National soccer championship temporarily suspended

Luanda – The current edition of the first division of the National Football Championship (Girabola2021/22) was suspended Thursday due to a lack of agreement between the Angolan Football Federation (FAF) and the Referees Association (AAFA).

According to a statement from the FAF, which said it had received a letter from AAFA on 28 February announcing the suspension of the activity of first-division national referees due to lack of payment, no consensus was reached after a meeting between the parties.

The document refers that due to this situation, FAF held contacts with AAFA, aiming at finding solutions that would assure the continuity of the competition, but without success.

Source: Angola Press News Agency

Report: UK to Ban Conversion Therapy for Gays, but Not for Trans People

The U.K. will ban conversion therapy for gay or bisexual people in England and Wales, but not for transgender people, ITV reported Thursday.

Hours earlier, the government had confirmed an ITV report that it would drop a plan to introduce legislation to ban LGBT conversion therapy and would instead review how existing law could be utilized more effectively to prevent it.

That prompted an angry response from LGBT groups and some lawmakers.

“The Prime Minister has changed his mind off the back of the reaction to our report and he WILL now ban conversion therapy after all,” ITV political reporter Paul Brand tweeted.

“Senior Govt source absolutely assures me it’ll be in Queen’s Speech (of planned legislation). But only gay conversion therapy, not trans,” he said.

A Downing Street spokesperson declined to comment.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s government has come under increasing pressure on the issue after former leader Theresa May vowed in 2018 to eradicate a procedure that aims to change or suppress someone’s sexual orientation or gender identity.

In May last year, when the government set out its post-pandemic parliamentary agenda, it said measures would be brought forward to prevent these “abhorrent practices which can cause mental and physical harm,” starting with a consultation on how best to protect people and how to eliminate coercive practices.

Source: Voice of America

Angola: Drought – Operation Update Report n° 1, DREF n° MDRAO007

Summary of major revisions made to emergency plan of action:

This Operations Update seeks two months no cost extension timeframe (new end date: 31 May 2022) to enable IFRC and Cruz Vermelha de Angola (CVA) conclude the procurement process for food parcel, WASH items to support 500 HH most vulnerable and affected by drought in the southern provinces of Huila, Cunene and Namibe. It is also to allow the IFRC and CVA teams finalise the detailed needs assessment.

The requested additional period is due to operational challenges experienced during the operation such as delayed on deployments and procurement processes. No additional allocation is requested, and the initial budget of CHF 159,708 will be implemented within the new time frame.

A. SITUATION ANALYSIS

Description of the disaster

Angola is facing the worst recorded drought in 40 years. IPC analysis for October 2021 to March 2022 indicates that about 1.58 million people are experiencing high levels of acute food insecurity, of which 42% are in IPC Phase 3 (Crisis) and 15% in IPC Phase 4 (Emergency). These people face difficulties in accessing food or are only able to meet the minimum food requirements through crisis and/or emergency coping strategies.

On 7 December, UNICEF published a call for Humanitarian Action for Children, alerting that an estimated 7.3 million people in Angola are facing food and nutrition insecurity due to climate shocks and about 3.9 million children are in need of assistance.

SARCOF-25 report indicates that during the December to January period, the country is projected to experience normal to above normal rainfall. This however is characterized by food shortages and increased incidences of high acute malnutrition which is projected to lead to further deterioration and a shift in phase from the current classification.

A DREF operation was launched to provide relief to 2.500 people (500 families) affected in the three provinces of Huila, Cunene and Namibe, South of Angola for a period of 03 months.

Recent data shows that part of the country is still experiencing fairly severe drought with potential impact on agricultural production while other parts of the country are showing good vegetation health. Despite this past month’s increased rain, long-term rainfall deficits (since December 2021) and deteriorated vegetation conditions persisted. Cunene, Huila, and Namibe are part of those areas. The picture below shows the severity of the situation in the country. Considering the Last FEWS Net report of 17 march 2022 also showing that poor rainfall in southwestern Angola as well as in others countries, the population could expect an increase of drought situation raised since december 2021. To be notes that all the targeted provinces in this operation are all based in the southern Angola. Cunene, Huila, and Namibe. The potential impact of this situation remains an important risk on population livelihood and food security in the southwestern regions and the other affected areas in the country.

Source: International Federation of Red Cross And Red Crescent Societies

National Development Plan with 65.75% of execution

Luanda – National Development Plan (PND) 2018-2021 had an execution rate of around 65.75 percent, according to a statement from the 3rd Ordinary Meeting of the Economic Commission of the Cabinet Council, held Wednesday.

According to the press release of the meeting, chaired by the head of State, the national economy showed signs of recovery in 2021, including the stabilisation of the exchange rate.

It states that, under the Integrated Plan for Intervention in Municipalities (PIIM), in 2021, the number of projects implemented rose to 1,983, compared to 77 in 2019, and 1,494 compared to 2020.

There was an increase of 13 .37 compared to the 1, 749 initially planned.

The press release notes that 75,551 citizens were integrated into income-generating activities, including 12,298 ex-military, and 320 tractors were distributed to 277 cooperatives, under the Integrated Programme for Local Development and Combating Poverty.

The source adds that the Kwenda programme has benefited 302,444 households, out of the 535,333 registered, with monetary transfers of more than 11. 9 billion kwanzas.

According to the statement, as a result of external scholarships granted by the Angolan government, 931 masters and 183 doctors returned to the country.

It also highlights that the entry into operation of 51 health facilities, 37 of which under the Public Investment Programme (PIP) and 14 of the PIIM, allowed the drop from 92% in 2017 to 39% in 2021, evacuations on medical boards abroad.

It adds that financing has been approved for 182 companies and 179 cooperatives, in a total of 1,024, until 2021, within the scope of the promotion of national production.

To encourage the increase in the purchase of national production, 2,226 contracts were signed, of which 1,147 were initialed in 2021, concludes the press release from the meeting.

Source: Angola Press News Agency

Parliamentary cooperation tops speaker’s audiences

Luanda – Issues related to strengthening parliamentary cooperation dominated Wednesday in Luanda, the audiences that the speaker of the National Assembly, Fernando da Piedade Dias dos Santos, granted to the ambassadors of Côte d’Ivoire, Portugal and India.

Speaking to the press, the ambassador of Côte d’Ivoire, Santiéro Jeam- Marie Sommet, said he had discussed with the speaker of the National Assembly (AN) the strengthening of friendly relations between the two countries, as well as defended the need to create a parliamentary friendship group.

According to the diplomat, who presented his credentials on 18 November, 2021, it was agreed at the meeting to carry out reciprocal visits of deputies of both countries.

He also expressed satisfaction for the existing cooperation between the two parliaments, with emphasis on the exchange of information.

For his part, the Portuguese Ambassador, Francisco Alegre Duarte, underlined his country’s priority to strengthen parliamentary cooperation, at a time when the Portuguese Parliament has just been sworn in.

According to the diplomat, the political situation in both countries was reviewed, with emphasis on preparations for the general elections to be held in Angola in August.

He said he had received a note of optimism in relation to the electoral year currently being held in Angola, and hoped that everything would run smoothly and serve as another milestone in the consolidation of democracy in this African country.

Questioned about the concession of visas for Angolan citizens to Portugal, Ambassador Duarte gave assurances that the embassy he heads is working to improve procedures and achieve concrete progress.

In this regard, he noted the signing of a visa facilitation protocol, in July 2021, as well as the agreement on mobility within the Community of Portuguese-speaking Countries (CPLP), which, according to the ambassador, is the result of an initiative and commitment from the Prime Minister of Portugal, António Costa.

He said that since that date there had been significant progress and, in March of this year, the end of restrictions on entering Portugal had been recorded.

Since June of last year visas for medical treatment had increased by over 300 percent, while those for study had risen by 390 percent and overall had risen by 400 percent.

According to the Portuguese ambassador, since March 2020 over 3,000 visas have been granted.

In her turn, the Indian ambassador to Angola, Pratibha Parkar, said that as well as strengthening parliamentary cooperation, the meeting aimed to launch the International Solar Alliance campaign.

She explained that this campaign is an initiative of the governments of India and France, launched at COP20, with the ratification of 180 countries.

He considered Angola’s participation in it important due to the role it plays in the Southern African region.

Source: Angola Press News Agency

Towering Ice Volcanoes Identified on Surprisingly Vibrant Pluto

A batch of dome-shaped ice volcanoes that look unlike anything else known in our solar system and may still be active have been identified on Pluto using data from NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft, showing that this remote frigid world is more dynamic than previously known.

Scientists said that these cryovolcanoes — numbering perhaps 10 or more — stand anywhere from 1 kilometer (six-tenths of a mile) to 7 kilometers (4-1/2 miles) tall. Unlike Earth volcanoes that spew gases and molten rock, this dwarf planet’s cryovolcanoes extrude large amounts of ice — apparently frozen water rather than some other frozen material — that may have the consistency of toothpaste, they said.

Features on the asteroid belt dwarf planet Ceres, Saturn’s moons Enceladus and Titan, Jupiter’s moon Europa and Neptune’s moon Triton also have been pegged as cryovolcanoes. But those all differ from Pluto’s, the researchers said, owing to different surface conditions such as temperature and atmospheric pressure, as well as different mixes of icy materials.

“Finding these features does indicate that Pluto is more active, or geologically alive, than we previously thought it would be,” said planetary scientist Kelsi Singer of the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colorado, lead author of the study published this week in the journal Nature Communications.

“The combination of these features being geologically recent, covering a vast area and most likely being made of water ice is surprising because it requires more internal heat than we thought Pluto would have at this stage of its history,” Singer added.

Pluto, which is smaller than Earth’s moon and has a diameter of about 2,380 kilometers (1,400 miles), orbits about 5.8 billion kilometers (3.6 billion miles) away from the sun, roughly 40 times farther than Earth’s orbit. Its surface features plains, mountains, craters and valleys.

Images and data analyzed in the new study, obtained in 2015 by New Horizons, validated previous hypotheses about cryovolcanism on Pluto.

The study found not only extensive evidence for cryovolcanism but also that it has been long-lived, not a single episode, said Southwest Research Institute planetary scientist Alan Stern, the New Horizons principal investigator and study co-author.

“What’s most fascinating about Pluto is that it’s so complex – as complex as the Earth or Mars despite its smaller size and high distance from the sun,” Stern said. “This was a real surprise from the New Horizons flyby, and the new result about cryovolcanism re-emphasizes this in a dramatic way.”

The researchers analyzed an area southwest of Sputnik Planitia, Pluto’s large heart-shaped basin filled with nitrogen ice. They found large domes 30-100 kilometers (18-60 miles) across, sometimes combining to form more complexly shaped structures.

An elevation called Wright Mons, one of the tallest, may have formed from several volcanic domes merging, yielding a shape unlike any Earth volcanoes. Although shaped differently, it is similar in size to Hawaii’s large volcano Mauna Loa.

Like Earth and our solar system’s other planets, Pluto formed about 4.5 billion years ago. Based on an absence of impact craters that normally would accumulate over time, it appears its cryovolcanoes are relatively recent — formed in the past few hundred million years.

“That is young on a geologic timescale. Because there are almost no impact craters, it is possible these processes are ongoing even in the present day,” Singer said.

Pluto has lots of active geology, including flowing nitrogen ice glaciers and a cycle in which nitrogen ice vaporizes during the day and condenses back to ice at night — a process constantly changing the planetary surface.

“Pluto is a geological wonderland,” Singer said. “Many areas of Pluto are completely different from each other. If you just had a few pieces of a puzzle of Pluto you would have no idea what the other areas looked like.”

Source: Voice of America

WHO Reports 43% Spike in Global COVID Deaths, While Caseload Drops

The World Health Organization reported a 43 percent spike in deaths from COVID-19 globally last week, while the number of cases continued to fall worldwide.

In its weekly epidemiological report, the WHO said 45,000 deaths attributed to COVID-19 were reported in the week ending March 27, up from 33,000 the week before. That spike follows a week in which deaths declined by 23 percent.

The agency said the increase in deaths is likely driven by changes in the definition of COVID-19 deaths in nations in the Americas such as Chile and the United States, and by retrospective adjustments reported from India in Southeast Asia.

As an example, Chile had the highest number of new deaths, reporting 11,858, a leap of 1,710 percent from the previous week. The United States saw a smaller but still significant increase of 5,367 new deaths, an increase of 8 percent.

While India saw 4,525 of new deaths; it represented an increase of 619 percent. The WHO said those deaths included numbers from Maharashtra state, which initially were not included in last week’s COVID-19 death toll.

While the number of new cases overall fell globally, three European countries — Germany, Italy and France — all saw an increase in new cases from the previous week. While Germany and Italy reported increases of two and six percent respectively, France reported 845,119 new cases – a increase of 45 percent.

The WHO has said repeatedly that COVID-19 case counts are likely a vast underestimate of the coronavirus’ prevalence. The agency also expressed concern that many countries in recent weeks announced plans to drop their comprehensive testing programs and other surveillance measures. They said doing so will cripple efforts to accurately track the spread of the virus.

Source: Voice of America

World Tuberculosis (TB) Day 2022 Commemorated in The Gambia

On March 24, the world marks World Tuberculosis Day to raise public awareness about the global epidemic of tuberculosis and efforts to eliminate the disease. TB remains one of the world’s deadliest infectious killers. Each day, over 4100 people lose their lives to TB and close to 28,000 people fall ill with this preventable and curable disease.

This year, the Ministry of Health (MOH), World Health Organization (WHO), Medical Research Council (MRC) and other key partners joined the international communities to commemorate World TB Day 2022. The theme of World TB Day 2022 was “Invest to End TB. Save Lives.” – a slogan that conveys the urgent need to invest resources in order to ramp up the fight against TB and achieve the commitments made by the global community to end this infectious disease.

As part of events marking this very important Day, a Press briefing was organized at the National TB/Leprosy Office of the Ministry of Health to raise public awareness and understanding of one of the world’s deadliest infectious disease, along with the devastating social and economic burden of this disease.

Speaking at the ceremony, the WHO Representative – Dr. Desta Tiruneh – emphasized the need for increased funding for TB prevention, diagnosis and treatment services that continues to fall far short of estimated global needs, and the United Nations global target. Highlighting the 2018 UN High-Level Meeting on TB, where world leaders agreed to mobilize US$13 billion per year to finance TB prevention and treatment by 2022 and promised another US$2 billion per year for TB research in the face of growing concerns around drug-resistant TB, Dr. Tiruneh added that more must be done if the global community wanted to achieve this target. He also stressed the need more closer collaboration with our beneficiary communities, leveraging their expert local knowledge to tailor response efforts for maximum impact. He noted that to achieve the SDG 2030 target we must collectively “invest to end TB, and save lives”.

Speaking on behalf of the Hon. Minister for Health, the Deputy Director Dr. Momodou Nyassi underscored that TB is curable, and treatment is provided free of charge, irrespective of nationality in Gambia. In thanking the government partners, he noted that through successful collaboration between government agencies and local/international partners, the anti-TB drugs have never been out of stock in the country. In addition to TB treatment, the ministry also provides nutritional support to all drug-resistant TB patients and transport refund to all bacteriologically positive pulmonary TB patients.

Dr. Nyassi went on to say that, “despite challenges in getting adequate resources especially during the COVID-19 pandemic, the Ministry of Health has over the years made progress in the fight against TB in the Gambia.”

He finally thanked all health care workers, Global Fund, WHO, MRC, the Civil Society, and the private sector for their persistent support in the fight against TB in The Gambia.

Sensitization activities will continue on community radios regionally in the weeks ahead.

Source: World Health Organization. Africa

Kashmir Film Sharpens Political Divisions in India

The phenomenal box-office success of a new film set in 1990s Kashmir has sharpened political divisions in India and prompted a re-examination of a violent campaign against Hindus in the Muslim-majority region three decades ago.

“The Kashmir Files,” directed by Vivek Ranjan Agnihotri, depicts the flight of Kashmiri Hindus, known as “Pandits,” from the region in early 1990s. It is a fictional narrative about a college student who learns that his Kashmiri Hindu parents were killed by Islamist militants, not in an accident as he was told by his grandfather.

The film is being enthusiastically promoted by India’s ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), which pursues a Hindu nationalist agenda and has been accused of fomenting animus toward the nation’s 200 million Muslims as an electoral strategy.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi personally met with the director and producer of the film immediately after its release and expressed his appreciation.

Celebrities and political leaders also have urged people to see the film. The Union minister for Women and Child Development, Smriti Irani, tweeted, “Watch … so that this history soaked in the blood of innocents may never repeat itself #TheKashmirFiles.”

A goods and services tax that boosts the price of movie tickets has been waived in most BJP-ruled states including some of India’s most populous. In the central state of Madhya Pradesh, police have been offered a day off work to watch the film. In the national capital territory of Delhi, however, Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal rejected a demand from BJP legislators to declare the film tax-free, saying, “Well, put it on YouTube, it will be free.”

Sushil Chaudhary, the founder and chairman of the digital movie theater chain Picture Time DigiPlex, told VOA he was pleased that the controversial subject had been addressed in a film.

“And the storytelling was very different compared to other Indian films. The way the director handled the film — it was quite amazing, at the same time very sensitive. This film has huge impact and reminded me of the much-celebrated ‘Schindler’s List,’” a 1993 film about a German businessman who rescued more than 1,000 Jews from the Nazi Holocaust.

On social media, commenters have described the movie as “the most hard-hitting film” about Kashmir made to date.

BJP’s support of ‘The Kashmir Files’

The film also has detractors, many of them in the conflict-torn region of Jammu and Kashmir itself. While expressing appreciation for the movie’s dramatic qualities, these critics say it oversimplifies the complex history of the conflict, and that it offers a clichéd representation of Kashmiri Muslims.

“Hindu supremacists in India have weaponized the Kashmiri Pandit exodus” wrote Nitasha Kaul, a Kashmiri Pandit and novelist based in London.

“The movie dwells on Kashmiri Pandit suffering alone and makes ample use of Islamophobic tropes – all Muslims in the movie are violent, barbaric or lecherous,” she wrote.

She argued that the movie “feeds into cycles of hate and revenge. It collapses Kashmir’s history and politics into an Islamophobic morality tale that is palatable and profitable to Hindutva India.”

Ashok Swain, the head of the department of peace and conflict research at Sweden’s Uppsala University, told VOA he believes the film was made purely for political purposes by a Hindu right-wing filmmaker with support from the ruling authorities.

The purpose of the movie is not to tell the history or support the cause of displaced Kashmir pundits, Swain maintained, “but to make economic gains for the filmmaker and political gains for the ruling regime by selling Muslim hate in the country.”

Regional take

The movie also has been met with criticism by Muslim leaders of the Peoples Democratic Party, a Kashmir-based regional political bloc. PDP leader and former chief minister Mehbooba Mufti has accused the BJP of doing nothing for the Kashmiri Pandits who remained in Jammu and Kashmir.

Earlier, she said the move is “ill-intentioned” and will not contribute to healing old wounds.

Mufti also argued that while the filmmakers were mainly interested in profits, Modi and the BJP were supporting the film in order to instigate people along religious lines.

Kashmir resident Sameer Kaul told VOA that some of the gory incidents portrayed in the documentary-style film actually occurred, but that the movie falsely suggests the entire Kashmiri Muslim community played a part in the violence. In fact, he said, some Muslims opposed the violence and others were simply frightened.

Kaul said the impact of the movie will be to increase religious polarization and potential intercommunal discord. “Never before has the justification for institution of an unbiased judicial probe by central government seemed as convincing. Truth should hopefully pave the way for closure, reconciliation and desperate peace.”

A similar view has been expressed by one Kashmiri Pandit girl, Sagrika Kissu. “Not every Muslim is a terrorist/militant or a terrorist sympathizer,” she posted on social media. “We should be very sensitive when we paint all of them in one color. This movie sets in a very bitter emotion for Kashmiri Muslims as whole.”

Real-life impact

Meanwhile, the impact from the movie is being felt in real life. A hotel in Delhi recently refused to accommodate a Kashmiri man even after he provided appropriate identification and other credentials.

The hotel’s receptionist said the Delhi Police had told the hotel not to accept reservations from guests from Jammu and Kashmir. A video of the incident went viral, prompting Delhi Police to deny having issued any such order.

In an immediate reaction, the hotel chain Oyo Rooms removed the hotel from its platform.

Nevertheless, the film is doing blockbuster business despite a lack of promotion and marketing, appearing on 700 screens across India and grossing $3 million since its release on March 11. It is also being shown in the United States, Britain, Canada and Australia, taking in $1.38 million in its first week on international screens.

Source: Voice of America

Will Smith Apologizes to Chris Rock for Oscars Slap

Actor Will Smith apologized to comedian Chris Rock one day after slapping him across the face during Sunday’s Academy Awards ceremony following a joke Rock made about the actor’s wife, Jada Pinkett Smith.

Smith’s apology Monday came after the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences issued a formal statement condemning his behavior for slapping Rock and announced it was initiating an investigation.

“Violence in all of its forms is poisonous and destructive,” Smith said Monday in a statement his publicist posted on Instagram.

“I would like to publicly apologize to you, Chris. I was out of line and I was wrong. I am embarrassed and my actions were not indicative of the man I want to be,” Smith added.

The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences announced it was initiating an investigation into the incident. According to the Academy’s code of conduct, Smith could face consequences such as “suspension of membership or expulsion from membership.”

In recent years, violations of this code have led to the removal of members such as Harvey Weinstein, Bill Cosby and Roman Polanski, who were expelled over allegations of sexual misconduct.

Rock did not file a police report.

“LAPD investigative entities are aware of an incident between two individuals during the Academy Awards program. The incident involved one individual slapping another. The individual involved has declined to file a police report,” said the LAPD in an official statement to the press. “If the involved party desires a police report at a later date, LAPD will be available to complete an investigative report.

Ahead of presenting the award for best documentary, Rock directed a comment to Pinkett Smith saying: “Jada, I love you. ‘G.I. Jane 2,’ can’t wait to see it,” apparently drawing a comparison to actress Demi Moore’s shaved hairstyle in the 1997 movie G.I. Jane.

While Pinkett Smith was shown rolling her eyes following the comment, her husband walked over to the stage and slapped Rock across the face during the live broadcast, a moment that went viral shortly after.

After taking his seat again, Smith directed profanity at the comedian, demanding he not speak of his wife.

Pinkett Smith, 50, has previously been vocal about her struggles with hair loss due to the autoimmune disease alopecia. She publicly shared her diagnosis in 2018 during a segment of her Facebook talk show series Red Table Talk.

Initially, the Academy had only issued a statement via its Twitter account after the ceremony ended.

“The Academy does not condone violence of any form,” the tweet said.

Later Sunday evening, Smith was awarded an Oscar for Best Actor in a Leading Role for his performance as Richard Williams, the father of tennis champions Venus and Serena Williams, in the film King Richard.

During his acceptance speech, Smith appeared emotional and apologized to the Academy and his fellow nominees, but did not directly mention Rock.

“Love will make you do crazy things,” Smith said, addressing his behavior.

“Thank you. I hope the Academy invites me back.”

Source: Voice of America