South African Pienaar Joins Tottenham, Not Chelsea

South Africna MidFielder, Steven Pienaar

Everton midfielder Steven Pienaar has agreed to join Tottenham after the two clubs agreed a fee of about £2.5m.

The South Africa international, 28, who was nearing the end of his contract at Goodison Park has signed a four-year-deal with the north London club.

“To end speculation, I am going to Spurs,” confirmed Pienaar on his Twitter account earlier on Tuesday.

Chelsea also had a bid accepted for Pienaar by Everton, but failed to convince the player to join them.

“I’ve had brilliant years at Everton. It will always be special place in my heart.”

Spurs now hope the midfielder is granted a work permit in time for him to make his debut at Newcastle on Saturday.

They had seen an initial bid of £2m turned down before settling on a compromise figure of £2.5m with the Toffees after Chelsea had had a £3m bid accepted.

Tottenham boss Harry Redknapp, speaking after his team’s 0-0 draw with Manchester United on Saturday, said: “I think he is a good player. He can play left or right or down the middle. I like him.

“I would not want to be putting the chairman under any pressure to buy him, but at £2m or £3m, he’s certainly not dear is he?”

Pienaar joined Everton from Borussia Dortmund in 2007, initially on a season-long loan, and went on to make 132 appearances for the Toffees, scoring 12 goals.

He initially made his name in Europe at Ajax after joining them from their club partners Ajax Cape Town in January 2001, helping them to the Dutch title in 2002 and 2004 before joining Bundesliga outfit Dortmund in 2006.

Everton boss David Moyes had said in August that only a “sack-load of cash” would persuade him to sell a playmaker voted the club’s player of the season last term.

But Pienaar, who has scored one goal so far this season, has failed to replicate that form during this campaign and Moyes has decided to cash in as his contract winds down.

BBC Sports

Generic Malaria Drug Approval Granted to Glenmark Pharmaceuticals

The United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has granted Glenmark Pharmaceuticals final approval to sell a generic version of GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) malaria drug Malarone.

In April 2010, Glenmark settled a patent litigation with GlaxoSmithKline over atovaquone and proguanil hydrochloride 250 milligram/100mg tablets–the generic version of Malarone.

The Indian company can sell the generic tablets under a royalty-bearing license from GlaxoSmithKline in the third quarter of 2011, or earlier under certain circumstances.

KAM

Jermaine Jackson Released From Burkina Faso?

As we posted here last week, Jermaine Jackson, the brother of the pop Star Michael Jackson, was stuck in Burkina Faso, Africa, due to an expired passport and unpaid child support worth about $91,921. Jackson owes the money in back child support to Alejandra Genevieve Oaziaza, the mother of his two sons.
Under California law, unpaid payments exceeding $2,500 per month are grounds for the individual’s passport to automatically be flagged. According to the law, Jackson’s passport could not be renewed until the excessive amount was paid in full.

Surprisingly, however, sources from RadarOnline.com say they spotted Jackson driving through Calabasas, California earlier this weekend.

“He was driving a white Range Rover and had a blonde in the front seat next to him,” the witness claimed. “He was laughing and looked like he didn’t have a care in the world.”

It is not clear yet whether Jackson got amnesty from the US Embassy in Ouagadougou and also whether the unpaid child support has been settled.
Are you surprised such a word class celebrity owes child support dues? Do you think Jackson should have been allowed to come back to the US if he still has not paid the child support?

jermaine jackson

Côte d’Ivoire: Gbagbo Loyalists Open fire towards UN security patrol

 

18 January 2011 –Forces loyal to former president of Côte d’Ivoire, Laurent Gbagbo, who refuses to step down despite his defeat in November’s elections, opened fire last night towards United Nations peacekeepers in charge of security for a top African Union (AU) emissary, according to the UN peacekeeping mission in the country.

Deploring the repeated acts of aggression against its patrols, the UN Operation in Côte d’Ivoire (UNOCI) reported today that its security forces stationed at the Pullman Hotel were waiting for the arrival of the AU Emissary, Kenya’s Prime Minister Raila Odinga, who was escorted by a UNOCI patrol, when a group of young people from the Gbagbo camp encircled them.

“The armed elements, which were supporting them, opened fire in the direction of the UNOCI vehicles forcing the peacekeepers to respond by shooting in the air,” the mission said in a press statement.

It stressed that the version of events given by Ivorian state television, under Mr. Gbagbo’s control, was not based on fact.

“It was in fact part of an ongoing campaign whose objective is to incite hatred among President Gbagbo’s supporters against UNOCI,” it said in the statement, adding, “UNOCI reiterates its appeal for calm and serenity to ensure a favourable environment to find a solution to the current post-electoral crisis.”

The nearly 9,000-strong peacekeeping operation has been supporting efforts over the past seven years to reunify a country split by a civil war in 2002 into a government-controlled south and a rebel-held north.

November’s run-off election was meant to be a culminating point in this process; and the UN, the AU, the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) and many countries recognized opposition leader Alassane Ouattara as the clear victor. But Mr. Gbagbo rejected the outcome of the poll, refused to step down and demanded UNOCI’s withdrawal – which the UN has rejected.

The resulting turmoil has displaced tens of thousands of people, mainly in the west of the country where the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) is strengthening its presence to cope with the crisis.

UNHCR teams have been deployed in the towns of Man and Danané to register internally displaced people (IDPs) and monitor their protection needs. More than 18,000 people are believed to be in this area.

The UN refugee agency “is particularly concerned about conditions at the Catholic mission in the town of Duékoué, where some 13,000 people have sought shelter,” the agency said in a statement today. “The church compound there does not have the sanitation facilities to cope with the numbers, garbage is accumulating, and the risks of disease are growing.”

Meanwhile in eastern Liberia, where some 30,000 refugees have fled from Côte d’Ivoire, work is under way on the construction of a new camp in the town of Bahn but the difficult jungle conditions have made this slower going than anticipated, UNHCR reported. Two bulldozers have been brought in from Sierra Leone to speed up the clearing of land, which until now has been done by hand. UNHCR estimates that some 600 Ivorians are crossing the border into Liberia each day.

In Geneva, humanitarian agencies with a presence in West Africa today launched a $32.7 million regional emergency plan in order to be prepared for humanitarian needs that could arise due to Côte d’Ivoire’s political crisis. The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) has warned that two millions Ivorians – including 100,000 refugees and 450,000 IDPs – could be affected if a major humanitarian crisis develops.

The six-month appeal aims to allow UN agencies and non-governmental organizations to secure funds that would be used to provide a timely and effective humanitarian aid in Côte d’Ivoire and in the neighbouring countries of Guinea, Mali, Burkina Faso and Ghana in vital sectors. The aid will include support for protection, health, water and sanitation, education, food and nutrition. The funds will also help assist those already affected by the ongoing crisis.

In a statement today, OCHA said that the current crisis is already affecting lives and livelihoods of both the displaced and host communities. Displaced children are unable to attend school and families have lost their sources of income. Humanitarian aid workers also estimate that as many as 420,000 nationals of neighboring countries currently living in Côte d’Ivoire could return to their countries of origin and require assistance, notably in transit camps, should the situation further deteriorate.

Uganda:Several Christians Hastily Convert to Islam For Clothes

Geof Magga

A group of Christians has suddenly converted to Islam in order to receive free items donated by a Dubai-based company and the United Arab Emirates Red Crescent.

This comes after Muslim landslide victims from Mount Elgon in eastern Uganda (locally called Baduda) who were relocated by the government to the western Ugandan district of Kiryandongo received items donated by a Dubai-based company called Al Crownfolest and the Red Crescent society of United Arab Emirates.

The donated items, worth over $500,000, and solicited by a Ugandan-based local NGO called Iganga Islamic Development Association were distributed last Thursday. Among the items donated were over 3,000 new pairs of trousers, 1,000 copies of the Islamic holy Koran, 500 T-shirts, 2,000 belts and thousands of skirts. The items included no Bibles.

Hasty Conversions

On seeing the Muslims clad in new clothes, and knowing that more clothes were to be distributed soon, over 20 Christians from the resettlement village and neighboring villages converted to Islam in order to get their share of the items.

All items were handed to the Muslim Baduda by the Director of Iganga Islamic Development Association, Abdul Majid Nkolawano. Some were kept in the local resettlement store for future distribution to Muslims by the resettlement village officials.

A neighboring village chief, George Nangwali, said, “Some Christians decided to convert to Islam after establishing that more donations were to be distributed soon. I have learned of three young men who have got circumcised in the last three days so that they become Muslims and qualify to get donated items. Most of the converts are women.”

After Nangwali confirmed that over 20 people had crossed from Christianity to Islam, one of the leaders of the resettled community, Justus Wambede, suggested that poverty and lack of resources could be responsible for the conversions.

Basic Requirements

“People are suffering from poverty. The government gives us some food but it is not enough. We do not have cooking oil and paraffin to light our lanterns. Some people want to get the items so that they sell and get to buy basic requirements” Wambede said.

One of the converts, Isaac Kule, says he “converted to Islam because of two reasons. One, so that I get some of the donated items, and two, because ministry of health ministry encourages us to get circumcised as one of the ways of reducing on the risk of getting infected by HIV-AIDS.” It is not clear who paid for Kule’s circumcision.

The director of Iganga Islamic Development Association, Abdul Majid Nkolawano, said that he asked for donations after seeing the sorry state in which the resettled people were living.

“On learning about the plight of these people, I contacted organizations in UAE for assistance,” said Nkolawano. “We will continue to look for more help from our friends all over the world.”

Last year, over 300 people were buried by mudslides in eastern Uganda, on the slopes of mountain Elgon, 350 kilometers from Kampala, in a village called Bududa. Because of that accident, the government decided to relocate people living on the slopes of the mountain to other parts of the country.

Global Action on Malaria Resistance Urgent, WHO

The WHO has launched a worldwide ‘call to action’ to governments, agencies, researchers and non-governmental organisations over the malaria parasite’s growing resistance to the most potent weapon against it — the drug, artemisinin.

If recently discovered resistance spreads, said the WHO, the formidable successes of anti-malaria campaigns in recent years will be threatened. Artemisinin lies at the heart of malaria treatment worldwide and has no obvious successor.

“The consequences of widespread resistance to artemisinins would be catastrophic,” WHO director-general Margaret Chan told a press conference held after the launch of the ‘Global plan for artemisinin resistance containment’ yesterday (12 January).

“We need to maintain this medicine. What is at stake it is not just the goals on malaria but, frankly, the whole related Millennium Development Goals”, said Robert Newman, director of the WHO Global Malaria Programme.

Resistance to artemisinin was identified in the Plasmodium falciparum parasite on the Cambodia–Thailand border in studies conducted between 2001 and 2009. It is now reported in other areas of the Greater Mekong Subregion and some fear that the resistance will spread to Africa, where most malaria deaths occur.

GPARC calls for increased surveillance of resistance and improved access to diagnostics and treatment with artemisinin combination therapies (ACTs), and for more research on topics ranging from new methods for containing resistance to mathematical modelling of its spread.

“We don’t have all the knowledge and tools we need,” said Newman, adding that finding a quick way of testing for resistance should be a priority.

“We need a molecular marker for drug resistance that will allow us to know much earlier where this problem may be emerging.”

“The research community must be engaged in the development of new classes of antimalarial medicines that would not fall into the same trap of resistance that we have with ACTs,” he added.

But it will not be easy to pin down the parasite’s genes responsible for resistance, according to Pascal Ringwald, coordinator of the drug resistance and containment unit of the WHO Global Malaria Programme.

“It took 30 years to find the gene related to chloroquine resistance,” he told SciDev.Net. “There are thousands of mutant genes in the parasite and the problem is to find which mutation could be related to artemisinin resistance.”

“Now we have better molecular tools,” he said. “I don’t think it’s going to take another 30 years, but it is very difficult and also very expensive.”

Call for action also aims to bring in new funds to bridge the estimated US$175 million funding gap for the project. So far, the UK’s Department for International Development (DFID) has agreed to fund a project to improve surveillance and map the extent of resistance.

World Bank Predicts Nigeria’s Economy to See Sustained Growth

Nyarko Benso

Nigeria’s economy is expected to continue in its strong growth trend in 2011 with the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) expanding to 7.1 per cent before moderating in 2012 at 6.2 per cent.

The World Bank also disclosed its intent to see the non-oil sector become the major driver of economic growth in the country in 2011 following benefits from new offshore developments and an improved security situation in the Niger Delta region.

GLOCALISATION: A Development Model for Africa

Glocalisation is both an idea and a process. As an idea, ‘it refers to a set of principles wherein developing sovereign national states in the Global community, will formulate policies of regional and local content for the actualization of development in their respective regions. As a process, ”Glocalisation” is the beginning of a new era for developing states to attain optimum development vis-à-vis globalizing the Local, and localizing the global’.

In other words, leaders and policy makers of developing nations must acknowledge that workable solutions to the challenges facing their regions must best be sourced ‘locally’ vis-à-vis globalizing the local, and localizing the global. Granted, the world is a Global Village. In the pre- Information and Communication Technologies (ICT) world, economic advancement was not demographically defined; rather it came out of the level of the scientific and technological know-how each country was exposed to. The advanced countries of the western hemisphere hoarded as much scientific and technological information as possible leaving the Third World nations in the dust. Countries with large populations like the BRIC (Brazil, Russia, India & China) experienced major hiccups: we can well remember the near collapse of the Brazilian currency in the 1980s, the widespread hunger in India and China (not forgetting that Japan once colonized China, but today China has overtaken Japan as the world’s 2nd largest economy).

However, access to scientific and technological information has known very little restriction today, as the nations above (BRIC) made the best of it, investing heavily on education, the process through which intellectual capital is built. This has to a large extent facilitated rapid growth and development of these nations especially those with common origin, interest, culture, philosophies amongst others. Needless to state why we have nations forming alliances to promote their common interest such as the European Union, African Union, Asian Tigers, etc.

Suffice to state that the development of nations as mentioned above can largely be attributed to the application of principles inherent in the concept of GLOCALISATION which requires an independent nation(s) though recognizing her inclusion in the comity of nations, design and articulate a policy framework of local content for the attainment of her developmental goals. Consider a research report by Goldman Sachs (2003): The rise of the BRIC (Brazil, Russia, India & China). The report as originally published predicted that China’s economy will surpass Germany in the next few years, Japan by 2015, the United States by 2041. India’s growth rate will be the highest – not China’s- and it will overtake Japan (today the world’s second-largest economy) by 2032. Taken together, the BRIC could be larger than the United States and the developed economies of Europe within 40years.

According to the Goldman Sachs report, China’s economy overtook Germany’s economy, a year earlier than expected, and overtook Japan in July 2010. It is now believed that the Chinese economy will overtake the United States by 2027. With India accounting for 10 of the 30 fastest growing urban areas in the world and 700million people moving to cities by 2050, its influence on the world economy will be bigger and quicker than was implied in 2003 analysis.(source: Wikipedia)

Closely following the BRIC prediction is the 2004 Report on the NEXT ELEVEN {N-11}, where Nigeria is included among eleven nations warming up to also assert themselves in the global economic map. While China overtakes the United States as the greatest economic power in the world by 2047, Nigeria would become the 20th largest economy by 2025 and the 12th by 2050 ahead of G-7 giants, Italy and Canada.

Successive leaders coupled with a consistent local developmental plan have been able to take the countries in focus above to their present world status. India as been able to localize the global especially in the area of alternative health care. Most countries around the world seek after India’s healthcare expertise resulting in a rapid economic and social development to the nation. Japan has taken the world in the field of technology vis-à-vis globalizing the local, and localizing the global. Most of Japanese products compete favorably world over with those from the United States, U.K, Germany, Spain, just to mention a few. Same is true of Algeria and South-Africa, nations in Africa that have achieved remarkable development due to a consistent Local framework vis-à-vis globalizing the local, and localizing the global. South Africa hosted the famous FIFA world cup tournament in 2010, as the first Africa nation. Dubai of the United Arab Emirates hosts a ‘prototype’ of the world trade center (New York); a center for trade and tourism in Africa is non existent.

Needless to state that the countries making progress have learned to adapt international opportunities to their local benefits. Much can be learned by developing nations especially in Africa in achieving national and continental development from the concept of Glocalisation

Glocalisation will strengthen and give the needed impetus for Africans to proffer local solutions to the challenges facing the continent. Africa is well positioned on the world stage being endowed with numerous human and material resources to address its challenges with little or no external influence. While African owes the Global community of which it is an integral part for some of her achievement in commerce, healthcare, insurance, transportation, etc, much of the desired results yet to be recorded by the continent especially in the area of governance, Human Rights, freedom and legality can realistically be attained with the principle of Glocalisation.

Presently, a major challenge facing the continent of Africa is the political upheaval in IVORY COAST where the incumbent president – Lauren Gbagbo lost in the nation’s last general election to his opposition leader- Alassane Quattara and insists on holding on to power despite calls from the international community and regional heads that he hands over. Interestingly, African Leaders under the auspices of AFRICAN UNION have succeeded in the past in ousting a defiant and failed leader out of power. Examples are sierra-lone, Liberia, Kenya just to mention few. ECOWAS, a regional community of which Ivory Coast is a signatory to with Nigeria as its seat of power is about to use military measure as a last resort to make the vote of the people count if the incumbent insists on not vacating office. Much of this is of interest to political observers and people around the world, especially Africans. Challenges as above are addressed locally with consideration to external measures.  In addition, the age-long Niger Delta region crisis in Nigeria over resource control appears to be halted in 2010 when the government in power granted ‘AMNESTY’ or ‘STATE PARDON’ to the militants, leading to an unprecedented handing over of arms and ammunition by the aggrieved youths of the community. Many benefited from the federal government Rehabilitation Programs for the ex-militants which empowered the youths in various skills and trade. That in itself was a practical demonstration of principles inherent in Glocalisation.

African leaders must come to terms with the peculiar challenges facing the continent and in the spirit of the African continent, proffer local solutions to the continent’s challenges. This is the time for African leaders to call back home Africans in the Diaspora to contribute towards the development of the continent using their international exposure and experience in all field of human endeavors. This will in turn translate into globalizing the local, and localizing the global for the benefit of the continent and its people.

The Millennium Development Goals (MDGS) of the third world nations will be realized only if the principles of Glocalisation are applied. African Leaders must consolidate effort towards the actualization of the MGDs. In my view, African leaders through the African Union should develop a long term development plan of Local Content geared towards addressing Poverty, Education, Mortality, Human Rights, etc., which are the issues embedded in the MDGs. Hence, there should be a’ Master-Plan’ out of which regional bodies in Africa-(ECOWAS, SADC) draw their individual plans. The MGDs should be a ‘driving force’ for African leaders to take the continent to its next level in the global community. Imagine a time when the western region of Africa connects the East, South and North through an integrated Rail system….(AFROLINE), when an African University is rated amongst the best five in the world; when a common mechanized agricultural system is developed; when the average African lives above one dollar per-day; when we can rely on our indigenous medical experts in handling terminal ailments such as cancer; and when our leaders plays high value in service devoid of corruption, violence, abuse of power and so on. All these can be achieved when principles inherent in Glocalisation are holistically applied in Africa.