Some 346 male and female farmers benefit from innovative training session in Dairy Value Chain

Some 346 male and female farmers have benefited from an innovative training session in the Dairy Value Chain (DVC), including 31% are women and 41% are young people, the German Agency for International Cooperation (GIZ) said on Sunday in Tunisia.

This activity is part of the Innovations in Agriculture and Agribusiness (IAAA) project, sponsored by the German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ), and implemented jointly by the Agricultural Investment Promotion Agency (APIA) and GIZ.

According to the latest survey, the DVC training helped male and female farmers to increase the productivity of their cows by more than 23% compared to untrained farmers.

These training days were carried out and organised by the DVC project partners, actors in the dairy sector, with synergy between the public and private sectors.

The project partners adopted the DVC approach within their field advisory services and managed to meet the quality standards of the training.

A total of 4,899 male and female farmers have been trained since the beginning of the IAAA project, with a high integration of women (56%) and a remarkable inclusion of youth (48%).

Source: Agence Tunis Afrique Presse

Syrian FM to visit Tunisia from April 17 to 19

At the invitation of Minister of Foreign Affairs, Migration and Tunisians Abroad, Nabil Ammar, Syrian Foreign Minister, Faisal Al Mokdad, will visit Tunisia from April 17 to 19.

The visit is a concrete expression of the age-old ties of brotherhood between the two countries and the restoration of bilateral relations, particularly following the appointment of a Tunisian ambassador to Syria and the decision to reopen the Syrian embassy in Tunisia, says a statement issued Sunday by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Migration and Tunisians Abroad.

Diplomatic relations with Syria were interrupted in 2012 by former president Moncef Marzouki, which caused a large controversy in Tunisia.

On March 11, 2023, President of the Republic, Kais Saïed, decided to resume diplomatic relations with Syria and appoint an ambassador to Damascus.

Source: Agence Tunis Afrique Presse

Tunisian Ridha Mami joins North American Academy of Modern International Literature

Tunisian member of academia, researcher and translator Ridha Mami was picked to join the New York-based North American Academy of Modern International Literature (ANLMI).

This is a first for Tunisian academics, Mami Sunday told TAP, after a months-long selection.

It is a source of pride for Tunisia, Mami said. This membership paved the way for him, he added, to get unanimously chosen to give two lectures as part of the academy’s roundtable meeting next May 26-27 on “the Importance of the Spanish Language as a Bridge between Cultures.” Several themes will be addressed in connection to building peace through education.

Mami will give next May 26 at the seat of the United Nations a first lecture, along with fellow academics from the different continents, on the theme “the Two Shores of the Mediterreanean: Tragedy of Conflict and the Possibilities of Co-existence.”

A second lecture is set for May 27 at the Bronx Campus; it will address the theme of “Translations of the Palestinian Literature to Spanish.”

The Tunisian academic is a professor of Spanish language and literature at the University of Manouba and Founding President of the Tunisian Association of Graduates in Spanish Language and Literature.

He is also a poet and a critic and the author of fourteen books in Spanish and English which were published in Spain and Lation America.

Likewise, Mami translated Abu El Kacem Chebbi’s poems to Spanish; they are currently taught at the universities of Venezuela, Argentina and other Latin American countries.

Source: Agence Tunis Afrique Presse

Foreign Minister inquires about situation of Tunisians in Khartoum

Foreign Minister Nabil Ammar called the members of the Tunisian diplomatic mission in Khartoum to inquire about the situation of Tunisians and their living conditions in the light of recent developments in this brotherly country, reads a statement of the department.

The minister called on the members of the Tunisian mission to maintain permanent contact with Tunisians residing in Sudan and to remain attentive to their needs in case of necessity. He stressed the importance of being vigilant and taking all available measures to secure the headquarters of the Tunisian diplomatic mission in Khartoum.

The Tunisian community established in Sudan is composed of 110 members among senior officials assigned to regional and international organisations, the Department of Foreign Affairs said.

On Saturday, the ministry assured that the Tunisians are safe following the clashes that broke out between the army and the Rapid Support Forces (paramilitary).

Source: Agence Tunis Afrique Presse

East: Sale of contraband petroleum products on the rise

Authorities charged with the fight against the sale of contraband petroleum products in the East region of Cameroon have raised concerns over the increase in the commercialization of the product.

A recent crackdown on dealers in the activity in that part of the country led to the confiscation of over 14,000 liters of illicit fuel, which authorities have said, accounts for the disruption of the production chain of petroleum products in Cameroon.

Health concerns constitute part of the worries raised. “Petroleum products are not supposed to be sold to consumers in containers and drums” Mr. Boussop, a member of the National Brigade for Petroleum Products in the East region indicates. He further discloses that the circulation is usually at its peak during weekends.

“During weekends, this activity intensifies,” the official says this makes them go as far as the Adamawa region in their control. “We go right up to Meiganga in the Adamawa region and Garoua-Boulai in the East region. Our aim is to completely solve this activity” Mr. Boussop notes.

As part of the measures taken already in the fight, a filling station in Garoua-Boulai has been sealed for selling contraband fuel. The authorities in the East region say moves of this nature will “help protect the government’s economic strategy”.

Source: Cameroon News Agency

My Beach Project turns Seychelles’ waste to pop art

MyBeachProject is turning rubbish collected on Grand Anse on Praslin, the second most populated island in Seychelles, into pop art to inspire change.

The project was launched in 2019 by Stefanie Wichmann from Germany, now living on Praslin, who noticed some plastic bottles when walking on the beach for the first time.

Wichmann came to Seychelles to work with an agency but ended up staying and starting the MyBeachProject.

“I mainly take care of Grand Anse on a 3 kilometre stretch collecting trash and creating spontaneous pieces of pop-up art that I post on Instagram/Facebook to raise awareness on the matter and inspire change,” she told SNA.

Wichmann then creates various works of art with the trash collected on the beach and takes pictures that are then made into postcards.

Since she started the project, she has collected 40,000 pieces of trash from the beach.

“A number I never would have guessed possible but it showed me how much a single person can do,” Wichmann revealed.

Doing the extra work to help preserve the environment in the small island state, she explained that she simply uses her 1 kilometre walk to work and back to pick up litter, keeping off days for the bigger hauls.

Wichmann shared her sadness that so much trash is being thrown on the beach she visits and carelessly dropped again within a few hours after she has collected some of them.

She started the clean-up project because “I always felt I’m here at the right time to tackle this issue and inspire people to become more aware of it, being more appreciative of the natural abundance Seychelles has to offer and to take action preserving this paradise on a larger scale.”

Wichmann added that she did not believe she was cleaning up other people’s messes but rather helping shift the mindsets to prevent it in the first place.

“Nobody is perfect, neither am I but it is about starting today with one little thing you can implement in your daily life. Imagine, if it is done by 100, 1000, or even everyone in Seychelles, how huge an impact it can make,” she said.

Visitors to the MyBeachproject Facebook or Instagram pages can order the postcard that catches their eyes the most.

Wichmann is also launching an appeal for people to help with the cause since she cannot do it alone. In addition to her MyBeachProject work, she is also part of Fresh Focus on Praslin. Fresh Focus is a group that cleans beaches and hiking trails on the second on Praslin and recycles plastic waste.

Source: Seychelles News Agency

Terrified Sudanese seek shelter as rival forces fight

After a sleepless night as fighting raged, Khartoum residents are cautiously venturing out to buy supplies fearing a prolonged fight between Sudan’s regular army and paramilitaries.

“We have been living in terror since yesterday,” said 43-year-old Sanaa Mohamed, outside a bakery in a northern Khartoum suburb.

“The explosions terrified my children,” added Mohamed, who hurried back to her family immediately after buying bread.

Like many in Sudan, Mohamed was shaken awake on Saturday by the outbreak of deadly fighting between Sudan’s army and the powerful paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF).

Families spent the day sheltered in place too scared to move, but on Sunday, with the fighting showing no signs of abating, some have crept out onto the dangerous streets seeking food.

Much of the city is without power in searing temperatures, with people readying for one of the last days of fasting for the holy month of Ramadan.

The violence erupted after weeks of bitter arguments between army chief Abdel Fattah al-Burhan and his deputy, Mohamed Hamdan Daglo, who commands the heavily-armed RSF.

Their disagreements centred around the integration of the RSF into the regular army — a key condition for a final deal aimed at ending a crisis since 2021 military coup that they orchestrated together.

– ‘Shooting never stopped’ –

By Saturday morning, the dispute escalated into an all-out conflict with heavy weaponry firing and fighter jets launching airstrikes in Khartoum, and conflict raging in several other cities.

In Khartoum, men in military fatigues on pick-up trucks with mounted machine guns roamed the streets.

Explosions rattled windows — and the nerves of many Sudanese trying to stay safe.

At least 56 civilians have been killed, according to a toll early Sunday by a group of pro-democracy medics, as well as some 600 others wounded.

The two sides have traded blame and accusations over who started the fighting.

Each have claimed the upper hand by declaring control of key sites, including the airport and the presidential palace. None of their claims could be independently verified.

“The shooting never stopped,” said Saad Ahmed, 55, from northern Khartoum. At times, “the shelling was as close as 10 metres” from his home, he said.

On social media, Sudanese have shared images of bullet holes in the walls of their homes, warning others to stay away from windows and doors.

The capital has ground to a near halt since the outbreak of clashes, with streets around Khartoum blocked and major bridges sealed off.

Both the army and the RSF have urged people to remain indoors while they fight out their disagreements.

– ‘Very worrying’ –

Despite the risk, Farouq Hassan insisted on opening his bakery.

“We are trying to work and make ends meet despite the power and water outages,” he told AFP.

Protracted fighting, he fears, would plunge Sudan — already grappling with a spiralling economic crisis — into deeper chaos.

“If I cannot find a way to re-stock the flour, my supply will run out in 48 hours,” said Hassan.

The international community and civilian leaders in Sudan have appealed for an immediate ceasefire, but the two generals have yet to heed the calls.

Daglo slammed Burhan as a “criminal” and “liar” on Al Jazeera TV, while the army declared Daglo a “wanted criminal” and the RSF a “rebel militia”.

Burhan said there “will be no negotiations or talks until the dissolution” of the group.

“It’s very worrying,” said Ahmed Seif, who lives in east Khartoum. “It doesn’t seem like it will end anytime soon.”

Source: Seychelles News Agency