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  • Traffic Cop Robot installed in Lubumbashi

    Traffic Cop Robot installed in Lubumbashi

    {{An “intelligent” traffic cop robot has been installed in the city of Lubumbashi in the Democratic Republic of Congo, it appears.}}

    Local residents seem enthusiastic about the robot, which replaces Lubumbashi’s traffic police and also has surveillance cameras to observe traffic offences, regional broadcaster Nyota says.

    It comes the year after two similar solar-powered robots were set up at intersections in the capital city Kinshasa, attracting attention at the time.

    However, there are some worries about whether the robots will be maintained properly, given that many of Lubumbashi’s traffic lights have fallen into disrepair, UN-sponsored Radio Okapi reports.

    The structure was developed by the organisation Women Technologies, which aims to encourage female engineers in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Head of the group, Therese Izay Kirongozi, now hopes other countries will follow suit.

    She would, for example, like to see these “robots Made in Congo” in New York. “That’s my dream. I dream big,” sherecently told Radio Okapi.

  • Are Sperm Counts Really Dropping Worldwide?

    Are Sperm Counts Really Dropping Worldwide?

    {{The shock conclusion of a study 20 years ago indicated that sperm counts had halved. But a closer look at the evidence then and now paints a much more complex story.}}

    Ask someone what they know about men’s sperm counts, and the chances are you will hear that they are dropping. People will probably have plenty of theories as to why this is happening – perhaps because of herbicides, pesticides, or oestrogens in the water from so many women being on the pill.

    Or there are theories based on lifestyle – for instance, men are taking less exercise, eating more fast food and getting fatter. Some even suggest that wearing tight pants can cause problems.

    But is it really true that sperm counts are in free-fall globally? To understand why this perception is so common, we have to go back to a paper published 20 years ago.

    Elisabeth Carlsen and her colleagues reviewed 61 studies of semen quality carried out between 1938 and 1990, and their conclusionspublished in the British Medical Journal in 1992 were shocking.

    In 50 years sperm counts had halved. The authors were open in saying that the data did not indicate whether or not the decline was continuing. But the mass of publicity their findings received left many with the idea that it had been proven beyond doubt – sperm counts are not only falling everywhere, but will continue to do so.

    {{Under scrutiny}}

    However, there are a number of issues with drawing conclusions about trends from these 61 original studies, and these are worth going through in some detail. Starting with the participants, studies of the sperm count of the average man are supposed to preclude men with fertility problems.

    But getting volunteers to provide semen samples is not easy, so some subjects might enrol in studies because they are concerned about their sperm count, yet fail to divulge this to the researchers.

    Different studies use different methods of ensuring that fertility is proven, but if some volunteers suspect they might have low sperm counts this could skew the sample, if you’ll forgive the pun.

    There are also other factors that vary from study to study, such as the length of time there has been between the provision of the tested sample and the previous ejaculation. Also, methods of analysing semen samples have changed between 1938 and 1990.

    The World Health Organisation (WHO) recommends using laboratory techniques that do not rely on an individual making a judgement, but this wasn’t the case for the earlier studies, making it hard to compare them with measurements taken 50 years later.

    And it is not just the practical techniques that have changed; statistical methods of analysing data have evolved too.

    When you look at the set of studies reviewed in the paper in more detail, it seems that although sperm counts do appear to have dropped in some places, they might have risen in others, even in different regions of the same country. In Paris, sperm counts appear to have declined, while they remained stable in another French city, Toulouse.

    Many of the original studies were too small to be considered as representative of a population. A re-analysis of the 20 largest studiesfound that the majority had been conducted before 1970 in New York, where sperm counts seemed particularly high.

    The later studies were from different places, which meant that sperm counts in one geographical location were compared with counts from somewhere different over a different period of time.

    Once these studies were removed, the picture looked a little different and sperm quality didn’t seem to be in decline. So perhaps the 1992 review was in fact highlighting differences between different regions, rather than differences over time.

    {{Incomplete picture}}

    Picking apart the studies in this review paper is one thing, but what does the research post-1992 tell us? The picture is mixed, with some studies still showing evidence for a decline in some places and others showing sperm counts have remained stable.

    To take two examples, a Finnish study published last year found that men born towards the end of the 1980s had lower sperm counts on average than those born at the beginning of the same decade. But Danish research that has been taking semen samples from young men about to begin military service has found no decline in sperm quality in 5,000 volunteers so far.

    Geographical location seems to make a difference, but the lack of studies conducted in low-income countries makes it difficult to establish a full picture. A paper published this year highlights the fact that even studies from middle-income countries have rarely included the poorest people.

    So, twenty years on from the BMJ paper we cannot say we have a complete picture about sperm counts globally. We can say that sperm counts are declining in some places, and this needs to taken seriously. But from the best evidence it seems this crisis is not happening everywhere.

    And without new and carefully controlled studies, we are likely to spend many more years in the dark over this issue. It is only by looking carefully at where counts are and are not falling, using the most accurate methods available, that we might find any clue to the cause.

    {wirestory}

  • Zimbabwean Man Pleades to be Hangman

    Zimbabwean Man Pleades to be Hangman

    {{A 27-year-old man in Zimbabwe has surprised the nation by pleading to be appointed as the official hangman or executioner for the country. }}

    Vumani Sibanda from Old Magwegwe claims he has a received a calling from God to apply for the job.

    He caused a stir, March 27, when he barged in a live court proceeding at the Western Commonage court, in the Southern Africa country, and pleaded with court officials to consider him for the position.

    He told the court, “I have been failing to sleep for the past week because of this calling.

    I feel it in my spirit that I should be the State hangman and execute people who bring suffering into our community.”

    When the obviously surprised court demanded why he wanted to take up such a mean job, he stated “Imagine the man who sodomised 10 pupils and was sentenced to 29 years in prison. He deserves to die because if he comes out of prison, he is going to commit the same crime”.

    I can kill a person as long as he deserves to die. My heart could be at peace if only I could be granted the job.”

    {myjoyonline}

  • Zuma Rejects EU-Africa Summit

    Zuma Rejects EU-Africa Summit

    {{South Africa’s President Jacob Zuma has joined President Mugabe in shunning the European Union-Africa Summit in Brussels, Belgium, over the contentious invitation list to the meeting.}}

    The African Union’s Peace and Security Council last Wednesday resolved that the continent should seriously consider putting the Summit on ice because of the EU’s disrespect for the continent.

    SABC News yesterday quoted President Zuma saying: “I think that time must pass wherein we are looked as subjects, we are told who must come, who must not come, we have not attempted to decide when we meet Europe; who must come and who must not come. It is wrong and causes this unnecessary unpleasantness.

    “I thought the AU and EU are equal organisations representing two continents but there is not a single one of them who must decide for others.”

    The South African broadcaster quoted political analyst Steven Friedman interpreting the situation thus: “The position of the African Union is that it should be up to the African Union rather than the European Union to decide which African leaders are accepted or not.

    “It seems SA is taking a stand to say you have no right to exclude particular African leaders.”

    Zimbabwe had already signalled it would not be part of a discredited EU-Africa Summit.

    Foreign Affairs Secretary Ambassador Joey Bimha said President Mugabe’s stand was consistent with his principled position on Africa being treated as an equal in the comity of nations.

    “President Mugabe will not be travelling to the Summit and there will be no Zimbabwean delegation at the summit. This means our seat will be empty.”

    The continent has agreed that it is not the duty of the EU bloc to choose the delegation of the member states.

    The 22nd Ordinary Session of the AU General Assembly in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, this year resolved that African leaders would not attend the Summit if President Mugabe – who was elected AU Deputy Chair at that meeting – was not invited.

    The EU handpicked who could and couldn’t attend the meeting, putting the lie to the bloc’s claims that it viewed Africa as an equal partner in global affairs.

    The EU, without giving an reason, did not invite Eritrea. It also did not send an invite to the Saharawi Arab Democratic Republic but extended a welcome to it’s coloniser, Morocco.

    {herald}

  • Gen. Bashir Pardons All Rebel Groups

    Gen. Bashir Pardons All Rebel Groups

    {{Sudan President Omar al-Bashir has declared a general pardon for all rebel movements operating in the country, including insurgents in the hard-hit Darfur, Blue Nile and South Kordofan states.}}

    At an address at the end of a regional conference for peace and reconciliation in the Chadian city of Um Jaras, President Bashir said the government would drop any charges but if the groups disarmed.

    They should also commit to the current faltering peace talks being mediated by the African Union, or any other mediators, he said.

    Mr Bashir said that the government was committed to ending the civil war in the country.

    “We are committed to achieving peace and stability to Darfur and other war regions in the country through peaceful means,” the President said.

    “But security and justice can’t be reality unless the rebel movements put down their weapons and come to work together to build the desired national reconciliation.”

    The second Um Jaras forum on peace and security in Darfur ended its sessions on Sunday and recommended disarming all rebel groups and militias saying that Sudan’s Armed Forces (SAF) must be the sole entity that has the right to bear arms.

    Participants at the forum declared their full support for peaceful co-existence among the tribes in Darfur.

    The meeting was also attended by traditional and tribal leaders from different tribes in Darfur, particularly the Rizeigat, Massalit, Ma’alia, Salamat and Ta’isha who have fought each other in different states.

    The leaders of these tribes handed over a written commitment to President Bashir pledging to not resort to arms and to resolve their differences peacefully.

    But the two main rebel groups did not take part despite assurances made by the government’s liaison committee that they would join the peace process.

    In January, President Bashir launched a nationwide reconciliation and dialogue initiative to resolve the Sudanese crises, even inviting opposition and armed groups to join the talks. (Read: Bashir dangles transitional government carrot)

    Opposition parties have so far boycotted the dialogue effort, demanding the government first stop the war in Darfur, Blue Nile and South Kordofan in addition to relaxing restrictions on the freedom of speech and political activities.

    NMG

  • Cameroon Minister Detained over Embezzlement

    Cameroon Minister Detained over Embezzlement

    {{Cameroon’s secondary education minister Louis Bapes Bapes was arrested and remanded in custody on suspected embezzlement of public funds, a court official and state radio in the central African nation said on Monday.}}

    Bapes Bapes is the first sitting minister to be arrested under President Paul Biya, 81, one of Africa’s longest serving heads of state. Biya, who came to power in 1982, launched “Operation Sparrow Hawk” in 2006 to combat corruption.

    The drive has seen several of his former aides, ministers and top government officials brought to court. Critics say the campaign has been used to target opponents.

    Bapes Bapes, who as education minister managed one of the largest ministerial budgets in the country, was taken to the Special Criminal Tribunal in the capital on Monday.

    “The judge notified him of his immediate remanding in custody at the Yaounde central prison for suspected embezzlement of public funds,” a court official told Reuters.

    Cameroon state radio CRTV, quoting a statement from the court, reported the arrest but did not indicate how much the minister was accused of embezzling.

    Biya created the Special Criminal Tribunal in 2012 to try officials suspected of embezzling sums equal or above 50 million CFA francs ($105,100)

    {reuters}

  • Giggs ‘Confident’ Ahead of Bayern Tie

    Giggs ‘Confident’ Ahead of Bayern Tie

    {{Manchester United are not “underdogs” for their Champions League quarter-final with holders Bayern Munich, according to player-coach Ryan Giggs.

    The 40-year-old also insists United can win the competition as they prepare for Tuesday’s first leg at Old Trafford.}}

    “Of course it is possible,” the midfielder said. “You need to play well, to get that little bit of luck.”

    Giggs acknowledged facing Bundesliga champions Bayern will be “tough”, but added: “We’re confident.”

    The Welshman added: “We are Manchester United, and at Old Trafford we have had so many great nights.”

    Giggs also used Monday’s news conference to reject any talk of a rift between him and manager David Moyes.

    “The relationship is good,” he said. “As a player you want to play all the time… but you are not sulking, you just have to be ready to play your best for the team.

    “There is no problem with the manager, I don’t know where that came from.”

    Bayern, who won a historic Treble last season, sealed this year’s Bundesliga title last week, with seven games remaining.

    United, meanwhile, are seventh in the Premier League, 10 points adrift of fourth place and Champions League qualification.

    Manager David Moyes has several selection concerns ahead of Tuesday’s game, most notably in defence, where midfielder Michael Carrick filled in at centre-back during the 4-1 victory over Aston Villa on Saturday.

    Left-back Patrice Evra is suspended while likely replacement Alexander Buttner is a doubt with a hamstring injury, as is right-back Rafael.

    Central defenders Rio Ferdinand, Jonny Evans and Chris Smalling, the latter of whom has also played at right-back this season, have only recently recovered from injuries.

    Striker Robin van Persie remains sidelined while January signing Juan Mata is cup-tied having played in the competition for Chelsea.

    “We have defensive issues undoubtedly, we will have to make one or two changes,” said Moyes. “We know that on our day we’re as good a side as any but we have to show it more often.”

    Moyes added he was looking forward to pitting his wits against Bayern manager Pep Guardiola.

    “It is the first time I have done, but I have no doubt I will be doing it many times in the future,” said the Scot.

    {BBCsports}

  • Japan to Relax Arms Export Ban

    Japan to Relax Arms Export Ban

    {{Japan is to ease its self-imposed arms export ban for the first time in almost 50 years.}}

    In the past all military sales have effectively been banned, although there has been technology transfer to the US.

    The new conditions would allow Japan to jointly develop arms with allies and give its defence industry access to new markets and technology.

    The move is likely to be viewed with suspicion in China, which has accused Japan of increasing militarism.

    Japan adopted a pacifist constitution after World War Two which prohibits going to war except in cases of self-defence.

    It has for decades observed the “three principles” of not exporting arms to countries that are communist, subject to UN arms embargos and involved or likely to be involved in international conflicts.

    These principles were adopted in 1967 and later evolved into a full self-imposed ban.

    But Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is keen to bolster national security and also normalise some of the restrictions Japan placed on itself after World War Two.

    BBC

  • CIA Accused of Misleading Public For Years

    CIA Accused of Misleading Public For Years

    {{The Central Intelligence Agency misled the U.S. government and public for years about aspects of its brutal interrogation program, concealing details about harsh treatment of detainees and other issues, according to a report in the Washington Post.}}

    U.S. officials who have seen a Senate Intelligence Committee report on the CIA interrogation program described damning new information about a network of secret detention facilities, also called “black sites”, the Washington Post said.

    The Intelligence Committee is responsible for oversight of the CIA. It completed the 6,300-page draft report on the interrogation program more than a year ago but it remains classified.

    At the “black sites”, prisoners were sometimes subjected to harsh interrogation techniques even when analysts were sure they had no more information to give, said the report, which the Post said was based on interviews with current and former U.S. officials.

    The files reviewed by committee investigators describe previously undisclosed cases of abuse, including the alleged repeated dunking of a terrorism suspect in tanks of ice water at a detention site in Afghanistan. The method bore similarities to waterboarding but never appeared on any Justice Department-approved list of techniques, the Washington Post said.

    Officials also said that millions of records show that the CIA’s ability to obtain the most valuable intelligence information, including tips that led to the locating and killing of Osama bin Laden in 2011, had little, if anything, to do with “enhanced interrogation techniques”, the newspaper said.

    A spokesman for the CIA said the agency had not yet seen a final version of the report and was not able to comment, the Washington Post said.

    Some current and former agency officials have privately described the study as marred by factual errors and misguided conclusions, the newspaper added.

    In March, Senator Dianne Feinstein, who chairs the Senate Intelligence Committee, accused the CIA of searching computers used by committee staffers compiling the report and she questioned whether the agency had broken the law in doing so.

    {wirestory}

  • Citigroup Uncoveres Rogue Trading in Mexico

    Citigroup Uncoveres Rogue Trading in Mexico

    {{Citigroup’s (C.N) Mexican subsidiary Banamex fired two bond traders after uncovering rogue trading last year, two sources close to the matter said, raising fresh questions over what controls the troubled unit had in place to police employees.}}

    Banamex suffered paper losses from unauthorized trading that ran into the millions or perhaps even tens of millions of dollars, the sources said.

    A spokeswoman for Citigroup confirmed the bank had fired two fixed income traders for violating its code of conduct and said in a written statement that the bank “escalated the issue to regulators and took immediate action against” the individuals. She did not elaborate.

    Mexico’s bank and securities regulator, the National Bank and Securities Commission, is aware of the matter, which was investigated internally by the bank, a spokesman for the regulator said.

    The trading loss, even if realized, would be small in the scheme of Citigroup’s $13.7 billion of earnings for 2013. The Mexican unit, which has in the past enjoyed a good deal of autonomy, has suffered much bigger losses from bad loans to homebuilders and oil services company Oceanografia.

    Some Citigroup officials are asking whether the U.S. Federal Reserve’s decision last week to veto its plan to boost dividends and buy back more shares was linked to its Mexico troubles.

    Citigroup has cut the compensation for Manuel Medina-Mora, who has run Banamex for many years and is also co-president of Citigroup – a role in which he oversees global consumer banking.

    Medina-Mora was paid $9.5 million in total compensation for 2013, according to a proxy statement filed by Citigroup on March 12. That was down from the $11 million he received for 2012.

    The filing said a factor in his pay was control issues at Banamex USA, a unit of Banamex, which the U.S. government has faulted for not doing enough to stop money laundering by customers. Citigroup last year consented to an order from the Federal Reserve to take corrective steps.

    Medina-Mora has declined to comment on the pay cut.

    The bank has also taken $40 million of pay back from Banamex employees’ bonus pool and said in a filing that it may cut pay for 2014 for senior executives at the bank.

    The Citigroup spokeswoman said Banamex was subject to the same oversight and controls required across the company. The bank was, however, working to “identify any areas where we need to strengthen our controls through stronger oversight or improved processes.”

    {reuters}