Purdue researcher awarded $1.3 million for malaria drug trials in Southeast Asia and Africa

Philip Low looks to validate previous trial results and test whether the number of days of an anti-malaria drug therapy can be reduced

WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind., Sept. 15, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — A Purdue researcher is taking a giant leap forward in the fight against drug-resistant strains of malaria in developing countries.

Open Philanthropy has awarded $1.38 million to Philip Low to further validate a drug therapy that he and his colleagues have previously shown to successfully treat the disease. Low (rhymes with “now”) is Purdue University’s Presidential Scholar for Drug Discovery and the Ralph C. Corley Distinguished Professor of Chemistry in the College of Science.

For years, experts have been concerned about the rise of drug-resistant malaria variants in Southeast Asia and the prospect that one or more of these strains might travel to Africa. A similar event occurred in the 1980s with the emergence of drug resistance to the then-standard treatment of chloroquine, which resulted in millions of deaths.

But Low is working to save lives on both continents by conducting clinical trials to validate previous results and to test whether the number of days of an anti-malaria treatment can be reduced.

While studying how malaria propagates in human blood, Low and his research team discovered that the cancer drug therapy imatinib is effective in the treatment of drug-resistant malaria. Trials in Southeast Asia showed that imatinib, when combined with the customary malaria therapy, clears all malaria parasites from 90% of patients within 48 hours and 100% of patients within three days. The patients receiving imatinib were also relieved of their fevers in less than half of the time experienced by similar patients treated with the standard therapy.

Open Philanthropy has awarded Low $600,000 for a larger clinical trial in Southeast Asia to validate his previous trials. The organization has also awarded Low $780,000 to determine whether the usual three-day therapy can be reduced to two days or even one. This work will be focused in the African countries of Kenya and Tanzania where malaria is prominent.

“We found that people in Africa must often walk many miles to obtain treatment for malaria. They will receive three pills, walk all the way home, take one or two pills, start to feel better, and then save the third pill for their next malaria infection,” Low said. “When they don’t finish the course of treatment, only the most drug-resistant strains of the parasite survive and spread. And that’s how people build up drug resistance. So we’d like to eventually be able to cure all patients with just one pill. It would prevent these drug-resistant strains from ever proliferating.”

Open Philanthropy is a grantmaking organization whose mission is to use its resources to help others as much as it can, according to the funder.

“This is yet another case of an organization recognizing Philip Low’s brilliance, scientific vision and mission to help people in all corners of the world,” said Brooke Beier, senior vice president of Purdue Innovates. “The Purdue Research Foundation has been a proud partner in supporting his work, protecting and promoting his intellectual property that is changing lives and making our world a better place to live.”

Since 1988, Low has been listed on more than 145 invention disclosures to the Purdue Innovates Office of Technology Commercialization. He has been listed on more than 600 patents in nearly two dozen countries around the world from the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office and international patent organizations. During his tenure at Purdue, Low has been awarded 213 research grants for more than $43.5 million. His work also receives support from the Purdue Institute for Cancer Research and the Purdue Institute for Drug Discovery.

Imatinib was originally produced by Novartis for the treatment of chronic myelogenous leukemia and other cancers. It works by blocking specific enzymes involved in the growth of cancers.

“When we discovered the ability of imatinib to block parasite propagation in human blood cultures in petri dishes, we initiated a human clinical trial where we combined imatinib with the standard treatment (piperaquine plus dihydroartemisinin) used to treat malaria in much of the world,” Low said.

Malaria infects human red blood cells, where it reproduces and eventually activates a red blood cell enzyme that in turn triggers rupture of the cell and release of a form of the parasite called a merozoite into the bloodstream. Low and his colleagues theorized that by blocking the critical red blood cell enzyme, they could stop the infection. The data from initial drug trials have confirmed that.

“Because we’re targeting an enzyme that belongs to the red blood cell, the parasite can’t mutate to develop resistance — it simply can’t mutate our proteins in our blood cells,” Low said. “This is a novel approach that will hopefully become a therapy that can’t be evaded by the parasite in the future. This would constitute an important contribution to human health.”

The goal, Low said, is to get this into developing countries to save lives. With this new round of funding, he says they’re now closer than they’ve ever been.

About Purdue University

Purdue University is a public research institution with excellence at scale. Ranked among top 10 public universities and with two colleges in the top 4 in the United States, Purdue discovers and disseminates knowledge with a quality and at a scale second to none. More than 105,000 students study at Purdue across modalities and locations, with 50,000 in person on the West Lafayette campus. Committed to affordability and accessibility, Purdue’s main campus has frozen tuition 12 years in a row. See how Purdue never stops in the persistent pursuit of the next giant leap, including its first comprehensive urban campus in Indianapolis, the new Mitchell E. Daniels, Jr. School of Business, and Purdue Computes, at https://www.purdue.edu/president/strategic-initiatives.

About Purdue Innovates

Purdue Innovates is a unified network at Purdue Research Foundation to assist Purdue faculty, staff, students and alumni in either IP commercialization or startup creation. As a conduit to technology commercialization, intellectual property protection and licensing, startup creation and venture capital, Purdue Innovates serves as the front door to translate new ideas into world-changing impact.

For more information on licensing a Purdue innovation, contact the Office of Technology Commercialization at otcip@prf.org. For more information about involvement and investment opportunities in startups based on a Purdue innovation, contact Purdue Innovates at purdueinnovates@prf.org.

Media contact: Steve Martin, sgmartin@prf.org

Sources: Philip Low, plow@purdue.edu

Brooke Beier, blbeier@prf.org

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Steve Martin
Purdue Research Foundation
sgmartin@prf.org

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National Assembly Speaker urges parliamentary ethics

The National Assembly Speaker, Carolina Cerqueira, said Saturday that she is confident that a sense of duty, parliamentary ethics and resilience will contribute to a democratic, prosperous, peaceful and socially just Angola.

In a message addressed to Angolan parliamentarians, one year after the inauguration of the deputies elected in 2022, Carolina Cerqueira said that exercising the legislative function is a noble mission that requires everyone to respect the dignity of every Angolan.

“Although it is democratic to disagree when the interests and values we embrace and believe in are confronted, ethics and understanding must prevail in the exercise of our right or power, never making disrespect prevail in debates and actions, always endeavouring to solidify parliamentary plurality, maintain decorum and respect for institutions as a constitutional duty,” the message reads.

According to the parliamentary leader, in this first year of the fifth parliamentary term, the deputies have proved that it is possible to overcome difficulties and that all means of political consultation must be exhausted, respecting differences in order to find consensus in favour of the best decisions for the well-being of the people.

Carolina Cerqueira said that in the face of the immeasurable challenges on the parliamentary agenda, in a complex international and internally challenging context, tolerance, serenity and everyone’s commitment to social peace and political peace must prevail in favour of democracy, understanding and respect for difference.

“It is in the face of this challenge that we once again call on the Angolans we represent to defend the public interest, with respect for the Constitution and the laws in force,” she stressed.

The National Assembly has 220 deputies elected in the 2022 general elections.

The ruling MPLA obtained 51.17%, electing 124 deputies, against UNITA’s 43.95%, which elected 90 deputies.

The Social Renewal Party (PRS) came third with 1.14 per cent of the vote and elected two deputies.

In fourth place was the FNLA (National Front for the Liberation of Angola), with 1.06% and two seats in the National Assembly. Also with two deputies, but 1.02%, was the PHA (Humanist Party of Angola)

Source: Angola Press News Agency

Angolan President arrives in New York for High Level Debate

Angolan President, João Lourenço, arrived early Saturday in New York, United States of America, to take part in the High Level Debate of the 78th Session of the United Nations (UN) General Assembly to take place from September 18 to 20.

The Angolan Head of State, who comes from Havana (Cuba) where he took part in the G77+China Summit, leads a high-level delegation to take part in various debates towards current world issues, such as terrorism and sustainable development, from the 18th to the 20th of this month.

The annually held United Nations debate brings together the 193 member countries.

President João Lourenço is due to speak on Wednesday 20th, the second day of the general debate.

The Head of State’s agenda includes a long list of political and diplomatic contacts, including meetings with counterparts and heads of government from different countries.

World leaders gather to engage in the annual high-level General Debate under the theme, “Rebuilding trust and reigniting global solidarity: Accelerating action on the 2030 Agenda and its Sustainable Development Goals towards peace, prosperity, progress and sustainability for all.”

Ambassador Dennis Francis of the Republic of Trinidad and Tobago, who was elected to this rotating position on June 1, 2023, chairs the event

The initiative is taking place at a time when the international political, military, economic, social and climate situation is marked by various challenges and crises in different parts of the world, particularly in Europe and the African continent.

One of these challenges, which could be on the agenda of the Heads of State and Government present in New York, is the war between Russia and Ukraine, which has had a significant impact on the international situation.

This conflict, which has been going on for more than a year and a half, has a major impact on diplomatic relations, international and regional security and even the global economy.

The war is having significant humanitarian consequences, with thousands of deaths and an increasing number of refugees and internally displaced people, as well as seriously affecting the global food distribution chain, especially cereals.

Meanwhile, the General Debate is also taking place against a backdrop of persistent conflicts in other parts of the world, such as the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), the Central African Republic (CAR), Libya, Mali, Sudan, Syria and Yemen.

These problems, along with the Israeli-Palestinian crisis, the situation in Western Sahara, expansion of terrorist activities in the Sahel region, Somalia and Mozambique, among other situations have the attention of the participants during the working days.

Source: Angola Press News Agency

Archbishop Muheria Calls For Alternative To Cushion Kenyans From Inflation

Roads, Transport and Public Works Cabinet Secretary Kipchumba Murkomen has defended Thursday’s decision by the Energy and Petroleum Regulatory Authority (EPRA) to increase the cost of fuel by as much as Sh20 for every litre.

Speaking in Nyeri on Friday, when he officially opened the 55th edition of the Central Kenya National Show on behalf of the President William Ruto, Murkomen said that the price of fuel had gone up all over the world and that the price hikes were not unique to the Kenya alone.

‘I know that Kenyans are anxious because of the price of petroleum. This increase is a result of a spike globally. As a matter of fact, our country has tried because, through the government-to-government arrangement, we have been able to manage the cost of petroleum products,’ stated Murkomen.

On Thursday, EPRA released the new fuel prices that will see a litre of Super Petrol prices go up by Sh16.96 while the cost of a litre of diesel has increased by Sh21.32. The price of Kerosene has shot up by Sh33.13 per litre.

With the new September-October price revisions, a consumer in Nairobi County will part with Sh211.64 for a litre of Super Petrol and Sh200.99 for a litre of Diesel. Kerosene is now retailing at Sh202.61 per litre. In Mombasa County, a litre of Super Petrol now costs Sh208.58, Diesel is retailing at 197.93 and a litre of Kerosene is being sold at Sh199.54 at the pump. In Nyeri County, Super Petrol is selling at Sh213.12, Diesel at Sh202.47 and Kerosene is selling at Sh 204.08.

In a statement, EPRA director general, Daniel Kiptoo, said that the increase was occasioned by an increase in the cost of imported refined petroleum products.

While defending the price hike, Murkomen said that the government was doing its best to cushion Kenyans from the impact through the government-to-government deal with the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia which is supposed to guarantee Kenya reduced fuel prices at the pump.

‘The president has not slept; he has done everything possible. The Ministry of Energy and the Energy CS have been to ministries that work on the G-to-G programme with the governments which can supply petroleum to make sure that we continue reducing the cost of the products,’ said Murkomen.

But in a rejoinder, Nyeri Diocese Catholic Archbishop, Anthony Muheria says that the upward price adjustments did not take into consideration the plight of poor Kenyans. According to the cleric who was speaking at the Our Lady Consolata Cathedral in Nyeri on Saturday, the price hike heralds the beginning of tougher times for Kenyans who will now be forced to dig deeper into their pockets to afford basic commodities and transport costs.

Further, Archbishop Muheria said that increasing the cost of fuel will deal another negative blow to the income of ordinary Kenyans who are already struggling to keep up with the upsurge of taxes from the government as a way of supporting the economy.

‘The increased cost of fuel is going to have a terrible ripple effect. All the fares, boda boda and matatu are going to change. It will also affect the prices of commodities and services,’ said Archbishop Muheria.

To address the crisis, the Nyeri Prelate has called for a discourse involving all stakeholders to chart the best solution which will put into consideration the plight of the poor.

He said he was convinced that despite the cost of fuel being determined by global factors, the government had not explored all the available avenues to cushion the consumer from the impact of the global petroleum trade.

‘We know that fuel prices are affected by the global market that is why we are saying we should find a solution. We should not constrain the poor Kenyans from all quarters,’ he said.

Source: Kenya News Agency

Nyamira County Launches Child Policy 2023

Nyamira Governor Amos Nyaribo has officially launched the County Child Policy 2023 to enable all children in the County to access enhanced care, protection and basic rights as enshrined in the Constitution and the Children’s Act 2022.

Governor Nyaribo observed that children face a myriad of challenges which in most instances are unattended to and the majority of adults assume they are just kids and have nothing to say or contribute in society thus denied a chance to access their rights.

‘The 2019 census indicated that in Nyamira, the total population of persons between the ages 0 – 19 were 307,000 which comprises about 42 percent of our total population, a key population which our government has decided to invest in so that we can leave behind a generation which is empowered.’

‘Children in our region face challenges like neglect by their caregivers, subjected to child labour like brick and ballast making, tea picking and even working as domestic workers or farm hands and are denied an opportunity to access education which is free shatteering their hope of living an economically stable future.’

The Governor pointed out that another upcoming challenge is cyberbullying, child trafficking for child labour or commercializing their body organs which caregivers, especially parents, must be on high alert because these abuses greatly endanger the lives of our children.

‘My government will team up with all willing stakeholders and partners in providing the necessary services, protection and support to these vulnerable groups of population in my county to ensure that they also enjoy being citizens of this county and country,’ Nyaribo pledged.

Nyamira County Commissioner, Onesmas Kyatha stated that his officers and the police will ensure all the criminals who abuse children will be prosecuted before the courts of law to serve justice to the innocent children.

‘If you think that your high socioeconomic status will bail you out of your heinous acts of defiling, assaulting and neglecting this vulnerable group of residents in Nyamira, be warned that it won’t be business as usual. We will pursue such matters to the bitter end until justice is served,’ CC Kyatha affirmed.

Ms Rebecca Hallam, the Country representative for Catholic Relief Services (CRS), an organization that has been collaborating with the County government to support them in the development of the Child Policy 2023 confirmed that the collaboration has been very mutual so far.

‘Through mutual collaboration with the county government of Nyamira, we have managed to develop the Child policy for service delivery in responding to the very immediate needs of children in this county. This policy will guide the formulation of sustainable children-related programmes and services by stakeholders who deal with children in their mandated service delivery. The county representative explained.

Ms Hallam said she was delighted and impressed with the county leadership and their relentless commitment to matters concerning children and promised that their collaboration will continue because they have already signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) to ensure together they will create a better world for children.

‘My government is committed to ensuring that implementation of this Child Policy 2023 by my administration is seamless. We shall allocate resources to child welfare programmes that will support vulnerable children and their households so they also grow up in conducive home environments,’ Confirmed Nyaribo.

Source: Kenya News Agency

Take Advantage Of Government Funds, Owalo Tells Women Groups

CS for ICT and the Digital Economy Eliud Owalo has encouraged women groups to utilize the available government funds such as Hustler Fund, to uplift themselves economically.

Meeting with women groups drawn from Siaya County at his home in Asembo, Rarieda Constituency, Siaya County Owalo said the empowerment of women is critical in developing the economy of the region and nation at large.

‘The government is committed to ensuring women are empowered in transformative ways that brings development to all citizens regardless of where they are in Kenya, they are all citizens and we shall ensure all these platforms are available to our women,’ Owalo said.

The CS noted that very few women are well informed of the available opportunities availed by the government to help groups access funding, running and even starting businesses adding that there are many unexploited resources that women should take advantage of by gaining strength in numbers and forming cooperatives aimed at bettering their financial situations.

Among the guests who accompanied the CS included SASRA chairman Jack Ranguma, Betty Adhiambo chairperson Nyanza Women Professionals Association, Elizabeth Ongoro Senator, Rose Nyamunga Chairperson Postal Corporation, representatives from Micro and Small Enterprise Authority, State Departments of Cooperatives; SMES; Blue Economy; Women Enterprise Fund; Gender among others.

Uwezo fund which gives loans of up-to Sh50, 000 was lauded by women groups attending for being at the forefront of lending to groups, as they were encouraged to make use of the many untapped resources that the government has availed to special groups, those under 35 were also emboldened to take up the Youth Fund and women Enterprise Fund which gives loans starting from Sh50,000 to 750,000.

ICT and Construction have been identified as the most underutilized niches by women in the current economic sectors.

In the field of construction only three percent of Kenyan women are in construction according to statistics by the government.

Source: Kenya News Agency

Roads Ministry To Facilitate Access To Markets By Farmers By Completing All Pending Road Projects

Roads Transport and Public Works Cabinet Secretary Kipchumba Murkomen has pledged to complete all pending roads as a way of supporting players in the agriculture sector to access local markets.

According to the CS, a total of 1,000 kilometers of roads are currently under construction with 469 kilometers being constructed by the Kenya Rural Roads Authority while the construction of the bulk of the remaining 531 kilometers is being undertaken by the Kenya National Highways Authority with a view of facilitating the movement of farm produce to markets as well as managing the cost of transport for framers.

‘It will be unfair for me to speak about only agriculture without speaking about the connection between agriculture and the market which is the responsibility of my ministry,’ said the CS.

‘We have over 1,000 kilometers of roads that are under construction in this country. We are doing everything possible to ensure that we have raised the necessary revenue that can enable us to complete this infrastructure. We will do everything possible to ensure that our farmers are not stuck when they are taking their produce to the market,’ added Murkomen.

The transport CS was speaking at Kabiru-ini showground in Nyeri when he officially opened the 55th edition of the Central Kenya National Show on behalf of the head of state, Dr. William Ruto. Accompanying Murkomen was the Principal Secretary in the State Department of Crop Development, Kello Harsma, Nyeri Deputy Governor, Warui Kinaniri, Agriculture Society of Kenya national chairperson, Pamela Kirinya, Central Kenya ASK show chairman, Patrick Munuhe among a host of other dignitaries.

This year’s annual agricultural fair which is themed Promoting Climate Smart Agriculture and Trade Initiatives for Sustainable Economic Growth has attracted close to 170 exhibitors from agriculture, manufacturing, housing, Small and Medium Enterprises, banking, hospitality, and education sectors.

In a speech read on his behalf by the transport CS, President Ruto promised to revitalize the sector in a bid to increase productivity and increase incomes for farmers.

According to the head of state, his agriculture revitalization plan will revolve around reducing the cost of production, investing in technologies to help farmers mitigate the effects of climate change, and investing in value addition.

Among the plans in the pipeline is the establishment of a Sh. 400 million semen plant which President Ruto stated will increase production in the dairy sub-sector.

The government has also identified edible oil, rice, coffee, beef, leather, and dairy sub-sectors for value addition and marketing.

He said that the state is working to reduce the country’s overreliance on the importation of food commodities by increasing local production.

‘We would like to reduce the importation of rice which currently costs Shs. 34 billion annually by expanding our current rice production in Mwea, Ahero as well as establishing other rice production fields. We are working on reducing the importation of edible oils which cost up to Sh 100 billion annually. We plan to achieve this by investing in the cultivation of palm oil, sunflower, canola, and soya bean,’ stated Dr Ruto.

On the climate-smart agriculture front, the President said that the government will incorporate smart technologies that are resilient to changes in weather patterns in addition to investing in irrigation-fed food production by actualizing the government’s plan to build 100 mega dams in the country to support irrigation-fed agriculture.

Additionally, he said there are plans to increase the total acreage of land under irrigation by 5,000 acres by the year 2026 to boost food security.

Source: Kenya News Agency

Inside State Plans To Revitalize The Mining Sector To Boost Revenue

The government has affirmed its’ commitment to streamline the mining sector to be a key driver of to the economy.

Mining, Blue Economy and Maritime Affairs Cabinet Secretary Salim Mvurya introduced a raft of sweeping reforms to revive the sector.

Mvurya says the once-dormant National Mining Corporation received a budgetary allocation of Sh349 million for the financial year 2023/2024.

The National Geological Survey, CS Mvurya divulged is at 95 percent with only the blue spaces that have not been looked into showing the country is endowed with resources

‘We have a responsibility to inspire the economy through mining. The country has enormous mineral resources,’ said CS Mvurya Friday when alongside PS for Mining Elijah Mwangi met Heads of Departments at the Kenya School of Government (KSG) Mombasa campus.

Mvurya said the government aims to increase revenue from the mining sector from the current one percent of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) to ten percent in the next three years.

‘We have just concluded the geo survey report which has identified 970 mineral occurrences across the country. We have been able to identify key minerals across the 47 counties.

We have now embarked on a process of ground trothing to be able to quantify and see the economic value of our minerals,’ said CS Mvurya.

Key value addition centers have been identified across the country in line with the mining value addition and mineral processing policy.

‘The establishment of the value addition centres aims to reduce the amount of exported raw for example in the building industry Kenya has sufficient limestone and gypsum where we can process clinker, we don’t need to import clinker from other countries,’ said CS Mvurya adding that jobs will be created in the mining sectors.

Artisanal miners will be organized into cooperative societies to access training and linked with financial institutions to have purchasing power of modern mining equipment for mineral exploration.

To curb smuggling of mineral products CS Mvurya said Madini House will be upgraded to be a modern laboratory and lab services will be decentralized to all mining regions.

The Ministry plans to cancel 1,500 dormant licenses and await cabinet approval. ‘In our analysis of the cadaster we have found out that there are quite a number of people who are holding licenses which we have now categorized as inactive,’ revealed CS Mvurya.

The Ministry will collaborate with the Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) and Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA) to introduce transit checks and containers transporting minerals will be sealed at the point of source and opened at the point of exit to prevent alteration of documents.

‘All rogue officials who have been doing that will be brought to book so that they can be accountable to the public and the government,’ warned CS Mvurya.

Source: Kenya News Agency

Village Elders’ Venture Into The Tuk-Tuk Business For Income

Village elders in Timbwani ward of Likoni Constituency have ventured into the public service transport business as an income-generating project.

More than 50 elders contributed Sh400 monthly since 2020 towards the purchase of a three-wheeled famously known as a tuk-tuk, a major mode of transport in the coastal city of Mombasa and its environs.

The village elders mooted the business idea in 2019 after they were trained on entrepreneurship skills, with the support of local leaders led by area MP Mishi Mboko Sh700, 000 was raised in a fundraiser. They bought a tent, chairs, and a tuk-tuk.

‘The challenges we faced made us think out of the box. Some of us lack even rent to pay for the houses we live in. We appeal to the government to consider our welfare,’ said Aboud Athman, Chairman of Timbwani Village Elders Welfare.

Athman urged Parliament and government to fast-track the implementation of the National Government Coordination (Amendment) bill, 2023 sponsored by Kibwezi West MP Mwengi Mutuse which enables village elders to be remunerated by the government.

‘The bill should be implemented to facilitate our work sometimes we lack fare or airtime to furnish the government officials with information. If they cannot pay us the County and National governments should initiate projects. Our target is to come up with other projects to be able to pay the village elders Sh4000 monthly,’ said Athman.

The tuk-tuk was launched by area MP Mishi Mboko who said the village elders’ relentless efforts to realise their dream of starting an income-generating project have borne fruit.

Village elders, she said, do a lot of community work in cooperation with the office of the Chiefs and Deputy County Community in sensitizing the public on government projects and how they will benefit their localities.

‘They play a pivotal role in security matters because they are the first contact person at the grassroots but it is sad, they don’t receive any remuneration even a stipend, token, or allowance. As legislators we have discussed their issues in Parliament for village elders to get allowances,’ said Mboko.

Mboko noted that giving monthly stipends to village elders will boost their morale and motivate them to carry out their duties and responsibilities with zeal.

She said: ‘If we really want to improve security it is imperative to empower the village elders because if they want to report a case for example sometimes, they lack even fares.’

The MP lauded the village elders for restoring peace in Likoni which had witnessed a surge in juvenile crimes with daylight robbery of businesses and members of the public.

She advised the elders to remain united devoid of divisions which may make the venture to go bankrupt. She promised to take them for training in business management.

‘They should take it seriously as a business maintaining their balance sheets. The business capital should not be distributed to members to ground to a halt the tuk-tuk due to lack of fuel or maintenance,” advised Mboko.

On his part, Timbwani Deputy OCS Jacob Lenaiyarra hailed Likoni MP for empowering the elders exhorting them to continue volunteering information to security agencies.

‘Without village elders and Assistant Chiefs Timbwani cannot be peaceful. These are the people who made the ward to be peaceful from our analysis. Through collaboration with village elders and the office of the Deputy County Commissioner we have reduced crime cases involving knife-wielding gangs,’ said Lenaiyarra.

He hailed the MP for empowering the village elders. He assured the village elders of the utmost confidentiality of information shared with the police.

‘Any information you share will not be released to anyone and will remain classified and your security is guaranteed,’ said the Deputy OCS.

Source: Kenya News Agency

Sfax: Two illegal migration attempts foiled and 114 wanted persons arrested

A security campaign carried out on Friday and Saturday in the city of Sfax, its northern coast and Kerkennah resulted in the arrest of 114 wanted persons and the foiling of 2 attempts to cross the maritime borders illegally.

National Guard spokesperson Houssem Eddine Jebabli pointed out that raids were carried out in Msatria, Jebeniana, El Awabed and Ellouza, preventing more than 200 sub-Saharan migrants from participating in illegal migration operations.

He reported that 6 boats, 2 rental cars and other vehicles were seized, in addition to the arrest of 48 people involved in public order offences.

The same source reported that an aerial operation was carried out at dawn on Saturday on the island of Kerkennah, targeting organisers of illegal immigration and aiming to ensure normal ferry traffic to Sfax, adding that these security campaigns have been intensified and will continue in the region.

Source: Agence Tunis Afrique Presse