Author: Théophile Niyitegeka

  • Population density pushes the ‘slow life’

    {Study takes aim at the psychological effects of population density and finds a ‘slow life strategy’ prevails.}

    Big cities with lots of people usually garner images of a fast paced life, where the hustle and bustle of the city is met, and at least tolerated, by those who live there. They live for the “rush” of city life, and all of the competition that lies therein.

    But a new study by Arizona State University shows the opposite may be true — that one psychological effect of population density is for those people to adopt a “slow life strategy.” This strategy focuses more on planning for the long-term future and includes tactics like preferring long-term romantic relationships, having fewer children and investing more in education.

    The study, “The crowded life is a slow life: Population density and life history strategy,” was published in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. Its findings provide novel insights into how population density affects human psychology, and has implications for thinking about population growth, environmental influences on social behavior, and human cultural diversity.

    “Our findings are contrary to the notion that crowded places are chaotic and socially problematic,” said Oliver Sng, who led the research while a doctoral student at ASU and who now is a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Michigan. “People who live in dense places seem to plan for the future more, prefer long-term romantic relationships, get married later in life, have fewer children and invest a lot in each child. They generally adopt an approach to life that values quality over quantity.”

    Sng, with ASU Foundation Professor Steven Neuberg and ASU psychology professors Douglas Kenrick and Michael Varnum, used data from nations around the world and the 50 U.S. states to show that population density naturally correlates with these slow life strategies. Then, in a series of experiments (e.g., in which people read about increasing crowdedness or heard sounds of a crowded environment), they found that perceptions of crowdedness cause people to delay gratification and prefer slower, more long-term, mating and parenting behaviors.

    Why? Using evolutionary life history theory, Neuberg notes that different strategies are useful in different kinds of environments.

    “In environments where population density is low, and there is thus relatively little competition for available resources, there are few costs but lots of advantages to adopting a ‘fast’ strategy,” he suggested. “On the other hand, when the environment gets crowded, individuals have to compete vigorously with others for the available resources and territory.”

    “To be successful in this competition, they need to invest more in building up their own abilities, which tends to delay having children,” he added. “Because this greater social competition also affects their kids, they tend to focus more of their time and energy on enhancing their abilities and competitiveness. So a slow strategy — in which one focuses more on the future and invests in quality over quantity — tends to enhance the reproductive success of individuals in high density environments.”

    Will higher densities always lead to this slow strategy? “Not at all,” said Sng. “In fact, when high densities are paired with unpredictable death or disease, the theory predicts that people will become more present-focused and opportunistic.”

    Sng added that the “slow life strategy, when brought to its extremes, also has its own pitfalls. Consider, for example, the pre-school craze in dense places like New York City, where parents are obsessed with getting their children into the best pre-schools. There are similar phenomenon emerging in dense countries like Japan and Singapore.”

    “With the world’s population growing,” Neuberg added, “it seems more important than ever to understand the psychological effects of overcrowding and how living in crowded environments might influence people’s behaviors. Applying a new perspective to an old question is allowing us to reexamine the effects of living in crowded environments.”

    Source:Science Daily

  • Transformation story of former deviant boys of Nyabugogo

    {They were once branded dangerous thieves, who used to suvirve through pick-pocketing and coning people, especially in awe hours.}

    Back in 2012, the Nyabugogo-Gatsata stretch was marked as one of the most insecure area in the city. Today’s story of the place is rather a reverse.

    The former street children, who had turned deviant, are the same that have since made Nyabugogo and Gatsata secure.

    “It was mainly through education and sensitizing them, as a national policy, rather than arrest and prosecution, although in other insistences arrest become part of the strategy but to a lesser extent,” says Assistant Commissioner of Police (ACP) Rogers Rutikanga, the central Regional Police Commander.

    Indeed, the “best approach” like has been in insistences of drug dealers and other street children, turned out fruitful as the former thieves came on board and today are one of the partners in crime prevention through their association – Hinduka Uhindure Abandi.

    Today, the umbrella loosely translated as “transform yourself and others,” has over 150 members.

    Besides their small income generating activities they since started, with the support of Gatsata Sector of Gasabo District, the group is now in crime prevention and working with security organs in community policing activities and sharing information with the police on wrongdoers and criminal activities.

    “I was a conman, who could use all tricks to successfully steal from people, and never slept in the same place. I was always moving thinking someone is going to arrest me, basically life was a risk,” said Pierrot Uwihaye who now heads an umbrella of the former group.

    In narrating a seemingly moving story of his life, Jean Damascene Niyonzima, another former member of the deviant group, keeps apologizing for the wrongs he may have committed in his thuggery life.

    “I could mount any truck, offload valuables as it moved and I made sure I disappeared before the driver or anyone could see me; I regret my actions, I could sleep in the wetland, there were diseases…,” says Niyonzima.

    “In 2014, local leaders together with the police called me and enlightened me on the dangers of what I was doing, and that was my turning point. That’s something that I will forever be grateful for because of the heart of humanity that I gained,” he adds.

    Jean Damascene Niyonzima and  Pierrot Uwihaye.

    Niyonzima was told to call his colleagues for a follow up meeting with local security personnel which he did.

    “The more I met and interacted with security personnel, the more I also interested most of my colleagues – a move that resulted into the formation of Hinduka Uhindure Abandi association,” Niyonzima narrates.

    He adds: “Since then, we committed to bring everyone on board and facilitate security organs in tracking criminals and recovering stolen items…remember, we used to be part of these crimes so we can easily know who did what and that’s how we partly give back to the people and our country,” he said.

    Today, the youthful group has made business project proposals and the authorities are helping them to secure funds. They believe their lives are slowly being transformed.

    “The national policy is to help the disadvantaged like these young people, who unfortunately find themselves in such bad things thinking that that’s where they will find survival; that’s why rehabilitation centres were established; that’s why vocational training centres like Iwawa, and the National Employment Programme, were developed,” says ACP Rutikanga.

    “They have become productive people both security and the country’s development under the new decent life.”

    Local authorities speak highly of these young men since they denounced their bad acts.

    According to the Executive Secretary of Nyamabuye Cell in Gatsata Sector, Jean Nepo Bizinde, a Gatsata Sector security meeting back in 2014 resolved to find a final solution get them off the street.

    “At first, we got 20 of them but the number kept on growing. Today they are the members of local nigh patrols (Irondo) and are active members of the society,” says Bizinde.

    Bizinde notes that it is the same process they are using together with Rwanda National Police and even those who reformed, to get the rest off the streets, show them the right way and a positive life.

    Nyabugogo bridge which was used as one of the ambushing and hide out areas for the former notorious group.

    Source:Police

  • Kigali to get new mayor

    {The National Electoral Commission (NEC) has announced that elections to replace the outgoing Kigali city mayor, Mukaruliza Monique will take place on Friday 17th February 2017.}

    Mukaruliza was appointed Rwanda’s ambassador to Zambia on 3rd February 2017 by the cabinet meeting chaired by President Paul Kagame after leading Kigali city for 341 days.

    “Elections to replace the mayor of Kigali City are due on 17th February 2017 at Rwanda Revenue Authority room at 10:00 hours in Kimihurura,” said NEC via twitter account.

    Mukaruliza once served as the minister for East African Affairs and the coordinator of Rwanda of Northern Corridor Projects.

    She was elected Kigali City mayor on 29th February 2016 with 182 votes out of 200 voters. She beat her rival Regine Mukeshimana who got only eight votes.

    Kigali city headquarters
  • This Valentine’s month, ISPA is providing free wireless Broad Band installation

    {ISPA, the best high speed internet service provider in Rwanda has started serving a Free Wireless Broad Band Internet installation as Valentine’s Day gift to its clients for the month of February 2017. }

    As Valentine’s is celebrated on 14th February each year where lovers offer special gifts including flowers, chocolates among others; ISPA has pledged to serve more connecting customers to the high speed internet network for free installation enabling them stay closer to their families and friends with reliable internet.

    Talking to IGIHE Robert Rugema Busulwa, Sales and Marketing Manager at ISPA Rwanda has said “We have been committed to facilitating all people enjoy this free installation cost and chat with their lovers during valentine’s month with ISPA’s fast, reliable and affordable internet.”

    “The deepest expression of love is more than candy, roses and cards,” he added.

    ISPA is a company providing IT solutions to challenges and customers’ needs including a 4G network, Fiber Optics which is available in all 30 districts of Rwanda.

    Since last year, ISPA has slashed internet prices by 30% to ease internet access for all Rwandans and the business community, time for Rwandans to enjoy ISPA’s fast, reliable and affordable internet connection

    ISPA headquarters at Gishushu.
  • Michael Flynn quits as national security adviser

    {Michael Flynn resigns after misleading officials about communications with Russia before new administration took office.}

    Michael Flynn has resigned as national security adviser over his contact with Russian officials before US President Donald Trump took office.

    His resignation on Tuesday followed reports a day earlier that the Department of Justice warned the Trump administration weeks ago that such communications could leave him in a compromised position.

    It is illegal for private citizens to conduct US diplomacy.

    “Unfortunately, because of the fast pace of events, I inadvertently briefed the Vice President-elect and others with incomplete information regarding my phone calls with the Russian ambassador,” Flynn wrote in his official resignation letter.

    “I am tendering my resignation, honoured to have served President Trump, who in just three weeks has reoriented American foreign policy in fundamental ways to restore America’s leadership position in the world,” he added.

    Retired General Keith Kellogg, who has been chief of staff of the White House National Security Council, was named the acting national security adviser while Trump determines who should fill the position.

    Discussing sanctions

    Flynn’s departure less than one month into the Trump administration marks an extraordinarily early shake-up in the president’s senior team of advisers.

    Flynn was a loyal Trump supporter throughout the campaign, but his ties to Russia caused concern among other senior aides.

    Flynn initially told Trump advisers that he did not discuss sanctions with Sergey Kislyak, Russia’s ambassador to the United States, during the transition.

    Vice President Mike Pence, apparently relying on information from Flynn, publicly vouched for the national security adviser.

    Flynn later told White House officials that he may have discussed sanctions with the ambassador.

    His conversations raise questions about Trump’s friendly posture towards Russia after US intelligence agencies concluded that Moscow hacked Democratic emails during the election.

    {{‘Looseness with the truth’}}

    A US official on Monday told The Associated Press that Flynn was in frequent contact with Kislyak on the day the Obama administration slapped sanctions on Russia for the election-related hacking, as well as at other times during the transition.

    Flynn’s discussions with the Russian also raised questions about whether he offered assurances about the incoming administration’s new approach.

    Such conversations would breach diplomatic protocol and possibly violate the Logan Act, a law aimed at keeping citizens from conducting diplomacy.

    Mark Jacobson, a Democratic adviser to former Secretary of Defense Ash Carter told Al Jazeera: “This is not about the conversations [Flynn] had with the Russian ambassador or other Russian diplomats. This was about the way he characterised it to the vice president, plain and simple.”

    “Charges have never been brought against anyone based on the Logan Act. I’m less concerned about that, I’m more concerned about the fact he may have lied to the vice president,” Jacobson added.

    “It’s more of the cover-up that gets you here. There’s been a lack of transparency, there has been a looseness with the truth at this White House.”

    {{‘Russophobia’}}

    A senior Russian MP said Flynn’s resignation suggested Trump had been backed into a corner or that his administration had been “infected” by anti-Russian feeling.

    “Either Trump has not gained the requisite independence and he is consequently being not unsuccessfully backed into a corner, or Russophobia has already infected the new administration also from top to bottom,” MP Konstantin Kosachev was cited as saying by the RIA Novosti news agency.

    Kosachev is head of the upper house of parliament’s international affairs committee.

    Moscow-based Dmiitry Babich, a reporter at the state-funded Sputnik International news agency, told Al Jazeera the news signalled “a dangerous return of McCarthyism to American politics”.

    “It’s obvious that the special services of the United States who eavesdropped on that conversation between Michael Flynn and the Russian ambassador, they leaked this information,” he said.

    “That was used to remove a person from office for a very strange reason. Isn’t it natural that the future head of national security should talk to an ambassador of a foreign nation, not a hostile nation, about the possible removal of sanctions?”

    Source:Al Jazeera

  • Syria rebels cast doubt on attending Kazakhstan talks

    {Accusing Russia of failing to implement ceasefire, rebels say they might attend talks only if progress is seen soon.}

    Syrian rebels have cast doubt on attending Russian-backed peace talks this week, accusing Moscow of failing to get Damascus to fully comply with a ceasefire or take tangible steps to fulfil their demands.

    A rebel official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said on Monday that at most a handful of rebels might attend, but only if progress was seen in the next two days.

    Russia had so far failed to yield any tangible steps towards full implementation of the ceasefire, humanitarian aid access, or a release of female detainees the rebels had demanded at the first meeting in the Kazakh capital Astana, he added.

    “It seems Russian pressure is of no benefit,” the official said.

    Kazakhstan said on Saturday it had invited the government and rebels for February 15-16 talks. They attended a similar indirect meeting in Astana last month aimed at shoring up a ceasefire brokered by Turkey and Russia, President Bashar al-Assad’s most powerful ally.

    “The opposition factions will not attend Astana because the Russian side did not abide by what they agreed to before, during and after Astana to uphold the ceasefire agreement,” Mohammad Al Aboud, a second senior rebel official said.

    Russia and Turkey, which backs the rebels, have sought to revive diplomacy towards ending the war since the Syrian government and its backers defeated the rebels in Aleppo in December, their biggest defeat of the conflict.

    A new round of UN-backed peace talks are due to begin in Geneva next week.

    The Syrian government said earlier on Monday it was ready to agree on prisoner swaps with rebel groups, which the opposition wants before any negotiations over Syria’s political future.

    Syrian state media cited an official source as saying the government was “always ready” to exchange prisoners in its jails for people “kidnapped by terrorist groups”.

    A rebel official dismissed the statement as a ruse, saying Damascus had far more detainees than the few the rebels held.

    {{Geneva Talks}}

    The United Nations special envoy for Syria, Staffan de Mistura, sent invitations on Monday for the Geneva talks beginning on February 23, after initial prior consultations beginning on or about February 20, his spokeswoman Yara Sharif said.

    The main Syrian opposition body on Sunday approved its delegation to next week’s Geneva talks.

    This month, in a rare move, the Syrian government and rebel groups swapped dozens of women prisoners and hostages, some of them with their children, in Hama province in northwestern Syria.

    Amnesty International said in a report this month that the government had executed up to 13,000 prisoners in mass hangings at a military jail near Damascus. The Syrian justice ministry called the report “devoid of truth”.

    Rebels say Russia has failed to yield any tangible steps towards implementation of the ceasefire, humanitarian aid access, or a release of female detainees the rebels demanded at the first Astana meeting

    Source:Al Jazeera

  • Pakistan: Deadly bomb blast rips through Lahore rally

    {Motorcycle bomber hits crowd during protest in eastern Pakistani city, in a deadly attack claimed by Jamaat-ul-Ahrar.}

    A powerful bomb blast on Monday ripped through a protest in the Pakistani city of Lahore, killing at least 13 people and wounding dozens, according to officials.

    The explosion went off in Lahore’s busy Mall Road during a rally attended by hundreds of pharmacists protesting against changes to a drug sale law outside the provincial assembly building.

    Jamaat-ul-Ahrar, a Pakistani Taliban-linked armed group, claimed responsibility for the attack, which also wounded at least 83 people, including media personnel covering the protest.

    A spokesman for the group warned in a statement that the blast was “just the start”.

    Witnesses told Al Jazeera that the blast occurred near the Punjab assembly building when a suicide bomber on a motorcycle rammed into a police vehicle.

    At least five police officers were killed in the attack, according to Mushtaq Sukhera, inspector general of police in Punjab province.

    “It was a suicide attack. The bomber exploded himself when successful negotiations were under way between police officials and the protesters,” Sukhera told reporters.

    {{Major Pakistan Attacks 2014-2017}}

    Al Jazeera’s Kamal Hyder, reporting from the blast site, said security forces had cordoned off the area on Mall Road, one of Lahore’s main arteries.

    “The explosion was heard for several kilometres. It was a very powerful explosive device,” Hyder said, adding that a state of emergency had been declared in the eastern city.

    “A number of people has been moved to hospitals, and the death toll is also mounting,” our correspondent said.

    Nawaz Sharif, Pakistan’s prime minister, condemned the attack and vowed to step up the fight against armed groups in the country.

    “Terrorism isn’t a novelty for us. Our story has been one of constant struggle against its grasp and a fight for the soul of Pakistan,” he said in a statement.

    “We have fought this fight against the terrorists among us, and will continue to fight it until we liberate our people of this cancer and avenge those who have laid down their lives for us.”

    Lahore was the site of an Easter Day bombing that killed more than 70 people in a public park last year.

    Jamaat-ul-Ahrar claimed responsibility for that attack, as well as for a bombing at a hospital in Quetta that killed 74 people in August last year.

    Security forces arrive at the blast scene in central Lahore

    Source:Al Jazeera

  • Dozens dead as Taiwan tour bus flips over near Taipei

    {Bus returning from a cherry blossom day trip overturns on an exit ramp in Taiwanese capital, leaving at least 32 dead.}

    At least 32 people have been killed and 12 wounded when a tour bus flipped over on a highway near Taiwan’s capital, Taipei, according to officials.

    Most of the passengers – senior citizens returning from a day trip to a popular cherry blossom viewing site – were trapped underneath the crushed vehicle on an exit ramp in the Nangang district of eastern Taipei, state media said on Monday.

    Rescue personnel used a crane to pry the vehicle open.

    “It happened on a curve, so the bus flipped and that could be due to excess speed,” said Tu Bing-cheng, a Taipei city official.

    “The whole frame of the bus changed shape, got crushed and left no openings.”

    The survivors, some of whom were seriously injured, were sent to hospitals nearby.

    Authorities are still trying to determine the exact cause of the accident. Investigators said driver fatigue could not be ruled out, the Apple Daily reported.

    A bus driver working for the travel agency that sold the tour told a local broadcaster that some colleagues had previously complained about the tiring assignment.

    A bus accident in Taiwan last July killed 26 tourists from mainland China, raising concern from officials in Beijing about travel safety.

    The bus passengers were returning from a trip to see cherry blossoms in central Taiwan

    Source:Al Jazeera

  • HRW: Syria carried out chemical attacks in Aleppo

    {Rights group accuses Syria of eight chemical attacks, killing at least nine people during offensive to retake key town.}

    Syrian government forces used chemical weapons in rebel-held areas of Aleppo during the final weeks of the battle to retake the key city, killing at least nine people and wounding hundreds more, according to Human Rights Watch (HRW).

    In a report on Monday, the US-based rights group said it had verified eight chemical attacks during the offensive from November 17 to December 13, adding that four children were among the victims.

    HRW said it had interviewed witnesses, collected photos and reviewed video footage to reach the conclusion that chlorine bombs were dropped from government helicopters during the operation.

    Around 200 people were wounded by the toxic gases used on opposition-controlled areas of the northern city, according to HRW.

    One of the deadliest bombings hit the neighbourhood of Sakhur on November 20, killing six members of the same family, including four children whose lifeless bodies were shown on a video taken by the Shabha press agency.

    ‘Coordinated attacks’

    Aleppo, once Syria’s bustling commercial hub, had been largely divided between a government-held west and a rebel-controlled east since 2012.

    Syrian forces, backed by Russia, launched an offensive in November to seize east Aleppo, a key battleground in Syria’s nearly six-year war.

    The government of Bashar al-Assad announced on December 22 that it had taken full control of the city.

    HRW said its report did not find proof of Russian involvement in the chemical attacks, but noted Moscow’s key role in helping the government to retake eastern Aleppo.

    READ MORE: Aleppo’s heritage sites ‘in danger’

    The HRW report detailed attacks on a playground, clinics, residential streets and houses that left scores of people struggling to breathe, vomiting and unconscious.

    The alleged attacks, which may have involved as many as three helicopters operating jointly, took place in areas where government forces were poised to advance, said the rights group.

    “The pattern of the chlorine attacks shows that they were coordinated with the overall military strategy for retaking Aleppo, not the work of a few rogue elements,” said Ole Solvang, HRW’s deputy emergencies director.

    ‘Industrial strength’

    Louis Charbonneau, the UN director at HRW, told Al Jazeera that the senior military officials who would have been overseeing the battle for Aleppo had to know chemical weapons were used.

    “This is industrial strength. People get a burning in their throats, their eyes tear up. Their lungs fill with fluid. Your body simply will not let you bring in air. You can actually see the yellow-green gas as it is moving through,” he said, explaining the effects of the gas.

    The actual number of chemical attacks could be higher, said the group, adding that journalists, medical personnel and other credible sources had reported at least 12 attacks in that period.

    Chlorine use as a weapon is banned under the Chemical Weapons Convention, which Syria joined in 2013 under pressure from Russia.

    The use of chlorine bombs as an indiscriminate weapon could amount to war crimes.

    HRW urged the UN Security Council to impose sanctions on senior leaders in the chain of Syrian command, but such a move would likely be vetoed by Russia.

    France and Britain are pushing the Security Council to ban the sale of helicopters to Syria and impose the first UN sanctions against Syrian military leaders and entities tied to chemical weapons development.

    A joint investigation by the UN and the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons found that several units of the Syrian army had used toxic weapons against three villages in northern Syria in 2014 and 2015.

    It was the first time an international probe blamed Assad’s forces after years of denial from his government in Damascus.

    The use of chlorine bombs as an indiscriminate weapon could amount to war crimes

    Source:Al Jazeera

  • Ebola ‘super-spreaders’ cause most cases

    {The majority of cases in the world’s largest outbreak of Ebola were caused by a tiny handful of patients, research suggests.}

    The analysis, published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, shows nearly two thirds of cases (61%) were caused by 3% of infected people.

    The young and old were more likely to have been “super-spreaders”.

    It is hoped understanding their role in spreading the infection will help contain the next outbreak.

    More than 28,600 people were infected with Ebola during the 2014-15 outbreak in west Africa and around 11,300 people died.

    {{How did it spread?}}

    The study looked at cases in and around the capital of Sierra Leone, Freetown.

    By looking at the pattern of where and when cases emerged, the researchers could tell how many people each infected person was passing the deadly virus onto.

    Prof Steven Riley, one of the researchers at Imperial College London, told the BBC News website: “Most cases had a relatively short infectious period and generated low numbers of secondary infections, whereas a small number had longer infectious periods and generated more infections.

    “The findings are likely an accurate description of what happened.”

    Children under 15-years-old and adults over 45 were more likely to be spreading the virus.
    “My feeling is this may be explained by human behaviour,” said Prof Riley.
    “It may not even be the cases, but the people around them.

    “I wonder whether it is to do with people coming to care for the young or old.”

    {{Infection hallmark}}

    Super-spreaders have been implicated in other outbreaks, including severe acute respiratory syndrome (Sars) and Middle East respiratory syndrome (Mers).

    They seem to be a hallmark of emerging infections that are jumping from animal to human hosts. The knowledge could help contain future outbreaks by targeting resources at the super-spreaders.

    Huge efforts went into contact-tracing during the Ebola outbreak, which could be focused on super-spreaders in the future. The study may also feed into plans to prepare a stockpile of Ebola vaccine.

    Prof Jonathan Ball, a virologist at the University of Nottingham, told the BBC: “The recent West African outbreak was on an unprecedented scale and many cases, especially those occurring out in the community, appear to have arisen from a surprisingly small number of infected individuals.

    “Knowing who is most likely to transmit the virus can help in focusing interventions designed to prevent virus spread, and the current study suggests that infected children and the elderly were more likely to pass their virus on.

    “Whether this was this due to biological or social factors is unclear, and these will be important questions to address if we are to understand how Ebola virus super-spread occurs.”

    The research was a collaboration between Princeton University, Oregon State University, the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, Imperial College London and the US National Institutes of Health.

    Source:BBC