Appel à candidatures pour la 2e saison de Viet Solutions, un concours de produits/solutions numériques organisé par Viettel

HANOI, Vietnam, 17 juin 2021 /PRNewswire/ — Le ministère vietnamien de l’information et des communications (MIC) et Viettel Group annoncent la deuxième saison de Viet Solutions, un concours visant à trouver des produits/solutions pour accélérer le progrès de la transformation numérique. Les personnes intéressées peuvent soumettre leur candidature sur le site officiel du concours www.vietsolutions.net.vn jusqu’au 15/08/2021.

Call for applications for the 2nd season of Viet Solutions - a contest for digital products/solutions by Viettel

Avec pour objectif de « créer des synergies pour créer des sociétés numériques », le concours s’adresse aux personnes et aux organisations du monde entier qui proposent des produits et des solutions dans dix domaines : applications mobiles, soins de santé, éducation, finance et banque, agriculture, transport et logistique, énergie, ressources et environnement, fabrication et gestion d’entreprise. Cette année, le MIC vietnamien et Viettel recherchent des solutions à des problèmes spécifiques qui sont énumérés sur le site officiel du concours.

Dans cette saison, Viet Solutions accepte également les idées d’entreprises et multiplie par trois la cagnotte. Le gagnant recevra 300 millions de VND (12 000 USD), les deux seconds 200 millions (8 500 USD), les deux troisièmes 150 millions (6 400 USD).

Tous les concurrents qualifiés pour l’événement principal auront la possibilité de conclure un partenariat avec Viettel, assorti d’une clause de partage des bénéfices pouvant atteindre 75 %. Les participants seront également formés aux compétences essentielles par des professeurs des meilleures universités économiques, des investisseurs providentiels et des PDG de grandes entreprises.

Le vice-ministre du MIC, Nguyen Huy Dung, a déclaré : « Il existe de nombreux problèmes qui ont besoin de la bonne idée pour être résolus. C’est l’idée maîtresse de la saison actuelle de Viet Solutions ».

Le PDG de Viettel, M. Le Dang Dzung, a déclaré : « Le modèle d’incubateur des trois parties, le gouvernement, les entreprises et les start-ups, génère un énorme pouvoir synergique. Le MIC crée des couloirs juridiques. Viettel dispose d’un vaste marché mondial qui permet aux concurrents de proposer de nouvelles solutions, de nouveaux produits et un environnement propice à la croissance. La communauté des startups fournira des produits créatifs, des solutions pour aider à résoudre le problème défini par le ministère et qui conviennent aux entreprises du marché. Ce modèle de collaboration aidera le Vietnam à accélérer ses progrès en matière de transformation numérique. »

Viet Solutions est un concours annuel visant à trouver des solutions créatives qui aident à résoudre le problème actuel de la société et contribuent au plan de transformation numérique du pays. Après deux saisons, 554 demandes ont été soumises, le revenu total des partenariats s’élève à 20 milliards de VND (870 000 USD).

Lors de la saison précédente, le concours a désigné trois lauréats : Mismart, qui utilise un drone pour surveiller la santé des cultures ; Map4D, une plate-forme cartographique vietnamienne, et CyRada, une solution de sécurité pour le cloud et le web.

Inscription

  • Date limite : Dimanche 15 août 2021 ICT.
  • Vous trouverez des informations sur l’éligibilité, etc. sur le site web de Viet Solutions : http://vietsolutions.net.vn
  • Toutes les candidatures doivent être faites via le site web de Viet Solutions.

Photo : https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1533477/VS2021_01.jpg

Cameroon Deploys Troops to Fight Separatists

YAOUNDÉ – Cameroon this week deployed an additional 300 troops to Bui, a northwestern administrative unit that the military says has become a stronghold for separatists. The troops are conducting house-to-house searches for weapons and destroying improvised explosive devices and rebel camps. But Civilians accuse both sides of abuses and rights violations.

Cameroon’s military says Bui, an administrative unit in the English speaking North West Region, is becoming an epicenter of separatist atrocities. About 35 improvised explosive devices, or IEDs, were destroyed by the military within the past two weeks.

Other IEDs planted by separatists, the military says, destroyed vehicles and roads.

Troops sent to restore order in June killed seven fighters including three self-proclaimed separatist generals, authorities said. Four soldiers died while seizing weapons from fighters.

General Valere Nka is commander of government troops fighting the separatists.

He said 300 additional troops have been deployed this week to Bui with a mission to destroy IEDs and separatist camps.

Nka said there is no time to rest for his troops as killings and looting by rebels is still rife in Bui. He said fighters continue to threaten freedoms and liberties of civilians. He said President Paul Biya, who is commander-in-chief of Cameroon’s armed forces, has instructed the military to destroy separatist camps and neutralize rebels and their self-proclaimed generals.

Nka urged civilians to assist the military in reporting suspects and helping identify their hideouts.

The Presbyterian Church in Bui said dozens of its members, especially motorcycle riders who transport travelers, have fled months of fighting.

Forty-year-old Christopher Tatah said he escaped to the French-speaking western town of Bafoussam. He said government forces seized his motorcycle in Kumbo, the capital of Bui.

“When they [the military] come, they break into houses and then they loot. They collect telephones, musical sets and then any other electronical gadget that they need. When they see any motor bike, they just collect and they do not give it back. So, we are pleading. The government should see [negotiate] a way that this war [separatist crisis] should come to an end,” he said.

Tatah said civilians accused of collaborating with the military are targeted and tortured by fighters.

He said before leaving Kumbo last Sunday, six civilians were killed when an explosive device planted by fighters detonated.

Separatists have been fighting for the creation of an independent English-speaking state called Ambazonia.

Capo Daniel is a self-proclaimed deputy defense chief of the Ambazonia Defense Forces, a rebel group in Cameroon’s western regions. He claims responsibility for the IEDs, but says fighters target only the military. He spoke via the messaging app, WhatsApp.

“Those civilians that were affected by those bombs [IEDs] were civilians who were being transported in Cameroonian military vehicles. Those military vehicles are legitimate targets for our forces on the ground. We will continue to target them and any civilians that allow themselves to be transported in military armored personnel carriers will definitely come under fire.”

Capo blamed the military for most of the atrocities. Nka said the military has remained professional and respects the rights of citizens.

Deben Tchoffo is the governor of Cameroon’s Northwest region. He said the troops deployed to Bui this week have been instructed to search homes and seize illegal weapons said to be in wide circulation.

“There are some prophets of doom who want to bring chaos in our region by destabilizing the population of the Northwest region. We instructed the administrative authorities and the security forces [the military] to recuperate all those guns, ammunition that are circulating in the region. The process is ongoing. We are going to make sure all those that are still keeping guns and ammunition in the region are brought to book and prosecuted,”

Violence erupted in 2017 in Cameroon’s English-speaking regions when teachers and lawyers protested alleged discrimination at the hands of the French-speaking majority. The military reacted with a crackdown and separatist groups took up weapons, claiming that they were protecting civilians. The U.N. says 3,000 people have been killed and more than 50,000 displaced in French-speaking towns and in neighboring Nigeria.

Source: Voice of America

Japan to Ease COVID-19 Restrictions as Tokyo Olympics Near

Japan unveiled plans Thursday to slowly ease the coronavirus state of emergency in Tokyo and several other prefectures in time for next month’s opening ceremony of the Tokyo Olympics.

Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga announced that the government will switch to “quasi-emergency” measures once the state of emergency expires Sunday. The looser restrictions would remain in place until July 11, just 12 days before the start of the Olympic Games.

In addition to looser restrictions, the government is expected to announce a plan to allow up to 10,000 spectators to enter venues holding Olympic events.

The initial one-month state of emergency was first declared in April due to a surge in new COVID-19 infections in the Japanese capital and beyond, and was extended in late May. The surge prompted staunch public opposition against staging the Olympics, especially among a prominent group of medical professionals that urged Suga to call off the games.

The Tokyo Olympics are set to take place after a one-year postponement as the novel coronavirus pandemic began spreading across the globe. Foreign spectators have been banned from witnessing the event.

Disappointing results for CureVac vaccine

Late-stage testing of an experimental COVID-19 vaccine has revealed some disappointing results. Preliminary findings show the vaccine developed by German biophaaceutical company CureVac is just 47% effective against the virus — below the 50% threshold set by the World Health Organization.

The vaccine has been given to 40,000 volunteers in Latin America and Europe. Franz-Werner Haas, CureVac’s chief executive, has blamed the disappointing results on the huge number of COVID-19 variants that have emerged since the start of the pandemic.

The European Union had reached an agreement with CureVac to purchase at least 225 million doses of the vaccine. The company says the Phase 3 trial will continue, with final results expected within a few weeks.

Growing concern in Africa

A report by the Associated Press Thursday reveals that public health officials on the African continent are alarmed over the slow rate of vaccinations and a surge in new COVID-19 infections. The AP says the continent has received only 2% of all vaccine doses administered globally, despite its 1.3 billion people accounting for 18% of the world’s population. Some countries have yet to inoculate a single person.

The World Health Organization says nearly 90% of African countries are set to miss the global target of vaccinating 10% of their people by September.

Source: Voice of America

Danakali Says Tests Prove Predictable, High-Grade Potassium Sulfate Production at Colluli

Danakali Ltd. said Thursday that tests for its Colluli potassium sulfate project in Eritrea prove predictable high-grade production at low chloride levels.

The group, which owns the project through a 50-50 partnership with the Eritrean National Mining Corporation, said an optimized-process plant design significantly reduces capital expenditure, operating costs and maintenance costs.

“Every study has increased our certainty that Colluli is the asset that will dominate the SOP (potassium sulfate) industry and change agriculture for the better in Eritrea, across Africa and beyond,” Executive Chairman Seamus Cornelius said.

Source: Dehai Eritrea Online

Support to families of martyrs

Employees of the Ministry of Marine Resources and Salina Salt Factory in Massawa have assumed the responsibility of supporting 20 families of martyrs.

At the event conducted at the Ministry of Marine Resources compound on 23 June, it was stated that the beneficiary families of martyrs are from Foro, Massawa, Gindae, and Shieb sub-zones.

According to the report, the employees of the Ministry of Marine Resources assumed the responsibility of supporting 15 families of martyrs while workers of Salina Salt Factory 5 families of martyrs for one year.

Mr. Ismael Osman, representative of the Ministry of Labor and Social Welfare branch, on his part stating the goodwill the employees undertook is part of the initiative nationals inside the country and abroad have been undertaking called on others in the civil service to follow the noble example.

Commending the initiative the employees of the Ministry of Marine Resources and Salina Salt Factory undertook, Mr. Rezene Adonay, Secretary of the PFDJ branch in the Northern Red Sea region, called for reinforced effort in ensuring the sustainability of the program.

The number of families of martyrs being supported by civil servants in the Northern Red Sea Region has reached 150, the report stated.

In related news, members of the youth workers organization in the Southern Red Sea region contributed financial and material support to 15 families of martyrs in the Port city of Assab.

Speaking to Erina, the chairperson of the youth workers organization in the region, Mr. Ibrahim Saleh stated that since last year members of the organization have been supporting families of martyrs by raising money from their monthly salaries.

Source: Ministry of Information Eritrea

Desertification and Drought Day

Message from Ministry of Agriculture

Desertification and Drought Day – known as the World Day to Combat Desertification and Drought before 2020 – is observed every year to promote public awareness of international efforts to combat desertification. The day is a unique moment to remind everyone that reversing land degradation is achievable through problem-solving, strong community involvement, and cooperation at all levels.

In 2021, the goal of Desertification and Drought Day is to demonstrate that investing in healthy land as part of a green recovery is a smart economic decision – not just in terms of creating jobs and rebuilding livelihoods, but in terms of insulating economies against future crises caused by climate change and nature loss, and in accelerating progress on all 17 Sustainable Development Goals as we recover from COVID-19.

The 2021 Desertification and Drought Day on 17 June will focus on turning degraded land into healthy land. Restoring degraded land brings economic resilience, creates jobs, raises incomes, and increases food security. It helps biodiversity to recover. It locks away the atmospheric carbon warming the Earth, slowing climate change. It can also lessen the impacts of climate change and underpin a green recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic.

Nearly three quarters of the Earth’s ice-free land has been altered by humans to meet an ever-growing demand for food, raw materials, highways, and homes. Fixing damaged ecosystems mitigates against climate change and bolsters nature’s defences against disasters and extreme weather events such as wildfires, droughts, floods, and sand and dust storms. Restoring natural landscapes reduces close contact between wildlife and human settlements, creating a natural buffer against zoonotic diseases.

Avoiding, slowing, and reversing the loss of productive land and natural ecosystems now is both urgent and important for a swift recovery from the pandemic and for guaranteeing the long-term survival of people and the planet.

Land restoration can contribute greatly to post-COVID19 economic recovery. Investing in land restoration creates jobs and generates economic benefits, and could provide livelihoods at a time when hundreds of millions of jobs are being lost.

— Ibrahim Thiaw, UNCCD Executive Secretary

“Smart land-based restoration initiatives would be particularly helpful for women and youth, who are often the last to receive help in times of crises. As we enter the UN Decade of Ecosystem Restoration, we have a real chance to build back better from the COVID-19 pandemic. If countries can restore the nearly 800 million hectares of degraded land they have pledged to restore by 2030, we can safeguard humanity and our planet from the looming danger,” adds Mr. Thiaw.

The COVID19 pandemic has reinforced just how much we need our forests, drylands, wetlands and other land ecosystems: for food, for the green economy, for eco-tourism, as a buffer against extreme climate events. In Costa Rica, our unique tropical forests are a limited and precious natural resource that we cannot neglect. On Desertification and Drought Day, I urge us all to push hard to restore our lands. We all have a role to play because we all have a stake in our planet’s future.

— Andrea Meza, Minister of Environment and Energy of Costa Rica

Eritrea’s context

Eritrea’s geographical location makes it prone to adverse effects of drought and desertification. This challenge is also aggravated by various man-made interferences like tree cutting for firewood and agricultural expansion; overgrazing and so on. Moreover, its landscape exposes the land to erosion and land degradation. Consequently, conserving soil and water has been one of the top priorities in the country’s national agricultural strategy. Since independence, the Government of the State of Eritrea (GSE) has invested its considerable resources and mobilized the general community into rehabilitating degraded land and constructing various water reservoirs.

According to reports from the Ministry of Agriculture, so far a total of 257,000 hectares of land has been treated with different kinds of structures and around 4.5 million cubic meters of check-dams constructed by different popular campaigns. Moreover, around 785 water-holding structures have also been constructed since Eritrea’s Independence.

The reports note that the National Greening Campaign which was launched in 2006 has made a great contribution in growing a culture of tree planting and soil and water conservation within communities. Since then, around 45 million tree seedlings have been planted in catchments, along roadsides, schools, public spaces, and on the grounds of different government and religious institutions.

To reduce the effects of drought and desertification, Eritrea focuses on the following areas:

• Reinforcing community-based development activities to enhance land productivity

• Constructing all kinds of water holding structures to improve agricultural productivity

• Installing alternative energy sources to minimize tree cutting

• Raising awareness of the public on environment conservation in general and tree planting and soil and water conservation in particular

• Fostering international and regional engagements through pragmatic initiatives

Source: Ministry of Information Eritrea

National General Examination commences

Grade 8 National General Examination has commenced Yesterday, 16 June.

According to Mr. Dini Mohammed, from the Ministry of Education, the exam is being conducted in 5 subjects and will continue until 18 June.

Mr. Dini also said that the exam is being conducted in 402 exam centers as well as in the Eritrean community school in the Sudan in which over 50 thousand students including 47.2% females, are participating.

The participants include students who have completed grade eight as well as members of the Eritrean Defense Forces who have been attending evening schools.

It is to be recalled that last year the National Examination has been postponed due to COVID-19 pandemic.

Source: Ministry of Information Eritrea