Notice: Function _load_textdomain_just_in_time was called incorrectly. Translation loading for the captcha-bank domain was triggered too early. This is usually an indicator for some code in the plugin or theme running too early. Translations should be loaded at the init action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home1/c306474/public_html/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6131
Notice: Function _load_textdomain_just_in_time was called incorrectly. Translation loading for the email-users domain was triggered too early. This is usually an indicator for some code in the plugin or theme running too early. Translations should be loaded at the init action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home1/c306474/public_html/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6131
Notice: Function _load_textdomain_just_in_time was called incorrectly. Translation loading for the wordpress-seo domain was triggered too early. This is usually an indicator for some code in the plugin or theme running too early. Translations should be loaded at the init action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home1/c306474/public_html/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6131 TalkAfrique - Page 90 of 138 - Connecting To Advance Deprecated: Function WP_Dependencies->add_data() was called with an argument that is deprecated since version 6.9.0! IE conditional comments are ignored by all supported browsers. in /home1/c306474/public_html/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6131
Deprecated: Function WP_Dependencies->add_data() was called with an argument that is deprecated since version 6.9.0! IE conditional comments are ignored by all supported browsers. in /home1/c306474/public_html/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6131
The recent ‘people’s revolt’ against the ousted President Hosni Mubarak of Egypt started on facebook and twitter. Politics and all its contents and discontents now find relevance mostly on the internet. In fact, no web attention, no politics. Politicians have also seized the opportunity of technology to promote their ideas and raise awareness about their policies. President Goodluck Jonathan of Nigeria made his first declaration to contest 2011 elections on the Facebook. We should have known that the time would come when ‘techno-democratic forces will drive silent revolutions across the globe’ (Tunde Oseni The Economist, 19 June, 2008).
This is the era of political technology (not necessarily in the Michel Foucault way please) and technological politics! It reached the peak when, for the first time in history, a presidential candidate, Senator Barack Obama, as he then was, raised a youth-focused campaign from Chicago to reach the nooks and crannies of the United States. Obama literally started it!
Not only was Senator Obama able to use the internet as a political technology, he also changed the way and manner politics was played. For the first time, a presidential candidate raised millions of dollars via the internet. With oratory prowess and a highly electrifying message of change and hope, Senator Obama changed the face of politics. Before other candidates could realize the power of politics in technology and the power of technology in politics, Obama had raced over. While they were too busy with the old idea of political marketing, Mr Obama had raised several volunteers and foot soldiers from millions of facebooking and twittering youths. While his opponents were using analogue, Mr Obama had gone digital.
Digital democracy is now moving fast across the world. The internet is now the most important tool of politicking. Those who want to catch the majority of their constituents, which in most cases are the youths, have come to terms with the inevitable use of the internet. It is no longer enough to have good ideas; you have got to sell them digitally. It is no longer enough to claim follower-ship; you have got to tell us online. Leaders are now seen in the image which the internet users create for them. No doubt, the cyberspace is limited in developing countries, and could be a very rowdy space for cacophonous views and counter-views, but the cyberspace has come to be a very significant avenue for democratic political mobilization.
[ad#Adsense-200by200sq]
There is no limitation to what you can achieve in life. The only limitation to achieving great feats in life is the one set by you. Therefore, no matter what you are going through; no matter where you are at the moment, be admonished that it is not yet over. There is always a chance to start over. If you have failed on any project, there is good news for you: the word “fail” simply means ‘First Attempt in Learning”. You can start all over again. The fact that you are alive is an indication that you still have a second chance. Hear Helen Keller “when one door of happiness closes, another opens; but often we look so long at the closed-door that we do not see the one which has been opened for us”
What this implies is that you do not need to continuously brood over what has happened as you have no power over it. You must be aware that what has been done cannot be undone. You can begin again when you see any setback in life as a learning process and press on with a positive attitude. There is nothing that happens to man in life that God does not know about. This thus suggests that whatever happens to us has a purpose and nothing happens by accident.
If you allow this to sink into your system, you will begin to see that the story of a man does not always unfold like a mathematical calculation on the principle that two and two make four; sometimes in life they make five or even minus three, and sometimes the black-board topples down in the middle of the sum, leaving the teacher with the black eye! We must therefore not lose sight of the fact that obstacles are there to toughen and prepare us for the challenges ahead.
This realization is possible depending on how you view any predicament you find yourselves in. Do you see the half-filled cup of water as “half-empty” or “half-full”? The way you describe such a cup of water will go a long way to depict your outlook on life. Imbibe a positive attitude to life and you will reach higher altitude and change your life for ever.
[ad#Adsense_468x60]
Female broadcast journalist of Citi FM and Metro TV
Female broadcast journalist of Citi FM and Metro TV, pretty-faced Shamima Muslim, has waded into the controversy of why some Ghanaian men are paying money to increase the size of their sex organs, commonly referred to as penis enlargement..
The issue became a topical one after a man was recently arrested and sent to court because he has a penis enlargement device which he claims he uses to elongate and fatten the penis for a fee so at to make it a better tool for good sex.
Shamima, on one of her radio programs on Citi FM, explained that in her view, some sizes of sex organs do really matter because they have a direct link to how good a round of sex can be. Simply put, she agrees that size matters.
Her comments on the subject came as a surprise as Shamima is largely perceived as an exceptionally pious person that could pass for a catholic nun in a nunnery.
Richard Sky, a college of Shamima, took the issue up on his facebook wall and the feedback was overwhelming.
Interestingly, Shamima has since declined to comment further on the matter and the debate continues on whether or not it is a crime to have a device that enlarges the penis whereas it is not a crime to have devices that enlarge the arms and shoulders.
John Dramani Mahama, Vice President of Ghana
John Dramani Mahama, Vice President of Ghana
Watching the the Egyptian crowds as they listened to a speech by their now former president, Muhammad Hosni Sayyid Mubarak, who had been in power since the assassination of Anwar El Sadat in 1981, only confirmed what is becoming more and more obvious: that for Africa there is no going back to the way things were; the only way we can move is forward. But Egypt is only the latest evidence of this trend. Any astute observer is aware that the desire for democracy is spreading through the African world like a contagion.
In 2010 there were at least a dozen presidential democratic elections in African nations, places like Guinea that hadn’t had an election since 1958. In 2011 there are scheduled to be nearly two dozen presidential elections in various nations — including Egypt, which is currently in the midst of what could most certainly be called a people’s revolution.
Though the methods being employed by protesters can be alarming at times in their ferocity, the demand for freedom itself is not altogether surprising. Just as there were signs, over a half century ago, foreshadowing the collapse of colonialism on the continent, there have been signs recently pointing toward the end of an era of dictatorship. What is, however, most fascinating about this inevitable death is the pivotal as well as provocative role that digital technology is playing to bring it about.
For the most part in recent times, we Africans have taken our requests for democracy to the polls, not the streets. Unfortunately, in some nations, that has not resulted in any real change. And ultimately, that is what sparks all revolutions: the urgent, non-negotiable need for sustainable change.
When Tunisian authorities in the city of Sidi Bouzid seized Mohamed Bouazizi’s unlicensed produce cart and the unemployed computer-science graduate set himself aflame, it took no time at all for that act of protest to turn into a trending topic. After Bouazizi’s self-immolation, the youth in Sidi Bouzid took to the streets. Because of the broadcasts of a single satellite channel, the world watched as those young men displayed their rage and frustration — and a hashtag was created.
The final condition to create this perfect storm was, of course, the WikiLeaks release of classified U.S. State Department communications, revealing that even the ambassador of one of the nation’s strongest allies shared the beliefs of most Tunisians about their leader, Zine El Abidine Ben Ali: out of touch, surrounded by corruption, determined to stay in power. It’s no wonder that when protests began in Egypt, one of the first measures authorities took to quell the burgeoning insurrection was cutting off all access to the Internet. No Facebook; no Google; no YouTube; no Twitter; no WikiLeaks. Also cut off were SMS and BlackBerry Messenger services. And satellite television as well — no Al-Jazeera.
In December I made my first official visit to Egypt as vice president of Ghana. I met with the prime minister, Ahmed Shafik, and toured the Smart Villages high-tech park in Cairo, where more than a hundred technological companies like Microsoft and Hewlett-Packard are housed. I was impressed with how fully Egypt had embraced IT and thought that they might even serve as a model for other African countries. In many ways I was right to assume that; of course I had no idea that the example they would set with technology would be the attainment of social justice.
Repressive regimes thrive on ignorance — the ignorance of their people, and the ignorance of the outside world. For too long, the image of Africa has festered under the haze of the Western world’s ignorance and its resulting apathy. A relevant example of this is the unofficial annexation of Tunisia, Algeria and the continent’s other northern nations, for reasons of race alone, to the Middle East. (Though the majority of Egypt’s land mass is in Africa, a portion of that nation, the Sinai Peninsula, is in the Middle East, making it transcontinental.)
Africa is, and has been for the past several centuries, a continent of artificial boundaries and of divisions constructed along the lines of race, class, tribal and ethnic grouping — divisions cleverly constructed for the purposes of conquering. It is an infrastructure that, by design, lends itself to dictatorship, to the powerlessness of the masses.
It wasn’t so long ago that if you wanted to post a letter from Ghana, a former British colony, to any of the countries that border us — Côte d’Ivoire, Togo or Burkina Faso, all former French colonies — it would be routed through Europe first before finally arriving at its destination. The same was true of telephone calls, and it was virtually impossible to travel by air from one African country directly to another. Now all you need to be connected via computer or mobile phone to anyone anywhere in the world is a signal.
A little over a decade ago, as minister of communications, I was privileged to be part of the process of deregulating and liberalizing the previous monolithic state-owned telesector in Ghana. Initially, people did not understand the new technology and were hesitant to embrace the monumental changes that seemed to be required. Mobile telephony as a communication tool was, for all intents and purposes, in its infancy, and only a privileged few had access. Looking back now, I can feel only a sense of satisfaction in seeing how telecoms and ICT have exploded not only in Ghana but across the continent.
Every year since 2000 the Internet population in most African countries has doubled. Over the past decade, the spread of telecommunications and ICT in Africa went from below an average of 3 percent teledensity to a whopping almost 50 percent.
“Knowledge is power, and information is liberation,” Kofi Annan, former United Nations secretary-general, has been quoted as saying. Mobile phones and the Internet are liberating Africa in a way that even independence from colonialism could not. Digital technology is redefining our political landscape and will continue to do so in ways that we have yet to even imagine.
What makes digital technology such an ideal tool for social and political empowerment in the formation of new democracies is the fact that it is ever changing; new media and applications are constantly being produced to meet the shifting needs of users. When President Mubarak shut down the Internet in Egypt, Google and Twitter joined forces to create “Speak to Tweet” to help people circumvent the block and post their tweets.
History has shown that when it comes to the fight for freedom in Africa, as one nation goes, so goes the entire continent. I am hopeful that now democracy will ultimately prevail in Egypt. The people of Africa deserve to live with dignity and in peace, to have their voices heard, to be free. Perhaps then-U.S. Sen. Barack Obama said it best when, in his presidential-campaign speeches, he noted, “Nothing can stand in the way of the power of millions of voices calling for change.” Especially when they are armed with the unifying force of digital technology.
History has been made today after a protracted peaceful protest by the Egyptians that saw their despotic self-styled maximum ruler of 30 years, handed power over to the military, an institution he has used over these years to protect his stay. That feat was a fall-out of the scenario that played itself out in Tunisia weeks back. It is a further confirmation of the fact the people decide who rules them.
For too long African leaders are typified for their stay-put attitude in power. Once they come to power, they turn themselves into civilian presidents through manipulated elections and continue to renew their tenures of office with landslide victory election after election. Mubarak is not a child of circumstance; what happened to him today that witnessed his fall from glory to grass is a seed his had sown long before today. His firm grip on the North African Red Sea nation since the 1981 when Aswar Sadat was assassinated has brought more and more hardship on the people of Egypt than socio-political and economic benefits.
He turned the government to personal fiefdom where he nursed the plan of presenting his son as a presidential aspirant in the next general elections. It was not known till today if he would have run again for the highest office he had monopolized in the last three decades. Unlike the proverbial cat, he never has nine lives that could take him to next tenure he had envisioned. The people decided today that he must bow to the popular will, a process that began young people embarked on self-immolation in the face of hardship, abject poverty in the midst of plenty, high unemployment and high inflation rates in the country. The popular Tahir Square was the main stage for the over two weeks protest.
To Africa leaders, the fall of Ali-Ben Bongo of Tunisia weeks ago, and that of the former Egyptian strongman Mubarak should serve as a warning sign that it is not business as usual. In specific terms the other so-called ‘strongmen’ like Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe, M. Gaddafi of Libya and recently Laurent Gbagbo of Ivory Coast should know that the coast is not clear for their sit-tight attitude. My. Gbagbo has held on to power for about a decade and refused to relinquish power to the rightful winner of the presidential election despite international pressure. They should note it down in their dairy today that the era of complacency on the part of the ordinary people is over. The African people can now assert their right and at any time, they will decide who govern them.
Godfrey Eloho is Public Affairs Analyst based in Port Harcourt, Nigeria[ad#Adsense-200by200sq]
Chelsea striker Didier Drogba has pledged his future to the Ivory Coast until the 2014 World Cup.
Drogba will be 36 by the time the Brazil finals arrive, which could be his third World Cup.
“I’m not in the twilight of my career with the Ivory Coast,” Drogba said after reports that this week’s friendly against Mali could be his last game.
“I’ll also play my third World Cup in 2014 in Brazil. If I am called upon, I will answer.”
“I intend to participate in the next two African Nations Cups in 2012 and 2013,” he added.
Ivory Coast beat Mali 1-0 in France on Tuesday, after Elephants captain Drogba assisted in Dider Ya Konan’s match-winning goal after just three minutes.
It was the Chelsea star’s first match since the Ivory Coast exited the 2010 World Cup at the group stage.
“I could not leave like that,” explained a man who led Ivory Coast to the 2006 Nations Cup final.
“The day I decide to retire internationally, I will take care to say goodbye to the fans. I would never creep away on tiptoes.”
The two-time African Footballer of the Year made his international debut in 2002 and is approaching a half-century of goals after winning just over 70 caps.
Ivory Coast resume their qualifying campaign for the 2012 Nations Cup next month when they host Benin.
The Elephants currently lead Group H, which also includes Burundi and Rwanda, with maximum points from two games, four goals scored and none conceded.
Hey Dear, TGIFriday! Thank God for letting us see this blessed day 11th February 2011 – a day that the Lord has made so let’s begin this new day by rejoicing in the Lord. Praise God…Hallelujah!
Year 2011 is filled with great blessings & promises – as we continue to BELIEVE & DELIGHT in the Lord, our heart desires will be granted unto us this year in Jesus Name! Psalm 37:4 says- “Delight yourself in the Lord and he will give you the desires of your heart.”.
As we go into this weekend, be blessed as you listen to the lyrics of this song “Let go” by DeWayne Woods – http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ilaV1YYwZJ8
My dear! Be encouraged as you let go and let God have His way in that situation. Let go of all those worries and let God fix everything for you.
Have a blessed weekend
Hey Dear, TGIFriday!
Thank God for letting us see this blessed day 4th February 2011 – a day that the Lord has made so let’s begin this new day by rejoicing in the Lord. Praise God…Hallelujah!
Year 2011 is filled with great blessings & promises – as we continue to BELIEVE & DELIGHT in the Lord, our heart desires will be granted unto us this year in Jesus Name! Psalm 37:4 says- “Delight yourself in the Lord and he will give you the desires of your heart.”.
As we go into this weekend, be blessed as you listen to the lyrics of this song “I understand” by Smokie Norful – http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l0skD7d3usw
Be encouraged as you go into this new day and weekend knowing that God sees, God knows and God understands.
Enjoy a POWER-full and FAITH-filled weekend!
Some stars are celebrated for their bigger behinds
By Rajini Vaidyanathan
Surgeons are warning of the risks of DIY buttock enhancement after a 20-year-old woman died in the US from silicone injections. Why do so many women now want to be big-bottomed girls?
For some people, bigger is better.
But tragically, for Claudia Aderotimi, it was the desire for a more shapely behind which ended in her death.
The student, who lived in North London, had travelled to Philadelphia for silicone injections, but died after suffering chest pains and breathing trouble following the procedure.
Police investigating her death believe she made contact with a supplier over the internet, exchanging text messages and phone calls before flying over.
Even though the injection of liquid silicone for cosmetic purposes is banned in the US, there is a burgeoning black market in the substance.
For many, the risks of the banned injections are worth taking, for the reward of a shapelier bottom.
Several internet chatrooms discuss the injections freely.
“I wanna have one of them big ghetto booties that turn heads and make em drool. Just kidding, I just want enough to fill out my jeans,” writes one poster.
“I have received butt injections before. I get it done every six months… it is the first thing that men go crazy,” writes another, who says she is a dancer.
More women are getting buttock enhancement treatments for a fuller figure
Bootylicious
Claudia was a budding actress and model, who once wrote of how she “dreamt of taking the world by storm”.
Some people in the business say the pressure to look like stars who sport larger bottoms, such as Jennifer Lopez, Nicki Minaj, Buffy Carruth and Beyonce Knowles, is encouraging young women to turn to cosmetic procedures.
Many people don’t have a licence to practise, they’re injecting in hotels, spas and apartments – all non-sterile environments”
As a singer and actor who stars in music videos, Tassie Jackson says the urge to conform is powerful.
“I personally haven’t one done and I wouldn’t. But, in today’s society and the world that we live in, a lot of women feel the competition and the need to enhance their features,” she says.
“There are pressures to look like our favourite icons and role models.”
Some artists will look for women with “more curves” when choosing dancers for a music video, she adds.
References to so-called “booty”, a slang term for bottom, are commonplace in hip hop and rap music.
Beyonce Knowles’ former band Destiny’s Child even brought the word “Bootylicious” to mainstream consciousness. The term, which now even appears in the Oxford English Dictionary, is an amalgam of “booty” and the word “delicious”.
But it’s not just young people immersed in hip-hop culture who yearn for a bigger bottom.
The number of buttock enhancements across all ages has risen in recent years, with the most desired waist-to-hip ratio standing at around 0.7 – an hourglass figure.
There were more than 5,000 buttock lift and implant procedures (which are legal) carried out in the US in 2009, according to the American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery.
Fuller figure
It is difficult to know how many illegal treatments are taking place – but the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) says the number of cases leading to serious injury or death is on the rise.
Dr Constantino Mendieta, a plastic surgeon who specialises in buttock implants, dates the trend back to Jennifer Lopez’s rise to stardom in the 1990s.
“She showed how nice it can look when you’ve got the right curves,” says Dr Mendieta.
“It’s not that we never looked at the buttock before then, but it was a taboo subject. She drew attention to it in a good way.”
Demand for Dr Mendieta’s Miami Thong Lift operation – which transfers fat from other areas of the body to create a fuller bottom – has risen 20-fold in the last decade.
However, the cost of $14,000 (£8,700) is beyond the reach of some women, leading them to turn to cheaper, but dangerous methods to replicate the look.
“Many people don’t have a licence to practise, they’re injecting in hotels, spas and apartments – all non-sterile environments,” he says.
Cultural differences
Ms Mendible points out that buttock augmentation has been around for years – in the 19th Century, women wore “bustles” to exaggerate their behinds.
At the same time, she says, large bottomed-people have historically been a source of ridicule in many cultures.
The most striking example was the Hottentot Venus, a young African woman who was kidnapped and exhibited around Europe in colonial times because she had large buttocks.
“It was almost a freak show,” says Ms Mendible. “She was paraded around and exhibited as an example of what made African women different.”
By Rajini Vaidyanathan BBC News, Washington
Today, buttock augmentation procedures – both legal and illegal – are most common among African-American, Hispanic and transgender communities.
Female body types have always been a sign of what society aspires to, Ms Mendible says, with a lean muscular form preferred in capitalist countries, compared with larger rears in poorer places such as her native Cuba.
“There, if you’re thin it’s a sign of being poor, it’s not a sign of beauty,” she says.
“To them the voluptuous body is a sign of good health and fertility.”