Author: b_igi_adm1n

  • Irrigation Made Easy By Motorcycle-Powered Pump

    Kenya based Farmlink-Africa director Mwangi Mbugiro shows how a motorcycle water pump operates
    In Kenya a new innovation could be replicated to help transform farming in rural East Africa, Kenya’s Business Daily has reported.

    A group of youths working under Farmlink-Africa has developed a pump that can be powered by a motorcycle engine instead of the traditional diesel engine, which can pump a total of between 22,000 to 40,000 litres of water per hour and consumes 0.2 litres of petrol in an hour.

    Mwangi Mbugiro Farmlink-Africa director of sales, explains that The pump is mounted to a motorcycle power take over — commonly known as the engine shaft that drives it as it pumps the water from its source.

    The machine can also pump water from a well of up to 40 feet but the speed and amount of water is usually dependent on the depth.

    Mwangi adds, “on a not-so-deep place, the water is pumped fast as compared to pumping it from a well that is deep.”

    He noted that the advantage of this machine is that it uses a locomotive that can be used for other purposes as compared to the common diesel water pump that performs one purpose only and lies idle when you are not pumping water.”

    The new innovation was showcased during this year’s Agricultural Society of Kenya show at the Kisumu showground under the theme, enhancing technology for agricultural food security.

  • Drug-Resistant HIV on the Rise in East Africa–Report

    New Findings indicate that drug-resistant HIV is on the rise in East Africa and southern Africa.

    According to the report published in a medical Journal –The Lancet, this could jeopardise a decade-long trend of decreasing AIDS-related illnesses and death.

    Researchers have noted that Resistance to AIDS drugs in the past decade is growing in parts of Africa but should not hamper the life-saving drug rollout.

    Tiny genetic mutations that make HIV immune to key frontline drugs have been increasing in eastern and southern Africa, something that should be a clear warning to health watchdogs, they said.

    “Without continued and increased national and international efforts, rising HIV drug resistance could jeopardize a decade-long trend of decreasing HIV/AIDS-related illness and death in low- and middle-income countries,” they said.

    The study, published in The Lancet, is funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and the European Union (EU).

    It is the widest-ever analysis of a risk that has haunted AIDS campaigners since 2003, when drugs started to be rolled out to poorer countries that are home to more than 90 percent of people with the AIDS virus.

    The nightmare is that — as with bacteria which become resistant to antibiotics — strains of HIV will emerge that will blunt the armoury of antiretrovirals, leaving millions defenceless.

    Silvia Bertagnolio from the UN’s World Health Organisation and Ravindra Gupta at University College London looked at published cases of HIV resistance and supplemented this with data from the WHO itself.

    Over eight years, prevalence of resistant virus in untreated people soared from around one percent to 7.3 % in eastern Africa, and from one percent to 3.7% in southern Africa, they found.

    Similar rates of 3.5-7.6% were also found in western and central Africa, Latin America and the Caribbean.

    The difference, though, is that they remained quite stable throughout this period, and did not experience such a big rise.

    The mutations were found in strains of HIV-1 virus that made them resistant to a class of drugs called non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors, or NNRTIs.

    These are the first-option treatments for HIV infection and are also used to prevent transmission of the virus from a pregnant woman to her foetus.

    If a patient is resistant to the drug, the risks of sickness and death rise in line with levels of virus.

    Further treatment options do exist beyond NNRTIs, but these second-line regimens are often far costlier.

    The paper says countries should step up monitoring of HIV resistance and take steps to guard against start-stop treatment that fuels the problem.

    They can do this by ensuring that drug supplies are not interrupted and by beefing up monitoring of patients to encourage them to follow the daily pill-taking regimen.

    Despite the concern, the rollout should carry on, says the paper.

    “Estimated levels, although increasing, are not unexpected in view of the large expansion of antiretroviral treatment coverage seen in low-income and middle-income countries — no changes in antiretroviral treatment guidelines are warranted at the moment.”

    Around 33 million people around the world have HIV.

    In 2011, about eight million badly infected people in poorer countries had access to HIV-suppressing drugs, a figure 26 times greater than the number in 2003 but still only just over half of those in need.

    The report coincided with the 19th International AIDS conference, a six-day event running in Washington until Friday.

  • Miss Belgium in Romance With Rwandan Artist

    nnnnb.jpg
    A Rwandan National living in Beligum is rumoured to be having an affair with Miss Belgium.

    Only identified as Jali 23, he has been reported to be intimately bonding with the Beligian Beauty Queen Miss Laura Beyne.

    The two have been spoted on streets in brussels holding hands and getting cosy. Jali was named Belgium artist of the Year 2012.

    In 2001,Jali ;launched his Album he named ‘Des jours & des lunes’.

    Beyne is currently in China where she is competing for the miss world crown.
    bbv.jpg
    jjjjjjjj.jpg

  • U.S. Training African Anti Drugs Units

    Africa is critically viewed as a new battle against narcotics syndicates and terrorism.

    Cocaine smuggling through West Africa has increased in recent years.

    Several years ago, a South American drug gang tried to bribe the son of the Liberian president to allow it to use the country for smuggling.

    However, he tipped off the DEA, and the gang members got arrested and convicted.

    The United states government says its behind the curve in some ways to deal with these major threats.

    Thus the US government is already training anti-drug specialists in Ghana and plans to do the same in Nigeria and Kenya to counter Latin American cartels smuggling drugs through Africa to Europe.

    “We see Africa as the new frontier in terms of counterterrorism and counternarcotics issues,”Jeffrey Breeden, chief of the Drug Enforcement Administration’s Europe, Asia and Africa was quoted as saying.

    “It’s a place that we need to get ahead of — we’re already behind the curve in some ways, and we need to catch up.”

    The United States is already conducting extensive anti-drug training programs in Mexico, Colombia and other countries.

    US anti-drug assistance to West Africa has reached nearly $50 million for each of the past two years, up from just $7.5 million in 2009.

    The DEA also is opening its first country office in Senegal.

    Additional information: NY Times

  • Ending AIDS and Poverty

    As we look back on the history of this epidemic, it is hard to say that there is any one moment when the tide began to turn. Because the truth is that we have been turning back the tide of AIDS, step by painful step, for 30 years.

    And at nearly every turn, it is the activists, and their communities, that have led the way.

    It was activists and communities who devised safer sex, promoted condom use, needle exchange and virtually all the behavioral prevention we use today.

    It was activists who transformed drug development and regulatory processes, and involved patients in clinical research, cutting drug approval times in half in the global north.

    It was activists in Durban in 2000 who began to push for access to antiretrovirals in the developing world and who kept pushing and are pushing still for them to be affordable and available to everyone who needs them, everywhere.

    And it was activists whose deep understanding of the communities most affected by AIDS has spurred a movement to promote the health and dignity of gay men, sex workers and drug users that has now reached every corner of the world.

    It was TASO in Uganda, ACT UP in the US, TAC in South Africa, Grupo Pela Vida in Brazil, the Lawyers Collective in India, the Thai Drug Users Network, and countless organizations like them that have woven together one of the most extraordinary movements the world has ever seen.

    Remember what ACT UP stands for: the AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power.

    This has been a movement that came together in anger, that thirsts for justice, that is fundamentally about unleashing the power of human solidarity, and that for 30 years has forged alliances to expand that solidarity and be ever more inclusive.

    A movement that has grown to include pioneering governments from Brazil to Botswana, UN agencies, visionary donors and donor countries, and groundbreaking NGO treatment programs; a movement that has led to efforts such as 3 by 5 and the creation of the Global Fund and PEPFAR.

    Thanks to this collective effort, we have seen remarkable gains in the fight. Prevalence has fallen steeply in many countries, new prevention strategies show great promise, and more than 8 million people are on treatment today.

    As we gather here in Washington, we look towards the end of AIDS as something that is actually within our reach, a vision that to me and many others here seems less idealistic, less outrageous, than 3 by 5 did, just a decade ago.

    Today marks the first time that a President of the World Bank Group has addressed the International AIDS Conference. I’m here because I know what this movement is capable of achieving. I’m here to bring you both a pledge and a challenge.

    I pledge that the World Bank will work tirelessly with all of you here to drive the AIDS fight forward until we win.

    And I challenge you to join me in harnessing the moral power and practical lessons that the AIDS movement has produced to speed progress against that other global scourge, poverty.

    As the leading global development institution, the World Bank is concerned with all aspects of development, all the dimensions that are united in the eight Millennium Development Goals.

    We know that development challenges are interdependent. And yet our approaches to these problems often remain fragmented, limiting our vision and our results.

    That’s why the idea of bringing lessons from AIDS to poverty reduction is crucial. By breaking down siloes between these two efforts, we begin a process that will go much farther.

    Ultimately we’ll multiply the flows of knowledge and experience across all development sectors, accelerating progress on education for all, maternal and child health, environmental sustainability, and so many of our other goals.

    Let me describe how the World Bank is applying its distinctive strengths to AIDS.

    The World Bank’s mission is to build prosperity and eradicate poverty in countries around the world. The Bank supports countries with financing, but also with knowledge and analytic capacities that are often just as important.

    In 2000, under President Jim Wolfensohn, the World Bank worked with many of you here to put the first billion dollars on the table for AIDS. Today, in health, the World Bank’s comparative advantage is in systems building.

    Our health sector strategy is focused on supporting countries to create health systems that deliver results for the poor and that are sustainable. We also help countries build social protection systems that can mitigate the impact of events like economic shocks and catastrophic illness, including AIDS, on families and communities.

    As an example of our health systems work, the World Bank is helping governments implement performance-based financing, which gives local health facilities financial rewards when they increase delivery of essential services and improve quality.

    In Burundi, after a performance-based financing model was introduced nationally to strengthen the AIDS response, the number of HIV-positive pregnant women receiving antiretrovirals for the prevention of mother-to-child transmission increased by 65 percent in just one year.

    We know that HIV is more than a medical problem. AIDS has devastating economic and social impacts on individuals, families and communities. That’s why social protection is also a critical piece of a comprehensive AIDS response. Every year, worldwide, 150 million people are forced into poverty by increased health expenditures and lost income due to illness, including AIDS.

    To date, the Bank has helped 40 countries scale up social safety-net programs, including health insurance schemes, old age pensions and cash transfer programs that supplement the incomes of poor families. Our goal is for all countries to be able to implement basic social protection programs tailored to their specific needs.

    Success in the AIDS response depends on partnerships. On a very personal level, I am committed to strengthening the World Bank’s multilateral alliances with UNAIDS and the Global Fund; our partnerships with UN technical agencies, including WHO and UNICEF; and our collaboration with PEPFAR and other bilaterals.

    Moreover, strong partnership with civil society that delivers results for the poor will be a signature of my presidency. We’ll build on the lessons of the Bank’s MAP initiative, which recognized that civil society voice is critical to make programs work for poor and vulnerable people.

    In 2008, the overall proportion of people in the developing world living on less than $1.25 per day was 22 percent, less than half of the 1990 figure. The Millennium Development Goal of halving the incidence of extreme poverty has been reached. But today 1.3 billion of the world’s people still live in absolute poverty.

    This is intolerable. We can and must end absolute poverty in our lifetime. To do so, we’ll need to share know-how across the boundaries of institutions and development fields. And we’ll need to use that know-how to build systems that can sustainably meet human needs.

    The AIDS fight has shown the world how to turn the tide of a massive assault on human life and dignity. We have a responsibility to ensure that lessons from AIDS inform and improve our efforts to tackle other social goals, above all poverty eradication.

    In some places, this is already happening. Governments and their partners are applying AIDS knowledge and resources strategically to beat the epidemic and simultaneously drive a broader anti-poverty agenda.

    Rwanda has used AIDS money and technical expertise from the World Bank, the Global Fund and others to build up its widely admired health insurance system, the mutuelles, and to expand secondary and vocational education.

    In Rwanda, AIDS resources are contributing to the strategic investment in human capital that has helped drive the country’s remarkable economic progress. From being an exception, this approach can become the rule. This will be a leap forward in our capacity to build systems and deliver results.

    As Rwanda shows, successful countries have tackled AIDS as a systems problem. They’ve responded to the epidemic by strengthening delivery systems for key social goods, and they’ve integrated those systems to address people’s needs comprehensively.

    Building systems is what the World Bank does best. We have decades of experience making systems work for all, but especially the poor. I want the Bank to lead the world in joining systems knowledge with clear moral values to help countries solve their toughest problems.

    Two features of the AIDS fight with clear lessons for poverty work are openness and innovation. The countries that have achieved the greatest successes against AIDS have been open about their epidemics.

    They have shared information widely, challenged stigma, and encouraged public debate. They have refused secrecy and dispelled irrational fear.

    There are many lessons here for the way we fight poverty. As we at the World Bank continue to tackle corruption, increase transparency and freely share our data, we’re taking these lessons from the AIDS fight ever more fully on board.

    Looking back over the last 30 years, we see that the AIDS response has generated continuous innovation. From the acceleration of drug approval protocols to task shifting within medical teams. From fixed-dose drug combinations to the hiring of accompagnateurs to deliver community-based services.

    We’ll need more innovation in the years ahead to finish the fight against AIDS. As President of the World Bank, I want to infuse that same appetite for innovation into the struggle for inclusive economic development. I’m convinced that if the practical know-how and the spirit of the AIDS movement can be brought to the poverty fight, there is no limit to what we can achieve.

    On the front lines of the 3 by 5 initiative, I saw daily how HIV implementers were generating innovative solutions to practical problems: from supply chain management to human resources to creating space for community voice in program evaluation.

    But have we done enough to organize, analyze and apply this knowledge? Have we brought it to bear in every setting where it could be transformative?

    All of us here know that a difficult fight against HIV lies ahead. We have come to Washington because we are determined to win that fight. We see our task through the lens of solidarity that has inspired the most ambitious AIDS activism and that we all feel today in this room.

    From the start, as they fought this epidemic, the activist pioneers knew they had to tackle the structural forces of prejudice, social exclusion and economic injustice. Their ambition to end unjust human suffering was as vast as the suffering itself. All of us here today must be just as ambitious.

    The AIDS movement has rekindled values that show the kind of global development we’re striving for: development grounded in solidarity, courage, respect for the dignity of all people, and an unrelenting demand for justice.

    If we unleash the power of these values, we can overcome any obstacle in the fight for economic and social justice. If we unleash the power of these values, we can leave to our children a world free of poverty and AIDS.

    We can end AIDS. We must end AIDS. The challenge we face is great. But as I look out at all of you today, I can actually see the end of AIDS.

    Thank you, let’s make it happen.

    The Author is World Bank Group President Jim Yong Kim

  • 8 Million Italians in Total Poverty

    New figures show at least 8 million Italians are now living in poverty and the outlook remains bleak in the short term.

    More than 11% of families of the country’s total population of 60.6 million are living in poverty, according to the national statistics agency Istat in its annual poverty report.

    Nearly one in four families in southern Italy were defined as poor in 2011, with even higher rates recorded in Sicily and Calabria, the report said.

    The shocking figures provoked a strong reaction from political leaders, employers and union leaders.

    “The new data which adds to an already alarming picture of Italy shows that poverty is now affecting workers as well as pensioners,” said Pietro Cerrito, secretary of Cisl, one of the country’s largest unions.

    “For the moment, there is no reason to see a reversal of this trend and it is clear that Italy has its ‘poor Africa’ in the south – a result of the recession, with no programs or concrete initiatives for renewal and growth. It is intolerable,” Cerrito said.

    Confcommercio, one of the country’s main employer groups, said the figures showed that there were a growing number of people living “in unsustainable living conditions.”

    “Only a return to growth can resolve this serious problem that is undermining social cohesion and possibilities for Italy’s development,” said Mariano Bella, director of the research office of Confcommercio.

    The poverty figures were released after the global ratings agency Moody’s downgraded two of Italy’s largest banks – Intesa Sanpaolo and Unicredit – from A3 to Baa2, after the country’s overall sovereign rating was slashed to two notches above junk status last week.

    Moody’s also cut the long-term issuer and debt ratings of 23 Italian public entities, including ENI and Enel, and 14 regional governments and four local governments.

    The Bank of Italy has forecast minus-2% growth of the country’s gross domestic product in 2012 and rising unemployment in the year ahead.

    “Despite a significant increase in participation in the job market, already seen in the first part of 2012, the rate of unemployment could go above 11% in 2013,” the bank said in its economic bulletin.

    However, one positive aspect of the bank’s latest forecast was a prediction that Italy would emerge from recession early next year while the spread between the 10-year Treasury bond and the German benchmark would remain around 450 basis points.

    “The recession will extend into the second part of this year but will be more limited compared to the first two quarters,” the bank said. “It should finish at the beginning of 2013.”

    But Italy will be looking to its European neighbours to kickstart its recovery.

    “The rapidity of the recovery will depend on the cohesion of the European Union and the standardization of financial markets,” the bank said.

    The Milan stock exchange bounced back from Moody’s decision to downgrade banks and local authorities and its benchmark FTSE index rose 1.6% in early afternoon trading Tuesday.

    Adding to Italy’s economic woes was the release of disappointing economic data showing a fall in Fiat car sales in the European market.

    The European vehicle producers’ association ACEA noted a fall of 16.7% in June.

    The company said in a statement that it had been “penalised by the dreadful overall results of the Italian market.”

    Fiat CEO Sergio Marchionne said earlier this month that Italy’s largest car maker may have to close one of its domestic plants if weak demand on the European auto market continued.

    Elsewhere, the International Monetary Fund predicted “further weakness” in what it called “an already sluggish global recovery.”

    It said risks to financial stability increased in the second quarter of 2012 because of the continued slow global recovery and fears about the quality of bank assets in Europe.

    “More worrisome than these revisions to the baseline forecast is the increase in downside risks,” said Olivier Blanchard, the IMF chief economist and director of the fund’s research department.

    Economists from the Dutch bank ING recently warned that progress on tackling eurozone debt would remain “very slow” and they forecast a 0.4% contraction in the economy in their June report.

    ING senior economist Teunis Brosens said a “big plan” was needed for Europe and required bold steps “towards more integration and political union.”

    “European Central Bank President Mario Draghi hinted that such steps may be rewarded with more supportive European Central Bank action,” said Brosens. “But we reckon that progress will remain very slow.”

    Source:: Xinhua

  • EAC Pushes for Arms Trade Treaty

    The East African Community deputy secretary general (Political Federation), Dr Julius Tangus Rotich, says arms trafficking is potent threat to stability, security and development.

    The EAC wants an Arms Trade Treaty (ATT) in order to address the problems associated with unregulated transfer of conventional arms.

    “A robust ATT, if fully implemented, would reduce the incentive to accumulate arms and hence reduce spending on arms and spur economic development,” he said in an address to the United Nations headquarters in New York last week.

    He said the regional bloc was keen to have a treaty that would address problems associated with unregulated transfer of conventional arms ” in all its manifestations”, he said in a statement sent to The Citizen.

    According to him, the matter has been discussed thoroughly by experts from the EAC partner states; Tanzania, Uganda, Kenya, Burundi and Rwanda in the past years and should now be put into practice.

    He added that the region has experienced and continues to experience the devastating consequences of unregulated arms transfer, a situation which has facilitated displacement of populations, human rights abuses and destabilisation of legitimate governments.

    Whereas the region was not producing arms, it remained awash with them, he said.

    The nexus between easy availability of arms, terrorism and piracy continues to manifest itself in the region and remains of primary concern for regional peace and security.

    “The inextricable link between unregulated arms transfer, human rights and humanitarian issues should thus be at the core of the treaty’s objectives, drawing from our regional experience,” Dr Rotich explained.

    He underscored the need for the proposed ATT which includes all arms in the UN Conventional Arms Register along with Small Arms and Light Weapons (SALW) and ammunitions as well as accommodate all aspects of transfer

  • Cucumber Good for Eyes,Skin

    Cucumber is a very edible fruit which comes from the cucumber plant cucumis sativus in the gourd family.

    This fruit can be eaten raw or cooked. With so many health benefits, it is one of the most important parts of food diet as well as skin diet.

    Cucumber for eyes: it is believed that cucumber helps in reducing swelling around the eyes or the dark circles under your eyes because it is an anti- inflamentory, hydrating and cooling snack.

    This is an easy homemade and natural treatment friendly with sensitive, allergic skins. They are the most wonderful and natural eye pads you can find for yourself.

    The puffiness and tiredness in your eyes may just leave you if you do this in a relaxed fashion.

    Cucumber for skin: if you have a rough or very sensitive skin (against sun rays), cucumber is good for you.

    Both the cucumber and your skin share the same level of hydrogen. Cucumber helps soothing and softening your skin and gets you relaxed in no time.

    Cucumber for headache: after a long hectic day, chances are you are to get a headache, avoid it by eating a few cucumber slices before going to bed and wake up refreshed and headache free.

    Cucumber for cellulites: try rubbing a slice or two of cucumber along your problem area for a few minutes.

    The phyto chemicals in the cucumber cause the collagen in your skin to tighten firming up the outer layer and reducing the visibility of cellulites. It works great on wrinkles too.

    Cucumber for shoes: Rub a cucumber over your shoe, its chemicals provide a quick and durable shine that repels water.

    Cucumber for fresh breath: After a meal or drink, take a slice of cucumber, press it on the roof of your mouth with your tongue for 30 seconds.

    Cucumber as an eraser:Take the outside of cucumber and slowly use it to erase the pen, pencil or marker writing.

  • Western Province Selects Miss Rwanda Contestant

    Esther Uwingabire, 23, has been selected Miss Western Province-scoring 91%

    The selection was held 21st of July in Rubavu,Western Province at the main hall of RTUC, the Rwanda Tourism University College.

    After selecting Umutesi Aurore,Isimbi Deborah and Umurerwa Ariane as the three contestants from the Southern Province on 14th July; yesterday 21st of July the same event took place in the Western Province in Rubavu.

    The miss Rwanda 2012 being prepared by Minispoc and Mashirika,was hosted by Anita Pendo,and had the minister of Minispoc Protais Mitari as the guest of honor.

    Esther Uwingabire was succeeded by Natacha Uwamahoro, 20, from Rubavu but currently studying from SFB, being the first runner up with 89%, she was also selected Miss SFB 2012 and Annick Umwamikazi, 21, from Nyamasheke with a rate of 82%, she studies from RTUC,Kigali.

    The three selected contestants were chosen among twelve other girls from different districts of the province, namely, Uwase Mignone,Esther Hakizimana, Laetitia Isimbi,Natacha Uwamahoro, Rachel Uwizera,Assia Niyifasha,Alice Nyirahabimana,Esther Uwingabire,Sandra Teta who was the runner up of miss SFB 2012,Adelphine Uwanyirigira,Gratia Mutabaruka and Annick Umwamikazi.

    After the first session of questioning, the number of contestants reduced to five with Teta Sandra’s exclusion being a total surprise to all.
    The five contestants were Annick Umwamikazi,Esther Uwingabire,Alice Nyirahabimana,Uwamahoro Natacha and Isimbi Laetitia.

    Gisenyi Acrobats and the Kigali Live Music Band featuring Rosette and Jonathan tremendously entertained the crowd with their lively acrobatic schemes and wonderful voices and rhythms in between breaks.

    By the time of the second questioning, only three girls selected to participate in Miss Rwanda 2012 had to remain; being, Uwingabire Esther,Uwamahoro Natasha and Annick Umwamikazi titled Miss, first runner up and second runner up of the western province respectively.

    “My message to the youth is to encourage them into being confident and having self esteem because I believe that we can achieve all that we put our minds into.

    If I become Miss Rwanda 2012,I will focus on women and young girls’ activities and purposes as well as working hand in hand with my country in different departments such as campaigning for the fight against drug consumption and addiction.” Said Miss Western Province Esther Uwingabire.

    On 28th July, the very same event of selecting three other contestants will be held in the Easten Province.

  • understanding African Batik

    Batik is a word used in West Africa consisting on the process of hand decorating and printing a fabric in which parts not to be dyed are covered by wax.

    African fashion really spread worldwide with the batik fabrics tailored in the western fashion way. The patterns on the fabrics reflect the beauty, texture and simplicity of the African tradition.

    These fabrics are originally from West Africa; Senegal, Nigeria, Ghana and the Gambia.

    History and manufacture

    There are examples of batik textiles in many parts of Africa but the most developed skills are to be found in Nigeria when the Yoruba people make Adire clothes.

    Two methods are used in the dying and printing of the fabric: Adire Eleso which involves tied and stitched designs and Adire Eleko where the starch paste is used.

    The paste is most often made from cassava (a root plant) flour, rice, alum or copper sulfate boiled together to produce a smooth thick paste.

    The paste produced from that mixture is used in two different ways.

    The first; using the freehand drawing of traditional designs using a feather, thin stick piece of fine bone, a metal or a wooden comb-like tool. This one is done by women.

    Men on the other hand force the pasting through a thin metal stencil with a flexible metal or wooden tool; this enables accurate repeat patterns to be achieved.

    The patterning of cloth is usually a family tradition handed down from mother to daughter as a cottage industry.

    The cloth is usually divided into squares or rectangles and designs represent everyday tools, carvings, bead work, activities or traditional image of the artists own culture or tribal history.

    An Eleko cloth (paste used) is usually made up of 2.2 meters pieces sewn together.

    The traditional dye is indigo from a plant that grows throughout Africa. They produce a dark blue color which varies with the varieties of indigo. Once the paste resist is dry, the fabric is dyed in large clay pots or pits dug in the earth.

    After dying, the paste is scraped off to reveal a white or pale blue design. The usual cloth is cotton but highly prized clothing using wild silk is sometimes produced.

    But in recent years, other clothes using the African designs have been produced in Britain ( Manchester clothes) and Holland, these ones are made by the machine.