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Thursday, April 5, 2018

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March 25, Senatorial Elections: Here is the Official Results


The Constitutional Council has proclaimed the results of March 25, 2018 senatorial polls. The official results show that the Cameroon People’s Democratic Movement, CPDM has bagged a landslide majority at the Senatorial elections.
The results proclaimed today by the Chairman of the Constitutional Council Clement Atangana saw the ruling party winning in nine of the ten regions, winning 63 seats in the Senate as against 07 seats for the main opposition party, the Social Democratic Front. The Head of State now has a maximum of ten days to appoint the remaining 30 senators to complete the 100-man house Senate. Speculations are high at whether the SDF will accept appointment into the senate. A school of thought holds that if the SDF refuses such an offer, it is likely to have no group in the senate given that the party needs 10 senators to form a group. The SDF has however won 10% of the seats in competition yet scoring 8.2% at the national level.
Where below is the full results
* CPDM = 81% = 63 seats
* SDF = 8,72% = 7 seats
* NUDP = 5,92% = 0 seat
* CDU= 1,61% = 0 seat
* UPC= 1,41% = 0 seat
* FSNC = 0,76% = 0 seat
* UDP = 0,16% = 0 seat
* ANDP = 0,13% = 0 seat
 


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Wednesday, April 4, 2018

Study: Vegetables can help keep older women's blood vessels healthy

New research suggests that women eat vegetables -- raw or cooked, and especially cruciferous vegetables -- to protect the health of their blood vessels. Photo by 6277974/Pixabay 
 
WEDNESDAY, April, 4, 2018 -- Eating lots of vegetables may help older women keep their blood vessels healthy, Australian researchers report.
The biggest benefit seems to come from cruciferous vegetables, including cabbage, Brussels sprouts, cauliflower and broccoli. Eating these strong-smelling veggies was linked to less thickening of the carotid arteries, located in the neck.
Thickening of this major blood vessels is a sign of impending heart disease, the researchers said.
"These findings reinforce the importance of adequate vegetable intake to reduce your risk of atherosclerosis ["hardening of the arteries"], heart attacks and strokes," said lead researcher Lauren Blekkenhorst. She's a research associate in the School of Medical and Health Sciences at the University of Western Australia.
"Recommendations to include a couple of servings of cruciferous vegetables may optimize the health benefits of increasing vegetables in the diet," Blekkenhorst said.
She added, however, that this study doesn't prove a lack of vegetables caused carotid artery walls to thicken, only that there was an association between the two.
Veggies are good for you, Blekkenhorst said, because they're high in fiber, so you feel full without consuming many calories.
"They are also packed full of vitamins, minerals and phytochemicals, which have been shown to reduce inflammation and oxidative stress," Blekkenhorst said. Chronic inflammation plays a part in a number of age-related illnesses, including heart disease, she added.
Best of all, the benefits of vegetables exist whether you cook them or eat them raw, Blekkenhorst said. Though cooking reduces some nutrients, eating cooked vegetables aids digestion and absorption of these nutrients, she said.
The benefits found in the study were limited to vegetables like cabbage, Brussels sprouts, cauliflower and broccoli, Blekkenhorst said. Other veggies did not show the same protective link.
She said the value of cruciferous veggies remained even after her team took into account a woman's lifestyle, heart disease risk, and other vegetable and dietary factors.
Blekkenhorst said it's important to eat both raw and cooked vegetables throughout the day.
Any way you prepare them, you'll do your body good, according to a nutritionist not involved with the study.
"Whether raw, roasted, steamed, sauteed or boiled, vegetables offer an amazing array of health benefits," said Samantha Heller, a senior clinical nutritionist at New York University Medical Center.
Vegetables help you fight infection and reduce your risk for mental decline, some cancers, heart disease and diabetes, she said.
"Inflammation plays a big role in the development of atherosclerosis, so it makes sense that eating foods that help lower inflammation may lead to more supple arteries," Heller said.
Whether men also gain these benefits from vegetables isn't clear, the study authors said.
"We cannot be certain that the findings will be the same for older men, as the risk factors for vascular disease are different for men and women, Blekkenhorst said. "But it can't hurt for men to consume more cruciferous vegetables every day."
Heller said it seems reasonable to think that men would derive the same health benefits from eating a variety of vegetables.
For the study, Blekkenhorst's team had nearly 1,000 women 70 and older fill out questionnaires about how often they eat veggies.
Responses ranged from never to three or more times a day. Types of veggies included onions, garlic, leeks, shallots, beans, leafy green vegetables, cruciferous vegetables and yellow, orange or red vegetables.
The researchers used sonograms to measure the thickness of each woman's carotid arteries and the amount of plaque they contained.
The carotid artery walls of women who ate the most vegetables were about 0.05 millimeter thinner than those who ate the fewest.
That difference might be significant, Blekkenhorst said, because a 0.1 millimeter decrease in carotid wall thickness was linked to a 10 percent to 18 percent lower risk of stroke and heart attack.
On average, each additional half-ounce of vegetables eaten in a day was associated with nearly a 1 percent thinner carotid artery wall, she said.
The report was published online April 4 in Journal of the American Heart Association



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That Fantastic Overhead Goal by Ronaldo Against Juventus

Cristiano Ronaldo admitted he didn't expect to score his sensational second goal in Real Madrid's 3-0 Champions League victory over Juventus on Tuesday night.

 
Ronaldo celebrating last night
After Cristiano Ronaldo smashed the ball from high out of the rainy sky into the left-hand corner of Gianluigi Buffon's net for his second goal against Juventus, there was a long second of silence in Turin while the Real Madrid man wheeled away to celebrate, and then a spontaneous round of applause as the home fans gave the Real Madrid striker due respect. What a finish.

Late Winnie Mandela's Granddaughter Shares Last Conversation With Her Granny On Social Media (Photos)

 Late Winnie Mandela's granddaughter, has posted the last conversation she had with her activist grand-mother days before she passed away.

 
Nelson and Winnie Mandela
 On April 2, South African anti-apartheid campaigner, Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, who is a former wife of South Africa's first black president, Nelson Mandela, died at the aged 81.
Only a week before Winnie Mandela's death, her granddaughter, Zoleka Mandela, joked about a conversation she had with her late grandmother. 
She took to her Instagram handle (@zolekamandela) on Thursday, March 26, to share the interesting post. 
According to the post, Zoleka told her late grandmother that she was searching for the right man for her and intends to screen all of them before her 82nd birthday. 
Zoleka and Winnie Mandela
Zoleka's conversation with late Winnie reads: "Zoleka : Ma, it's time I found you a boo thang so he can do the thangs that need to be done! What is actually your type? 

My Day One (my grandmother): Darling, just look at your grandfather. That's my type. 

Tuesday, April 3, 2018

Israel Cancels Plan To Deport African Migrants

 The controversial plan by Israel to deport thousands of African migrants from the country has finally been cancelled.


Isreali Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu
 

Israel has announced it reached a deal with with the UN refugee agency to cancel a controversial plan to deport African migrants and replace it with a new one that will see thousands sent to Western countries.
In the new deal according to a report by AFP, a minimum of 16,250 migrants will be resettled in unspecified Western nations under the agreement announced in a statement from Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office.

South Africans Mourn Winnie Mandela

 Winnie Mandela, former wife of South Africa's first black president, Nelson Mandela has passed away leaving behind loved ones.

Late Winnie Mandela


According to the BBC, South African anti-apartheid campaigner Winnie Mandela has died aged 81. The revelation was made public by her personal assistant, Zodwa Zwane Monday afternoon.
 Winnie Madikizela Mandela was the former wife of South Africa's first black president, Nelson Mandela.
 Zwane said Winnie's family would issue a statement later in the day.
 Born in Bizana in the Eastern Cape in 1936‚ she moved to Johannesburg to study social work after matriculating.
 She met lawyer and anti-apartheid activist Nelson Mandela in 1957 and they were married a year later. They had two children together.
 However‚ her marriage life with Mandela was short-lived‚ as he was arrested in 1963 and sentenced to life imprisonment for treason. Mandela was eventually released in 1990 and went on to become South Africa's first black President.


When News Breaks Out, We Break In. (The 2014 Bloggies Finalist)

Monday, April 2, 2018

PM Yang Prescribes Measures to Put an End to Rampant Leakages of Official Docs and Info


Prime Minister Philemon Yang has issued a circular letter to the decentralized territorial units’ officials and to the managing directors of public institutions and companies warning that “break time is over” to those who leak sensitive documents and information in the social. In the circular which was signed on March 29, 2018, Prime Minister further emphasized that in defiance of the rules in force, government institutions and companies’ confidential document and information were regularly disclosed to an unauthorized public. He added that because of the vulgarization of the internet and new electronic communication tools, the dissemination of this info was accentuated.
According to the minister, apart from compromising the efficiency of public actions, this constitutes serious harms to the security of the state which is increasingly confronted with multifaceted security threats.
Also, to put an end to this, the minister advises the officials to ensure that public agents respect the professional discretion required by the civil service regulation. The PM urged that public agents suspected of violation of the professional discretion obligation should face the competent disciplinary commission. He also advised them to place only people with an unquestionable decency in their services’ mail processing chain.
 


When News Breaks Out, We Break In. (The 2014 Bloggies Finalist)

Study: Red meat linked to colon cancer in women


April 2 (UPI) -- If a woman avoids eating red meat, her risk of colon cancer is significantly reduced, according to a new study in Britain.
Researchers studied whether beef is associated with risk of colon and rectal cancer compared with poultry, fish or vegetarian diets. The findings were published Sunday in the International Journal for Cancer.

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Winnie Mandela, Anti Apatheid Fighter Dies at 81

Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, a prominent anti-apartheid activist and the ex-wife of Nelson Mandela, has died at the age of 81.
Madikizela-Mandela was married to Nelson Mandela from 1958 to 1996.
Mandela was imprisoned throughout most of their marriage and Madikizela-Mandela's own activism against the apartheid regime led to her being imprisoned for months and spending years under house arrest.
Her political activism was marred by a kidnapping and assault conviction in 1991, for which she was fined.
She faced these allegations again during the 1997 hearings before the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, a panel that investigated apartheid-era crimes.
As a parliamentarian after South Africa's first all-race elections, she was convicted of fraud.
Still, she was widely venerated in South Africa for her role in fighting white minority rule.
Press Association

When News Breaks Out, We Break In. (The 2014 Bloggies Finalist)