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  • Researchers Present Detailed Analysis of Maize Genome

    An interdisciplinary team, led by researchers at Cornell University and the U.S. Department of Agriculture-Agricultural Research Service (USDA-ARS), have just published the most comprehensive analysis to date of the corn genome.

    The team expects the achievement to speed up development of improved varieties of one of the world’s most important agricultural commodities.

    The results should boost international efforts to increase yields, expand areas where corn can be cultivated and produce varieties better equipped to resist pests and disease.

    Funded in the United States by the National Science Foundation (NSF) and the USDA, the work was a collaborative effort by scientists at 17 U.S. and foreign institutions that include the University of Wisconsin-Madison; University of Missouri-Columbia; North Carolina State University; Beijing Genome Institute; University of California, Davis and the International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center, Mexico City, Mexico.

    The study appears in two corn genome projects published in separate reports in the June 3 online edition of the journalNature Genetics.

    “This work represents a major step forward and an important tool in the arsenal available to scientists and breeders for improving a vital source of nutrition,” said Edward B. Knipling, administrator of USDA’s Agricultural Research Service.

    The analysis could also help those who develop corn yields as a source of fuel, who manage crops in the face of changing climates and who are concerned about the diminishing supply of arable land and growing populations, he said.

    “This project is a stellar example of how collaborations of scientists, here and abroad, leverage resources across multiple agencies to enable transformational research with the potential to address urgent societal needs for a bio-based economy,” said John Wingfield, assistant director for NSF’s Biological Sciences Directorate.

    It is anticipated that the tools and approaches generated in this project will enable scientists to look at genetic differences in other organisms as they respond to global climate change, human disturbance and invasive species, Wingfield explained.

    The studies’ collaborators shed light on corn’s genetic diversity, detail how it evolved and outline how corn–known as maize among scientists–continues to diversify as it adapts to changing climates and habitats.

    One study, published in the journal led by team member, USDA-ARS and Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory scientist Doreen Ware, examines the genetic structure and the relationships and sequential ordering of individual genes in more than 100 varieties of wild and domesticated corn.

    Another study led by team member Jeff Ross-Ibarra from the University of California, Davis gives an extraordinary glimpse into how corn evolved more than 8,700 years ago from a wild grass in the lowland areas of southwestern Mexico into today’s ubiquitous international commodity.

    The researchers compared wild varieties with traditional corn varieties from across the Americas and with modern improved breeding lines. They identified hundreds of genes that played a role in the transformation of corn from its wild origins to today’s cultivated crop and show how that transition was largely achieved by ancient farmers who first domesticated it thousands of years ago.

    Last year, the economic value of the U.S. corn crop was $76 billion, with U.S. growers producing an estimated 12 billion bushels, more than a third of the world’s supply.

    Corn is the largest production crop worldwide, providing food for billions of people and livestock and critical feedstock for production of biofuels.

  • Rwanda Hailed on Child Protection

    Rwanda has been hailed for her upcoming accession to the Hague convention on protection of Children and Co-operation in Respect of Intercountry Adoption.

    The congragulatory message was echoed by U.S. Special Advisor for Children’s Affairs, Ambassador Susan Jacobs while she met with Inyumba Aloisea, Minister for Gender and Promotion of Family.

    They two also discussed Rwanda’s child protection initiative that has been approved by the Cabinet. Minister Inyumba and Ambassador Jacobs first met in early May when they discussed child protection at the Christian Alliance for Orphans conference in California.

    Susan Jacobs is the Special Advisor for Children’s Issues. She was a Senior Policy Advisor in the Bureau of Consular Affairs and previously served as the Bureau’s liaison to the Department of Homeland Security.

    From 2000-2003 she was the United States Ambassador to Papua New Guinea, the Solomon Islands and Vanuatu.

    Ambassador Jacobs graduated from the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor, where she was a Regents Scholar, and later studied at Georgetown University Law School and the George Washington University.

  • Africa Shouldn’t Import Food–Okonjo

    Nigeria’s Finance minister Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala recently competed for the post of President of The World Bank but didn’t succeed. She was africas favourite.

    In an Exclusive Interview, Ngozi said I went into this with the support of our leaders. They actually asked me to and they were very steadfast in their decisions. Africa showed unity. All the countries were supporting the same goal for the first time.

    She said African countries should rebuild their fiscal buffers and diversify their economies away from commodities in order to protect themselves from another possible global downturn,

    In this interview with IMF Survey online, she explains how her country has achieved impressive economic performance, and what policies African countries should pursue to achieve solid and inclusive growth.

    QUESTION: Many Africans were very disappointed by the fact that you were not selected as the new president of the World Bank. What are you going to do to try and ensure a greater voice in the selection process the next time around?

    ANSWER: I know there might be a little tinge of disappointment, but actually many people are elated. Yes, Africans would have loved it, but they also recognize that the continent has achieved a great deal.

    I went into this with the support of our leaders. They actually asked me to and they were very steadfast in their decisions. Africa showed unity. All the countries were supporting the same goal for the first time.

    It was amazing. If another similar issue ever comes around, we will have shown that we can do it. We have opened a door.

    The process for selecting the World Bank president can never be the same again. Everybody acknowledges that. Next time around, it is going to be a different, more open process, and maybe another African can go for it.

    Africa is not immune to a downturn in the global economy and, especially not, from a renewed crisis in the euro area.

    What should Africa’s priority be to protect itself from a possible downturn?

    Firstly, I think African countries will need to cushion their economy. After 2008, most countries depleted their buffers. There are many types of policy buffers such as reducing taxes and so on. Countries put them in place in order to make food cheaper or cushion people.

    By phasing out subsidies in good times, the savings generated can be used in a downturn. This is what we did in Nigeria.

    The amount of fiscal space left, for many countries, to take those measures is now limited. We now need to look, with the help of the international institutions, at how we can rebuild fiscal space and rebuild buffers.

    Secondly, I think that African countries also need to look inward. They need to learn how to better mobilize their own domestic savings, be more robust in their approach to tax, and also stimulate the growth of sectors that can diversify their economies to limit their dependency on commodity booms.

    What should countries do to achieve growth that is both inclusive and solid?

    For one, we should look for sectors that create jobs. Very often, natural resource and mining sectors do not create a lot of jobs. They tend to be capital intensive. Many of them do not employ too many people. So, one really needs to look at other options. Agriculture is something all African countries can do very well.

    In fact, we really have no business importing any food on the continent. African countries should also trade with each other. These things create jobs. There is also manufacturing.

    China is moving up the value chain. Countries need to look at whether we can take up some of the manufacturing China is letting go of at the low end of the value chain. Ethiopia is currently doing so with shoes.

    Nigeria is looking at it with electronics. Those are the kinds of things that they need to do.

    The IMF has forecasted a healthy eight per cent growth for Nigeria. Why has the country performed so well?

    I think that the country has performed well because we have got several sectors of the economy, which are good sources of growth, quite apart from the oil sector, which is doing relatively well.

    We also have agriculture, which is doing reasonably well. We have got a solid mineral sector with small-scale mining. The telecom sector is booming. Services, retail trade, housing and construction are also doing well. So we have several sectors that are performing relatively well.

    But more fundamentally, we have macroeconomic policies that created a stable environment where growth can occur. Furthermore, we are carrying some structural reforms in the power sector, in the downstream petroleum sector as well as in the ports and transport sector; these reforms are also helping to unleash growth. I think that once they are completed, Nigeria could see growth at much more than eight per cent.

    Are you worried about inflation in this scenario?

    Yes, we are worried. Even though we produce crude oil and export, we do import refined petroleum and we are a big importer of food items. So, we also suffer from imported inflation in oil prices and foods.

    Food price volatility has reoccurred this past year of 2011 and food prices have now reached their peak of 2008. All this, also affect our economy. But, we are fighting it. The central bank is really focusing on this issue.

    At the moment, inflation is down to about 11.9%. We are hoping to keep it either in the low double digits or drop to the high single digits over the next year or so.

    What is Nigeria going to do to reduce its dependence on oil?

    We are not happy with it. We would like to improve our non-oil revenues. We would like to create jobs. As you know, oil is not a sector that creates jobs.

    The big problems faced by Nigeria and many African countries are the issues of job creation and of growth that is not really inclusive. What do I mean by that? You can have growth as we are having, but that growth is not creating as many jobs, especially for youth, and is leaving some people behind.

    That’s not really the kind of growth we want. We want the growth that will create enough jobs for youth, and that will include people in the rural areas as well as in the cities.

    That way the whole country is improving together. We do not want increasing inequality. Youth unemployment, both in Nigeria and on the continent, is a huge problem and we need to tackle it forcefully.

    What policies are you thinking of implementing to tackle this problem?

    We need to diversify the economy itself into sectors such as agriculture, where we have a strong comparative advantage. I think Nigeria should not even be importing most of the food it currently imports.

    We spend about $10 billion a year on food imports of things that we could grow, like rice, fish, sugar, and wheat for bread. Actually we do not grow wheat very well, but we can substitute cassava flour for wheat flour. If we pursue the development of these sectors, then we will create jobs and we will diversify.

    We are investing, and we are also encouraging active investment in agriculture for both small and larger farmers because Nigeria only uses 44% of its arable land. There is also scope to increase our productivity, which is currently about one-third of that in South Asia and East Asia.

    We are also doing some targeted programmes as well. We have an extremely popular programme, which creates jobs by supporting young entrepreneurs. It is a business plan competition and those who win get anything from $10,000 to $100,000 to support their businesses.

    They also receive mentorship, access to credit, and support. Finally, we also have a public works programme targeted towards parts of the country that are falling behind because of the inclusiveness issue. So, there really is a range of instruments we are deploying now.

  • Brits Celebrate 60-Year Reign of Monarch

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    Vessels of all shapes and sizes took part in the historic pageant including royal barge Spirit of Chartwell, with the 86-year-old monarch and her proud family on board.

    About 1.25 million well-wishers packed the river’s banks in London, cheering in spite of grey skies and heavy downpours while around the country, thousands more held street parties to mark the day.

    Bedraggled Brits used to holiday deluges lined the Thames joined by foreign visitors determined to shrug off the weather and pay tribute to Her Majesty’s 60-year reign.

    The Queen defied the wind and rain without an umbrella to wave from beneath an ornate canopy on the Spirit of Chartwell as it joined a magnificent flotilla making the seven-mile trip from Battersea to Tower.
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  • Congolese Forces Repulse Mai Mai Militia

    Congolese forces (FARDC) and the Mai Mai militia clashed early morning Sunday in the resort of Kanyihunga-Bulambo located in the community of Bashu in the territory of Beni in North Kivu.

    The FARDC commander based in Beni, Colonel Eric Ruhorimbere, confirmed the clashes saying six militiamen were killed and one captured.

    The clashes started from 2:30 (local time), when the FARDC launched an attack against the positions Mai-Mai, according to sources in the area.

    After an hour of fighting,the Mai Mai abandoned their positions fleeing to the town of Soma, in the Rwenzori.

    Col. Ruhorimbere said that situation was under control of the army adding that four AK47 rifles were recovered by the Armed Forces of the DRC. He gave no figures of casualities on the side of the regular army.

    This assessment was however confirmed by local sources and civil society, noting that the Mai-Mai captured is a child of thirteen.

    Mai Mai militiamen attacked, Tuesday, April 24 around 2 am, the military camp Ozacaf Armed Forces of the DRC located in the center of the town of Beni.

    They were repulsed by loyalist forces. The fighting lasted about twenty minutes, wounding three, including two women and a child who was in the camp, according to Col. Ruhorimbere.

  • Rwanda Exploring Oil, Results Expected June

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    Rwanda government announced plans to sign a Production Sharing Agreement (PSA) with Vanoil Energy Ltd, the Canadian oil exploration firm before the next phase of exploration begins.

    However,Rwanda’s geologists , Ministry of Natural Resources and Vanoil say wouldn’t speculate insisting that to speculate on the facts would only cause anxiety among the people.

    The oil exploration results are expected this month. Based on seismic studies, hopes are high that the country has oil deposits.

    In 2011 Vancouver, British Columbia -Vanoil Energy Ltd. (“Vanoil” or the
    “Company”) announced that it had executed an extension to the Technical Evaluation Agreement (“TEA”) with the Rwandan Ministry of Natural Resources for Vanoil’s exclusive 1,631 square kilometre oil and gas license in the Kivu Graben Basin.

    The highly prospective Kivu Graben is on the same rift trend with the Albertine Graben where at Lake Albert, Tullow Oil and Heritage Oil have stated that they have found 1.5 billion recoverable barrels of oil; a significant discovery that many believe may represent only a small portion of the enormous potential of the area.

    It is the intention of the Company and the Minister of Natural Resources of Rwanda to conclude a Production Sharing Agreement (“PSA”) before the end of 2011.

    Vanoil also confirms that the Syracuse University has received permission from the Rwandan Ministry of Natural Resources to commence a 2D Seismic study of Lake Kivu on behalf of Vanoil.

    This program will assist in identifying the areas of greatest hydrocarbon prospectivity in the Lake Kivu Graben. Additionally, the 2D Seismic study is to demonstrate the similarities between Lake Albert and Lake Kivu and to establish drill targets in and around Lake Kivu on Vanoil’s concession.

    Dal Brynelsen, President, commented: “Since the first Technical Evaluation Agreement signed in October of 2007, Vanoil has worked closely with the Rwandan Government to develop and enter into a PSA. We are pleased to see that our efforts will be rewarded shortly.

    In addition, we are very pleased to secure the technical expertise of the Syracuse University who have provided seismic data for oil and gas discoveries on Lake Albert and recent exploration activities on Lake Turkana as well for Vanoil on Lake Kivu in 2010”.

  • Canada Protests Against Mugabe

    Canada has withdrawn from the United Nations World Tourism Organisation (UNWTO) in protest over Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe’s recognition as a tourism ambassador by the world body.

    This follows the presentation of an open letter to President Mugabe and his Zambian counterpart Michael Sata last week after they signed a tripartite agreement to co-host the UNWTO general assembly in Victoria Falls in August next year.

    Canada’s Foreign Affairs minister John Baird told his country’s House of Commons that the Zimbabwean leader’s appointment “symbolises what is wrong with the UN”.

    He said Canada would withdraw from the UNWTO this month.
    But the UN body insisted President Mugabe had not been made an ambassador as claimed, in a statement released on Thursday

    “The receiving of the Open Letter implies no legal commitment or official title attribution to the country or the recipient,” the agency said.

    President Mugabe’s alleged appointment has also dominated world news headlines, with many newspapers saying the 88-year-old leader was not fit for the role, because of his human rights record.

    He is currently under US and European Union travel ban for alleged electoral fraud.

  • Motorcycle Thieves Arrested

    Four men have been arrested by Police in Ngoma district in connection with theft of a motorcycle belonging to Bonaventure Karuranga.

    On 1 June, Karuranga was allegedly ambushed on his way home. He was stopped and beaten sustaining minor injuries before they fled with his motorbike.

    The arrest of the goons was made possible following shared information from residents that identified them. The motor cycle was later handed back to the owner.
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  • IFC, AfDB Deal to Enable African Local Currency Swap Transactions

    The World Bank’s International Finance Corporation and the African Development Bank have signed a deal to enter into African local currency swap transactions, the lenders said.

    This deal will give a boost to Africa’s domestic capital markets and enable the lenders to make loans to their clients in more local currencies than they do now.

    The agreement was signed at the AfDB’s annual meeting in Arusha, Tanzania, and is part of efforts by the two institutions to cut countries’ dependence on foreign currency denominated debt.

    Improving Africa’s capital markets is vital if the continent is to maximise its growth potential.

    Under the deal, the IFC could obtain local currency in a country where it doesn’t have a funding source or an upcoming bond issue but where the AfDB does.

    “The agreement opens up the possibility for both institutions to share our local currency resources,” IFC treasurer Jingdong Hua told Reuters in a phone interview from Arusha.

    “Let’s say AfDB is issuing in a currency where we haven’t started a capital market exploration but we happen to have a programme, we can borrow from the AfDB and on-lend to our clients and vice versa.”

    Hua said the deal had no fixed size and the transactions would depend on project demand. It is the first such deal between two multilateral financial institutions and has no time limit.

    IFC, the World Bank’s private sector arm, said it expects to invest $2.6 billion in sub-Saharan Africa this fiscal year and to mobilise an additional $1.1 billion from other investors.

    The agreement follows the launch of its pan-African bond issuance programme in May. IFC is working with authorities in Botswana, Ghana, Kenya, South Africa, Uganda and Zambia to obtain consent to issue regular local currency bonds.

    Funds raised from the bond sales will be invested in IFC-backed businesses that contribute to social objectives such as job creation and infrastructure development, Hua said.

    Foreign investors who buy the bonds would gain exposure to African local currency debt from triple-A rated issuers.

    Since 2005, the AfDB has issued bonds denominated in or linked to seven African currencies. It is also a regular issuer in South African rand, its third largest lending currency.

    IFC said it wants to strengthen its presence in Ethiopia and in post-conflict or fragile states such as South Sudan, Thierry Tanoh, vice president for sub-Saharan Africa,.

  • 150 Feared Dead in Nigeria Plane Crash

    A Plane has crashed into a building in Nigerias Commercia Capital Lagos. Over150 passengers are feared dead.

    “It was a Dana (airline) flight out of (the capital) Abuja to Lagos with about 153 people on board,” Nigeria’s head of civil aviation Harold Demuren said.

    Residents said the plane had been coming in low, making a loud noise, when it slammed into the residential area.

    “It was flying low with a lot of noise for about five minutes before it crashed into the residential area,” one resident said. “It then burst into flames.”

    A spokesman for Nigerian airline Dana confirmed one of its planes was involved in the crash but could not immediately provide further details.

    Thick smoke rose from the area near the Lagos airport and flames could be seen coming from the building.

    Asked if anyone likely survived the crash he said, “I don’t believe there are any survivors.”

    Lagos State police spokesman Joseph Jaiyeoba told local media that the plane went down in the Iju neighbourhood on the mainland of the city where the bulk of the city’s population lives.

    Hundreds of residents swarmed the area to see what had happened.

    “I can confirm that one of our planes crashed today on the outskirts of Lagos,” Tony Usidamen told local Media. “We lost communication with the aircraft. We are going to issue an official statement.”

    Nigeria has a spotty aviation record, though Dana has been considered to be a relatively safe domestic airline. It began flights in 2008 and had been operating up to 27 daily flights.

    Dana Air started operating in November 2008 and today is one of Nigeria’s main airlines, flying a fleet of MD-83 aircraft, according to information on its website.

    Its aircraft make daily flights between Abuja, Calabar, Lagos, Port Harcourt and Uyo.

    Lagos, the largest city in Africa’s most populous nation, is home to an estimated 15 million people. Built around a lagoon on the Atlantic coast, it is thought to be the largest city in Africa.

    This latest incident came after another plane crash on Saturday night in the capital of the nearby West African nation of Ghana, which saw a cargo plane overshoot a runway and hit a passenger bus, killing at least 10 people.

    The Allied Air cargo plane had departed from Lagos and was to land in Accra.