CPOPC Holds A Writing Competition on Smallholder’s Topic

JAKARTA, Indonesia, Sept. 13, 2021 /PRNewswire/ — A short story competition with the theme “smallholders and oil palm plantation” is now open for entries.

Council of Palm Oil Producing Countries (CPOPC) holds a story writing competition to engage communities and families living near or within the palm oil plantation in palm oil producing countries. For more info, please visit: https://www.cpopc.org/events/

This competition organized by the Council of Palm Oil Producing Countries (CPOPC) engages the communities and families living near or within the palm oil plantation in Indonesia, Malaysia and other oil palm producing countries.

As more than 40% of the global palm oil production is done by smallholders, the stories should focus on the smallholders’ significant role in the palm oil industry, acknowledging thereby that their lives also face challenges. It is due time that we start recognizing smallholders’ substantial contributions to the palm oil industry in meeting one of the most important elements of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), that is sustainable consumption and production. Through this competition, CPOPC hopes to convey the importance of establishing a global alliance of oil palm smallholders of palm oil producing countries where information sharing and collaboration will continue to take place.

This competition could make people appreciate the important role of smallholders in providing affordable vegetable oil for food and energy.

Winning entries may win up to USD1,000 and a chance to share real-life stories of smallholders’ efforts in managing their plantations and in creating a decent life for their families. CPOPC is offering prizes worth USD7,950 for all winning entries.

Participant may submit their stories of 500 to 750 words in one of these languages: Bahasa Indonesia, Bahasa Malaysia, English, Spanish or French.

The categories are in the following:

  • Decent work, education, and sustainable community
  • Poverty alleviation, zero hunger, health and economic growth
  • Climate action, environment and biodiversity

All the winning stories will be published into a book. The deadline for submission is September 30, 2021. Submissions of short stories can be sent to cpopcstorycompetition@cpopc.org.

For more information on the competition please visit: https://www.cpopc.org/events/

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Le CPOPC organise un concours de rédaction sur le thème des petits exploitants

JAKARTA, Indonésie, 13 septembre 2021 /PRNewswire/ — Un concours de nouvelles ayant pour thème « les petits exploitants et les plantations de palmiers à huile » est désormais ouvert aux inscriptions.

Council of Palm Oil Producing Countries (CPOPC) holds a story writing competition to engage communities and families living near or within the palm oil plantation in palm oil producing countries. For more info, please visit: https://www.cpopc.org/events/

Ce concours organisé par le Conseil des pays producteurs d’huile de palme (CPOPC) fait participer les communautés et les familles vivant à proximité ou à l’intérieur des plantations de palmiers à huile en Indonésie, en Malaisie et dans d’autres pays producteurs d’huile de palme.

Étant donné que plus de 40 % de la production mondiale d’huile de palme est assurée par des petits exploitants, les histoires devraient se concentrer sur le rôle important de ces derniers dans l’industrie de l’huile de palme, tout en reconnaissant que leurs vies sont également confrontées à des enjeux. Il est temps que nous commencions à reconnaître les contributions substantielles des petits exploitants à l’industrie de l’huile de palme pour atteindre l’un des éléments les plus importants des objectifs de développement durable (ODD), à savoir la consommation et la production durables. Grâce à ce concours, le CPOPC espère faire comprendre l’importance d’établir une alliance mondiale des petits exploitants de palmiers à huile des pays producteurs d’huile de palme, où le partage d’informations et la collaboration se poursuivront.

Ce concours pourrait faire apprécier le rôle important des petits exploitants dans la fourniture d’huile végétale abordable pour l’alimentation et l’énergie.

Les gagnants peuvent remporter jusqu’à 1 000 USD et avoir la chance de partager des histoires vraies quant aux efforts déployés par les petits exploitants pour gérer leurs plantations et créer une vie décente pour leurs familles. La CPOPC offre des prix d’une valeur de 7 950 USD à tous les participants gagnants.

Les participants peuvent présenter leurs histoires de 500 à 750 mots dans l’une de ces langues : en indonésien, en malaisien, en anglais, en espagnol ou en français.

Les catégories sont les suivantes :

  • Travail décent, éducation et communauté durable
  • Lutte contre la pauvreté, faim zéro, santé et croissance économique
  • Lutte contre le changement climatique, environnement et biodiversité

Toutes les histoires gagnantes seront publiées dans un livre. La date limite pour nous faire parvenir vos nouvelles est le 30 septembre 2021. Elles peuvent être envoyées à cpopcstorycompetition@cpopc.org.

Pour plus d’informations sur le concours, veuillez consulter le site : https://www.cpopc.org/events/

Photo – https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1612849/CPOPC_Story_Competition_Flyer_English.jpg

Innova Medical Group Gifts £10m To Launch Global Pandemic Institute In Liverpool

Liverpool is to headquarter the Pandemic Institute, which will provide the world’s first unique and comprehensive capability to predict, prevent, respond to and recover from Future Pandemics

Innova has provided the capital required to establish the Institute, alongside support from the Liverpool City Council, The University of Liverpool, Liverpool John Moores University, the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine and KQ Liverpool.

PASADENA, Calif. and LIVERPOOL, England, Sept. 13, 2021 /PRNewswire/ — Innova Medical Group, a global health innovator and the world’s largest provider of rapid antigen tests, has announced a £10 million donation for the launch of The Pandemic Institute, a global centre of excellence to help the world prevent, prepare, and respond more effectively to future pandemics. The Institute is headquartered in Knowledge Quarter Liverpool (KQ Liverpool).

INNOVA MEDICAL GROUP GIFTS £10M TO LAUNCH GLOBAL PANDEMIC INSTITUTE IN LIVERPOOL

Innova’s donation provides the startup capital required to establish the Institute, alongside support from the Liverpool City Council, The University of Liverpool, Liverpool John Moores University, the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, and KQ Liverpool.

The facility will offer world-leading clinical, research, and policy expertise, based in what is soon to be designated one of the world’s healthiest buildings, The Spine. That expertise will be supported by one of Liverpool’s greatest assets – its considerable academic resources – along with global connections and affiliates and public and private sector partners.

Together, the Institute’s partners will translate research results into policy and tangible actions, providing a unique holistic approach and comprehensive end-to-end capabilities across the pandemic lifecycle. The result will allow the world to accelerate global response to future pandemic events, to unify global intelligence and to dramatically increase the impact of pandemic research on the global society.

Innova Medical Group Logo

“The Innova team is passionate about supporting projects that will make a difference and it is clear now that pandemics are one of the biggest threats to the health of the world’s population,” said Daniel Elliott, CEO and President of Innova Medical Group. “It’s a really exciting initiative for us to be supporting the City’s academic and business institutions with an ambition towards end-to-end solutions that can be applied on a global scale. We look forward to working collaboratively with the Institute’s existing and future partners in pursuit of that combined goal.”

“The Pandemic Institute will be a unique centre of excellence which has the potential to help revolutionise how the world responds to future pandemics,” said Professor Matthew Baylis, Director of the Pandemic Institute. “Liverpool is perfectly placed for this exciting initiative and we appreciate Innova’s leadership in establishing the Pandemic Institute and the generous gift to Liverpool.”

ABOUT INNOVA MEDICAL GROUP, INC:

Innova Medical Group is a global health screening and diagnostic innovator driven to dramatically improve health outcomes worldwide with equitable, high-value testing solutions. Our strategic and iterative approach enables us to create, build and deploy a myriad of accessible tests customized to meet and empower the user at their point of need. With a panoramic vision spanning the present to the future, we develop trusted solutions that are both intuitive and secure to use. We quickly and nimbly became the world’s largest provider of Covid-19 tests, and we are determined to execute on this model across infectious disease, other chronic conditions and wellness. For more information, please visit: www.innovamedgroup.com

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President: GBV perpetrators cannot go unpunished

President Cyril Ramaphosa says the approval of three critical pieces of legislation will strengthen the criminal justice system and ensure harsh penalties for those found guilty of GBV.

“These gruesome acts of violence cannot go unpunished. They must strengthen our resolve to end gender-based violence in all its forms. We must strengthen our efforts across all fronts,” President Ramaphosa said on Sunday evening during his address to the nation.

On 1 September, the National Council of Provinces (NCOP) passed three bills – namely the Criminal and Related Matters Amendment Bill, Domestic Violence Amendment Bill and the Criminal Law (Sexual Offences and Related Matters) Amendment Act Amendment Bill – which will change the landscape in terms of how government departments, law enforcement and the courts deal with cases of violence against women and the vulnerable.

The House passed two of the bills – the Domestic Violence Amendment Bill and Criminal Law (Sexual Offences and Related Matters) Amendment Bill with amendments, and the two Bills were scheduled to be sent back to the National Assembly. The Criminal and Related Matters Amendment Bill, meanwhile, was scheduled to be sent to the President for assent.

In his address on Sunday, the President lamented that Women’s Month witnessed many GBV cases, at a time when the country had planned to celebrate the success of women in many fields.

Among other cases, Fort Hare law student, Nosicelo Mtebeni, was murdered and dismembered in East London; a Grade 1 pupil from Khensani Primary School in Soshanguve was raped in the school’s toilets; Palesa Maruping, was found hanging from the ceiling of a house in Khuma Location in the North West, and Pheliswa Sawutana was strangled to death in Kosovo informal settlement in Cape Town.

“The courts are increasingly handing down judgements for life imprisonment for statutory rape, robbery and aggravating sentences that involve rape.

“We continue to implement all the pillars of the National Strategic Plan against Gender-Based Violence and Femicide. Ultimately, the success of this work depends on the actions that we all take to end this pandemic of violence against women and children,” President Ramaphosa said.

He called on men to understand that the rights and freedoms guaranteed by the country’s Constitution belong to all people, men and women alike.

Social Relief of Distress

Touching on the recent public violence that occurred in Gauteng and KwaZulu-Natal, where a number of businesses were looted and destroyed, President Ramaphosa said government continues to implement measures to assist households, employees and businesses that have been affected by the pandemic and by the public violence.

“Since we reopened applications for the special Social Relief of Distress grant in the first week of August, we have received nearly 13 million applications. Of these, 8.3 million applications have been approved, and payments have started to these recipients,” the President said.

According to President Ramaphosa, just over 3.7 million applications were declined, mainly because applicants have other identified sources of income or are registered for assistance like the UIF and NSFAS.

“Around 845 000 applications are still in the validation process. Along with the other measures we have put in place, this grant is providing critical assistance to unemployed South Africans at this most difficult time,” the President.

Source: South African Government News Agency

Thusong Service Centres a key link to government services

Thusong Service Centres continue to play a vital role in giving South Africans access to government services, particularly those who live below the poverty line in rural and disadvantaged areas.

Deputy Minister in the Presidency, Pinky Kekana, said that government remains committed to ensure that services reach and meet the needs of the people and ultimately closing the gap of inequality.

“The Thusong Service Centre Programme has been reaching about six million beneficiaries every year through the Integrated Mobile Outreach Programme, and it is our goal to increase this number of beneficiaries’ year on year. This is both a government target and one I have taken on as an individual commitment to you, in my new role as Deputy Minister in the Presidency,” Kekana said.

The Deputy Minister was addressing the launch of the seventh Annual Thusong Service Centre Week on Monday, in Botlokwa, Limpopo.

The 2021 Annual Thusong Service Centre Week takes place in conjunction with Public Service Month, under the theme: “The Year of Charlotte Maxeke – building the capacity of the State through a resilient workforce that respond to the coronavirus pandemic.”

The Thusong Service Centre Programme Service Delivery Model focuses on a perfected integration of partnerships with civil society and the private sector, to achieve a successful model that South Africans can be truly proud of.

Kekana extended her gratitude to partners who have supported the programme since its inception, for more than two decades.

“The partnerships with Phelophepha Train, Samsung, Digi-Titans, and the newly on boarded Think WiFi Company, to name but a few, have all yielded further positive initiatives which lead to our people benefiting through even more access to information and opportunities of development projects and economic activities, thereby contributing to the alleviation of poverty and increasing job creation,” she said.

She added that the centres have played an important role in the vaccination rollout programme by providing information on vaccines and some of the centres being identified as vaccination sites. The centres are a resource to communities for access to information and opportunities, beyond just basic services.

“Some of these services include SEDA (Small Enterprise Development Agency) for those seeking to enter the world of entrepreneurship and looking to be capacitated and supported through government funding, as well as youth advisory services and civil society offerings to assist in various societal and community based needs,” Kekana said.

Over the last 22 years, Thusong Service Centres has served as a base from where information about communication and activities take place, including government outreach events around gender-based violence (GBV), 16 Days of Activism for No Violence Against Women and Children campaign, government’s programme of action, South African Social Security Agency (SASSA) initiatives and many more.

“There is no doubt that this ‘one-stop’ programme of action implemented and sustained by government, for almost as long as our country attained freedom, has had a positive impact on the lives of our people. Through the Thusong Centres, government has been accessible and visible, where information and services are provided with a human face, based on the principles of Batho Pele that was the essence of the early democracy,” the Deputy Minister said.

As part of lessons taught by the COVID-19 pandemic, the Deputy Minister said that the digitalisation of the Thusong Centres basket of services are prioritised in the list of technology interventions required for government services, to ensure that citizens are assured of the continuation of access to information and opportunities through the centres.

Source: South African Government News Agency

Over 73 000 Grade 1 & 8 online applications recorded in Gauteng

The Gauteng Department of Education has confirmed that over 73 000 successful Grade 1 and 8 applications were recorded on day one of the Phase 2 of the 2022 Online Admissions applications.

The department said that as of midday, a total of 73 305 successful Grade 1 and 8 applications were recorded on its system.

Of the total figure, the number of applications recorded for Grade 1 are 69 300 and Grade 8 recorded 3 981 applications.

“This phase was initially meant for parents and guardians with children going to Grade 1 and Grade 8 in the 2022 academic year at Gauteng public schools. However, after realising that there were parents and guardians who were not able to apply on time during Phase 1 for learners in Grade 7 at public schools in Gauteng, they will also be able to apply during Phase 2,” the department said.

The department said before the system opened on Monday morning, approximately 9 000 parents were on the landing page waiting for it to open, which caused an administrative delay.

Parents and guardians are reminded to upload their documents onto the system within seven days of applying or submit the documents to all schools applied to.

“It is incredible that our Online Admissions system keeps advancing and making strides as the years progress. This year was the first time we launched our two-phased application approach and the extent of its success has been astounding.

“We are grateful to all parents and guardians who have conveyed their success in applying for their children using our system,” said Gauteng Department of Education MEC, Panyaza Lesufi.

The GDE team will be available for assistance during Phase 2 applications on all their social media platforms, decentralized walk-in centres and call centre on 0800 000 789.

Source: South African Government News Agency