Author: Théophile Niyitegeka

  • The genes, neural circuits behind autism’s impaired sociability

    {Genetic ‘toggle switch’ reveals regulation of sociability in autism mouse model.}

    Researchers at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC) have gained new insight into the genetic and neuronal circuit mechanisms that may contribute to impaired sociability in some forms of Autism Spectrum Disorder. Led by Matthew P. Anderson, MD, PhD, Director of Neuropathology at BIDMC, the scientists determined how a gene linked to one common form of autism works in a specific population of brain cells to impair sociability. The research, published in the journal Nature, reveals the neurobiological control of sociability and could represent important first steps toward interventions for patients with autism.

    Anderson and colleagues focused on the gene UBE3A, multiple copies of which causes a form of autism in humans (called isodicentric chromosome 15q).Conversely, the lack of this same gene in humans leads to a developmental disorder called Angelman’s syndrome, characterized by increased sociability. In previous work, Anderson’s team demonstrated that mice engineered with extra copies of the UBE3A gene show impaired sociability, as well as heightened repetitive self-grooming and reduced vocalizations with other mice.

    “In this study, we wanted to determine where in the brain this social behavior deficit arises and where and how increases of the UBE3A gene repress it,” said Anderson, who is also an Associate Professor in the Program in Neuroscience at Harvard Medical School and Director of Autism BrainNET Boston Node. “We had tools in hand that we built ourselves. We not only introduced the gene into specific brain regions of the mouse, but we could also direct it to specific cell types to test which ones played a role in regulating sociability.”

    When Anderson and colleagues compared the brains of the mice engineered to model autism to those of normal — or wild type (WT) — mice, they observed that the increased UBE3A gene copies interacted with nearly 600 other genes.

    After analyzing and comparing protein interactions between the UBE3A regulated gene and genes altered in human autism, the researchers noticed that increased doses of UBE3A repressed Cerebellin genes.

    Cerebellin is a family of genes that physically interact with other autism genes to form glutamatergic synapses, the junctions where neurons communicate with each other via the neurotransmitter glutamate. The researchers chose to focus on one of them, Cerebellin 1 (CBLN1), as the potential mediator of UBE3A’s effects. When they deleted CBLN1 in glutamate neurons, they recreated the same impaired sociability produced by increased UBE3A.

    “Selecting Cerebellin 1 out of hundreds of other potential targets was something of a leap of faith,” Anderson said. “When we deleted the gene and were able to reconstitute the social deficits, that was the moment we realized we’d hit the right target. Cerebellin 1 was the gene repressed by UBE3A that seemed to mediate its effects.”

    In another series of experiments, Anderson and colleagues demonstrated an even more definitive link between UBE3A and CBLN1. Seizures are a common symptom among people with autism including this genetic form. Seizures themselves when sufficiently severe, also impaired sociability. Anderson’s team suspected this seizure-induced impairment of sociability was the result of repressing the Cerebellin genes. Indeed, the researchers found that deleting UBE3A, upstream from Cerebellin genes, prevented the seizure-induced social impairments and blocked seizures ability to repress CBLN1.

    “If you take away UBE3A, seizures can’t repress sociability or Cerebellin,” said Anderson. “The flip side is, if you have just a little extra UBE3A — as a subset of people with autism do — and you combine that with less severe seizures — you can get a full-blown loss of social interactions.”

    The researchers next conducted a variety of brain mapping experiments to locate where in the brain these crucial seizure-gene interactions take place.

    “We mapped this seat of sociability to a surprising location,” Anderson explained. Most scientists would have thought they take place in the cortex — the area of the brain where sensory processing and motor commands take place — but, in fact, these interactions take place in the brain stem, in the reward system.”

    Then the researchers used their engineered mouse model to confirm the precise location, the ventral tegmental area (VTA), part of the midbrain that plays a role in the reward system and addiction. Anderson and colleagues used chemogenetics — an approach that makes use of modified receptors introduced into neurons that responds to drugs, but not to naturally-occurring neurotransmitters — to switch this specific group of neurons on or off. Turning these neurons on could magnify sociability and rescue seizure and UBE3A-induced sociability deficits.

    “We were able to abolish sociability by inhibiting these neurons and we could magnify and prolong sociability by turning them on,” said Anderson. “So we have a toggle switch for sociability. It has a therapeutic flavor; someday, we might be able to translate this into a treatment that will helps patients.”

    New research reveals the neurobiological control of sociability and could represent important first steps toward interventions for patients with autism.

    Source:Science Daily

  • 2016 GDP up to Rwf 6,618 billion

    {Rwanda Gross Domestic Product (GDP) in 2016 reached Rwf6, 618 billion from Rwf5,956 billion in the previous year, a 5.9% growth.}

    Agriculture grew by 4%, industries by 7% and service sector grew by 6%.

    The Minister of Finance and Economic Planning, Amb. Claver Gatete said that the economic growth in 2016 surpassed previous years.

    He explained that the progress was close the target because the economy raised by 5.9% while the target was 6%.

    Gatete explained that hosting international meetings contributed a lot to the 2016 GDP especially hotels and restaurants.

    The Director of National Institute of Statistics of Rwanda,Yusuf Murangwa explained that agricultural growth was boosted by food crops in the first quarter at 5% though the latter declined in the second quarter growing by 1% due to drought and floods in some regions of the country.

    Made in Rwanda also contributed a lot because textile and leather industries grew by 10% ,food processing industries by 8% while construction materials including cement increased by 21%.

    Hotel and restaurants related services grew by 11% while transport related services rose by 8%.

    The Minister of Finance and Economic Planning, Amb. Claver Gatete said that the economic growth in 2016 surpassed previous years.
  • Governor Munyantwari urges Rusizi local leaders on strengthening security

    {The Governor of Western Province, Munyantwari Alphonse has requested leaders from various sectors of Rusizi district close to Burundi border to strengthen cooperation with residents to neutralize forces that are planning to destabilize the country. }

    He made the remarks on Monday in a meeting that followed Sunday morning incident where a 12-year old child and a security guard at Ryankana health center were shot dead by unidentified gunmen.

    The security meeting brought together village and cell leaders from sectors bordering with Burundi and their executive secretaries.

    Munyantwari reminded leaders to help citizens in maintaining security.

    “Security begins with understanding the value of the nation. When you have understood that your nation must not be invaded, that a citizen must face no security threat you have to collaborate with others to make it possible,” he said.

    Munyantwari said that crimes are changing with world’s new trends and urged citizens to embrace better security measures.

    A statement released by the Ministry of Defense on Monday explained that the unidentified gunmen fled to Burundi after killing two civilians in Rusizi.

    The Governor of Western Province, Munyantwari Alphonse
  • Rubavu school dormitory catches fire

    {A dormitory accommodating 20 senior six male students at Ecole Secondaire Baptiste de Fraternité (ESBF) in Gisenyi sector of Rubavu district has caught fire this morning destroying property worth millions. }

    No one died as the incident took place when students were in class.

    Destroyed materials include beds, mattresses, suitcases, bags, clothes, laptops among others whose value has not yet been established.

    Fire-fighting trucks at Gisenyi airport have intervened to put out the fire.

    Rwanda Energy Group (REG) employees at the scene have attributed the cause of fire to substandard equipment and poor electrical installation.

    The mayor of Rubavu district, Sinamenye Jeremie has asked students to share items with affected schoolmates.

    He also lauded security personnel and students for intervention to put out the fire.

    Students escaping the dormitory on fire.
  • Rwandan founded organization to raise $25 million in support of African women

    {Entreprenarium organization which recently launched the program dubbed “Men-Invest-In-Women” is set to collaborate with potential African business magnates to raise USD 25 million that will be invested in activities that enhance the progress of African women.}

    Under the initiative which started on Women Day on 8th March 2017, it is expected that 50 rich women on African continent will expand the program to more 500 to increase the capacity of African women.

    Entreprenarium organization was founded by a female Rwandan, Kristine Ngiriye operating in Rwanda, Senegal and Gabon. Her project executes various activities including offering trainings to women entrepreneurs and providing investment to start ups.

    The statement released by Entreprenarium reads that the program of MenInvestInWomen was initiated by 50 potential businessmen from Rwanda, Senegal, Mali, Ivory Coast, Gabon, Cameroun, Nigeria, Uganda, Kenya and South Africa to focus on two main activities including education and job creation.

    “These business people committed on one side to support educated girls but who didn’t get chance to take their studies higher to becoming good leaders playing their role in this continent’s transformations. On the other hand, they want to promote trade implicating women activities and contribution to the development of the continent,” reads the statement.

    70% of the fund is expected to support entrepreneurs’ projects and provide technical assistance in promising projects while 30% will be allocated to funding education in higher learning institutions and universities.

    Selected projects will come from various categories where 32% will be agriculture sector, 41% being technology, 20% will be service related projects and 7% related to environment.

    It has so far trained 1360 women entrepreneurs while over 100 have benefited from its program of providing investment for promising projects dubbed “Women Capital Raising” (WCR).

    Kristine Ngiriye, the founder of Entreprenarium organization
  • Cooperative mismanagement to be addressed in Nkumba retreat

    {The Minister of Trade, Industry and East African Affairs (MINEACOM), François Kanimba has urged leaders of cooperative to improve performance and deliver on their mandate towards members’ expectations. }

    Kanimba noted this yesterday as he launched a retreat for 455 cooperative leaders from across the country yesterday in Nkumba where he decried poor management urging them to address the challenge.

    “No excuse should be given for the persistent mismanagement of cooperatives.That is why we have launched education for cooperatives’ leaders. We want it extended to more cooperatives’ employees and members to have common understanding,” he said.

    The president of Rwanda Cooperative Association (RCA) Appollo Munanura said the civic education will acquaint them with advanced skills in cooperatives management and improve their cooperation at work.

    Rwanda has over 8000 cooperatives with 3,000,000 members.

    The capacity building sessions for cooperative leaders started on 13th March to be concluded on 21st March 2017 in Nkumba civic education training center.

    The Minister of Trade, Industry and East African Affairs (MINEACOM), François Kanimba
  • Rwanda’s Green Party mulls bank loan to fund presidential campaign

    {The Green Party is considering a bank loan to finance its presidential flag bearer in the August elections, reflecting the difficulties Rwandan political parties are facing with election financing.}

    Frank Habineza, the president and presumed presidential flag bearer of the Green Party said borrowing to support his campaign was one option that the party will discuss in the near future.

    The Green Party’s political bureau elected Mr Habineza as its presidential flagbearer last December, a decision the party’s assembly is expected to confirm before the end of this month.

    “We are still trying to see how much we are going to raise from our members, but if we don’t raise enough, we are considering a loan from a bank, though we are yet to discuss this as a party,” Mr Habineza said.

    Although the party has in the past had trouble with getting even a meeting venue, Mr Habineza said he did not expect any trouble in getting lenders to extend credit to the party.

    “Borrowing is a viable option for us because all that banks require of us is a register of our members and the contributions they make. We have more than 200,000 members so we can borrow the same way schools borrow against student enrolment,” he said.

    {{Three-week window}}

    Rwanda’s presidential campaigns have been squeezed into a tight three-week window starting July1 4, reflecting efforts to lighten the financial burden on the candidates.

    Even President Paul Kagame’s Rwanda Patriotic Front which is assumed to be well funded is understood to be planning to spend less compared with previous elections.

    The Green Party, which is the most vocal opposition party, says it has come up with a budget of Rwf1.6 billion ($2 million), but says that it is struggling to raise the money.

    “What we have managed to collect at the moment is laughable when you compare it to the budget we have. This will definitely affect our reach countrywide and sensitisation campaigns,” Mr Habineza said adding that, “The only thing we are fully guaranteed of is security during the campaigns offered by the police, but when it comes to money, it is a real struggle.”

    The Liberal Party’s Donatile Mukabalisa refused to discuss the party’s campaign budget while the Social Democratic Party President Vincent Biruta was not available for comment.

    However inside sources told The EastAfrican that even these parties were struggling to finance their candidates’ campaigns.

    “In the 2013 presidential campaigns, the Liberal Party got a bank loan to finance its campaigns, and to date are still struggling to repay that loan,” a source who preferred anonymity said.

    Frank Habineza, the president and presumed presidential flag bearer of the Green Party.

    Source:The East African

  • HWPL advocates for Peace, Cessation of War

    A total of 1800 stakeholders in governance, Peace Forum came together yesterday for the 1st Annual Commemoration of the DPCW in Seoul, South Korea organized by Heavenly Culture, World Peace, Restoration of Light (HWPL), an international peace organization under the UN Department of Public Information (DPI).

    In commemoration of the DPCW proclaimed on the same date in 2016, the forum reaffirmed the importance of global peace movement currently on progress under the Legislate Peace Campaign to establish the principle of international law for peace through the introduction of a UN resolution based on the DPCW.

    Chairman Man Hee Lee of HWPL emphasized that peacebuilding “is not an individual task”, but “is relevant to everyone” as a common purpose of the global community. He offered the role of religion as a bridgebuilder of peace rather than the core of conflict and violence by adding “our orientations must be one for peace. Whether religious secular world it is, there is no exception.”

    In the progress report, Dong Min Im, the secretary general of HWPL, explained the significance of peace projects in HWPL by saying, “The work is to put an end to war in our globe and make a foundation of a world of everlasting peace, which is unprecedented in history.” He continued, “The solution to peace is all of us becoming messengers of peace.”

    Bup Hye Kim, chairman of Buddhist Central Council for National Unification, offered a picture of concrete action plans of HWPL in achieving peace. “Youth and women are the main scapegoats in war, but even in this reality we must face the fact that youth and women are voluntarily standing at the forefront to build the foundation of peace with HWPL”, he said.

    The DPCW with its 10 articles and 38 clauses was drafted by HWPL and legal experts in international law. Based on the spirit of the Charter of the United Nations and Declaration of Human Rights, the DPCW advocates peace as a global order through respect on international law, ethnic/religious freedom, and spreading a culture of peace.

    Efforts of promoting peaceful coexistence with initiatives of HWPL contribute to conflict resolution to raise mutual understanding that can restrain hostility. Seminars and culture events at both local and national levels have been hosted by HWPL with the local community to overcome religious or ethnic boundaries. Areas of conflict where threats of life are persistent including Syria, Israel and Palestine are included to raise awareness for peace building.

    1800 Participants  came together in Seoul for Advocacy of International Law for Peace
    Mr. Lee giving a speech at 1st Annual Commemoration of the DPCW
  • Donald Trump’s 2005 tax return leaked to media

    {As US network obtains part of president’s tax filings, White House says Trump paid $38m in taxes on $150m of income.}

    US President Donald Trump paid $38m in taxes on more than $150m of income in 2005, the White House has said, acknowledging key details it previously refused to release.

    The revelation came as a response to an MSNBC report on Tuesday that the US broadcaster had obtained two pages of his returns.

    MSNBC host Rachel Maddow said she received the documents from investigative journalist David Cay Johnston, who said on her show that he received them in the mail.

    Speaking to Al Jazeera, Johnston said the $38m figure released by the White House included payroll taxes. When these are not taken into account, Trump’s total 2005 federal tax bill was $36.5m, the investigative journalist said.

    According to the leaked pages of the tax return, Trump and his wife Melania paid $5.3m in regular federal income tax, and an additional $31m in the alternative minimum tax (AMT) – which the president wants to eliminate.

    “If the alternative minimum tax had not been in effect in 2005, Trump would have paid only $5m of tax on $183m of income – that tax rate is less than the tax rate paid by the poorest half of Americans” Johnston said from New York.

    “Trump, this very wealthy man … wants a tax system where he would pay the same rate of tax as people who make less than $33,000 a year in America.”

    {{‘That makes me smart’}}

    The returns showed Trump paid an effective federal tax rate of 25 percent in 2005 after writing off $100m in losses.

    The White House said in a statement that Trump took into account “large scale depreciation for construction.”

    It said the former reality TV star, as head of the Trump Organization, had a responsibility “to pay no more tax than legally required”.

    Trump’s refusal to release his tax returns despite decades of precedent featured heavily in the 2016 presidential race. He said he could not release the filings as he was under audit.

    Democrats hinted that by not releasing the documents, Trump may be trying to hide that he pays little to no tax, makes less money than he claims, or gives a negligible amount to charity.

    In January, Trump adviser Kellyanne Conway said the White House would not release the documents.

    Trump said his taxes are not of interest to the general public.

    “You know, the only one that cares about my tax returns are the reporters,” he said during a news conference after his January 20 inauguration.

    Ahead of the November election, The New York Times published what it said were leaked tax filings from 1995 that revealed a deficit big enough for Trump not to pay federal income taxes for up to 18 years.

    In the first presidential debate, when Trump’s rival Hillary Clinton accused him of not having paid federal tax in years, he responded, “That makes me smart”.

    {{Questions remain}}

    Al Jazeera’s Shihab Rattansi, reporting from Washington, DC, said that what many will be interested in is not Trump’s 12-year-old tax return, but his potential conflicts of interest – specifically allegations that he has been receiving contributions from foreign governments that could influence policy.

    But “any money that he’s been making from foreign governments is unlikely to be in his personal income tax return, because he’s got so many different corporations, limited liability companies and so on,” Rattansi noted.

    He added that Tuesday’s revelations could actually play out in Trump’s favour.

    “The way MSNBC hyped it beforehand, and the skillful way the White House handled it, could bolster Trump’s base, who’ll say ‘look, it’s more fake news, there was nothing to see here’.

    “Incidentally, at least for a while, it took the focus away from the controversy over the plan to replace the Obamacare system that will leave millions of people without healthcare coverage.”

    The White House lashed out at MSNBC over the leaks.

    “You know you are desperate for ratings when you are willing to violate the law to push a story about two pages of tax returns from over a decade ago,” it said in a statement.

    During a presidential debate, Trump said not paying taxes made him 'smart'

    Source:Al Jazeera

  • Employers allowed to ban the hijab: EU court

    {Hijab targeted as court rules workplace bans on political and religious symbols are not discriminatory.}

    Employers are entitled to ban staff from wearing visible religious symbols, the European Union’s top law court ruled on Tuesday, a decision Muslims said was a direct attack on women wearing hijabs at work.

    The European Court of Justice (ECJ) said it does not constitute “direct discrimination” if a firm has an internal rule banning the wearing of “any political, philosophical or religious sign”.

    The court gave a judgment in the cases of two women, in France and Belgium, who were dismissed for refusing to remove hijabs, or the headscarf worn by many Muslim women who feel it is part of their religion.

    Critics called the ban a thinly veiled measure targeting Muslims.

    “A ban on religious and political symbols feels to me as a disguised ban on the hijab. I cannot think of another symbol that will affect hundreds of thousands of people in Europe ,” Warda el-Kaddouri told Al Jazeera from Brussels.

    “By stating that veiled women can simply take off their hijab, you imply that the empowerment of women to be in control of their own body and to make individual decisions is reserved for white women only.”

    Kim Lecoyer, president of Belgium-based Muslim Women Lawyers for Human Rights, told Al Jazeera the ruling legitimised discrimination on the grounds of religion.

    “The court could and should have seized the opportunity to put a halt to the multiple discriminations faced by Muslim women and protect their fundamental rights, but they chose not to,” said Lecoyer.

    {{Anti-Muslim nationalism}}

    The wearing of religious symbols, especially the hijab, has become a hot button issue with the rise of nationalist and sometimes overtly anti-Muslim parties across Europe.

    Some countries such as Austria are mulling a complete ban on the full-face veil in public, while in France last year local authorities barred women wearing the burkini, the full-body swimsuit, fining those who did.

    Manfred Weber, head of the centre-right European People’s Party, the biggest in the European Parliament, welcomed the ECJ’s ruling as a victory for European values.

    “Important ruling by the European Court of Justice: employers have the right to ban the Islamic veil at work. European values must apply in public life,” Weber said in a tweet.

    Al Jazeera’s Natacha Butler, reporting from Paris, said Tuesday’s ruling is complex.

    “The idea behind it is that companies have the freedom to choose whether or not they want to present a so-called neutral image and what they want to do to benefit their business.”

    Butler said the court ruled businesses should have the freedom to choose how they operate, and that included choosing whether people would be allowed to wear items such as hijabs or crosses on chains.

    “It’s going to be very complicated to rule on such cases within each country, because it will come under the jurisdiction of each separate nation in the EU, because there are so many shades of grey what constitutes discrimination against somebody’s religious freedom or not,” she said.

    The ECJ ruled on a case dating to 2003 when Samira Achbita, a Muslim, was employed as a receptionist by G4S security services in Belgium .

    At the time, the company had an “unwritten rule” that employees should not wear any political, religious or philosophical symbols at work, the ECJ said.

    In 2006, Achbita told G4S she wanted to wear a hijab but was told this would not be allowed. The company subsequently introduced a formal ban. Achbita was dismissed and she went to court claiming discrimination.

    The ECJ said European Union law does bar discrimination on religious grounds, but G4S’s actions were based on treating all employees the same, meaning no one person was singled out for application of the ban.

    “Accordingly, such an internal rule does not introduce a difference of treatment that is directly based on religion or belief,” it said.

    However, in a related case in France, the ECJ ruled a customer could not demand that a company employee not wear a hijab when conducting business with them on its behalf.

    Design engineer Asma Bougnaoui was employed full-time by Micropole, a private company, in 2008, having been told that wearing the hijab might cause problems with clients.

    After a customer complaint, Micropole asked Bougnaoui not to wear the hijab on the grounds that employees should be dressed neutrally.

    She was subsequently dismissed and went to court claiming discrimination.

    The ECJ said the case turned on whether there was an internal company rule in place applicable to all, as in the G4S instance, or whether the client’s demand meant Bougnaoui was treated differently.

    The ECJ concluded that Bougnaoui had indeed been treated differently and so the client’s demand that she not wear a hijab “cannot be considered a genuine and determining occupational requirement”.

    The ruling comes on the eve of a Dutch election in which Muslim immigration has been a key issue and a bellwether for attitudes towards migration and refugee policies across Europe.

    Source:Al Jazeera