Jerome Boateng Wants to Leave Man City for Bayern Munich

Berlin-born Boateng wants a move back to his native Germany

Manchester City defender Jerome Boateng wants to return to the German league by joining Bayern Munich.

The 22-year-old move to City last summer on a five-year deal from Hamburg but has become frustrated at Eastlands.

He wants to play at centre-back and not the right-back slot he usually occupies for City. He said: “It is all about whether I am released. I hope it works.

“Bayern are bigger than City, they are one of the top six teams in Europe. To play for them would be an honour.”

A stumbling block over any deal could be the fee for Boateng, whose first season at City was disrupted by injury and limited him to 24 appearances.

His last game for City was on 2 March in the FA Cup fifth round victory over Aston Villa.

Despite City going on to lift the Cup and qualify for the Champions League, Boateng is keen to leave in order to improve his international prospects with Germany.

“I would like to go to Munich. On my side everything is clear,” said Boateng.

“I have already told [City manager] Roberto Mancini that I want to play in central defence and not at full-back.

“Bayern have indicated I will play in the centre. To play there regularly is important for me because I will have a better chance of playing in the national team.”

Dutch Wesley Sneijder Pledges Future to Inter Milan

Wesley Sneijder Pledges Future to Inter Milan

Wesley Sneijder has moved to end speculation over his future by insisting he wants to stay with current club Inter Milan.

The 27-year-old playmaker has been mooted as a target for Chelsea and Manchester United but is set to remain at the San Siro.

“Milan is marvellous, picturesque and full of elegance. I love it,” Sneijder told the Inter website.

“At the moment I am very happy here and I don’t see why I should leave.”

The Holland international joined Inter in the summer of 2009 and played a major part in helping Inter win the Treble of the Champions League, Serie A and Coppa Italia in his first season.

The Italian club finished second in the league and got to the last eight of the Champions League during the last campaign, with their only trophy coming when they beat Palermo to win the Coppa Italia.

Sneijder, who scored four goals in 25 outings in a season hampered by injury, has a contract running until 2015 with Inter and his commitment to the club will disappoint potential suitors.

“There is a family atmosphere at Inter and there are all the ingredients to aim high,” added Sneijder.

U.S. Seeks Greater Economic Role in Africa

By PETER WONACOTT

LUSAKA, Zambia—U.S. officials and business leaders have gathered here for a bout of soul-searching on how to lift trade and investment in Africa, underlining a broad recognition that American companies are trailing those from China and India in tapping the continent’s economic opportunities.

The meeting in Zambia has drawn one of the largest U.S. delegations to Africa in years. It includes U.S. Trade Representative Ron Kirk and U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who arrives in the capital Lusaka on Friday. She is the first U.S. secretary of state to visit Zambia in 30 years.

Mr. Kirk said he was “sobered by the reality that we are just at the beginning” of a broader economic ties with Africa.

The focus of the meeting is the African Growth and Opportunities Act, or Agoa, an 11-year-old piece of U.S. legislation that provides preferential access to the American market for more than 1,800 African products. It covers 37 countries in sub-Saharan Africa, with a handful of others disqualified because of coups and corruption.

Many participants say the U.S. needs a new approach to a continent that is projected to grow faster than any other global region over the next five years. They say trade assistance, along with humanitarian aid, together aren’t enough to tap a market with a billion potential consumers.

“America has more medical doctors and Ph.D.s here than businessmen,” says Greg Marchand, who runs a telecommunications and consulting company in Zambia called Gizmos Solutions Ltd. “And we wonder why we aren’t doing a lot of business.”

The U.S. remains the top donor to Africa, disbursing $7.6 billion in 2009, according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.

China isn’t a member of the OECD, and doesn’t provide detailed breakdowns of aid and investment to Africa. But in 2009, China became Africa’s largest trade partner. In the first 11 months of last year, China’s trade with Africa amounted to $114.81 billion, according to the Chinese government’s White Paper on the topic. U.S. trade with Africa for the period reached $103 billion, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

China has tied much of its trade and investment to Africa with preferential loan deals, often aimed at securing supplies of oil, gas and minerals. Top-ranking Chinese officials regularly visit African countries to cement these agreements.

“The goal of China is mercantilist; they do what they need to do to get access to natural resources,” says Paul Ryberg, the Washington-based president for the African Coalition for Trade, which represents African companies in the U.S. The centerpiece of U.S. economic engagement, Agoa, says Mr. Ryberg “is economic development, creation of jobs and the creation of a middle class to buy our products.”

But while Agoa boosted African exports to the U.S.—10 times from its inception to 2008—it has failed to broaden significantly the trade relationship. Energy exports account for about 90% of sub-Saharan African trade to the U.S., according to a study published last month by the Brookings Institution, a Washington think tank.

That type of trade relationship is seen as too narrow to seize new opportunities linked to Africa’s accelerating economic growth and new consumers.

The International Monetary Fund predicts sub-Saharan Africa—a collection of 47 countries—will grow 5.5% this year and 6% in 2012. Over the next five years, the IMF predicts that average growth of sub-Saharan countries will be higher than other regions. The African Development Bank Group estimates a new consumer class on the continent of 300 million people.

Yet the continent remains burdened by political corruption and poor infrastructure—problems that ratchet up the price of goods, particularly in many landlocked countries. Most African countries rank at the bottom of the World Bank’s Ease of Doing Business survey.

Companies from China, India and Brazil generally have been less daunted by such challenges. Bharti Airtel Ltd., India’s largest phone company, now operates in 16 African countries, part of a dramatic expansion of Indian investment in Africa. This month, Bharti Airtel said it signed a deal with China’s Huawei Technologies Co. to help manage and modernize its network in Africa.

U.S. officials say American companies, not the government, must pursue African business opportunities. In most African countries U.S. investment lags far behind American aid. In Zambia, for example, the U.S. foreign direct investment was $79 million in 2008, up 3.9% from the year before, according to USTR. Meanwhile, the U.S. Agency for International Development estimated it spent $390 million in Zambia last year, up from $300 million in 2009.

Outside Lusaka, China has invested more than $1 billion in an investment zone near the Chambishi copper belt. The zone includes 14 Chinese companies, mostly mining and equipment makers.

China’s investment in Zambia hasn’t been without its troubles. In March, 600 workers went on strike demanding a 50% pay increase, the latest in a long list of labor disputes. Meanwhile, Zambia’s opposition politicians have accused China of taking away jobs from Zambians and subjecting their country to a new form of colonization.

At the same time, the southern African economy is showing signs of moving beyond its dependence on minerals. Lusaka’s commercial real-estate market is crammed with new tenants, even as new buildings and shopping malls go up.

The 36-year old Mr. Marchand, an entrepreneur from Chicago, says he arrived in 2005 with four laptops, a printer and $100,000 to start his telecom and consulting company. The U.S. government assistance, he says, was minimal. “They issued me a passport.”

At least now the U.S. government is paying attention, says Mr. Marchand, who is also the president of a new American Chamber of Commerce in Zambia. On Saturday, U.S. Secretary Clinton and U.S. Trade Representative Kirk are scheduled to attend the chamber’s opening ceremony.

—Jackie Bischof in Johannesburg contributed to this article.

In Africa, Clinton will See a Continent Starved for Aid, Change

Hillary Clinton

(CNN) — Hillary Clinton’s weeklong trip to sub-Saharan Africa takes her to a continent hungry for economic growth and political accountability but still shackled by poverty and government corruption.

The U.S. secretary of state will see the effects of that poverty close-up:

— In Tanzania, she’ll meet with women who are victims of gender-based violence.

— In Ethiopia, she’ll visit a hospital where women are suffering from fistula, their internal organs scarred. They’ve been abandoned by their husbands and ostracized by their communities.

She also will see initiatives designed to improve Africans’ lives, such as programs providing mothers and children with nutritional food for the critical 1,000-day period from the start of a woman’s pregnancy until her child’s second birthday.

At her first stop Friday in Lusaka, Zambia, Clinton will speak to the 2011 U.S.-Sub-Saharan Africa Trade and Economic Cooperation Forum, the centerpiece of the United States government’s trade policy with sub-Saharan Africa. It gives trade preferences to countries of the region that meet criteria on economic, legal and human rights issues.

Eligible countries can export nearly 6,500 products — including apparel, automobiles, footwear and fruit — duty-free to the U.S.

At the forum, government officials, business leaders and civil activists from African countries and the United States will discuss trade, business and investment opportunities in Africa. Clinton will meet with participants in the African Women’s Entrepreneurship Program, an outreach, education and engagement initiative that aims to give African women entrepreneurs the tools to fight for change in their communities.

“People in Africa are very hopeful,” says Melvin Ayogu, fellow at the Brookings Institution’s Africa Growth Initiative, but when they look at their governments “they often see the politics of impoverishing people to stay in power.”

In Zambia, Tanzania and Ethiopia, Clinton will meet with government officials, stressing U.S. goals of fostering good governance and protection of human rights.

In strategically located Zambia, Clinton will meet with President Rupiah Bwezani Banda, but she also will confer with opposition presidential candidates Michael Sata and Hakainde Hichilema.

In Tanzania, she heads for the State House and a meeting with President Jakaya Kikwete then flies to Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, for a speech to the African Union.

One of her last events on her trip will highlight a priority issue for Clinton: cookstoves. As the Global Alliance for Clean Cookstoves notes, cooking is one of the most dangerous activities for a woman in many developing countries.

Nearly three billion people use traditional cookstoves that burn wood and create smoke that causes almost 2 million premature deaths annually — more than twice the number from malaria, according to the Global Alliance for Clean Cookstoves. Breathing in toxic fumes, women and children develop pneumonia, emphysema, cataracts, lung cancer and other illnesses.

At a Peace Corps building in Addis Ababa, Clinton will meet with local women who make money selling new, clean cookstoves.

“The next time you sit down with your own family to eat, please take a moment to imagine the smell of smoke, feel it in your lungs, see the soot building up on the walls,” Clinton said in September of 2010. New, clean cookstoves, she said, can save millions of lives.

“The benefits from this initiative,” she said, “will be cleaner and safer homes, and that will, in turn, ripple out for healthier families, stronger communities, and more stable societies.”

Chelsea Offers Michael Essien To Inter Milan

Chelsea have shocked Ghanaian football fans after revelation in the Italian media that they have offered Michael Essien to Inter Milan for Wesley Sneijder.

Accoding to the report in one of the respected sports newspapers in Italy, Inter Milan president Massimo Moratti has been offered TWO players by Chelsea for Wesley Sneijder.

Corriere dello Sport says Chelsea have made contact with Inter about a deal for the Holland international with key player Essien going in the opposite direction.

The Blues know they face competition from Manchester United for the Dutchman and hope to convince Moratti to part with the playmaker by offering players in exchange.

Chelsea have offered Florent Malouda and Michael Essien.

Moratti likes both midfielders, but will leave the final decision with coach Leonardo.

Five Mexico Soccer Players Test Positive for Banned Substance

Rodriguez in action against El Salvador at the Gold Cup

Five Mexico internationals have tested positive for the banned substance Clenbuterol.

The players named are goalkeeper Guillermo Ochoa, defenders Francisco Rodriguez and Edgar Duenas and midfielders Antonio Naelson ‘Sinha’ and Christian Bermudez.

Mexico are taking part in Concacaf Gold Cup in the United States.

They beat El Salvador 5-0 in their opening match and face Cuba on Thursday in Charlotte, North Carolina.

The general secretary of the Mexican Football Federation (Femexfut) Decio de Maria said the quintet had been suspended from the tournament.

He added that any further sanctions, which could include bans of up to two years, would be determined by Femexfut.

“Late on Wednesday we received the anti-doping analysis of 14 players of the ‘Tri’ [national team] that were done on 21 May and five players showed positive,” De Maria announced at a news conference.

Did you know?

Tour de France winner Alberto Contador tested positive for Clenbuterol in 2010 – he was later acquitted

“The substance for which they were positive is Clenbuterol. The players will be withdrawn from coach Jose Manuel de la Torre’s team.”

De Maria added: “The cause is believed to be because of [eating] beef or chicken between 17 and 20 May so an investigation will be made with the food suppliers. For the time being we don’t see any negligence by anyone, not even theirs.

“We know there is a health alert throughout the country because of food contaminated with Clenbuterol and that will be taken into account for the investigation.”

In April, Germany’s anti-doping agency [Nada] advised against athletes eating products from Mexico because it might increase the risk of involuntary positive doping results. Mexico denied there was a problem.

People that Make it in Life Operate within their Passion

(Isaac submitted this article which seems to continue from exactly where I ended in my last post. Enjoy. I’ll be back with the next in the series)

By Isaac Oluyi

Knowledge acquisition is good, but it is much better when you put the knowledge you have acquired to judicious use. It is only proper application of knowledge that gives you power. You may have all the degrees in the world without being fulfilled in life. Degrees do not bring fulfilment. It is only when you do what you have passion for that fun and fulfilment become your lot.

When Phillips Emegwali, Africa’s version of Bill Gates in terms of computer wizardry, said “knowledge is the currency of the world, while the rest is capital”, he failed to add that knowledge only becomes the currency of the world if it is in your area of passion. No matter the knowledge you have, once it is devoid of passion, it may be hard to make the most of it. As an individual, I love writing and public speaking. The two are like second nature to me. I can put words together within a twinkle of an eye to form beautiful expressions. I know this is where my passion lies. So my studying Literature-in-English in the university was not a happenstance. It was a carefully thought out plan. Despite the fact that I work as an administrator today I still write and speak professionally.

Another striking illustration is my love for animals. I have always loved rearing animals from childhood. I remember Continue reading “People that Make it in Life Operate within their Passion”

UNICEF and Partners Launch Report on Preventing HIV Among Young People

JOHANNESBURG, South Africa, 2 June 2011 – In South Africa, the nation with the largest number of young people living with HIV, the destructive nature of the epidemic can be better understood than anywhere else in the world. According to a global report released here yesterday by UNICEF and its partners, one in three young people newly infected with the virus each year is from either South Africa or Nigeria.

The report – ‘Opportunity in Crisis: Preventing HIV from early adolescence to young adulthood’ – confirms that young people worldwide face a significant risk of HIV infection every day. And their vulnerability is heightened by failures to provide them with adequate information and essential services.

“In 2009 alone, these realities, gaps and inefficiencies in response translated to an estimated 890,000 new infections among young people worldwide,” said UNICEF Regional Director for Eastern and Southern Africa Elhadj As Sy.

Opportunities for youth

For the young men and women of ‘loveLife’, South Africa’s largest national prevention initiative for youth, HIV is a central fact of life and work. To ensure that peers in their communities have the information needed to protect themselves, they engage in face-to-face interaction and mass media campaigns. They also produce dramas and radio shows, and organize debates on youth and HIV.

Young activists from loveLife participated in a panel discussion at the launch of ‘Opportunity in Crisis’ along with representatives of the partners who jointly produced the report – including UNICEF, UNAIDS, the UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, the UN Population Fund, the International Labour Organization, the World Health Organization and the World Bank.

“We need to create opportunities for young people,” said one youth panellist. “If I am a young person who doesn’t work but still have to be a breadwinner at home, it will be very easy for me to submit to peer pressure, to date a sugar daddy and to do all the things that will lead me to be at risk of HIV infection.”

Progress on prevention

Despite such challenges, ‘Opportunity in Crisis’ acknowledges that some progress has been made in preventing new infections among young people. In many high-burden countries, HIV prevalence and incidence have declined.

While in 2001 there were 5.7 million young people living with HIV worldwide, the figure now stands at approximately 5 million. Nevertheless, the actual reduction – 12 per cent – represents less than half the 25 per cent target set by world leaders a decade ago.
Moreover, African youth, and especially young women in Africa, are the most vulnerable in the battle against HIV.

“The grim picture, particularly the harsh reality faced by African youth, should exhort us all to take a pause and reflect on the commitments that were promised to ensure safe passage to a healthy and productive adulthood,” said Mr. Sy. “Prevention of new infections requires much more commitment from families, teachers and leaders to establish a safe and protective environment for the most vulnerable, especially the girls.”

Package of interventions

Participants in the report’s launch pointed out that reducing the number of new infections will require greater attention to prevention, care and support for adolescents and young people at risk. They pointed out, as well, that the world now knows what really works to prevent HIV transmission in young people. This package of interventions includes:

  • Abstaining from sex and not injecting drugs
  • Correct and consistent use of male and female condoms
  • Medical male circumcision
  • Needle and syringe exchange programmes as part of a comprehensive harm-reduction programme
  • Using antiretroviral drugs as treatment (which lowers the chance of transmission) or as post-exposure prevention
  • And communication for social and behavioural change

On the last point in particular, young people themselves are key to the success of prevention efforts. In the process of becoming peer educators like the loveLife activists, they can also build self-confidence and acquire new skills.

‘Making a difference’

“I didn’t know I love radio, but now it has become my favourite thing in the world,” said Xolani Khoza, 19, a radio producer working with loveLife in Orange Farm, an impoverished neighbourhood near Johannesburg.

“Around 400 kids come to our youth centre every day after school just to listen to our shows. Our show doesn’t only educate them on important issues such as teenage pregnancy but all the other issues affecting their lives,” Xolani added.

“I was very shy before,” said Kedibone Segonote, 19, another peer educator. “After meeting and talking to many young people since I joined loveLife, I have gained much confidence and feel that I am really making a difference in their lives.”