Monday, November 19, 2012

70% of African Women Lack A Safe Toilet Increasing Their Risk of Illness

Eliza Ngaiyaye, with her daughter Evelyn opening the lock of the latrine, Mwenyekondo, Lilongwe, Malawi.

19 Nov 2012 08:18 Africa/Lagos


70% of African women lack a safe toilet increasing their risk of illness, shame, harassment and violence

Annette Namougabo, Bwaise 2, Busoga, Kampala, Uganda.

JOHANNESBURG, November 19, 2012/African Press Organization (APO)/ --


• Download broadcast interviews, b-roll, audio, pictures and case studies: http://assetbank.wateraid.org/assetbank-wateraid/action/viewLogin

[Username: WTD2012 / Password: WTD2012]


• Download 1 in 3 women lack access to safe toilets – a briefing from WaterAid that includes full poll results here: http://www.wateraid.org/1in3mediabriefing


Seven in ten women in sub-Saharan Africa have no access to a safe toilet, threatening their health and exposing them to shame, fear and even violence.


This means that on World Toilet Day, 19 November, 297 million African women and girls lack safe and adequate sanitation and of those 107 million don't have a toilet at all.


A survey commissioned by WaterAid of women living across five slums in Lagos, Nigeria, showed that one in five had first or second hand experience of verbal harassment and intimidation, or had been threatened or physically assaulted in the last year when going to the toilet. Anecdotal evidence from other African countries suggests that the scale of the problem may be much larger than this.


Logo WaterAid: http://www.photos.apo-opa.com/plog-content/images/apo/logos/wateraid.jpg


Barbara Frost, Chief Executive of WaterAid, said:

“When women don't have a safe, secure and private place to go to the toilet they are exposed and put in a vulnerable position and when they relieve themselves in the open they risk harassment. Women are reluctant to talk about it or complain, but the world cannot continue to ignore this.”


“Adequate sanitation, coupled with access to clean, safe water to drink, transforms lives, improving health, safety and productivity. Governments are urged to take action and invest in access to sanitation and water.”


Other studies from Uganda and Kenya show that such experiences of fear, indignity and violence appear to be common in Africa wherever women lack access to safe and adequate sanitation.

Sandimhia Renato, 18, from Mozambique walks 15 minutes every day to defecate in the bush.


“Sometimes when I go I feel ashamed and go back without defecating. Sometimes I wait until dark to go there so no one can see me. I will be very concerned about Diani, my daughter, going to the bush because it is so far from here. At night it is very dangerous. People get killed. A woman and a boy were killed with knives. One woman I know of has been raped.”


Security came out as a recurring concern in the poll of women from slums in Lagos, with 67% of respondents saying they feel unsafe even using shared or community toilets in a public place.


Poor hygiene has serious implications on health. Every day, over 1,000 African mothers lose a child to diarrhoeal diseases caused by a lack of adequate sanitation and clean water.


Lack of decent sanitation also affects productivity and livelihoods. Women and girls living in sub-Saharan Africa without toilet facilities spend 20 billion hours each year finding a place to go in the open, according to figures released in a WaterAid briefing.


Barbara Frost continued:


“This World Toilet Day, WaterAid is joining the call of hundreds of organisations around the world, for governments to keep the promises they have made to get adequate sanitation and safe water to the world's poorest people”.


WaterAid has also released a new film showing what it would be like for women in the western world if they also lacked sanitation. The film can be viewed online at www.wateraid.org/1in3.


Distributed by the African Press Organization on behalf of WaterAid.



Notes to editors:


• Download broadcast interviews, b-roll, audio, pictures and case studies: http://assetbank.wateraid.org/assetbank-wateraid/action/viewLogin

[Username: WTD2012 / Password: WTD2012]


• Download 1 in 3 women lack access to safe toilets – a briefing from WaterAid that includes full poll results here: http://www.wateraid.org/1in3mediabriefing


• Photo Barbara Frost, Chief Executive of WaterAid: http://www.photos.apo-opa.com/plog-content/images/apo/photos/barbara-frost.jpg


The poll in Nigeria was commissioned by WaterAid and carried out by international polling and research company GlobeScan to conduct a poll in the slums of Lagos, between 18 and 22 October 2012. The poll interviewed 500 women about their experiences of and around sanitation. The survey was conducted in five slum areas; Ajegunle, Ijora, Badia, Oko Agbon and Otto-Oyingbo.


Some of the other poll results found that:


• The most common location for women accessing sanitation facilities was ‘informal outside location' (40%) as compared to a toilet within their own home (33%), public toilet in the area where they live (19%) or public toilet at their place of work (6%).

• 68% of women agreed that the cost of accessing public toilets was a problem for them.

• 61% of women agreed that the public toilets that they normally used were unhygienic.

• 98% of women stated that compared to other priorities such as spending on education or transport infrastructure, felt that it was either very important (89%) or somewhat important (9%) for the Nigerian Government to invest in sanitation as a way to improve your health, safety and livelihood.


WaterAid's vision is of a world where everyone has access to safe water and sanitation. The international organisation works in 27 countries across Africa, Asia and the Pacific region to transform lives by improving access to safe water, hygiene and sanitation in some of the world's poorest communities. Since 1981, WaterAid has reached 17.5 million people with safe water and, since 2004, 12.9 million people with sanitation. For more information, visit http://www.wateraid.org , follow @wateraid on Twitter or visit us on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/wateraid.


• Around 2,000 children die every day from diseases caused by dirty water and poor sanitation.

• 783 million people in the world live without safe water. This is roughly one in eight of the world's population.

• 2.5 billion people live without sanitation; this is 39% of the world's population.

• For every £1 invested in water and sanitation, an average of £4 is returned in increased productivity.

• Just £15 can enable one person to access a lasting supply of safe water, improved hygiene and sanitation.


Source: WaterAid







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Portrait of a Nigerian Celebrity Blogger and Her Vagina Dialogues


Yes, my dear.
She has issues.
Both small one and big ones
The good apples and the rotten apples.
These issues have become embedded in the tissues of her drama queen personality.
The issues she has been carrying along in her excess baggage.
The issues she has spilled on the street of Blogosphere and polluting the atmosphere.
She has made an issue out of her missing clitoris.
No thanks to her ignorant mother who cut off the ugly thing even before she had her milk teeth.
Female genital mutilation was a must for all baby girls in their primitive clan.
To stop them from growing up into nymphomaniacs and spreading STDs and having unwanted pregnancies her primitive mother said.
But that left our poor girl with frigidity.
“Now, how can I have an orgasm when mama cut off my clitoris?”
She whined as she gazed at herself in the mirror in her birthday suit.
Then she looked miserably at her two orange sized boobs as well.
“And that is why my breasts are small too. Because cutting off my clito also affected my breasts from developing fully since puberty.”
My dear, don’t get twisted over your sexuality.
Female genital mutilation can really do collateral damage to the sexuality of a girl and yes, frigidity is one of them. But I have good news for you!
“What good news?”
You can still have orgasm.
‘Who told you that? No clito, no orgasm.”
Clito or no clito, you can still have orgasm.
“Please, stop pulling my legs.”
Look Eve Ensler even forgot to add it to her Vagina Monologues.
So, I am letting the cat out of the bag in our own Vagina Dialogues.
“Hmm.”
Remember when we were playing hide and seek moonlight games in Mushin.
“You mean Monshine?”
What is Moonshine. I mean Mushin the ghetto. Where we all grew up in that Face –Me- I Face –You tenement behind the refuse dump after the Idi Oro Market.
“I don’t want to be reminded of the nightmares of the past.”
Fine. But lest we forget, that Cinderella never lived in denial.
“Well, I am not Cinderella.”
Okay sorry Lindarella. Before we forget the direction of our Vagina Dialogues.
“You were saying?”
Yes, as I was saying. You can have multiple orgasms even without your clitoris.
“You are kidding me!”
No way. You don’t need your clitoris to have orgasms.
“But you know that even Dan whined about not making me come.”
Must you bring up Dan the DJ again? He is married!
“Okay. No more Dan the randy dandy DJ here.”
Fine. A woman does not even need a man to have multiple orgasms.
“Are you talking about the Dildo and Vibrator?”
No girlfriend. Those are expendable bedroom toys.
“Then how?”
Through your G-Spot.
“Pllllleeaassse. Give me a break. I have heard and read volumes about the G-Spot, but I am still searching for it!”
You must have been missing the direction!
“How?”
By using the wrong compass.
“You know I hate having sex since I don’t enjoy it.”
You don’t even need sex to trigger your G-Spot.
“Please, spare me the joke. Don’t make me laugh out aloud.”
I am not kidding. You don’t need to have sex to have multiple orgasms.
“So, I will just wish for it and have it?”
Will you just listen to me?
“Okay.”
Show me your index finger.
“Here it is.”
Yeah. All you need is your index finger. Now I know you never went to boarding school where many girls lose their virginity even before puberty. Are you ready my dear?
“Yes.”
Please, shut the door.


~ By Orikinla Osinachi, Monday November 19, 2012. Lagos, Nigeria.
~ Orikinla Osinachi is the author of Scarlet Tears of London, In the House of Dogs and other books.
© Orikinla Osinachi. 2012. This is a commercial work of intellectual property. No reproduction in any format of media without the authorization and permission of the author. Any violation of the copyright is subject to litigation wherever the violation is committed.












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Nigerian Film Restless City Wins Best Feature Prize at Colours of the Nile


One of the most ambitious Nigerian filmmakers Andrew Dosunmu’s Restless City was named Best Long Feature Film at the inaugural Colours of the Nile Film Festival, which ran in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia from 7-11 November 2012. The Nigerian film also won Best Cinematography.



The jury was made up of French/Tunisian filmmaker Karim Dridi; Ethiopian director Solomon BekeleWeya; South African producer Letebele Masemola-Jones; African Screens editor Don Dewale Omope; and Ioana-Frederique Westhoff from the ACP Films Programme.


Praising Restless City for dealing with “a rarely-touched–upon subject” in “the struggles of African migration to the USA,” the jury said, “Told with care and attention to detail, the winning film shows a very high level of originality, high artistic merit, an innovative approach to storytelling and profound cinematographic flair.”

Speaking about the festival as a whole, the jury said, “The choice of films for the inaugural Colours of The Nile International Film Festival 2012, has been a compelling and visually inspiring cinematic feast from every corner of the African continent.”

Ambassador Xavier Marchal, the head of the European Union delegation to Ethiopia, spoke at the awards night, where he presented the Best African Short Film Award to Hisab by Ethiopia’s Ezra Wube. In his speech, the ambassador said, “The Colours of the Nile International Film Festival is making a new landscape in African cinema.”

While the films dealt with diverse subject matter, the jury was struck by a common thread – that of the displacement involved in migrant and immigrant lifestyles.

“This is perhaps not surprising, as it is very much a sign of the times throughout the world in which we live today,” said the jury. “Migration from one country to the other is something we can all relate to. It happens for a variety of reasons that ultimately lead to people seeking a better life for themselves and their families. It is an issue that is top of the social, economic and political agenda of most countries of the world.”

Other awards went to:

Best Short Film – Hisab by Ezra Wube (Ethiopia)
The jury was struck by Hisab’s “highly original, innovative and creative way of depicting the hustle and bustle of life in a capital city.” Hisab “mixed live sound with artistic animation techniques and used animals that are a distinct part of life in the city to portray, in a humourous way, the behaviour of humans.”

Best Documentary Film: Voyage of Hope by Michel K. Zongo (Burkina Faso)
The jury was “unanimously moved by the soberness and love with which the director goes on the journey from onecountry to another to trace the trail of his brother, who left the country for economical reasons 17 years ago and is rumoured to be dead.”

Best Screenplay: The Repentant by Merzak Allouachi (Algeria)
The jury was impressed with “how this story dealt with a very dramatic issue in contemporary Africa without the introduction of drama effects.” They said The Repentant “epitomizes what a good film is about: a great story well told.”

Best Sound: 1Ž2 Revolution by Karim El Hakim and Omar Shargawi (Egypt)
The jury says, “This award goes to an outstanding documentary, which worked with live sound recorded and adapted during a dramatic turn of events, while maintaining the original tension of the environment as the action occurred.”

Best Soundtrack: Otelo Burning by Sara Blecher (South Africa)
The jury felt Otelo Burning “deserved recognition for its superior and original soundtrack that adds to the visual appreciation of the film and firmly sets the story in the South African context.”

Best Actor: Kenneth Nkosi in Otelo Burning (South Africa)
Although Kenneth Nkosi seems to have a minor part in Otelo Burning, the jury felt he “conveys, with tremendous strength and humility, his emotional frustrations and sadness about the dramatic course the lives of his belovedones has taken.”

Best Actress: Elizabeth Melaku in Scent of a Lemon (Ethiopia)
The jury felt Elizabeth’s Melaku performance showed “highly remarkable and convincing screen acting” in her “transformation from a cheerful loving woman and caring wife to an introverted, bitter and struggling woman following unjustified societal pressure.”

Special mentions went to Abraham Gezahagne’s film Scent of a Lemon (Ethiopia);
Theresa Traore-Dahlberg’s short film Taxi Sister (Senegal and Sweden); and Eric Miyeni’s documentary Mining For Change (South Africa).

CNIFF was made possible with the generous support of partners The Ministry of Culture and Tourism; Seagull Films; Encounters South African International Documentary Film Festival; and Institut Francais/ Cinémathèque Afrique, as well as sponsors European Union; French Embassy Addis Ababa; French Embassy Kenya Alliance Ethio-Francaise; Italian Cultural Institution EUNIC; Egypt Air; Fana Broadcasting Corporation; NyalaInsurances Share Company; BGI Ethiopia; Timret Le Hiowt Ethiopia/Wise Up; BRC Tour and Travel and Tizez Hotel Addis Ababa.

For more information, visit http://www.coloursofthenile.net/.


Watch and embed the trailers from the winning films:

1Ž2 Revolution: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=phWQLSOmJ_Q

Hisab: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zrOuvpREG70

Mining for Change: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XJ_15m7nrLo

Otelo Burning: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gek4b3x0TTQ

Restless City: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z4VjY0h4YuI

Taxi Sister: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mGf6pVRRui0

Voyage Of Hope: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JQVuTIIkU1s

For more information, visit http://www.coloursofthenile.net/.

Or call Joy Sapieka at joyls@mweb.co.za - 0027 73 2125492 /
Kevin Kriedemann at kevin@kevinlikes.com - 0027 83 5562346







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Saturday, November 17, 2012

There Are Only Two Kinds of People Who Use Social Media


There are only two kinds of people who use social media: those who want more followers and those who are lying.

~ A.P.E. Author Publisher Entrepreneur Guy Kawasaki, chief evangelist of Apple, Co-founder of Alltop.com and Holy Kaw, and the author of What the Plus!, Enchantment, and nine other books.


Click here to read more and respond to Guy Kawasaki.





His bestselling books for those who don't have them.

Selling the Dream

Enchantment: The Art of Changing Hearts, Minds, and Actions  

What the Plus!: Google+ for the Rest of Us

The Art of the Start: The Time-Tested, Battle-Hardened Guide for Anyone Starting Anything

Reality Check: The Irreverent Guide to Outsmarting, Outmanaging, and Outmarketing Your Competition

Rules For Revolutionaries: The Capitalist Manifesto for Creating and Marketing New Products and Services

How to Drive Your Competition Crazy: Creating Disruption for Fun and Profit

     







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Friday, November 16, 2012

The Future of Print is Netpage


The Future of Print is Netpage

Newsweek has left the print for the internet and I said that was a mistake, because they should have gone to Netpage as Esquire has done with its 80-year old print title.
What does Netpage do?

Netpage is the app for paper that makes the entire surface of a magazine page interactive...so you can clip articles, play a video, and buy stuff, right from the page without any codes, watermarking or special printing process.


High Reader Engagement
Netpage enables publishers to offer 100% interactive magazines, transforming print from a static to a social experience. Every article, photo, and ad - anything the user wants -- on every page, can be clipped, saved, and shared instantly, through social media.

The Result:
is high reader engagement. Readers get exactly the kinds of interaction they most enjoy: being able to share, save, and engage with great content just the ways they like.







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Former President Olusegun Obasanjo Leads ECOWAS Election Observer Mission to Ghana



FORMER PRESIDENT OBASANJO TO LEAD ECOWAS ELECTION OBSERVER MISSION TO GHANA

ABUJA, November 15, 2012/African Press Organization (APO)/ -- Nigeria's former President Chief Olusegun Obasanjo will lead a 250-member ECOWAS Election Observer Mission to Ghana's general elections scheduled for 7th December 2012 within the context of the region's instrument for provision of support to Member States holding elections.

The ECOWAS team, comprising representatives of various segments of the West African society, will be in the country for nine days to observe the conduct of the Presidential, legislative and local elections, expected to contribute to the deepening of democratic culture in the country.

An ECOWAS assessment mission was in Ghana last October to review preparations for the elections during which the mission members met with various stakeholders, including representatives of political parties, civil society organizations and the national electoral commission, to discuss their perspectives on the preparations for the elections.

Through these missions, the region seeks to promote a culture of transparent and credible elections, consistent with best practices for the enhancement of regional peace and stability.



Source: Economic Community Of West African States (ECOWAS)

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Happy 82 Birthday Chinua Achebe

Prof. Chinua Achebe (born 16 November 1930 as Albert Chinụalụmọgụ Achebe) is the famous author of one of the greatest novels of all time, the classic Things Fall Apart (1958) and other books and the second most celebrated Nigerian writer after the Nobel Laureate Prof. Wole Soyinka.

We wish you a beautiful happy 82nd Birthday and many wonderful returns of the day as we join all your well wishers all over the world to celebrate the awesome day our Almighty Father JEHOVAH brought you into the world to be a blessing to humankind.

Top Bestselling Books of Chinua Achebe

There Was A Country: A Personal History of Biafra

Things Fall Apart

Arrow of God  

The African Trilogy: Things Fall Apart, No Longer at Ease, and Arrow of God (Everyman's Library Classics & Contemporary Classics)  

A Man of the People

Chike and the River

Anthills of the Savannah

Home and Exile

No Longer at Ease (Macmillan Readers)

The Education of a British-Protected Child: Essays 
   






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How To Sell A President


The Selling of a President

~ By Jerry Bader (c) 2012

There are many things online businesses can learn from the recent American Presidential election and you don't have to be an American to appreciate their significance. Presidential elections are exercises in marketing big ideas, and big ideas are the key to marketing success. After all is said and done, the 2012 US Presidential election boiled down to, is there a place in government for governing? Put that way it really doesn't seem to make sense, but that was the big idea voters were asked to decide: should government be run by politicians looking out for 'the people' or should it be run by business executives looking out for the 'bottom line?'

CLICK HERE TO READ COMPLETE ARTICLE.


Filmmakers call it "the movie the White House doesn't want you to see." Apparently, they're right.









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Rwandan Journalist Sentenced To One Year in Jail

Stanley Gatera, editor of the Kinyarwandan-language paper Umusingi.

16 Nov 2012 07:02 Africa/Lagos

Rwandan journalist sentenced to one year in jail

NEW YORK, November 16, 2012/African Press Organization (APO)/ -- An appellate court in Rwanda should overturn the prison sentence handed to the editor of a private weekly on Wednesday, the Committee to Protect Journalists said today. CPJ also urges authorities to release Stanley Gatera, editor of the Kinyarwandan-language paper Umusingi, pending his planned appeal.


The Gasabo Intermediate Court in the capital, Kigali, sentenced Gatera, 22, to a one-year jail term and fines of 30,000 Rwandan francs (US$50) for inciting divisionism and gender discrimination in an opinion column he published in Umusingi in June, according to local journalists and news reports. The state prosecutor said in court that the article broke the country's laws about referring to ethnic identities, local journalists told CPJ. The Rwandan penal code includes crimes that carry prison terms for individuals who speak too provocatively about ethnicity, news reportssaid.

The article, called "Shangazi" (Dear Aunt), suggested that men may regret marrying a Tutsi woman solely for her beauty, according to CPJ's review of a translated copy of the article. Police released a statement saying they arrested Gatera on August 1 after receiving complaints from women's groups.

Gatera, who defended himself in court, said that the paper had run an apology from him in a subsequent issue, local journalists told CPJ. But police in the statement called it a "denial of wrongdoing."

The journalist is being held at Kimironko Prison in Kigali and plans to appeal the sentence, local journalists said.

"Readers may have been offended by this column, but that does not mean Stanley Gatera should be put in prison," said CPJ East Africa Consultant Tom Rhodes. "We urge the courts to release him immediately pending appeal, and to overturn the disproportionate penalties against him."

Umusingi has been targeted in the past. In February 2011, the newspaper's website was temporarily blocked in Rwanda after it published an interview with a dissident Rwandan general in South Africa. The paper's founder and former managing director, Nelson Gatsimbazi, fled the country in August 2011 after being told of his impending arrest on charges of divisionism based on a complaint filed by another journalist in 2008, local journalists told CPJ. In December 2010, Gatsimbazi was accused by the presidential security adviser of working with "enemies of the state," according to news reports.

Source: Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ)

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14 Nov 2012
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05:23 Little Big Souls International Charitable Foundation on World Prematurity Day Nov 17 raises an audible voice to honour the million babies that die each year.
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04:40 Le fonds Pembani Remgro Infrastructure Fund, The Carlyle Group et Standard Chartered Private Equity investissent 210 millions de dollars dans Export Trading Group, un gestionnaire mondial de chaîne d'approvisionnement agricole
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Thursday, November 15, 2012

IJE: The Journey Now Selling Fast On DVD


The most acclaimed and highest grossing Nigerian film at the box office IJÉ the Journey is now available on DVD. Just click on the title and movie poster to order for it.

About the Actor
Genevive Nnaji is the
Julia Roberts of Africa.


Featured on the Oprah Winfrey Show


episode Meet the Most Famous People in the World, Genevive is ranked #19 on Forbes 40 Most Powerful Celebrities In Africa.
Product Description
IJÉ tells the tale of Chioma, a child growing up in the Nigerian countryside who warned her restless sister, Anya,
about the trappings of the American Dream. Ten years later, Anya is accused of killing three men in a Hollywood Hills mansion one of them her record-producer husband. Chioma
travels from Nigeria to Los Angeles, and with the help of a young attorney, discovers that the dark secret her sister wants to keep hidden might be the only thing that can win her freedom.

Highest grossing film in West Africa!
Most successful film in the history of Nollywood (Nigeria s film industry, and the world s second-largest film producer after India s Bollywood)

AWARDS INCLUDE
San Francisco Black Film Festival:
2010 Melvin Van Peebles Award

Canada International Film Festival:
Excellence in Filmmaking

Hawaii International Film Festival:
Excellence in Filmmaking

Arizona Black Film Showcase: Best Feature Film

Las Vegas International Film Festival:
2010 Golden Age Award

Swansea Bay Area Film Festival:
2010 Best International Student Film

Mexico International Film Festival: 2010 Silver Palm Award









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