Thursday, December 15, 2011

Gaddafi: The End Game




Doha, Qatar, 14 December 2011:

Premiering on 22 December 2011, State of Denial ends Al Jazeera English’s series on Libya, Gaddafi: The End Game. It starts screening just before Libya celebrates 60 years of independence on 24 December 2011.



Produced and directed by Anne Reevell (Moonbeam Films) and executive produced by South African Oscar, Emmy and BAFTA winner Jon Blair, State of Denial explains in forensic detail why the Libyan downfall was not straightforward and examines why, in spite of little public support and a massive international military assault, Gaddafi managed to hang on to power for as long as he did.

The documentary charts the disintegration of Gaddafi’s brutal regime through the accounts of the insiders, defectors and military advisers who helped bring it about. State of Denial includes for the first time on-the-record interviews with many senior figures of the revolution, including National Transitional Council leader, Mustafa Abdul Jalil, one of the first defectors; Abdel Hakim Belhaj, the Islamist revolutionary leader re-indicted by the US; and Brigadier General Abdel Salam al-Hasi, the head of the new Libyan army.

There are also frank interviews with Britain’s Libyan adviser to the Prime Minister, Brigadier General Robin Searby, who in a series of exclusive interviews reveals that getting Gaddafi “got personal.” In an interview in April, Searby said it was too early for hindsight. “But I firmly believe he (Gaddafi) will never go. The revolution, the Green Book, is his whole life. Unless he is bombed out, it is the people around him who will have to get rid of him.”

State of Denial reveals the way that the Libyans grouped Britain among these inner-circle defectors. The documentary describes the panic inside the regime after February’s protests in Benghazi were put down, revealing the desperate attempts to get messages from Tripoli to Downing Street. It chronicles the regime’s disbelief that the British had deserted them and reveals messages sent by a senior Libyan military aide, saying that it wasn’t their fault “a peaceful demonstration had been used as a tool to carry out an evil plot to create chaos.”

State of Denial reveals that Gaddafi never had the weapons of mass destruction he pledged to renounce when Tony Blair went to Tripoli in 2004 to bring the Libyan dictator in from the cold, but argues that the links forged between senior personnel in the British and Libyan military proved invaluable in the war against Gaddafi.

The documentary also explores the tensions within both the Gaddafi family and the rebel/NATO coalition.

One of Gaddafi’s sons tried to find out if he could get a visa for the UK, while Saif El Islam, Gaddafi’s Western-educated son, was advised to give up by those around him.

The rebels thought NATO’s relentless bombing of targets like Gadaffi’s Bab Al Aziziya compound was ”making him stronger,” so the relationship between the rebels and NATO was frequently tested by coalition fears of hitting civilian targets.

Reevell formed close links with Libya through regularly travelling and working there since 2005. During the conflict, she was in daily contact with a Tripoli-based insider and in June she travelled to Libya’s Western Mountains with a group of UK-based revolutionaries to chart the fall of Tripoli for the first two episodes of the series.

State of Denial screens on Al Jazeera English from Thursday, 22 December 2011 at the following times GMT: Thursday, 20h00; Friday, 12h00; Saturday, 01h00; Sunday, 06h00; Monday, 20h00; Tuesday, 12h00, Wednesday, 01h00; and Thursday 29 December 2011 at 06h00.

You can watch and embed the trailer at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3SQGn67vugY.

For more information, visit http://www.aljazeera.com/programmes/gaddafitheendgame/


Contact:

Kevin Kriedemann
+27 83 556 2346
kevin@kevinlikes.com
http://kevinlikes.com



TIME MAGAZINE ANNOUNCES TIME PERSON OF THE YEAR: THE PROTESTER



14 Dec 2011 18:00 Africa/Lagos

TIME MAGAZINE ANNOUNCES TIME PERSON OF THE YEAR: THE PROTESTER

ADDITIONAL RESOURCES: Audio, hard copy requests, contact information and more available at: http://multivu.prnewswire.com/broadcast/52764/press.html

NEW YORK, December 14 /PRNewswire/ -- THIS IS A TIME MAGAZINE SPECIAL REPORT.

TIME MAGAZINE REVEALS THE 2011 TIME PERSON OF THE YEAR: THE PROTESTER

TIME EDITOR RICK STENGEL:

"In 2011, all over the world, from Egypt to Greece, Wall Street to Red Square, The Protester embodied the idea that individual action can bring collective change. Although it meant different things in different places, the idea of democracy was present in every gathering. Everywhere people said they'd had enough."

TIME SAYS THE CHOICE IS NOT NECESSARILY AN HONOR, BUT A RECOGNITION OF THE POWER OF THESE MOVEMENTS AND THE WANING INFLUENCE OF TRADITIONAL LEADERS.

"For upending governments and conventional wisdom, for combining old techniques with new technologies and for steering the planet on a more democratic though sometimes more dangerous path for the 21st century, The Protester is Time's 2011 Person of the Year."

READ THE TIME PERSON OF THE YEAR STORY ONLINE NOW AT TIME.COM OR BUY A COPY OF THE ISSUE ON NEWSSTANDS OR TABLET ON FRIDAY DECEMBER 16TH.

I'M PAUL JOHNSON.
Audio: http://multivu.prnewswire.com/broadcast/52764/press.html

Source: TIME MAGAZINE

AUDIO PROVIDED BY: TIME MAGAZINE

CONTACT: FOR STORY INFORMATION, PLEASE CALL: MultiVu Media Relations,1-800-653-5313, EXT. 3 OR EMAIL RADIO@MULTIVU.COM

Web site: http://www.time.com



Paramount Pictures Unveils New Logo in Celebration of the Studio's 100th Anniversary


Paramount Pictures Unveils New Logo in Celebration of the Studio's 100th Anniversary

New Logo Will Be Seen With "Mission: Impossible - Ghost Protocol"

(PRNewsFoto/Paramount Pictures Corporation) HOLLYWOOD, CA UNITED STATES


HOLLYWOOD, Calif., Dec. 14, 2011 /PRNewswire/ -- Paramount Pictures today unveiled a new company logo that commemorates the studio's 100th Anniversary in show business. The new logo can be seen on the new Tom Cruise starrer, MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE – GHOST PROTOCOL. The movie will open in IMAX and on other premium large format screens on Friday, December 16th and in theatres everywhere on December 21st.

(Logo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20111214/LA22803LOGO)

The studio's first logo, a symbol of a rugged, snow-covered peak from the Wasatch mountain range, was created in 1916. The 100th Anniversary logo was created by Devastudios, Inc.

Paramount will use the logo throughout its centennial year in 2012. Beginning in 2013, the wording about the 100th anniversary will be removed from the logo, with the rest of the design remaining in use.

About Paramount Pictures Corporation

Paramount Pictures Corporation (PPC), a global producer and distributor of filmed entertainment, is a unit of Viacom (NASDAQ: VIA, VIAB), a leading content company with prominent and respected film, television and digital entertainment brands. Paramount controls a collection of some of the most powerful brands in filmed entertainment, including Paramount Pictures, Paramount Animation, Paramount Vantage, Paramount Classics, Insurge Pictures, MTV Films, and Nickelodeon Movies. PPC operations also include Paramount Famous Productions, Paramount Home Media Distribution, Paramount Pictures International, Paramount Licensing Inc., and Paramount Studio Group.

About Paramount Pictures 100th Anniversary

The only major studio still located in Hollywood, Paramount Pictures celebrates its 100th year in show business in 2012. Adolph Zukor, Jesse L. Lasky and Cecil B. DeMille are credited as Paramount's principle founders, with Queen Elizabeth being the studio's first feature film in 1912. Through a century of excellence, Paramount has set the standard in cinema and continues to deliver the highest caliber of entertainment to audiences worldwide.

SOURCE Paramount Pictures Corporation

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Wednesday, December 14, 2011

The Sex And Evil Spirits Movie Opens At The Genesis Cinemas This Weekend


British actor Marc Baylis and Alex Lopez in Changing Faces.

The first Nigerian movie on the transmission of evil spirits through sex, Changing Faces opens this Weekend December 16, at the Genesis Deluxe Cinemas in the Shoprite at The Palms on Victoria Island, Lagos.

Nollywood Stars Alex Lopez, Keppy Ekpenyong and others will be there to meet with their fans and give out postcards of their scenes in the movie.



Tuesday, December 13, 2011

Malaria Deaths Are Down




13 Dec 2011 10:55 Africa/Lagos

Malaria deaths are down but progress remains fragile

GENEVA, December 13, 2011/African Press Organization (APO)/ -- Malaria mortality rates have fallen by more than 25% globally since 2000, and by 33% in the WHO African Region, according to the World Malaria Report 2011, issued today by the World Health Organization. This progress is the result of a significant scaling-up of malaria prevention and control measures in the last decade, including the widespread use of bed nets, better diagnostics and a wider availability of effective medicines to treat malaria.


However, WHO warns that a projected shortfall in funding threatens the fragile gains and that the double challenge of emerging drug and insecticide resistance needs to be proactively addressed.


"We are making significant progress in battling a major public health problem. Coverage of at-risk populations with malaria prevention and control measures increased again in 2010, and resulted in a further decline in estimated malaria cases and deaths," says Dr Margaret Chan, WHO Director-General. "But there are worrisome signs that suggest progress might slow."


During the past decade, malaria incidence and mortality rates have been cut in all regions of the world, according to the World Malaria Report 2011. In 2010, there were an estimated 216 million cases of malaria in 106 endemic countries and territories in the world. An estimated 81% percent of these cases and 91% of deaths occurred in the WHO African Region. Globally, 86% of the victims were children under 5 years of age.


There were an estimated 655 000 malaria deaths in 2010, which is 36 000 lower than the year before.* While this 5% year-on-year decline represents significant progress, the mortality figures are still disconcertingly high for a disease that is entirely preventable and treatable.


"With malaria deaths in Africa having fallen significantly since 2000, the return on our investment to end malaria deaths has been greater than any I have experienced in the business world. But one child still dies every minute from malaria - and that is one child and one minute too many,” says Raymond G. Chambers, the UN Secretary General's Special Envoy for Malaria.


“The toll taken by the current economic crisis must not result in our gains being reversed, or progress slowed. With Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon's charge for near zero deaths by end of 2015, turning back now is not an option,” Mr Chambers adds.


Steady progress in malaria control



Long-lasting insecticidal nets have been one of the least expensive and most effective weapons in the fight against malaria. According to the new report, the number of bed nets delivered to malaria-endemic countries in sub-Saharan Africa increased from 88.5 million in 2009 to 145 million in 2010. An estimated 50% of households in sub-Saharan Africa now have at least one bed net, and 96% of persons with access to a net use it.


There has also been further progress in rolling out diagnostic testing, which is crucially important to separate malaria from other febrile illnesses. The number of rapid diagnostic tests delivered by manufacturers climbed from 45 million in 2008 to 88 million in 2010, and the testing rate in the public sector in the WHO African Region rose from 20% in 2005 to 45% in 2010.


Worldwide, the volume of antimalarial medication delivered to the public sector has also increased. In 2010, 181 million courses of artemisinin-based combination therapies (ACTs) were procured, up from 158 million in 2009, and just 11 million in 2005. ACTs are recommended as the first-line treatment for malaria caused by the most deadly malaria parasite, Plasmodium falciparum.


Projected shortfall in funding


Despite significant progress in 2010, the projected shortfall in malaria funding threatens the hard-earned gains of the last decade.


International funds for malaria control reached US$ 1.7 billion in 2010 and US$ 2 billion in 2011, but remained significantly below the US$ 5-6 billion that would be needed annually to achieve global malaria targets. According to projections in the report, despite increased support from the United Kingdom, malaria funding will slightly decrease in 2012 and 2013, and will likely drop further to an annual US$ 1.5 billion by 2015.


Triggered primarily by the reduction in available funding within the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, this decrease will considerably alter the malaria control landscape and threaten the sustainability of the multipronged approach to fight the disease, which relies heavily on investments in bed nets, indoor residual spraying, diagnostic testing, treatment, research and innovation.


"We need a fully-resourced Global Fund, new donors, and endemic countries to join forces and address the vast challenges that lie ahead. Millions of bed nets will need replacement in the coming years, and the goal of universal access to diagnostic testing and effective treatment must be realized," says Dr Robert Newman, Director of WHO's Global Malaria Programme. "We need to act with urgency and resolve to ensure that no-one dies from malaria for lack of a 5 dollar bed net, 1 dollar antimalarial drug and a 50 cent diagnostic test."


Emerging threats


Plasmodium falciparum resistance to artemisinins, which was confirmed on the Cambodia-Thailand border in 2009, has now also been identified at additional sites in Myanmar and Viet Nam. WHO has recommended that all countries ban the marketing of oral artemisinin-based monotherapies, which have been one of the major factors fostering the emergence and spread of resistance. Despite continued international pressure, 25 countries still allow the marketing of oral artemisinin-based monotherapies and 28 pharmaceutical companies continue to market these products (down from 39 in 2010).


The problem of mosquito resistance to insecticides also appears to be growing, although to date has not been linked to widespread failure of malaria vector control efforts. According to the World Malaria Report 2011, which includes data on insecticide resistance for the first time - 45 countries around the world have identified resistance to at least one of the four classes of insecticides used for malaria vector control; 27 of these are in sub-Saharan Africa. Resistance has been reported from all WHO Regions except the WHO European Region. India and malaria-endemic countries in sub-Saharan Africa are of greatest concern due to widespread reports of resistance - in some areas to all classes of insecticides - combined with a high malaria burden.


Current malaria control efforts are heavily reliant on a single class of insecticides, the pyrethroids, which are the most commonly used compounds for indoor residual spraying, and the only insecticide class recommended - and currently used - on long-lasting insecticidal nets. In response to this emerging threat, WHO is currently working with a broad group of stakeholders to develop a Global Plan for Insecticide Resistance Management in malaria vectors, which will be released in early 2012.


Notes to editors


The World Malaria Report 2011 is an annual publication from WHO. It summarizes information received from malaria-endemic countries and malaria control partners, and analyses prevention and control measures according to a comprehensive set of indicators. This year's report builds primarily on data received from countries for the year 2010. For the first time, the report contains individual profiles for 99 countries with ongoing malaria transmission.


* The total number of estimated malaria deaths presented in World Malaria Report 2011 (655 000 deaths) is substantially lower than the number presented in the World Malaria Report 2010 (781 000 deaths). This is partly because of an actual decrease in the number of malaria deaths (36 000), and partly because of a downward revision of child mortality estimates for all causes and diseases - for the past decade - by the UN Inter-agency Group for Child Mortality Estimation. This revision reduced malaria mortality estimates in the WHO African Region by approximately 11%.


The full report, including all annexes, is available at http://who.int/malaria/world_malaria_report_2011/en/index.html.


Source: World Health Organization (WHO)




Official launch of the Pan African University On Wednesday 14 December 2011

13 Dec 2011 05:04 Africa/Lagos


Official launch of the Pan African University On Wednesday 14 December 2011

ADDIS ABABA, December 13, 2011/African Press Organization (APO)/ -- Invitation to the journalists

Journalists are invited to attend the official launch of the Pan African University and a press conference at the African Union Commission on 14 December. The launch will be officiated by H.E Dr Jean Ping- Chairperson of the African Union Commission; H.E Mr Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo- Chairperson of the African Union and H.E Professor Jean Pierre Ezin- Commissioner of Human Resources, Science and Technology at the African Union Commission.


Events will commence at 10am and will conclude with a press conference and lunch at 13:30.


The Pan-African University (PAU) is being established in fulfillment of the Arusha Convention, by creating an exemplary but uniquely different and modern educational structure which focuses on integrative teaching and cutting-edge research, and is strategically conceptualised within the context of the diverse African cultural values, linguistic pluralism, and aspiration for the scientific and technological breakthroughs towards the continent's development.


The PAU is modeled on the creation of centers for excellence in the under listed thematic areas, with each geographical sub-region of Africa hosting a thematic component and serving as a coordinating hub for high quality centers developing similar programs on the continent.

The five thematic areas and the regional hubs of PAU are:

• Space sciences (Southern Africa, with a host institution yet to be identified)

• Water and Energy Sciences, including climate change (North Africa, with a host institution in Algeria)

• Basic Sciences, Technology and Innovation (Eastern Africa, with Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology, Kenya, as the host institution)

• Life and Earth Sciences, including health and agriculture (Western Africa, with University of Ibadan, Nigeria, as the host institution)

• Governance, Humanities and Social Sciences (Central Africa, with University of Yaounde I, Cameroon as the host institution)


A press conference will take place from 13.10- 13.40 pm in the Conference Center of the AU, immediately after the official launch of the Pan African University.


Journalists are invited to cover the opening ceremony of the Launching of the Pan African University (PAU) at 10am, and participate at the Press Conference at 13:30.

For more information, visit the AU website: www.au.int


Source: African Union Commission (AUC)

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Monday, December 12, 2011

How To Throw A Christmas Party



Throwing a perfect Christmas party is not as easy as it looks like, it involves a lot of planning and event management skills, here's how to manage a good Christmas party. Let the professionals teach you a few tricks of the trade.


Be the Life of the Party This Holiday Season -- and Any Time of Year -- With The Everyday Guide to Spirits and Cocktails: Tastes and Traditions

CHANTILLY, Va., Dec. 9, 2011 /PRNewswire/ -- Connoisseurs or novices, spirits lovers can now amaze and delight friends and family with an enhanced knowledge of and appreciation for great spirits and cocktails. The Everyday Guide to Spirits and Cocktails: Taste and Traditions, a dynamic series of video lectures available just in time for the holidays, is a fun and engaging educational experience that reveals everything people need to know to choose, mix, and serve spirits and cocktails just like a master mixologist.

To view the multimedia assets associated with this release, please click http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/be-the-life-of-the-party-this-holiday-season----and-any-time-of-year----with-the-everyday-guide-to-spirits-and-cocktails-tastes-and-traditions-135212493.html

Hosted by acclaimed expert and Certified Specialist of Spirits Jennifer Simonetti-Bryan and filmed entirely on location at Washington, DC's iconic Gibson Bar, this exciting course features six half-hour lectures that cover the history, production, varieties, and uses of popular spirits including vodka, rum, and whiskey. As Ms. Simonetti-Bryan demonstrates how to taste and compare the quality and complex notes of each spirit with the skill and confidence of a wine connoisseur, people will learn to maximize their experiences with spirits and discover their own personal taste preferences. They'll also get a host of recipes for delicious cocktails that illustrate each spirits' unique characteristics.

The Everyday Guide to Spirits and Cocktails: Taste and Traditions also includes two bonus lectures packed with insider tips, such as how to create the perfect home bar, how to make sure the figure-conscious can enjoy their favorite drinks, and how to craft seasonal cocktail recipes like Eggnog and Hot Buttered Rum. Available on DVD for $29.95 and as a digital video download for $27.95, this interactive learning experience makes an excellent—and affordable—gift both for the holidays and for any occasion.

"Everyone loves a delicious cocktail—never more so than during the party season," says Ms. Simonetti-Bryan. "But many people can't tell their gin from their vodka, or their sour from their daiquiri. The Everyday Guide to Spirits and Cocktails: Tastes and Traditions offers a solid grounding in understanding the origins of spirits, the intricacies of tasting, how to establish your personal preferences, and above all, how to mix that lip-smackingly good cocktail. It's a comprehensive guide to spirits and cocktails – with bite-size, half-hour lectures that can be enjoyed on your own time."

The Everyday Guide to Spirits and Cocktails: Tastes and Traditions is just one of more than 350 educational and inspiring courses for lifelong learners available from The Great Courses. To download or purchase this course as a holiday gift, please visit http://bit.ly/u5dnNt or http://www.thegreatcourses.com/cocktail-courses.

For further information on The Everyday Guide to Spirits and Cocktails: Tastes and Traditions or The Great Courses, please contact Victoria Harris or Gina Tunley at Punch Communications: +44 (0) 1858 411 600 or tgc@punchcomms.com

Notes to Editors

* The Everyday Guide to Spirits and Cocktails: Tastes and Traditions is available from www.thegreatcourses.com/cocktail-courses for $27.95 (digital video download) and $29.95 (DVD). Shipping and handling costs apply.

* Jennifer Simonetti-Bryan is a definitive authority on spirits in the United States and among a small number of people to have received the highest credentials in the spirits and wine industry. She has a Professional Certificate in Spirits from the Wine & Spirit Education Trust and is a Certified Specialist of Spirits from the Society of Wine Educators. Ms. Simonetti-Bryan is also one of only a few hundred people in the world to hold the Master of Wine title (M.W.) from The Institute of Masters of Wine in London, England—the highest and most difficult title to achieve in the industry. Winner of the Wiesbaden Tasting Trophy from the Institute of Masters of Wine, Ms. Simonetti-Bryan has trained thousands of professionals in the spirits and wine industry, has judged international spirits and wine competitions, and has hosted seminars with Food Network stars including Rachael Ray and Bobby Flay. She is a frequent guest on television programs, including Fox Business and Bloomberg TV, and has been featured in Fortune, Wine & Spirits Magazine, and Wine Enthusiast Magazine.

* The Great Courses is a highly popular series of university-level lectures crafted and delivered by top professors and experts. Designed to meet the demand for lifelong learning and to change the way people think about the world, The Great Courses currently offers more than 350 courses in a range of video and audio formats including DVD, CD, and digital downloads. Courses span more than 5,000 hours of content across ten subject categories: science and mathematics, history, fine arts and music, religion and theology, philosophy and intellectual history, literature and English language, business and economics, better living, professional, and high school. Since 1990, over 10 million courses have been sold around the world.

Related Links:The Everyday Guide to Spirits and Cocktails: Tastes and Traditionsthegreatcourses.com/spirits


SOURCE The Great Courses

Read more: http://www.sacbee.com/2011/12/09/4111611/be-the-life-of-the-party-this.html#ixzz1gJhTAb00


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05:57 Joint media advisory / Second African Union Conference of Ministers Responsible for Mineral Resources Development, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

05:53 Job / Communications Consultant / Investment climate advisory services of the World Bank Group



Sunday, December 11, 2011

Genevieve Nnaji Travels to America and Loses Major Role to Omotola


Genevieve Nnaji

Genevieve Nnaji's trip to the United States of America has made her to lose the lead role to Omotola Jalade-Ekeinde in a big budget Nollywood movie that Teco Benson is directing at the moment.


Omotola Jalade-Ekeinde

Genevieve had the role until she travelled to the U.S. and since the filmmaker did not want her to delay the production, he decided to replace her with Omotola who is already on location this Sunday in Lekki, Lagos.

"Genevieve is out of the production," said one of the actors on location.



Saturday, December 10, 2011

Pina is An Awesome Journey of Life in Poetic Dance


PINA - Dance, dance, otherwise we are lost - International Trailer from neueroadmovies on Vimeo.



A sizeable crowd watched the African premiere of the awesome German documentary film Pina Saturday afternoon at the Silverbird Cinemas in the Silverbird Galleria on Victoria Island in Lagos. It was the special feature of the monthly documentary film screening series of iRep International Documentary Film Festival and the Goethe Institut in Nigeria.



The audience of both Nigerians and the international community of mainly Germans and other Europeans was captivated by the hyperbolic renditions and illustrations of the life work of Philippina "Pina" Bausch (27 July 1940 – 30 June 2009), whose untimely death whilst Wim Wenders was still planning the experimental documentary in 3D compelled him to cancel the film production until the other dancers of the famous Tanztheater Wuppertal prevailed on him to complete the film as a memorial tribute to Pina and what a great tribute it has become as the dancers reenacted the panoramic montage of the phenomenal oeuvre of her Tanztheater in four movements, titled Le sacre du printemps (The Rite of Spring), Café Mueller (a café in the German town of Solingen, where Bausch grew up from when she began dancing at 14), Kontakthof, and Vollmond.


A gripping scene from Pina


Philippina "Pina" Bausch

The dancers gave testimonies of Pina’s philosophy of life as depicted in her largely expressionist dance on and off stage and how much she influenced them to equally express their innermost being through the choreography of different sequences of dances all looking like a narrative of the various experiences of the romance of human existence on earth. I saw the dancers as the illustrations of the flower children of Mother Nature in their pilgrimage in the world as they passed through different stages of existential evolution. I saw echoes of the art of Salvador Dali (May 11, 1904 – January 23, 1989) and the architecture of Walter Adolph Georg Gropius (May 18, 1883 – July 5, 1969), founder of the Bauhaus School that later birthed The Bauhaus Movement and the literature of Franz Kafka (3 July 1883 – 3 June 1924), Jean-Paul Sartre (1905–1980) and Albert Camus (1913-1960) as the dancers took their captive audience on a hypnotic and surrealistic journey of the diverse experiences of humankind in the universe.


Director Wim Wenders arrives at the "Pina" special screening during AFI FEST 2011 presented by Audi at Grauman's Chinese Theatre on November 5, 2011 in Hollywood, California.(November 4, 2011 - Photo by Christopher Polk/Getty Images North America)

Pina is definitely going to become a timeless classic in the history of modern documentary filmmaking and may end up as the magnum opus of Wim Wenders. Its accomplishment is an embodiment of the heart, soul and spirit of Wenders himself. To me, it is a phenomenal fusion of abstract art, literature and music in the choreography of modern dance. And it is an unforgettable journey of life in poetic dance.


~ By Ekenyerengozi Michael Chima, author of Children of Heaven, Sleepless Night, Scarlet Tears of London, Bye, Bye Mugabe and In the House of Dogs.




Friday, December 9, 2011

New Nigerian Media Platform Seeks to Promote Public Interest Journalism

9 Dec 2011 16:18 Africa/Lagos


New Nigerian Media Platform Seeks to Promote Public Interest Journalism

PR Newswire

ABUJA, Nigeria, Dec. 9, 2011

ABUJA, Nigeria, Dec. 9, 2011 /PRNewswire/ -- Faced with ongoing challenges of self-censorship, poor quality information, and political agenda dominating the news industry in Nigeria, the founders of Nigeria Intel are proud to announce the launch of an exciting new platform that will seek to promote high quality, independent journalism in the public interest.

"There is clearly a high level of talent among Nigerian journalists, and a number of high quality publications, but what we are trying to accomplish is an alternative business model, whereby the advertising and editorial pressure during future election cycles will not impact the quality of the product," said Executive Editor Salisu Suleiman, who previously served a ten-year term as an Information Officer of the Federal Government of Nigeria. "The non-profit model for Nigeria Intel is based upon private donations, public non-governmental grants, and online advertising revenue that is 100% applied to our operation costs, staff, and freelance contributors - in other words, the more successful the platform becomes, the more content we will be able to commission from independent journalists, creating a multiplier effect that encourages the development of the profession."

Although the project may be in its infancy stages, there are lofty goals for collaboration with some of the country's leading thinkers, says Mohammed Salihu, Managing Editor of Nigeria Intel. "Our goal is to attract reform-minded journalists by offering a fresh perspective on the most crucial issues having an impact on Nigerian citizens," said Mr. Salihu. "When we talk about 'journalism in the public interest,' we want to go far beyond simple punditry to offer facts, details, and high quality credible news, which we view as the building blocks for transparency, democracy, and better accountability of governance."

Nigeria Intel, which can be found online at http://www.nigeriaintel.com, is a project of the Civic Media Institute of Nigeria, a small multinational organization founded in September 2011 to assist Nigerian journalists in accessing professional training opportunities, providing a platform for freelancers to publish investigative journalism, and contributing to the diversity of the media offering to Nigerian and international audiences.

SOURCE Civic Media Institute of Nigeria

CONTACT: CONTACT: James T. Kimer, +1-917-355-0717, james.kimer@nigeriaintel.com

Web Site: http://www.nigeriaintel.com