Author: Publisher

  • Mexico Telecoms Bill Has Powers to Tame Slim, Televisa

    Mexico Telecoms Bill Has Powers to Tame Slim, Televisa

    Mexico’s government on Monday proposed giving a new regulator wide-reaching powers to police the operations of dominant telecommunications companies and TV broadcasters, right down to their prices and discounts.

    The bill sent to Congress fleshes out a constitutional reform approved last year that seeks to curb the power of phone mogul Carlos Slim and the country’s top broadcaster, Televisa.

    The regulator, the Federal Telecommunications Institute (IFT), will have sweeping powers to order companies to sell assets, revoke concessions and share networks and infrastructure, according to the bill sent to the Senate.

    Mexico’s two main opposition parties, however, said in a joint statement later on Monday that the proposal would curtail the power of the IFT and instead empower the executive branch for “political purposes.”

    The statement was signed by the conservative National Action Party and the leftist Democratic Revolution Party, rivals of the ruling Institutional Revolutionary Party.

    Under the proposal, the IFT will have the power to levy fines of up to 10 percent of revenue in Mexico in the case of a repeat offense. It will also be able to force companies to seek approval annually for interconnection and infrastructure-sharing terms, in line with a draft obtained by Reuters last month.

    Major market players such as billionaire Slim’s phone and Internet giant America Movil, his fixed-line operator Telmex and TV broadcaster Televisa have been declared dominant by the regulator.

    “The most important part of this is more competition,” communications and transport secretary Gerardo Ruiz Esparza told local radio. “What the (bill) says is that for there to be more competition, we need to ensure there is no dominance in the market.”

    The telecoms overhaul, a central plank of a wider raft of economic measures ranging from taxes to energy that Pena Nieto pushed through Congress last year, has raised hope the government is serious about finally breaking the stranglehold of a select few over Latin America’s second-biggest economy.

    Slim, who became one of the world’s richest men after taking control of Mexico’s former state telephone monopoly at the outset of the 1990s, controls around 80 percent of Mexico’s fixed-line business and about 70 percent of the mobile sector.

    Televisa has more than 60 percent of the TV market, and many Mexicans complain it exerts too much political influence.

    Mexico’s radio and television industry group said in a memo to members that some aspects of the bill imply “new and severe” regulatory burdens for the broadcast sector, according to a preliminary review.

    It said some measures translated into over-regulation and could be subjective and editorial independence could be compromised by the imposition of a code of ethics. It also cited unduly harsh fines and legal uncertainty regarding concession extensions.

    {Reuters}

  • India Averts Major Terror Attack

    India Averts Major Terror Attack

    {{Media in India are giving prominent coverage to the arrest of four suspected militants ahead of the general elections.}}

    Senior police officers say they have averted “a spectacular terror strike” by arresting four alleged members of the banned Indian Mujahideen (IM) group.

    Polling for a new Lok Sabha, or lower house of India’s parliament, will be held from 7 April to 12 May. Votes will be counted on 16 May.

    “We have arrested Zia-ur-Rahman alias Waqas, a Pakistani national, Sunday. He, along with his accomplices, was planning a major attack in the country,” a report in the Business Standard quotes SN Srivastava, a top police official in Delhi, as saying.

    India’s intelligence agencies and police blame the IM for several terror attacks in the past few years.

    The police arrested Waqas and three other IM members from the northern state of Rajasthan after an intelligence-sharing operation between different police forces, the Hindustan Times reports.

    Waqas is wanted in connection with bomb blasts in Mumbai, Pune and Hyderabad over the past several years. He is reportedly a bomb expert, reports say.

    Home Minister Sushilkumar Shinde said the arrest of Waqas was a great success, as he was a crucial link to the group, Reuters news agency reports.

    His arrest is the second major setback for the IM as its founder, Yasin Bhatkal, was arrested in Nepal last year, papers say.

    Meanwhile, tourists travelling in groups will now be able to book an entire coach in the Delhi metro to see the city, the Hindustan Times reports.

    “The Delhi Metro Rail Corporation has decided to allow tour operators, government and private agencies, or any individual on behalf of a group or school to avail the facility,” the paper says.

    Booking a coach may cost anywhere between 30,000-50,000 rupees (£300-500, $490-820), the paper adds.

    In other news, a 24-year-old woman’s breasts were allegedly cut off by another woman and two male accomplices in Bhiwandi on the outskirts of Mumbai, The Deccan Chronicle reports.

    The victim was attacked after she refused to work as a sex worker in a brothel run by the 34-year-old woman, the paper adds.

    Police say the woman has been arrested but the male suspects are still at large, the paper reports.

    agencies

  • Russia Fears Investors Could Shipout $70bn

    Russia Fears Investors Could Shipout $70bn

    {{Russia expects investors to move up to $70bn (£42bn) of assets out of the country in the first three months of this year.}}

    The sign that investors are becoming nervous about Russia comes amid sanctions and tensions over Ukraine.

    Speaking to reporters on Monday, Andrei Klepach, Russia’s deputy economy minister, also warned of stagnant growth and rising inflation.

    He expects growth in the first quarter to be “around zero”.

    The Russian economy grew by just 1.3% last year, but Mr Klepach said it was “too soon” to talk about “a recovery from stagnation”.

    “There won’t be a recession, but there is a problem of stagnation: it’s length and depth,” Mr Klepach said.

    “Unfortunately the investment slump is continuing. I’m not ready to say how long it will continue.”

    The Russian economy ministry forecasts suggest $65-70bn of assets would be taken out of Russia this quarter, but Mr Klepach said the figure was likely to be closer to $70bn.

    That would mark a significant rise on 2013, when capital outflows for the entire year totalled $63bn.

    Mr Klepach said sanctions imposed by the US and EU in the wake of the Ukraine crisis had yet to have a significant impact, but said “worsening of relations is a significantly negative factor for economic growth and correspondingly influences the capital outflow.”

    BBC

  • Nairobi Sex Workers Drop Mini Skirts for Hijab

    Nairobi Sex Workers Drop Mini Skirts for Hijab

    {{Commercial sex workers in some parts of Nairobi have ditched the miniskirt for the Hijab to lure men, a move that has sparked condemnation from Muslim clerics}}.

    The Hijab — worn by Muslim women — is a symbol of piety but sex workers in Eastleigh use it to make men believe that the women they are picking up are either Muslim or from the Coast. Some men also associate it with Ethiopian and Eritrean women.

    Investigations by the Nation revealed that non-Muslim sex workers are wearing the veil to attract men who believe they are less promiscuous than those who put on miniskirts.

    Nairobi’s Jamia Mosque Imam, Mohamed Swalihu, said he was aware that the Hijab was being abused.

    “It is sad and incredible; but it is unfortunately true,” he said. “It is very unfortunate that we see Hijabs being misused by commercial sex workers who are non-Muslims. It is satanic and should be condemned in the strongest terms possible.”

    He said even men had started using the Hijab for criminal activities.
    He said it was sad for Muslim women to enter into prostitution which is contrary to every teaching in Islam.

    Clients’ demands

    But the Kenya Sex Workers Alliance defended the sex workers who were conducting their trade in Hijabs saying they were doing business in line with their clients’ demands.
    The co-ordinator of the alliance, Ms Phelister Abdalla, asked the government to decriminalise commercial sex work, citing high unemployment levels.

    “We want it to be treated like any other profession. Most of us depend on it,” she said.
    Interviews with sex workers at Eastleigh established that men were no longer interested in women who wear miniskirts. Instead, they prefer women from Ethiopia and Muslims.

    One sex worker who chose not to be named said she bought two hijabs which she uses only when she is waiting for clients. She also uses make-up to lighten her complexion.
    According to her, Hijab-wearing sex workers charge the highest prices and have the highest number of pick-ups.

    Random interviews with some of the commercial sex workers revealed that men perceive Hijab-wearing women as more “pure” than the other sex workers. They also perceive them to be less sexually active.

    One sex worker said male clients prefer Ethiopian women and the easiest way to spot one was by the colour of the skin and a Hijab. A sex worker who fits the description can earn up to three times more than one who doesn’t.

    One way that the sex workers camouflage their true complexions is by using red or blue lighting once they get to their hotel rooms.

    The choice of perfume is also used to create the impression that they are Muslim women even when they are not.

    On 12th Street, a host of Hijab-wearing sex workers will be spotted from 8pm.

    {nation}

  • EWSA Accused of Rendering Rwimiyaga Grain Millers Jobless

    EWSA Accused of Rendering Rwimiyaga Grain Millers Jobless

    {{Maize millers in Rwimiyaga, Nyagatare District are angry at EWSA for faulting terms and requirements they agreed upon as a prerequisite for connecting over 20 maize milling machines to the national grid.}}

    The Millers say they have been rendered jobless for the last three months.

    At the beginning of this year on January 30, EWSA in Nyagatare abruptly disconnected a power line that supplied the maize milling machines in Rwimiyaga Town.

    This followed complaints from Rwimiyaga residents who appealed to EWSA over noise pollution and drop of electricity for domestic consumption.

    Aproprietor of a milling machine in the area, Mr. Robert Bahat told this reporter, “When all the mills are operating, the rest of the town would experience a blackout and endure noise from the operating mills.”

    Meanwhile the maize milling operators said they had been requested by EWSA to relocate to another area out of town where they would operate without causing unnecessary noise in the town.

    The Millers appealed to Rwimiyaga Sector authority to help them find a plot where they would be given a direct power line from the transformer. The new plot out of town was granted.

    However, it emerged that one of the millers Mr. Etienne Nsabimana remained at the former location and EWSA reconnected power to his milling machine and this has since angered his colleagues.

    “It is very disappointing to see EWSA acting in this manner. We cannot go and leave Nsabimana behind”.

    EWSA Managing Director Nyagatare Branch, Mr. Anaclet Mukiga says, “I was at the site on January 20 and I told them it’s not in my responsibilities to verify settlement.

    Whoever is cleared by local authorities to get connected to the grid, we connect them because it is our responsibility”.

    Mukiga added that the reason they were cut off from the power line was not due to the location of their activities but due to power supply interruption their activities caused.

    Rwimiyaga Sector Executive Secretary Emmanuel Muyango confirmed that the problem exists;

    “However, we cannot force people to work together or to work in a certain place if they don’t want. If one’s activities are not a problem to the rest of the population, they’re free to work anywhere with anyone”.

    Maize milling machines are a profitable business in villages since most people grow maize.

    There are over 10 business persons that own milling machines in Rwimiyaga most of whom obtained them through bank loans .

  • Obama, China’s Xi Pledge Cooperation

    Obama, China’s Xi Pledge Cooperation

    {{U.S. President Barack Obama and Chinese President Xi Jinping pledged cooperation between their countries and chatted about first lady Michelle Obama’s recent trip to Beijing when they met prior to a nuclear summit on Monday.}}

    In remarks to reporters ahead of their meeting, Obama said he and Xi would discuss the situation in Ukraine, denuclearization of North Korea, and fighting climate change.

    Obama said the bilateral relationship between the two countries was as important as any in the world.

    Through various meetings and forums, Obama said, “We’re also able to work through frictions that exist in our relations around issues like human rights, dealing with maritime issues in the South China Sea and the Pacific region in a way that is constructive and hopefully will lead to resolutions and … solutions for all parties.”

    Xi made a point of thanking Obama for U.S. help in searching for the missing Malaysian Airlines flight which had a large number of Chinese passengers. He said the two countries should address common challenges in a spirit of mutual cooperation.

    “China is firmly committed to … building a new model of major country relations,” he said, according to a translator. “We are committed to our position of no confrontation… mutual respect, and win-win cooperation with regard to the United States.”

    Obama also thanked Xi for hosting his wife and daughters, who are touring China.

    “She also played some table tennis, although I think this was not the high level ping pong diplomacy that we saw in the past,” Obama joked about his wife.

    Xi said he had a message for Obama from the U.S. first lady.

    “She asked me to formally convey to you her best regards,” he said to laughter in the room.

    reuters

  • Malaysia says Missing Plane Crashed in Indian Ocean

    Malaysia says Missing Plane Crashed in Indian Ocean

    {{The Malaysia Airlines plane that disappeared over two weeks ago crashed in the southern Indian Ocean, Prime Minister Najib Razak said on Monday.}}

    New satellite analysis from Britain had shown that Flight MH370, with 239 people on board, was last seen in the middle of the Indian Ocean west of Perth, Australia, he said in a statement.

    “This is a remote location, far from any possible landing sites,” Najib said.

    “It is therefore with deep sadness and regret that I must inform you that, according to this new data, Flight MH370 ended in the southern Indian Ocean.”

    Najib added that the families of those on board had been informed of the developments.

    His comments came as an Australian navy ship was close to finding possible debris from the jetliner after a mounting number of sightings of floating objects that are believed to parts of the plane.

    The objects, described as a “grey or green circular object” and an “orange rectangular object”, were spotted on Monday afternoon, said Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott, adding that three planes were also en route to the area.

    Flight MH370 vanished from civilian radar screens less than an hour after taking off from Kuala Lumpur for Beijing on March 8. No confirmed sighting of the plane has been made since and there is no clue what went wrong.

    {reuters}

  • Congolese Refugees Dead After Boat Capsizes on L.Albert

    Congolese Refugees Dead After Boat Capsizes on L.Albert

    {{At least 98 people died after a boat capsized on Saturday on Lake Albert, which lies between Uganda and the Democratic Republic of Congo, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) said on Monday.}}

    “Based on information UNHCR has received so far from the authorities and refugees, 41 people were rescued and 98 bodies recovered,” the agency said in a statement.

    The boat, which was ferrying refugees from Uganda back to their native DR Congo, may have been carrying as many as 250 people, according to the UNHCR.

    It was “one of two that left from Hoima district on the eastern (Ugandan) side of the lake on Saturday morning, carrying refugees who had been living at Kyangwali refugee settlement but were heading back home to eastern DRC of their own accord”, the agency said.

    The death toll given by the agency is much higher than the 19 initially reported by Ugandan media on Saturday.

    The survivors have been taken to Uganda’s northwestern Bundibugyo district, where they are receiving care from the Ugandan government, the UNHCR and the agency’s partners, the statement said.

    {france24}

  • Africa Still Suffers High Rates of Malnutrition–FAO

    Africa Still Suffers High Rates of Malnutrition–FAO

    {{Despite important economic progress and agricultural successes, Africa remains the world’s most food insecure continent, with relatively low levels of agricultural productivity, low rural incomes, and high rates of malnutrition, FAO said Monday.}}

    As the Organization’s 28th Regional Conference for Africa gathers in Tunis, FAO is calling on African ministers of agriculture for action in priority areas to accelerate increased investment and broad-based transformation in support of smallholder farmers, including rural youth and women.

    Africa has recorded continuous economic growth since 1999, accompanied by improved governance and human development indicators.

    Currently, seven out of the top ten fastest growing economies in the world are situated in Africa, and the International Monetary Fund estimates that economic growth in sub-Saharan Africa will be 6.1% in 2014.

    Africa’s annual total GDP grew on average by 4.8% in 2000-2010, up from 2.1% in the previous decade, and the agricultural sector’s growth rates in the same time period were 3.2 percent and 3.0% respectively.

    The continent has achieved a series of agricultural successes in major areas, including the intensification of staple food production, improved varieties of banana in eastern and central Africa, high-yielding varieties of maize in east and southern Africa, and productivity gains in cotton production in Burkina Faso and Mali and in tea and floriculture in East Africa.

    “The question is how African leaders can build on this progress by providing stable agriculture and fiscal policies that encourage investment, as committed 10 years ago in the Maputo Declaration, and strengthen governance and accountability mechanisms that contribute to more systemic implementation of policies and programmes,” said Bukar Tijani, FAO Assistant Director-General and Regional Representative for Africa.

    “These actions are critical to trigger a transformation in the capacity of countries to deliver sustained and broad-based agricultural growth and development.”

    The Conference will advocate for providing the enabling environment to end hunger in the continent by 2025.

    It will primarily focus on sustainably increasing the potential of agriculture, fisheries, livestock and forestry as a source of employment and income for African youth, women and men who engage in these sectors for food and nutrition security as well as agri-business ventures aimed at increasing family incomes.

    The status and trends of agriculture, food and nutrition in Africa

    Trends in per capita food production have been generally positive over recent decades. On average, agricultural production in Africa has increased slightly less than 1 percent per year, compared with about 2 percent in developing countries.

    While Africa experienced high instability in food price levels, per capita food production was more stable over time and variability was relatively low compared to other regions, such as Asia or Latin America.

    But despite the overall progress made on hunger and malnutrition in Africa over the past decades, absolute levels of hunger and undernourishment remain worrying in sub-Saharan Africa, FAO said.

    FAO estimates that poverty rates in Africa declined marginally from 56 percent in 1990 to 49 percent in 2010, leaving 388 million in extreme poverty and approximately 239 million chronically undernourished in the continent.

    The food security situation in the Sahel and the Horn of Africa continues to be of particular concern.

    By 2012, Africa as a continent had made the least progress in reducing poverty. The 2012 United Nations Millennium Development Goals (MDG) Report states that Africa is 41% “off” the first MDG poverty target versus 25% in South Asia and 6.1% in Latin America.

    However, 11 African countries have already met the first MDG hunger target to reduce by half the proportion of hungry people between 1990 and 2015.

    Three countries – Djibouti, Ghana, and São Tomé and Príncipe – have also met the even more ambitious 1996 World Food Summit goal to reduce by half the total number of hungry.

    {{Enabling environment for investment}}

    In order to compete successfully with imports in their own growing domestic and regional agribusiness markets, African farmers and agribusinesses will need to improve value chain efficiency at all levels, FAO said.

    The Organization underscored that there are significant opportunities for accelerating smallholder-driven agriculture and agri-business in Africa as the basis for transforming and commercializing the sector.

    Due to rapid urbanization, around 40% of Africa’s population is now living in urban areas and consuming approximately 50% of the total food, boosting the importance of rural-urban food supply chains.

    Policy-makers should see this urban market as at least as much of an opportunity as the export market, particularly since it is more accessible to small family farms and firms, the Organization stressed.

    Numerous and interesting examples of the dynamic growth of rural-urban supply chains and agri-food systems can be found throughout the continent including: millers-cum-retailers of teff in Addis Ababa markets; the millet supply chain in Senegal with the rise in branded, packaged millet and millet-cum-dairy products for the Dakar market and for export; the chicken supply chain in urban Nigeria, Mozambique and many other African countries, giving rise to a wide range of local and regional poultry companies; and the rapid rise of dairy processing companies, linked to small farmers, in Kenya and Zambia.

    Concerted efforts are needed to assist a broader set of asset-poor family farms gain access to agricultural inputs, affordable credit, rural services and extension information that allows them to take advantage of the growing market.

    Innovative social protection and risk management programmes are also required to address the particular constraints of smallholder farmers, FAO said.

    {{Sustaining CAADP momentum}}

    With a view to enhancing FAO contributions to the implementation of the Comprehensive Africa Agriculture Development Programme (CAADP) at country, regional and continental levels, the Organization undertook important activities in 2013 towards strengthening and aligning capacity on CAADP activities for 2014 and 2015.

    In July 2013, FAO collaborated with the African Union Commission and Lula Institute to host a High-Level Meeting in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, “Toward African Renaissance: Renewed Partnership for Unified Approach to End Hunger in Africa by 2025 within the CAADP Framework”.

    The Declaration of the High-Level Meeting – which was also endorsed at the January 2014 African Union Summit – urges African heads of state to end hunger, food insecurity and malnutrition on the continent by 2025.

    The High-Level Meeting roadmap recommends joint actions to mainstream and operationalize the Partnership for a Renewed Unified Approach to End Hunger in Africa through CAADP, implemented primarily with its own resources and with the assistance of technical and development partners.

    The Africa Solidarity Trust Fund for Food Security was meanwhile officially launched during the 38th Session of the FAO Conference in June 2013.

    The fund currently has $40 million, to initially support projects in Central African Republic, Ethiopia, Malawi, Mali and Niger.

    The major contributions so far come from Equatorial Guinea and Angola. The Fund is one of the few Africa-led innovative mechanisms of mobilizing resources from Africa for Africa.

    FAO’s Regional Conference for Africa is taking place from 24-28 March in the Tunisian capital. In total, 54 African member countries will participate in the conference, 30 of which will be represented at ministerial level.

    In addtion, Austria, China, the Dominican Republic, France, Italy, India, the Netherlands, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, the United Kingdom and the United States of America as well as the Holy See will attend as observers.

    {FAO}

  • Cricket: South Africa Thumps New Zealand

    Cricket: South Africa Thumps New Zealand

    {{Dale Steyn and JP Duminy have led South Africa to a thrilling two-run win over Group One rivals New Zealand on Monday that kept them in the hunt for a semi-final spot at the World Twenty20 in Bangladesh.}}

    South Africa, who lost their opening match to Sri Lanka, struggled early on and needed a blistering unbeaten 86 off 43 balls by Duminy to reach 170 for six.

    New Zealand seemed to be cruising in their reply thanks to Kane Williamson’s 35-ball 51 and Ross Taylor’s 62.

    They needed 31 off 24 deliveries with seven wickets in hand but a brilliant two-over spell from Steyn (4-17) turned the match on its head.

    The fiery paceman dismissed the dangerous Corey Anderson for seven in the 18th over and then picked up two for four in the last over with the Kiwis, who beat England in their first match, requiring seven for victory.

    Taylor, needing three off the last ball, was run out.

    Leg-spinner Imran Tahir also played a key role, taking two for 27, but paceman Morne Morkel had a day to forget as he went for 50 in three overs.

    Earlier, Hashim Amla (41) and Duminy fought back with a 55-run stand after South Africa had slumped to 42 for three.

    The fourth-wicket partnership was broken in bizarre fashion when Amla thumped a ball from Anderson and it hit Duminy’s bat at the non-striker’s end before spooning up for the bowler to complete an easy catch.

    Duminy was full of improvised strokes, bludgeoning 10 fours and three sixes as his side added 70 runs in the last five overs.

    {{Scores: }}
    South Africa – 170-6 in 20 overs: (JP Duminy 86 not out, Hashim Amla 41; Corey Anderson 2-28, Tim Southee 2-46)

    New Zealand – 168-8 in 20 overs: (Ross Taylor 62, Kane Williamson 51; Dale Steyn 4-17, Imran Tahir 2-27)

    {{Teams:}}

    {{South Africa:}}

    Hashim Amla, Quinton de Kock, AB de Villiers, JP Duminy, Faf Du Plessis(captain), David Miller, Albie Morkel, Dale Steyn, Morne Morkel, Lonwabo Tsotsobe, Imran Tahir

    {{New Zealand:}}

    Martin Guptill, Kane Williamson, Brendon McCullum(captain), Ross Taylor, Colin Munro, Corey Anderson, Luke Ronchi, Nathan McCullum, Tim Southee, Kyle Mills, Mitchell McClenaghan