Jagannath University (JnU) student Tithy Sarker has been sued under the Digital Security Act for making “derogatory” comments about religion on Facebook.
Abu Musa Rifat, a student of the university’s zoology department, filed the case with the Cyber Tribunal in Dhaka today, Shamim Al Mamun, bench assistant of the tribunal, confirmed to The Daily Star.
After a hearing, Judge Mohammad Ash Sams Joglul Hossain took the case into cognisance and recorded the complainant’s statements.
The court also instructed the Cyber Crime Investigation Division of the Counter Terrorism and Transnational Crime (CTTC) unit of police to investigate the matter and submit a report to it by December 8.
On a recent country visit to Turkey at the invitation of Minister of Health Dr Fahrettin Koca, WHO Regional Director for Europe Dr Hans Henri P. Kluge delivered a keynote address at the Health Scientific Board of the Turkic Council and spoke with Mr Baghdad Amreyev, Secretary General of the Turkic Council.
The Regional Director’s visit also offered the opportunity to visit WHO/Europe’s new geographically dispersed office (GDO) in Istanbul, which will be a centre of excellence for preparedness for humanitarian and health emergencies.
Preparedness for humanitarian and health emergencies
Earlier this year, WHO/Europe and Turkey’s Ministry of Health signed an agreement to establish the new GDO focusing on preparedness for humanitarian and health emergencies. Dr Kluge met with Deputy Minister of Health Professor Emine Alp Meşe and expressed his thanks to the Ministry for their support in establishing the GDO.
Dr Kluge reiterated that the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the real and lasting impact of health emergencies on health systems. He spoke of the importance of ensuring that countries have the necessary capacities to prepare for health emergencies. The GDO will be a regional centre for such capacity-building and training.
Emergency preparedness is strongly emphasized under the European Programme of Work (EPW), United Action for Better Health, which envisages protecting more people from health emergencies as one of its core priorities. This will also contribute to the triple-billion goals highlighted in WHO’s 13th General Programme of Work.
Speech at the Turkic Council
In his keynote speech at the fourth meeting of the Health Scientific Board of the Turkic Council, Dr Kluge stressed the importance of subregional networks like the Turkic Council, which help coordination on health security threats such as COVID-19. In addition, Dr Kluge spoke of the need for greater understanding how health and livelihoods interlink, and emphasized how decisive measures taken early to control the pandemic will, in the long run, benefit the economy.
The meeting also provided an opportunity to speak with other health ministers, including Dr Alexey Tsoy of Kazakhstan, Dr Alymkadyr Beyshenaliev of Kyrgyzstan and Dr Alisher Shadmanov of Uzbekistan.
Working together with United Nations partners
Central to WHO’s work in countries, partners play a vital role in improving health care. Dr Kluge met with Ms Alanna Armitage, Regional Director for Eastern Europe and Central Asia of the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA). He thanked UNFPA for their collaboration during the COVID-19 pandemic and recognized ongoing work between the agencies, including an agreement and joint work plan on the implementation of the WHO European Action Plan on Sexual and Reproductive Health in countries of eastern Europe and central Asia. Dr Kluge and Ms Armitage spoke about the importance of sexual and reproductive health and maternal health to both agencies, adding that a new action plan should be planned together between WHO/Europe and UNFPA.
In a separate set of meetings, Dr Kluge spoke with Ms Gwi Yeop Son of the United Nations Development Coordination Office (UNDCO) about possible areas for collaboration with the opening of the new GDO in Istanbul. The meeting also offered the chance to highlight the implementation of the EPW, which regards partnerships with other United Nations agencies as an important part of success. The discussions covered how WHO/Europe and UNDCO can work together to ensure that any potential COVID-19 vaccine is rolled out smoothly in countries of Europe and central Asia.
Responding to an earthquake
During the visit, an earthquake struck Izmir and affected other parts of Turkey as well as neighbouring Greece. The Regional Director expressed his condolences to the Turkish authorities and offered WHO/Europe’s support. The WHO Country Office in Turkey immediately mobilized a response to support partners in the Ministry of Health as well as the Disaster and Emergency Management Presidency of Turkey (AFAD).
European Commission Speech Brussels, 05 Nov 2020 Let me begin by thanking DG ECFIN and my team for their efforts.
It is not easy to have solid forecasts in such an uncertain situation.
We have with five key me…
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Bishop Oballa urged couples to work towards ensuring that things are right in the family so that society can achieve success in curbing Gender Based Violence (GBV).
“The family is one of the most precious values that the Church holds and promotes,” said Bishop Oballa. “If things are right in the family, society will thrive. If things begin going wrong at the family level, society is going to be affected. God intended that as the first unit of society, the family should be a place of holiness, communion and love,” he said.
The Bishop was addressing Family Life Coordinators drawn from Kenya’s Catholic Diocese of Ngong during a training workshop on Prevention and Intervention of violence. The workshop was held at the Watakatifu Wote Senta in Ngong recently. The training was organised by the Kenya Conference of Catholic Bishops (KCCB) – Family Life National Office. It was the first in a series of trainings planned across Catholic dioceses in Kenya to address the rising incidences of GBV in the wake of Covid-19 pandemic.
Bishop Oballa noted that Covid-19 has brought out many issues that have been underlying in families, saying the world we are living in today calls for families to have a lot of compassion and love for one another. He encouraged families not to give room to intolerance as this could spark violence.
God’s word can heal our tendency to violence
“God’s word can heal our anger, intolerance and tendency to violence so that we can start to treat one another with love and mercy in all situations without calculation, especially with those we live,” said the Bishop. “I believe we give room to intolerance and violence when we begin calculating. When people start calculating, they give room to sowing discord, and this brings bitterness.”
Bishop Oballa called upon the family life coordinators to strive to have model families and be examples that others can emulate, telling them that a lot is expected from them by God and the Church.
‘When you cultivate a model family, this will help you to work on your wrong relationships and allow God to heal whatever it is that has not been going well,” he said. “I call on you to reflect on whether you are the man or woman, husband or wife, father or mother, that you should be. God has expectations of you, and the Church too has expectations of you,” emphasised Bishop Oballa.
See in every human person, a child of God
The Bishop urged the coordinators to heed the exaltation of Pope Saint John Paul II that calls on Christian families to share in the life and mission of the Church.
“If all families understood the ministry of the Church, GBV would have no place whatsoever in the society,” said Bishop Oballa. “If everyone saw in every human being, a child of God, GBV would be non-existent. Please go out and be ambassadors of God’s love and peace.”
Combating violence in society requires commitment
He told the coordinators that success in their work of combating violence in the society would not depend on their numbers but their commitment to the cause. He reminded them that Jesus only had 12 Apostles, but the message of Salvation has today reached the ends of the world.
“You just need a few people who grasp the message and are convinced to be able to pass the message and influence the attitudes and habits of others,” said the Bishop.
He thanked the staff of KCCB – Family Life National Office for organising the diocesan trainings, saying this was a true mark of their commitment and dedication in ensuring the laity are formed in ways that contribute to peace and a loving atmosphere in the homes.
Change begins with each one of us
For his part, the National Executive Secretary of the KCCB – Commission for Pastoral and Lay Apostolate, Fr. Josiah Muthee, told the coordinators to be committed to the GBV campaign and have the zeal and passion of football fans while championing their cause. He said the time had come for those in Kenya to take matters of child safeguarding seriously just as is happening in the Western World.
“Ensure that you benefit as much as possible from this training before you can cascade the GBV campaign to the grassroots. Change begins with all of us. We must be ready to do away with certain norms, cultures and customs that have become outdated,” said Fr. Muthee.
China is set to begin construction of the strategic railway line connecting Ya’an in Sichuan Province and Nyingtri (Ch. Linzhi) in Tibet Autonomous Region according to Chinese state-run Global Times. The project is part of the larger Sichuan-Tibet railway line.
The Sichuan-Tibet Railway is the second such project in Tibet after the Qinghai-Tibet Railway. It will go through the southeast of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, one of the world’s most geologically active areas, a report by the state-run China News reported.
Linzhi, which is also known as Nyingchi, is located close to Arunachal Pradesh border. China claims Arunachal Pradesh as part of southern Tibet while India contests it. Linzhi also has an airport, one of the five built by China in the Himalayan region.
The Ya’an-Nyingtri section runs 1,011 kilometres and will include 26 stations once completed. The total cost of the entire Sichuan-Tibet Railway project is around 319.8 billion yuan (USD 47.8 billion), Global Times reported.
“After the Sichuan-Tibet railway starts operation, Tibet will have more exchanges with other parts of the Chinese mainland. Strategically, China’s Tibetan region will have much stronger capabilities in material transportation and logistical supplies,” said Lin Minwang, deputy director at the Center for South Asian Studies at Fudan University.
The construction when completed, will provide logistical superiority to China linking the border regions near India’s Arunachal Pradesh, a hot-bed of disputed border claims by Beijing. Observers say that the project is in alignment with not only China’s economic prospects but military interests as well. The new railway line will cater to military transports and contribute to what China calls “border stability”.
Qian Feng, director of the research department at the National Strategy Institute at Tsinghua University said, “If a scenario of a crisis happens at China-India border, the railway will provide great convenience for China’s delivery of strategic materials.”
The construction of the Sichuan-Tibet Railway is of strategic importance that benefits the overall development of Tibet, Xiong Kunxin, an ethnic studies professor at the Tibet University in Lhasa, said.
The Sichuan-Tibet Railway starts from Chengdu, the capital of Sichuan province, cuts through Ya’an and enters TAR via Chamdo (Ch. Qamdo), reducing the journey from Chengdu to Lhasa from 48 hours to 13 hours, the report said.
Both Sichuan and Tibet are rich in resources with their unique natural landscapes, huge mineral reserves, and a wide variety of medicinal herbs.
After the completion of the Sichuan-Tibet Railway, it is expected to greatly boost local tourism all along the line, it said. “It will also enhance person-to-person exchanges between different regions and ethnic groups, promote understanding and cultural integration,” Xiong said.
WHO/Europe and the Welsh Government have agreed to work more closely together to promote health equity and rights and to ensure prosperity for all. Discussions with Public Health Wales and National Health Service (NHS) Wales, held at a virtual meeting on 4 November 2020, focused on the next steps in implementing the new agreement, and how to identify and overcome the common challenges faced by society both before and as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic.
“In what kind of place would you like to grow up, have a family and grow old? Through its focus on building people’s resilience and strengthening health and livelihood systems, Wales has taken an approach that can deliver healthy and cohesive places for all people to prosper and flourish, today and for future generations. The learning from Wales on how to make this happen in practice will contribute to fulfilling my vision for health across the WHO European Region through the European Programme of Work,” said Dr Hans Henri P. Kluge, WHO Regional Director for Europe.
“With this agreement between the Welsh Government and WHO, I look forward to supporting the delivery of health, sustainable development and prosperity to the people of Wales, and learning from these innovative approaches to strengthen health equity across Europe in the years to come,” he added.
A common sentiment expressed by many participants at the event was that the COVID-19 pandemic brings added urgency and impetus to this area of work.
The agreement calls on WHO/Europe and the Welsh Government to accelerate progress towards healthy, prosperous lives for all by increasing equity in health and leaving no one behind in Wales and the European Region. It also seeks to strengthen the role of Wales in the Region and globally in developing and sharing solutions and expertise through collaboration with WHO and its Member States, networks and partners.
Specific activities include:
developing a health equity status report for Wales with data, policy and health economics analysis, and potential solutions for policy action and investment to reduce health inequities;
creating a health equity solutions platform for Wales – a digital portal containing data, evidence, legislation, policies, tools and practical solutions to reduce health inequity; and
establishing Wales as a “live policy innovation site” through the development of innovative tools, mechanisms and digital solutions to model outcomes and impact and to monitor progress, and by providing a forum for sharing information, learning and know-how across the Region and beyond.
Cementing partnership with Wales
The joint work emerging from this agreement further reinforces the strong collaboration between WHO/Europe and Wales on technical and policy issues related to sustainable development and public health.
Wales was a founding member of and is active in the WHO Regions for Health Network, takes part in advisory groups and task forces coordinated by WHO/Europe, and hosts the WHO Collaborating Centre on Investment for Health and Well-Being at Public Health Wales.
“Through our WHO Collaborating Centre, we have worked closely with our colleagues at WHO for the last few years, and this memorandum of understanding comes at an extremely important time as we move swiftly to mitigate the broader health impacts of the coronavirus and learn together in doing so,” said Dr Tracey Cooper, Chief Executive of Public Health Wales.
“It also marks a further strengthening of Wales’s relationship with WHO. In partnership with the Welsh Government, we will work collaboratively on the agreed work plan to optimize health and well-being and improve health equity in these challenging times,” she added.
Health equity at the core of the European Programme of Work (EPW)
Addressing the persistent challenge of health inequalities to ensure that no one is left behind is a core value underpinning the EPW for 2020–2025, which was endorsed by Member States in September 2020. This priority is shared by the Welsh Government.
“Here in Wales, we are fully committed to achieving sustainable prosperity within our borders and beyond. Wales, like most countries, experiences inequalities in health, but we are determined to build a healthier Wales for all,” said Mr Vaughan Gething, Minister for Health and Social Services in Wales.
“Having our hard work recognized by the World Health Organization is a true testament to the hard work and grit of the people of Wales, who are continually working for equality for our nation,” he concluded.
The potato was first domesticated in Peru and Bolivia between 8000 and 5000BC [1]. Andean farmers found they grew well in higher altitudes around the lakes of Titicaca where the ancestors of the Inca settled [2].
Rich in starch, potatoes contain higher vitamin C than oranges, more potassium than bananas, and more fibre than apples [3]. The Spanish introduced potatoes to Europe in the 15th century having realised the food security significance [1]. Almost a century later the governor of Bermuda sent plants to Virginia in the U.S. [4]. It would take another century and a half to become an established crop in the U.S. In the 19th century, potatoes became a staple food, mostly to immigrants from Ireland and Scotland. During the Klondike gold rush, prospectors prized potatoes as much as the gold they extracted. Although vitamin C was yet to be discovered, the gold diggers knew potatoes contained vital nutrients that helped them to survive in the wild [5].
Western diets have literally been consumed by the potato and all its derivatives but we have forgotten the benefits of other South American/African tubers, namely yacón, sweet potato and yam. Popular in South America and Africa, these are still relatively uncommon SUPERFOODS that grow and adapt well to controlled environments.
Strengthening the Immune System to protect against disease – ‘The Good’
YACóN (Smallanthus sonchifolius)
Yacón is a relative of the sunflower and Jerusalem artichoke. It produces a large tuber with a sweet taste and texture like an apple or watermelon [6]. The edible tuber can weigh from a few hundred grams up to a kilogram. Yacón roots contain inulin, oligosccharides and fructooligosaccharides (FOS), indigestible polysaccharides that pass through the human digestive tract without being absorbed. Yacón has been used to make syrups suitable for diabetic patients, highly valued in Japan for antihyperglycemic properties [7]. However the percentage of FOS versus monomer type sugars can vary with variety, particularly post harvest (personal communications Beotanics Ltd). They showed that monomer sugars increased dramatically within 4 months of storage. Proper variety selection, growing culture, storage temperature and processing are essential to maximise this vegetables unique traits. They have a prebiotic effect, promoting beneficial gut bacteria to improve gastric health [7]. Yacón leaves also display medicinal properties with protocatechuic, chlorogenic, caffeic, and ferulic acids, which help to lower cholesterol [8].
Growing Yacón – Protected Controlled Environment
Yacón products including flour, syrup, juice, concentrate, tea extracts, both fresh and organic are predominantly exported to U..S markets [9]. If you want to grow yacón, space is a prime consideration as they can grow to over 2m in height. They produce small yellow flowers at the end of the growing season. Although yacón is not photoperiod sensitive, it still requires several months to establish and tubers tend to be late forming with most development happening 5 to 8 months after planting. Yacón does not do well in dry hot summers as it’s unsuitable for maximising high FOS in tubers. The hot climate also makes it susceptible to thrips and whitefly so there is a definite advantage to cooler coastal conditions such as the Pacific Northwest.
SWEET POTATO (Ipomoea batatas)
Sweet potatoes are a member of the morning glory family. They are gathering popularity as a healthy alternative to the starchy potato. Sweet potatoes produce more edible energy per hectare per day than wheat, rice or cassava [10] and are a good source of carbohydrates, fiber, and micronutrients. The edible leaves and shoots contain vitamins A, C and B (Riboflavin) [11]. Orange sweet potato contains high levels of beta-carotene which is converted by the body to vitamin A. They offer a cost-effective, sustainable way to supplement diets with only 125g needed to provide a RDA of vitamin A [12].
Purple sweet potato contains 4-7 times higher levels of anthocyanins compared to other sweet potatoes [13]. There is a wide range of genetic variability which leads to some interesting opportunities in the intensity of beta-carotene and anthocyanin, making this crop suitable for future food ingredients and nutraceutical exploration in both leaf and root. Beotanics Ltd are at an advanced stage exploring commercial opportunities in protected and vertical farming possibilities with specially selected genetics for high value applications.
A search for sweet potatoes in the U.S. will take you to California Sweetpotates, family owned farms in Merced, Stanislaus and Kern County. These sweet farmers practise sustainable controlled fertilization and drip irrigation to produce bountiful harvests. They have one of the best sites for learning how to cook with sweet potatoes. So why not make some amazing healthy dishes, we love the grilled sweetpotato tacos with queso fresco and cucumber-tomato salad.
YAM (Dioscorea)
Some people confuse sweet potato with yam but it bears no relation to yam which are sometimes called true yams so as to make the genus clear.
Yam is a tuber of the Dioscoreacea family, commonly grown throughout African countries predominantly grown for starch. The most common cultivars include white yam (D. rotundata), water yam (D. alata), yellow yam (D.cayenensis), aerial yam (D.bulbifera), Chinese yam (image inset) (D.esculenta) and trifoliate yam (D.dumentorum) [14]. Bulbifera also known as ‘air potato’ is a highly invasive species [15]. The USDA has a citizen science programme to monitor Bulbifera vines and the biological beetles introduced to control their spread in Florida [16]. One of the most under-rated medicinal varieties is the water yam, cultivated in Nigeria for its large roots and edible white and purple flesh [17].
Medicinal Properties Water of Yam
Water Yam is a natural source of vitamin C, beta carotene and vitamin B6 with important cardiovascular protectant properties [18]. Traditionally hard to grow, water yam has been difficult to commercialise in comparison to other cultivars. Farmers in Nigeria have concentrated on the more lucrative white yam and mixed crop farming of maize, cassava, cocoyam and sweet potato to ensure food security and protect against crop failure. But water yam is very high in total dietary fiber and has a high amylase content [19], which helps to break down starch. Water yam is also low in sodium and high in potassium, manganese and calcium which has implications in food fortification supporting bone health, metabolism and heart function [20].
Yam has been shown to contain powerful antioxidants with anticancer properties. It has preventative effects against many other ailments including arthritis and gastrointestinal disorders [20]. In turn these antioxidants display anti-inflammatory effects which help control diabetes and obesity as well as related heart disease [20]. A study examining people that ate yam extract for 12 weeks showed improvements in brain function. The effect is thought to be due to diosgenin which promotes neuronal growth [21].
Circulatory levels of two estrogen hormones, estrone and estradiol typically decrease during menopause, but both hormones can be increased through daily consumption of yam which has been demonstrated to increase levels by more than a quarter [22].
Why Yacon, Sweet Potato and Yam need to start clean – ‘The Bad’
Despite being relatively easy to grow, potato tubers have a bad past history and are susceptible to more than 75 diseases [22]. The origins of some of the more serious diseases including blight have since been traced back to Mexico [24]. Early potato blight most often seen in North America is caused by the fungal disease of Alternaria [25], but it is late potato blight caused by Phytophthora infestans that resulted in the devastating mid 18th century European and Irish famines [24]. This also affects other members of the solanacea family including tomatoes. Around the world potato blight causes around $6 billion of damage to crops each year [26].
There needs to be a clear path for viral and fungal free starting material and that starts with plant tissue culture and clean potato seeds.
The solution is to source the best plants for the field from plant micropropagation that guarantees the plants are free from diseases. The International Potato Centre, CIP in Lima is the central genebank for all things potato related in the world, preserving every known tuber germplasm for future biodiversity. We don’t know of many commercial growers of yacón and sweet potato using protective environments but one Irish company, Beotanics in Kilkenny, Ireland are proving it can be done. They hold a wide range of virus free stock in their laboratories to support over 1000 ha of client crops.
Protected cropping is essential for seed root production planting materials due to sweet potato being very prone to virus. In more temperate regions protected cropping of planting stock is essential as it’s a slip raised crop and huge amounts are needed for a very short planting window.
Sweet potatoes can be grown using a dripper system which may circumvent contaminated fields allowing time for regeneration of agricultural fields. In Nigeria Professor Morufat Balogun oversees the work done by the Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA) on yam seed production from meristem tip culture followed by aeroponic growing in tanks within polytunnels before finally planting out in the field. Commercial crops are subsequently harvested after 5 months with tubers as large as 5Kg. Funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation hear first hand from Professor Balogun on the impressive work being done in Nigeria in the film below.
Potato Piracy – ‘The Ugly’
If you are planning to grow any of these crops, be aware that some have protected status. Cultivar piracy is a real threat to the South American economy who are reliant on the income from native crops.
Feeding future world populations
The potato tuber is the third most eaten crop in the world, but who would have thought the potato could sustain life beyond earth in years to come? Proof of concept experiments are currently taking place to grow potatoes in simulated Martian conditions [27]. So the humble spud is indeed a SUPERFOOD that has survived famines, disasters, maybe even become a sustainable food source for settlers on Mars but for now and more importantly could boost personal immunity to fight disease.