Difference between revisions of "Cosmos Times:Africa"

From eagle-rock.org
Line 2: Line 2:
 
[[File:Young bull elephant.jpg|right|300px|Young bull elephant]]
 
[[File:Young bull elephant.jpg|right|300px|Young bull elephant]]
 
__FORCETOC__
 
__FORCETOC__
 +
 +
==Suicide Bomber Kills Nearly 50 at Nigerian High School — Nov 10, 2014==
 +
Source <ref>[http://www.nytimes.com/2014/11/11/world/africa/nigeria-suicide-bomber-boko-haram.html?_r=1 Bomb at School in Nigeria Kills Nearly 50 Boys] — By Adam Nossiter | New York Times | Nov 10, 2014</ref>
 +
 +
A suicide attacker disguised as a student detonated a bomb at a boarding school in northern Nigeria on Monday morning, killing nearly 50 boys who were between 10 and 20 years old, officials and witnesses said.
  
 
==Chinese officials caught smugging ivory in Tanzania — Nov 6, 2014==
 
==Chinese officials caught smugging ivory in Tanzania — Nov 6, 2014==

Revision as of 16:30, 17 November 2014

The Cosmos Times banner.jpg


All pages in The Cosmos Times
The Cosmos Times(3 C)

This page is part of an archive of articles that were published in The Cosmos Times.
The Cosmos Times provides news concerning the entire cosmos.
Research the facts and keep working on your opinion.

News in The Cosmos Times is selected for the following topics:

  • News from the entire cosmos, which means the entire earth and the cosmos beyond it, and also the spirit world.
  • News from religions and spiritual movements.
  • Central world news for topics such as: Politics, economics, culture & art, science & technology, philosophy, history, culture.
  • News concerning developments of native tribes, new communities and new nations trying to achieve autonomy.

There is a Facebook page The Cosmos Times.

'
Young bull elephant


Suicide Bomber Kills Nearly 50 at Nigerian High School — Nov 10, 2014

Source [1]

A suicide attacker disguised as a student detonated a bomb at a boarding school in northern Nigeria on Monday morning, killing nearly 50 boys who were between 10 and 20 years old, officials and witnesses said.

Chinese officials caught smugging ivory in Tanzania — Nov 6, 2014

Source [2]

BEIJING — When Chinese President Xi Jinping took a large government and business delegation to Tanzania on his inaugural trip abroad in March 2013, he took pains to emphasize that his country’s growing ties with Africa would benefit the people of the continent.

But even as he spoke in glowing terms about unity and cooperation, his entourage was busy buying up thousands of kilograms of illegal ivory, using the cover afforded by their official status to smuggle it home, an investigative report released Thursday alleges.

Such was the scale of the purchases that local prices in one market in the commercial capital, Dar es Salaam, doubled to $318 per pound during the president’s visit, according to “Vanishing Point: Criminality, Corruption and the Devastation of Tanzania’s Elephants,” released by the London-based Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA).

The last kings of Africa — Oct 27, 2014

Source [3]

Vienna-based photographer and art historian Alfred Weidinger has spent the past five years capturing the splendor of Africa's monarchies and tribal leaders for his photographic project, The Last Kings of Africa. The project is his attempt to capture the beauty and mystique of the region's most powerful sovereigns. So far he has photographed 220 tribal kings and leaders, with many more to go.

Eyewitness to Hell: Ebola in Liberia through the lens of a photographer — Oct 24, 2014

Source [4]

Firsthand account of daily life in Liberia. The people live in fear for their lives while groups of local men undertake the thankless and dangerous task of body removal for the dead. This is a powerful, touching testimony.

With Aid Doctors Gone, Ebola Fight Grows Harder — Aug 16, 2014

Source [5]

When people started dying of Ebola in Liberia, Clarine Vaughn faced a wrenching choice: Should she send home, for their own health and safety, four American doctors working for Heartt, the aid group she led there? Or should she keep them in the country without proper supplies or training to fight the virulent, contagious disease, which was already spreading panic?

After much agonizing, Ms. Vaughn, who lives in Liberia, pulled the doctors out and canceled plans to bring in more. The African physicians and nurses left behind told her they understood, but felt abandoned. They said, “We need you guys here,” she recalled.

Kenyan girls taken to remote regions to undergo FGM in secret - July 24, 2014

Source [6]

Parents are taking their daughters to remote regions of Kenya to undergo female genital mutilation (FGM) in secret, according to the head of the country's new FGM prosecution unit.

Christine Nanjala, who has led a high-profile crackdown on the practice, said perpetrators were becoming increasingly difficult to catch as many moved underground to carry out the practice.

Chinese admit role in graft and poaching in Africa — July 14, 2014

Source [7]

"China’s ambassador to Tanzania Lu Youqing has admitted that some Chinese nationals and companies engaged in corruption and illegal ivory trade in the country. He also voiced his concern about “shoddy” work done by Chinese contractors in road projects in some African countries. In an interview published by the South China Morning Post, the envoy expressed his disappointment over “bad habits” that tarnish China’s image in Tanzania and across the African continent."

Former Ivoirian President Stands Trial for Crimes Against Humanity — June 12, 2014

Source [8]

Judges at the International Criminal Court say former Ivory Coast president Laurent Gbagbo will stand trial on charges of crimes against humanity.

The court's pre-trial chamber found "substantial grounds" to believe Gbagbo is responsible for acts of murder, rape and other crimes committed in Ivory Coast between December 2010 and April 2011.

Below the radar: How human rights abuses are being ignored in Tanzania — July 16, 2013

Source [9]

This editorial decries judicial corruption in Tanzania and lists numerous examples to support its arguments.

Mali and the Africa Land Grab — Feb 24, 2013

Source [10]

Journalists examine France's motives sending forces to intervene in Mali civil war. Examines the politics affecting land, water and food security. Drought, civil war, food security issues are contended by a number of international players including France, Libya, the USA, Mali, the Toureg separatists as well as Al Quaida.

References

  1. Bomb at School in Nigeria Kills Nearly 50 Boys — By Adam Nossiter | New York Times | Nov 10, 2014
  2. Chinese officials accused of smuggling ivory during state visit to TanzaniaBy Simon Denyer | Washington Post | Nov 6, 2014
  3. The last kings of Africa — by Monique Todd | CNN | Oct 27, 2014
  4. Eyewitness to Hell: Ebola in Liberia through the lens of a photographer — By Kieran Kesner | Mashable | Oct 24, 2014
  5. With Aid Doctors Gone, Ebola Fight Grows Harderby Sheri Fink | New York Times | Aug 16, 2014
  6. Kenyan girls taken to remote regions to undergo FGM in secret — By Alexandra Topping | The Guardian | July 24, 2014
  7. Chinese admit role in graft and poaching in AfricaBy Florence Mugarula | Africa Review | July 16, 2014
  8. Former Ivorian President Gbagbo to Stand Trial — Voice of America | June 12, 2014
  9. Below the radar: How human rights abuses are being ignored in TanzaniaBy Sarah Hermitage | African Arguments | July 16, 2013
  10. Mali and the Africa Land Grab — Paul Jay | The Real News | Feb 24, 2013

Comments