Africa’s Big Social Media Explosion

Africa Social Media explosion
Africa social media explosion

André-Michel Essoungou

In the mid-1990s, as the use of mobile phones spread in much of the developed world, few thought of Africa as a potential market. Now, with more than 400 million subscribers, its market is larger than North America’s and is growing faster than in any other region.

A similar story now seems again to be unfolding as Africans use their cell phones to connect to “social media” ─ Internet services like Facebook, Twitter and YouTube ─ that allow people to interact with each other directly. In the process, they are joining what may be the next global trend: a shift to mobile Internet use, with social media as its main driver. According to Mary Meeker, an influential Internet analyst, mobile Internet and social media are the fastest growing areas of the technology industry worldwide, and she predicts that wireless telephones use will soon overtake computers as the primary Internet device.

Africa is pushing both developments. Studies suggest that when Africans go online (predominantly with their mobile phones), they spend much of their time on social media sites. In recent months, Facebook ─ the major social media platform worldwide and currently the most visited website in most of Africa ─ has seen a massive growth on the continent. The number of Facebook users now stands at over 17 million, up from just10 million in 2009. More than 15 per cent of people online in Africa are currently using the platform, compare to 11 per cent in Asia. Two other social networking websites, Twitter and YouTube, rank among the most visited websites in most African countries.

African sports, music and film stars, political leaders and companies have joined the global conversation. The Facebook fan base of Ivorian football star and UN goodwill ambassador Didier Drogba is approaching 1 million. Zambian author and economist Dambisa Moyo has more than 26,000 followers on Twitter. Companies such as Kenya Airways and media organizations in South Africa are using various social media platforms to interact better with customers and readers. During recent elections in Côte d’Ivoire, candidates not only toured the cities and villages; they also moved the contest online, posting campaign updates on Twitter and Facebook.

Constraints and opportunities

Africa’s embrace of social media is even more striking given the low number of Africans using the Internet and the many hurdles they face trying to go online.

Africa’s 100 million Internet users make the continent the region in the world with the lowest penetration rate and a tiny minority of the 2 billion people online around the world. Among the many reasons for this poor showing are the scarcity and prohibitive costs of high speed internet connections and the limited number of personal computers in use.

But these challenges simultaneously contribute to the growth in the use of mobile Internet, which in recent years has been the highest in the world. “Triple-digit growth rates are routine across the continent,” notes Jon von Tetzchner, co-founder of Opera, the world’s most popular mobile phone Internet browser. “The widespread availability of mobile phones means that the mobile web can reach tens of millions more than the wired web.” As with the rapid growth in use of mobile phones in Africa in recent years, Mr. Tetzchner believes that the “mobile web is beginning to reshape the economic, political and social development of the continent.”

‘Seismic shift’ coming

Erik Hersman, a prominent African social media blogger and entrepreneur is equally enthusiastic. In an e-mail to Africa Renewal, he notes that “with mobile phone penetration already high across the continent, and as we get to critical mass with Internet usage in some of Africa’s leading countries (Kenya, South Africa, Ghana, Nigeria, Egypt) … a seismic shift will happen with services, products and information.”

These growth rates are persuading major companies to invest in reaching Africa’s expanding pool of Internet users. Facebook, after launching versions in some of the major African languages, including Swahili, Hausa and Zulu in May, has announced it will offer free access to its platform to mobile phone users in many parts of Africa. In October Google started testing a new service for Swahili speakers in East and Central Africa. Tentatively called “Baraza” (“meeting place” in Swahili), it will allows people to interact and share knowledge by asking and answering questions, many of them of only very local or regional interest.

Africans are also cashing in on the local market. In South Africa, MXit, a free instant messaging application with an estimated 7 million users, is the most popular local social networking service. From Accra and Abidjan to Lusaka and Nairobi, African programmers are designing and launching new home-grown platforms and tools that will keep the African online conversation going and growing in the years ahead.

André-Michel Essoungou is a writer for UN Africa Renewal magazine based in New York City

Africa: Unlocking the Economic Potential of Biotechnology

Jose W. Fernandez

By 2050 population growth is expected to translate into a 70 percent increase in global demand for food. Add the estimated 27 percent decline in global productivity expected due to climate change, and it is clear that the demand for food production will become more critical in the coming decades.

Countries that depend on rain-fed agriculture will be especially vulnerable. Crop models for Sub-Saharan Africa have indicated that in 2050, average rice, wheat, and maize yields will decline by up to 14 percent, 22 percent, and 5 percent, respectively.

But there are rays of hope as we go towards 2050. The potential for agriculture in Africa is great. African countries can use their own experiences, indigenous knowledge and traditional methods, as well as the many talents of their people to adopt and adapt the best of what science has to offer in new technologies.

An essential lever for raising agricultural productivity is increasing investments in science and technology. An important lesson of the 1960s “Green Revolution” was that agricultural research could contribute decisively to spurring agricultural growth. Countries that simultaneously adopted the technology and increased their investments in agricultural research have maintained and even accelerated their rate of productivity and growth. New technologies – like biotechnology, conservation tillage, drip irrigation, integrated pest management, and new multiple-cropping practices – have improved the efficiency and productivity of agricultural resources over the last decade. Around the world some 14 million small and resource poor farmers in the developing world have already benefited from biotechnology crops.

In a 2008 survey of the global impact of biotech crops, the global net economic benefits to biotech crop farmers was $9.2 billion dollars, divided roughly equally between developed and developing countries. In South Africa, for example, biotech maize, soybean, and cotton are estimated to have enhanced farm incomes by $383 million dollars. In other areas of the world, the technology has changed the lives of farmers and raised incomes in a matter of years. In India, conservative estimates for small-scale farmers have indicated that the use of biotech cotton has increased yield by 31 percent, decreased insecticide application by 39 percent, and increased profitability by 88 percent, equivalent to $250 U.S. dollars per hectare. With the advent of enhanced tools, such as drought-resistant corn and disease-resistant bananas, those who have paved the way for the technology will reap even further economic benefits.

African researchers are already working on the next generation of biotech crops that will have a wider array of benefits for farmers, like drought tolerance, nitrogen-use efficiency, and salt tolerance to help address shifting environments due to climate change. But second generation biotech crops will go beyond benefits to the farmer. Work is underway in crops, like cassava and rice, to increase their vitamin, mineral, and protein content, benefitting the consumer as well.

So we know what technology can do. The question is what has been keeping it out of the hands of those who could benefit from it? In many cases misinformation has made people fear a process and its products. However, the real obstacle is the lack of functioning regulatory systems that would allow countries to make their own decisions about the safety of these products. Biotechnology-produced crops have been assessed for safety in all regions of the world – from the European Union to Japan to Brazil to Burkina Faso. Not to adopt biotechnology because of unfounded claims after more than 15 years of safe use and proven benefits would be to unnecessarily narrow an African farmer’s agricultural potential. It is one of the tools, which, when paired with the right incentives, can enable Africa’s farmers and businesses to close the productivity gap.

But those incentives must have political will behind them. Technology alone is not the answer. To make use of the potential of biotechnology, science-based regulatory systems must be established. I call upon those who have the ability to do so to put in place such sound policies, based on science, and to take full advantage of what investment in agricultural science and technology can do for African farmers and economies.

Several African countries have already adopted the policies and regulatory frameworks needed to support the responsible and safe use of biotechnology. I applaud their courage and foresight to move forward. With increased political will, strong research support, and biosafety policies and regulations that empower the use of the technology, African countries can revolutionize their agricultural sector. What’s more, they can squarely look those in the eye who maintain that crop technology leads to lost markets, and ask them to explain why the expanding economies of the world are exactly those that are developing and using biotechnology.

To those who fear monopolies and multinational ownership of the food supply, I say promote competition, don’t stifle innovation. It is clear that economic growth will be achieved by those countries that are innovators in agriculture and that take the leap of faith needed to invest in their farmers, which is an investment in their future.

Mr. Fernandez was nominated by President Obama on August 6, 2009, and sworn in as Assistant Secretary on December 1, 2009. He serves as the Assistant Secretary of State for Economic, Energy and Business Affairs. He leads the Bureau that is responsible for overseeing work on international trade and investment policy; international finance, development, and debt policy; economic sanctions and combating terrorist financing; international energy security policy; international telecommunications and transportation policies; and support for U.S. businesses and the private sector overseas. Mr. Fernandez was named one of the “World’s Leading Lawyers” by Chambers Global for his M&A and corporate expertise, an “Expert” in International Financial Law Review’s “Guide to the World’s Leading Project Finance Lawyers”, and one of the “World’s Leading Privatization Lawyers” by Euromoney Publications.

Government to empower Ghana AIDS Commission

Vice President John Dramani Mahama on Friday announced that government would commit adequate resources towards the fight against HIV and AIDS and other diseases in the country.

“In our new National Strategic Plan, we are focused on eliminating the mother-to-child transmission of the disease. We are also committed to educating the public against new infection of the disease.”

Vice President Mahama announced these when Miss Jean Beagle, Deputy Executive Director of United Nations AIDS Programme, called on him at the Castle, Osu to announce her impressions on HIV and AIDS programmes in the country’s health facilities.

The Vice President said although Ghana had 1.9 per cent prevalence rate, one of the lowest on the African continent, government would continue to initiate programmes that would stem the spread of the disease in a few years.

He promised to draw up comprehensive programmes in consultation with development partners to ensure that the incidence of HIV/AIDS was reduced to the barest minimum.

He gave the assurance that satellite hospitals would be constructed in the Metropolis to relieve the existing hospitals of the current congestions they experienced in the past years.

Miss Beagle commended government for the number of interventions it had made towards the upkeep of persons living with HIV and AIDS and appealed for more proactive programmes that would make the patients comfortable.

“Ghana has done so well in taking care of the HIV and AIDS patience, but I want to appeal to government to intensify educational programmes on stigma and discrimination which are quite high in the country.”

In a related development, Vice President Mahama has commended the British government for its tremendous support to Ghana in the areas of the Ghana Armed Forces Staff College and the Savannah Accelerated Development Authority programme.

He also expressed happiness that the British government had initiated moves to establish a multi-purpose eye clinic in the national capital.

Vice President Mahama made the commendation when Dr Nicholas Westcott, Out-going British High Commissioner to Ghana called on him to announce the end of his duty tour in the country.

The Out-going High Commissioner who is taking up a European Union position for Africa in Brussels, Belgium, commended Ghana for the open debates on national issues, adding “it helps in nation-building.”

Source: GNA

ASA CALL FOR PROPOSALS 2011 MEMBERSHIP RENEWAL

ASA CALL FOR PROPOSALS/2011 MEMBERSHIP RENEWAL 
The ASA 2011 Call for Proposals is Now Open! The 54th Annual Meeting of the African Studies Association will be held November 17-20, 2011 at The Marriott Wardman Park Hotel in Washington, DC.  This year’s Annual Meeting theme is: “50 Years of African Liberation” and this year’s Program Chair is Carol Thompson, Northern Arizona University. To renew your ASA membership and/or pre-register to submit your proposal, you may log on at www.africanstudies.org.

Millions in Niger need help to avoid another food crisis, warn UN agencies

 20 January 2011 – The United Nations food agencies are urging continued assistance for Niger, where acute malnutrition rates remain high despite a good harvest and millions need help to avoid another food crisis.

Last year the Government of Niger, supported by the UN, launched a massive humanitarian intervention which averted the worst effects of a food and nutrition crisis that threatened the lives of more than seven million people and the livelihoods of the country’s farmers and pastoralists.

As part of that effort, the World Food Programme (WFP) delivered emergency food assistance to more than 5 million people, including vulnerable groups such as children under five, and pregnant or lactating women.

In addition, the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) provided 13,000 tonnes of animal feed and distributed over 3,400 tonnes of quality seeds, covering 94 per cent of affected villages.

These interventions, coupled with a good rainy season in 2010, led to a 60 per cent increase in domestic cereal production. Livestock that survived the drought were also restored to health as pastures returned.

However, according to a joint assessment published today by the two Rome-based UN agencies, the acute malnutrition rate was still above 15 per cent in most parts of the country in October and November, reaching 17 per cent in the area around Agadez and Zinder.

“Food and non-food assistance is still necessary to reconstitute the resilience capacity of the affected populations to allow them to have independent access to food,” said the report.

The agencies are calling for assistance to pastoralists to help them replenish their livestock, help with restoring cereal banks and reconstituting the national grain stock, as well as continued support of feeding centres for malnourished people.

Assistance needs to begin immediately, they stressed, so that farmers will have the necessary quality seeds and fertilizers before the next planting season that starts in May.

Title Over, We Just Need Consecutive Wins for Confidence, Drogba

Drobga is having a frustrating season at Chelsea

Didier Drogba has spoken about Chelsea’s dire form, and says that right now all they are looking to do is win two games back-to-back rather than get back into the title race

Chelsea’s hopes of keeping hold of their Premier League crown are slim as they trail Manchester United by seven points and have played a game more, while they have won only two of their last ten fixtures in the league.

Speaking to Sports Illustrated, Drogba said: “Instead of thinking about winning the title, we should think about winning two consecutive games. Then we’ll see. It’s not a joke, it’s true.

“We have to think about winning two consecutive games. That’s being realistic and it shows how badly we’ve been doing for the last month and a half. It’s something that has to change and we’re not far from that.

“Now everybody is coming back from injuries it is going to help us. When you don’t win games, yeah, you lose confidence. The only way to get back your confidence and be able to say we can still win the league would be to win two or three consecutive games.

“We’ve had a lot of injured players and the team has changed from last year. We lost five great players in Michael Ballack, Juliano Belletti, Deco, Ricardo Carvalho and Joe Cole.

“We replaced them with young players like Jeffrey Bruma, Gael Kakuta, Josh McEachran and Patrick van Aanholt. They are good players but need time to adapt.”

Chelsea began the season on fire, firing six goals past both West Bromwich Albion and Wigan Athletic in their opening two fixtures. But their free-scoring ways are now a thing of the past, while Drogba himself conceded that his form must improve.

Drogba continued: ”What happened is just that the season is very long. I said during that time that maybe some difficult moments would come, so we’d have to be sure that these moments wouldn’t be long. Unfortunately, it’s longer than what we thought it would be.

”I’ve had malaria and surgery before the beginning of the season for my hernia to make sure I’ll be okay for the next few years. I won’t say I’m happy because we’re having a difficult moment, but when you look at the amount of games I’ve played and the number of goals and assists I’ve had, I know it’s not the best, but it’s not bad.

”I can continue to improve that. I’m not worried about my performance. What is really important for me is for the team to go back to the winning way. If we win the league and I score only ten goals, for me it’s fine.”

Drogba is still overcoming the affects of that malaria problem, which was initially diagnosed as ‘flu.

”It was really bad, so bad that it lasted two months,” he added. ”It should be something that could be solved in a few weeks. At first the tests didn’t show that it was malaria. The doctor thought it was ‘flu, so that’s why we lost time.

”While we thought it was ‘flu I was playing, because for me I can handle ‘flu. I lost fitness, but I was working hard and trying to help the team. For me to be playing now, it’s already a good start because it was a difficult moment for me to have malaria. Very difficult.”

Drogba also played down the effect of the departure of Ray Wilkins, who was effectively sacked as the club’s assistant manager in November.

“He was part of the team for a bit more than two years. But even when he was there we lost some games,” Drogba explained. ”Last year we had a bad moment as well when he was there. I think it’s not about Ray leaving the club. It’s about the players not being able to play at their best, including me. For sure we’ll win a lot of games and lose some games, but it’s not an individual that would make a big difference like this in our results. I think it’s collective, the team.”

ESPN

Sex Workers in Umunde Delta State Beat Three Customers Into Coma

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It is reported that commercial sex workers in Umunede Delta State have beaten three customers into a unconsciousness for non-complete payment after several rounds of sex. The report obtained from LEADERSHIP SUNDAY asserts that the irritated prostitutes descended on their customers who were said to have taken Viagra before seeking them out.

The going rate in Umunede, for what is called “daybreak”, is N8,000 to N10,000 depending on what is agreed upon.

The severe beating which took place on the night of January 13th involved Igbo traders travelling from Benin to Onitsha. After being stranded for hours due to a broken down vehicle, the travelers had no option but to seek a place to survive the chilly night.

The traders therefore went into a ‘hotel’ only to discover that all the hotels were brothels filled with sex workers. They were said to have bargained to sleep with a few of them on “daybreak” menu but this was not to be as they tried to elope without paying in full.

Observers say the overly vexed up prostitutes joined hands and released heavy blows on their customers, leaving them with deep-cut wounds. They were taken to the University of Benin Teaching Hospital, UBTH) still in heavy bleeding.

The victims’ names were given as Emeka, Nnamdi, and Cornelius who hail from Imo State but live in Benin City where they deal in vehicle spare parts.

Some bystanders confirmed that some of the men were still ‘hard’ are they were receiving the blows on their faces.

While this may appear as entertainment, of course it does entertain, it reveals a major problem that African governments and leaders need to address if we as a people are going to meet the challenges of the millenium development goals. Food for thought.

Caught in The Act: Imaging Microscopy Catches Malaria Parasite Invading Blood Cells

Australian scientists using new image and cell technologies have for the first time caught malaria parasites in the act of invading red blood cells. The researchers, from the Walter and Eliza Hall Institute in Melbourne, Australia, and the University of Technology, Sydney (UTS), achieved this long-held aim using a combination of electron, light and super resolution microscopy, a technology platform new to Australia.

The detailed look at what occurs as the parasite burrows through the walls of red blood cells provides new insights into the molecular and cellular events that drive cell invasion and may pave the way for developing new treatments for malaria. Institute researchers Dr Jake Baum, Mr David Riglar, Dr Dave Richard and colleagues from the institute’s Infection and Immunity division led the research with colleagues from the i3 institute at UTS.

Dr Baum said the real breakthrough for the research team had been the ability to capture high-resolution images of the parasite at each and every stage of invasion, and to do so reliably and repeatedly. Their findings are published in today’s issue of the journal Cell Host & Microbe.

“It is the first time we’ve been able to actually visualise this process in all its molecular glory, combining new advances developed at the institute for isolating viable parasites with innovative imaging technologies,” Dr Baum said.

“Super resolution microscopy has opened up a new realm of understanding into how malaria parasites actually invade the human red blood cell. Whilst we have observed this miniature parasite drive its way into the cell before, the beauty of the new imaging technology is that it provides a quantum leap in the amount of detail we can see, revealing key molecular and cellular events required for each stage of the invasion process.”

The imaging technology, called OMX 3D SIM super resolution microscopy, is a powerful new 3D tool that captures cellular processes unfolding at nanometer scales. The team worked closely with Associate Professor Cynthia Whitchurch and Dr Lynne Turnbull from the i3 institute at UTS to capture these images.

“This is just the beginning of an exciting new era of discoveries enabled by this technology that will lead to a better understanding of how microbes such as malaria, bacteria and viruses cause infectious disease,” Associate Professor Whitchurch said.

Dr Baum said the methodology would be integral to the development of new malaria drugs and vaccines. “If, for example, you wanted to test a particular drug or vaccine, or investigate how a particular human antibody works to protect you from malaria, this imaging approach now gives us a window to see the actual effects that each reagent or antibody has on the precise steps of invasion,” he said.

Malaria is caused by the Plasmodium parasite, which is transmitted by the bite of infected mosquitoes. Each year more than 400 million people contract malaria, and as many as a million, mostly children, die.

“Historically it has been very difficult to both isolate live and viable parasites for infection of red blood cells and to employ imaging technologies sensitive enough to capture snapshots of the invasion process with these parasites, which are only one micron (one millionth of a metre) in diameter,” Dr Baum said.

He said one of the most interesting discoveries the imaging approach revealed was that once the parasite has attached to the red blood cell and formed a tight bond with the cell, a master switch for invasion is initiated and invasion will continue unabated without any further checkpoints.

“The parasite actually inserts its own window into the cell, which it then opens and uses to walk into the cell, which is quite extraordinary,” Dr Baum said. “Visually tracking the invasion of Plasmodium falciparum into a red blood cell is something I’ve been aiming at ever since I began at the Walter and Eliza Hall Institute in 2003; it’s really thrilling to have reached that goal. This technology enables us to look at individual proteins that we always knew were involved in invasion, but we never knew what they did or where they were, and that, we believe, is a real leap for malaria researchers worldwide

This work was supported by the National Health and Medical Research Council, The University of Melbourne, Canadian Institutes of Health, the University of Technology, Sydney, and the Australian Research Council.

This image is a composite showing the behavior of different parts of the malaria parasite as it invades a red blood cell, at nanometer scales. The three components of the malaria parasite are labeled with fluorescent proteins (blue = parasite nucleus, red = secretory organelle, green = tight junction). The red blood cell is superimposed on the image for context. Image 1 (Attachment): The parasite is about to invade the red blood cell (unseen to the right of the picture). The tight junction (green) is like a window that the parasite brings with it and inserts into the red blood cell to gain entry. Image 2 (Invasion): This image is mid-invasion, the first time this step has even been visualized. The parasite "opens" the window it has inserted into the cell, and walks through. The secretory organelle (red) secretes its contents through the tight junction (green) and creates a vacuole which the parasite lives within in the red blood cell. In this image we see the parasite nucleus (blue) moving through the ‘window’ into the cell. Image 3 (Sealing): The parasite has completed invasion and is within a vacuole inside the host red blood cell. The window has been closed again, and will break down at a later stage. The parasite is now enclosed within its vacuole (red), the nucleus (blue) showing the parasite safely inside.
Penny Fannin
fannin@wehi.edu.au