Sunday, July 4, 2010

Happy 4th of July to all the citizens of the United States of America

A new book chronicles circumstances of the emergence of Barack Obama




Happy 4th of July to all the citizens of the United States of America.
Let me share the following message from President Barack Obama.


Michael Chima --

The Fourth of July is especially dear to my family. For us, it is not just our nation's birthday. It is the day Michelle and I became parents 12 years ago. And I can't wait to watch the fireworks with Malia on her birthday tonight, as we do every year.

As we celebrate the profound pride of being American, today is a time to honor the women and men in our armed forces, whose immeasurable bravery and sacrifice have made our country what it is today.

That sacrifice is shared with husbands and wives, with sons and daughters, with fathers and mothers, who are asked to wait at home as their loved ones protect our nation. Their heroism, too, has helped pave the path of our freedom.

Even before we moved into the White House, Michelle was a champion for those military families. She has witnessed their struggles, and she has made it her personal mission to fight for them. On this Fourth of July, she recorded a personal message, commemorating our nation's birthday and paying tribute to these families.

Please take a minute to watch Michelle's video -- and join us as we honor our military families here and abroad:

http://my.barackobama.com/July4th

From all of us, happy Independence Day.

Thank you, and may God bless America.

~ President Barack Obama

July 4th, 2010




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Friday, July 2, 2010

The Origin of the Igbos: Past, Present and Future

THE ORIGIN OF IGBO PEOPLE
Igbo people came into existence through a man called Ukeneme the son of Nwachukwu (Ishmael in Hebrew). Nwachukwu, Ukeneme’s father, was called God’s son because his earthly father abandoned him few years after he was born. An angel of the Lord was sent from heaven to adopt him on behalf of God. He was however to inhabit the forest, fight nature and wilderness in order to become a strong man. He eventually conquered the forest and his descendants became forest people where kings and queens emerged to rule the ancient world at various times.

Ukeneme (Hebrew Kedema) was actually the last son of Nwachukwu. He founded the settlement of Asaba-Igbo near Ethiopia and married an Ethiopian princess. His great grand daughter called Ada (Ethiopian Adwa) became the queen of Asaba (Hebrew Sheba). Her son became the Menelik 1, an emperor of unified Ethiopia while her other generations ruled at Aksum, Unubi-Igbo, Cush, and even Egypt. These kings created im-portant cities such as Maarib, Aksum, Adwa, Meroe, Ahiaragu, Enugu etc., on their way to their promised land. There may have been about 44 Ukeneme dynasties that ruled the world of Igbo people.
Arufo

1.0 Introduction:
In this Chapter, Ojemba would try to answer an expected question; Who is the Igbos? The book will try to provide the answer by developing a theory based on Ojemba’s Tales. Igbo people are therefore the generation of people that developed Aksum, Cush, Nubia and Sheba. Etc., originating from the horn of Africa (North East of the Sub Continent). They had moved to the Central and then to West Africa because these various kingdoms and empires declined and because they remained strangers among indigenous people whom they had ruled. They encountered several revolts because they were strangers and some of such revolts often became catastrophic, necessitating relocation. They were therefore able to establishment several communities in many regions. This book also tried to imply that some of such movements were really ordained in order that they fi-nally find the promised land, i.e. where they are today.

TRADITIONS, RELIGION AND CULTURE OF IGBO PEOPLE
OJEMBA TALES:

There are many things that constitute abomination in Igbo Land. People are forbidden from committing abomination such as killing not only of a fellow human being but some sacred animals in designated places. Because they have been through a lot and traveled so far to their present settlement, they became their own brother’s keepers. They were no pagans as far as their believe in one God is concerned even before the coming of Irish Catholicism and other European Christianity. Their religion was the Coptic Christianity accepted about 50 AD and adopted as the state religion in Nubia. They were not allowed to kill a royal python or fish in certain rivers. The observation of this law started when a queen of Egypt called Iputu committed abominations by killing her half brother who was the Pharaoh of Egypt as well as her sister. A king of Rome aided and abetted these abominations and God punished them both by turning Iputu into a beautifully colored snake called ‘Eke Iputu’ while the king of Rome was turned into a fish. Because these involved kings and queens, these animals became royal animals.
Arufo

IGBO PEOPLES WAY OF LIFE
Although as they arrived at the promised land, they did not set out to create an empire similar to that of Nubia and did not maintain a centralized government. They lived in numerous autonomous villages, with strict laws and customs for about 1000 years. The villages were organized into clans while each clan operated their government based on their special believe and ways of worships. Each clan therefore made and enforced codes of conduct commonly referred to as the traditions. In general, the occupation of the peo-ple, their traditions as well as their culture suggest strong relationship to the majority of tribes existing in modern day Zambia, Kenya, Southern Sudan, Uganda, Eritrea and Ethiopia, all in North East of Africa. Oral history also suggested that the traditions com-monly practiced by these tribes are similar to the practices of the ancient Jewish people as revealed by the Holy Bible (see books of Genesis, Exodus, and Leviticus). After Nigeria was created in 1900 and its attendant independence in 1960, Igbo tradition went into sev-eral transformations.

In this Chapter, Ojemba tried to show some of the culture that made the Igbo people unique in their present West African location. The account in this Chapter would explain how the people lived before the advent of Christianity, a factor that had much influence in the transformation of the culture of Igbo people. They have in recent time embraced European Christianity simply because their way of life as well as their belief had always been for one God. In accepting the European Christianity Igbo people renewed their faith in the supremacy of one God, the God of Abraham and Ishmael, their accepted forefa-thers.

2.1 The Culture in Perspective:
Like in the ancient Hebrew kingdoms of Israel and Judah, Igbo people manifests their culture in arts, literature, dance, music, drama, clothing, architecture and other esthetic designs. Story telling, proverbs, idioms, riddles, myths and folklore. All these play prominent role in the life of the Igbo people. Story telling for instance, serve to docu-ment actual events, entertain, teach morals and stimulate the imagination of the listener. Some stories also provide commentary on peoples lives in a given period. Myths are used to explain events especially the recurrent ones. Proverbs and idioms serve to com-municate the wisdom of the past generation. There is a proverb for every situation in life, typically formulated from home experiences and reflections throughout ages.

2.2 Socialization:
In the Igbo homeland, every person-man or woman- had a role assigned to him by the society. He or she learned the ways of the society and the tasks expected of him/she. It is usual for individuals to belong to groups other than family groups within the general society, such as hunters club, Ozo, Nze, Ekpe, Okonko, Oba, and other artisan guilds etc. These various organizations were meant to complement the family role and they exist also to perform certain traditional functions, sometimes in ritualistic ways. Igbo tradition offers two kinds of securities to the people, ‘Social and Psychological’.

In their villages, they were always assured of what to eat, in so far as the village had enough. They were assured of work. When they grow old, the kit and kin would provide for them. That was their social securities. They had to learn a single set of behavior. They know what was expected of them and what to expect from others. They know that when they were married or children are born, or a member of family died, the whole vil-lage could participate in an appropriate ceremony to mark the occasion. These were the psychological securities.

2.3 Oral Communications:
Igbo people speak ‘Ibo’ which is classified as the Niger-Congo language groups. Ibo belong to ‘Kwa’ sub family of such language groups. In terms of Igbo people’s popula-tion, Ibo is the largest linguistic stock of Negro Africa. Olauda Ekwiano was said to have been the pioneer of written language of Ibo. He, in fact, created the first set of Ibo alpha-bets as he translated his autobiography (1789), to the language, which he wrote under the pseudonym of Gustavus Vassa. He was kidnapped from Onicha-Ugbo in the former Be-nin Kingdom, and sold into slavery to the New World. He lived in England as a free man from where he wrote several articles including his life as Igbo boy. In the 20th century, many writers including the legendary F.C. Ogbalu produced Ibo grammar books and Ibo language had since been studied and used as medium of instruction in schools and col-leges in Nigeria and some institutions abroad.

Ibo language has a lot of dialects. The language changes as the location of Igbo people’s settlements changed. Going from the extreme south of Ikwere clan of the present day Rivers State of Nigeria to the extreme north of Igbo-Eze at the borders of Benue State, Ibo language has more than 66 variations. In fact sometimes more than a dialect exists in a province (collection of clans). This is perhaps one reason why non-Igbos can hardly learn the language. However, the complexities of Ibo language had made other neigh-boring languages very simple and Igbo people had learn to speak more than their own vernacular in every environment outside Igbo land. The progress Igbo people made in commerce especially had been their ability to speak Hausa, Yoruba and other languages spoken by smaller tribes such as Tiv, Igala etc. This has given them edge over other Ni-gerians in their ability to conduct business in the multiethnic Nigeria. They can commu-nicate and interact very effectively in every tongue in Nigeria and other West African lo-cations.

The complexities of the language are also manifested in various ways items were named. Some items are named differently in different clans and they are generally accepted as Ibo language. Most widely traveled Igbo people understand all of them. A word, Uri for instance could mean dance in Owerri province, or one of the tradition cosmetic herbs used by women to decorate their body during festivals. However, Onitsha or Awka per-son of Igbo origin may call the same word Uli having relatively the same meaning. While Igbo people traditionally know who speak what and how, it will be extremely dif-ficult for a non Igbo person or children born in Diaspora by Igbo parents to know what is what. In fact, several words in Ibo language have more than one meaning which led some people to suggest that Ibo language is incomplete. Also different words mean the same thing and it is understandable too. Drinking cup for instance, may be called obele, okuku or iko depending on the settlement. Ibo language has a few more alphabets than English language. Letters such as n, y, w, k, p, g, b, are combined in various forms to create extra Ibo alphabets such as nw, kp, gb, kw, gw etc.

2.4 Proverbs and Idioms:
Although Igbo people are excellent communicators but the practice of interjecting most sentences with Idiom or Proverbs had always confused most non-Igbos. Conversations are rarely concluded without an interjection of idiomatic expressions or parables (Ilu). There is a proverb for every situation in Igbo life. Those who can not follow conversions because of the added ‘Ilu’ are said to be less knowledgeable, while those who can effec-tively understand and follow conversations are said to be wise. That is, at all times, the elders had the expectations that the young ones could reason out events by themselves and the only responsibility of the elders was to give hints. This they believed would cre-ate wisdom because the idioms and proverbs as they are being used serve to communicate the wisdom of the past generations. They are typically formulated through home experi-ences and reflections throughout ages.

The difference between proverb and idioms is not distinctly clear. Ibo idioms still sounded like proverbs but they are actually figure of speech, which are common in other world languages. The beauty of both Idioms and proverbs are shown when they are written and spoken in Ibo. A phrase, ‘Our people said; or my father told; or the elders of our clan said in a proverb…’ usually start proverbs. However, for purposes of the reader-ship of this book, all the proverbs would be translated into English.

IDIOMS:
1.0 A child can not grow beyond his destiny.
2.0 A child can not pay for his mother’s milk.
3.0 A clan is like a lizard, if it lost its tail, it soon grew another.
4.0 A hunter’s dog can suddenly go mad and turn to his master.
5.0 A man is judged by his handwork.
6.0 A man who has sipped the spirit waters can not be revived.
7.0 A man who will not lend his knife to cut dog meat because that was a taboo but will offer his teeth for the same job.
8.0 A proud heart can survive a general failure, because such does not prick its pride.
9.0 Age is respected but experience is revered.
10.0 An outsider who weeps louder that the bereaved.
11.0 Every thing is possible but everything in not expedient.
12.0 God will not agree.
13.0 He is like small flying bird that so far forgot himself after a heavy meal, and then he challenged his personal spirit or Chi.
14.0 He tapped my palm trees to death.
15.0 He who brings kola brings life.
16.0 His worth and not that of his father judge a man.
17.0 I can not find the mouth to tell the story.
18.0 I owe them no yam and no cocoyams.
19.0 It is like pouring grain of corn into a bag full of holes.
20.0 Like a man in a song who had ten wives and not enough soup for his foo foo.
21.0 May bullet crack his head?
22.0 Never let a handshake pass elbow.
23.0 Nothing puzzles God.
24.0 Opposing him is like a proverbial fly trying to move a dunghill.
25.0 Proverbs are the palm oil with which words are eaten.
26.0 The man is as slippery as fish in water.
27.0 Those, whose kernels are cracked by their benevolent spirit, should try to be humble.
28.0 We are God’s flock, sometimes He chooses a young one to eat, and other times, the older ones may be chosen.
29.0 We must bale this water now that its is only ankle deep.
30.0 We should never fight a fight of blame.
31.0 You have put a knife on the thing that held us together and we have fallen apart.

PROVERBS:
1.0
2.0 A chick that will grow into a cock can be spotted the very day it hatched.
3.0 A child on its mother’s back does not know that the way is long.
4.0 A child’s finger is not scalded by a piece of hot yam, which its mother put into its palm.
5.0 A man who calls his kinsmen to a feast does not do so to save them from starva-tion.
6.0 A person who decided to chase after a chicken in the day light, for him is a con-stant fall.
7.0 An old woman is always uneasy when dry bones are mentioned in the proverb.
8.0 As a man danced so the drums were beaten for him.
9.0 As dog said if I fall for you and fall for me, it is a play.
10.0 As the elders said, if one finger brought oil it soiled the rest.
11.0 Eneke, the bird said that since men have learned to shoot without missing, he has learned to fly without perching.
12.0 I cannot live on the bank of a river and wash my hand with spittle.
13.0 I have climbed the iroko tree today; therefore I must come down with as much firewood as I can find.
14.0 If a child washed his hands well, he could eat with the kings.
15.0 Looking at king’s mouth, it may seem he never sucked at his mother’s breast.
16.0 Madness may indeed depart, but never with all his clamorous train which haunt the eyelid.
17.0 Sun will shine on those who stood, before it could reach on those who knelt under them.
18.0 The belly does not bulge out only with food and drinks; it might be the abomina-ble disease.
19.0 The lizard that jumped from high iroko tree to the ground said he would praise himself if no one else noticed.
20.0 Those who gather ant-infested faggot must be prepared for the visit of lizards.
21.0 When a man says yes, his personal spirit or Chi will always concur.
22.0 When a mother cow is chewing grass its young ones watch its mouth.
23.0 Whenever I see the dead man’s mouth, I see the folly of not eating what one has in one’s life.
24.0 Whenever you see a toad jumping in broad daylight, then know that someone is after his life.
25.0 Who will leave an Ozo feast to attend to poor ritual meals?
26.0 You can tell a ripe corn by its looks.

2.5 How Persons and Places are Named by Igbo People:
Igbo names are words and phrases used to identify and set people and place apart. Spe-cific names sometimes reflected parent’s experiences in life as well as described the cir-cumstances leading to the birth of such child. Such words or phrases can be descriptive adjectives turned into nouns or they may be substantive nouns. Majority of names of Igbo people often has a lot to do with the people’s belief in the theory of creation. The understanding was that children are direct gift from God (Seed of Stomach). Certain names are traditionally used to designate men while others are given to women. A num-ber of Igbo names can however be used for either sex. Today, in addition to the tradi-tional names given to children, Christian or baptismal names are common especially among Catholics. This came into existence when the Irish priests predominated the churches in Igbo land. Igbo people were then told that only names of Saints can be used during the baptism. However, Christian influence on first names, which was strong in the early times of colonialism, has began to be less important as some Igbo people began to embrace priesthood. The vernacular names are now being accepted universally as bap-tismal names or first names.

In the early times, before colonialism, Igbo people did not commonly adopt surnames and last names. People are known by the specific places they came from. However, after colonialism and the introduction of civil service systems, it became necessary to intro-duce consistent surnames or last names. It was mainly for purposes of taxation and for other administrative exigencies. Once introduced, Igbo people adopted it as they assume that it made for immortality. Succeeding generations used it venerate the family name as a symbol of permanence. Christianity, in its part, made Igbo people to adopt a threefold pattern of given, middle and surname or family name. Specific motivation for choosing names can be itemized below.

(a) Special relationship between persons can be object for naming children e.g. Azikiwe.

(b) When female children are produced while couples desired at least a male child, they can formulate names such as Nwanyibunwa or Nkechinyere etc.

(c) The people also recognize the limitation imposed by environment for their wishes and desires. Such natural hazards as wars, poverty, death and accidents etc., have influenced Igbo peoples choices of names of their children e.g. Balogu.

(d) Death (Onwu) and life (Ndu) are known to be mysteries of creation. The people therefore did not waist time to unravel them but expresses their faith in God’s domination of such mysteries. Names such as Agbapuruonwu, Onwudiwe etc., have therefore been formulated from those mysteries.

(e) Igbo market days and calendar consist of Afo, Nkwo, Eke and Orie. Children have been given names of those days especially when they are born in any one of the days. The names could be Nwafo, Nwankwo, Nweke, and Nworie for male children, Mgborie, Mgbafo and Mgbeke for female children.

(f) Children are also recognized as precious gift from God almighty and when they are born praise names are often given to them. There is also in recognition that, as precious gift from God, they are much more important than any material wealth or possession. . Example of such names includes Ibuaku, Nwakaego, Madukaeji-aka etc.
(g) Names such as Chukwumaeze, Chukwuemeka, Nnaemeka etc., are used to ex-press human faith in God almighty.

(h) Materials, Rivers, articles of household etc., can be used to name children in Igbo land e.g. Ofo, Aziza, Orji, Uzuh etc.
(i) Children names have been formulated based on the order for which children were born such as ‘Okpara’ for the first male children; Ada for the first female child etc.

Igbo villages bear names of mostly the founders. A town can bear a name as follows; Umuobom, Ndi-Izuogu, Ogwu, Nkerefi etc. In the first one, Umu means children and Obom may perhaps be the first settler or the ancestral father of all the inhabitants the par-ticular place. In the second name, Ndi means people of Izuogu probably because it in-cluded both his own children and his slaves. The prefix, Ndi is mostly used in the settle-ments created by former slave merchants mostly from Arochukwu. Some communities are named descriptively to signify the circumstances of its existence or the terrain and physical features of the specific location such as Ikpa and/or Ikpa-Okoli etc. Ikpa means a free range and probably located by Okoli who was the ancestral father or first settler in the location.

A place can also bear names used for the commemoration of a significant clan figure, historical event, or named after towns and cities of the ancient Cush and Nubia where the people originated. For instance, Asaba town across the Niger River was named after the original country of Igbo people, Saba, after one of the sons of Ham, the son of Noah in the bible. Unubi was also named after Nubia, one of the most powerful ancient empires created by the Saba people out of the land of Cushites, who were also the descendants of Ham (Gen. 10:6-8; Isa. 18:1; Jer. 13:22). RELIGION AND SACRED BELIEFS OF IGBO PEOPLE

3.0 Introduction
This chapter is designed to answer the question; “What is the people’s philosophy of life in general?’ Igbo people believed that religious faith and philosophical understanding are complementary. They combined ethical and supernatural beliefs into a spiritualistic way of life based on the belief that the soul is a prisoner of the body. The soul would be freed at death and reincarnated in a higher or lower form of life, depending on the degree of virtues achieved. Religion therefore, is a way of life while it controlled all aspect of Igbo culture and tradition. In general, Igbo belief system revolved around one God “Chukwu” who rule heaven and earth. Their God is omnipotent and omnipresent spirit. However, they also believed that to reach this mighty spirit, intermediary agents are necessary. One of the greatest agents was the spirit called “Ala “. It was said to be the same angel that guided Ishmael to the land of gold called Havilar/Shur at the eastern part of Egypt after he left his father’s country. Ala, the superior guiding angel of Igbo people was responsi-ble for morality, fertility and general conduct of the people. It was also their belief that more than Ala, God almighty appointed several other spirits to work for the general guid-ance of His creation including “Chi” generally accepted as personal spirit of individual Igbo person. Every other spirit reported to Ala, who ultimately reports to Chukwu who resides in heaven.

3.1 Origin of Igbo Religion
The belief system adopted by Igbo people came from their last empire, Nubia. The re-ligion was identified as Coptic Christianity. Fundamentally, the religion was closely in-tertwined with every thing else, from the daily task to the most exalted rituals. In the an-cient city of Aksum, there was a very powerful emperor called Ezana who was converted to Christianity by two Syrians, Frumentus and Adessius. After accepting the faith, he made it the state religion. While in Aksum, Frumentius played very important role in the emperor’s court. After the fall of Aksum and subsequently, Nubia or Cush, the people scattered to various locations in Africa. Igbo people were part of those who left with this belief into their present homeland in West Africa. .

When Europeans arrived in West Africa in the 19th century AD, they were able to con-vince the people that Coptic Christianity was equivalent to paganism, especially as they were looking for foothold to colonize the people. How could a people who believe in one indivisible almighty God be pagans? As far as history can tell, Igbo people had always been religious. However, Coptic Christianity may appropriately be described as primi-tive religion rather the paganism. This is because it lacked the body of sacred scriptures and formal written body of theology equivalent to the Bible of the European Christianity. Igbo religion therefore, was an integral piece within the rest of the people’s culture.


HIGHLY RECOMMENDED:




They Lived Before Adam ((Prehistoric Origins of the Igbo The Never Been Ruled)) ~ Catherine Acholonu

Murder at Montpelier: Igbo Africans in Virginia ~ Douglas B. Chambers

Migration And The Economy: Igbo Migrants And The Nigerian Economy 1900 To 1975 ~ Mathias Mgbeafulu

Ndi Ichie Akwa mythology and folklore origins of the Igbos ~ I. N. C Nwosu

African Christianity Rises Volume Two: Eucharistic Inculturation in Igbo Catholicism ~ David Asonye Ihenacho

Overcoming Women's Subordination in the Igbo African Culture and in the Catholic Church: Envisioning an Inclusive Theology With Reference to Women ~ Rose N. Uchem

Igbo-English English-Igbo Dictionary and Phrasebook (Hippocrene Dictionary & Phrasebook) ~ Nicholas Awde

Traditions of Igbo Origin: A Study of Pre-Colonial Population Movements in Afric ~ John N. Oriji

African Christianity Rises Volume One: A Critical Study of the Catholicism of the Igbo People of Nigeria ~ David Asonye Ihenacho

Law and Justice in Post-British Nigeria: Conflicts and Interactions Between Native and Foreign Systems of Social Control in Igbo (Contributions in Comparative Colonial Studies) ~ Nonso Okereafoezeke

Igbo Women and Economic Transformation in Southeastern Nigeria, 1900-1960 (African Studies) ~ Gloria Chuku


African Cultural Values: Igbo Political Leadership in Colonial Nigeria, 19001996 (African Studies) ~ Raphael Chijioke Njoku



IMF and World Bank Announce US$12.3 billion in Debt Relief for the Democratic Republic of the Congo

2 Jul 2010 12:20 Africa/Lagos

IMF and World Bank Announce US$12.3 billion in Debt Relief for the Democratic Republic of the Congo


KINSHASA, Dem. Rep. of Congo (DRC) July 2, 2010/African Press Organization (APO)/ -- The International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank's International Development Association (IDA) have decided to support US$12.3 billion in debt relief to the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC).


The decisions by the Board of Directors of both institutions1 will generate total debt service savings of US$12.3 billion, which include US$11.1 billion under the enhanced Heavily Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC) Initiative, and US$1.2 billion under the Multilateral Debt Relief Initiative (MDRI). Debt relief from the IMF will total US$491 million and from the World Bank's IDA US$1,832 million, with the remainder expected to come from bilateral and commercial creditors. As a result of this relief, the DRC will no longer face a heavy debt service burden in relation to its revenue and foreign exchange resources.


The Boards determined that the country has implemented the policy measures (“triggers”) required to reach the completion point, a stage in which debt relief from both the HIPC Initiative and MDRI becomes irrevocable. The triggers included satisfactory implementation of the country's poverty reduction and growth strategy, maintenance of macroeconomic stability, improvements in public expenditure and debt management, and improved governance and service delivery in key social sectors such as health, education and rural development.


“Reaching the HIPC completion point demonstrates the significant progress that the DRC authorities have made over the past several years in strengthening macroeconomic policy management and performance following a devastating decade-long conflict that destroyed the country's economic and social infrastructure,” said the IMF's Mission Chief for the DRC, Brian Ames. “The conditions for reaching the HIPC completion point provided the authorities with a policy reform framework that guided their efforts to enhance macroeconomic stability, address weaknesses in public financial management and economic governance, and reform the social sectors. Progress in each of these areas also sets a solid foundation for advancing the country's development agenda going forward,” he added.


“We recognize the government's huge efforts toward reaching Completion Point. This could be a turning point in DRC's long troubled history,” said Marie-Françoise Marie-Nelly, World Bank Country Director for DRC. "Going forward, strengthening the rule of law, improving governance – especially in the oil and mining sectors – and improving the business climate are essential next steps to benefit the most vulnerable Congolese citizens,” she added.


The Democratic Republic of the Congo becomes the 30th country to reach the completion point under the HIPC Initiative. The completion point marks the end of the HIPC process for the DRC, which started in July 2003 when the Executive Boards of the IMF and the World Bank agreed that it had met the requirements for reaching the decision point, at which countries start receiving debt relief on an interim basis.


Note to Editors


The HIPC Initiative


In 1996, the World Bank and IMF launched the HIPC Initiative to create a framework in which all creditors, including multilateral creditors, can provide debt relief to the world's poorest and most heavily indebted countries to ensure debt sustainability, and thereby reduce the constraints on economic growth and poverty reduction imposed by the unsustainable debt-service burdens in these countries.


To date, 36 HIPC countries have reached their decision points, of which 30, including the Democratic Republic of the Congo, have reached the completion point.


The MDRI


Created in 2005, the aim of the Multilateral Debt Relief Initiative (MDRI) is to reduce further the debt of eligible low-income countries and provide additional resources to help them reach the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). Under the MDRI, three multilateral institutions—the World Bank's International Development Association, the International Monetary Fund and the African Development Fund—provide 100 percent debt relief on eligible debts to qualifying countries normally at the time they reach the HIPC Initiative completion point.


For more information on the Democratic Republic of the Congo, please visit: http://www.imf.org/external/country/COD/index.htm or www.worldbank.org/drc


For more information on debt relief, click:


http://www.imf.org/external/np/exr/facts/hipc.htm,


http://www.imf.org/external/np/exr/facts/mdri.htm and


http://go.worldbank.org/83PZB7FH80.


Source: International Monetary Fund (IMF)

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Thursday, July 1, 2010

Come And See Glamrock City At The Eko International Film Festival On July 7




Glamrock City: A Love Story

A thrilling tale of the femme fatale, "ART ET DECES aka Glamrock City," written and directed by Christophe Kourdouly and Stéphane Jauny, screened at the Marche on May 19th. Produced by Antetime Production, the film is of two girls who in search of inspiration kill men to capture their last breath of life and create Art from Death for their next painting exhibition. The film showed great emotion and an intriguing plot line that keeps your attention. In a twist, the directors listed above, including the third director, Luc Job, casted themselves into the final scene. An emotional and riveting tale, Glamrock City is a story of love taken to the extreme.




DATE: JULY 7, 2010

VENUE: EKO INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL, GENESIS DELUXE CINEMAS, THE PALMS, LEKKI, LAGOS, NIGERIA.

TICKET: N5, 000 ONLY




Evangelist to Jump From Plane in Chains

1 Jul 2010 15:42 Africa/Lagos

Evangelist to Jump From Plane in Chains

OTTAWA, Ill., July 1 /PRNewswire/ -- What do the Bible, a parachute and a pair of handcuffs have in common? Escape Artist Anthony Martin...


Martin, a nationally-recognized escape artist turned evangelist, has announced plans to attempt a "Leap of Faith," in Ottawa, Ill., July 13, at 2 p.m. Martin will be handcuffed by an area locksmith before donning a parachute and leaping from an aircraft at 14,000 feet. He will have to free his hands in order to deploy the parachute and save his life. Martin, 44, an escape artist who has been featured four times in Ripley's Believe It or Not, has reserved July 14 as a rain date should weather conditions prohibit the attempt.


The handcuffs for the escape attempt will be supplied by a Joliet locksmith and verified to be legitimate and unaltered before the leap. The escape is being made possible by the sponsorship of Skydive Chicago, which will both prepare Martin and film the attempt at its skydiving facility located at 3215 E 1969th Road in Ottawa, Ill.


The film of the stunt will be shown at Martin's evangelistic outreaches.


Aerial escapes have been a signature stunt for Martin, who has escaped from a locked box thrown from an airplane as well as a similar handcuffed jump over the Snake River Canyon for the Discovery Channel.


Martin, a Christian since childhood, has been using his unusual talents to evangelize and promote his Christian beliefs for the past 12 years. Ambassador In Chains Ministries, founded by Martin, was launched in 1998 as a resource for local churches. Details of the ministry are available on his website at www.anthony-escapes.com. Martin said he uses his escapes as a metaphor for escaping eternal death through repentance and faith in Jesus Christ.


For the moment, Martin will be preoccupied with the prospect of temporal death while he plummets to the Earth at 180 miles per hour. Martin estimates his body position and altitude at the time of the jump should give him between 40 and 50 seconds to free himself if he is to survive.


For more information please visit these helpful websites: www.anthony-escapes.com or www.skydivechicago.com.


Source: Ambassador In Chains Ministries

CONTACT: Skydive Chicago, +1-815-433-0000


Web Site: http://www.anthony-escapes.com/
http://www.skydivechicago.com/



National Association of Black Journalists Letter to Cable News Executives

30 Jun 2010 19:53 Africa/Lagos



National Association of Black Journalists Letter to Cable News Executives

WASHINGTON, June 30 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- The following letter was released today by the National Association of Black Journalists:


Dear Cable News Executives:


It is 2010, but the National Association of Black Journalists sees our cable news networks moving backward when it comes to who they believe is worthy of anchoring prime-time news shows.


NABJ was founded in 1975 to encourage news media companies to hire and to promote more Black journalists. At that time, black journalists originally hired to cover riots during the turbulent 1960s found they were not being assigned to other meaningful beats or were only allowed to cover "Black" stories.


NABJ's advocacy for fair hiring practices paid off. Many of our founders, including columnists Les Payne in New York and DeWayne Wickham in Washington, D.C., and anchor Maureen Bunyan in Washington, D.C. remain prominent figures in the media.


NABJ continues this advocacy today. To be candid, we have been focusing our talks with media executives on ways they can increase the diversity of their news management teams. It is our belief that a diverse management team improves coverage decisions and hiring practices. It seems, though, that the companies have taken that to mean that we don't care about who is on the air. We're watching, and we do.


Over the past several years, NABJ Executive Board members have met with leaders of the top media companies. Our message: "Let us help if you are looking for diverse talent."


Some of the companies have reached out, but the names we have submitted never seem to be called in for interviews.


Three years ago, Ebony magazine's Kevin Chappell noted, "While CNN has the most Black news anchors with eight, the other cable networks don't (fare) as well... and none of the national cable stations has any Blacks in prime-time slots."


Nothing has changed. NABJ questions CNN's decision to hire former New York governor/attorney general Eliot Spitzer to co-host a new show in Campbell Brown's old time slot. The company missed another opportunity to place a person of color in prime time. It just seems that cable news can never find diverse candidates who are good enough to meet their standards. We want to know your standards.


Are you telling us that CNN could find no one better than an ex-politician who quit being New York governor after consorting with prostitutes to grace America's living rooms each night?


CNN does have Tony Harris anchoring in the morning, and Fredricka Whitfield, T.J. Holmes, and Don Lemon on the weekends. But that's not prime time. The same can be said about MSNBC which last week named veteran Lawrence O'Donnell as the anchor of its new 10 p.m. show. The prime-time host line-up at Fox News also lacks any racial diversity.


"In his story, Chappell talked with NABJ Member and CBS News anchor Russ Mitchell who summed up what many of us have witnessed over the years. Mitchell told Ebony "I've been to journalism conferences over and over again, and heard some executive say 'I'd like to hire more African-Americans, but I just can't find any qualified ones out there.' That was b.s. then, and that's b.s. now."


NABJ couldn't agree more.

Sincerely,

The National Association of Black Journalists

Source: National Association of Black Journalists

CONTACT: Ryan L. Williams of National Association of Black Journalists,
+1-301-405-0717, rwilliams@nabj.org


Web Site: http://www.nabj.org/



Sudan / Widespread Abuses Bode Ill for Referendum / Hold Security Forces Accountable for Violations in April 2010 Elections

30 Jun 2010 19:55 Africa/Lagos


Sudan / Widespread Abuses Bode Ill for Referendum / Hold Security Forces Accountable for Violations in April 2010 Elections


KARTHOUM, June 30, 2010/African Press Organization (APO)/ -- Both national and southern Sudanese authorities should investigate human rights abuses connected to its April 2010 elections and bring to justice those responsible, Human Rights Watch said in a new report released today. Addressing the abuses is especially important as the country prepares for a referendum on self-determination in Southern Sudan, Human Rights Watch said.

The 32-page report, “Democracy on Hold: Rights Violations in the April 2010 Elections,” documents numerous rights violations across Sudan by both northern and southern authorities in the period leading up to, during, and following the April elections. These abuses include restrictions on freedom of speech and assembly, particularly in northern Sudan, and widespread intimidation, arbitrary arrests, and physical violence against monitors and opponents of the incumbent parties by Sudanese security forces across the country. The report is based on research carried out between November 2009 and April 2010 in Khartoum and Southern Sudan.

“The national elections were an important milestone of the 2005 peace agreement, which was meant to pave the way forward for Sudan,” said Rona Peligal, Africa director at Human Rights Watch. “But pushing the elections-related abuses under the rug would not bode well for the referendum coming up in January.”

The 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement, which ended 22 years of civil war between northern and southern forces, called for Sudan to hold national elections and a referendum on southern self-determination. Southern Sudanese, including more than 1.5 million southerners living in Khartoum and northern states, will decide in the January 2011 vote whether to secede from the north.

Human Rights Watch called on the national unity government to enact genuine reforms called for in the peace agreement, including improvements to the national security apparatus. The national security law currently grants broad powers of search, seizure, and arrest, and allows for detention without judicial review for up to four and a half months, in violation of international law.

Human Rights Watch found that in the months leading up to the April elections the ruling National Congress Party suppressed peaceful assembly by opposition party members in the north and prevented free association and speech. During election week, there were fewer cases of such restrictions, but several cases of harassment, intimidation, and arrest of opposition members and elections observers.

In Southern Sudan, Human Rights Watch documented widespread intimidation, arbitrary arrest, detention, and mistreatment of opponents of the southern ruling Sudan People's Liberation Movement (SPLM), as well as of election observers and voters, throughout the elections process in several southern states.

In addition to these rights violations, serious irregularities in the conduct of the election – such as multiple voting, ballot-stuffing, and other acts of fraud – undermined their legitimacy.


On April 26, the elections commission declared both ruling parties the winners in their regions following the vote-counting. Omar al-Bashir, who is wanted by the International Criminal Court on charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity committed in Darfur, was re-elected president of the national unity government.

In the weeks following the April elections, Human Rights Watch documented a worsening human rights situation across Sudan, with renewed repression in the north, incidents of elections-related violence in the south, and ongoing conflict in Darfur.

Human Rights Watch also called on Sudan to cooperate with the International Criminal Court, as required under United Nations Security Council Resolution 1593.

“The elections were supposed to help expand democracy in Sudan, but they have had the opposite effect,” Peligal said. “The electoral victory has essentially emboldened the ruling parties, particularly in the north, to crack down on opponents, activists, and journalists.”

The post-election crackdown in Khartoum included the May 15 arrest and detention of the opposition figure Hassan al-Turabi and of journalists, the arrest of Darfuri students, and the resumption of pre-print censorship leading to the suspension of three newspapers.

In early June, security forces violently repressed a peaceful demonstration by Sudanese doctors striking for better wages and working conditions, and detained six doctors without charge until June 24, when the doctors called off the strike. Two of them were subjected to physical mistreatment by national security officials.

In Southern Sudan, simmering disputes over election results between the ruling party and independent candidates have led to clashes between armed forces. In Jonglei state, for example, forces loyal to General George Athor, who unsuccessfully ran for state governor, have clashed with the southern army on multiple occasions since the results were announced. Vote-rigging and intimidation during the elections have led to anger and frustration in the south.

In Darfur, where many communities boycotted the elections process, the Sudanese government continues to carry out armed attacks on rebel factions and civilians, using both aerial bombs and ground forces. In May, this violence caused the highest death tolls in two years.

“Democracy on Hold” also examines the reaction of the international community to the widespread abuses during the elections. The report highlights how political considerations related to efforts to carry out the 2005 agreement, in particular the referendum, have made many international actors reluctant to criticize Sudan's human rights record.

“Sudan's international partners have a critical role to play in urging Sudanese authorities to end impunity for abuses,” Peligal said. “Timid silence on their part will both jeopardize the prospects for a peaceful and meaningful referendum and derail the democratic transformation envisioned by the peace agreement.”

Source: Human Right Watch (HRW)


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Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Americans Are Getting Fatter and Fatter in 28 States in the US



29 Jun 2010 16:07 Africa/Lagos


New Report: Adult Obesity Increases in 28 States

Striking Disparities Persist; Obesity Rates Highest Among Blacks and Southerners

WASHINGTON, June 29 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Adult obesity rates increased in 28 states in the past year, and declined only in the District of Columbia (D.C.), according to F as in Fat: How Obesity Threatens America's Future 2010, a report from the Trust for America's Health (TFAH) and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF). More than two-thirds of states (38) have adult obesity rates above 25 percent. In 1991, no state had an obesity rate above 20 percent.


(Logo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20100204/TFAHLOGO)
(Logo: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20100204/TFAHLOGO)


The report highlights troubling racial, ethnic, regional and income disparities in the nation's obesity epidemic. For instance, adult obesity rates for Blacks and Latinos were higher than for Whites in at least 40 states and the District of Columbia; 10 out of the 11 states with the highest rates of obesity were in the South - with Mississippi weighing in with highest rates for all adults (33.8 percent) for the sixth year in a row; and 35.3 percent of adults earning less than $15,000 per year were obese compared with 24.5 percent of adults earning $50,000 or more per year.


"Obesity is one of the biggest public health challenges the country has ever faced, and troubling disparities exist based on race, ethnicity, region, and income," said Jeffrey Levi, PhD, executive director of TFAH. "This report shows that the country has taken bold steps to address the obesity crisis in recent years, but the nation's response has yet to fully match the magnitude of the problem. Millions of Americans still face barriers - like the high cost of healthy foods and lack of access to safe places to be physically active - that make healthy choices challenging."


The report also includes obesity rates among youths ages 10-17, and the results of a new poll on childhood obesity conducted by Greenberg Quinlan Rosner Research and American Viewpoint. The poll shows that 80 percent of Americans recognize that childhood obesity is a significant and growing challenge for the country, and 50 percent of Americans believe childhood obesity is such an important issue that we need to invest more to prevent it immediately. The survey also found that 84 percent of parents believe their children are at a healthy weight, but research shows nearly one-third of children and teens are obese or overweight. Obesity rates among youths ages 10-17 from the 2007 National Survey of Children's Health (NSCH) also were included in the 2009 F as in Fat report. Data collection for the next NSCH will begin in 2011. Currently, more than 12 million children and adolescents are considered obese.


"Obesity rates among the current generation of young people are unacceptably high and a very serious problem," said Risa Lavizzo-Mourey, M.D., M.B.A., RWJF president and CEO. "To reverse this national epidemic, we have to make every community a healthy community. Americans are increasingly ready and willing to make that investment."


Additional key findings include:
-- Adult obesity rates for Blacks topped 40 percent in nine states, 35
percent in 34 states, and 30 percent in 43 states and D.C.
-- Rates of adult obesity for Latinos were above 35 percent in two states
(North Dakota and Tennessee) and at 30 percent and above in 19 states.
-- Ten of the 11 states with the highest rates of diabetes are in the
South, as are the 10 states with the highest rates of hypertension.
-- No state had rates of adult obesity above 35 percent for Whites. Only
one state--West Virginia--had an adult obesity rate for Whites greater
than 30 percent.
-- The number of states where adult obesity rates exceed 30 percent
doubled in the past year, from four to eight--Alabama, Arkansas,
Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Oklahoma, Tennessee and West
Virginia.
-- Northeastern and Western states had the lowest adult obesity rates;
Colorado remained the lowest at 19.1 percent.


The report found that the federal government and many states are undertaking a wide range of policy initiatives to address the obesity crisis. Some key findings include that:


At the federal level:
-- The new health reform law, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care
Act of 2010, has the potential to address the obesity epidemic through
a number of prevention and wellness provisions, expand coverage to
millions of uninsured Americans, and create a reliable funding stream
through the creation of the Prevention and Public Health Fund;
-- Community Transformation grants have the potential to help leverage
the success of existing evidence-based disease prevention programs;
-- President Barack Obama created a White House Task Force on Childhood
Obesity, which issued a new national obesity strategy that contained
concrete measures and roles for every agency in the federal
government; and
-- First Lady Michelle Obama launched the "Let's Move" initiative to
solve childhood obesity within a generation.

And at the state level:
-- Twenty states and D.C. set nutritional standards for school lunches,
breakfasts and snacks that are stricter than current United States
Department of Agriculture requirements. Five years ago, only four
states had legislation requiring stricter standards.
-- Twenty-eight states and D.C. have nutritional standards for
competitive foods sold in schools on a la carte lines, in vending
machines, in school stores, or through school bake sales. Five years
ago, only six states had nutritional standards for competitive foods.
-- Every state has some form of physical education requirement for
schools, but these requirements are often limited, not enforced or do
not meet adequate quality standards.
-- Twenty states have passed requirements for body mass index screenings
of children and adolescents or have passed legislation requiring other
forms of weight and/or fitness related assessments in schools. Five
years ago, only four states had passed screening requirements.


To enhance the prevention of obesity and related diseases, TFAH and RWJF provide a list of recommended actions in the report. Some key policy recommendations include:


-- Support obesity- and disease-prevention programs through the new
health reform law's Prevention and Public Health Fund, which provides
$15 billion in mandatory appropriations for public health and
prevention programs over the next 10 years.
-- Align federal policies and legislation with the goals of the
forthcoming National Prevention and Health Promotion Strategy.
Opportunities to do this can be found through key pieces of federal
legislation that are up for reauthorization in the next few years,
including the Child Nutrition and WIC Reauthorization Act; the
Elementary and Secondary Education Act; and the Surface Transportation
Authorization Act.
-- Expand the commitment to community-based prevention programs initiated
under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 through new
provisions in the health reform law, such as Community Transformation
grants and the National Diabetes Prevention Program.
-- Continue to invest in research and evaluation on nutrition, physical
activity, obesity and obesity-related health outcomes and associated
interventions.


The full report with state rankings in all categories is available on TFAH's Web site at www.healthyamericans.org and RWJF's Web site at www.rwjf.org. The report was supported by a grant from RWJF.


STATE-BY-STATE ADULT OBESITY RANKINGS


Note: 1 = Highest rate of adult obesity, 51 = lowest rate of adult obesity. Rankings are based on combining three years of data (2007-2009) from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System to "stabilize" data for comparison purposes. This methodology, recommended by the CDC, compensates for any potential anomalies or usual changes due to the specific sample in any given year in any given state. States with statistically significant (p<0.05) increases for one year are noted with an asterisk (*), states with statistically significant increases for two years in a row are noted with two asterisks (**), states with statistically significant increases for three years in a row are noted with three asterisks (***). Additional information about methodologies and confidence intervals is available in the report. Individuals with a body mass index (BMI) (a calculation based on weight and height ratios) of 30 or higher are considered obese.


1. Mississippi*** (33.8%); 2. (tie) Alabama (31.6%); and Tennessee*** (31.6%); 4. West Virginia (31.3%); 5. Louisiana* (31.2%); 6. Oklahoma*** (30.6%); 7. Kentucky* (30.5%); 8. Arkansas* (30.1%); 9. South Carolina (29.9%); 10. (tie) Michigan (29.4%); and North Carolina*** (29.4%); 12. Missouri* (29.3%); 13. (tie) Ohio (29.0%); and Texas* (29.0%); 15. South Dakota*** (28.5%); 16. Kansas*** (28.2%); 17. (tie) Georgia (28.1%); Indiana* (28.1%); and Pennsylvania*** (28.1%); 20. Delaware (27.9%); 21. North Dakota** (27.7%); 22. Iowa* (27.6%); 23. Nebraska (27.3%); 24. (tie) Alaska (26.9%); and Wisconsin (26.9%); 26. (tie) Illinois* (26.6%); and Maryland (26.6%); 28. Washington*** (26.3%); 29. (tie) Arizona (25.8%); and Maine** (25.8%); 31. Nevada (25.6%); 32. (tie) Minnesota (25.5%); New Mexico*** (25.5%); and Virginia (25.5%); 35. New Hampshire* (25.4%); 36. (tie) Florida** (25.1%); Idaho (25.1%); and New York (25.1%); 39. (tie) Oregon (25.0%); and Wyoming (25.0%); 41. California* (24.4%); 42. New Jersey (23.9%); 43. Montana*** (23.5%); 44. Utah* (23.2%); 45. Rhode Island* (22.9%); 46. Vermont*** (22.8%); 47. Hawaii** (22.6%); 48. Massachusetts* (21.7%); 49. District of Columbia. (21.5%); 50. Connecticut (21.4%); 51. Colorado (19.1%).


STATE-BY-STATE ADULT OBESITY RANKINGS FOR BLACKS


Note: 1 = Highest rate of adult obesity, 51 = lowest rate of adult obesity. Rankings are based on combining three years of data (2007-2009) from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System to "stabilize" data for comparison purposes. This methodology, recommended by the CDC, compensates for any potential anomalies or usual changes due to the specific sample in any given year in any given state.


1. Wisconsin (44.0%); 2. Mississippi (42.9%); 3. Kentucky (42.6%); 4. Kansas (41.9%); 5. Alabama (41.7%); 6. (tie) Tennessee (41.1%); and North Carolina (41.1%); 8. Ohio (40.9%); 9. Delaware (40.6%); 10. Arkansas (39.8%); 11. South Carolina (39.4%); 12. Louisiana (38.7%); 13. (tie) Missouri (38.4%); Pennsylvania (38.4%); and Oregon (38.4%); 16. Michigan (38.2%); 17. Wyoming (37.9%); 18. Texas (37.6%); 19. Idaho (37.3%); 20. (tie) West Virginia (37.2%); and Maine (37.2%); 22. (tie) California (37.1%); and Oklahoma (37.1%); 24. Nebraska (37.0%); 25. Georgia (36.5%); 26. New Mexico (36.4%); 27. (tie) Florida (36.3%); and Maryland (36.3%); 29. New Jersey (36.1%); 30. Indiana (35.9%); 31. Alaska (35.7%); 32. Illinois (35.5%); 33. (tie) Connecticut (35.4%); and Virginia (35.4%); 35. Utah (34.5%); 36. District of Columbia (34.4%); 37. Iowa (34.1%); 38. Arizona (32.5%); 39. Washington (32.2%); 40. North Dakota (31.3%); 41. Rhode Island (30.8%); 42. New York (30.6%); 43. Hawaii (30.4%); 44. Vermont (30.1%); 45. Massachusetts (29.0%); 46. Minnesota (28.6%); 47. Colorado (28.1%); 48. South Dakota (27.5%); 49. New Hampshire (27.2%); 50. Montana (26.2%); 51. Nevada (25.8%).


STATE-BY-STATE ADULT OBESITY RANKINGS FOR LATINOS


Note: 1 = Highest rate of adult obesity, 51 = lowest rate of adult obesity. Rankings are based on combining three years of data (2007-2009) from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System to "stabilize" data for comparison purposes. This methodology, recommended by the CDC, compensates for any potential anomalies or usual changes due to the specific sample in any given year in any given state.


1. Tennessee (39.5%); 2. North Dakota (37.4%); 3. (tie) Missouri (34.0%); and Texas (34.0%); 5. (tie) Michigan (33.4%); and Arizona (33.4%); 7. Pennsylvania (33.3%); 8. Alabama (33.2%); 9. Kansas (32.8%); 10. (tie) Ohio (32.5%); and Alaska (32.5%); 12. Louisiana (30.8%); 13. New Mexico (30.7%); 14. Illinois (30.6%); 15. Oklahoma (30.4%); 16. Nebraska (30.3%); 17. (tie) Georgia (30.2%); and California (30.2%); 19. Wyoming (30.0%); 20. Washington (29.9%); 21. Arkansas (29.6%); 22. Iowa (29.4%); 23. Virginia (29.2%); 24. Idaho (29.1%); 25. West Virginia (28.5%); 26. (tie) South Carolina (28.4%); and Nevada (28.4%); 28. New York (28.0%); 29. Kentucky (27.9%); 30. Florida (27.8%); 31. Hawaii (27.7%); 32. Massachusetts (27.1%); 33. Rhode Island (27.0%); 34. (tie) Delaware (26.8%); and Indiana (26.8%); 36. (tie) Minnesota (26.4%); New Hampshire (26.4%); and Connecticut (26.4%); 39. South Dakota (26.2%); 40. North Carolina (25.7%); 41. Mississippi (25.6%); 42. New Jersey (25.4%); 43. Wisconsin (24.9%); 44. Colorado (24.5%); 45. Maryland (24.4%); 46. Oregon (23.7%); 47. Utah (23.6%); 48. Montana (23.2%); 49. Maine (21.0%); 50. Vermont (20.8%); 51. District of Columbia (20.6%).


Trust for America's Health is a non-profit, non-partisan organization dedicated to saving lives by protecting the health of every community and working to make disease prevention a national priority. www.healthyamericans.org


The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation focuses on the pressing health and health care issues facing our country. As the nation's largest philanthropy devoted exclusively to improving the health and health care of all Americans, the Foundation works with a diverse group of organizations and individuals to identify solutions and achieve comprehensive, meaningful and timely change. For more than 35 years the Foundation has brought experience, commitment, and a rigorous, balanced approach to the problems that affect the health and health care of those it serves. Helping Americans lead healthier lives and get the care they need--the Foundation expects to make a difference in our lifetime. For more information, visit www.rwjf.org.


Photo: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20100204/TFAHLOGO
PRN Photo Desk, photodesk@prnewswire.com
http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20100204/TFAHLOGO
Source: Trust for America's Health

CONTACT: Elle Hogan, +1-202-223-9870 x 21, ehogan@tfah.org, Laura Segal,
+1-202-223-9870 x 27, lsegal@tfah.org, both of Trust for America's Health; or
Susan Levine, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, +1-609-627-6343,
slevine@rwjf.org


Web Site: http://healthyamericans.org/

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Tuesday, June 29, 2010

President Obama Nominates a New Ambassador to Nigeria

29 Jun 2010 14:47 Africa/Lagos


USA / Nigeria / President Obama Announces More Key Administration Posts, 6/28/10


WASHINGTON, June 29, 2010/African Press Organization (APO)/ -- President Barack Obama announced his intent to nominate the following individual to key administration posts:

Terence P. McCulley, Nominee for Ambassador to the Federal Republic of Nigeria, Department of State

Terence P. McCulley is a career member of the Senior Foreign Service, with the rank of Minister-Counselor. He served most recently as the Deputy Chief of Mission at the U.S. Embassy in Copenhagen, Denmark. Prior to this, Mr. McCulley was the U.S. Ambassador to Mali, and he has served as Deputy Chief of Mission at the U.S. Embassies in Tunisia, Senegal and Togo. Other overseas postings include Niger, South Africa, India and Chad. In Washington, Mr. McCulley was the senior desk officer for Zaire (now Democratic Republic of the Congo), and Deputy Coordinator for Iraq Assistance. A native of Oregon, he is a graduate in History and French of the University of Oregon in Eugene.

Source: The White House


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Monday, June 28, 2010

Nigerians Should Forgive and Give IBB Another Chance


IBB


I beg, please, if you have anything against former military President, General Ibrahim Babamosi Babangida, forgive him so that God will also forgive you too.

True Christians must be willing to forgive those who repent.
Or have you forgotten your Holy Bible.
Say the Lord's Prayer again.

What of those who murdered Moshood Kashimawo Olawale Abiola?

The irony of it all is the fact that, even the millions of criminals and sinners and their accomplices, including the devil incarnates who hide their transgressions in Nigeria are casting stones at IBB.
SHAMELESS HYPOCRITES AND INGRATES.
Tuffia kwa!

if everyone who has committed an offence in Nigeria is doing as IBB is begging for forgiveness, Nigeria will soon become heaven on earth.


Whoever covers over his sins does not prosper. Whoever confesses and abandons them receives compassion.
~ Proverbs 28:13
FINIS.