Author: Publisher

  • Australian scientists microchip bees to map movements, halt diseases

    Australian scientists microchip bees to map movements, halt diseases

    {Australian scientists are gluing tiny sensors onto thousands of honey bees to track their movements in a trial aimed at halting the spread of diseases that have wiped out populations in the northern hemisphere.}

    Scientists at the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO), Australia’s national science agency, said the microchips could help tackle so-called colony collapse disorder, a situation where bees mysteriously disappear from hives, and the encroachment of the parasitic varroa mite.

    Scientists will use tweezers to glue on the sensors, weighing about 5 milligrams and measuring 2.5 millimeters (a little more than 1/16 of an inch) square, after soothing the bees to sleep by refrigeration.

    Some young bees, which tend to be hairier than older bees, need to be shaved before the sensor can be glued on.

    Scientists will examine the effectiveness of pesticides in protecting the bees from colony collapse disorder and varroa mite.

    The study will also enable farmers and fruit growers to understand and manage their crops, given the honey bee’s crucial role in the pollination of crops globally, the CSIRO said in a statement issued on Wednesday.

    “Honey bees play a vital role in the landscape through a free pollination service for agriculture, which various crops rely on to increase yields,” the CSIRO’s Paulo de Souza, who is leading the project, said in the statement.

    “Using this technology, we aim to understand the bee’s relationship with its environment.”

    Scientists plan to fit sensors on 5,000 bees in the southern island state of Tasmania over the Australian summer.

    The radio frequency identification sensors work like an electronic tag for cars on a toll road, recording when insects pass a checkpoint. That will allow scientists to build a three-dimensional image of the insects’ movements, a process described as “swarm sensing”.

    The scientists are working on shrinking the sensor to 1 mm square so they can be attached to smaller insects, including mosquitoes.

    {{Reuters}}

  • Israel PM slams EU ‘hypocrisy’ on settlements

    Israel PM slams EU ‘hypocrisy’ on settlements

    { Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu slammed the European Union Thursday for calling in ambassadors over plans for some 1,800 new homes for Jewish settlers in the occupied West Bank.}

    Netanyahu’s angry remarks come hot on the heels of a public spat between his defence minister and US Secretary of State John Kerry, who is energetically pushing Israel and the Palestinians toward a framework for a peace agreement.

    “This is hypocritical. The EU calls our ambassadors in because of the construction of a few houses? When did the EU call in the Palestinian ambassadors about incitement that calls for Israel’s destruction?” Netanyahu asked foreign correspondents at his annual new year reception.

    “It’s time to stop this hypocrisy,” he said. “This imbalance… doesn’t advance peace, I think it pushes peace further away.”

    Netanyahu’s government announced plans for the new homes in the West Bank, including annexed Arab east Jerusalem, just days after the latest peace mission by US Secretary of State John Kerry who has slammed them as “illegitimate” and “unhelpful.”

    European Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton had said she was “deeply concerned” over the move, adding that settlements were “illegal under international law, constitute an obstacle to peace and threaten to make the two-state solution impossible”.

    AFP

  • About us

    {{MISSION}}

    IGIHE LTD is at the forefront of promoting the usage of ICT in the Rwandan media landscape; for instance, we facilitate our audience to access fast and reliable news through the internet. We inspire Rwandan youth to work hard to achieve their dreams.

    {{VISION}}

    IGIHE LTD aims to be the best media group & IT company in the Great Lakes region and across the African continent .

    {{CORPORATE HISTORY}}

    IGIHE Ltd is a registered independent media & IT company in Rwanda with numerous “IGIHE” brands in the electronic, digital and print media.

    IGIHE LTD was established in 2009 by young entrepreneurs and started operating with its premier brand, www.igihe.com. This was a pioneer online news outlet that has built a reputable media brand. The latter revolutionized the Rwandan media platform.

    Currently, IGIHE LTD has a variety of online media platform such as the English version of IGIHE http://en.igihe.com , French version of IGIHE http://fr.igihe.com and Kirundi version of IGIHE http://igihe.bi.

    In addition, we operate www.igihe.tv (an online TV portal for live streaming and on demand videos) which we co-own in partnership with Holy Multimedia under Free Media Networks. Moreover, IGIHE has an entertainment website http://igiheshowbiz.com and http://igiherealestate.com .

    We also provide a variety of additional services to our esteemed clients, primarily internet solutions such as; website Content development, Website design and maintenance, Online advertisements just to mention a few.

  • UN expert on freedoms of peaceful assembly and association  to visit Rwanda

    UN expert on freedoms of peaceful assembly and association to visit Rwanda

    GENEVA (16 January 2014) – {United Nations Special Rapporteur Maina Kiai will visit Rwanda from 20 to 27 January 2014 to assess in depth to what extent the rights to freedom of peaceful assembly and of association are enjoyed in the country.
    }

    Mr. Kiai’s visit will be the first information-gathering mission to Rwanda by an independent expert mandated by the UN Human Rights Council to monitor and promote the realization of the rights to freedom of peaceful assembly and of association worldwide.

    “The rights to freedom of peaceful assembly and of association are essential components of democracy, and States are called upon by the Council to respect and fully protect the rights of all individuals to assemble peacefully and associate freely,” the independent expert said.

    “Government cooperation is absolutely essential to the effectiveness of my mandate and every other Human Rights Council’s mandate,” the Special Rapporteur noted.

    Mr. Kiai is scheduled to travel to Kigali and Huye. During his eight-day visit, he will meet with State officials, members of the judiciary and of Parliament, as well as representatives of the national human rights commission, the civil society, and the diplomatic community.

  • Agathe Habyarimana attacks France over Refusal of residence

    Agathe Habyarimana attacks France over Refusal of residence

    {Agathe Habyarimana, the widow of the former Rwandan president, accused of being involved in 1994 genocide against Tutsis, has gone to the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) on charges that France refused to grant her a residence permit}

    This was revealed by her lawyer Philippe Meilhac who also said that France had violated the rights of his clients as well as violated the European Convention on Human Rights.

    Mrs Habyarimana was evacuated from Rwanda in the early days of the genocide by French soldiers to France, where she settled permanently in 1998 .After unsuccessfully sought of political asylum in France, she asked in 2009 a residence permit, a query that resulted in several contradictory rulings.

    Finally, the State Council approved in June 2013 the refusal to give her a residence. The reason behind that refusal was that Mrs Habyarimana was a “threat to public order.

  • Woman allegedly faked death to avoid charges

    Woman allegedly faked death to avoid charges

    { A woman who prosecutors say faked her own death to avoid answering for a theft charge was escorted from a Nashville courthouse this week after apparently cutting herself with a pen.}

    Shortly after Tuesday’s start of a General Sessions Court hearing to “resurrect” a felony charge from 2011, court officials noticed Sarah C. Moretti behaving unusually and realized she was attempting to harm herself, said Judge Casey E. Moreland, who was presiding over the hearing.

    A law enforcement officer in the courtroom restrained the 37-year-old, whose arms were bleeding from apparently self-inflicted wounds caused by a pen, Moreland said.

    The woman was eventually escorted from the courthouse by emergency medical personnel, he said.

    In July 2011, a charge for stealing nearly $2,500 in merchandise from a Macy’s department was dropped after court officials received a certificate that Moretti had died in Kentucky from a drug overdose.

    But the death certificate put off authorities for only so long.

    In March 2012, police picked up Moretti after they said she was caught shoplifting at a Dillard’s department store. She then was arrested again last month after police said she returned to the Macy’s store, resulting in a criminal trespassing charge.

    In the aftermath of the courtroom incident Tuesday, the “motion to resurrect” hearing was postponed until Jan. 24.

    USATODAY

  • U.S. Government Begins Airlifting Rwandan Peacekeepers to CAR

    U.S. Government Begins Airlifting Rwandan Peacekeepers to CAR

    – U.S. Ambassador to Rwanda Donald W. Koran, U.S. military and senior Rwandan Defense Forces officials said farewell Thursday to the first of dozens of U.S. military cargo jet flights that will transport more than 800 Rwandan peacekeepers to their new peacekeeping mission: to end the violence, protect civilians, prevent further atrocities, provide humanitarian assistance, and help create an environment for constitutional and democratic governance to take root in the Central African Republic.

    The deployment follows a request by the African Union for Rwanda to contribute peacekeepers to MISCA in order to achieve its mandate to: Protect civilians, restore security and public order; stabilise the country and restore state authority; support reform and restructuring of the defence and security; and create conducive conditions to the provision of humanitarian assistance to the population in need. The peacekeepers will operate under Chapter VII of the United Nations Charter.

    Within a period of 20 days, a US Military aircraft (C-17) will airlift 850 peacekeepers to Bangui, CAR’s capital city.

    The cooperation between the United States and Rwanda is just the latest example of one of the strongest peacekeeping relationships in the region, Ambassador Koran said.

    “The United States government is pleased to work with Rwanda on our shared goal of making sure the people of the Central African Republic have a chance to live safe, secure and productive lives,” Koran said. “The security partnership between our two countries benefits more than Rwandans and Americans. It benefits other countries in the region and the world over. Of that, we are proud.”

    “The existing cooperation between Rwanda and the US Government in Peacekeeping Operations is a cornerstone for concerted efforts to ensure that peace and security is restored in the region and beyond. Rwanda Defence Force reiterates its sincere gratitude to the US for the invaluable support in providing strategic airlifts and associated logistical support for the deployment of the Peacekeeping Force to CAR,” said General Patrick Nyamvumba, RDF Chief of Defence Staff.

    “Besides the battalion’s experience as RDF soldiers, it has undergone a pre-deployment training with specifics on CAR and has been robustly equipped to fulfill their mission mandate,” said Brigadier General Joseph Nzabamwita, Defence and Military Spokesman.

  • An unmanned aircraft used by U.N. peacekeepers in DRC crushed

    An unmanned aircraft used by U.N. peacekeepers in DRC crushed

    {An unmanned aircraft used by U.N. peacekeepers in Democratic Republic of Congo crashed on Wednesday near the eastern town of Goma, sources at the airport and interior ministry said.}

    The United Nations force started using drones – a first for the world body – last month to help it monitor armed groups operating along Congo’s border zone with Rwanda and Uganda.

    “One of these U.N. drones crashed not long after it took off,” a senior official Congo’s interior ministry told Reuters, asking not to be named. There were no reports of casualties.

    A source at Goma’s airport confirmed the incident. A spokesman for the U.N. mission was not available for comment.

    The Falco drones used by the U.N. force are manufactured by Selex ES, a unit of Italian defence group Finmeccanica . The firm was not immediately available for comment.

    Agencies

  • Ghana to contribute 850 troops to South Sudan – President Mahama

    Ghana to contribute 850 troops to South Sudan – President Mahama

    {President John Dramani Mahama on Tuesday announced that Ghana would contribute 850 troops to war-torn South Sudan to help restore peace and stability to the North African country.
    }

    He said the deployment of the Ghana battalion to the restive country followed a request from the United Nations Secretary-General to Ghana to help in keeping the peace and assist with the humanitarian efforts.

    President Mahama announced this when Dr Tedros A. Ghebreyesus, Ethiopian Foreign Minister called on him at the Flagstaff House, Kanda.

    President Mahama indicated that the National Security Council met on Monday to ratify the troop deployment.

    The Ethiopian envoy, who discussed issues of common interest and the situation in South Sudan with President Mahama, was accompanied by Ms Hannah Tetteh, Minister of Foreign Affairs and Regional Integration, Mr Francis Yankey, Ghana’s Ambassador to Ethiopia and a 10-member Ethiopian delegation.

    President Mahama noted that as a young independent country that is facing development challenges, South Sudan needs stability to develop and not conflict. “When I received the request from the UN Secretary-General, I did not hesitate to give my provisional approval,” he added.