Scientists Have Identified a New Type of Mosquito

Jonathan Amos

Scientists have identified a new type of mosquito. It is a subgroup of Anopheles gambiae, the insect species responsible for most of the malaria transmission in Africa.

Researchers tell Science magazine that this new mosquito appears to be very susceptible to the parasite that causes the disease – which raises concern.

The type may have evaded classification until now because it rests away from human dwellings where most scientific collections tend to be made.

Dr Michelle Riehle, from the Pasteur Institute in Paris, France, and colleagues made their discovery in Burkina Faso, where they gathered mosquitoes from ponds and puddles near villages over a period of four years.

When they examined these insects in the lab, they found many to be genetically distinct from any A. gambiae insects previously recorded.

The team grew generations of the unique subtype in the lab to assess their susceptibility to the malaria parasite and this revealed them to be especially vulnerable, more so than indoor-resting insect types.

But Pasteur team-member Dr Ken Vernick cautioned that these mosquitoes’ significance for malaria transmission had yet to be established.

“We are in a zone where we need to do some footwork in the field to identify a means to capture the wild adults of the outdoor-resting sub-group,” he told BBC News.

“Then we can test them and measure their level of infection with malaria, and then we can put a number on how much – if any – of the actual malaria transmission this outdoor-resting subgroup is responsible for.”

The researchers report that the new subgroup could be quite a recent development in mosquito evolution and urge further investigation to understand better the consequences for malaria control.

They also emphasise the need for more diverse collection strategies. The subtype is likely to have been missed, they say, because of the widespread practice of collecting mosquitoes for study inside houses. In one sense this has made sense – after biting, mosquitoes need to rest up and if they do this inside dwellings, the confined area will make them an easier target for trapping. However, the method is also likely to introduce a bias into the populations under study.

Commenting on the study, Dr Gareth Lycett, a malaria researcher from the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine in the UK, said it was an interesting advance that might have important implications for tackling malaria.

“To control malaria in an area you need to know what mosquitoes are passing on the disease in that district, and to do that you need sampling methods that record all significant disease vectors,” he told BBC News.

“You need to determine what they feed on, when and where, and whether they are infectious. And where non-house-resting mosquitoes are contributing to disease transmission, devise effective control methods that will complement bed-net usage and house spraying.

“A recent 12m-euro multinational project (AvecNET), funded by the European Union, and led by the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine has the specific aims of doing just this.”

According to the World Health Organization (WHO), there are more than 200 million cases of malaria worldwide each year, resulting in hundreds of thousands of deaths, most of them in Africa.

Malaria is caused by Plasmodium parasites. The parasites are spread to people through the bites of infected female Anopheles mosquitoes.

Jonathan Amos Science correspondent, BBC News

‘We Are All Red Inside’

By Tunde Oseni

One sunny Sunday

I ran across the Park

And I jogged along the mark

As I looked left and right

I saw faces around the pitch

Every kid of Mother Nature within reach

Wandering about

In the sea of life

From wherever each of us may come

And whichever race each of us may claim

Only one race indeed exists

And that is the human race

White, black, blue or brown

‘We are all red inside’[1]


[1] Phrase first encountered during a Xmas Lunch (25 December, 2010) conversation with Terry Dunn, a 64-year old British Linguist and University Receptionist at Hope Hall, Exeter University, United Kingdom:  The idea is that all humans, black or white, carry red blood in our veins, and therefore we should see ourselves as one.

Ouch! Rwandan Government to Urge Men to be Sterilized to Control Population

Rwanda’s government has said it wants to encourage men to have vasectomies in a bid to stem the small landlocked country’s growing population.

It would be done along with its HIV prevention campaign to encourage all men to be circumcised.

Health officials would take the opportunity to talk to men about the birth-control method at the same time.

A BBC reporter in Rwanda says vasectomies are uncommon in the country and the move may meet resistance.

A vasectomy is often irreversible. The operation for a male sterilisation takes about 15 minutes and can be carried out in a clinic under local anaesthetic.

The Rwandan government has been encouraging male circumcision since 2008 as the UN World Health Organization says it reduces the risk of heterosexual HIV infection.

Health Minister Richard Sezibera said the government aimed to have 700,000 men circumcised in the next three years.

“Those who will be willing to join the programme of family planning will be allowed to have a vasectomy,” Dr Sezibera said.

But men interviewed on the streets of the capital, Kigali, were cautious about such a permanent method of contraception.

“I think I can’t go for it. You may plan to have two children and then unfortunately one dies,” one man told the BBC’s Network Africa programme.

“When this happens when you already have had vasectomy, you can’t have another child. Instead of going for vasectomy, you would rather practice other methods.”

“I can never go for it,” another added.

One man was a little more positive: “I personally wouldn’t prefer to. But perhaps if I had three children, I would go.”

Experts say a slowdown in Rwanda’s fast-growing population, which the UN estimates was 10.2 million in 2010, would help improve living standards.

Egypt/Zimbabwe: Zimbabweans Cannot Outsource Their Revolution (opinion)

Jacob Dlamini

 Johannesburg (South Africa) – The year is only 34 days old and already it has seen the absolute demise of one dictatorship (Tunisia), the near collapse of another (Egypt), the rattling of a third (Jordan), the likely ruin of a fourth (Yemen) and the possible failure of a fifth (Algeria). That, by any measure, is a good start to what may be the most fundamental political change in the Middle East since 1948, when the state of Israel was founded.

The drama of the past 34 days was enhanced by the fact that two of the dictatorships either to fall (Tunisia) or flirt with downfall (Egypt) were, until recently, considered, especially by the US government, the most stable and least likely to fall.

In fact, US strategy in the Middle East has rested largely on an expensive peace between Egypt and Israel bankrolled by the US. It is largely because of this peace, brokered by former US president Jimmy Carter back when he occupied the White House, that Egypt is one of the top three recipients of military and other aid from the US, after Israel. The peace rested on a firm understanding between the Americans, Israelis and Egyptians, whose state is the largest and most politically significant in the Middle East, that the other Arab-led dictatorships in the Middle East posed little existential threat to Israel so long as Egypt honoured its side of the Camp David agreement.

But Egypt now looks likely to fall, meaning Egypt as we know it could change dramatically as Egyptians, fed up with corruption, neglected by a statistically impressive but empirically hopeless economy, and fed up with a leader, Hosni Mubarak, who seemed to think he was fated by history to rule, take to the streets to demand his ousting.

But it is not only Mubarak’s Egypt that is likely to go into the proverbial dustbin of history. The US policy of making nice with Mubarak while ignoring his brutality against his political opponents and, occasionally, using Mubarak’s apparatus of repression for the “rendition” and torture of enemy combatants, will also have to change.

The last thing the US wants is to, again, find itself backing the wrong side in the wave of protests sweeping the Middle East. The US made that mistake by backing a coup against a democratically elected government in Iran in the 1950s, supporting Saddam Hussein and even plying him with arms in the 1980s while he fought against the hated ayatollahs of Iran, and abandoning, in Afghanistan, the mujahedeen, who had helped the US give the hapless Soviets a taste of Vietnam. That is why the US has been treading gingerly on this. That is why US President Barack Obama has been frantically trying to sound allied to both prodemocracy protesters and Mubarak at the same time. Obama wants to be able to claim some credit should Egypt be delivered finally from dictatorship.

But what is the lesson of the recent events for southern Africa? In particular, what lessons does the wave of protests sweeping the Middle East have for Zimbabweans?

The most important lesson to come out of Egypt and Tunisia, it seems to me, is that revolutions cannot be outsourced. There has been something rather obscene about the ways in which some human rights activists, Zimbabwean and non-Zimbabwean, have presented the problems in Zimbabwe as if they are entirely SA’s or, to be exact, Thabo Mbeki ’s. One got the impression sometimes that these activists wanted Mbeki and South Africans in general to march on Harare. Some even suggested SA invade Zimbabwe.

What these hysterical calls did was absolve the prodemocracy movement in Zimbabwe of the responsibility to take the lead in the fight against Robert Mugabe’s dictatorship. Why is it, for example, that none of us who want to see Mugabe out of office and on trial for all sorts of crimes have bothered to ask why the Movement for Democratic Change, whose roots are supposedly in Zimbabwe’s labour movement, has yet to organise a successful strike, stayaway or other form of popular protest?

None of this is to ignore the brave men and women, journalists, lawyers, farmers and ordinary citizens who have protested against Mugabe’s rule and paid with everything from their lives to their limbs and property. The actions of these people must be recognised and honoured. But they cannot and should not be the exception.

Zimbabweans cannot outsource their revolution. They cannot leave the fight for their freedom to others. Sure, they need support, solidarity and the knowledge that the rest of the world is on their side. But they cannot expect the fight to be led by outsiders. That, for me, is what the Egyptians and the Tunisians have taught us.

Mubarak has one of the most formidable repressive machineries in the world but that has proved worthless in the face of popular protest. Voting with their feet, as the millions of Zimbabweans have done by moving to SA, Zambia, Botswana, Canada, Australia, the US and the UK, must have been a difficult thing to do. But it is by no means courageous. Courage is staring down a dictator, telling him to go and standing your ground. That is what the North Africans have done. Let us hope Zimbabweans learn from them.

*Jacob Dlamini is a South African writer.

The End of Dynastic Presidential Politics in Africa?


René Dassié

The political ambitions of Gamal Mubarak who is widely tipped to succeed his father Hosni, president of Egypt, is looking particularly grim following recent events in the north African country. In Senegal, another possible handover from President Wade to his son, Karim, has aroused strong criticism. A rejection that could be extended to other countries, including Congo and Equatorial Guinea. Since 2001, three sons of former African presidents have succeeded their fathers.

Have current events in Egypt, where millions of protesters are demanding the departure of President Hosni Mubarak, turned the northern African leader’s plan, to place his son at the helm of political affairs, upside down? According to many observers, the embattled president has been grooming his son, Gamal, to take over from him after his last term this year. The octogenarian president has nonetheless always denied this possibility, while those close to him suggest that he will be his own successor, despite his old age.

Notwithstanding those statements, many events from last year pointed to a gradual strategic positioning of Gamal. At 46, he was propelled into the enviable position of Secretary General of the ruling National Democratic Party (NDP). Assembling under the slogan “Gamal: dream of the poor”, his supporters swarmed some of the country’s busy streets, last September, to collect five million signatures; The number of signatures needed to enable a person stand for presidential elections in Egypt. Away from his busy volunteer campaigners in the streets of Cairo and Alexandria, his daddy, Hosni Mubarak, was tirelessly working to raise Gamal’s stature in international politics, especially by engaging him in direct Israeli-Palestinian negotiations with Washington.

Karim Wade in Gamal’s shadow

Egypt is not the only African country where a president’s son is working to take over — what is increasingly becoming a family business — from his father. Karim Wade, Senegalese President Abdoulaye Wade’s eldest son, has since last year been catapulted to political stardom. The 85 year-old Abdoulaye Wade, whose second and last term ends next year, has always denied trying to position his son to succeed him as head of state. But his continuous denial has not stopped him from transferring political power to Gamal.

Early October, 2010, Gamal was put in charge of a super ministry that controls almost all of the country’s strategic ministerial portfolios: energy, air transport, infrastructure and international cooperation. In February 2009, Karim’s candidacy for mayoral elections in Dakar, the country’s largest, was analyzed as a trial run for his future presidential candidacy.

“The enthronement of the Republic’s Prince [Karim Wade, Editor’s note] should by all means begin by first taking charge of the capital’s mayoral office. This step will be the trial phase of the electoral holdup that the authorities intend to implement for the 2012 [elections, Editor’s note]”, analyzed Sud Online, a Senegalese online journal.

The throne thirsty sons

Elsewhere on the continent, old presidents are busily positioning their offspring strategically. In the Republic of Congo, the media often describes Denis Christel Sassou Nguesso, one of President Denis Sassou Nguesso’s sons, as the most likely successor. Unfortunately, the little prince has so far only made a name for himself as a spendthrift who is out to squander all the resources of his country on his most lavish lifestyle.

In the Central African Republic, Francois Bozize has dumped his son Francis Bozize into the Defense Minister’s seat. In Cameroon, Paul Biya, who has been in power for almost three decades, has made his eldest son, Franck, his special adviser. In the Obiang Nguema controlled Equatorial Guinea, the President is torn between his two sons. Teodorin Nguema Obiang, whose reputation as an international gambler precedes him, was accused by the U.S. Senate in a 2004 report which revealed that he had conducted shady transactions with a local bank. And then there is Gabriel Obiang Lima, the Secretary of State for Mines, Industry and Energy, who is believed to be cherished by both his family and oil companies.

Cases of succession

With the exception of constitutional monarchies as is the case in the kingdoms of Morocco, Lesotho and Swaziland, three sons of heads of state rose to power in the last decade. All under chaotic conditions.

A little over a week after Laurent-Desire Kabila was shot and killed by one of his bodyguards, his then 29 year old son, Joseph, succeeded him. February 2005, Togo’s Faure Gnassingbe mounted the country’s presidential throne amid the power crisis that followed the death of his father and long-time dictator, Gnassingbe Eyadema. Two months later, he consolidated his power after a heavily contested election that was controlled by security forces with brutal force in Faure’s favour.

In Gabon in October 2009, Ali Bongo was sworn in as President after the death of his father Omar a few weeks earlier. A year after the presidential election, Andre Mba Obame, one of the most popular presidential candidates, continues to challenge the legality of Ali’s installment.

For future presidential heirs, the dynamics may be changing. The ongoing pro-democracy demonstrations in Egypt could well have definitely affected Gamal’s chances to inherit his father’s position. The announcement of his possible candidacy last year aroused strong hostility among his opponents, who had earlier on marched through the streets of Cairo and Alexandria carrying placards that read: “We do not want a hereditary government! “And” no to Gamal! .

In Senegal, talks about a possible Karim Wade candidacy has ignited similar hostilities. In Libya, Gaddafi’s most politically committed son, Seif al-Islam, who wants to reform his country, is facing a clamorous rebellion from powerful politicians. But does this really mark the end of the trend of dynastic power transmissions?

Tunde Oseni In Town With ‘My London Poems’

Tunde Oseni, who also writes for TalkAfrique,  launched his new book “My London Poems’ a couple of weeks ago. I join all readers of TalkAfrique to congratulate Tunde and wish him success on the project.
Please enjoy the report and photos sent in by Ms. Akhagba.
By Omoye Akhagba, Nigeria.

It was a season of ovation when Tunde Oseni, a Phd Student came to the country to launch his book titled My London Poems With My Nigerian Story.

The anthology contains twenty-two poems that talk  about different spheres of life including ‘Obama’. He decribes Obama as a phenomenon of faith and hope to do things that seem impossible.

The event was not only about the public presentation of the book but also  presentation of awards to notable Nigerians  who have made remarkable impact in the lives of the people.

The awardees were Hon. Abike Dabiri -Erewa, Member, Federal House of Representatives, who is also the  Chairman, House Committee on Diaspora Affairs. She is being recognized for the numerous  scholarships awarded  to many youths in her community and sponsorship of several Bills in the House one of which is  the Freedom  Of Information Bill.

The second awardee was  Mr. Ayodeji Babatunde Iginla, Rector of the Lagos State Polytechnic, Ikorodu who was represented by the Director of Students’ Affairs, Mr. Isaac Omolumo. The Rector is recognized  for his remarkable transformation in the institution with the latest ICT facilities to improve academic learning.

The third awardee was Mr. Aletile Oluwaseyitan Lawrence a.k.a SeyiLaw, a stand up comedian who has been involved in humanity projects such as the Live Green and War Against Rape campaigns.

The event was graced by friends, associates and families of the scholar as he told his early childhood story and the struggle to keep faith alive.

Tunde Oseni studied political Science from the prestigious  university of Ibadan, where he bagged a first class honours. He then proceeded to study for a  Master of  Science in  African Studies at the University of Oxford on scholarship. Tunde is currently a Phd Scholar and Teaching  Assistant  at the University of Exeter in United Kingdom.

Tunde Oseni, presenting the Youth Focus Role Model Award 2011 (Leadership) to Hon. Abike Dabiri-Erewa, member, Nigeria Federal House of Representatives, and chairman, House committee on Diaspora Affairs. Hon. Dabiri-Erewa has given several scholarships to many youths , inspired several young leaders in her community, constituency and country, and has remained a source of inspiration to her and next generations
Tunde Oseni, presenting the Youth Focus Role Model Award 2011 (Education) to Mr Ayodeji Babatunde Iginla, Rector, Lagos State Polytechnic, Ikorodu (represented by the Director of Student Affairs, Mr Isaac Omolumo): the Laspotech has undergone unprecedented growth, especially in the area of ICT under Mr Iginla, earning him the sobriquet: The e-Rector
Tunde Oseni, presenting the Youth Focus Role Model Award 2011 (Entertainment) to Mr Aletile Oluwaseyitan Lawrence a.k.a Seyi Law, a popular stand-up comedian, who has been involved in 'Live Green' and 'War Against Rape' campaigns.

Nigeria and Kenya Enter No Visa Deal

The Federal Government of Nigeria has relaxed visa requirements for citizens of Kenya and Seychelles with effect from February 11, 2011 following a directive from President Goodluck Jonathan.
Visitors from the two countries will from that date only be required to pay a visa fee of $25 at the point of entry, rather than go through the hassles of visa application at the Nigerian High Commission in Nairobi as was the case currently.
But for the nationals of Seychelles, their valid passport admits them directly into Nigeria without any recourse to visa fees.
This was the outcome of a meeting between the Minister of Interior, Capt. Emmanuel Iheanacho (retd.) and the ministers of foreign affairs and aviation in Abuja on Tuesday.
 
Courtesy: The Punch (Lagos) 2 February, 2011

Beyond Political Turmoil in Africa: We Are Blessed, Not Cursed

 In the last couple of months, there hav been pockets of crises here and there on the African continent. From Ivory Coast to Sudan, and from Tunisia to Egypt, it has been tales of cacophony and woes. This seems worrisome in a continent blessed with abundant human and material resources. There is a tendency to regard our dear continent as cursed, given the enormity of turmoil in the land. But when viewed against the backdrop that there is no nation or continent which has not been through this phase of development in its historical evolution, we may be consoled that all is not lost.

I have read all sorts of comments on the happenings in Africa in recent times – from the cosmetic to the logical. But the funniest has been the one saying that what is happening is a sign of the end time. I consider this laughable as I see this more or less as a phase in our development. As much as one would have expected that by now Africa should have outgrown this stage, we must know that it is not what is going on that matters but how we handle it. We therefore need to tread on the side of caution, as violence cannot end violence. It will only escalate it.

In the face of the on-going adversity, one thing is obviously clear: the current generation of African leaders is bereft of ideas. The onus is now on us (the younger generation) to begin to look inwards. We must begin to light up our corners with bright ideas. After all, ideas, they say, rule the world. We must be guided by Stedman Graham’s advice that “people who let events and circumstances dictate their lives are living reactively. That means that they don’t act on life, they only react to it.” The only price we have to pay to prove to the world that Africa is blessed and not cursed is to be conscious of the fact that “leaders are not born, they are made. They are made just like anything else…through hard work” (Vince Lombardi)