ANGOTIC 2023: President visits exhibition pavilion

Angolan head of State João Lourenço visited the exhibition pavilion of the 3rd edition of the international technology fair Angotic 2023 Monday (12) in Luanda.

In addition to a range of different technological products and services, there are also new technologies in telecommunications, business management solutions, using cybernetic intelligence.

The company’s chairperson of the executive committee, Felisberta de Jesus, said apart from traditional data transmission, internet and telephony services, ANGOTIC 2023 comes up with services such as Dala-Net, SMS pro and drone pro, for monitoring industrial spaces.

In turn, the content manager of the company Dom, Abraão Teca, a digital outdoor media company and supplier of audiovisual equipment, brings to ANGOTIC2023 a solution for measuring traffic, which aims to monitor, in real time, the number and gender of people who see advertising on billboards.

The commercial manager of ITGEST, André Rijo, comes to ANGOTIC2023, with solutions in terms of cybersecurity, as well as management software in various areas, from the energy sector, solid waste collection, clinical and industrial laboratories.

As for the event, André Rijo aims to reach new partnerships, as well as increase the number of customers.

The three-day event will address topics such as “Space industry and trends”, “Business model for space technology”, “Metaverse to revolutionise the future of entertainment, content and commerce”, “Connectivity and modernisation technological

Source: Angola Press News Agency (APNA)

University Don cautions public against use of alcohol for sex

Prof Eugene Kufuor Maafo Darteh of the Department of Population and Health, University of Cape Coast (UCC), has warned that having sex under the influence of alcohol can have a dire personal and social consequences.

There is recent craze for sex boosters among the youth in Ghana and the media is inundated with countless assorted alcoholic beverages touted for their ability to enhance sex drive.

However, Prof Darteh said the use of alcohol and related drugs for sex, impaired judgement and led people to abandon or forget to use contraceptives such as condoms for protection against Sexually Transmitted Diseases and Infections (STDs/STIs).

The ramifications, he cautioned, were a hike in STDs, unwanted pregnancies, abortions and deaths among others, which could weigh heavily on the health system and the economy.

The Professor of Social Dimensions of Sexual and Reproductive Health, gave the caution when he delivered his professorial inaugural address on the theme: ‘Eating the Forbidden Fruits: Reflections on Risky Sexual Behaviours among Young Women in Ghana over the Last Three Decades.’

Prof Darteh observed that despite efforts by traditional, religious and legal systems to check Risky Sexual Behaviours among the youth, the menace remained a major public health concern.

Beyond the use of alcohol for sex, he noted, the youth were also actively engaged in early sex, multiple sex partners, unprotected sexual affairs, age mixing (having sugar mummies and daddies) and early marriage.

Citing data from the Ghana Demographic and Health Survey, he said in 1988, 43.73 per cent of young people from 15 to 24 years had sex before age 16 but reduced to 27.8 in 2014.

However, he observed that 9.74 per cent of the same age group had multiple sex partners in 2003 and increased to 63 per cent in 2014.

He added that less than six per cent used condoms in 1998 when data was collected and in 2014, it was less the seven per cent.

‘It means that our young people are not using the condoms, but they are having sex, having multiple sexual partners and are mixing ages,’ he noted.

‘If nothing is done about these risky sexual behaviours, it will shake the foundation of our health, our wellbeing and our education,’ he added.

When that happened, he indicated, Ghana risked missing SDG goals one, two, three, four and five which dealt with poverty reduction, elimination of hunger, good health, quality education and gender equality respectively.

Prof Darteh called for the development of the skills and potentials of the future generation aged 15 to 24 to mitigate the incidence of such Risky Sexual Behaviours.

‘The size is huge and so when we get them well-educated and in good health, they move into proper adulthood and they are going to create a certain labour force that propels the economic development,’ he said.

He said young people should be equipped with the appropriate sexual education to ensure they did not engage in the Risky Sexual Behaviours.

Prof Darteh said there was also a need to provide holistic services which offered all forms of services to encourage young people to seek help.

‘We need to ensure that services that target young people will cater for their minds and bodies,’ he stressed.

Prof Darteh was first appointed lecturer at the then Department of Geography and Tourism, UCC in 2007, was promoted to senior lecturer in 2013, moved up to Association Professor in, February 2018 and a full Professor in February 2021.

He has more than 65 peer reviewed journal articles in Scopus indexed journals, a book chapter, a few technical reports and modules to his credit.

Over the period of his employment at the UCC, he has supervised and graduated five PhD holders, and more the 30 M.Phil. and MA thesis.

He has provided mentorship to a few young academics who are occupying positions in academia, research and industry.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Seychelles aims for more golds at 2023 Special Olympic World Games

Seychelles is aiming at winning more gold medals at the 2023 Special Olympic World Games scheduled to take place in Berlin, Germany, from June 17 to June 25.

Team Seychelles got its send off in a ceremony on Saturday at the L’Escale Resort for the delegation of 18 members. The Seychelles’ flag was handed over by the sports minister, Marie Celine Zialor to the flag bearers, Anil Antat and Suzie Sarakiya.

Seychelles is competing with a team of 10 athletes, where they will compete in four disciplines, namely bocce, athletics and powerlifting.

The team left Seychelles on Monday morning, headed by coach Erica Celeste.

“I think we can do well, although some of the athletes will be going out for the first time, so we will have to work with them to ensure they are ready, but I think they will perform and we can do well,” said Celeste.

For the island nation in the western Indian Ocean, this will be another chance to win more gold medals. In the World Games in Abu Dhabi in 2019, Seychellois athlete Roland Jeannevol won a gold medal in the shot put while Suzie Sarakiya won a silver medal in the 100 metres race.

At the ceremony on Saturday, was the chief executive for the National Sports Council (NSC), Marc Arrisol, who shared that NSC contributed 10 plane tickets for the delegation.

Arrisol said that as was the case in the past, “we are expecting more gold medals to make our small country proud.”

He also revealed plans for NSC to make sports facilities more inclusive, which will ensure these athletes are able to access such facilities.

Speaking to the athletes, the sports minister, Zialor expressed her desire to see the local Special Olympics programme get back to where it was before.

She said that since last year, the ministry has been working with all local partners “to reignite such initiatives and use sports to get people with special needs to flourish at an early age.”

The Special Olympics World Games is an international sports event for participants with intellectual disabilities. It is organised by the International Olympic Committee recognised by the Special Olympics organisation.

Around 7,000 athletes from 170 countries will participate in 24 sports events at the 16th Special Olympic World Games.

Source: Seychelles News Agency

Invest in afforestation- ‘Chiraahene’ appeals to investors

Barima Minta Afari II, the chief of Chiraa in the Sunyani West Municipality of Bono Region, has appealed to local investors to invest in afforestation projects for sustainable development.

He said that type of investment had multiple benefits for the country, citing that in the medium to long term, the environment would be protected through climate change mitigation and consequently dried water bodies and other extinct forest resources could be restored.

The ‘Chiraahene’ (Chief of Chiraa) said if one of the cardinal objectives of investment was for the socio-economic progress of the populace, then investing in afforestation guaranteed the provision of jobs from the ’embryonic to the maturity stage’.

Barima Afari II made the call when interacting with the media after the symbolic planting of tree seedlings at the off-reserve portion of ‘Morton Forest’ at Tetekrom, a farming community near Chiraa where the Sunyani District Office of the Forestry Services Division (FSD) selected for the District’s observance of this year’s Green Ghana Day (GGD), which was on the theme: ‘Our Forests, Our Health.’

‘The Chriaahene’ said the significance of investing in afforestation had trickled down positive effects on both present and future generations as it had wide range of associated natural and physical-material benefits for the health and general well-being of the citizenry

He, therefore, commended the government for instituting the green day, saying, it was therefore, an obligation for every Ghanaian to support that course through involvement in tree planting not only on the officially declared day of the exercise, but at any day and anytime to restore Ghana’s green environment.

He cautioned ‘galamsayers’ (illegal miners) not to either enter the ‘Morton Forest’ or step on any land in the Chiraa area to engage in their selfish and nation-wrecking activities, warning that any individual or group caught would be dealt with according to the full rigours of the law.

‘The Chriaahene’ further warned group hunters within Chiraa and its environs who went on hunting expedition by setting fire unto bushes during the dry season for game to spare the Morton Forests, saying ‘it is a huge investment by an individual with general benefit for the country, so everyone must help in protecting it’.

The ‘Morton Forest’ is owned by Morton Farms, a company established by a Ghanaian private investor, Nii Noi Morton and had since 2011 planted more than 300 acres of different economic tree species which had now matured and forested the hitherto degraded land area.

The tree species include ‘odum’, ‘wawa’, ‘ofram’, mahogany, ’emire’, ‘wabre’, cedrela, teak, ‘mansonia’ and ‘hyedua’.

According to Nana Dei Boakye, the Farm Manager, the company targeted to plant an additional 370 acres of tree seedlings this year, as 150 acres out of the 370 had been planted already.

Earlier in an interview with the media, Mr. Francis Brobbey, the Sunyani District FSD Manager explained the District’s FSD Management chose the Morton Forest’s off-reserve for the ceremonial planting to observe the GGD because ‘what Nii Morton has achieved as an individual in the forest sector is nationalistic and highly commendable that needs to be emulated and replicated by other investors for national interest.’

Source: Ghana News Agency

Installation of new sewerage system on Seychelles’ La Digue Island in good progress

Works are progressing satisfactorily after one year into the project of constructing a centralised sewerage system for Seychelles’ La Digue island, said the Public Utilities Corporation (PUC).

The plant comprises two main components – the installation of a sewer collection system along the western coast of La Digue and the construction of a sewage treatment plant at L’Union Estate.

“The first component of works, the sewer collection system, divided into two lots and awarded to Earth Development and Ascent projects respectively are well underway, both standing at 52 percent completion,” said PUC in a press statement last week.

The plant, to cover 95 percent of domestic wastewater generation on La Digue, was announced in 2018. It is being financed by the European Investment Bank (EIB), Agence Française de Développement (AFD) and PUC at a cost of $16 million.

This was planned to address environmental hazards caused by the lack of proper sanitation facilities on La Digue – Seychelles’ third-most populated island.

PUC said that within the next two months, Earth Development expects to complete outstanding pipe laying works, from La Passe to La Digue Supermarket, while Ascent Project aims to complete pending works from the island’s main helipad to Mutu shop.

Once completed, the facility will have the capacity to treat an average flow of 1,000 cubic metre per day. Green Island Construction Company (GICC) is currently undertaking site preparation in anticipation of construction work which is due to commence.

PUC recently launched the tender process for the supply of pre-fabricated sewerage pumping/lifting stations.

The second component of this project, the construction of the sewerage treatment plant at L’Union Estate was awarded to GICC earlier this year.

PUC representatives recently met with a group of concerned residents to clarify their doubts about establishing the plant at the designated location.

Source: Seychelles News Agency

ANGOTIC 2023: Discover country’s largest technological showcase

The country’s largest technological showcase opened its doors on Monday at the Talatona Congress Center, after a period of standstill due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

Around 109 speakers and moderators will discuss various topics at the three-day event, which brings together more than 60 companies and 21 countries.

In addition to national experts, the meeting will bring together speakers and moderators from Japan, United Kingdom, Brazil, Nigeria, Lesotho, South Africa, United States, Canada, Spain, Serbia, Uganda, France, Namibia, Portugal, Zambia, Cote d’Ivoire, Sweden, Argentina, Ethiopia, Malawi and Sao Tome.

Meanwhile, the event started in 2018 with 21 plenary sessions and 98 speakers (including 33 international guests) and 16 moderators.

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Source: Angola Press News Agency (APNA)