Thursday, 18 September 2014

Ethiopian Airways to be official Aviation Africa 2015 airline -

Ethiopian Airlines has been named as the official carrier of
Aviation
 Africa 2015 Summit to be held in Dubai from May 10-11, 2015.
Ethiopian will be offering special discounted fares for all participants traveling on Ethiopian online destinations from Africa and Middle East. Ethiopian Airlines, a global Pan-African carrier, operates to 5 continents; Africa, Europe, North America, South America and Asia, serving 83 international and 20 domestic destinations.
At the two day summit, an overview of Ethiopian’s success story whilst operating in a challenging environment and concerns that hampered African carriers from sharing a ‘level playing field, will be discussed among participants.
Mr. Henok Woubshet, Director Distributions of Ethiopian said, ‘’ As a Pan-African airline, we are very pleased to be an official carrier of the 2015 Aviation Africa Summit. It is a testimony of our commitment to further strengthen cooperation among African carriers to create a single African aviation market and I believe this will foster future prospects of African Aviation”.
Mark Brown, Publisher of African & Arabian Aerospace magazines and organizer of Aviation Africa 2015 said “I am delighted to welcome Ethiopian Airlines as Official Airline to Aviation Africa 2015. With the African region poised for huge growth in the aviation industry it is appropriate that we have one of the largest carriers supporting this important event which will be tackling the issues surrounding handling, financing and supporting this growth area”.

Africa’s Demand For Business Aviation Is On The Rise

Dassault_Falcon_7X

VENTURES AFRICA – Booming sectors in sub-Saharan Africa, including oil and gas and agriculture, have expanded demand for business aviation, French aircraft maker, Dassault Aviation has said.
“Sub-Saharan Africa is an area of fast growth and industries such as mining, oil and gas and agriculture are booming which provides expanding demand for business aviation,” said Gilles Gautier, Vice President, Falcon Sales for Dassault Aviation.
The company will present its large cabin, 
long range
 Falcon 7X at the Africa Aerospace & Defence Expo, which will hold in Gauteng, South Africa on 17-21 September 2014.

“Falcons, with their exceptional short field and hot-and-high performance and low operating economics, are ideal for the tough conditions and vast expanses of this market,” Gautier added.
South Africa, venue of the Expo, which is regarded as the foremost exhibition of aviation technology on the continent, is home to a third of Africa’s business jets and some of its biggest operators. Angola and Nigeria are also two of its fastest growing markets.
Falcon 7X interior
Falcon 7X interior
The aircraft maker said Falcons can access challenging airports where competitors are unable to operate – a strong selling point in Africa, where the average age of business aircraft is higher than elsewhere. Features like this, Dassault said have won it 33 percent share of the African market and a quarter of the large cabin segment. The French company also said government users operate 30 percent of the Falcons on the continent.
The newly introduced very large cabin Falcon 5X and ultra long range Falcon 8X are expected to further boost African demand.
With the 6,450nm 8X, an extended version of the 7X featuring an unparalleled selection of cabin configurations, customers will be able to fly non-stop from Cape Town to London or Johannesburg to Moscow while benefiting from the outstanding operating economy and flexibility offered by the 7X.
Aviation contributed $34.5 billion to the GDP of Africa in 2012, which could increase to $168.7 billion in 2032, according to data from the Air Transport Action Group (ATAG). Dassault Aviation’s new offering is expected to boost the growth of the sector on the continent.
FX5 cockpit

Zimbabwe's First Lady Grace Mugabe, awarded PhD, two months after enrollment

Robert and Grace Mugabe

By May Jesaro (@KiptuiMay) You will never guess what is buzzing in the worldwide media let alone with Zimbabweans about their ‘oh so Grace-ful’ First Lady. 

The First Lady of Zimbabwe, Grace Mugabe, seems to be drawing attention from everywhere on her recently acquired PhD. But what’s the big deal you would wonder? Grace, who is now dubbed ‘DisGrace’, was awarded a PhD in Sociology after two months of enrollment into the University of Zimbabwe. President Robert Mugabe, her husband, who happened to be the chancellor of the university, capped his ‘hard working’ wife on her graduation last week. This would go on to add on her academic list having completed her first degree in Chinese language in 2011. According to the state owned Herald Newspaper, her thesis was on the changing social structure and functions of the family which involved a study in a children’s home. Many Zimbabweans, especially the university students, seemed who have recently acquired a degree of outrage on social media but what can you do? Unless your one of the Mugabe's, your books will be your 'spouse' till you graduate.

WCW– Lupita Nyong'o

Lupita Nyongo

By this time most Kenyan must have heard of Lupita, the beautiful Kenyan lass who conquered Hollywood thanks to her role as Patsey in 12 Years a Slave, and won the hearts of many prominent personalities including Oprah Winfrey and Barrack Obama. What perplexed many Kenyans however was news that she was born in Mexico. Uproar by her Kenyan fans led her to candidly explain, with the help of her father Professor Anyang’ Nyong’o how she was born in Mexico but raised in Kenya.

Her immense talent coupled up with an education from the finest schools saw her graduate with a degree in Film and Theatre studies, after which worked as a production assistant on several films. Lupita’s prowess in film and theatre has seen her produce and direct her own film, “In my genes” and feature in popular Mtv Africa series “Shuga”. It was soon after completing her Master’s degree from the Yale School of drama, that she landed a role in Steve McQueen’s drama “12 Years a slave”. This has seen her scoop nominations and bag numerous awards with the most prestigious being the “Oscar Academy Award” for “Best Supporting actress”. Besides being immensely talented, Lupita’s beauty and fashion sense has seen her inspire many “colored girls” especially those from Africa to confidently love their complexions and believe in their beauty with one even saying that. “I was about to buy the “Whitenicious” Cream to lighten my complexion when you appeared on the world map and saved me.” To further appraise her beauty, Lupita was voted “People’s most beautiful woman”, has graced numerous magazine covers and is a worldwide heartthrob with other celebrities looking up to her. Evidently endowed with talent and beauty, what’s not to love about this shining star Lupita?     GO TO PAGE 1 2 Next » inShare The Right Way To Seduce Girls Easily Girls Go Crazy When Men Do This... This Video Reveals The Truth About Girls... Any Girl Will Fall In Love With You In 15 Seconds! NEXT STORY » MCM: David Mathenge aka Nameless Read More... Comment Policy 


Robert Gates: ISIS Can't Be Defeated Without US Ground Troops

Image: Robert Gates: ISIS Can't Be Defeated Without US Ground TroopsPresident Barack Obama forcefully reaffirmed that he won’t send American troops into combat in Iraq amid fresh questions about whether the U.S. can avoid sliding deeper into an escalating conflict.
“This is not and will not be America’s fight alone,” Obama told troops at MacDill Air Force Base in Tampa, referring to the battle against the Islamic State extremist group. “I will not commit you and the rest of our armed forces to fighting another ground war in Iraq.”
Obama spoke after meeting with Central Command Commander General Lloyd Austin, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel and representatives of more than 40 countries that are part of the coalition the U.S. is building to counter Islamic State fighters in Iraq and Syria.
Obama is trying to rally an American public weary of war for a battle against the Sunni extremists who’ve seized territory across Iraq and Syria with a brutal campaign of terror against religious minorities and the beheadings of western hostages.
Vote Now: Should Congress Back Obama War Plan? Vote Here
While the president vowed that he won’t deploy U.S. ground troops in the battle, Army General Martin Dempsey, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and Obama’s former defense secretary raised the prospect that American troops ultimately may be needed for his strategy to succeed.
Military Advisers
In testimony to a Senate committee yesterday, Dempsey said he would recommend U.S. military advisers accompany Iraqi troops into battle if necessary to defeat Islamic State, which also is known by the acronyms ISIS and ISIL.
Dempsey added that such a step isn’t needed now. He said Obama has told him to come back on a “case-by-case basis” with questions about using American personnel.
Obama didn’t directly address Dempsey’s remarks. He said that while the U.S. has a responsibility to lead the fight, it can’t do “what Iraqis must do for themselves.” The U.S. will be more effective providing intelligence, logistics and air power than it would be sending in troops. A U.S. troop commitment also won’t help the cause of long-term stability and self-sufficiency in the region, he said.
“One thing we have learned is that when we do things alone and the people of those countries aren’t doing it for themselves, as soon as we leave, they start getting into the same problems,” Obama said.
‘Hypothetical Scenario’
Administration officials yesterday sought to turn aside any questions about escalating U.S. involvement.
White House press secretary Josh Earnest said Dempsey was referring to “a hypothetical scenario” and that the administration’s strategy was clear.
“The president does not believe that it would be in the best interest of our
national
 security to deploy American ground troops in a combat role in Iraq and Syria,” Earnest told reporters yesterday. “That policy has not changed.”

Dempsey’s spokesman, Air Force Colonel Ed Thomas, said such advisers might include personnel calling in airstrikes for Iraqi forces.
“The context of this discussion was focused on how our forces advise the Iraqis and was not a discussion of employing U.S. ground combat units in Iraq,” he said.
The U.S. is set to have about 1,600 military personnel in Iraq to protect American diplomatic missions and to assess and advise the Iraqi military.
U.S. Airstrikes
Obama’s strategy is based on a campaign of airstrikes against Islamic State targets in Iraq to back Iraqi and Kurdish units on the ground.
Robert Gates, who served under both Obama and his predecessor, George W. Bush, said he doubted that an air campaign alone or relying only on Iraqi and Kurdish forces would be enough.
“There will be boots on the ground if there’s to be any hope of success in the strategy,” Gates said today on “CBS This Morning.” By repeatedly pledging that the U.S. won’t put troops into combat, “the president, in effect, traps himself.”
Gates, who took over the defense job in the Bush administration in 2006 following setbacks for U.S. forces in Iraq, said Obama’s stated goal of destroying the extremist group may be unrealistic. He said the U.S. has been at war with al-Qaeda for 13 years, and while “we have dealt them some terrible blows,” the terrorist group hasn’t been fully defeated.
‘Realistic Goals’
The U.S. should continue to strike Islamic State to degrade the organization and prevent it from holding territory, he said. “Those are probably realistic goals.”
Obama also has asked Congress for authority to train and equip vetted Syrian rebels who are rivals to Islamic State in that country’s civil war. A vote on that authority was approved in the House today 273-156.
While some Republicans are pushing for a more robust military operation against Islamic State, many of Obama’s fellow Democrats in Congress say they won’t support deeper involvement.
“We are not there to support combat troops in any engagement,” House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi said at a news conference today. “The American people are very burned by what happened in Iraq” with the 2003 invasion.
Iraqi Prime Minister Haidar Al-Abadi said his county neither needs nor wants foreign ground troops. In an interview with the Associated Press, he urged the U.S. and other nations to expand the campaign against Islamic State into neighboring Syria.
Coalition Aid
More than 40 countries have offered assistance in a global coalition to fight Islamic militants, Obama said. France and the U.K. are conducting airstrikes over Iraq, “with others committed to join this effort,” he said.
On the ground, Saudi Arabia will host U.S. efforts to train and equip Syrian opposition forces. Australia and Canada are sending military advisers to Iraq, German paratroopers are offering training and other, unspecified nations are offering to resupply arms and equipment to forces in Iraq.
Arab nations “have agreed to strengthen their support for Iraq’s new government,” and help to cut off Islamic State funding, collect intelligence and stem the flow of foreign fighters.


Steve Jobs Didn’t Let His Kids Use iPhones Or iPads: Here’s Why Read more at http://www.inquisitr.com/1468612/steve-jobs-didnt-let-his-kids-use-iphones-or-ipads-heres-why/#g031Fq50iozvww9A.99

Steve Jobs is a name which is synonymous with cutting edge, innovative and groundbreaking technology.
So it may come as something as a surprise to learn Apple’s former CEO didn’t believe in letting his kids use some of his company’s greatest products – the 
iPhone
 and the iPad.

And it’s not because the Apple godhead was a closet 
Samsung
 fan either.

Jobs, who died in 2011, may have had an instinctive flair for technology but he was a low tech parent who firmly believed in restricting his children’s access to electronic devices.
“We limit how much technology our kids use at home,” said Jobs way back in 2010, expressing growing concerns about his children’s gadget use.
As all modern parents know, iPhones and iPads are extremely appealing to children. These little hand-held devices are state-of-the-art toys. Surrogate parents almost, capable of entertaining, distracting, and pacifying children during school holidays and on long car journeys when mom and dad’s attentions are focused elsewhere.
Yet instead of thanking Apple for these extremely convenient parent assistants, should we actually be concerned about the potential harm they may be inflicting upon our youngsters?
Steve Jobs certainly appeared to think so. In a New York Times article published this week, journalist Nick Bilton recalls how he once put it to Jobs that his kids must love the iPod, but to his surprise Jobs replied, “They haven’t used it. We limit how much technology our kids use at home.”
“I’m sure I responded with a gasp and dumbfounded silence. I had imagined the Jobs’s household was like a nerd’s paradise: that the walls were giant touch screens, the dining table was made from tiles of iPads and that iPods were handed out to guests like chocolates on a pillow. Nope, Mr. Jobs told me, not even close.”
And Jobs wasn’t the only technological guru who had substantial concerns about the long-term effects of kids engaging with touch-screen technology for hours on end.
Chris Anderson, former editor of Wired, also believes in setting strict time limits and parental controls on every device at home.
“My kids accuse me and my wife of being fascists. They say that none of their friends have the same rules. That’s because we have seen the dangers of technology first hand. I’ve seen it in myself, I don’t want to see that happen to my kids.”
Researchers at the University of California Los Angeles recently published a study which demonstrated that just a few days after abstaining from using electronic gadgets, children’s social skills improved immediately.
Which is definitely food for thought considering recent research showed that an average American child spends more than seven and a half hours a day using smart-phones and other electronic screens.
Jobs was undoubtedly a genius but he didn’t get that way through staring at screens and playing Angry Birds until the early hours or constantly updating his 
Facebook
 account.

Walter Isaacson, the author of Steve Jobs, spent a lot of time at the Apple co-founder’s home and confirmed that face-to-face family interaction always came before screentime for Jobs.
“Every evening Steve made a point of having dinner at the big long table in their kitchen, discussing books and history and a variety of things. No one ever pulled out an iPad or computer. The kids did not seem addicted at all to devices.”
So the next time the advertising department at Apple, Samsung, or any other major technological corporation attempt to sublimely convince you that life is somehow lacking without their latest little device, remember that the man who started it all, believed somewhat differently.

Read more at http://www.inquisitr.com/1468612/steve-jobs-didnt-let-his-kids-use-iphones-or-ipads-heres-why/#g031Fq50iozvww9A.99

S. Sudan government orders all foreign workers out by October 15th 2014


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A body has been found in a Lufthansa A340’s landing gear at Frankfurt airport

  A dead body has been found in the undercarriage of a Lufthansa aircraft that arrived at #Frankfurt airport from Tehran. German newspaper B...