Tag: orange

  • Ericsson, Orange launch 4G network in Sierra Leone

    Ericsson and Orange have launched 4G network in Sierra Leone.

    The two companies said the offering will provide residents in the nation’s capital, Freetown, with fast and reliable 4G access.

    Orange will use Ericsson Radio System products and solutions to offer 4G in 60 sites, which is designed for low latency and fast mobile broadband in a cost and energy-efficient manner, optimizing use of frequency bands and realizing fiber-like access speeds over the air. With reduced latency, consumers in Sierra Leone can enjoy online services, including HD video and network games.

    Aminata Kane Ndiaye, CEO of Orange Sierra Leone, says: “Today marks a new era for mobile broadband in Sierra Leone. The 4G launch will bring consumer’s mobile experience to a whole new level – with higher speeds and reliable broadband access. Thanks to our successful cooperation with Ericsson we can offer 4G to our customers, facilitate network planning and maintenance and allow for smooth introduction of new IP-based services.”

    READ ALSO: Ericsson, UNESCO launch AI programme

    Orange also revealed plans to continue the Ericsson Radio System rollout across Sierra Leone. This will enable Orange to serve everything from 2G to 5G, through a risk-free implementation of a series of building blocks. The solution enables Orange to deploy and evaluate new features, in high-traffic areas, before rolling them out more widely.

    Rafiah Ibrahim, Head of Ericsson Middle East and Africa says: “Ericsson and Orange have a longstanding partnership and today we continue our successful journey by bringing 4G to Sierra Leone. Our Ericsson Radio System will enable our partner Orange to continue delivering a superior end-user experience for both existing and future subscribers.”

    Ericsson Radio System, with its end-to-end portfolio of hardware, software and services will help Orange Sierra Leone get quality mobile broadband performance smoothly and profitably.

  • ‘Orange FM bill, an abuse of office’

    ‘Orange FM bill, an abuse of office’

    An Akure lawyer, Charles Titiloye, has described the bill for the establishment of Orange FM sent by Governor Olusegun Mimiko to the House of Assembly as an “abuse of office and subversion of the constitution”.

    Titiloye said Orange FM is one of the government’s private ventures run with public fund for four years without legislative approval or any enabling law duly passed by the Assembly.

    According to him, knowing the implication of this unlawful act, the governor is now seeking to legalise the controversial Orange FM at the twilight of his government four years after it began operations.

    He said: “Rather than pass the bill what the Jumoke Akindele-led Assembly ought to have done is to begin impeachment proceedings against the governor for allegedly spending public fund on an unregistered radio station purportedly owned by the state without any legislative approval or law for four years.

    “Unfortunately, the lawmakers gave their nod to the bill in the second reading and public hearing conducted yesterday.”

  • Tackling hidden hunger with orange flesh sweet potato

    Tackling hidden hunger with orange flesh sweet potato

    Hidden hunger refers to the lack of access to micronutrients critical to proper physical and cognitive development. Food fortification is one of the least expensive and most effective nutrition interventions to tackle it on a huge scale. To achieve this, there is a global campaign to distribute sweet potatoes fortified with integrated essential vitamins and minerals to farmers to plant nationwide. The International Potato Centre is championing the campaign, DANIEL ESSIET reports.

    Hidden hunger is one of the biggest global challenges of our time. While farmers are making efforts to address hunger that concerns quantities of food, nutritionists and farmers agree that not much has been done to position agriculture to address micronutrient deficiency which has to do with  food quality.

    For them, it is possible, for example, to eat 2,000 calories of starchy foods – unenriched white flour, or white-fleshed potato – and while one won’t be hungry, one’s body would lack the essential nutrients to properly function.

    According to them, the human body needs iron from food sources to build blood cells; vitamin A to support immune system and vision; iodine for cognitive development and thyroid function. Of particular importance are the essential micronutrients, which the body needs for survival but cannot be produced by itself. These are vitamins and metals such as iron and zinc, among others.

    To solve this problem, experts are advocating food fortification to eradicate preventable diseases and improve lives. Consequently, organisations have also started to enhance the nutrients in staples. Examples of these include intensive breeding to develop high iron content beans and pearl millet; high zinc content wheat and rice; and high vitamin A content maize, cassava, and sweet potato.

    Once seeds for biofortified crops are distributed, farmers are then free to plant, harvest, and save seeds as they deem fit. Doing so ideally provides a long-term solution to combat hidden hunger.

    Presenting the annual lecture of the Agricultural and Rural Management Training Institute (ARMTI), Ilorin, Kwara State, the Country Representative and Technical Advisor, International Potato Center (CIP), Dr Mrs Olapeju Phorbee said sweet potatoes are a common staple – but contain little-to-no Vitamin A. To this end, she said her center, is working extensively to introduce an orange-fleshed sweet potato (OFSP) that is high in vitamin to Nigerian farmers.

    According to her, OFSP has shown to be an extremely rich source of bio-available pro-vitamin A, which is largely retained when the sweet potato is boiled, steamed or roasted.

    The CIP she said it is working with the Federal Government to increase the annual production of potatoes put at 3.9 metric tonnes to boost the economy, create jobs and advance the livelihood of Nigerians.

    According to her, Nigeria is the third largest producer of sweet potato in the world after China and Uganda.

    Though with its potential benefits, Mrs Phorbee, said potato has not been unexploited in the country.

    To this end, she said the centre introduced Reaching Agents for Change (RAC) Project to create new awareness focusing on the promotion of OFSP, which is better nutritionally.

    According to her, the market for it has been successfully demonstrated in the Osun State on the school feeding programme.

    Her words: “We are currently on the pilot phase of OFSP pottage in the school feeding menu.”

    According to her, OFSP has huge potential to improve the wealth of the people especially when the whole value chain is well exploited.

    She said:”It’s short production cycle, adaptability in marginal soil and possibility of irrigation farming makes OFSP a cash crop that can be available all year round in Nigeria for various purposes- household consumption, income generation for the grassroots and small-medium processors, and as an industrial raw material.”

    To date, over 20,000 households have received at least one bundle of OFSP vines to plant and access its roots for either consumption or commercialisation. The vine multipliers are obviously making money in vine sales especially from organisations that are using OFSP in their developmental programmes.

    With the growing level of OFSP awareness in Nigeria, raising more commercial multipliers and farmers at all levels, she noted, is worth considering for employment generation.

    The acting Executive Director, ARMTI, Mr Anthony Njoku said the theme of the 18th Annual Lecture of ARMTI, “Food Security, Employment Generation and Wealth Creation in a Developing Economy: The Role of Orange-fleshed Sweet potato (OFSP) Value Chain Development” demonstrated that the institute as a committed agency of the Federal Ministry of Agriculture And Rural Development (FMARD) for strengthening government policies, especially in agriculture and rural development.

    Having been involved since 2012 with CIP and its Reaching Agents of Change (RAC) project in training experts on Sweet Potato Value Chain Development, Njoku said ARMTI chose the title of its 18th Annual Lecture to bring home, the potential and extra-ordinary importance of the sweetpotato value chain development in Nigeria’s efforts to diversify her economy by making agriculture a business.

    He said the “Jumpstarting Project for OFSP Vine Production” is designed to serve the Kwara and Osun states’ farmers.

    He said the institute has undertaken a development initiative, the Village Alive Development Initiative (VADI) to improve the economic well-being of the communities around its operational area.

    Seven communities are involved, they include Fufu, Falokun-oja, Jimba-oja, Elerinjare, Apa-ola, Igbo-owu and Ilota. 53 operational and productive groups have been formed. Seed fund, totalling N10,000,000, he disclosed  has been disbursed to the seven communities; and savings mobilisation in the communities by June this year  stood at  N6,094,865.

    The total loan disbursed by June, in the communities, he said is N11,092,00, while loan repayment stood at N8,378,020 indicating 75.5 per cent loan repayment rate at the time.

    The participating communities, groups and individuals, he disclosed, operate and manage independent bank accounts in the project.

    The Permanent Secretary, FMARD, Sonny Echono said the ministry was also aware of the laudable strides that ARMTI is making.

    Represented by the Director, Human Resources, Mr Itua Aikhoje, Echono, said VADI implemented in seven communities in ARMTI’s operational area has the potential to spread speedy and sustainable development to the rural communities all over the nation, with time.

    “The Jumpstarting Project for Sweet Potato Vines Multiplication that we have just commissioned this morning, I am told, is a pilot project that is being funded by an international partner of ARMTI, the International Potato Centre. Together with the ToT (train the trainers) on orange-fleshed sweetpotato, these initiatives depict the kind of proactiveness we are talking about.”

    He emphasised the importance of agriculture, adding that it has taken the front burner with the dwindling fortunes of oil.

    By this, he said employment would be generated in abundance and the sector would be seen as a major source of wealth creation for the nation.

    Kwara State governor, Dr Abdulfatah Ahmed, said the state has identified the need to take bold steps to develop the agricultural sector to stimulate food security, job creation, wealth creation, economic growth and rural development. Represented by the Special Adviser to Agriculture and Rural Develoment, Hon Anu Ibiwoye, he said the state government has initiated and incorporated agriculture as a major policy-thrust in its Shared Prosperity Agenda, which is the cardinal platform for driving the economic transformation of the state.

    This has culminated in the development of a comprehensive and all encompassing document known as the “Kwara Agricultural Modernisation Master Plan” (KAMP) to fast track the development of Agriculture not only as a major driver of the economy of the state, but also as a veritable tool for youth employment and empowerment, a tool to arrest social ills such as youth restlessness rurla/urban drift.

    He said the state is a trail blazer in the introduction of mechanisation and public private partnership in agriculture. This, according to him, has been yielding tremendous result in terms of increase in agricultural products output, growing export potentials of some products, and ensuring food security in the state. The tremendous success of the commercial farm project in Shonga, Kwara state, being the first of its kind in Nigeria is a good example of this accomplishment, he added.

    The project has engendered the social development of the rural communities in and around Shonga, provided gainful employment for the rural women and youth population as well as facilitated the provision and development of infrastructure in the rural community leading to increased agricultural output, and a reduced rural-urban drift of our rural population.

    In addition, he said the state has established Kwara Agric Mall, a one stop coordination centre for farmers’ needs, providing access to agric inputs, equipments, finance, extension and markets.

    According to him, Kwara State is in the rice producing belt of the country with about 400,000 hectares of land available for rice production. The annual rice production figure for the state, he  said  is estimated at 120,000 metric tonnes. Efforts are being made to increase it through lead farmers under the off-takers Demand Driven Agriculture (ODDA) programme, he assured.

  • Orange goes for Airtel’s assets

    Orange goes for Airtel’s assets

    • Airtel: no plans to quit Africa

    French operator Orange has said it is in talks to buy Bharti Airtel’s subsidiaries in Africa, fuelling speculation that this might be Bharti’s first step towards a complete sale of its African business.

    But in a swift reaction, the Indian cellphone biggest carrier, said yesterday it had no plans to exit Africa, despite beginning exclusive talks with Orange to sell four of its units there. “We remain fully committed to our Africa operations and will continue to invest in its growth and building a profitable business and accordingly have no plan to exit,” the company said in a statement yesterday in response to a query from Reuters.

    On 9 June 2010, billionaire Sunil Mittal spent $9 billion to become a global firm. It bought Kuwait-based Zain Group’s telecom assets in 15 countries in Africa, the next big frontier for growth for Asia’s successful entrepreneurs. It took on $8.5 billion in debt to fund its ambitions. Five years later, the company is yet to declare any profits or meet any of its growth targets.

    Airtel had big plans for Africa—a target of 100 million subscribers, up from 42 million at the time of acquisition, $5 billion in revenue, up from $3.6 billion, and $2 billion of earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) which is a measure of a firm’s profitability.  By March 2013, less than three years  after the acquisition, long-time lieutenant of Mital, Manoj Kohli moved to Nigeria to head the new business.

    But it has never met these targets and now it looks like Bharti may have bitten off more than it could chew.

  • Orange maize improves vitamin A in children, new study shows

    Just ahead of World Food Day, a study published in the ‘American Journal of Clinical Nutrition’ has established that ‘orange’ vitamin A maize increases vitamin A storage in the body. This maize has been conventionally bred (non-genetically modified organism (GMO) to have higher levels of beta-carotene, a naturally occurring plant pigment that the body then converts into vitamin A. Lack of sufficient vitamin A blinds up to 500,000 children annually and increases the risk of death from disease (such as diarrhea in children).

    Vitamin A deficiency is widely prevalent in Sub-Saharan Africa. Foods that are good sources of vitamin A, such as orange fruits, dark leafy vegetables, or meat, are not always available, or may be too expensive in some regions. In many African countries, people eat large amounts of staple foods like cassava or maize. For example, in Zambia, people eat up to a pound of white maize daily. However, this white maize provides no beta-carotene. Switching to orange maize, which is rich in beta-carotene, could potentially provide maize-dependent populations with up to half their daily vitamin A needs.

    In this controlled efficacy study, children from the Eastern Province of Zambia were randomly assigned to three feeding groups and received either white maize, orange maize, or a daily vitamin A supplement. After three months, both groups that received either the orange maize or vitamin A supplements showed significant increases in their total body stores of vitamin A, with no changes observed in the group that received white maize.

    Lead scientist Sherry Tanumihardjo said “we were surprised to find that most of the children in this study already had substantial stores of vitamin A. We attribute this to the success of fortifying sugar with vitamin A, the provision of vitamin A supplements to young children, and perhaps better diets. Yet, despite having adequate vitamin A stores, we still saw this store increase in children as a result of eating the orange maize. So, I’m confident that orange maize would be especially effective in increasing body stores of vitamin A in populations suffering from vitamin A deficiency.”

    Unlike the form of vitamin A found in supplements and fortified foods, the body regulates conversion of beta-carotene into vitamin A, and consuming high levels of beta-carotene is not harmful to health. Several orange maize varieties have been released by the governments of Zambia and Nigeria. In Zambia, HarvestPlus has provided orange maize to more than 10,000 farming households and is now working with the private sector with the goal of reaching 100,000 famers by 2015.

    According to Eliab Simpungwe, HarvestPlus Country Manager for Zambia, “the orange maize has been embraced by consumers once they have had a chance to taste it. When they also understand the benefits of vitamin A in the diets they are all the more enthusiastic about orange maize.” The orange maize varieties released are also high yielding, disease and virus resistant, and drought tolerant.

    The Zambian Government has officially recognised biofortification, which it includes in the National Food and Nutrition Strategic Plan for Zambia 2011-2015. Musonda Mofu, Acting Executive Director of the National Food and Nutrition Commission in Zambia and who was also on the study team, said “there are still many pockets where vitamin A deficiency remains a problem in Zambia. Food-based approaches such as orange maize can provide people—especially women and children—with a good portion of their daily vitamin A needs through nshima or other traditional foods made from maize, that we Zambians eat every day. For us, this is cost-effective and a safe approach to improving nutrition.”

    HarvestPlus and its partners have developed and disseminated other conventionally bred crops to provide needed vitamins and minerals in the diet. These are vitamin A cassava (Democratic Republic of Congo, Nigeria), vitamin A orange sweet potato (throughout Sub-Saharan Africa) and iron beans (Democratic Republic of Congo, Rwanda, Uganda). Zinc wheat and rice and iron pearl millet have been targeted to South Asia.

  • Copy the orange look

    Copy the orange look

    DO you know the queen of colours at the moment? It is no other than orange. Orange is the rave of the moment. Colours are synonymous with fashion. Specific colours of fabrics rule per season and the trendiest colour for both night gigs and daytime events at the moment is orange. Thanks to the ingenuity of our designers, many attention-grabbing dresses are in orange. Orange is everywhere, in every imaginable style. Depending on your choice, you can choose fabrics in banana, custard, burnt-orange, pint orange etc.

    One interesting thing about orange is that it comes out best when it is used to add quality or beauty to any fabric of any other colour. Depending on the skill of the designer, orange fabrics can make you look elegant, bold and tasteful. On its own, orange is actually a very bold and lousy colour that you may not want to wear alone.

    By the way, you should never make it an all round orange affair; for instance, you may go for gold shoes and bag or better still another popular colour that blends with all orange, black. This is certain to give you the gorgeous effect that you desire. Go ahead and spice your wardrobe with orange!

  • Benefits of orange on skin

    This fruit belongs to the citrus family and is best know for its astringent and toning properties. Oranges are a good source of Vitamin C which is known to improve the skin texture and color. They help restoring collagen in our body which is responsible for skin firming and preventing early aging of skin. So, daily serving of citrus fruits helps our body fight aging.

    •After eating orange, instead of throwing away the peels, dry them in sun and grind them. Store the mixture. And, use it as a body scrub.

    •Mix the above made scrub and milk or milk cream and apply on face. It gives an instant glow to your face. And, reduces the dark spots and blemishes on your skin.

    •If you do not want to go through the tedious step of grinding the peels, you can make a refreshing face spray using the peels.

    •If you do not use a face spray, simply pour boiling water on the peels and leave for a day. Next day, filter the liquid and store it in fridge. Apply the liquid on your face using a cotton ball. Let stay till it dries up. Your face will be firm and glowing.

    •You can use this liquid in preparing face masks. Use the liquid in a day or two.

    •You can pour this liquid in your bath water and enjoy a refreshing and rejuvenating bath. Your skin will smell fresh all day.

    •Use the liquid as a hair rinse to get shining hair. It also helps in removing dandruff.

    •A very innovative tip: Take the juice of 2 oranges and freeze it in an ice tray. Rub your face with frozen orange juice cubes. It will instantly freshen you up and lift up the tiredness from your face. The juice will give your dull and oily face an instant sheen. And, the chilled ice cubes will close and minimize the size of your pores. This also provides relief to acne prone skin and pimples.

     

    Source:elements4health.com