Can the African Union reform itself?

The African Union ( AU ) has been around in some form for more than 50 years. While it represents a symbol of African unity in the post...

Sunday, 31 December 2017

Liverpool car park blaze destroys hundreds of vehicles on New Year's Eve



LIVERPOOL: Firefighters in the northern English city of Liverpool were battling a huge fire at a car park on Sunday that destroyed hundreds of vehicles and prompted the evacuation of multiple buildings in the surrounding area.
Police said all cars inside the multi-storey Kings Dock car park, which has a capacity of 1,600 vehicles, had been destroyed, and owners should contact their insurance companies.
An international horse show that had been scheduled to take place at the Liverpool Echo Arena, next to the car park, was canceled. Organizers said all people and horses involved were safe.
The Merseyside Fire and Rescue Service said initial investigations indicated that an accidental fire within one vehicle had caused others to ignite.
Firefighters equipped with breathing equipment were still fighting the blaze six hours after they were called to the scene.
Liverpool City Council opened a reception center for people who were unable to get home because of the blaze.
The city’s mayor, Joe Anderson, visited the scene, which he described on Twitter as a major incident.
“The people of Liverpool never let us down with their generosity and everyone has now been accommodated or given a lift. A big thank you to everyone who called to offer help,” he said.

Kenya bus crash kills at least 30


At least 30 people were confirmed killed and several others injured when a bus collided with a truck on a road in central Kenya, the country's President said.
The crash happened early Sunday as the Nairobi-bound bus was traveling along the Nakuru-Eldoret highway.
In a statement, President Uhuru Kenyatta expressed his condolences to the families and friends of passengers involved in the road accident at Migaa near Molo, a town in Nakuru County north of Nairobi.
    "The President said it was unfortunate that many Kenyans have continued to lose their lives in road accidents, which can be avoided," the statement read.
    Twenty-eight bodies had so far been recovered from the bus wreckage as well as the body of the truck driver, according to the Kenya Broadcasting Corporation (KBC).
    Rescue operations continued at the scene of the accident, with injured passengers transported to Molo Sub-County Hospital and Nakuru Level Five Hospital for treatment, KBC reported.
    President Kenyatta wished the injured a quick recovery and called upon drivers to be vigilant on the roads over the holiday period.
    "Let us all be responsible this festive season, and more so, those of us who are driving," Kenyatta said, according to the statement.

    Saturday, 30 December 2017

    Zambia deploys army to battle cholera after 41 deaths



    LUSAKA: Zambia’s president Edgar Lungu has deployed the army to help combat a cholera outbreak that has claimed 41 lives in the capital Lusaka and affected 1,550 more since September.
    The initial outbreak began on September 28 according to the World Health Organization and Zambia’s health ministry subsequently launched efforts to limit the spread of the disease.
    Cholera is a water-borne disease which goes hand in hand with poverty and while readily treatable can be lethal if unaddressed.
    "I have directed all the three wings of the Defence Force to join the Ministry of Health... to escalate efforts to minimise the spread of cholera in our capital city and the rest of the country," Lungu wrote on his official, verified Facebook page late Friday.
    "Lusaka has been recording an average of 60 new cases every day. I’ve noted with great sadness that a total of 41 people have died of the disease since its outbreak.
    "The outbreak was initially linked to contaminated water from shallow wells and unsanitary conditions in the residential and public areas affected. But we now note that the spread of cholera is being propagated through contaminated food."
    Lungu added that there would be a crackdown on street food stalls, bars and restaurants that do not meet minimum food hygiene standards.
    "I am deeply concerned at the rampaging advance of the outbreak," he said.

    Protests against Iran's government continue for a third day in a row


    Protests against Iran's Government have taken place in the country's major cities for the third day in a row.
    In clips posted on social media, crowds can be seen chanting and throwing missiles outside university gates in Iran's capital Tehran.
    Police have made dozens of arrests and reportedly used tear gas and violence to disperse demonstrators.
    The protests, which began in north east Iran on Thursday, are against rising prices, alleged corruption and the country's costly involvement in regional conflicts such as Syria and Iraq.
    The government's warning people to stay away from what it calls 'illegal gatherings'.
    On social media, the US has defended the protests, with President Donald Trump warning Iran's Government 'the world is watching'. The Department of State also tweeted its support and urged other nations to do the same.
    Earlier Saturday morning, Iranian state television showed thousands gathered in Tehran and other cities to support their Supreme Leader Ayotallah Ali Khamenei.
    The nationwide movement was marking eight years since the end of major protests in 2009.

    Two arrested in murder of mother, kids, partner in Troy, New York



    Two people have been arrested in connection with the murder of a mother, two of her children and her female partner in Troy, New York, police said early Saturday.
    The identities of the people arrested were not immediately released. Troy Police Capt. Dan DeWolf said in an email that both defendants are due to be arraigned Saturday morning and more information about the offenses each is charged with will be released.
    The bodies of Shanta Myers, 36, her 11-year-old son Jeremiah, her 5-year-old daughter Shanise, and 22-year-old Brandi Mells were found in their basement apartmentthe day after Christmas. Myers had a 15-year-old son who was out of town on a retreat at the time of the murders.
    DeWolf previously declined to discuss details of the crime scene but law enforcement sources told the Albany Times Union that the victims were bound and their throats were slit.
    "After being in this business for almost 42 years I can't describe the savagery of a person like this," Police Chief John Tedesco said this week as police searched for the killer.
    Police have said a preliminary investigation of the crime scene suggested the victims were targeted.
    Myers' family described her as a good-natured woman who could not have done anything to provoke such violence.
    "She is so sweet," her sister, Shakera Symes, told NBC News. "She goes out of her way to want to be loved. She wouldn't be involved in anything that would be close to deserving this. She's very mild-mannered."
    Myers' big joy was cooking for family gatherings. "She always had one of the biggest dishes. You would see her out there frying up empanadas," Symes said.
    "She just loved to be included in family events, but over the last year, she kind of isolated herself as she got into a relationship," she added.
    Shanta Myers, 36; Brandi Mells, 22. Courtesy Troy Police Department
    Mells was originally from Newark, New Jersey, but moved to upstate New York as a teenager, said close friend Dria Hector. She was living in Troy with her mother when she met Myers.
    "She was a little person but her heart was bigger than she was," Hector said of Mells, who had dwarfism. "She was very real, she spoke the truth. She was a sweet person, but she could have her bad days, like we all do.'
    She said she met Myers' youngest child a few months ago and recalled how the 5-year-old played with and tried to feed her own 2-year-old daughter.
    "She was so, so sweet," she said. "She had a big personality."
    Jeremiah, who was known as JJ, was very involved in the Boys and Girls Club in Troy, where he took part in the afterschool program and played on the basketball team.
    "He was such a radiant kid that everybody knew him," said Hollyanne Buntich, human resources director for the club, which has started a fundraising campaign for the family. "He was a ray of sunshine."
    Jeremiah Myers, 11; and Shanise Myers, 5 Courtesy Troy Police Department
    Symes said she expected to hear from Jeremiah last Friday because he usually called her to chat when he didn't have school. But the call never came, and the family never showed up at her house for Christmas, as expected.
    Then came the terrible news the following day.
    "I can't understand why somebody wanted to do something like that," Symes said.

    Book deserts leave neighborhoods thirsty for reading material



    Derrick and Ramunda Young love books as much as they love their people. When they decided to expand their 10-year-old online black-owned bookstore, MahoganyBooks, and open a brick-and-mortar store, they chose Washington, D.C.'s Anacostia neighborhood, which was without a bookstore for several years.
    When Derrick was a child, he spent a lot of time with his grandmother in the neighborhood, which has a wealthy black history. He wanted to invest in the neighborhood that nurtured him in his youth and reverse its designation as a book desert and make books available for children and adults there who love them.
    "A book desert isn't a community-created situation," said Derrick, 40, who opened the store in the Anacostia Arts Center. "It's because other people have decided not to invest into these communities. It's not because these communities aren't readers...Who better to invest in our people than us?"
    Anacostia is one of the nation's top book deserts that researchers studied last year. Researchers found that there are so few books available for sale for youth in Anacostia that 830 children would have to share one book. In a 2016 study, researchers found that book deserts exist when there is a rise in income segregation. This negatively impacts a family's capability to provide reading material for their children and that ultimately affects a child's chances to succeed academically.
    From left, Derrick and Ramunda Young. Kea Taylor Imagine Photography
    Susan B. Neuman, professor of childhood and literacy education at New York University, studied six neighborhoods across the nation, including Anacostia, which experienced "income segregation."
    The lack of available children's reading material along with the poverty rate made these neighborhoods book deserts and areas where their opportunities to be ready for school were low, she said. In Anacostia, Neuman and her research team surveyed 21 miles in the area and found 137 businesses and only four of them sold print resources, none of them sold books for preschoolers. Only one drugstore sold five books.
    "The neighborhood was literally bereft of print...We couldn't find the newspaper," Neuman said. "There is the assumption that people aren't reading but they do. They want to read. They want to become informed."
    But Anacostia isn't the only American neighborhood that is a book desert. Neuman's research team also found that low-income families have little access to books in Detroit and Los Angeles.
    The lack of books for sale in a neighborhood not only makes it difficult for parents to model healthy reading habits for their children, it's also a barrier for children to maintain literacy in the summer when school is out and literacy programs halt, Neuman said.
    "This is a big deal because of the summer slide and many of the children who have limited activities during the summer their achievement scores go way down because there's so little stimulation," she said.
    Parents in neighborhoods that are book deserts don't always use public libraries because they represent government and all of the negative associations parents might have with it, Neuman said.
    If children of color don't have culturally relevant books during their formative years their identity will be affected and they won't have a true sense of their history, said Derrick Barnes, author of "Crown: An Ode to the Fresh Cut," one of Kirkus Reviews' best picture books of 2017.
    "I speak to black parents all of the time and they are still hungry for stories that feature black children just being children," said Barnes, also the author of the Ruby and the Booker Boys series. "People will buy if you offer them material that speaks to them...I'm trying to paint these positive human images of black children and in particular black boys."
    MahoganyBooks offers books about black and Latino children, including some books in Spanish through a partnership with the mobile bookstore Duende District, which caters to Latino, immigrant and black readers. Since the store opened on Nov. 24, the Youngs said most of their customers are from the neighborhood and some are already frequent shoppers.
    "That to me is a testament that people are receiving what we're going," said Ramunda Young, 42. "We've got regulars already and we've only been here four or five weeks. There are people coming in here two or three times a week already."
    Viorika Getty Images
    The Youngs want MahoganyBooks to not only provide books for the community, they want their store to be a center for literary activity where they foster the work of emerging authors, offer classes, book signings and book drives.
    Opening a bookstore like MahoganyBooks in a place that people already visit can be good a solution to book deserts, Neuman said. She hopes to see neighborhoods and businesses make children's reading material available in nail, beauty and barbershops, dollar stores and others places that people frequent with their children. Neuman wants to see innovative solutions to book deserts similar to those that have been developed to address food deserts.
    "There's this overriding notion that poor people don't care about the achievement of their children," she said. "But this is wrong. If the proprietors would have books, people would buy them."
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    Woman retakes Europe vacation photos in same spots 30 years later



    You can't revisit the past, but thanks to modern photography, you can try to recreate it. Just ask Lisa Werner.
    Back in the 1980s, Werner was a student at a German language school, and photographed her travels across Europe. Fast forward to 2017, and Werner returned to the Rhine River region -- exactly 30 years later. The photographer decided to recreate some of her favorite snapshots from back in the day.
    "I thought it would be a fun photography project for my YouTube channel," Werner tells CNN Travel. "I was amazed at how little these places had changed."

    Trip down memory lane


    Werner recreated her images by finding the original location and mimicking her original pose.
    Courtesy Lisa Werner Photography
    Before she left, Werner fished out her old photo albums and scanned 13 favorite images. Once in Europe, she successfully tracked down the exact locations and mimicked her pose from 30 years previously -- creating new versions of her favorites. Werner has showcased the then-and-now photographs on her YouTube channel - Cave Art Gal, and blog.
    The tree in the backdrop of this Strasbourg image has grown from sapling to full height.
    Courtesy Lisa Werner Photography
    The images document her travels from Strasbourg, France, to Amsterdam in the Netherlands. The family trip was a stroll down memory lane for Werner.
    "I easily remembered exactly where all the locations were," the photographer says. "I wish I had scanned more than only 13 old photographs."

    Unspoiled beauty


    The tree in the backdrop of this Strasbourg image has grown from sapling to full height.
    Courtesy Lisa Werner Photography
    Werner's images are remarkable for how little the backdrops have changed. Her photos include flower-strewn bridges and cathedrals in France; the winding Snakes Way in Heidelberg, Germany and modern art in Mainz, Germany.
    These gorgeous European city centers remain intact -- seemingly unaltered for hundreds of years. The only differences tend to be foliage -- some of which has been planted or grown significantly since the 1980s.

    Changing times


    In this image, Werner recreates eating a pastry outside Strasbourg Cathedral.
    Courtesy Lisa Werner photography
    It's camera and photography habits -- not locations -- that have changed since 1987.
    "It was the camera capabilities that improved," says Werner. "Back then it was film camera, now it's an iPhone.
    "We spent about one to two minutes taking a quick photo with my iPhone and then moved on to catch up with my brother and his daughter," Werner says. Werner's pictures also mark a change from the arm's-length social media snaps popular today.
    "People have commented that nowadays we take selfies but back then we were placing ourselves within the locations, featuring the places more," she says.

    From Europe to Australia


    Werner asked other tourists to recreate the photographs with her -- as in this picture in Heidelberg, Germany.
    Courtesy Lisa Werner Photography
    In Werner's images, past and present, the locations take center stage. As a photographer who contributes to global agency Getty, Werner is used to showcasing landscapes.
    Her passion is photographing cave art.
    "I have always been obsessed with photographing ancient cave paintings," she says. "I started with finding all of the Chumash Native American sites in the mountains behind Santa Barbara, California. Then I expanded to across America, to Mexico [...] Last year I photographed aboriginal cave paintings in the Australian Outback."

    The next thirty years


    Werner will always have a soft spot for Europe, however -- especially now she has a whole new set of memories and photographs to treasure. Plus she plans to return and recreate her images once again, 30 years from now.
    "I plan to reshoot each one again when I'm 87," she says

    Salah double ensures Liverpool overcome Leicester



    LIVERPOOL 2 LEICESTER CITY 1
    Two second half goals from Mohamed Salahhelped Liverpool secure a hard-fought 2-1 victory over Leicester City at Anfield in the Premier League on Saturday.
    The visitors got off to the perfect start when a mix up at the back saw Riyad Mahrez square for Jamie Vardy to tap into an open goal in front of the Kop in the third minute.
    Liverpool looked for an immediate riposte, but Salah missed two gilt-edged opportunities before Sadio Mane saw an effort disallowed for offside as Juergen Klopp’s men grew frustrated.
    Salah’s persistence paid off just after the restart when he fired in from close range to level and struck his second, and 17th in the Premier League this season, in the 76th after shrugging off Harry Maguire and producing a composed finish.


    Winning debut for Carvalhal as Swansea beat Watford 2-1



    (Reuters) – WATFORD 1 SWANSEA CITY 2
    Late goals by Jordan Ayew and Luciano Narsingh gave Swansea a 2-1 Premier League win at Watford and handed visiting coach Carlos Carvalhal a winning debut in England’s top flight on Saturday.
    Ayew struck an 85th-minute equaliser and substitute Narsingh netted a 90th-minute winner for Swansea after Peru forward Andre Carrillo gave Watford an 11th-minute lead with a close-range header after visiting keeper Lukasz Fabianski could only parry Richarlison’s fierce shot from a tight angle.
    It was the most unlikely climax to the match as Watford dominated and looked set to celebrate their second successive league win, with Swansea looking bereft of ideas after Ayew’s fifth-minute piledriver from 30 metres hit the crossbar.
    However, Watford were punished after substitute Andre Gray missed a sitter moments before Ayew’s equaliser and Narsingh stunned the home crowd as he swept home a rebound to give Swansea only their second league win in 13 games.
    (Writing by Zoran Milosavljevic, editing by Pritha Sarkar)

    Friday, 29 December 2017

    Football star George Weah wins Liberian presidential election


    George Weah, the only African player to be both FIFA's world player of the year and win the Ballon d'Or, is Liberia's president.
    Former professional footballer George Weah has won the Liberia presidential run-off.
    The country's electoral commission said the ex-AC Milan, Chelsea and Manchester City striker had taken 61.5% of the vote from 98.1% of ballots cast.
    He beat Vice President Joseph Boakai, who took 38.5% of the vote.
    Mr Boakai has now conceded to Mr Weah and offered his congratulations.
    Mr Weah, who tweeted: "Change is on," succeeds Ellen Johnson Sirleaf to become president next month, the country's first democratic transition since 1944.
    Before the official results were announced, Mr Weah tweeted: "The Liberian people clearly made their choice... and all together we are very confident in the result of the electoral process."
    The process had been delayed by several weeks after a legal challenge by Mr Boakai.
    Armed police were stationed outside the polling body's headquarters on Thursday, as some of Mr Weah's supporters started their celebrations.
    Mr Weah, 51, grew up in poverty in Liberia.
    He was raised by his grandmother in one of the worst slums of Liberia's capital Monrovia, but he went on to have a glittering football career in the 1990s.
    He played for a number of different teams in Africa before being transferred to Monaco where he was coached by Arsene Wenger.
    He also played for Paris Saint-Germain, AC Milan, Chelsea and Man City.
    He has been senator for Montserrado County in Liberia after being elected in 2014.
    He won 38.4% of votes in the first round on 10 October, while his opponent Mr Boakai came second with 28.8%.
    This triggered the run-off as neither made it past the 50% needed for an outright win.