Fears for Australia’s Famous Migrating Moth

Conservationists are blaming climate change, land clearing and pesticides for the population crash of one of Australia’s most famous insects. Once a common sight, bogong moths have become rare in recent years. They are now recognized as endangered by the world’s leading scientific authority on vulnerable species, the International Union for Conservation of Nature.

The bogong moth is native to Australia. The mass migration of billions of the small insects has long been a spectacular sight in eastern Australia.

Scientists say the moths are guided by the stars and the earth’s magnetic fields.

They fly up to 1,000 kilometers from Queensland to the mountains of Victoria to shelter in caves from the heat of summer. In the caves, it was once estimated there were as many as 17,000 moths per square meter.

But Jess Abrahams, a nature campaigner from the Australian Conservation Foundation says bogong moth numbers have collapsed.

“It is a dramatic decline, and this population crash has been caused by climate change-fueled extreme drought in their breeding grounds in western Queensland. There has also been land clearing over many years, use of pesticides as well and the consequence is a huge crash in numbers and the flow-on affects to other species is of huge concern. This should be an alarm bell because we are in the midst of an extinction crisis. We are seeing (a) million species globally at risk of extinction and literally these things are disappearing before our very eyes,” Abrahams said.

The decline of the bogong moth has a cascading effect on other species. They were a major source of food for another critically endangered animal, the mountain pygmy-possum. Fewer than 2,000 of Australia’s only hibernating marsupials are thought to be left in the wild.

The moth is one of 124 Australian animals and plants that were added in December to the “Red List” of threatened species compiled by the International Union for Conservation of Nature. They include several other types of insects and the grey-headed flying fox, which is Australia’s largest bat.

The Red List classifies how close global animal, plant and fungi species are to dying out, and includes sharks, rays and birds. Many populations are strained by global warming, deforestation, habitat loss and pollution.

Campaigners are urging the Australian government to do more to save the moths that were once in such abundance in cities such as Sydney and Canberra that their vast numbers disrupted sporting events.

Source: Voice of America

Democratic Republic of the Congo – DRC At A Glance – 30 November 2021

Highlights

1. The DRC is the country with the largest internally displaced population in Africa

2. DRC hosts over 0.5 M refugees and asylum seekers

3. Lack of a proper civil registration system puts many at risk of statelessness in DRC. UNHCR joins the United Nations Legal Identity Program to help the DRC government put in place a strong registration system that is inclusive for all types of populations, ensuring that no one is left behind

Source: UN High Commissioner for Refugees

Ambulance Service for Poor Helps Residents of Nairobi’s Largest Slum

A community health service in Africa’s largest urban slum is helping poor people get affordable emergency services during the COVID pandemic.

The Kibera community emergency response team in Nairobi is offering a $1 monthly fee for access to emergency services, including an ambulance.

Poor people — like those living in Nairobi’s Kibera slum — find it difficult to access emergency health care.

Even where public services such as clinics and hospitals are provided within slums, the high cost effectively bars most Kibera residents from calling an ambulance.

It’s a challenge Moses Omondi — who was born and brought up in Kibera slum — has undertaken.

He formed a community emergency response team that provides services to slum residents for a fee of $1 a month, including ambulance transport to the hospitals.

“If you have an ambulance, you can easily access a hospital because no hospital should deny you services when you have been taken there by an ambulance, Moses Omondi said. “It means it’s an emergency case that needs emergency attention.”

Annet Okumu is one of about 300 subscribers to the ambulance service. She said she received potentially lifesaving care inside an ambulance after an accident last year.

“The condition I was in wasn’t that good,” Okumu said. “I was really having a very bad headache, I was bleeding. So maybe I could have overbled if I couldn’t have gotten the first aid service.”

Non-profit groups and other benefactors support the service. So far, there is one ambulance for an estimated 250,000 residents in the slum. Officials hope to increase the number to five.

Ambulance services in Kenya ordinarily cost up to $400 depending on the needs of a patient, such as a ventilator and the distance involved.

Officials say arrangements that provide public access to affordable emergency services are especially important during the COVID-19 era. Judith Okech is the head of the Ambulex Kenya service.

“It’s a service people are acknowledging that they very much need, and you’ll realize that people living within such settings, some of them have never called for an ambulance because they know that if you call for an ambulance it’s never going to get there, or you’ll be asked for a lot of money that they are not able to afford,” Judith said.

Residents say the community service emergency response team offers hope they will have better access to the health care they need.

Source: Voice of America

France Broadens Mask Mandate to Children as Young as 6

France has lowered the age of its mask mandate to 6-year-old children, officials announced Saturday. The news comes just days before schools reopen Monday, following the winter holiday break.

While the mandate requires children to wear masks in indoor public places, the mandate will also include outside locations in cities like Paris and Lyon where an outside mandate is already in place.

The wildly contagious omicron variant, French authorities said Saturday, has resulted in four consecutive days of over 200,000 new infections.

The chief executive of Britain’s National Health Service Confederation told the BBC Saturday that the surge in COVID cases fueled by omicron may force hospitals to ban visitors.

“It’s a last resort. But, when you’re facing the kind of pressures the health service is going to be under for the next few weeks, this is the kind of thing managers have to do,” Matthew Taylor said.

Europe has surpassed 100 million cases of coronavirus since the pandemic began nearly two years ago, according to data from the Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center. Worldwide, nearly 290 million cases have been recorded.

Nearly 5 million of Europe’s cases were reported in the last seven days, with 17 of the 52 countries or territories that make up Europe setting single-day new case records thanks to the omicron variant, Agence France-Presse reported Saturday.

More than 1 million of those cases were reported in France, which has joined the U.S., India, Brazil, Britain and Russia to become the sixth country to confirm more than 10 million cases since the pandemic began, Reuters reported.

Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center reported early Sunday that it has recorded 289.3 million global COVID cases and 5.4 million deaths.

Source: Voice of America

Richard Leakey, Fossil Hunter and Defender of Elephants, Dies at 77

World-renowned Kenyan conservationist and fossil hunter Richard Leakey, whose groundbreaking discoveries helped prove that humankind evolved in Africa, died on Sunday at the age of 77, the country’s president said.

The legendary paleoanthropologist remained energetic into his 70s despite bouts of skin cancer, kidney and liver disease.

“I have this afternoon… received with deep sorrow the sad news of the passing away of Dr. Richard Erskine Frere Leakey,” President Uhuru Kenyatta said in a statement late Sunday.

Born on December 19, 1944, Leakey was destined for paleoanthropology — the study of the human fossil record — as the middle son of Louis and Mary Leakey, perhaps the world’s most famous discoverers of ancestral hominids.

Initially, Leakey tried his hand at safari guiding, but things changed when at 23 he won a research grant from the National Geographic Society to dig on the shores of northern Kenya’s Lake Turkana, despite having no formal archaeological training.

In the 1970s he led expeditions that recalibrated scientific understanding of human evolution with the discovery of the skulls of Homo habilis (1.9 million years old) in 1972 and Homo erectus (1.6 million years old) in 1975.

A TIME magazine cover followed of Leakey posing with a Homo habilis mock-up under the headline “How Man Became Man.” Then in 1981, his fame grew further when he fronted “The Making of Mankind,” a seven-part BBC television series.

Yet the most famous fossil find was yet to come: the uncovering of an extraordinary, near-complete Homo erectus skeleton during one of his digs in 1984, which was nicknamed Turkana Boy.

As the slaughter of African elephants reached a crescendo in the late 1980s, driven by insatiable demand for ivory, Leakey emerged as one of the world’s leading voices against the then-legal global ivory trade.

President Daniel arap Moi in 1989 appointed Leakey to lead the national wildlife agency — soon to be named the Kenya Wildlife Service, or KWS.

That year he pioneered a spectacular publicity stunt by burning a pyre of ivory, setting fire to 12 tons of tusks to make the point that they have no value once removed from elephants.

He also held his nerve, without apology, when implementing a shoot-to-kill order against armed poachers.

In 1993, his small Cessna plane crashed in the Rift Valley where he had made his name. He survived but lost both legs.

“There were regular threats to me at the time and I lived with armed guards. But I made the decision not to be a dramatist and say: ‘They tried to kill me.’ I chose to get on with life,” he told the Financial Times.

Leakey was forced out of KWS a year later and began a third career as a prominent opposition politician, joining the chorus of voices against Moi’s corrupt regime.

His political career met with less success, however, and in 1998 he was back in the fold, appointed by Moi to head Kenya’s civil service, putting him in charge of fighting official corruption.

The task proved impossible, however, and he resigned after just two years.

In 2015, as another elephant poaching crisis gripped Africa, President Kenyatta asked Leakey to again take the helm at KWS, this time as chairman of the board, a position he would hold for three years.

Deputy President William Ruto said Leakey “fought bravely for a better country” and inspired Kenyans with his zeal for public service.

Soft-spoken and seemingly devoid of personal vanity, Leakey stubbornly refused to give in to health woes.

“Richard was a very good friend and a true loyal Kenyan. May he Rest In Peace,” Paula Kahumbu, the head of Wildlife Direct, a conservation group founded by Leakey, posted on Twitter.

Source: Voice of America

International net reserves set at USD 9.8 billion

Luanda – The International Net Reserves (INR) until 30 December 2021 fixed up to USD 9,8 billion related to a period of 11 months of importing goods and services.

Comparing to the end of 2020 it is verified a break of more one billion USD taking view that until 31 December of that period as the INR were set at USD 8,7 billion.

According to data released by the Central bank of Angola regarding to the Daily Evolution of the International Net and Importing months, the Gross International Reserves (GIR) until 30 December 2022 stayed at USD 15.4 billion.

In 2020, the GIR closed the year in USD 14.8 billion observing as well that from August to 03 December the GIR remain at 16 billion dollars.

However, on this matter the SADC demands related to importing months are six months having the indicators of the Central Bank of Angola, above the average underlined in the region.

Source: Angola Press News Agency

CPLP president defends coordinated positions against inequalities

Luanda – The president of the Community of Portuguese-speaking Countries (CPLP) João Lourenço Friday defended a firmed and coordinated standing of the international body to fight the spread of the covid-19 virus and its variants, poverty and social and economic inequalities.

In a statement released by the Portuguese Radio and TV station (RTP) for the country members of the Community of Portuguese-speaking Countries, the Angolan head of State also called for measures to fight climate crisis, emerging of extremists regimes, political and religious fundamentalism and other ways of oppression and exploration of the human being.

The head of state hailed the citizens of the CPLP working in the international body projects and wished a festive Season in the spirit of helping each other and solidarity towards the most needy and in the certainty that they will continue to be united.

“It’s with great pleasure that in this Festive Season I address myself throughout the respective public Television channel to all viewers of Angola, Cape Verde, Guinea Bissau, Mozambique, Sao Tome and Principe, Portugal, Brazil, East Timor and Equatorial Guinea, united countries not only due to the language and culture but especially because of deep friendship and solidarity ties”, stressed João Lourenço.

Regarding the covid-19 pandemic, João Lourenço considered that it reinforced in an almost outrageous way the evidence of how still is unequal, unbalanced and selfish the current International Order.

The Angolan leader added that covid-19 and its social and economic effects have been showing that everyone depends on other and that only together is possible to fight all the challenges that passes by on the horizon in the safeguard of the humanity and earth planet.

The CPLP President considered as sad and regrettable that have been a virus to wake up our conscious for this reality.

Angola assumed the rotating presidency of the Community of Portuguese-speaking Countries for the period of 2021 to 2023 during the 8th Conference of Heads of State and Government of the organization that took place from 12 to 17 July 2102 in Luanda.

Source: Angola Press News Agency

US Seeks New 5G Delay to Study Interference with Planes

U.S. authorities have asked telecom operators AT&T and Verizon to delay for up to two weeks their already postponed rollout of 5G networks amid uncertainty about interference with vital flight safety equipment.

The U.S. rollout of the high-speed mobile broadband technology had been set for December 5, but was delayed to January 5 after aerospace giants Airbus and Boeing raised concerns about potential interference with the devices used by planes to measure altitude.

U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg and the head of the Federal Aviation Administration, Steve Dickson, asked for the latest delay in a letter sent Friday to AT&T and Verizon, two of the country’s biggest telecom operators.

The U.S. letter asked the companies to “continue to pause introducing commercial C-Band service” — the frequency range used for 5G — “for an additional short period of no more than two weeks beyond the currently scheduled deployment date of January 5.”

The companies did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The U.S. officials’ letter assures the companies that 5G service will be able to begin “as planned in January with certain exceptions around priority airports.”

The officials say their priority has been “to protect flight safety, while ensuring that 5G deployment and aviation operations can co-exist.”

Last February, Verizon and AT&T were authorized to start using 3.7-3.8 GHz frequency bands on December 5, after obtaining licenses worth tens of billions of dollars.

But when Airbus and Boeing raised their concerns about possible interference with airplanes’ radio altimeters, which can operate in the same frequencies, the launch date was pushed back to January.

The FAA requested further information about the instruments, and it issued directives limiting the use of altimeters in certain situations, which sparked airline fears over the potential costs.

When Verizon and AT&T wrote to federal authorities in November to confirm their intention to start deploying 5G in January, they said they would take extra precautions beyond those required by U.S. law until July 2022 while the FAA completes its investigation.

The conflict between 5G networks and aircraft equipment led French authorities to recommend switching off mobile phones with 5G on planes in February.

France’s civil aviation authority said interference from a signal on a nearby frequency to the radio altimeter could cause “critical” errors during landing.

Source: Voice of America

Angolan President congratulates Cuban counterpart

Luanda – The Angolan Head of State João Lourenço Saturday congratulated the Cuban counterpart Miguel Díaz-Canel on the 63rd anniversary of the Cuban Revolution Triumph which was marked today.

In the message, the Angolan leader highlights the historical relationships of friendship and cooperation which both countries keep for several decades “as the results that reinforce the pillars in which they rest important and solid conquests of our respective people”.

The head of state also expressed the interest of the Angolan Government to continue straightening friendship bonds and solidarity that unite the people, countries and governments of Angola and Cuba.

João Lourenço ends the message wishing good health, personal well being and prosperity for the Cuban people.

Angola and Cuba has political, diplomatic, economic, commercial and cultural and historical ties, based on the reciprocity of advantages, dating back several decades.

Source: Angola Press News Agency

Covid-19: Angola records 805 new cases, 87 recoveries

Luanda – The health authorities have recorded in the last 24 hours, 805 new cases, 2 deaths and the recovery of 87 patients.

According to data contained in the daily bulletin, 407 cases were diagnosed in Luanda, 127 in Benguela, 63 in Huambo, 62 in Uíge, 46 in Cuanza Sul, 45 in Moxico, 38 in Cuanza Norte, 10 in Bié, 6 in Lunda Sul and 1 in Namibe.

Among the new cases, whose ages range from 3 months to 86 years, 438 are male and 367 are female patients.

In the last 24 hours, the laboratories processed 2,396 samples, with a daily positivity rate of 33,6 percent.

The deaths were registered in the provinces of Luanda and Moxico.

According to the daily bulletin, the recovered patients 85 reside in Luanda and 2 in Benguela.

Angola has 82,398 confirmed cases, 64,620 recovered 1,772 deaths and 16,006 active. From the active patients, 10 are in critical condition, 46 are severe, 98 are moderate, 109 are mild and 15,743 are asymptomatic.

However, 263 patients are hospitalized in treatment centers, while 213 are in institutional quarantine.

Source: Angola Press News Agency