Czech Ex-Premier Babis Acquitted in EU Funds Fraud Case

A Prague court on Monday acquitted former Prime Minister Andrej Babis of fraud charges in a $2 million case involving European Union subsidies.

A prosecutor requested a three-year suspended sentence and a fine of $440,000 for the populist billionaire. The prosecution still can appeal.

Babis pleaded not guilty and repeatedly said the charges against him were politically motivated.

He wasn’t present at Prague’s Municipal Court on Monday. His former associate, Jana Nagyova, who signed the subsidy request, was also acquitted.

The ruling is a boost for Babis just days before the first round of the Czech presidential election.

Babis is considered a front-runner in Friday’s election, along with retired army general Petr Pavel, former chairman of NATO’s military committee, and former university rector Danuse Nerudova.

Source: Voice of America

New Guidance: Use Drugs, Surgery Early for Obesity in Kids

Children struggling with obesity should be evaluated and treated early and aggressively, including with medications for kids as young as 12 and surgery for those as young as 13, according to new guidelines released Monday.

The long-standing practice of “watchful waiting,” or delaying treatment to see whether children and teens outgrow or overcome obesity on their own, only worsens the problem that affects more than 14.4 million young people in the U.S. Left untreated, obesity can lead to lifelong health problems, including high blood pressure, diabetes and depression.

“Waiting doesn’t work,” said Dr. Ihuoma Eneli, co-author of the first guidance on childhood obesity in 15 years from the American Academy of Pediatrics. “What we see is a continuation of weight gain and the likelihood that they’ll have [obesity] in adulthood.”

For the first time, the group’s guidance sets ages at which kids and teens should be offered medical treatments such as drugs and surgery — in addition to intensive diet, exercise and other behavior and lifestyle interventions, said Eneli, director of the Center for Healthy Weight and Nutrition at Nationwide Children’s Hospital in Columbus, Ohio.

In general, doctors should offer adolescents 12 and older who have obesity access to appropriate drugs and teens 13 and older with severe obesity referrals for weight-loss surgery, though situations may vary.

The guidelines aim to reset the inaccurate view of obesity as “a personal problem, maybe a failure of the person’s diligence,” said Dr. Sandra Hassink, medical director for the AAP Institute for Healthy Childhood Weight, and a co-author of the guidelines.

“This is not different than you have asthma and now we have an inhaler for you,” Hassink said.

‘Not a lifestyle problem’

Young people who have a body mass index that meets or exceeds the 95th percentile for kids of the same age and gender are considered obese. Kids who reach or exceed that level by 120% are considered to have severe obesity. BMI is a measure of body size based on a calculation of height and weight.

Obesity affects nearly 20% of kids and teens in the U.S. and about 42% of adults, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The group’s guidance takes into consideration that obesity is a biological problem and that the condition is a complex, chronic disease, said Aaron Kelly, co-director of the Center for Pediatric Obesity Medicine at the University of Minnesota.

“Obesity is not a lifestyle problem. It is not a lifestyle disease,” he said. “It predominately emerges from biological factors.”

The guidelines come as new drug treatments for obesity in kids have emerged, including approval late last month of Wegovy, a weekly injection, for use in children ages 12 and older. Different doses of the drug, called semaglutide, are also used under different names to treat diabetes. A recent study published in the New England Journal of Medicine found that Wegovy, made by Novo Nordisk, helped teens reduce their BMI by about 16% on average, better than the results in adults.

How Wegovy works

The drug affects how the pathways between the brain and the gut regulate energy, said Dr. Justin Ryder, an obesity researcher at Lurie Children’s Hospital in Chicago.

“It works on how your brain and stomach communicate with one another and helps you feel more full than you would be,” he said.

Still, specific doses of semaglutide and other anti-obesity drugs have been hard to get because of recent shortages caused by manufacturing problems and high demand, spurred in part by celebrities on TikTok and other social media platforms boasting about enhanced weight loss.

In addition, many insurers won’t pay for the medication, which costs about $1,300 a month.

One expert in pediatric obesity cautioned that while kids with obesity must be treated early and intensively, he worries that some doctors may turn too quickly to drugs or surgery.

“It’s not that I’m against the medications,” said Dr. Robert Lustig, a longtime specialist in pediatric endocrinology at the University of California, San Francisco. “I’m against the willy-nilly use of those medications without addressing the cause of the problem.”

Lustig said children must be evaluated individually to understand all factors that contribute to obesity. He has long blamed too much sugar for the rise in obesity. He urges a sharp focus on diet, particularly ultra-processed foods high in sugar and low in fiber.

Dr. Stephanie Byrne, a pediatrician at Cedars Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, said she’d like more research about the drug’s efficacy in a more diverse group of children and about potential long-term effects before she begins prescribing it regularly.

“I would want to see it be used on a little more consistent basis,” she said. “And I would have to have that patient come in pretty frequently to be monitored.”

At the same time, she welcomed the group’s new emphasis on prompt, intensive treatment for obesity in kids.

“I definitely think this is a realization that diet and exercise is not going to do it for a number of teens who are struggling with this — maybe the majority,” she said.

Source: Voice of America

Australian Open Tennis Tournament Not Testing for COVID-19

One year after Australia deported Serbian tennis champion Novak Djokovic for refusing to get vaccinated, Australian Open tournament officials say players this year will not be tested for COVID-19 and would even be allowed to compete even if they had the virus.

Tournament director Craig Tiley told reporters Monday they are telling players and tournament staff to stay away if they feel ill, but otherwise they will not be tested. If they have already been tested, they will not be required to disclose their status.

Tiley said the tournament just wanted to “follow what is currently in the community.”

The new policy is a stark change from the strict protocols of the past two years, when spectators were banned from the tournament, matches were played in a bio-secure “bubble,” and nine-time tournament champion Djokovic was not allowed to play.

Last week, during a Cricket match in Sydney between South Africa and Australia, Australian Cricketer Matt Renshaw was allowed to play in a five-day test match despite testing positive for COVID.

Riley said, “It’s a normalized environment for us and, not dissimilar to cricket, there will potentially be players that will compete with COVID.”

The more relaxed rules for sports reflects Australia’s more relaxed rules regarding COVID-19. At the height of the pandemic, the nation — and Melbourne in particular -— endured some of the longest and strictest lockdowns.

But in the past year, mandates regarding safeguards such as testing, and mask-wearing have been replaced.

Source: Voice of America

Two shining victories within three days

Eritrean Olympian Athlete Rahel Daniel won Gold Medal at the 79th World Cross-Country Championship 2022 held on 8 January in Spain.

Rahel Daniel finished the 7.6 km race in 25 minutes and 43 seconds followed by Kenyan, Ethiopian and Bahrain athletes.

Rahel Daniel is the first Eritrean athlete to win the race.

Olympian Athlete Rahel Daniel also won Gold Medal at the 66th Compacio Cross-Country Championship held in Italy on 6 January.

Speaking to journalists, Rahel Daniel expressed confidence to register similar victory at the similar Cross-Country race to be held in Australia after a month.

Source: Ministry of Information Eritrea

Independent News Outlet Staff Go on Trial in Belarus

Five employees of what used to be authoritarian Belarus’s largest independent news outlet went on trial Monday in Minsk, facing several charges including tax evasion and “inciting enmity”, a rights group said.

The outlet Tut.by covered large-scale protests in 2020 that erupted after President Alexander Lukashenko claimed a sixth term in office in a contested election.

The new source’s editor-in-chief Marina Zolatova and the its general director Lyudmila Chekina have been in pre-trial detention since May 2021.

Three other defendants in the case left Belarus before the trial started, according to rights group Viasna.

A photo from court published by opposition leader Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya showed Zolatova and Chekina sitting inside a cage for defendants.

“We must support all journalists who fight for the truth!” Tsikhanouskaya wrote on Twitter on Monday at the start of the closed-door trial.

The media outlet was designated “extremist” in 2021. Some of its employees now work from abroad for a successor publication called Zerkalo.

Zerkalo said in a statement the case against their former colleagues “was fabricated from start to finish and appeared only because the regime is afraid of journalists”.

Following the historic anti-regime protests in 2020, Belarus has sought to wipe out remaining pockets of dissent, jailing journalists, activists and forcing many others into exile.

According to Viasna, there are over 1,400 political prisoners in Belarus.

In a high-profile case last week, Viasna founder Ales Bialiatski, who was co-awarded last year’s Nobel Peace Prize, went on trial in Belarus with several of his associates.

They face between seven and 12 years in prison.

Tsikhanouskaya, who claimed victory in Belarus’s disputed 2020 presidential election, will face trial in absentia on January 17 on charges including high treason and conspiracy to seize power.

Source: Voice of America

James Webb Telescope: Six Months of Images

It’s been six months since the James Webb Space Telescope began transmitting breathtaking pictures of the cosmos back to Earth, transfixing star gazers and scientists alike.

The images have led to new discoveries about the universe, including the formation of stars, the evolution of black holes and the composition of planets in other solar systems.

NASA’s Webb telescope — a collaboration between the United States, Europe and Canada — was launched on Christmas Day 2021. However, it was not until July 12, 2022, when U.S. President Joe Biden officially released the first set of pictures taken by the $10 billion telescope, that its first images were seen by the world.

Here is a look at some of the best images captured by the telescope over the past six months.

Among the first set of images taken by the telescope and revealed by NASA is a galaxy cluster known as SMACS 0723 that is teeming with thousands of galaxies. NASA called the picture “the deepest, sharpest infrared view of the universe to date” and said it shows the galaxies as they appeared 4.6 billion years ago. Scientists describe the telescope as looking back in time. That is because it can see galaxies that are so far away that it takes light from those galaxies billions of years to reach the telescope.

Also part of the first set of images NASA released, this picture shows emerging stellar nurseries in a star-forming region called NGC 3324 in the Carina Nebula. NASA says the stellar nurseries and individual stars that are seen in the image are completely hidden in visible-light pictures. “Because of Webb’s sensitivity to infrared light, it can peer through cosmic dust to see these objects,” it said. A successor to the Hubble Space Telescope, Webb is able to use the infrared spectrum in capturing its images, while its predecessor used mainly optical and ultraviolet wavelengths.

This observation from the Webb telescope captures detailed measurements of a planetary atmosphere 1,150 light-years away. Among the findings from this atmosphere is the distinct signature of water. NASA says such images show “the significant role the telescope will play in the search for potentially habitable planets in coming years.” The planet analyzed here, known as WASP-96 b, is one of more than 5,000 confirmed exoplanets in the Milky Way, according to NASA. It has a mass less than half that of Jupiter, a temperature greater than 500°C, and it orbits its Sun-like star once every 3½ Earth-days.

The Webb telescope captured new images of Jupiter in August, delighting the internet with its composite picture of the planet from three infrared filters. Jupiter’s Great Red Spot – a storm so big it could contain the entire Earth — is shown in white instead of red, and in sharp detail. NASA says the spot appears white, as do some of the clouds around the planet, because they are reflecting a large amount of light and contain high-altitude hazes.

Staying within our solar system, Webb turned its gaze to Neptune, producing an image of the icy planet that captures some of the clearest views of its rings. The photo also shows seven of Neptune’s 14 known moons. While Neptune appears blue at visible wavelengths, caused by small amounts of gaseous methane, Webb’s near-infrared camera does not show the color in this image. “Methane gas so strongly absorbs red and infrared light that the planet is quite dark at these near-infrared wavelengths, except where high-altitude clouds are present,” NASA said.

Webb’s new view of the Pillars of Creation shows a beautifully clear picture of the celestial event, where new stars are forming within dense clouds of gas and dust. The Pillars captured people’s imagination when NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope began sending images of it in 1995, including the picture at left taken in 2014. The image on the right is created from Webb’s near-infrared camera and shows the presence of far more stars, which are formed out of the dusty clouds over millions of years.

Source: Voice of America

“Hard work and Determination are the Hallmark of Successful Entrepreneurship” Azieb Tsegay

Azieb Tsegay has been striving to be self-reliant since she was young. By adding knowledge and education to her efforts, she successfully opened her own dairy products processing factory and is one of the successful women entrepreneurs in Eritrea.

Let’s start with your background…

My name is Azieb Tsegay. I was born and raised in Asmara. I completed 12th grade in Asmara and then I went to Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, and got married with Eng. Michael Tsegay. I started my university education there but had to quit for some reasons. One of the main reasons was that I started to focus on raising my children.

Earlier you started a business in poultry farming. When and how did you start it?

When I started a family in Addis Ababa, I didn’t want to stay at home. So, I learned about fashion and clothing design. This enabled me to produce different kinds of outfits and had helped me in supporting my family financially. But I was not satisfied with it. I wanted to do more. I had the feeling that my peers were learning and I was lagging behind. Therefore, I learned handcrafting. But still the money I was earning was not enough, and this prompted me to engage in poultry farming. I started it with some 600 chicken in my neighborhood. When Eritrea became independent, we moved to Eritrea and I was given a parcel of land in Dubarwa. I started poultry farming again in 2004 with around 2000 chicken.

Did you find the poultry farming rewarding?

The house I built for the purpose of poultry farming in Dubarwa was conducive for the chicken. And the passion I had for poultry helped me to take the job seriously. Encouraged by this, in Feb 2005, I imported around 20,000 chicken called “first generation” from the Netherlands with all the necessary poultry feeds and vaccinations. I kept four thousand chicken for myself and sold the rest at the local market because I believed that other people should also engage in this business and improve their livelihoods. Again, in May 2005, I imported 20 thousand chicken to lay eggs and six thousand chicken intended for meat production. I kept four thousand chicken for myself and sold the rest at the local market. The broiler chicken grow fast and I sold them to hotels and restaurants. That was lucrative for me at the time, and I believe it had a modest contribution in stabilizing the market.

In October 2005, however, I encountered a huge problem because of the outbreak of a global bird flu. I was told to eliminate around eight thousand chicken. This was a challenge for me at that time as I was expecting to import as many chicken from the Netherlands. In consultation with the Ministry of Agriculture, I managed to isolate the chicken from any contact with the outside world and managed to avoid the problem unharmed. At the same time, a rumor that the “eggs from the ‘Holland chicken’ is infected” was spread, which caused me to dump around 180 thousand eggs. Though this was not confirmed by experts, it did affect my business. But I didn’t lose hope. I was determined to make progress and brought chicken called “second generation” from Keren. But from this time onwards the poultry business didn’t go as well as I wanted it to, so to compensate for this I started a dairy farm alongside. In 2009, I quit poultry farming altogether when scarcity of poultry feed was added to the challenges I had already encountered.

Do you think that other women can empower themselves by engaging in poultry farming?

Poultry farming is not an easy job. Chicken require utmost care. If you can take care of them properly, it is beneficial. Families can improve their nutritious food by raising chicken. But chicken are also vulnerable to disease, and if they get infected, they can have pernicious effects on your economy. So it’s a business that requires a very painstaking undertaking. Chicken are not the kind of animals that can be watched from afar but are to be handled with care. You need to be careful about the feeding, hygiene and vaccination. Although poultry farming can be beneficial it requires very meticulous effort and dedication.

How did you start the dairy production business?

When the poultry farming proved to be not profitable any more, I started to shift to cattle breeding in 2007. I was encouraged by the outcome and increased the number of milk cows I had. The milk I was producing was more than the demand of the local market in Dubarwa. I was forced to sell it in Asmara, 30 km away. It wasn’t profitable. Therefore, I came up with the idea of starting manufacturing dairy products. In consultation with Dutch experts, I learned the process of producing cheese and mozzarella. I started production and made progress but had shortage of packaging materials. When the plant was in its initial steps, my son, Abraham, went to Italy and the Netherlands to learn about the process of cheese making. With his help and the machines we imported, we were able to manufacture milk products and avoided the post-harvest loss we had been encountering.

On average, we buy around 3000 liters of milk per day and during the fasting season, we buy around 65 thousand liters of milk per day from the local milk cooperatives and other suppliers. Our factory produces yogurt, different types of cheese, buttermilk, butter, cream and ricotta. Our products are sold to a wide range of customers, including mining companies, the local market and hotels and restaurants. The prices of our products are reasonable in light of the price we pay for the milk we buy from our suppliers.

In my journey, I came across a lot of frustrating challenges. But, thanks to the encouragement and support of my husband, my sons and relatives, I was able to carry on unconstrained by the problems I faced. Losing hope is the worst enemy. You shouldn’t feel overwhelmed by challenges because there is no shortcut to success. It is always good to grow step by step. It can sometimes be frustrating, but at the end of the day, it is those who are tested by challenges who become experienced and successful.

What would your answer be to those who think that women are unable to lead and manage businesses?

I don’t think that women are incapable of leading and managing if they have the necessary knowledge and education. But the traditional thinking that emanates partly from the fact that our patriarchal society doesn’t acknowledge the potential of women is one of the obstacles to women’s development. However, if women are given equal education and opportunities, there is no way they could be any short of achieving what they aspire. I believe that, there is no difference between men and women in their ability to acquire knowledge and skill except in their physical strength. In any case, we both complement one another.

How do you think should women prioritize work and education?

If they have the opportunity they should first focus on education. Education is key to transforming women and can help them in making the right choices in their life. In its narrowest sense, it helps them to be equipped with more knowledge and skills, preparing them for better job opportunities.

We have an association called Eritrean Women’s Agro-business Association (EWAA). The purpose of the association is to help grow members by providing education and training. Currently, there are 63 members in the association. Within the association, we are provided with various kinds of training in the fields of poultry, cattle breeding, dairy products, bee keeping, breeding rabbits, mushroom farming, floriculture, horticulture and others. And at SMAP Institute, the association provides training on accounting, finance and management. This has helped us a lot to excel in our work.

What is the role of your sons and your husband in your success?

First off, my husband understands me and encourages me in all the efforts I make. In addition to that, he is educated and contributes a lot. His attitude towards women is very positive. He believes if women are educated and dedicated to their goal they can achieve what they want. And my son, Abraham, has been key to my success in our dairy production enterprise. He leads the marketing of our products and the provision of supplies.

What do you think is the secret to your success?

The secret to my success is the dedication to my goal and working hard. When I was overwhelmed with challenges I didn’t give up – I always strove to overcome them. I will continue to do so in the future till I achieve my goals and dreams.

What are your future plans?

I have a lot of projects. But, my biggest aim is to grow the factory by adding machineries and the necessary skilled laborers.

Source: Ministry of Information Eritrea