Hisense L9G Laser TV Unveiled at the World Cup Final Draw, #PerfectMatch World Cup-themed Marketing Campaign Officially Launched

CAPE TOWN, South Africa, April 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ — The Final Draw for the FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022TM was held in Doha Exhibition & Convention Center (DECC) on 1st April. As the official sponsor, Hisense displayed the 100L9G TriChroma Laser TV during the Official Draw Event, and demonstrated its features and quality to over 2,000 guests from the various football associations and FIFA partners, which was widely praised. Meanwhile, the #PerfectMatch World Cup-themed marketing campaign was officially launched.

During the event, the senior management team for FIFA and representatives of various football associations visited the Hisense booth. Fatma Samoura, the Secretary-General of FIFA, personally felt the immersive experience brought by the ultra-high definition picture quality of the L9G Laser TV, and highly praised the re-cooperation with Hisense. Mr. Jason Ou, President of Hisense Middle East and Africa, highlighted that the L9G Laser TV is designed to mirror human visual perception while being friendly to the eye due to the certified low blue light hardware solution by TUV Rheinland. Besides, the perfect home entertainment system and cinema-quality sound will provide fans with a truly immersive experience to watch the FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022 TM.

With the FIFA World Cup 2022 TM Draw Event, Hisense officially launched the “Perfect Match” global World Cup marketing campaign. Perfect Match, which not only means that the FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022 TM will be the perfect football tournament for the football fans but also stands for the meaning that Hisense products will be the best choice for fans to watch matches at home. Starting from the FIFA World Cup 2022 TM Draw Event, Hisense will take advantage of the influence of the World Cup and make full use of the resources of sponsorship rights, combining with the important nodes of the event and sales, to organize a series of brand marketing campaigns such as CSR campaigns and the super brand week. Hisense will widely reach consumers through social media and PR communications, interact in-depth with fan groups, strengthen Hisense’s World Cup sponsorship, thereby enhancing brand awareness and preference, continue to promote international market development and global brand construction, and accelerate Hisense’s process of internationalization.

Photo – https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1779303/image_5020023_35323523.jpg

L’église de Shincheonji dévoilera son nouveau séminaire à la suite de sa série sur l’Apocalypse et les Paraboles

NEW YORK,, 1er avril 2022 /PRNewswire/ — Du 31 mars au 27 juin, l’église Shincheonji, l’église de Jésus, le Temple du Tabernacle du Témoignage, dévoilera son programme intermédiaire par le biais d’un nouveau séminaire. La série intitulée « The Testimony on the Revelation of the Old and New Testaments by Chapter » (« Témoignage sur l’Apocalypse de l’Ancien et du Nouveau Testament par chapitre ») sera disponible sur YouTube. Le contenu sera fourni par le Zion Christian Mission Center, le centre d’enseignement biblique gratuit de l’église Shincheonji.

Chairman Lee Man-hee's special lecture on March 31st (PRNewsfoto/Shincheonji Church of Jesus)

Le séminaire débutera par une conférence spéciale du président Lee Man-Hee le 31 mars. Après l’explication par le président Lee de l’objectif du programme intermédiaire, 24 leçons enseignées par les responsables des églises de la branche de Shincheonji seront diffusées.

« Après le séminaire sur l’Apocalypse et le programme d’introduction, [les instructeurs] témoigneront du programme intermédiaire », a déclaré le président Lee. « Ce sont les personnes qui ont inscrit l’Ancien et le Nouveau Testament, même la Révélation, dans leur cœur et dans leur esprit pour devenir de véritables Bibles vivantes. Prenez-en note. Tout ce que vous pensez être faux, posez des questions et faites des commentaires à tout moment. »

Le séminaire en ligne se concentrera sur les chapitres essentiels de la Bible et abordera les sujets suivants :

  • L’alliance de Dieu, Abraham et l’Apocalypse
  • Le royaume des cieux créé selon le domaine céleste et spirituel
  • L’ordre de la trahison du peuple élu, de la destruction et du salut
  • Les livres scellés et les révélations de l’Ancien et du Nouveau Testament
  • L’issue de ceux qui ont respecté l’alliance et de ceux qui ne l’ont pas respectée

Cette dernière série fait suite à de précédents séminaires YouTube expliquant le livre de la Révélation et à une série de 24 épisodes sur les paraboles des secrets du ciel. Jusqu’à présent, le séminaire sur les paraboles de Jésus a dépassé les 15 millions de vues.

Au total, 2 000 pasteurs ont signé un protocole d’accord avec l’église Shincheonji et ont demandé à recevoir du matériel pédagogique. Plus de 100 pasteurs, évangélistes et séminaristes coréens se sont inscrits au programme biblique standard proposé par l’église Shincheonji.

« Comme l’église de Jésus de Shincheonji connaît une croissance rapide, même les pasteurs peuvent demander du matériel pédagogique et demander l’envoi de conférenciers », a déclaré un responsable de l’Église. « La raison pour laquelle nous sommes capables de diffuser la meilleure parole de l’humanité est que Dieu est avec nous. J’espère que ce sera un moment où les gens pourront vérifier, par la parole de la Révélation que Dieu a promise et accomplie, les secrets de la Bible qui n’ont jamais [été] connus. »

Contact : revelation@scjamericas.com

Photo – https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1778544/Shincheonji_Church_Chair.jpg

Ramadan Begins in Much of Middle East Amid Soaring Prices

CAIRO — The Muslim holy month of Ramadan — when the faithful fast from dawn to dusk — began at sunrise Saturday in much of the Middle East, where Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has sent energy and food prices soaring.

The conflict cast a pall over Ramadan, when large gatherings over meals and family celebrations are a tradition. Many in the Southeast Asian nation of Indonesia planned to start observing Sunday, and some Shiites in Lebanon, Iran and Iraq were also marking the start of Ramadan a day later.

Muslims follow a lunar calendar, and a moon-sighting methodology can lead to different countries declaring the start of Ramadan a day or two apart.

Muslim-majority nations including Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Syria, Sudan and the United Arab Emirates had declared the month would begin Saturday morning.

A Saudi statement Friday was broadcast on the kingdom’s state-run Saudi TV and Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, the crown prince of Abu Dhabi and de facto leader of the United Arab Emirates, congratulated Muslims on Ramadan’s arrival.

Jordan, a predominantly Sunni country, also said the first day of Ramadan would be on Sunday, in a break from following Saudi Arabia. The kingdom said the Islamic religious authority was unable to spot the crescent moon indicating the beginning of the month.

Indonesia’s second-largest Islamic group, Muhammadiyah, which counts more than 60 million members, said that according to its astronomical calculations Ramadan begins Saturday. But the country’s religious affairs minister had announced Friday that Ramadan would start on Sunday, after Islamic astronomers in the country failed to sight the new moon.

It wasn’t the first time the Muhammadiyah has offered a differing opinion on the matter, but most Indonesians — Muslims comprise nearly 90% of the country’s 270 million people — are expected to follow the government’s official date.

Many had hoped for a more cheerful Ramadan after the coronavirus pandemic blocked the world’s 2 billion Muslims from many rituals the past two years.

With Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, however, millions of people in the Middle East are now wondering where their next meals will come from. The skyrocketing prices are affecting people whose lives were already upended by conflict, displacement and poverty from Lebanon, Iraq and Syria to Sudan and Yemen.

Ukraine and Russia account for a third of global wheat and barley exports, which Middle East countries rely on to feed millions of people who subsist on subsidized bread and bargain noodles. They are also top exporters of other grains and sunflower seed oil used for cooking.

Egypt, the world’s largest wheat importer, has received most of its wheat from Russia and Ukraine in recent years. Its currency has now also taken a dive, adding to other pressures driving up prices.

Shoppers in the capital, Cairo, turned out earlier this week to stock up on groceries and festive decorations, but many had to buy less than last year because of the prices.

Ramadan tradition calls for colorful lanterns and lights strung throughout Cairo’s narrow alleys and around mosques. Some people with the means to do so set up tables on the streets to dish up free post-fast Iftar meals for the poor. The practice is known in the Islamic world as Tables of the Compassionate.

“This could help in this situation,” said Rabei Hassan, the muezzin of a mosque in Giza as he bought vegetables and other food from a nearby market. “People are tired of the prices.”

Worshippers attended mosque for hours of evening prayers, or tarawih. On Friday evening, thousands of people packed the al-Azhar Mosque after attendance was banned for the past two years to stem the pandemic.

“They were difficult (times) … Ramadan without tarawih at the mosque is not Ramadan,” said Saeed Abdel-Rahman, a 64-year-old retired teacher as he entered al-Azhar for prayers.

Higher prices also exacerbated the woes of Lebanese already facing a major economic crisis. Over the past two years, the currency collapsed and the country’s middle class was plunged into poverty. The meltdown has also brought on severe shortages in electricity, fuel and medicine.

In the Gaza Strip, few people were shopping on Friday in markets usually packed at this time of year. Merchants said Russia’s war on Ukraine has sent prices skyrocketing, alongside the usual challenges, putting a damper on the festive atmosphere that Ramadan usually creates.

The living conditions of the 2.3 million Palestinians in the impoverished coastal territory are tough, compounded by a crippling Israeli-Egyptian blockade since 2007.

Toward the end of Ramadan last year, a deadly 11-day war between Gaza’s Hamas rulers and Israel cast a cloud over festivities, including the Eid al-Fitr holiday that follows the holy month. It was the fourth bruising war with Israel in just over a decade.

In Iraq, the start of Ramadan highlighted widespread frustration over a meteoric rise in food prices, exacerbated in the past month by the war in Ukraine.

Suhaila Assam, a 62-year-old retired teacher and women’s rights activist, said she and her retired husband are struggling to survive on their combined pension of $1,000 a month, with prices of cooking oil, flour and other essentials having more than doubled.

“We, as Iraqis, use cooking oil and flour a lot. Almost in every meal. So how can a family of five members survive?” she asked.

Akeel Sabah, 38, is a flour distributor in the Jamila wholesale market, which supplies all of Baghdad’s Rasafa district on the eastern side of the Tigris River with food. He said flour and almost all other foodstuffs are imported, which means distributors have to pay for them in dollars. A ton of flour used to cost $390.

“Today I bought the ton for $625,” he said.

“The currency devaluation a year ago already led to an increase in prices, but with the ongoing (Ukraine) crisis, prices are skyrocketing. Distributors lost millions,” he said.

In Istanbul, Muslims held the first Ramadan prayers in 88 years in the Hagia Sophia, nearly two years after the iconic former cathedral was converted into a mosque.

Worshippers filled the 6th-century building and the square outside Friday night for tarawih prayers led by Ali Erbas, the government head of religious affairs. Although converted for Islamic use and renamed the Grand Hagia Sophia Mosque in July 2020, COVID-19 restrictions had limited worship at the site.

“After 88 years of separation, the Hagia Sophia Mosque has regained the tarawih prayer,” Erbas said, according to the state-run Anadolu Agency.

Source: Voice of America

Detention of Journalists in Ethiopia Serves as Example of Deteriorating Media Freedom

WASHINGTON — Following a four-month ordeal, an Ethiopian journalist is back home with his family, although he still may face years in prison if convicted of violating the country’s wartime state of emergency law and anti-terrorism law.

Amir Aman Kiyaro, a video journalist accredited by the Associated Press, was arrested on November 28, 2021, in Addis Ababa following a reporting trip outside of the capital. He was accused of illegally communicating with members of the Oromo Liberation Army, which the government has labeled a terrorist group. Under the nation’s state of emergency, journalists have been punished for interviewing political figures, dissidents and members of armed groups. The state of emergency was lifted in February.

Amir and another freelance video cameraman, Thomas Engida, were held as suspects but never charged with a crime, a representative of the AP said.

Ian Phillips, vice president of international news at The Associated Press, said the case shows how journalism is being criminalized and reporters harassed in Ethiopia. He emphasized that Amir was on a legitimate reporting trip and committed no crime.

“The crackdown on the media that this case represents, there is no true accusation that can be leveled against Amir,” Phillips told VOA in a March 25 interview prior to Amir’s release. “He is a respected, balanced journalist who has covered both sides of the conflict. He’s been picked up and this is an arbitrary detention and we have been calling on Ethiopian authorities to do the right thing and release him.”

Zecharias Zelalem, a Canada-based Ethiopian journalist whose work has appeared in Al Jazeera, said arrests like this drove him to sign an open letter calling on the government to respect media rights. He said 46 journalists were detained in 2021 in the country making Ethiopia one of the worst jailers of journalists in Africa.

“The general optimism that we had a couple of years ago with the much-heralded reform, with the promises that journalists would be able to operate unperturbed, this has not panned out,” Zecharias said. “The promises and the pledges did not materialize. And unfortunately for journalists, the situation is starting to mirror what we saw in 2009 when Ethiopia passed its infamous anti-terror proclamation, which was used to round up journalists en masse. So, we had to speak up about a very, very dire situation that our colleagues on the ground in Ethiopia are facing.”

When the Prime Minister of Ethiopia Abiy Ahmed came to power in 2018, there was widespread optimism about the direction the country was taking. Abiy was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize the next year partly due to “granting amnesty to thousands of political prisoners” which included journalists and “discontinuing media censorship,”the committee wrote when making the announcement.

However, progress eroded and the country plunged into a civil war in November 2020. Journalists were intimidated, harassed and arrested.

It became virtually impossible to get accurate information from within Ethiopia once conflict intensified and the government imposed an internet communication blackout in some parts of the country where there was conflict.

Journalists have been prevented from reporting in areas where the Oromo Liberation Army, a rebel group that is fighting the central government, is active. Accurate information is hard to come by, experts say.

Zecharias said the reporting Amir was doing, traveling to an area of Oromia currently controlled by a rebel group, is vital since there is virtually no coverage of what daily life is like there.

“What he was carrying out was very important, crucial journalistic work,” he said. “Very few journalists have been able to gain access to areas under the control of the OLA to see what life has been like for hundreds of thousands if not millions of people in these areas, much of which have been subjected to internet and phone outages, we don’t have an accurate picture of.”

Amir’s lawyer Tadele Gebremedhin said his client was released on a 60,000 birr ($1,165) bail and ordered not to leave the country until his case is investigated. He said the journalists have been accused of working with foreign media outlets and “spoiling the country’s development plans” through negative reporting.

VOA reached out to the office of the prime minister and attorney general requesting comment but received no response.

As free press advocates continue to push for the fair treatment of journalists, arrests continue in Ethiopia. On March 31, four journalists were arrested in the Somali region of the country, according to local reports.

“We will continue to cover the story of journalists who are unjustly held. This is not acceptable behavior. These are arbitrary detentions,” Phillips said. “If there is proof of something, then that evidence has to be surfaced and has to go through a proper trial process, something that is extremely important to us at the AP and to our news organizations.”

Source: Voice of America

NPR “Journalist” Utterly Failed to Provide Balanced Reporting by Confining Herself to Sheer Paraphrasing a One-sided Wild Allegations Against Eritrea

The Embassy of the State of Eritrea to the United States is appalled that WBUR’s Meghna Chakrabarti provided, perhaps unwittingly, a disinformation platform for TPLF collaborators on NPR’s On Point Radio Program that was broadcast under the title: “No Food, medicine or electricity – the truth about life in Ethiopia’s Tigray region”.

In the program, Ms. Chakrabarti allowed her biased guests to wallow on maligned comments about Eritrea without as much as asking them for rudimentary evidence on their wild allegations. A responsible “journalist” will have asked for evidence to ascertain the veracity of grave allegations. A responsible “journalist” will have invited guests with different views and perspectives. A responsible “journalist”, who presumably went to great length to obtain a ‘’recorded message” from Mekele will have checked authenticity and veracity of “witness statements” Apparently, none of these logical and mandatory steps that are vital for ensuring objectivity were taken.

One of her TPLF activist guests falsely alleges that “120,000 girls and women have been raped” by Eritrean forces. It is mind-boggling that such a comment did not deserve a follow-up with questions about evidence or investigations at the very least.

Unfortunate and sad as it is, literature on rampant, officially sanctioned rape and gender-based violence in Tigray Region under TPLF rule prior to the current conflict is available in the public domain. This deplorable situation had in fact prompted the launching of the “Enough/Yikhono Movement” by concerned women groups in Tigray Region in 2019. These grim facts were obviously beyond the radar screen of the radio program.

As pointed out above, Ms. Chakrabarti has utterly failed to provide balanced reporting as her guests were all parroting the false narrative of TPLF leaders. Her role seemed to be confined to sheer paraphrasing of their gratuitous vitriol against Eritrea without any serious attempt for validation and verification.

Time and time again, TPLF leaders have wickedly propagated fabricated dramas and utter falsehoods. The TPLF has routinely used its networks – it allocated a whopping 32 million US dollars that it had siphoned off when it was in power in the first ten months of 2020 alone for these purposes – and lobbying firms for access to, and amplification by, certain media outlets.

The TPLF’s preposterous allegations are motivated by, and intended for, deliberate misinformation. The sole aim is to sway public opinion in order to divert focus from the reckless War of Insurrection that it launched on November 3, 2020,

including its cruel and unprecedented high crimes of the slaughtering of Ethiopian soldiers in their sleep. The TPLF also bombed Asmara, the Eritrean capital, and other targets in the country hurling a total of 22 missile attacks in the space of few days. To date, the TPLF remains the architect of chaos and mayhem in the region.

The litany of TPLF criminality and malfeasance in the past three decades is indeed boundless. As underlined above, this has always been accompanied by lavish financial outlays and extensive media campaigns to hoodwink international public opinion. In this context, Ms. Chakrabarti radio program virtually endorses the continuance of the TPLF’s malicious disinformation campaign thereby contributing to confuse and mislead those with a less intimate awareness of the current crisis in Ethiopia.

Source: Ministry of Information Eritrea

Eritrea: Africa’s Cycling Champion

Eritrea, a young developing country with great potential in sport, has been making major strides in continental and international cycling competitions. It has so far produced world-class athletes: Daniel Teklehaymanot who wore King of the Mountain jersey in the Tour de France and many others who won African and world championships. Eritrea has become the undisputed African Cycling Champion eight times since 2010. The prowess of the Eritrean national cycling team, which also reflects the national mantra of Eritrea, at continental and international tournaments is being increasingly recognized by the sport community.

The Eritrean national cycling team has won the African Championship tournament for a record eight times. This year, it has garnered 15 medals, including seven gold, six silver and two bronze at the 18th African Cycling Championship held at the Egyptian resort city of Sharm el-Sheikh from 22 to 27 March. Henok Mulubrhan, a 22-year-old professional athlete, clinched the title of African Champion of the year 2022 by edging South African Reinardt Janse Van Rensburg and Algerian Hamza Amari. Henok is the sixth Eritrean athlete to become African Champion. Before him, Daniel Teklehaimanot (2010), Natnaiel Berhane (2011 and 2012), Tesfom Okbamariam (2013 and 2016), Amanuel Gebrezgabhier (2018) and Mekseb Debesay (2019) became champions of the African Continental Cycling Championship. The African Continental Cycling Championship is an annual cycling race being held since 2001.

Back in August 2010, President Issaias Afwerki said that “the Africa task is concluded” at his meeting with Eritrea’s National Team that became the champion of Africa and Tour Rwanda for the year. He nudged the athletes to widen their horizon and compete at international levels and grand world tours. Soon, Daniel Teklehaimanot and Merhawi Kudus achieved the vision by becoming the first black Africans to compete at Tour de France. Recently, in October 2021, Biniam Ghirmay competed against world athletes in the under-23 men’s road race in Belgium to become the first black African to win a silver medal in the world championship.

While the Eritrean National Team was competing for African championship in Sharm el-Sheikh, the professional Eritrean cyclist Biniam Girmay finished first at the prestigious Gent Wevelgem competition in Belgium. He became the first African cyclist to win in the world’s classic tour in Belgium, Europe. Up on his victory, Biniam said, “It was a big moment for me, for my continent, for Eritrea and especially for black cycling, to show our potential to the world.” Eritrean athletes have experienced many such epic moments in history to become a pride for Eritrea and Africa. Eritrean cyclists are used to standing on every podium of major tournaments. Biniam Girmay will appear on Giro d’Italia in May to, hopefully, write a new chapter of success for himself, Eritrea and Africa.

Sport, in general, and cycling, in particular, have always been part of life in Eritrea. The bicycle is a popular mode of transport and entertainment of the young and adults. Cycling is not only viewed as an athletic activity, it’s rather a tradition. The physical, psychological and emotional wellbeing of Eritreans is closely related with cycling. At the same time, the government’s enormous attention plays a critical role for its development. The many Eritrean cyclists who excelled in major international competitions provide additional impetus to the young for increased interest in sports. The pioneering heroes became role models for many young Eritreans to be into cycling intensely.

At the country level, the organization of sport in Eritrea stretches from grassroots (schools, local administrations, army units) to the national level. The National Commission of Culture and Sport is the umbrella for all the sports federations and plays a major role in formulating and implementing the national policy on Sports. Various sport clubs are operating in Eritrea’s six administrative regions.

Sport, especially big events such as the Olympics and continental and international championships, plays a vital role in nation building by inspiring national pride. The sporting victory Eritrea has gained through cycling is a symbolic expression of the general condition of the country. As sport is entwined with national identity, athletics, in general, and cycling, in particular, can serve as manifestations of the Eritrean national identity. Indeed, it is widely accepted that sports diplomacy is primarily aimed at building peace, friendship, cooperation, and mutual understanding between peoples that Eritrea has fought to achieve.

Eritrea’s success in sport is no accident. The remarkable achievement in cycling is the outcome of both organizational competency of sport administration and indefatigable individual efforts of the athletes. The achievement being scored in sport would help Eritrea to stand out not only in international sports but also in the international system as a whole.

Source: Ministry of Information Eritrea