of the five, only Kenya requires to sign the agreement to enjoy these benefits as it is a developing country.

    The rest are considered Least Developed and already enjoy a set of benefits while exporting to the EU.

    Tanzania and Uganda have argued signing the EPA as it is would allow the region to be a dumping ground and kill of nascent industries.

    The leaders resolved that Kenya should not be “disadvantaged” for signing the EPAS ahead of the group, but offered little guarantee of that protection.

    A worker arranges roses for export to the European market. They form a part of Kenya's exports to the EU.

    Source:Daily Nation

  • Migrant crisis: Mediterranean rescue as 34 drown

    {At least 34 migrants, some of them young children, have drowned after falling into the sea off the Libyan coast, Italy’s coastguard says.}

    The overcrowded boat was carrying about 500 migrants when it suddenly listed, sending about 200 people into the water, a spokesman said.

    It triggered a frantic operation to search for survivors.

    The central Mediterranean route for illegal migration to Europe is currently the busiest.
    More than 50,000 migrants have reached Italy this year.

    The route is also the most deadly, accounting for the vast majority of the 1,364 people who the UN estimates have drowned in the Mediterranean this year.

    One report suggested a private humanitarian group, Moas, had begun lifting people from the crowded wooden boat about 30 nautical miles off Libya, when many fell into the water.

    It is thought they may have been knocked off balance by a wave.

    Chris Catrambone of Moas tweeted pictures from the scene and said bodies were still in the water – including those of toddlers.

    The Italian coastguard directed other boats to the scene – including Italian, British and Spanish navy vessels – while a helicopter and military aircraft dropped lifeboats, said AFP.

    Meanwhile, the Italian coastguard said operations in the area had rescued a total of 1,800 people from 10 separate vessels on Wednesday.

    Leaders of the world’s wealthiest nations, the G7, are meeting on the Italian island of Sicily on Friday and the deputy executive director of the UN’s children’s organisation Unicef urged them to address the continuing tragedy in the seas around them.

    “The tragedy of children dying in the Mediterranean is a wake-up call to leaders meeting in Sicily,” said Justin Forsyth.

    “These extremely vulnerable children need action now.”

    {{Libyan coastguard ‘violence’}}

    Good weather conditions off Libya have prompted an increase in the number of migrants leaving for Italy.

    The waters in the area are busy with boats from the Italian and Libyan coastguards, humanitarian vessels and even scavenger boats hoping to recover abandoned equipment.

    German NGO Jugend Rettet said on its Facebook page that on Tuesday a Libyan coastguard vessel had fired gunshots as it conducted a rescue.

    It said the boat was already carrying migrants, presumably picked up from other vessels, who had panicked and thrown themselves overboard only to be shot at themselves.

    “We can not say whether and how many dead there were in the shooting,” the 25-year-old captain, named only Jonas, was quoted as saying.

    “We had to be careful not to get a bullet ourselves. We are speechless against this crude violence.”

    It said two boats had then been towed illegally back to Libya where captured migrants can be housed in camps notorious for human right abuses.

    Earlier this year, human rights groups voiced concern after EU leaders agreed a deal with Libya’s UN-backed government to reinforce its coastguard and curb more attempted migrant crossings.

    Libya is a gateway to Europe for migrants from across sub-Saharan Africa and also from the Arabian peninsula, Egypt, Syria and Bangladesh. Many are fleeing war, poverty or persecution.

    The crossing from Libya to Italy is now one of the busiest used by illicit migrants - and one of the most deadly

    Source:BBC

  • Nigerian tutoring app Tuteria wins UK engineering award

    {A tutoring app developed by a 27-year-old Nigerian has won an engineering award given by the UK’s Royal Academy of Engineering.}

    Godwin Benson designed Tuteria, a platform that links qualified tutors to students in their area and within their budget.

    He developed the platform based on the experiences he had as a tutor.
    The engineering innovation award was launched in 2014 and rewards innovators in sub-Saharan Africa.

    Mr Benson beat 16 participants to clinch the £25,000 ($32,000) prize money.

    Other entries in the competition included a system that reduces the amount of energy used to heat water, an app that controls water consumption and a smart jacket to identity pneumonia.

    The group received coaching on preparing business plans and communication ahead of their final presentation on Tuesday in front of a live audience in Kenya’s capital, Nairobi.

    The head judge of the competition Malcolm Brinded said that Tuteria could change the lives of people eager to learn: “We’re proud to have him as our third Africa Prize winner, and we trust Tuteria will go on to change the lives of millions of people who are eager to learn and develop new skills.”

    Mr Benson told the BBC Focus on Africa radio programme that he always knew he had a great project

    “It is something that solves the problem of access to quality, personalised learning and helps people earn income from sharing their knowledge,” he said.

    The app has a ratings system, and allows students to book lessons using an upfront online payment system.

    Tutors are then paid once the lessons have been confirmed, and Tuteria takes 15 to 30% commission for each paid lesson.

    Tutors cover a range of academic subjects.

    Mr Benson plans to use the prize money to widen Tuteria’s offering “even beyond Nigeria.” And to include online classes and video courses as well.

    Godwin Benson developed the platform based on the experiences he had as a young tutor.

    Source:BBC

  • Agriculture Transformation on agenda as AfDB annual meeting kicks off in India

    {The 52nd Annual Meeting of the Board of Governors of the African Development Bank (AfDB) opened in Ahmedabad, India, with calls for greater cooperation between the Bank and India to spur Africa’s transformation.}

    Held under the theme “Transforming Agriculture for Wealth creation in Africa,” the annual meeting will underscore the importance of agriculture for Africa’s transformation and hopes to encourage the youth to engage in agriculture as a business for real transformation to take place.

    “To develop with pride, Africa must feed itself,” Akinwumi Adesina, the President of the African Development Bank Group said. He pointed out that the continent’s food imports bill would nearly triple to reach US $110 billion per year by 2025 and disrupt the continent’s macroeconomic and fiscal stability.

    “Investing in agriculture will enable African economies to grow by 10-20%,” he said adding that,“It would reduce the one million migrants who travelled from Africa to Europe in 2016 alone, and avoid the loss of over 5,000 young lives, whose future now lies buried at the bottom of the Mediterranean Sea.”

    The Minister of finance and Economic Planning Claver Gatete called for partnerships and innovation in Agriculture for the sector to meet expectations.

    “Agriculture sector employs a big number of the African people. Public and private investments can unlock potential in the agriculture sector and speed up poverty reduction. In Rwanda Agriculture contributes to more than 30% of our GDP,” Minister Gatete told participants.

    Agriculture is the economic mainstay of the majority of households and is a significant contributor to the Rwanda’s economy. In 2015, the agriculture sector accounted for approximately 33% of the GDP, employed nearly 70% of the Rwandan labor force, generated 60% of the foreign exchange, provided 75% of raw materials for industry, and provided about 45% of total Government revenue.

    The AfDB President believes agriculture, which is critical to the economic stability of African countries because high food prices and cost of imports affect the stability of local currencies, is now receiving better attention from Ministries of Finance and Governors of the Central Banks.

    The African Development Bank (AfDB) has provided a roadmap to the growth of agriculture in African countries with a plan to inject about US $2.4 billion every year for 10 years to build roads, irrigation infrastructure and storage facilities within Africa to attract high-value investors.

    Participants of the 52nd Annual Meeting of the Board of Governors of the African Development Bank (AfDB).
  • BK nets Rwf 5.6 billion in 2017 first quarter

    {Bank of Kigali earned Rwf 5.6 billion net profit in the first quarter of 2017 a 5.8% growth of similar period last year.}

    The bank’s total assets grew to Rwf 661.6 billion.

    The Chief Finance Officer at BK, Nathalie Mpaka has told the media that BK made a good progress in the past few months.

    Clients’ deposits increased by 3.5% rising from Rwf 419 billion to Rwf 433.7 billion. Offered loans increased by 10.4% compared to similar period last year rising from Rwf 385.8 billion to Rwf 426.1billion.

    The CEO of BK, Dr Diane Karusisi told the media that they want to increase loans to spur development.

    “We currently have Made in Rwanda in our country, a program aimed at promoting manufacturing and buying local products. We are analyzing such good projects to provide funding. It is something interesting for us,” she said.

    “We will be supporting Rwanda’s economy while expanding our activities. We are looking for good projects in which to invest because it is important to the economy, job creation and expanding trade,” she added.

    BK recently announced 50 projects among which the most outstanding ones will receive a loan of Rwf 60 million at zero interest rate.

    By 31stMarch 2017, BK had 241,300 retail customers and 25,100 corporate customers, 1321 agents, 79 branches, 93 ATM and 1038 Point of Sales (POS).

    The Chief Finance Officer at BK, Nathalie Mpaka has told the media that BK made a good progress in the past few months.
    The CEO of BK, Dr Diane Karusisi told the media that they want to increase loans to spur development.
  • TVET gets Rwf 68 billion India boost

    {The government of Rwanda and India Export Import Bank yesterday signed a financing agreement worth $ 81 Million (Approximately Rwf 68 Billion) to support the establishment of integrated Technical Vocational Educational and Training (TVET) system through construction of modern training and production workshops including equipment for ten new vocational training centers and four business incubation centers.}

    The financing agreement signed on the sidelines on the ongoing Africa Development Bank Annual Meetings in India will scale-up and support ongoing government efforts to improve quality of technical education and enhancing existing capabilities of institutions to become dynamic, demand-driven, quality conscious, efficient, forward looking and responsive to rapid economic and technological developments.

    Minister of finance and economic planning Claver Gatete said that technical skills have a crucial role in attaining increased output, reducing unemployment, poverty and enhancing social development in Rwanda.

    “Rwanda’s industrial base is growing but it does not match skills available in the country. It is important that we address the skills gap to ensure that the economy continues to grow and remain competitive,” Minister Gatete said.

    Recent skills audit conducted indicatedthat there are significant technical and vocational skills deficiencies to meet the current labor market demand. Filling these skill gaps in the economy will be crucial to the realization of Vision 2020 and EDPRS2.

    In order to address this government set a national target of creating 200 thousands off-farms new jobs on annually.

    Signed financing agreement worth $ 81 Million will support the establishment of integrated Technical Vocational Educational and Training (TVET)
  • Health benefits of moderate drinking may be overstated, study finds

    {The benefits of light alcohol consumption, as well as the risks associated with not drinking at all, might not be as great as previously thought, according to Penn State researchers who examined the drinking habits of middle-aged adults.}

    The researchers analyzed information about more than 9,000 people across England, Scotland and Wales born in 1958 who are participating in the longitudinal National Child Development Study. The study, based at the University College London Centre for Longitudinal Studies, tracked changes in people’s drinking and cigarette smoking habits from age 23 to 55, and linked these changes to mental and physical health.

    About one third of men and women who reported drinking at the light-to-moderate level were very unlikely to smoke. While this group of light drinkers and non-smokers enjoyed the best health and quality of life in middle age, three other groups experienced more health problems. These groups were those who drank lightly to moderately but also smoked; those who both drank more heavily and smoked; and those who refrained from drinking alcohol or reduced their drinking over time.

    Light-to-moderate drinkers were defined as adults who consumed no more than 14 units of alcohol, which is equivalent to roughly six pints of beer or six medium-sized glasses of wine, per week. This is the current maximum recommended for men and women by the United Kingdom’s Department of Health, according to Jeremy Staff, professor of criminology and sociology at Penn State and the study’s lead author.

    While the supposed benefits of moderate drinking have been widely reported in the media, many reports have failed to take into account other risk factors. For example, light-to-moderate drinkers suffered poor health in midlife if they were former smokers or still had the occasional cigarette. This may be due to a direct effect of smoking or because of other lifestyle-related risks, such as lack of exercise or obesity. Many midlife abstainers also began their adult life in poorer physical or mental health than peers who had completely abstained from alcohol.

    “Alcohol abstainers are a diverse group. They include former heavy drinkers who quit due to problems with alcohol, as well as those who quit drinking due to poor health, and not just lifetime abstainers,” said Staff. “Medical professionals and public health officials should be wary of drawing conclusions about the so-called ‘dangers’ of never drinking without more robust evidence.”

    About 1-in-5 members of 55-year-olds who said they had never drunk alcohol in their lives had previously reported drinking when they were younger. This suggests that those who drink very little may tend to misremember or under-report previous drinking habits. When studies include this group as lifetime abstainers, apparent ‘harms’ of abstaining may be overestimated, said the researchers.

    While modest drinking habits also have been linked with higher levels of education, those with few or no educational qualifications were also among those who did not drink or drank modestly. On the other hand, men and women with the highest educational qualifications at age 23 were more likely than their peers to drink at light-to-moderate rates throughout their adult lives, and were unlikely to smoke.

    Jennifer Maggs, professor of human development and family studies at Penn State and another of the study’s authors, added, “Evidence continues to grow that alcohol has many health risks, including for cancer. Therefore, it is dangerous to report only benefits of moderate alcohol consumption. Drinking habits are also shaped by our education, health earlier in life, and related lifestyle factors including smoking. These other influences may be the real factors underlying the connection between drinking and midlife health.”

    According to Sir Ian Gilmore, Chair of the Alcohol Health Alliance in the UK, “This study provides yet more evidence that any benefits associated with drinking alcohol are smaller than previously thought. The most effective ways to reduce harms associated with alcohol consumption are to introduce pricing measures linked to alcohol sales, and enable more informed choices through public education efforts and mandatory labeling of alcohol products.”

    While the supposed benefits of moderate drinking have been widely reported in the media, many reports have failed to take into account other risk factors.

    Source:Science Daily