Eritrea clinched Gold Medals at African Cycling Championship

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TDPel Media

The Eritrean Cycling National team that is taking part in the Africa Championship in Sharm El-Sheik, Egypt, recorded a shining victory. At the team time trial held today, the Eritrean National Team won four Gold Medals in the elite categories in both genders. In the men elite category that witnessed heavy competitiveness, Eritrea won the Gold Medal through Henok Mulubrhan, Dawit Yemane, Michael Goitom and Aklilu Gebrehiwet. The South African and Algerian national teams won the Silver and Bronze medals following the Eritrean national team in 6 and 10 seconds respectively. In the females’ catego… Continue reading “Eritrea clinched Gold Medals at African Cycling Championship”

Conagen Produces Two Thaumatin Protein Natural Sweeteners at Scale

100,000 times sweeter than table sugar

Bedford, Mass., March 23, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Food and beverages brands get two more tools for their sugar reduction toolkits as Conagen announced the successful scale-up production of two new high-intensity sweeteners, thaumatin I and thaumatin II. The development will expand commercial partner Sweegen’s robust sugar reduction solutions of zero-sugar natural sweeteners.

Thaumatin is a group of proteins found in the fruits of the tropical plant Thaumatococcus danielli. Each protein, thaumatin I and thaumatin II, varies slightly in sweetness profiles. Both proteins have been evaluated as 100,000 times sweeter than sugar on a molar basis and 3,000 times sweeter on a weight basis. The high sweetness factor can translate into a strategic cost-effective sugar reduction solution for brands seeking to get the most out of a natural sweetener.

The thaumatin proteins were developed from Conagen’s peptide production platform, which had previously been used for the scaled production of another peptide sweetener, brazzein. “Conagen constantly improves its protein and peptide production platforms to generate more exciting new products,” said Casey Lippmeier, vice president of innovation at Conagen. “In this case, the platform has been leveraged to make thaumatin by several innovative approaches, but under a significantly shorter R&D timeline.”

These two new, high-purity thaumatin proteins add to Sweegen’s creative portfolio of sugar reduction solutions to help brands make low-calorie products. Brands can now explore the synergistic benefits of formulations that contain thaumatin and other products from Sweegen’s Signature Sweetener portfolio, including brazzein and stevia. This diversity of natural, high-intensity sweeteners represents the most cost-effective approach for reducing sugar in food and beverages to deliver the best tasting match for the sweetness of sugar.

The desire for natural sweeteners will drive the demand for fruit and plant-based sweeteners, such as thaumatin and stevia, respectively. The main advantages to sweetening food and beverages with thaumatin are its familiarity and acceptance by consumers and the fact that it is approved for use in products by the majority of the countries in the world.

Health-conscious consumers are generally more accepting of natural sweeteners than sugar and artificial sweeteners. According to FMCG Gurus, Top 10 Future Trends 2030, “60% of global consumers currently believe natural sweeteners are healthier alternatives to sugar.” The trend report further stated, “Increasingly, consumers will want only products that contain real and authentic ingredients, and sweeteners will be no exception to the rule. As such, this will drive demand for sweeteners sourced directly from fruits and plants, something that the industry will respond to.”

Like most other proteins, when thaumatin proteins are consumed, they are digested into amino acids.  However, because thaumatin communicates such a strong sweet taste, the levels used in most applications contribute almost no calories. It is one of the most intense sweeteners ever discovered.

Consumers increasingly expect to stock their pantries with low-to-no sugar products with food and beverages that fit into their lifestyle and diets. Thaumatin can complement a number of consumer lifestyles, such as diabetic, ketogenic, or low-to-no carbohydrate diets. These sweet proteins are low on the glycemic index.

“Thaumatin is the second announced product generated from our peptide platform, which fits well into our existing world-scale, precision fermentation infrastructure.” Lippmeier further added, “Peptides and small proteins like brazzein and thaumatin can be very difficult to make economically; however, now that we have successfully scaled multiple peptides and proteins, we are willing to collaborate with other customers to make other novel peptide products.”

Regulatory approval for thaumatin as natural sweeteners has passed in the European Union (E957), Israel, and Japan. In the United States, it is generally recognized as safe as a flavoring agent (FEMA GRAS 3732).

About Conagen
Conagen is a product-focused, synthetic biology R&D company with large-scale manufacturing service capabilities. Our scientists and engineers use the latest synthetic biology tools to develop high-quality, sustainable, nature-based products by precision fermentation and enzymatic bioconversion. We focus on the bioproduction of high-value ingredients for food, nutrition, flavors and fragrances, pharmaceutical, and renewable materials industries. www.conagen.com

Attachment

Ana Arakelian, head of public relations and communications
Conagen
+1.781.271.1588
ana.arakelian@conagen.com

Keep Your Cool: Hisense Celebrates Closure of the Summer Season with New Hi-Season Campaign

CAPE TOWN, South Africa, March 22, 2022 /PRNewswire/ — As summer draws to a close in South Africa, Hisense, provider of high-performance TV and home appliances, is catching the last summer days to help the South African households keep their cool with its new Hi-Season campaign this March.

Any customers who purchase Hi-Season promotional products and send proof of purchase to prize@hisense.co.za before 15th April will enter the draw to win a Hisense fridge. Alongside the lucky draw, Hisense is offering savings up to R10,000 across its product range. It has be proof of purchase of an online purchase. Participating retailers include Takealot, Makro, Game, Hifi Corp, Everyshop, Hirsch, FNB Complete, and New World.

As part of the Hi-Season campaign, Hisense is casting the spotlight on three appliances that will help users reimagine summer:

75A6GS 4K UHD TV

Experience a total 4K solution with 4K resolution and an UHD AI Upscaler. Over 8 million pixels are housed for true 4K resolution, while the upscaler works to enhance non-4K signals to achieve near-4K resolution and greater detail than standard FHD signals. Feel immersed by the DTS virtual X advanced surround sound solution suite, or connect Bluetooth devices for more audio options. The 75A6GS also includes Game Mode and the VIDAA U4.0 personalized content platform for a non-stop summer of entertainment.

120L5F Laser TV

Bring the cinematic experience home with brighter pictures, natural colours and ultra-clear details. The ultra-short throw 120L5F Laser TV projects a colourful and bright image onto a 120-inch ambient light rejection screen that’s designed for viewing in any room in the house. Enjoy incredible image depth and quality with 4K UHD and over 8 million pixels — and with close to zero harmful blue lights, viewers benefit from a healthier viewing experience free from eye strain, even after long viewing periods.

H670SIA-WD Side by Side Refrigerator

H670SIA-WD is both energy efficient and environmentally friendly, earning the appliance an A+ energy class rating. Its multi-airflow technology cools the fridge evenly from corner to corner so food stays fresher for longer. Hisense’s frost-free technology reduces the humidity level to prevent frost formation, and the accelerated temperature adjustment ensures frozen goods defrost quickly. With the built-in internal water reservoir, users have a permanent supply of chilled water at the press of a button.

For more information on the Hi-season campaign, please visit https://hisense.co.za/ .

Photo – https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1771531/HiSeason_Summer_KV___final.jpg

‘A DREAM COME TRUE’ – ERITREAN BINIAM GIRMAY REFLECTS ON HISTORIC PODIUM AT WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS

The first black African to stand on the podium at a World Championships, Eritrean Biniam Girmay is a fast finisher with a huge future. Though he represents the hopes of an entire continent, he wears the pressure lightly, with pride, and he will go to the Giro d’Italia in May with the highest of motivations. “This is the beginning, and I have to continue. It’s now that the door is open.”

Source: Dehai Eritrea Online

Eritrea Tops The Gold And Egypt Wins 3 Bronzes On The First Day Of The African Cycling Championship

The competitions of the first day of the African Road Cycling Championship, held in Sharm El-Sheikh from 22 to 27 March, with the participation of 30 countries, resulted in the Egyptian team winning three bronze medals.

The junior team won the third place and the bronze medal, in the junior races, while the Eritrea team won the first place and the gold medal, and the Algerian team won the second place and the silver medal.

In the women’s race, the Egyptian team won the third place and the bronze medal, while the Eritrea team won the first place and the gold medal, and the Moroccan team won the second place and the silver medal for the race

In the women’s under-23 elite race, the Egyptian team won the third place and the bronze medal, while Eritrea won the gold in the race, and the Mauritius team won the second place and the silver medal.

In the men’s under-23 elite race, the Eritrean team won the first place and the gold medal, the South Africa team won the second place and the silver medal, and the Algerian team won the third place and the bronze medal.

Dr. Wajih Azzam, Chairman of the Higher Organizing Committee of the Championship, President of the Egyptian and African Cycling Federations and Vice President of the International and Arab Federations, confirmed that the first day of the African Cycling Championship witnessed strong competitions between all participating teams.

Azzam praised the results achieved by the Egyptian team on the first day, which won 3 medals, after a fierce competition with strong teams such as the Eritrean team, which depends on players, all of whom are professionals in France, in addition to other distinguished teams such as South Africa, Algeria and Morocco.

Source: Dehai Eritrea Online

“I think the Aviation College is Very Crucial for the Future of the Eritrean Air force.” Second lieutenant Hana Kidane

Throughout history, Eritrean women have been icons of determina¬tion and diligence. From household chores to jobs that highly-skilled people, they have demonstrated their unshakable work spirit.

Meet Second lieutenant Hana Kidane, a 23-year-old Eritrean who has recently graduated from the College of Aviation of Eritrea as a pilot. She has shared her experiences with us in the following inter¬view.

Thank you for your time, Hana. Please introduce yourself.

Thank you for having me. I’m a 2022 graduate of the College of Aviation of Eritrea. I was born in 1998 in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, and came to Eritrea in 1999. I went to elementary and junior schools in Adi-Guaedad and did high school at Barka Secondary School. Then I joined a technical school and went to Sawa in 2016. I joined Eritrean Air-force in 2017, right after I got back from Sawa.

What was your experience in the college like?

It was amazing. It took us three years to complete the program — two years of theoretical and a year of practical training. The first two years were intense with a lot of exams. We couldn’t get much sleep. But we had a clear goal and we held on to that.

At the beginning I thought it was going to be tough for us girls as it was intense; however, it never felt tough once we got into college. Our fellow boys kept encouraging us and supporting us throughout the college years. Our department mates and instructors were also very supportive, which gave us hope and faith. Our instructors were everything that we could have asked for. They took care of us like brothers and sisters. Of course, we were willing and determined to reach our goals and were finally able to make it.

What were your first time training to fly and your first solo flight like? Please share your experience with us.

I don’t have sufficient words for that. It was all that I wished to experience while we were learning the theoretical part. Being able to maneuver an aircraft in the sky on your own gave me satisfaction and joy. My first solo flight was in Massawa where we flew 1200 feet high and remained airborne for 30 minutes. I was a bit nervous during the first practical training on the sky. I successfully completed my mission, and that was the happiest day of my college life.

What do you think about people in our society who portray women as weak compared to their men counterparts when it comes to doing a job that requires high skills?

Such people should open their eyes and see it isn’t true. We are able to graduate just like our male counterparts. Around 15- 20 females graduated with us in different fields. If a girl is willing to achieve anything, she can and there should be no doubt about that.

As females we should never let things such as age affect our dream journey. Thinking about marriage and having children should never prevent us from having big dreams because it’s all about time management. Manage your time well and you’ll be able to go through the process of life on time. Don’t lose great education and job opportunities for things that you’ll be able to achieve sooner or later. Age shouldn’t be a factor to stop us from doing what we are supposed to do.

Women in our country aren’t very well represented in the job market. What do you think is the problem and how should it be solved?

You are right. But it doesn’t mean that we females are weaker or slower. It’s all about willingness and taking initiatives. We know our mothers and grandmothers fought along with their fellow brothers and fathers for their nation’s freedom. We have what it takes in our heads, so let’s just have a winning mindset. Everything is possible if we just believe that we can do it. Our country is providing us with opportunities that no one would get easily. Why shouldn’t we use it? The next aviation college students must walk through this journey with hope, diligence and determination. And we should always remember that the people and the government are with us and supporting us.

Our mothers were able to leave their marks in our history, working with determination despite the colonization and pressure from the society. With less pressures, there can’t be anything we can’t achieve now in the modern world. We just need to take one step at a time and strive to be where we want to be and who we want to be.

Are there any other remarks you would like to make?

I advise young Eritrean girls to pursue their dreams despite pressures that might possibly come along their ways. We are the products of our magnificent mothers and grandmothers, and so let’s all vow to keep up the hard working spirit that we inherited.

This is just the beginning for those of us who have graduated. Students of the aviation college and also the youth everywhere must strive to do better every single day. We have now got our license as pilots and we’ll continue to get to the top and serve our nation and people. Our aviation college’s first commencement was undeniably successful. I think the aviation college is very crucial for the future of the Eritrean Air force.

Source: Ministry of Information Eritrea

(mid-day.com) Heard of Eritrea, Africa’s Ukraine?

There was a little-known African nation that fought for its freedom from Ethiopia, the big bully next door. The little guy won there too

A giant, startling statue of bathroom sandals, called shidas, stands at a busy traffic island in Eritrea’s capital Asmara, as a tribute to its freedom fighters

You’ve probably never heard of Asmara, so you might not know it’s the capital of a country called Eritrea, which you haven’t heard of either. It’s been decades since I was last there but I remember one striking moment from my first visit there in 2001. Our airport taxi had reached the town centre, where several avenues converge on a green traffic island. A giant, startling statue made of sheet metal stood there, almost 20 feet long and nearly as high.

It was a pair of bathroom sandals. You know the kind, you probably wear them around the house. Eritreans call them shidas, from the Arabic word, and the roundabout is named Shida Square.

Shidas remind Eritreans of the 30-year war they fought for independence from their large, ruthless, better armed and brutal neighbour, Ethiopia. Neither the USA nor the USSR, who were Cold War enemies then, were particularly interested in Eritrea’s fight for freedom, though for different reasons.

Tiny Eritrea, then with a population of 2.2 million—a tenth of present-day Mumbai—had a rag-tag army of guerrilla fighters who called themselves the Eritrean People’s Liberation Front (EPLF). It was Africa’s little David, armed with a slingshot against the raging Goliath of Ethiopia.

Yet it was Eritrea that trounced the big bully next door and became the world’s newest nation on May 24, 1993.

Why would I not be reminded of Eritrea when I read about the brave people of Ukraine hitting back against the Russian bear next door?

The most remarkable fact about Eritrea’s war to be free was that the world didn’t care at all about Eritrea. Unlike Ukraine, where the NATO countries are aligned against Russia, the world had no interest in the small, rebellious country perched on Ethiopia’s shoulder, flanking the Red Sea. The Russians loved Ethiopia’s leftward tilt towards a more ‘communist’ world view and channelled money and arms to it.

The Americans, meanwhile, had another, equally self-serving reason for supporting Ethiopia. Their radio engineers had discovered that the Eritrean plateau, 2.4 kms above sea level, had unparalleled radio receptivity. With Ethiopian support, America had set up a listening post called the Kagnew Station, to eavesdrop on radio signals from over half the globe. A mini-America existed there, with burger joints and bomb-proof underground concrete bunkers.

So the US, side by side with its ideological adversary Russia, also supported Ethiopia, fearing that an idealistic, newborn Eritrea might just kick them out.

The Eritreans hunkered down for a long-drawn-out war they knew they would have to fight with no help from the rest of the world. But what Ethiopia had in sheer firepower, the Eritreans made up in pig-headed determination, courage, solidarity—and innovation.

They dug themselves into the sheer mountain sides along the plateau of Nakfa. The EPLF painstakingly cut miles of tunnels into the rock to house weapons, a 3,000-bed hospital and schools for the children of fighters.

Women joined and fought alongside men with perfect gender equity. As in Ukraine, civilians became warriors—teachers, doctors, tailors, carpenters and others took up arms against a seemingly invincible enemy. Uniforms were made from donated jeans, cut as high as possible so that each pair of jeans yielded several shorts.

One account described the trials of fighting a war without drinking water or latrines: “Fighters formed a human chain and, backs pressed against the cliff face, passed jerrycans carefully from one shoulder to another. As there was not enough flat ground for a latrine, fighters would wrap one arm around a sapling that leant over the void, undo their flies, and relieve themselves into the abyss.”

Eventually, the Ethiopians could not resist the sheer tenacity of the Eritrean spirit. They left, as the Russians will, from Ukraine.

So why the giant statue of sandals in the public square?

Plastic sandals were introduced to Eritrea by a photojournalist in Mussolini’s invading army, Raffaello Bini, who stayed and set up a shoe company in Asmara. Importing machines from Hong Kong, he designed a cheap PVC sandal, nicknamed the ‘Kongo’. When the Ethiopian army seized Bini’s factories, his workers went underground, becoming EPLF guerrillas. They began churning out Kongos for fighters by melting down old car tyres. The shidas they made were dirt-cheap, could be rinsed clean with water and repaired easily by melting the rubber over campfire.

While Ethiopian soldiers plodded about in heavy boots, Eritrean guerrillas moved light-footed as goats in their cheap sandals.

When an Eritrean fighter died, little would remain, so frugally did they live. In due course, the EPLF would send back the dead fighter’s sandals to his family. Within the house, a shrine would be built around the sandals, a modest memorial to the man or woman who had fought for freedom in those sandals and died wearing them.

Source: Dehai Eritrea Online