Category: Science News

  • Amazing haul of ancient human finds unveiled

    {A new haul of ancient human remains has been described from an important cave site in South Africa.}

    The finds, including a well-preserved skull, bolster the idea that the Homo naledi people deliberately deposited their dead in the cave.

    Evidence of such complex behaviour is surprising for a human species with a brain that’s a third the size of ours.

    Despite showing some primitive traits it lived relatively recently, perhaps as little as 235,000 years ago.

    That would mean the naledi people could have overlapped with the earliest of our kind – Homo sapiens.

    In a slew of papers published in the journal eLife, Prof Lee Berger from the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, Prof John Hawks from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, US, and their collaborators have outlined details of the new specimens and, importantly, ages for the remains.

    The H. naledi story starts in 2013, when the remains of almost 15 individuals of various ages were discovered inside the Dinaledi chamber – part of South Africa’s Rising Star Cave system.

    At the same time, the researchers were exploring a second chamber about 100m away, known as Lesedi (“light” in the Setswana language which is spoken in the region).

    The finds from Dinaledi were published in 2015, but remains from the Lesedi chamber had not previously been presented, until now.

    The latest specimens include the remains of at least three individuals – two adults and a child.

    One of the adults has a “wonderfully complete skull”, according to Prof Hawks. This tough-looking specimen is probably male, and has been named “Neo”, which means “a gift” in the Sesotho language of southern Africa.

    Examination of its limb bones shows that it was equally comfortable climbing and walking.

    The fact that Homo naledi was alive at the same time and in the same region of Africa as early forms of Homo sapiens gives us an insight into the huge diversity of different human forms in existence during the Late Pleistocene.

    “Here in southern Africa, in this time range, you have the Florisbad skull, which may be an ancestor or close relative of modern humans; you’ve got the Kabwe skull, which is some kind of archaic human and possibly quite divergent; you’ve got evidence from modern people’s genomes that archaic lineages have been contributing to modern populations and may have existed until quite recently,” said Prof Hawks.

    “You have this very primitive form of Homo [naledi] that has survived alongside these other species for a million years or more. It is amazing the diversity that we are now seeing that we had missed before.”

    As to how H. naledi held on to its distinctive characteristics while living cheek-by-jowl with other human species, Prof Hawks said: “It’s hard to say it was geographic isolation because there’s no boundary – no barrier. It’s the same landscape from here to Tanzania; we’re in one continuous savannah, woodland-type habitat.

    He added that the human-sized teeth probably reflected a diet like that of modern humans. In addition, H. naledi had limb proportions just like ours and there is no apparent reason why it could not have used stone tools.

    “It doesn’t look like they’re in a different ecological niche. That’s weird; it’s a problem. This is not a situation where we can point to them and say: ‘They co-existed because they’re using resources differently’,” Prof Hawks told BBC News.

    The researchers say that finding the remains of multiple individuals in a separate chamber bolsters the idea that Homo naledi was caching its dead. If correct, this surprising – and controversial claim – hints at an intelligent mind and, perhaps, the stirrings of culture.

    By dating the site, researchers have sought to clear up some of the puzzles surrounding the remains.

    In 2015, Prof Berger told BBC News that the remains could be up to three million years old based on their primitive characteristics. Yet the bones are only lightly mineralised, which raised the possibility that they might not be very ancient (although this is not always an accurate guide).

    In order to arrive at an age, the team dated the bones themselves, sediments on the cave floor and flowstones – carbonate minerals formed when water runs down the wall or along the floor of a cave.

    Several techniques were used: optically stimulated luminescence to date the cave sediments, uranium-thorium dating and palaeomagnetic analyses for the flowstones and combined U-series and electron spin resonance (US-ESR) for dating three naledi teeth.

    By combining results together, they were able to constrain the age of the Homo naledi remains to between 236,000 and 335,000 years ago.

    “We’ve got a geological bracket based on flowstones overlying the fossils and we’ve had direct dates on the teeth themselves,” said John Hawks.

    The team sent samples to two separate labs to perform their analyses “blind”. This meant that neither lab knew what the other was doing, or what their analytical approaches were. Despite this, they returned the same results.

    “This is now the best dated site in southern Africa – we threw everything at it,” said John Hawks.

    Many mysteries remain about this intriguing member of the human family tree. Not least of them is H. naledi’s evolutionary history up until the point the remains show up in the Rising Star cave system.

    Researchers currently envisage two possibilities. The first is that H. naledi represents one one of these earliest branches of Homo – perhaps something like Homo habilis. It retains a rather primitive anatomy while evolving in parallel with the branch of the human family tree that eventually results in modern humans.

    The other possibility is that it diverged more than a million years ago from a more advanced form of Homo – perhaps Homo erectus – and then reverted to a more primitive form in some aspects of its skull and teeth.

    The male H. naledi specimen named "Neo", after being freed from the surrounding matrix

    Source:BBC

  • Prevalence of visual impairment among preschool children projected to increase

    {The number of preschool children in the U.S. with visual impairment is projected to increase by more than 25 percent in the coming decades, with the majority of visual impairment resulting from simple uncorrected refractive error, according to a study published by JAMA Ophthalmology.}

    Visual impairment (VI) in early childhood can significantly impair development of visual, motor, and cognitive function. There has been a lack of accurate data characterizing the prevalence of VI in the U.S. preschool population. Rohit Varma, M.D., M.P.H., of the University of Southern California, Los Angeles, and colleagues examined prevalence data from two major population-based studies to determine demographic and geographic variations in VI in children ages 3 to 5 years in the United States in 2015 and estimated projected prevalence through 2060. Visual impairment was defined as decreased visual acuity (VA) (<20/50 in children 36 to 47 months of age or <20/40 in children 48 months of age or older) in the better-seeing eye in the presence of an identifiable ophthalmic cause. The researchers found that in 2015 in the United States, it is estimated that 174,00 children ages 3 to 5 years were visually impaired, most (n = 120,600; 69 percent) owing to simple uncorrected refractive error, and that Hispanic white children were the most affected (n = 65,942; 38 percent). The 45-year projections indicate a 26 percent increase in VI in 2060. During this period, Hispanic white children will remain the largest demographic group in terms of the absolute numbers of VI cases (44 percent of the total). Multiracial American children will have the greatest proportional increase (137 percent), and non-Hispanic white children will have the largest proportional decrease (21 percent) in the number of VI cases. From 2015 to 2060, the states projected to have the most children with VI are California, Texas and Florida. Several limitations of the study are noted in the article. "Given that most preschool VI can be prevented or treated by low-cost refractive correction and that early intervention is critical for better visual outcomes, vision screening in preschool age and follow-up care will have a significant, prolonged effect on visual function and academic and social achievements and therefore should be recommended for all children," the authors write. "A coordinated surveillance system is needed to continuously monitor the effect of preschool VI on the national, state, and local levels over time." Source:Science Daily

  • Noise created by humans is pervasive in US protected areas

    {Protected areas in the United States, representing 14 percent of the land mass, provide places for respite, recreation, and natural resource conservation. However, noise pollution poses novel threats to these protected areas, according to a first-of-its-kind study from scientists at Colorado State University and the U.S. National Park Service.}

    Researchers found that noise pollution was twice as high as background sound levels in a majority of U.S. protected areas, and caused a ten-fold or greater increase in noise pollution in 21 percent of protected areas.

    The often-overlooked impacts of noise, driven by expansion of human activities and transportation networks, are encroaching into the furthest reaches of remote areas, according to the study. The research findings highlight the pervasiveness and identify the primary drivers of noise in protected areas.

    Rachel Buxton, lead author and post-doctoral researcher in the Department of Fish, Wildlife, and Conservation Biology in the Warner College of Natural Resources, said the team was surprised by how prevalent noise pollution was in protected areas.

    “The noise levels we found can be harmful to visitor experiences in these areas, and can be harmful to human health, and to wildlife,” she said. “However, we were also encouraged to see that many large wilderness areas have sound levels that are close to natural levels. Protecting these important natural acoustic resources as development and land conversion progresses is critical if we want to preserve the character of protected areas.”

    Anthropogenic, or human-caused, noise is an unwanted or inappropriate sound created by humans, such as sounds emanating from aircraft, highways, industrial, or residential sources. Noise pollution is noise that interferes with normal activities, such as sleeping and conversation. It can also diminish a person’s quality of life.

    Measuring noise pollution is a challenging task, given its diffusive nature and since sound is not easily monitored remotely over large spatial scales; it can’t be measured by satellite or other visual observations. Instead, for this study, the team analyzed millions of hours of sound measurements from 492 sites around the continental U.S. The results summarized predictions of existing sound levels, estimates of natural sound levels, and the amount that anthropogenic noise raises levels above natural levels, which is considered noise pollution.

    How prevalent is noise pollution in protected areas? The research team found anthropogenic noise doubled background sound levels in 63 percent of U.S. protected areas, and caused a ten-fold or greater increase in background levels in 21 percent of protected areas.

    In other words, noise reduced the area that natural sounds can be heard by 50 to 90 percent. This also means that what could be heard at 100 feet away could only be heard from 10 to 50 feet.

    This reduced capacity to hear natural sound reduces the restorative properties of spending time in nature, such as mood enhancement and stress reduction, interfering with the enjoyment typically experienced by park visitors. Noise pollution also negatively impacts wildlife by distracting or scaring animals, and can result in changes in species composition.

    High levels of noise pollution were also found in critical habitat for endangered species, namely in endangered plant and insect habitats. “Although plants can’t hear, many animals that disperse seeds or pollinate flowers can hear, and are known to be affected by noise, resulting in indirect impacts on plants,” said Buxton.

    The study also revealed that high noise pollution levels within protected areas were in specific locations, where noise reduction techniques may best be targeted. The biggest noise-causing culprits were roads, aircraft, human development, and resource extraction.

    Some protected areas have introduced effective techniques to reduce noise, launching shuttle services to cut back on traffic, implementing quiet zones where visitors are encouraged to quietly enjoy protected area surroundings, and creating noise corridors, aligning flight patterns over roads.

    “Numerous noise mitigation strategies have been successfully developed and implemented, so we already have the knowledge needed to address noise issues,” said George Wittemyer, an associate professor at Colorado State University and the senior author of the study. “Our work provides information to facilitate such efforts in respect to protected areas where natural sounds are integral.”

    Researchers said that many people don’t really think of noise pollution as pollution. But the team is hopeful that more people will consider sound as a component of the natural environment.

    “Next time you go for a walk in the woods, pay attention to the sounds you hear — the flow of a river, wind through the trees, singing birds, bugling elk. These acoustic resources are just as magnificent as visual ones, and deserve our protection” said Buxton.

    This is an acoustic recording station at the iconic tourist attraction Alcatraz Island in San Francisco Bay, Golden Gate National Park, California.

    Source:Science Daily

  • Computers learn to understand humans better by modelling them

    {Computers are able to learn to explain the behavior of individuals by tracking their glances and movements.}

    Researchers from Aalto University, University of Birmingham and University of Oslo present results paving the way for computers to learn psychologically plausible models of individuals simply by observing them. In newly published conference article, the researchers showed that just by observing how long a user takes to click menu items, one can infer a model that reproduces similar behavior and accurately estimates some characteristics of that user’s visual system, such as fixation durations.

    Despite significant breakthroughs in artificial intelligence, it has been notoriously hard for computers to understand why a user behaves the way she does. Cognitive models that describe individual capabilities, as well as goals, can much better explain and hence be able to predict individual behavior also in new circumstances. However, learning these models from the practically available indirect data has been out of reach.

    “The benefit of our approach is that much smaller amount of data is needed than for ‘black box’ methods. Previous methods for performing this type of tuning have either required extensive manual labor, or a large amount of very accurate observation data, which has limited the applicability of these models until now,” Doctoral student Antti Kangasrääsiö from Aalto University explains.

    The method is based on Approximate Bayesian Computation (ABC), which is a machine learning method that has been developed to infer very complex models from observations, with uses in climate sciences and epidemiology among others. It paves the way for automatic inference of complex models of human behavior from naturalistic observations. This could be useful in human-robot interaction, or in assessing individual capabilities automatically, for example detecting symptoms of cognitive decline.

    “We will be able to infer a model of a person that also simulates how that person learns to act in totally new circumstances,” Professor of Machine Learning at Aalto University Samuel Kaski says.

    “We’re excited about the prospects of this work in the field of intelligent user interfaces,” Antti Oulasvirta Professor of User Interfaces from Aalto University says.

    “In the future, the computer will be able to understand humans in a somewhat similar manner as humans understand each other. It can then much better predict not only the benefits of a potential change but also its individual costs to an individual, a capability that adaptive interfaces have lacked,” he continues.

    The results will be presented at the world’s largest computer-human interaction conference CHI in Denver, USA, in May 2017.

    The picture shows how ABC-driven parameters lead to more accurate predictions of user behavior.

    Source:Science Daily

  • Hawaii: How the world’s biggest volcanoes formed

    {A study led by The Australian National University (ANU) has solved the 168-year-old mystery of how the world’s biggest and most active volcanoes formed in Hawaii.}

    The study found that the volcanoes formed along twin tracks due to a shift in the Pacific Plate’s direction three million years ago.

    Lead researcher Tim Jones from ANU said scientists had known of the existence of the twin volcanic tracks since 1849, but the cause of them had remained a mystery until now.

    “The discovery helps to better reconstruct Earth’s history and understand part of the world that has captivated people’s imagination,” said Mr Jones, a PhD student from the ANU Research School of Earth Sciences (RSES).

    “The analysis we did on past Pacific Plate motions is the first to reveal that there was a substantial change in motion 3 million years ago. It helps to explain the origin of Hawaii, Earth’s biggest volcanic hotspot and one of the most popular tourist destinations in the world.”

    Twin volcanic tracks exist in other parts of the Pacific, including Samoa, and the study found that these also emerged three million years ago.

    Mr Jones said this kind of volcanic activity was surprising because it occurred away from tectonic plate boundaries, where most volcanoes are found.

    “Heat from the Earth’s core causes hot columns of rock, called mantle plumes, to rise under tectonic plates and produce volcanic activity on the surface,” he said.

    “Mantle plumes have played a role in mass extinctions, the creation of diamonds and the breaking up of continents.”

    Co-researcher Dr Rhodri Davies from RSES said the twin volcanic tracks emerged because the mantle plume was out of alignment with the direction of the plate motion.

    “Our hypothesis predicts that the plate and the plume will realign again at some stage in the future, and the two tracks will merge to form a single track once again,” Dr Davies said.

    “Plate shifts have been occurring constantly, but irregularly, throughout Earth’s history. Looking further back in time we find that double tracks are not unique to young Hawaiian volcanism — indeed, they coincide with other past changes in plate motion.”

    Hawaii sits at the south-eastern limit of a chain of volcanoes and submerged seamounts which get progressively older towards the north west.

    The researchers worked with the National Computational Infrastructure at ANU to model the Pacific Plate’s change in direction and formation of the twin volcanic tracks through Hawaii.

    This is a map of recent Hawaiian volcanism, highlighting the Loa and Kea tracks.

    Source:Science Daily

  • A brisk walk instead of sitting down: Just ten minutes a day makes a difference

    {It is not the amount of time spent sitting still that matters. Instead it is the extent of physical activity that is essential in reducing the risk of elderly women developing cardiovascular disease, as shown in a new Örebro study published in PLOS ONE.}

    “We have studied women over 65 as they are among the least active groups of the population, at the same time as they run a high risk of developing cardiovascular disease,” says Fawzi Kadi, Professor at Örebro University.

    A sedentary lifestyle is associated with health risks such as diabetes and cardiovascular disease. But the Örebro study shows that it is the daily amount of physical activity that is crucial to a person’s health.

    “The study shows how important it is to encourage more physical activity. We are not talking slow everyday pace, but at least one brisk walk or other physical activity requiring some exertion,” says Andreas Nilsson, researcher at Örebro University.

    120 women took part in the Örebro study. They had a medical examination and over the course of one week, their physical activity was measured using an accelerometer.

    The results may well apply to other groups since they are in line with a meta-analysis of previous research based on a million adult men and women, which indicated that physical activity rather than sedentary behaviour affects the risk of mortality.

    “Our study points in the same direction — that the negative health effects of a sedentary lifestyle decrease with the extent of physical activity,” says Fawzi Kadi.

    This means that if one person is jogging while another is only doing less strenuous activities, the first person runs a lower risk of developing cardiovascular disease than the second — regardless of the extent of their sedentary activities.

    “Getting up once in a while is naturally a good thing, but doing more exercise is better for our health,” concludes Andreas Nilsson.

    Source:Science Daily

  • First clues about the social lives of extinct human relatives

    {A new study from The Australian National University (ANU) of the bony head-crests of male gorillas could provide some of the first clues about the social structures of our extinct human relatives, including how they chose their sexual partners.}

    The study looks at the sagittal crest, a bone ridge on the top of the skull, in four species of apes.

    Lead researcher of the study Dr Katharine Balolia of the ANU School of Archaeology and Anthropology said that while the crests were long thought to develop in apes to provide extra space for the muscles used for chewing, this study indicates they could also be a form of social signalling that results from sexual selection.

    “We found that for male gorillas and orangutans, it is not just chewing that drives crest formation. There is also a social element to it. For example, females prefer male gorillas with larger sagittal crests,” Dr Balolia said.

    Dr Balolia said the findings may provide clues to the social structures of some extinct human relatives.

    “Some species of extinct human relatives have a sagittal crest,” she said.

    “And if sagittal crest size and social behaviour are linked in this way, then we could potentially establish that some of our extinct human relatives had a gorilla-like social system.

    “This would be a first, because otherwise the human fossil record provides precious little about how our extinct relatives chose their mates.”

    The study used 3D scans of skull specimens and found two lines of evidence to support the finding.

    “In terms of gorilla social structures, the males establish dominance shortly after their wisdom teeth emerge. We found the sagittal crest appears right after their wisdom teeth emerge, so that fits in with the timing of social dominance,” she said.

    “In contrast, in orangutans some males only become dominant quite late in their adult life, and the sagittal crest appears later,” she said.

    In addition, statistical modelling suggests that, when present, crests in gorillas and orangutans are larger than what would be expected if they were simply there to provide more space for the larger chewing muscles needed by the big males.

    This is the sagittal crest of a male gorilla skull.

    Source:Science Daily

  • Bonobos may be better representation of last common ancestor with humans than chimps

    {Study examined muscles of bonobos and found they are more closely related to humans than common chimpanzees}

    A new study examining the muscular system of bonobos provides firsthand evidence that the rare great ape species may be more closely linked, anatomically, to human ancestors than common chimpanzees. Previous research suggested this theory at the molecular level, but this is the first study to compare in detail the anatomy of the three species.

    “Bonobo muscles have changed least, which means they are the closest we can get to having a ‘living’ ancestor,” said Bernard Wood, professor of human origins at the GW Center for the Advanced Study of Human Paleobiology.

    Scientists believe that modern human and common chimpanzee/bonobo lineages split about 8 million years ago with the two great ape species splitting about 2 million years ago. As common chimpanzees and bonobos evolved after their split, they developed different traits and physical characteristics, even though they remained geographically relatively close, with their main division being the Congo River. Because of this, researchers have been curious as to what those differences are and how they compare to humans. By studying the muscles of bonobos (which indicates how they physically function), the team was able to discover that they are more closely related to human anatomy than common chimpanzees, in the sense that their muscles have changed less than they have in common chimpanzees.

    Earlier studies examined the DNA similarities and differences between bonobos and common chimpanzees, but this was the first study to compare the muscles of the three species.

    “In addition, our study has shown that there is a mosaic evolution of the three species, in the sense that some features are shared by humans and bonobos, others by humans and common chimpanzees, and still others by the two ape species,” said Rui Diogo, lead author of the paper and associate professor of anatomy at Howard University. “Such a mosaic anatomical evolution may well be related to the somewhat similar molecular mosaic evolution between the three species revealed by previous genetic studies: each of the chimpanzees species share about 3 percent of genetic traits with humans that are not present in the other chimpanzee species.”

    The researchers led a team that examined seven bonobos from the Antwerp Zoo that had died and were being preserved. Researchers said this was an extremely rare opportunity given bonobos’ status as an endangered species.

    The scientists note that having a clear understanding of what makes humans different from our closest living relatives might lead to new breakthroughs or understandings of human health.

    A new study examining the muscular system of bonobos provides firsthand evidence that the rare great ape species may be more closely linked to human ancestors than common chimpanzees.

    Source:Science Daily

  • Gender differences in depression appear at age 12

    {An analysis just published online has broken new ground by finding gender differences in both symptoms and diagnoses of depression appearing at age 12.}

    The analysis, based on existing studies that looked at more than 3.5 million people in more than 90 countries, confirmed that depression affects far more females than males.

    The study, published by the journal Psychological Bulletin, should convince doubters that depression largely, but not entirely, affects females, says co-author Janet Hyde, a professor of psychology and gender and women’s studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

    “We found that twice as many women as men were affected. Although this has been known for a couple of decades, it was based on evidence far less compelling than what we used in this meta-analysis. We want to stress that although twice as many women are affected, we don’t want to stereotype this as a women’s disorder. One-third of those affected are men.”

    The gender gap was evident in the earliest data studied by co-authors Hyde; Rachel Salk, now a postdoctoral fellow in psychiatry at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine; and Lyn Abramson, a professor of psychology at UW-Madison. “The gap was already present at age 12, which is earlier than previous studies have found,” says Hyde. We used to think that the gender difference emerged at 13 to 15 years but the better data we examined has pushed that down to age 12.”

    The gender difference tapers off somewhat after adolescence, “which has never been identified, but the depression rate is still close to twice as high for women,” Hyde says.

    Puberty, which occurs around age 12 in girls, could explain the onset, Hyde says. “Hormonal changes may have something to do with it, but it’s also true that the social environment changes for girls at that age. As they develop in puberty, they face more sexual harassment, but we can’t tell which of these might be responsible.”

    Although the data did not cover people younger than 12, “there are processes going on at 11 or 12 that are worth thinking about, and that matters in terms of intervening,” Hyde says. “We need to start before age 12 if we want to prevent girls from sliding into depression. Depression is often quite treatable. People don’t have to suffer and face increased risk for the many related health problems.”

    The results described averages across the nations covered in the study, Hyde says, but similar results emerged from the studies focusing on the United States.

    The UW-Madison researchers looked at both diagnoses of major depression, and at symptom measure of depression, Hyde says. “Symptoms are based on self-reported measures — for example, ‘I feel blue most of the time’ — that do not necessarily meet the standard for a diagnosis of major depression. To meet the criteria for major depression, the condition must be evaluated much more rigorously.”

    The researchers looked at the relationship between depression and gender equity in income. Surprisingly, nations with greater gender equity had larger gender differences — meaning women were disproportionately diagnosed with major depression. “This was something of the opposite of what was expected,” says Hyde. “It may occur because, in more gender-equitable nations, women have more contact with men, and therefore compare themselves to men, who don’t express feelings of depression because it doesn’t fit with the masculine role.”

    Curiously, no relationship in either direction appeared for depression symptoms.

    Despite the prevalence of and growing concern about depression, “this was the first meta-analysis on gender differences in depression,” Hyde says. “For a long while, I wondered why nobody had done this, but once I got into it, I realized it’s because there is too much data, and nobody had the courage to plow through it all. We did, and it took two years.”

    The analysis, based on existing studies that looked at more than 3.5 million people in more than 90 countries, confirmed that depression affects far more females than males.

    Source:Science Daily

  • MMI staff comfort widows of Genocide against the Tutsi in Ruhango

    {Military Medical Insurance (MMI) staff led by the Director General, Col J P Bitega, on 27 April 2017 paid visit to widows of the1994 Genocide against the Tutsi, in Kinazi Sector, Ruhango District.}

    The widows are all members of Humura Mubyeyi Cooperative that is engaged in small scale farming projects, to help the survivors access decent lives, and keep in solidarity while struggling against the pains resulting from the Genocide.

    To comfort and support the Kinazi widows, MMI employees donated 4 cows to them, in addition to an equal number of cows the institution offered 4 years ago.

    The widows appreciated very much the MMI visit and cows donation.

    “We do consider this as a symbol of love and solidarity by our military and the Government in general. We cannot thank enough the RPA soldiers now RDF, our children who saved us from the hands of the killers, and continue to support our lives. These cows contribute to transform our lives as we get milk”, Nyirasamaza Georgette said.

    The widows in general expressed recognition to Rwanda Defence Force and said they feel strengthened and full of hope for the future.

    The MMI Director General, Col J Paul Bitega comforted the widows saying that the RDF in general stays in solidarity with them in this particular period when we remember the Genocide against the Tutsi. He urged the survivors to scale up their efforts in combatting poverty. “Poverty remains the first enemy threatening our lives and we are here as RDF in general inspired by our top leadership to support you, our people to live decent lives”, Col Bitega said. The MMI DG further promised continued support to the Kinazi widows, members of Humura Mubyeyi Cooperative, and the Genocide survivors in general.

    Source:Minadef