‫‫اجتماع هواوي السحابي يسهل حديث Shenzhou-14 Taikonaut مع الشباب الأفريقي

شنتشن، الصين، 9 سبتمبر 2022 / PRNewswire / — شارك ثلاثة من رواد الفضاء الصينيين شنتشو-14 ( Taikonauts) ، الموجودين حاليًا في الفضاء، في حوار مع طلاب من العديد من البلدان الأفريقية عبر وصلة فيديو في 6 سبتمبر. خلف نجاح هذا الحدث الذي بث على الهواء مباشرة على مستوى العالم، كان الدعم الثابت الذي قدمه اجتماع هواوي السحابي، والذي يضمن اتصالًا سلسًا بالفيديو بين جميع المشاركين.

يصادف هذا العام الذكرى السنوية العشرين لإقامة العلاقات الدبلوماسية بين الصين والاتحاد الأفريقي. وكان هذا النشاط، الذي شاركت في استضافته بعثة الصين لدى الاتحاد الأفريقي ووكالة الفضاء الصينية ومفوضية الاتحاد الأفريقي، أحد الأنشطة التي نُظمت للاحتفال بهذه المناسبة. وكانت هذه هي المرة الأولى التي يجري فيها رواد التايكون حوارًا مباشرا مع المراهقين الأفارقة.

وأتيحت الفرصة لمراهقين من إثيوبيا والجزائر وجنوب أفريقيا والسنغال والصومال ومصر وناميبيا ونيجيريا لطرح أسئلة رواد Taikonauts . يقوم رواد Taikonauts تشين دونغ وليو يانغ وكاي شوزي حاليًا بمهمة في محطة تيانغونغ الفضائية، وأجابت الثلاثي على أسئلة حول الحياة في الفضاء والتجارب العلمية والنمو الذي شهدوه.

ضمنت الشبكة العالمية SparkRTC اتصالات فيديو عالية الدقة في الوقت الحقيقي مستقرة لكل من المشاركين في الاجتماع في الموقع وعبر الإنترنت في الصين والبلدان الأفريقية المذكورة أعلاه. سمحت الترجمة الفورية بين الصينية والإنجليزية والفرنسية للجميع بالتعبير عن أفكارهم بسهولة وفهم بعضهم البعض بشكل أفضل. كفلت وظائف التحكم في الاجتماعات المتنوعة سير الحدث بطريقة منظمة. قام فريق الضمان الشامل والخدمة العالمية المحترف من Huawei Cloud بتسهيل اتصالات الفيديو.

يضمن اجتماع هواوي السحابي وصولًا مستقرًا من أكثر من 170 دولة ومنطقة. ولديها سجل حافل من الظهور في أكثر من 500 مؤتمر دولي وكسب ثقة أكثر من 1.5 مليون عميل في كل من القطاعين الخاص والعام. يساعد حل الاجتماع السحابي الاحترافي المؤسسات على التحول إلى التكنولوجيا الرقمية وتحسين الكفاءة.

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Huawei Cloud Meeting facilite les échanges entre les taïkonautes de Shenzhou-14 et la jeunesse africaine

SHENZHEN, Chine, 9 septembre 2022/PRNewswire/ — Trois astronautes chinois (taïkonautes) de la mission Shenzhou-14, qui sont actuellement dans l’espace, ont participé à un dialogue avec des étudiants de plusieurs pays africains par vidéoconférence le 6 septembre. Derrière le succès de cet événement diffusé en direct à l’international, il y a le soutien indéfectible de Huawei Cloud Meeting, qui a assuré une connexion vidéo fluide entre tous les participants.

Cette année marque le 20e anniversaire du début des relations diplomatiques entre la Chine et l’Union africaine. L’événement, co-organisé par la Mission de la Chine auprès de l’Union africaine, l’Agence chinoise des vols spatiaux habités (CMSA) et la Commission de l’Union africaine (CUA), était l’une des activités organisées pour célébrer cet anniversaire. C’était la première fois que les taïkonautes dialoguaient directement avec des adolescents africains.

Des adolescents d’Algérie, d’Égypte, d’Éthiopie, de Namibie, du Nigeria, du Sénégal, de Somalie et d’Afrique du Sud ont eu l’occasion de poser trois questions aux taïkonautes. Les taïkonautes, Chen Dong, Liu Yang et Cai Xuzhe, sont actuellement en mission sur la station spatiale de Tiangong, et le trio a répondu aux questions sur la vie dans l’espace, les expériences scientifiques et la croissance qu’ils ont connue.

Le réseau mondial SparkRTC a assuré des connexions vidéo HD en temps réel stables pour les participants aux réunions sur place et en ligne, en Chine et dans les pays africains évoqués ci-dessus. L’interprétation simultanée entre le chinois, l’anglais et le français a permis à chacun d’exprimer ses idées facilement et de mieux se comprendre. Diverses fonctions de contrôle des réunions ont permis de s’assurer que l’événement se déroulait correctement. L’équipe professionnelle d’assurance de bout en bout et de service technique international de Huawei Cloud a fluidifié les connexions vidéo.

Huawei Cloud Meeting garantit un accès stable depuis plus de 170 pays et régions. Il a fait ses preuves lors de plus de 500 conférences internationales et gagné la confiance de plus de 1,5 million de clients des secteurs privé et public. La solution de réunion professionnelle sur le cloud aide les entreprises à passer au numérique et à améliorer leur efficacité.

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Southern Africa – Regional Fact Sheet, August 2022

8.1million people of concern to UNHCR are hosted in16 Southern African countries, including 1.1million refugees and asylum-seekers mainly from Central African Republic, Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), Rwanda, Burundi, and South Sudan.

UNHCR contributes to protection and solutions for 7 million internally displaced persons (IDPs)in the region due to both conflict and natural disasters –5.6 million in DRC, 1 million in Mozambique, 304,000 in Republic of the Congo (ROC) and 42,000in Zimbabwe.

By the end of August, 11,954 refugees and asylum-seekers voluntarily repatriated to their countries of origin from asylum countries in Southern Africa. UNHCR has also assisted 1,336people to depart on resettlement since the beginning of the year.

Regional Overview Context:

Southern Africa is home to 8.1 million people of concern to UNHCR as of August 2022. Complex crises cause millions to flee their homes and prevent their safe return. The region comprises the largest IDP situation in sub-Saharan Africa, while refugee camps and settlements, along with some urban areas, host long-term refugee populations–some displaced for many decades. The situation is complicated by the growing impact of climate change and natural disasters.

Emergency Situations: About two-thirds of forcibly displaced people in the region have fled conflict in the DRC, mainly in the east of the country, where violence, compounded by natural disasters, have internally displaced 5.6 million people and caused about 1 million to seek asylum. In northern Mozambique, more than1 million people are internally displaced, including 200,000, among them IDPs and refugees, affected by tropical storms and cyclones.

Solutions: Local integration and voluntary repatriation are the focus for solutions in the region, as opportunities for resettlement remain limited to a small percentage of the overall population. Options to expand complementary pathways are also being explored. Steps towards ending statelessness in the region include reforming nationality law, policy and procedure, and supporting access to documentation.

Source: UN High Commissioner for Refugees

The Worsening Situation in the Horn of Africa Requires Immediate Attention and Action

At least 36.1 Million people across the Horn of Africa are going hungry as Ethiopia, Kenya, and Somalia experience the worst drought in 40 years. With factors across the three countries ranging from four failed rain seasons and a potential fifth, rising costs of living, high inflation, climatic shocks, the Ukraine conflict that has seen wheat and fertilizer shortages, and insecurity, indicators point to the situation worsening.

In Ethiopia, according to UNOCHA, 24.1 million people are currently affected by below-average rainfall as a result of the climate crisis, this is a drought of proportions unseen in recent history. Inaccessibility of food and poor access to water is causing a rise not only in malnutrition amongst children but also across entire communities. Millions of cattle and livestock have already died as pasture and water points dry up. With the Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD) forecast indicating an even drier than average October to December, when the rains would be expected, the situation will surely worsen.

Benoit Munsch, CARE International’s Managing Director for the Horn of Africa said, “As the food security situation worsens in Ethiopia, we are particularly concerned about the impact this is having on women and girls. Even though CARE has intervened early with food distributions for some affected communities, as well as through agriculture, cash transfers, health and nutrition, and WASH interventions, the unmet need remains staggering. This humanitarian crisis is the challenge of a generation. More funding and support is required to provide life-saving assistance to the hard-hit communities affected by the drought and to help them rebuild more resilient and sustainable livelihoods.”

In Kenya, almost 1 Million children under the age of five and 115,725 pregnant and lactating women are acutely malnourished. These are part of the 4.2 million Kenyans who are facing a severe drought and acute food insecurity. The Government of Kenya declared the drought a national disaster in September 2021. As the cost of living skyrockets and the country continues to feel the impact of the Ukraine conflict, it is expected that more people will continue to slip into hunger and hence the need for enhanced humanitarian response.

Mwende Kusewa, CARE International Kenya interim Country Director said, “While government subsidies on fuel and corn flour are welcome, they offer a very short-lived relief. Unfortunately, as the cost-of-living increases and with a projection that the short rains will likely be below average, we anticipate a grim situation in the coming months. Already it’s reported that in some of these areas, project participants are starting to prefer direct food distribution interventions rather than cash transfers because the high cost of food means that they will increasingly buy fewer food rations with the cash transferred to them.”

On 5th September 2022, humanitarian organizations sounded the alarm that parts of the Bay area in Somalia would slip into famine in October 2022 as the country faces it 5th Failed rainfall season. Somalia has been experiencing the worst drought in 40 years with 7.8 million people experiencing acute food insecurity with the U.N. reporting that, between January to June 2022, at least 200 children have already died as a result. Access to water is becoming increasingly challenging as most water points have dried up and prices have spiked. This is forcing women and girls to travel long distances in search of this precious commodity exposing them to GBV.

We are witnessing massive displacement of communities, with record estimates indicating at least 1 million people have moved from their homes in search of food and water with others even crossing borders. As herds of livestock have been annihilated due to a lack of pasture and water, the livelihoods of millions have been affected causing them to fall further into poverty.

Hali, a 70-year-old mother of 10 children says, “My whole life I was a pastoralist. Due to this prolonged drought in our village, my herd was decimated. I used to have 150 goats and 30 camels, now I am only left with 10 weak goats. I fled the drought and relocated to another place to raise my family.”

Somalia depends on wheat and fertilizer from Ukraine. As the conflict protracts beyond its six-month mark, prices of fertilizer, fuel, and wheat have soared affecting the accessibility of these to many in Somalia.

Iman Abdullahi, CARE International Somalia Country Director said, “We are currently in 11 regions in Somalia offering life-saving rapid response support to affected communities. We are supporting affected communities with Unconditional cash transfers, clean drinking water, health, and nutrition support for children under five years, and psychosocial support for women and girls affected by GBV. Immediate and urgent action is required to scale up our response to save the affected even as the situation worsens.”

Across the Horn of Africa region, CARE International is tirelessly engaged to support the communities that we work alongside. Kate Maina-Vorley, CARE East and Central Africa Regional Director said, “We have worked in the region for many decades, and it will be unfortunate to see some of the work that we have done, especially in support of women and girls being eroded.

For example, in Somalia, girls are dropping out of school to support their families in the search of food. We are weary that practices such as early marriage and Female Genital Mutilation may resurge. With the rising hunger and malnutrition levels, the rise of disease could worsen the situation. At the same time, we are very aware of the situation of neighboring countries, such as Sudan and South Sudan which are also experiencing an increase in food insecurity. In partnership with other humanitarian organizations need to act swiftly to upscale our response to stem this worsening disaster. we call on donors to increase funding to support the scale-up of the ongoing response”

Source: CARE

Large Parts of Somalia on the Brink of Famine, New Report Warns

MOGADISHU, Somalia – September 7, 2022 — Approximately 7.1 million people in Somalia are dealing with crisis levels of hunger and an official declaration of famine is predicted as soon as October without significant additional humanitarian response. This is according to a new report from the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) Famine Review Committee, a panel of independent international food security and nutrition experts. including Action Against Hunger, a global nonprofit leader in the movement to end hunger.

The worst drought in 40 years, conflict, and skyrocketing food and fuel prices have left 20.5 million people across the Horn of Africa in urgent need of food assistance. Somalia is particularly hard-hit.

According to Action Against Hunger and the new IPC report, in Somalia:

-The drought has killed an estimated three million livestock and more than one million people have been forced to flee their homes in search of food and water.

-Without current levels of humanitarian assistance, famine already would have been declared in the Bay regions of Somalia.

-Malnutrition in Somalia’s Baidoa and Burhakaba districts has doubled over the past year, and people there will face famine (IPC Phase 5) between October and December 2022 without significant additional humanitarian assistance.

“The climate crisis is a food crisis. Across the Horn of Africa, four rainy seasons have failed and people are dying of hunger every day. If the rains don’t come next month, then famine almost certainly will,” said Ahmed Khalif, Country Director for Action Against Hunger in Somalia. “With food increasingly hard to find and impossible to afford, more parents face the impossible choice of which child gets to eat and which might die. The world has enough food for everyone. Now, we need the will to act.”

Across Somalia, 6.4 million people lack access to clean water and safe sanitation, which is leading to outbreaks of waterborne diseases and gastrointestinal illness that make hunger worse — and which can be deadly for malnourished children.

“By the time a child with severe malnutrition reaches our stabilization centers, they already face the imminent threat of death from hunger. One mother in the Burhakaba district left home in search of food and help for her child only to discover that her baby died on her back. The tragedy is so widespread, many deaths are never reported,” said Khalif. “Malnutrition is treatable. Yet, our centers are overwhelmed with patients and often do not have enough supplies, beds, staff or medicines. We need more resources to save lives and reach more families sooner to prevent these senseless deaths.”

A regional challenge

Across the Horn of Africa – the region that includes Ethiopia, Kenya, and Somalia – 7.1 million children suffer from acute malnutrition as a result of the drought, which has been compounded by local conflict and rising prices resulting from the war in Ukraine. The United Nations has called for $1.8 billion to provide assistance to nearly 22 million people in crisis, but so far, only a portion of the needed funding has been received.

Action Against Hunger today urged world leaders to scale up aid, immediately, to save lives and prevent more communities from edging closer to famine.

Action Against Hunger in Somalia

Action Against Hunger has been working in Somalia since 1992 and in 2020 served nearly 9% of the country’s total population. The nonprofit is:

-Promoting health: Action Against Hunger works to strengthen health systems and runs 68 health and nutrition facilities and mobile teams, including five hospitals and 30 health centers

-Treating and preventing hunger: so far this year, Action Against Hunger has treated nearly 100,000 children and adults for malnutrition and other illnesses. It also is giving 185,000 families emergency cash assistance so they can buy the food they need, and helping farmers with solar irrigation kits, seeds and fertilizer to once again become self-sufficient in the face of the climate crisis.

-Providing clean water: Action Against Hunger is giving people the supplies and knowledge they need to prevent cholera, working to restore wells where possible, and trucking water to thousands of people, an expensive emergency measure that is not intended to be long-term.

Source: Action Against Hunger USA

MORA fait son entrée en Afrique du Sud et lance ses mini-réfrigérateurs pour une vie heureuse

LE CAP, Afrique du Sud, 9 septembre 2022/PRNewswire/ — MORA, une marque pionnière d’appareils électroménagers appartenant au groupe Hisense, franchit une étape importante et fait son entrée officielle en Afrique du Sud en présentant trois mini-réfrigérateurs à ses consommateurs locaux en septembre. Un premier pas vers une vie haut de gamme : MORA met ses fonctionnalités, sa technologie et son design au service du bien-être des familles sud-africaines avec sa vision « Plein de joie, plein de vie ».

Avec une riche histoire qui remonte à 1825 en République tchèque, MORA fait ses premiers pas en Afrique du Sud pour rejoindre la marque Hisense, dans l’intention de répondre aux besoins des ménages sud-africains. En lançant une série d’accessoires indispensables avec des caractéristiques d’efficacité énergétique A+ et une fonction de réduction du bruit, notamment le M65RTS qui est déjà en magasin, ainsi que les M125RT et M125RWH bientôt sur le marché, MORA est en bonne voie pour fournir une aide précieuse et devenir la pièce maîtresse des cuisines grand public.

L’introduction des incontournables mini-réfrigérateurs fait écho à l’engagement de MORA à rendre la vie plus facile et amusante pour ses consommateurs sud-africains. Les mini-réfrigérateurs sont équipés de la fonction de réduction du bruit et de technologies d’économie d’énergie, et ils sont disponibles en plusieurs volumes et couleurs, ce qui en fait des produits polyvalents qui peuvent s’adapter à divers aspects de la vie quotidienne. Pour les particuliers vivant dans des espaces réduits ou pour les professionnels, les mini-réfrigérateurs permettent de vivre une vie agréable à de multiples égards.

Grâce aux produits MORA, les familles sud-africaines peuvent profiter de la performance, de la fiabilité, du confort et de la simplicité des produits, et ce dans de nombreux cas de figure : pour aménager une petite maison, pour décorer des suites ou encore des locaux professionnels.

L’entrée en Afrique du Sud marque un nouveau pas vers l’objectif final de MORA : permettre aux consommateurs d’accomplir leurs tâches quotidiennes tout en profitant des moments et des expériences importantes auprès de leur famille. Ses technologies de pointe révolutionnent les appareils électroménagers pour les doter de fonctions modernes, économiques et respectueuses de l’environnement.

MORA fait partie intégrante de la cuisine moderne depuis ses débuts. En partageant son expérience et ses innovations avec ses consommateurs en Afrique du Sud, MORA aidera les familles sud-africaines à mieux cuisiner chez elles et à vivre des moments de bonheur, de légèreté et d’aventure.

Les produits de MORA seront disponibles via plusieurs canaux, notamment les distributeurs et les magasins tels que OK et HNH. Pour en savoir plus, rendez-vous sur :  https://hisense.co.za/mora/ .

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