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Daily Archives: August 24, 2023
The Future of Open Source is Still Very Much in Flux – Slashdot
Posted: August 24, 2023 at 11:27 am
Free and open software have transformed the tech industry. But we still have a lot to work out to make them healthy, equitable enterprises. From a report: When Xerox donated a new laser printer to MIT in 1980, the company couldn't have known that the machine would ignite a revolution. While the early decades of software development generally ran on a culture of open access, this new printer ran on inaccessible proprietary software, much to the horror of Richard M. Stallman, then a 27-year-old programmer at the university.
A few years later, Stallman released GNU, an operating system designed to be a free alternative to one of the dominant operating systems at the time: Unix. The free-software movement was born, with a simple premise: for the good of the world, all code should be open, without restriction or commercial intervention. Forty years later, tech companies are making billions on proprietary software, and much of the technology around us is inscrutable. But while Stallman's movement may look like a failed experiment, the free and open-source software movement is not only alive and well; it has become a keystone of the tech industry.
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The Future of Open Source is Still Very Much in Flux - Slashdot
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How to face the climate crisis with Spinoza and self-knowledge – Aeon
Posted: at 11:26 am
Each of us experiences the climate crisis. We try to adapt to it: buying face masks to brave smoke-filled air outdoors or air purifiers to clean it indoors, turning up the air conditioning to insulate ourselves from excessive heat, preparing to evacuate our homes, if need be, when another hurricane hits the coast. We wonder where we can settle down that wont go to hell in a handbasket during our lifetime. Some of us wonder whether we should bring children into this world.
The climate crisis prompts questions that challenge our very being. We ask ourselves: Who am I in this increasingly unstable world? What is to become of me? Such questions can lead to despair, or lead us to look away, but, as we will see, they can also positively challenge the way we think about ourselves.
Our current political and economic circumstances lead us to think of ourselves as useful cogs in a machine, and of our identity in terms of certain hoops we need to jump through: go to college to get well-paying jobs, climb the property ladder, and make sure we have adequate savings for retirement. However, the climate crisis can prompt us to rethink these suppositions. What good are retirement savings if the world is burning? We need a much richer concept of self a fully realised self that is worth preserving.
The concept of self-realisation acknowledges our strong drive to preserve ourselves and to persevere in the face of the climate crisis. This self-concept is much richer and more expansive than is commonly recognised. Its not enough to preserve your narrow, personal self. You are part of a vast, interconnected Universe, where your wellbeing crucially depends on maintaining relationships and connections with others, including nonhuman others.
The Norwegian philosopher Arne Nss (1912-2009) coined the term deep ecology. The main idea of deep ecology is that we should address the ecological crisis through a paradigm shift. Rather than tinkering with concrete targets (such as CO2 emissions), we must radically re-envisage how we engage with the world. Nss was a wide-ranging philosopher with varied interests. Among many other things, he was a huge fan of the Sephardic Dutch philosopher Baruch de Spinoza (1632-77), particularly of his Ethics (1677), which Nss re-read frequently, and which plays a key role in his environmental philosophy.
Arne Naess reading Spinozas Ethics. Courtesy Open Air Philosophy
Nss is famous in his home country. He is considered a national treasure, widely admired for his social activism, mountaineering, philosophy textbooks, and even his practical jokes and spectacular feats such as climbing the walls of the tallest building at the Blindern campus of the University of Oslo while being interviewed by the Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation. He was a man of polarities: on the one hand, a member of an eminent Norwegian family, appointed as a full philosophy professor at Oslo aged 27 in fact, the only philosophy professor in Norway at the time. On the other hand, he published his extensive works with little regard for prestige or fame, including in obscure ecological magazines with small print-runs. This partly explains why Nss still remains relatively unknown in English-language academic philosophy. Especially in later life, he approximated what his friend and fellow environmental philosopher George Sessions called a union of theory and practice, practising his ecophilosophy by spending extensive time outdoors, hiking and mountaineering until well into his 80s. Nss had a spartan vegan diet consisting of unseasoned boiled vegetables. After retiring early, he gave much of his pension away to various projects such as the renovation of a Nepalese school.
Nsss notion of self-realisation is inspired by many philosophical traditions, including Mahayana Buddhism and Gandhis philosophy of nonviolent resistance. Another important inspiration was from Spinoza. According to his Ethics, everything in nature has a conatus, a fundamental striving to continue to exist: Each thing, as far as it can by its own power, strives to persevere in its being.
We see this fundamental tendency not only in humans but also in trees, bees and geese, and even inanimate objects such as tables, mountains and rocks. Things dont spontaneously disintegrate and they tend to keep their form over time; even something seemingly transient like a fire will try to keep itself going. How can we understand this universal drive? Nss situates the conatus in a bigger picture of nature, namely, one that helps us to persevere and affirm ourselves as expressions of nature. Spinoza argued that there is only one substance, which he called God or God or nature. Nature and God are coextensive, as God encompasses all of reality. So, Spinozas God is similar to what we now call the universe, the totality of all that is. This totality expresses itself in infinitely many modes, such as thought and physical bodies. We, like everything else, are expressions of this one substance.
When our surroundings are hurt, we feel hurt too
Unlike a traditional theistic God, Spinozas God has no overall higher purpose, no grand design. This God is perfectly free and acts in accordance with its own laws, but doesnt desire anything. Nature simply is, and it is perfect in itself. As Nss put it in 1977: If it had a purpose, it would have to be part of something still greater, eg, a grand design. As Nss interprets him, Spinozas metaphysics is fundamentally egalitarian. There is no hierarchy, no great chain of being with creatures lower or higher. We are on an ontological par with fish, oceans and beetles. A bears interests roaming about in the Norwegian countryside matter just as much as those of the surrounding farming communities.
Nature as a whole expresses its power in each individual thing. It is within these expressions of power that we can situate the drive to preserve our own being. To actualise ourselves, we need to understand what our self is. Nss thinks that we underestimate ourselves, writing in 1987: We tend to confuse it [the self] with the narrow ego. Self-knowledge is partial and incomplete, this lack of knowledge prevents us from acting well.
Here again is a clear influence of Spinoza. Spinoza thinks that knowledge and increased (self-) understanding help us to increase our ability to act, and hence our ability to persevere. We can realise this expansive conception of self by considering our relation to place, an idea that Nss draws from Indigenous thought. We often feel attached to places of natural bounty and beauty, to the point that we might feel that, as Nss said: If this place is destroyed something in me is killed.
Loss of place has by now well-documented effects on mental health, including eco-anxiety, which arises from a sense of loss of places to which people feel a strong emotional connection. When our surroundings are hurt, we feel hurt too. Inuit communities in northern Canada feel homesick for winter. This spontaneous feeling of connection to place signals to us that our self does not end at our skin, but that it includes other creatures. Indigenous people, through their activism and landback movements, demonstrate that there is more to the self than these metrics. In a letter in 1988, Nss tells the story of an indigenous Smi man who was detained for protesting the installation of a dam at a river, which would produce hydroelectricity. In court, the Smi man said this part of the river was part of himself. Differently put, if the river were altered, he would feel that the alteration would destroy part of himself. In his view, personal survival entailed the survival of the landscape.
For Nss, there is no grand, external purpose to our lives other than the purposes we assign to them. But because our wellbeing depends on factors outside of us, there still is some sense in which we can be worse off or better off, and it is rational to strive to be better off. In this sense, self-realisation is distinct from happiness. A tree that flourishes and does well, with leaves gleaming in the sun and birds nestling on its branches, is realising itself although we dont know whether it is happy.
A similar concept is articulated in the work of the Black American feminist author Audre Lorde (1934-92). For her, survival does not only mean having a roof over your head and food on the table. As Caleb Ward explains in a recent blog of the American Philosophical Association, for Lorde there is a difference between safety and survival. Safety is what we are told we must try to realise: we study, get a mortgage, and a job, to protect ourselves from the vicissitudes of life. Survival on the other hand, which is closer to self-realisation, is a concept that receives virtually no attention in policy or life advice: survival includes living out and preserving [Lordes] identity across its many aspects: as Black, as a woman, as a lesbian, as a mother. Ward quotes one of Lordes talks:
Drawing together these insights from Lorde, Nss and Spinoza, we can say that the climate crisis seriously hampers our ability for self-expression. Its degradation of our sense of place and belonging makes it difficult for us to realise ourselves as human beings. Increasingly, we are pushed to settle for safety from immediate threats posed by the degradation of the environment. We cannot even begin to think about how to preserve ourselves in all the diverse aspects of our existence, and therefore cannot really survive. This is in part why the climate crisis is so corrosive to our sense of self: it impedes our ability to know ourselves.
Self-realisation implies a unity of acting and knowing: you need to know yourself accurately as part of a vast, interconnected nature, and as more than a narrow ego. Once you know this, you can begin to act. By contrast, lack of knowledge (of ourselves, as conceived of a larger whole) immobilises and disempowers. Unfortunately, the climate crisis is undergirded by massive denialism. This denialism is more than us looking away as individuals. It is bankrolled by wealthy elites and fossil fuel companies in the face of inescapable climate degradation. As Bruno Latour writes in O atterir? (2017), or Down to Earth (2018):
The super-wealthy have tightened their grip on democracy, creating politically motivated diversion tactics, such as blaming so-called metropolitan elites (educated people) for the worsening economic circumstances of working-class people, or pointing the finger at refugees arriving in precarious boats on the shores of wealthy countries. The climate crisis lies behind nostalgic nationalist throwbacks to some imagined past, such as MAGA and Brexit.
Seeking prestige, fame and wealth seems like it will help us realise ourselves but, actually, we are in their power
Unlike some other recent thinkers such as Jason Stanley, Latour argues that these movements are only superficially like early 20th-century fascism. Rather, they represent a novel political order that is based on climate-change denial, where wealthy elites aim to create gated communities and escape routes by deregulation and disenfranchisement. All the while, they try (in vain) to realise themselves in things that seem ultimately unfulfilling and empty: superyachts, short trips into space or into the deep sea, and buying up entire islands.
By influencing and subverting the democratic process, they try to encourage deregulation so as to pull more and more resources toward themselves. Realising (at some level) that this is not sustainable, they retreat into increasingly remote fantasies such as TESCREAL (an ideological bundle of -isms: transhumanism, extropianism, singularitarianism, cosmism, rationalism, effective altruism and longtermism). Its promoted by philosophers at the University of Oxford such as Nick Bostrom, Hilary Greaves and William MacAskill. They envisage a future where humanity will transform itself into a posthuman state (facilitated by so-called liberal eugenics and AI), colonise the accessible Universe, and plunder our cosmic endowment of resources to produce astronomical amounts of value (for an overview, see mile Torress recent essay for Salon). The happiness of these future posthumans, most of whom would be digital, justifies neglecting current-day problems. For the purposes of evaluating actions, Greaves and MacAskill write, we can in the first instance often simply ignore all the effects contained in the first 100 (or even 1,000) years, focusing primarily on the further-future effects. Short-run effects act as little more than tie-breakers. The TESCREAL world leaves little scope for the diversity of expression of being human: the joyful, vulnerable and diverse ways of being in, for instance, Traveller and Roma communities, Indigenous societies, and more.
Why do the wealthiest people seek to actively deny the climate crisis rather than address it? The philosopher Beth Lord, drawing on Spinoza, argues that they are in the grip of bad emotions. Normally, our emotions help us seek out what is good for us and avoid what is bad. We have three basic affects: joy, sadness and desire. Desire is an expression of the conatus: we seek things that bring us joy and avoid things that bring us sadness. Overall, this aids our self-preservation. However, because of the complex ways in which our emotions intermingle, it is possible to be mistaken in them and to desire things that really do not help us to realise ourselves. Seeking prestige, fame and wealth seems like it will help us realise ourselves but, actually, we are gripped by them and are in their power.
While these misconceptions are prominent among the wealthiest elites, we see them in everyone. The ethicist Eugene Chislenko argues that we might all be climate crisis deniers in some sense. Not that we literally deny that there is a climate crisis or influence policy to fuel denialism, but that we look away, much like a person in grief who realises someone is dead but has not been able to integrate the loss into her life. As Chislenko writes: We say it is real, but we rarely feel or act like it is. We go to an airline booking site to visit a friend for the weekend; we still think we might see the Great Barrier Reef some day; we have no plans that match the scale of the change.
And the reason for this is, in part, that we feel like addressing the climate crisis would demand substantial sacrifices on our part, which seem like a drop in the ocean given the scale of the problem. As Nss writes: when people feel they unselfishly give up, even sacrifice, their interest in order to show love for Nature, this is probably in the long run a treacherous basis for conservation. How then do we get out of this situation of collective denialism?
We have now seen what self-realisation is and how it is tied to knowledge. By increasing our knowledge, we increase our power. For example, knowing that pathogens cause infectious disease led to great advances in preventing or reducing transmission through vaccines. Similarly, to be able to act in the face of the climate crisis, we need knowledge, and for that we can look directly at Spinozas philosophy for inspiration.
Spinoza lived a very sparse, propertyless existence in rented rooms, and tried to stay away from fame and the limelight. He declined a prestigious professorship at the University of Heidelberg, and did not wish to be named as the sole heir of a friend, even though it would have made him independently wealthy for life, choosing instead to grind lenses to sustain himself. So he did not think that flourishing or, in his terminology, blessedness (beatitudo) could be found in material wealth and fame. Instead, his work as a lens-grinder offered more opportunities for self-realisation, because it made him part of the interconnected, budding community of early scientists at the start of the scientific revolution, many of whom used lenses in their telescopes and microscopes.
While Spinoza did not see blessedness in this-worldly wealth, he didnt think it could be found in an afterlife, either. In the 17th century, people commonly believed that you could achieve blessedness after you died if you followed the moral norms and willingly abstained from certain pleasures during your lifetime. However, Spinozas radical insight is that you can achieve blessedness in this life. As he writes:
The notion of blessedness is closely linked to Spinozas view of self-realisation. Recall that Spinoza sees God as nature. Self-realisation requires that we accurately understand ourselves as modes of God and thereby come to love God. But what does such an accurate understanding entail? One recent interpretation is offered by Alex X Douglas in his book on the topic, The Philosophy of Hope (2023). For Spinoza, blessedness is a kind of repose of the soul or mental acquiescence. It arises from the intellectual love of God or nature. For Spinoza, knowledge increases our power, and hence our self-preservation, by knowledge. If our emotions mislead us (as when we seek prestige or fame), we actually decrease our self-preservation because we are pushed to serve external goods. The highest knowledge we can hope to achieve is knowledge of the Universe as a whole. This knowledge is also knowledge of the self, because each of us is an expression (mode) of God. Douglas clarifies that this does not mean that we are parts of God, like jigsaw puzzle pieces. Rather, each of us an individual damsel fly, a rose, a mountain or a cloud expresses the whole, in its own particular way.
Once we understand ourselves as ecological selves, this will feel like preserving our expanded self
Once you realise that you are an expression of the whole of nature, you come to realise that, although you will die, you are also eternal in a non-trivial sense, since the one substance of which you are an expression will endure. Spinoza also makes the strong claim that, if we are rational, we cannot but love God. It is the rational thing to do, because the love of God spontaneously and naturally arises out of an accurate understanding of ourselves and the world. Once you realise this, you achieve blessedness.
As weve seen, Spinoza says that flourishing or blessedness is not the reward of virtue, but virtue itself. Once we achieve this, we no longer have to constrain our lusts, because they will dissipate when we achieve this cognitive unity with the rest of nature. All this talk about tempering ones lusts may feel moralistic and old-fashioned, but Spinoza brings up an important point, namely that engaging in pursuits such as Last Chance Tourism visiting places on Earth soon to disappear due to the climate crisis or deep-sea exploration for fun is ultimately self-destructive. Similarly, we might feel that renouncing steak, or giving up flying for frequent conference travel or for pleasure, might be restraining ourselves.
But once we understand ourselves as ecological selves, and understand how we are part of fragile, large ecosystems and the planet, this will feel like preserving our expanded self, rather than cutting ourselves short. As Spinoza explains in his Short Treatise on God, Man and his Well-being (c1660), since we find that pursuing sensual pleasures, lusts, and worldly things leads not to our salvation but to our destruction, we therefore prefer to be governed by our intellect. Paradoxically, we underestimate how rich our ecological selves really are. We dont give ourselves enough credit, on how we are able to derive genuine contentment and wellbeing from simple pleasures that do not involve destroying the planet. Rather, we think that we need infrastructure-heavy, expensive things to make us happy, where happiness always lies just around the corner.
Self-realisation increases our power. As we saw, we chase things we imagine will bring us joy, such as wealth and prestige, but which decrease our power, because they have us in their thrall. Active joy in a Spinozist sense is an intellectual understanding of yourself and your relationship to the world. An example of this is the work of Shamayim Harris. When her two-year-old son, Jakobi Ra, was killed in a hit and run, she resolved to transform her dilapidated, postindustrial Detroit neighbourhood into a vibrant village: I needed to change grief into glory, pain into power. Buying up houses for a few thousand dollars, she transformed the area into the eco-friendly Avalon Village with a library, solar energy, STEM labs, a music studio, farm-to-table greenhouses, and more. Such resilient, walkable and child-friendly communities provide a great scope for self-realisation. In an important Nssian sense, Harris created a home for herself and others. Nsss ecosophy is all about home, but in a broader environmental and ecological sense, where self-realisation is the ultimate norm.
There is a beauty about self-realisation. Through wise and rational conduct, we would be able to find new citizenship, a way of being in nature, a polis that also includes nonhuman animals and plants. This way of being would increase our power of acting, and respond to our drive for self-realisation.
There is not one set way for us to be. There is not even an ideal that humans must evolve toward, as in the TESCREAL universe. Nature has no ultimate teleology. We matter as we are right now, not (only or mainly) as future hypotheticals, and we can envisage a world where humans, animals, plants, but also mountains and rivers, have their own multifaceted identities and where they exist in community with each other. Such a world can hold diversity of thought and expression. Our way out of the climate crisis must therefore begin by a reconceptualisation of ourselves as ecological and interconnected selves.
Self-realisation as conceived by Nss, Spinoza and Lorde is at heart a joyful, affirmative vision. It does not start from the premise that life is inherently filled with suffering. Once we achieve self-realisation, living well becomes easy due to the unity of blessedness and virtue. However, it is difficult to attain because of our collective climate denialism. Its not that one day we will wake up and be self-realised. We need to achieve that perspective change and realise we are interconnected selves that can flourish only with the rest of nature. It is perhaps fitting to end with the final lines of Spinozas Ethics:
With thanks to mile Torres, Bryce Huebner, Johan De Smedt, Oscar Westerblad, Phyllis Gould, David Johnson and Ivan Gayton for comments on an earlier draft.
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How to face the climate crisis with Spinoza and self-knowledge - Aeon
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Danny Faure, Former President of the Republic of Seychelles to … – Commonwealth
Posted: at 11:26 am
Former President of the Republic of Seychelles, H.E. Danny Faure, will lead a team of Commonwealth election observers to the Republic of Maldives, which will be holding a presidential election on 9 September 2023.
This will be the first Commonwealth Observer Group (COG) to observe an election in the country since Maldives re-joined the Commonwealth in February 2020.
The Commonwealth Secretary-General, Rt Hon Patricia Scotland KC, constituted a COG following an invitation from the Elections Commission of Maldives.
There are 282,395 eligible voters in this year's election who will have the right to cast their ballot for their choice of presidential candidate.
Commenting on the COG, the Rt Hon Patricia Scotland KC said:
"In the spirit of our Commonwealth's enduring commitment to democratic principles and the rule of law, I am delighted to announce the establishment of a Commonwealth Observer Group (COG) for the upcoming election in Maldives. Our Commonwealth family stands united in its dedication to supporting democratic processes, fostering transparency, and ensuring that the voices of citizens are heard.
The Commonwealth's presence in Maldives reaffirms our steadfast belief in the conduct of inclusive, transparent, and credible elections. We will be guided by the values enshrined in our Charter, promoting democracy, respecting fundamental rights, and contributing to the advancement of peaceful societies."
Secretary-General Scotland acknowledged the commitment of the COG members to this important mission and extended gratitude to each observer for their willingness to serve the Commonwealth in this capacity.
Reflecting the diverse expertise and experience of Commonwealth member countries, the COG consists of 11 eminent individuals from various backgrounds, including politicians, diplomats and experts in law, human rights, gender equality and election administration.
Observers will arrive in Mal, Maldives, on 2 September and depart the country on the 15th. The Group will be supported by a staff team from the Commonwealth Secretariat.
The Commonwealth Observer Group members, in alphabetical order by country name, are:
The mandate of the Group, which is independent and impartial, is to observe the preparations for the election, the polling, counting and the results process, and the overall electoral environment. The observers will assess the conduct of the process as a whole and, where appropriate, make recommendations for the strengthening of the electoral system in Maldives.
Prior to deployment across Maldives, the Group will hold briefings with the electoral authorities, political parties, law enforcement agencies, the diplomatic community, media and civil society groups representing women, youth and people with disabilities.
Upon fulfilling their mandate, the COG will submit a comprehensive report containing their observations and recommendations to the Commonwealth Secretary-General.
This report will subsequently be shared with the Government of the Republic of Maldives, the Elections Commission of Maldives, political party leadership, and Commonwealth member governments. The report will also later be made public.
For further information and media inquiries, please contact :
Yvonne Chin Irving Communications Consultant
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Danny Faure, Former President of the Republic of Seychelles to ... - Commonwealth
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Appointment of the Board of Seychelles Licensing Authority and its … – African Business
Posted: at 11:26 am
The Office of the President has today announced the appointment of the new Board of the Seychelles Licensing Authority (SLA) and its new Appeals Board.
Mr Percy Quatre has been appointed as the new Chairperson of the SLA Board.
The other Board Members are:
Dr Steven Renaud
Ms Annabelle Pillay
Ms Karine Bonne
Mr Jeevan Palani Batcha
Ms Zenabe Daman
Ms Shantana Barbe
The new Chairperson of Seychelles Licensing Authority Appeals Board is Ms Jolle Perreau and the other Members are:
Ms Shireen Denys
Mrs Frederika Confait-Poussou
Mr Liam Weber
All the Board Members have been appointed for a for a 3-year period effective from the 1st August, 2023.
The President has also thanked the outgoing Members for their period of tenure.
Distributed by APO Group on behalf of State House Office of the President of the Republic of Seychelles.
This Press Release has been issued by APO. The content is not monitored by the editorial team of African Business and not of the content has been checked or validated by our editorial teams, proof readers or fact checkers. The issuer is solely responsible for the content of this announcement.
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Appointment of the Board of Seychelles Licensing Authority and its ... - African Business
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Seychelles launches national survey on cardiovascular and non … – Seychelles News Agency
Posted: at 11:26 am
According to the annual health sector performance report of 2022, cardiovascular diseases are attributed to 280 deaths in Seychelles - 30 percent of total deaths. (Wikimedia/Volganet.ru)CC-BY-SA 3.0
Seychelles' health ministry is launching a new population-based survey on cardiovascular diseasesandother non-communicable diseases to assess the distribution of health behaviours, diet and main risk factors in the wholepopulation.
The survey, which will be conducted from mid-August 2023 until December 2023, will help local health authorities startthe process to establish a better database on cardiovascular diseases.
Non-communicable diseases (NCD) are those not transmitted through infections from person to person such as heart diseases, diabetes and cancer.
According to the annual health sector performance report of 2022, cardiovascular diseases attributed to 280 deaths in Seychelles - 30 percent of total deaths, followed by cancer at 159 deaths which is 17 percent.
"The aim of the study is so that we can see the risk factors associated with cardiovascular disease and other NCDs in Seychelles," explained Bharathi Viswanathan, programme manager for NCDs.
She said that this will allow the authorities to have information onhow many people have them.
A random selection of 18 to 74-year-old living in Seychelles has been chosen with the help of the National Bureau of Statistics for a survey that will study people's behaviours, lifestyles in relation to non-communicable diseases in the country.
"We will have the chance to see if those who have the diseases are properly following their treatments to control them in addition to maybe discovering new cases of the disease," she said.
The Ministry of Health is receiving help from its local partners, Seychelles Petroleum Company (Seypec) and the Mauritius Commercial Bank (MCB) for funding to carry out the survey.
For the first time, there will also be a screening for cancer with the information being collected used to better design screening methods and provide an accurate picture of the situation in the country.
"The survey will help us adjust our services to the information we collect with this new group," said cardiovascular health official, Dr Pascal Bovet.
In addition to information concerning NCDs, the team will also ask questions about mental health, and whether there are certain impairments, which will also be very helpful to the social services databases.
Other studies carried out in the western Indian Ocean archipelago had shown an increase in obesity in children and the diseases associated with it.
However, Bovet allayed the fears by explaining that risks for such illnesses in Seychelles have decreased, however, with a growing and ageing population numbers will appear larger.
"We have evidence here in Seychelles that the risks have also decreased a 45-year-old man now has less risks of cardiovascular diseases than his father did at the same age," he expanded.
Bovet attributed the improvement to a variety of reasons such as better treatment or people adopting healthier lifestyles.
Meanwhile, the 15 person- strong team undertaking the survey are health officials from various units in the ministry, and will see participants from 6.30 am to 8.30 am during weekdays, targeting at least 20 people per day".
Preliminary results will be provided to the participants of the survey although the questions and tests have been set in a manner to provide rather general information on the participants' health.
For Praslin and La Digue, the second and third most inhabited islands, health officials will be coming to the islands in October to see the participants.
The survey will conclude in December, after which the officials will work on a report of the findings to present in January next year.
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Ehi Braimah: Blue economy will boost Nigeria’s revenue — no … – TheCable
Posted: at 11:26 am
Ehi Braimah, the publisher of the Naija Times, says the new marine and blue economy ministry is full of opportunities to grow Nigerias economy.
On August 16, President Bola Tinubureleased the list of the ministers and their portfolios, listing Adegboyega Oyetola as the minister of transportation and Bunmi Tunji-Ojo to head the marine and blue economy a new ministry.
However, days after, the presidentannounced the reshuffling of his cabinet, redeploying Oyetola as the minister of marine and blue economy and Tunji-Ojo as the ministry of interior.
Speaking on Monday during Sunrise Daily, a Channels TV programme, Braimah said the blue economy has the potential to add trillions of naira to Nigerias annual revenue if steps are taken to fix loopholes.
The journalist, who said he has been researching the blue economy since 2020, noted that putting a credible strategy in place and taking cues from established models across the world would help the new minister learn the ropes quickly.
He said the African Union has estimated that the potential of a blue economy in the continent is about $300 billion.
If we get our acts right, Nigeria will be making a lot of money. In fact, we have no reasons to be in deficit, he said.
Just imagine, about three years ago, our appropriation budget was N10.5 trillion which is about $ 29.42 billion. We were using the rate at the time. Today, we are having a budget of N21.83 trillion with a deficit of N12.1 trillion.
If we stop all the leakages and optimise our revenue channels, Nigeria has no business being in deficit.
As a matter of fact, our revenue every year should be in the region of 40 to 50 trillion naira and the blue economy which has just been created will add to that revenue.
There are a lot of opportunitiesits to build a credible strategy and to know more about the blue economy.
For the benefit of the new minister who would head the ministry, there are already established models so lets start from there.
We can learn from the Republic of Ireland, for example, South Africa, Seychelles they established blue economy models. In 2012, that was the Republic of Ireland, then in 2014 that was South Africa, then Seychelles was in 2015.
Secondly, opportunities for growth revenue growth, job opportunities, livelihood. I can talk about fishing. There is a lot of fishing going on in our coastal communities. Im also talking about transportation marine transportation, shipping.
Braimah said the country is losing a lot of revenue to a lack of optimisation of maritime transportation, adding that more vessels exporting goods out of Nigeria will reduce the pressure on the foreign exchange in the country.
He also said the new ministry will create jobs in the country in different areas especially as there would be a lot of inter-agency collaborations under the ministry.
Although Braimah said a lack of accurate data and maritime insecurity would pose challenges, he expressed hope that seasoned hydrographers and the Nigerian Navy will support the new ministry to sail smoothly.
The marine and blue economy oversees a range of economic activities related to oceans, seas, and coastal areas.
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Saudi women’s football teams could play in Oceania under new deal – RNZ
Posted: at 11:26 am
Saudi Arabia's Seba Tawfiq (green) runs with the ball during a friendly football match against Bhutan in Abha on September 24, 2022. Photo: AFP
The Oceania Football Confederation and the Saudi Arabian Football Federation have signed a memorandum of understanding which could see the Middle Eastern's recently-formed women's teams play in the Pacific.
The agreement will focus on women's football, beach soccer and futsal.
The two organisations will collaborate and cooperate in areas such as technical and managerial football development, competitions and friendly matches.
"The recent development of women's football in Saudi Arabia with a women's football league and a women's national team is commendable, and OFC will be happy to share its expertise and help SAFF in this area," OFC general secretary Franck Castillo said at the signing ceremony in Sydney.
The MOU, which is for an initial period of five years, will allow teams from Saudi Arabia to participate as guests in OFC competitions, and vice versa.
The deal comes as the Women's World Cup final concludes this weekend with the final between Spain and England.
While none of the six Asian Football Confederation slots were filled by Middle Eastern teams, Morocco represented the Arab World and made the last 16.
Saudi Arabia women's team, known as the Green Falcons, played their first-ever match in February 2022 against the Seychelles, winning 2-0 win in a friendly tournament in the Maldives.
"It was an incredible journey when I was the head coach," German Monica Staab told FIFA.com.
"I was a part of history. The first official international FIFA match in the Maldives against the Seychelles. And we won. It was just amazing how these girls were playing."
Staab, who is now the technical director for the Saudi Arabian women's team, said there were 800 applicants for the try-outs for that first national team, from which they selected 35 players.
In 2019, a Premier League and a First Division were both launched in Saudi Arabia, along with a league involving 50,000 girls, and about 3,600 participating schools.
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Nuveen Q&A: There is lack of understanding over the potential of … – ESG Clarity
Posted: at 11:26 am
Conserving and using the oceans, seas and marine resources in a sustainable way is one of the aims of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals, adopted by the United Nations in 2015 as a universal call to action to end poverty, protect the planet and ensure peace and prosperity by 2030.
More than three billion people depend on marine and coastal biodiversity for their livelihoods, and globally the market value of marine and coastal resources and industries is estimated at $3trn per year. Therefore, investment in the conservation of our marine environment is seen as the next frontier in the responsible investment market in the form of blue bonds.
See also: High Seas Treaty will boost interest, access and issuance of blue bonds
According to the UN Global Compact, blue bonds today are where green bonds were 10 years ago. The green bond market has seen rapid growth,with more than $1trn in total issuance, and blue bonds are poised to see a similarly strong market.
ESG Clarity spoke to Stephen Liberatore, head of ESG and impact, global fixed income, at Nuveen, to find out more about this emerging investment space.
Can you explain why investment in ocean conservation is so important?
The ocean covers more than 70% of the surface of our planet and is home to some of the most diverse, unexplored and unique habitats. However, due to increased ocean pollution from fishing, discarded plastic, oil spills and more, marine eco-systems are more vulnerable than ever before.
Blue bonds, a subset of green bonds, are relatively new to the market and provide investors with an instrument designed to support sustainable marine and fisheries projects, preserve local tourism and encourage sustainable ocean management practices. It is crucial we combine both public and private investment to mobilise resources to empower local communities and protect our oceans.
What kind of funds are investing in blue bonds?
Any institutionalinvestor can become involved in blue bonds, working alongside governments, conservation groups and other stakeholders to develop projects. For instance at Nuveen, we worked alongside The World Bank back in 2018 to launch the worlds first blue bond in the Seychelles, where we were the lead investor.
More recently in March this year, we acted as the anchor investor buying 80% (roughly $58m) of a rare blue bond designed to help finance debt relief for Barbados and protect its marine environment. The bond aimed to preserve local tourism and the fishery industries, the latter of which contributes to 40% of Barbadoss GDP, through sustainable ocean management practices in the Caribbean nation. It was the first time Nuveen allocated capital to a bond that is tied to a so-called debt-for-nature swap.
How do you measure the impact that blue bonds have?
For the Barbados Blue Bond, Nuveen uses impact data provided to the Marine Spatial Plan Steering Committee a body consisting of The Nature Conservancy, government officials and local stakeholders to monitor the progress of capital allocation and conservation targets.
What should be done to further incentivise investment in blue bonds?
In order to further incentivise investment in blue bonds, we need to continue raising awareness of their numerous benefits.
Blue bonds support local communities across the planet with a range of opportunities, including coral reef restoration, reducing the negative impact of fishing, for example moving away from nets to long lines, and increasing clean water resources.
One example to demonstrate their benefits is the recent Ecuador blue bond, which targeted the protection of marine resources in the Galapagos archipelago. The Galapagos are considered one of the most ecological diverse areas on the Earth and is designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site.One of the main environmental commitments of the transaction is the development of a 60,000 kilometre marine reserve including a 30,000 kilometre no-take zone where the protected hatcheries will support adjacent fishing grounds.
What hurdles are blocking the development of the blue bonds market?
Blue bonds are an emerging area of climate finance, so amongst certain investors there is a lack of understanding over their purpose and potential. Blue bonds are a fantastic innovation to enhance ocean and coastal preservation while providing economic benefit to the issuers and their citizens. Therefore, the need for education is more important than ever to ensure blue bonds continue to be supported and launched.
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Musk’s Erratic Behavior May Be Caused By Escalating Drug Use, Associates Say – The Daily Beast
Posted: at 11:25 am
Elon Musk has long touted ketamine as an alternative to antidepressantsbut some of his associates suggested to The New Yorker that his personal use of the drug has been on the rise recently, perhaps contributing to his erratic behavior. A little bit of ketamine has an effect similar to alcohol. It can cause disinhibition, where you do and say things you otherwise would not, a leading ketamine researcher Amit Anand told the magazine, adding: You can feel grandiose and like you have special powers or special talents. People do impulsive things, they could do inadvisable things at work. Musk has apparently become more isolated, too, as his relationship with the press and some members of the public becomes more combative. His life just sucks, one colleague told The New Yorker. Its so stressful. Hes just so dedicated to these companies. He goes to sleep and wakes up answering e-mails. Ninety-nine per cent of people will never know someone that obsessed, and with that high a tolerance for sacrifice in their personal life.
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Keith Lee pitches Mr. Beast fight on Elon Musk vs. Mark Zuckerberg card – MMA Fighting
Posted: at 11:25 am
Keith Lee hopes to fight fellow influencer Mr. Beast on the undercard of the on-again, off-again Elon Musk vs. Mark Zuckerberg fight card.
Although the battle between the social media titans appears to be on the ropes, Lee on Wednesday pitched the idea of fighting Mr. Beast on his official Tik Tok account, which boasts 13.6 million followers.
I havent thought about fighting in a long time, and I mean no disrespect at all, I just think it would be a dope, entertaining fight, Lee said.
Mr. Beast got the social media world chirping when he posted a picture wearing boxing gloves alongside Logan Paul, who is currently training for a grudge match with Dillon Danis on Oct. 14.
Training for the undercard, wrote Beast, whos also known as Jimmy Donaldson.
Lee fought in MMA at 135 pounds. He said he is now about 185 pounds. Such is the life of a food influencer.
Im solid, though, he said with a smile.
Mr. Beast, who boasts 178 million subscribers on his insanely popular YouTube channel, was estimated by Lee to weigh around 190 pounds, a gap he said could easily be negotiated.
I know me and Jimmy share a lot of the same sentiments, so a portion of our proceeds can go to charity, Lee said.
The picture Mr. Beast posted was a pivot from his earlier stance on influencer boxing matches. In 2021, Donaldson told Colin and Samir that, while intriguing, he was too busy to make the commitment for a boxing match. He said this past year that he would need six months to prepare himself.
Is Mr. Beast ready to make the jump into the squared circle? Lee hopes to find out.
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