Ethiopian Forces Seize Three Towns in Northern Tigray

NAIROBI, KENYA — Ethiopian government forces and their allies have captured the city of Shire and two more towns in the Tigray region in an offensive that aims to take control of airports and federal infrastructure.

The attack has been met with international calls for an immediate ceasefire and for neighboring Eritrea to withdraw troops from the region. The fighting has also dashed hopes for African Union-led peace talks.

In a statement, the Ethiopian government said its forces have taken control of Alamata, Korem and Shire city in the Tigray region and will coordinate with aid groups to get aid into those areas.

The rebel Tigray People’s Liberation Front acknowledged losing ground to the government troops but said it will defend itself against the enemies.

“Shire is the second-largest city in Tigray and strategic as it’s at a crossroads, potentially making it easier to advance towards Axum and Adwa” said William Davison, the International Crisis Group’s senior analyst for Ethiopia. “It also has a major road south leading from it. So it’s a strategic and psychological boost (for the Eritrean and Ethiopian federal forces). But of course, we are yet to see how quickly this advance will continue. It’s possible there will be a rapid move towards Makelle or there could be resistance along the way that prevents that.”

On Monday, the Ethiopian government said it was seeking to take control of critical infrastructure in the region, including airports and communications facilities.

The war in Tigray is nearing the two-year mark, with no sign of peace in sight. In August, the conflict resumed after five months of truce.

Davison said planned peace talks between the TPLF and the government may be for naught if the government asserts authority in Tigray.

“It’s not clear who they will be negotiating with if they succeed. So, it looks more like 2020 rather than 2022, meaning that in 2022, there’s been a focus on a negotiated settlement before the resumption of the conflict. But if they are trying to take control of Tigray it’s not clear who they will be negotiating with at the end of it.”

This month’s planned peace talks in South Africa and other peace processes failed to launch, as the sides continue to disagree on the venue and mediators of the reconciliation efforts.

The head of the Horn Institute for Strategic Studies, Hassan Khannenje, said all means possible need to be used to bring the factions to the negotiating table.

“It’s important that the parties also present mediators who are at least going to appear neutral or impartial to both parties” said Khannenie. “Part of the challenge in recent months has been the perception some mediators may not exactly be neutral. It’s going to be important that the framework of the mediation also involves a degree of carrots and sticks to ensure that spoilers are not going to have their way because, without the ability to enforce the agreement, of course, it’s going to be violated.”

Khannenje adds that without some incentives for the parties just to come to the table, both sides may be reluctant to negotiate at all.

 

Source: Voice of America

UN Rights Chief: Fighting in Tigray Taking Toll on Civilians

GENEVA — The U.N. high commissioner for human rights, Volker Turk, says the escalating hostilities in Ethiopia’s northern Tigray region are taking a devastating toll on the civilian population and must stop. Lisa Schlein reports for VOA from Geneva.

U.N. rights chief Volker Turk is alarmed at the latest surge of airstrikes launched on the Tigray region by the Ethiopian air force. He warns the attacks on civilians and civilian infrastructure risks worsening what already is a catastrophic situation.

The High Commissioner’s spokeswoman, Ravina Shamdasani, says numerous reports have been received since August 31 of civilian casualties and destruction of civilian objects due to airstrikes and artillery strikes in Tigray.

“On civilian casualties, because of the communication, disruptions and difficulty accessing the sites, we do not have a comprehensive figure,” said Shamdasani. “What we have managed to document from the 31st of August to date, there have reportedly been at least 31 civilians, including children killed and 73 others wounded in 14 separate airstrikes launched by the Ethiopian Airforce in the Tigray region, including in Mekelle, Shire, and other parts of Tigray. But, of course this is very likely to be extremely underestimated because of the constraints that I mentioned.”


Fighting between the Ethiopian government and Tigrayan rebels resumed August 24, ending a five-month long humanitarian truce.

Since the conflict began nearly two years ago, millions of Tigrayans have been displaced. The United Nations estimates half a million people have died from conflict, hunger, disease, and lack of medical care. More than five million people need humanitarian assistance.

Shamdasani says the High Commissioner is concerned by mobilization exercises involving military reservists in Eritrea as well as the Tigrayan armed forces and the Ethiopian armed forces. She says the High Commissioner is appealing to all parties

to stop fighting and work towards a peaceful and lasting solution.

“Parties to the conflict must respect international human rights law and international humanitarian law by taking all feasible measures to protect civilians and civilian objects, and allowing humanitarian assistance to reach those in need…The High Commissioner stressed the need to support all efforts towards ensuring accountability for gross violations and abuses of international human rights law and international humanitarian law committed during the conflict,” said Shamdasani.


Shamdasani says the Human Rights Office has raised its concerns with the Ethiopian government.

She says it has been urging the government to hold accountable perpetrators of serious human rights violations in Tigray. Unfortunately, she notes, progress in this regard has been extremely slow.

 

Source: Voice of America

Workshop of National Sports Federations

The National Sports Federations are conducting workshop starting from 17 October at Asmara Palace under the theme “Strong Organization for Sports Development”.

 

Speaking at the opening event of the workshop, Ambassador Zemede Tekle, Commissioner of Culture and Sports, said that the objective of the workshop is to review four years activities of each federation and generate ideas that could support the development of sports in the country.

Col. Solomon Seyum, head of supervision of activities of Olympics and Para-Olympics Committees, called on the participants to carry out thorough assessment of activities and contribute in designing future programs.

The participants conducted extensive discussion on the reports presented by presidents and finance heads of Volleyball and Badminton federations and adopted future programs.

The workshop that started by Volleyball and   Badminton federations will continue with the remaining federations.

 

Source: Ministry of Information Eritrea

Ministry of Agriculture Promotes Hydroponic Fodder Production to Alleviate Shortage of Animal Feed

Starting from the second half of this year, the Ministry of Agriculture is vigorously promoting hydroponic farming in dairy farmers. It is to be noted that the Ministry has been seeking for a number of solutions to solve the constant shortage of animal feed in general; and that of the dairy cattle in particular. Cultivation of green forage, possession of improved and manageable number of breed have been among the major priorities in this sub-sector. The adoption of hydroponic fodder production is, of course, one component of these initiatives.

The Public Relations Division of the Ministry of Agriculture has interviewed Ms. Almaz Gebreyohannes, Head of Agricultural Innovations Unit to shed light to readers as to how the hydroponic fodder farming is progressing in the country.

Question: Let’s start with what hydroponics is?

 Answer: The word hydroponics is derived from two Greek words: ‘hydro’ meaning water and ‘ponos’ meaning labour i.e. working with water. Hence, it literally means farming without any soil but with only water. Hydroponic fodder production involves supplying cereal grains and pulses with the necessary moisture nutrients, to enable germination and plant growth in the absence of a solid growing medium. The resulting green shoots and root mat are harvested and fed to livestock.

Q: What is the contribution of this technology in Agriculture; globally and regionally?

A: The methods of hydroponic fodder production date back to the 1800s or earlier, from the ‘Hanging Gardens of Babylon’ era, when European dairy farmers fed sprouted grains to their cows during winter to maintain milk production and improve fertility. However, currently there is a renewed interest in this technology due to shortage of green feed in most of the Middle East, African and Asian countries. It is worth mentioning that various countries have been conducting a number of studies during the past years to evaluate the effectiveness of hydroponic fodder. Similarly, the Ministry of Agriculture of the State of Eritrea conducted few trials to see the effect of hydroponic fodder in chicken, rabbit, pigs and horses; putting a number of feed parameters in to consideration for the last three years; and the results were promising.

Q: When and for what purpose did the MoA start hydroponics?

A: Since Eritrea is geographically located in the region which is prone to recurrent drought, it needs to adopt modern technologies to increase its food and feed production. Availability of fresh or dried grass for animal feed during dry seasons has been a great challenge for farmers for years. It is for this reason that the MoA started to introduce this technology in the late 2019. Though it is possible to produce food and feed with hydroponics, we are focusing on animal feed at this time.

Q: What crops are you growing with the help of this technology?

A: Even though a range of cereals and pulses can be grown by hydroponic farming, the most commonly used cereal grain is barley. There are a range of chemical and structural changes that take place within the cereal grain through the hydroponic growing process. Activation of enzymes within the grain leads to hydrolysis of proteins, carbohydrates and lipids into their simpler components. This hydrolysis increases the concentrations of amino acids, soluble sugars and fatty acids within the grain and resulting shoot. The grain also responds to the supply of moisture and nutrients by germinating, sprouting and then producing a 200 – 250 mm long vegetative green shoot with interwoven roots within 10 to 14 days. For instance, a kilo of barley seed can yield up to seven times of its original weight using this technology.

Q: What are its advantages?

A: It has many advantages. Continuous supply of fodder all year round in a small space and with minimum water. It can be managed with household labor and thus is economically feasible. It is also eco-friendly.

Q: What do we, then, expect from all these initiatives?

 A: The MoA is carrying out considerable efforts to cascade the technology to all dairy cattle owners so that they are able to produce hydroponic fodder on their own; and provide enough and sustainable feed for their livestock.

***

 Ms. Heran Yosief and Ms. Betlihiem Angesom are also young Agricultural engineers who are leading the hydroponic farming for the last two years to introduce it to the direct beneficiaries – the dairy cattle farmers. They run the hydroponic farming demonstration site located at the premises of the MoA headquarters.

According to them; a number of farmers and experts from different regions of the country have visited the demonstration site. Moreover, some trainings and experience sharing platforms were also organized to promote the technology.

Eng. Heran pointed out that the visiting farmers admire the new technology for it is easy to be adopted, and very important in alleviating the current animal feed shortages. Most of them have also promised to practice it in their farms, she added.

Eng. Betlhiem on her part said that the Agricultural Innovations Unit is providing training of trainers to experts from the six zobas. As of now, the technology has been piloted in Gash-Barka, Anseba and Maekel regions; and we are keenly following up their progress, she described. She also outlined that all the initiatives are showing promising results.

Finally, all these agricultural experts urged dairy farmers to adopt the technology and to approach the Ministry for any additional information.

 

Source: Ministry of Information Eritrea

SIT Rolos opens its Machine Intelligence Platform to academia and business to accelerate the research

SCHAFFHAUSEN, Switzerland, Oct. 18, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — SIT Rolos announced today that it would bring research to a new level by opening its Machine Intelligence (MI) Platform to all scientific groups. Any researcher from academia or business can now configure, run and collaborate with others on their computational research project through Rolos Platform. Thanks to a user-friendly interface, no specific IT knowledge is required to use the Platform.

Rolos Platform addresses two major problems in research: infrastructure setup and teamwork. First, it provides premade infrastructure ready for research tasks with all the necessary resources out of the box – Graphics Processor Unit (GPU), Central Processing Unit (CPU), and storage. Researchers, therefore, no longer need to spend time on infrastructure setup and resource allocation. On the other hand, the Platform also ensures collaboration on a project – code and data versioning control, group editing, and consistent changes for all project participants.

Rolos allows its users to build their computational setups using the available cloud, on-premise servers, and High-Performance Computing (HPC) clusters and save costs on running simulation experiments. SIT Rolos can also provide its own resources from the cloud infrastructure in SIT data centers.

Rolos Platform is available through two types of deployments:

  • as a SaaS solution (Software as a Service) in Rolos Cloud, that can be accessed at http://my.rolos.com; or
  • as an on-premises installation on the customer’s hardware cluster that provides the full stack of software to create a computational research lab.

In the words of Konstantin Novoselov, Nobel Prize Winner, Professor of Physics at the National University of Singapore, Rolos Platform is used “to unify data from different scientists, unleash the power of Big Data, and achieve exponential progress in research projects.”

Rolos Platform features include:

  • Computing and storage resources automatic provisioning
  • Research environment management
  • A workflow manager
  • An Interactive Papers publishing module

Join the introduction to Rolos Machine Intelligence Platform for Computation and Data Management on October 18 at 10 am CESThttps://web.sit.org/simplify-and-accelerate-research-lifecycle-rolos-webinar-oct-2022

During the webinar, you will see an overview of the Platform’s essential features and deep dive into the main current research scenarios.

About SIT Rolos

SIT Rolos is part of the Schaffhausen Institute of Technology (SIT) group. SIT Rolos provides a Machine Intelligence Platform with consulting and applications for academia and business. The company has strong expertise in Machine Intelligence and Data Science in various application areas, including Scientific Research, Business Analytics, Professional Sports, Driverless Mobility, Robotics, and others.

SIT Rolos is a global company headquartered in Switzerland with a presence in the United States, United Kingdom, Netherlands, Germany, Singapore, Spain, Bulgaria, Serbia, and Turkey.

Get in touch today and see how we can help you reach your business goals: https://rolos.com/about/

Natalia Tashkeeva
SIT VP of communications & events
+65 9643 9080 | nt@sit.org

bioLytical Laboratories Inc. receives WHO PQ for its iStatis COVID-19 Antigen Home Test

bioLytical Laboratories Inc. announced its immediate entry into the African, Asian, Middle Eastern, and South American markets with its COVID-19 antigen self-test on its new lateral flow platform, iStatis

iStatis COVID-19 Antigen Home Test

iStatis COVID-19 Antigen Home Test Components

  • From the makers of INSTI®, bioLytical launches a new platform, iStatis, created to ensure every person in the world has access to reliable testing
  • bioLytical receives eligibility for its self-test, the iStatis COVID-19 Antigen Home Test, for international, regional, and national procurement agencies for immediate entry into the African, Asian, Middle Eastern, and South American markets
  • The test is portable and can be performed in a multitude of settings with easy-to-understand results
  • Test performance in clinical studies demonstrated high accuracy, with industry-leading sensitivity and specificity
  • bioLytical’s quality system is MDSAP: ISO 13485 certified

RICHMOND, British Columbia, Oct. 18, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — bioLytical Laboratories Inc. (“bioLytical”), a global leader in rapid in-vitro medical diagnostics, announced it has received its WHO PQ for its self-test, the iStatis COVID-19 Antigen Home Test, allowing its immediate entry into international markets.

Building on its innovative INSTI® testing platform, bioLytical launched iStatis to continue creating reliable access to testing. With new lateral flow technology in its portfolio, bioLytical can reach more people, creating equitable access to a rapid COVID-19 antigen self-test that provides peace of mind with industry-leading accuracy.

“We are excited to announce iStatis in additional global markets after receiving our WHO PQ with our COVID-19 rapid antigen self-test,” said Rob Mackie, Chief Executive Officer of bioLytical. “With various global regions with a low supply of high-quality tests, we saw an opportunity to provide rapid tests to more markets. We are proud to work with the WHO to help underserved markets and to open up equitable testing access globally.”

With the unpredictable nature of the pandemic, testing will continue to play an integral role in the fight against COVID-19 as an extra layer of defense to keep communities safe. With varying transmission levels in different global regions, the iStatis COVID-19 antigen self-test will help create certainty as a tool for identifying infection. Allowing individuals to test at home helps reduce the burden on busy medical facilities. With its high accuracy, portability, and ease of use, bioLytical is working to create global access for everyone who needs a rapid test with iStatis.

bioLytical will manufacture the iStatis COVID-19 self-tests in its MDSAP: ISO 13485-certified facility in Richmond, British Columbia. As a global leader in ultra-rapid infectious disease diagnostics, bioLytical is working to ensure our iStatis test kits are available across international markets such as Africa, Asia, the Middle East, and South America. The iStatis COVID-19 Antigen Home Test also has received Health Canada authorization and its CE Mark for self-testing across Canada and Europe.

bioLytical Laboratories Inc. is a privately-owned Canadian company focused on the research, development, and commercialization of rapid in-vitro medical diagnostics using its proprietary INSTI® technology platform and its lateral flow line iStatis. bioLytical has won several local and industry awards, including B.C. Exporter of the Year in 2019. We have been named Lifesciences B.C.’s Growth Stage Med Tech Company of the Year and are featured on B.C.’s Fastest-Growing Companies for six years in a row, including the Globe and Mail’s Fastest Growing Companies list in 2020. bioLytical moved to a significantly larger, state-of-the-art facility in Richmond, B.C., in 2020 to accommodate the extraordinary growth achieved through our team. Providing accurate results in one minute or less, the INSTI® range includes the INSTI® HIV-1/HIV-2 Antibody Test, INSTI® Multiplex HIV Syphilis Ab Test, INSTI® HIV Self Test, INSTI® Covid-19 Antibody Test, and the INSTI® HCV Antibody Test. bioLytical sells its products in Europe, North America, South America, Africa, and Asia. In 2022, bioLytical launched iStatis, its new lateral flow testing platform to create additional access to testing worldwide.

By delivering accurate results in real-time, INSTI® and iStatis generate meaningful outcomes for medical professionals, patients, and public health organizations worldwide and is a key partner in tackling some of the world’s most severe healthcare challenges. Please visit www.istatis.com and www.insti.com and www.biolytical.com for more information.

References
https://www.who.int/publications/i/item/WHO-2019-nCoV-SurveillanceGuidance-2022.1

A photo accompanying this announcement is available at: https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/1f99cf04-8303-4204-8a66-fe352eb5f47e

Media Contact
Communications at bioLytical
press@biolytical.com
+1-778-238-9340

Mosa Meat Scaling Beef Cultivation to Industrial Production Levels

Recent expansion to 77,000 sq ft. makes Mosa Meat the largest cultivated meat campus in the world.

Maastricht, The Netherlands, Oct. 18, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Mosa Meat, a leader in the cultivated meat space that grows beef directly from animal cells, and unveiled the first cultivated hamburger in 2013, has announced the next step in the scale up of the company’s cultivated beef production facilities.

A new industrial production development center is being developed close to Mosa Meat’s existing pilot facility in Maastricht. After demonstrating the beef cultivation process at pilot scale, Mosa Meat is now ready for the next phase of expansion, housing industrial-size production lines and enabling larger production quantities of beef.

“We’ve expanded our space by 30,000 square feet in our next phase, which brings Mosa Meat’s total footprint to over 77,000 square feet,” shared Maarten Bosch, Mosa Meat’s CEO. “This makes us the largest cultivated meat campus in the world, and provides a solid foundation for our European and global commercialisation plans.”

Global meat consumption is projected to grow more than 40% by 2030, and Mosa Meat is part of a growing global movement to transform the way meat is produced. Beef specifically, is the protein with the highest carbon footprint, which is why Mosa Meat has focused on it since the company was founded in 2016.

Mosa Meat has grown to over 160 employees, with over 80 scientists and the largest number of PhDs in the industry in just a few years’ time. The production team has grown five-fold in the last three months to 15 members. Simultaneously the company has also expanded its footprint at existing locations, including operations at Brightlands and the current pilot facility in Maastricht, where R&D capacity continues to grow. Together, this brings Mosa Meat one step closer towards commercialisation.

Mosa Meat plans to announce the launch of its industrial production development center in 2023.

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About Mosa Meat

Mosa Meat is a global food technology company pioneering a cleaner, kinder way of making real beef. Our founders introduced the world’s first cultivated beef hamburger in 2013, by growing it directly from cow cells. Founded in 2016, Mosa Meat is now scaling up production of the same beef that people love, but in a way that is better for people, animals, and the planet. A diverse and growing team of food-loving problem-solvers, we are united in our mission to fundamentally reshape the global food system. Headquartered in Maastricht, The Netherlands, Mosa Meat is a privately held company backed by Blue Horizon, M Ventures, Bell Food Group, Nutreco, Mitsubishi Corporation, Leonardo DiCaprio and other high-caliber investors.

Follow Mosa Meat on Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter and Instagram or visit mosameat.com to learn more about why people #cravechange. Access the Mosa Meat press kit here.

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Tim van de Rijdt
Mosa Meat
press@mosameat.com