“We must end hunger in Africa. Yes, we must! Hunger diminishes our humanity” - Adesina urges
|
YOKOHAMA, Japan, August 28, 2019/ -- The Sasakawa Association will work with the Japan International Corporation Agency (JICA), to help double rice production to 50 million tonnes by 2030. Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe made the announcement at the Sasakawa Africa Association (SAA) symposium held on Wednesday during TICAD7.
“Japanese technology can play a key role in innovation which is key to agriculture,” Prime Minister Shinzo Abe told delegates. Discussions at the Symposium focused on Africa’s youth bulge, unemployment rates, agricultural innovations and technologies, solutions and job creation opportunities in the agricultural sector. “We’ve always believed in the agriculture potential of Africa,” said Yohei Sasakawa, Chairman of the Nippon foundation. “We are paying more attention to income-generating activities. We want to help shift the mindset of small-holder farmers from producing-to-eat to producing-to-sell. We are hopeful that Africa’s youth can take agriculture to a new era, and that they can see a career path in agriculture,” he added. In a keynote address, African Development Bank Group President, Akinwumi Adesina, called for urgent and concerted efforts to “end hunger”. “In spite of all the gains made in agriculture. We are not winning the global war against hunger. We must all arise collectively and end global hunger. To do that, we must end hunger in Africa. Hunger diminishes our humanity,” Adesina urged. According to the FAO's 2019 State of Food and Security, the number of hungry people globally stands at a disconcerting 821 million. Africa alone accounts for 31% of the global number of hungry people – 251 million people. Commending the Sasakawa Association’s late founder, Ryochi Sasakawa, for his tireless efforts in tackling hunger, Adesina said: “Passion, dedication and commitment to the development of agriculture and the pursuit of food security in our world has been the hallmark of your work.” Between 1986 and 2003, Sasakawa Association in Africa, operated in a total of 15 countries including - Ghana, Sudan, Nigeria, Burkina Faso, Benin, Togo, Mali, Guinea, Zambia, Ethiopia, Eritrea, Tanzania, Uganda, Malawi and Mozambique. Harnessing the potential of new technologies Adesina expressed confidence in the ability of technology to deliver substantial benefits in agriculture. To accelerate Africa’s agricultural growth, the African Development Bank has launched the Technologies for African Agricultural Transformation (TAAT) to deliver new technologies to millions of farmers. ‘TAAT has become a game changer, and is already delivering impressive results, Adesina said. Working with 30 private seed companies, the TAAT maize compact produced over 27,000 tons of seeds of water efficient maize that was planted by 1.6 million farmers. Tackling climate change: a top priority Hiroyuki Takahashi, founder of Pocket Marche, a platform that connects Japanese farmers and producers with consumers, shared insights and lessons learnt from Japan’s experiences, historic cycles of climate disasters and the country’s rebound. “The power to choose what we eat is the power to stop the climate crisis and bring sustainable happiness to a world with limited resources,” Takahashi said. It is estimated that Africa will heat up 1.5 times faster than the global average and require $7-15 billion a year for adaptation alone. Limiting the impacts of climate change is expected to become a top priority for Africa. “Africa has been short changed by climate change. But, it should not be short changed by climate finance,” Adesina said in his concluding remarks. “Let’s be better asset managers for nature. For while we must eat today, so must future generations coming after us. It is our collective responsibility to ensure that we do not leave empty plates on the table for generations to come,” Adesina concluded. |
Wednesday, August 28, 2019
Japan to help double Africa’s rice production by 2030
WHO revises recommendations on hormonal contraceptive use for women at high HIV risk
[GENEVA, 29 August 2019] The World Health Organization (WHO) has revised its guidance on contraceptive use to reflect new evidence that women at high risk of HIV can use any form of reversible contraception, including progestogen-only injectables, implants and intrauterine devices (IUDs), without an increased risk of HIV infection.
However, as these contraceptive methods do not protect against HIV and other sexually transmitted infections (STIs), the guideline emphasizes that correct and consistent use of condoms should be used where there is a risk of STIs, including HIV. WHO also recommends considering offering pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) in settings where the incidence of HIV is above 3%, as appropriate.
The updated WHO guideline follows a thorough review of the latest scientific evidence.
It emphasizes that women should have access to the full range of modern contraceptive methods so they can make informed choices around contraceptive choice and their sexual health.
It emphasizes that women should have access to the full range of modern contraceptive methods so they can make informed choices around contraceptive choice and their sexual health.
“Evidence shows that a woman’s risk of HIV should not restrict her contraceptive choice,” said Dr Peter Salama, Executive Director, Universal Health Coverage/Life Course at WHO. “All women should have access to a wide range of options for contraception as well as to HIV prevention and to treatment if needed.”
The updated recommendations to the WHO guideline, Medical eligibility criteria for contraceptive use, stem from a review of the latest evidence conducted by the independent Guideline Development Group convened to inform WHO. This Group assessed all of the evidence on hormonal contraception and risk of HIV acquisition published since the previous review published in 2016, along with a systematic review of all published evidence on copper-bearing IUDs and HIV risk.
The global recommendations have particular bearing for sub-Saharan Africa, which has the highest rates of HIV transmission but also some of the biggest challenges in ensuring women have access to a full range of contraceptive options. Currently a quarter of women aged 15–49 in Africa (24%), who want to delay or prevent having children, have limited access to modern contraception. This is the highest unmet need across all WHO regions.
About the evidence.
The new evidence is largely based on the results of the Evidence for Contraceptive Options and HIV Outcomes (or ECHO trial) - a randomized clinical trial that showed no statistically significant differences in HIV acquisition among women using intramuscular depot medroxyprogesterone acetate (DMPA-IM), copper IUDs, or levonorgestrel (LNG) implants.
This new high-quality evidence supersedes the low to low-moderate quality evidence from observational studies that had been previously available to inform WHO’s guidance.
This new high-quality evidence supersedes the low to low-moderate quality evidence from observational studies that had been previously available to inform WHO’s guidance.
Promoting STI prevention within contraceptive services
The ECHO study – which was conducted across communities expected to have high levels of HIV prevalence in Eswatini, Kenya, South Africa and Zambia - also revealed concerningly high levels of HIV acquisition and other sexually transmitted infections (STIs) among women seeking contraceptive services, particularly younger women, irrespective of which of the three contraceptive methods they used.
“There is a clear need to ensure women in Africa have access to high quality HIV and STI prevention and testing services, along with a wide range of contraceptive options to suit their values, preferences, views and concerns,” said Dr Felicitas Zawaira, Director of Family and Reproductive Health in WHO’s African region. “In high HIV prevalence settings, these may include condom promotion, pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), as well as linkages to antiretroviral therapy for those testing HIV-positive, and partner testing.”
WHO will work with Ministries of Health, other organizations providing contraception and STI/HIV services and civil society, including youth organizations, to support implementation of these updated recommendations. WHO has established an advisory group of women living with HIV to ensure their perspectives are heard and considered across WHO in relation to HIV and sexual and reproductive health and rights.
Monday, August 12, 2019
Kenya’s new wildlife conservation campaign
Journalist - Kenya
[Nairobi] Kenya on 1 August launched a new wildlife
conservation campaign dubbed “Ivory Trade is a Rip Off”, a fresh effort aimed at raising awareness and
curb the illegal trade in ivory.
The campaign — supported by 31 other African states
under the African Elephant Coalition — calls for the listing of the African Elephant
in Appendix I of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of
Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) – which includes species threatened with
extinction – at the Convention’s upcoming 18th Conference of the Parties
(CoP18) following the dwindling numbers of elephants as a result of poaching.
The launch that took place at Nairobi’s Jomo Kenyatta
International Airport was attended by the Director of UN Environment’s Regional
Office for Africa, Juliette Biao, the country’s Cabinet Secretary for Tourism
and Wildlife, Najib Balala, and representatives from Kenya Wildlife Service
(KWS), Kenya Airports Authority (KAA) and Kenya Airways.
“We are worried – with the lobbying that is going on and
opening the ivory trade – that poaching could be revived, because there will be
a demand and supply,” said Cabinet Secretary Najib Balala. “And that is why we
are here today, to bring this awareness.”
CITES introduced the ban on international trade in ivory in
1989 following years of unprecedented poaching; up to 80 per cent of herds are
estimated to have been lost in some regions.
“The Kenya Airport Authority was the first in Africa to sign
the United Buckingham Palace Declaration, an international initiative that
commits players in the international transport supply chain to collaborate in
the fight against the wildlife trafficking,” KAA’s Isaac Awuondo said at the
launch. “We moved quickly to join in the fight against illegal wildlife
trafficking out of the realization that a complex transnational supply chain
was enabling this vice and it needed to be disrupted, if not eliminated.”
“Illegal Trade in Wildlife harms sustainable development in
Africa. Together we can reverse the trend and protect our wildlife. I urge all
stakeholders to join this campaign to eliminate this scourge,” Director of UN
Environment’s Regional Office for Africa, Juliette Biao.
Through a partnership between KWS and KAA, Jomo Kenyatta
International Airport is equipped with canine units trained to detect wildlife
products in passenger baggage and cargo. KAA has been at the forefront in its
commitment to the fight against Illegal wildlife trafficking by enacting laws,
developing policies and procedures and training personnel to ensure that
illegal wildlife products do not pass through airports.
As part of the campaign, 400,000 limited-edition boarding
passes have been produced with the message: “Trade of ivory is ripping Kenya
apart”.
Kenya Airways and UN Environment have jointly been raising
awareness on the need for better and sustainable wildlife conservation by
distributing a special children’s education pack to passengers. The pack
contains a tote bag, a comic book, postcards, stickers and temporary tattoos
relating to wildlife conservation and the illegal wildlife trade.
UN
Environment supports African countries in their fight against illegal trade in
wildlife through awareness raising, policies as well as capacity building and
support to local communities.
Tuesday, July 09, 2019
Two Ghanaian journalists arrested and interrogated, one allegedly tortured, says CPJ
[New York] Ghana's
Commission for Human Rights and Administrative Justice should immediately
launch an independent investigation into the arrests of Modern Ghana editor
Emmanuel Ajarfor Abugri and reporter Emmanuel Yeboah Britwum by security
forces.
On June 27,
in Accra, the capital, Ministry of National Security officers arrested Abugri
and Britwum at the offices of their employer, the privately owned news website
Modern Ghana, interrogated them at Ministry of National Security offices, and
confiscated their laptops and phones, according to Britwum, who spoke to CPJ
over the phone, and local news reports.
The officers questioned the journalists about
Modern Ghana's recent reporting on National Security Minister Albert Kan Dapaah
and accused them of obtaining information about Kan Dapaah by hacking an email
account, Britwum said. Britwum told CPJ that the officers did not present a
warrant at the time of their arrest.
Abugri told
Ghanaian broadcaster Joy News and local news website Citi Newsroom that
officers tied his hands, slapped him, and shocked him with a taser during his
interrogation. The officers also made the journalists log in to their phones
and computers and reviewed their files, Britwum told CPJ.
Britwum was
released on June 28 and Abugri was released on June 29, Britwum said. He told
CPJ that officers returned their phones but that their laptops remain in
custody.
"The
arrests of Emmanuel Abugri and Emmanuel Britwum, and Abugri's alleged torture
at the hands of Ministry of National Security officers, is only the latest
security service attack on journalists in Ghana," said Angela Quintal,
CPJ's Africa program coordinator. "This dangerous pattern is made worse by
the repeated failure to hold those responsible for attacks against the press to
account. The Ghanaian Commission for Human Rights and Administrative Justice
should take this case seriously and pursue justice for Britwum and
Abugri."
Ghana's
Commission for Human Rights and Administrative Justice is a presidentially
appointed body tasked with investigating human rights violations and abuses of
power, according to its founding charter.
The
journalists' arrest came one day after Modern Ghana complied with a June 26
request from the Ministry of National Security to take down an article critical
of Kan Dapaah published on the website on June 25, Britwum told CPJ.
On July 1,
Ghanaian police summoned Abugri and Britwum to a local police station to give
statements about the events surrounding their arrests, and the journalists were
summoned again on July 2 and 3 for further questioning at the Police Criminal
Investigations Department headquarters, according to Samson Lardi Anyenini,
Ajafor's lawyer, who spoke to CPJ via messaging app.
Also on July
1, Ghana's National Security Council Secretariat released a statement, which
CPJ reviewed, stating that Abugri's allegations of torture were
"false," that he was "never manhandled" during the
interrogation, and saying that the journalists had been arrested for "engaging
in cyber-crimes."
During his
interrogation, Britwum told officers that he obtained information about Kan
Dapaah from documents sent to an email address registered to local private
radio broadcaster Peace FM, to which he had been granted access, Britwum told
CPJ. Officers accused him of hacking the account, Britwum said.
On July 5,
state prosecutors filed cybercrime charges against Britwum, Abugri, and Peace
FM editor Yaw Obeng Manu for the alleged unlawful access of an email account,
according to Anyenini.
Later that day,
however, Senior State Attorney Stella Ohene Appiah and Accra High Court Justice
Afia Asare Botwe dropped the charges against the journalists, according to Anyenini
and a reportby Joy News.
According to
reports by local news website Ghana Web, the Ghana Journalists Association, an
independent professional association, and the OneGhana Movement, a local civil
society group focused on promoting official accountability, have both called
for an independent investigation into Abugri's alleged torture.
On July 8,
Ghana police spokesperson David Eklu told CPJ over the phone that he was not
aware of the specific details concerning Britwum and Abugri's arrests and
questioning by Ministry of National Security officers, and said that the
cybercrime investigation was transferred to the country's police.
CPJ's
repeated calls to Kan Dapaah went unanswered. Eklu told CPJ that he was aware
of the calls for an independent inquiry into the allegations of abuse by
Ministry of National Security officers, but said he did not have any
information on such an inquiry's likelihood.
Kan Dapaah
was named as the head of Ghana's newly created National Security Ministry by
President Nana Akufo-Addo in early 2017 with a mandate to increase security
services' public accountability, according to media reports from the time.
Nevertheless, investigations into attacks against journalists have lagged in
recent years, according to CPJ research.
Saturday, July 06, 2019
Why science journalism is societal necessity
By Ochieng’
Ogodo
Journalist-Kenya
Journalist-Kenya
[NAIROBI] Many
a times I have been asked about the viability of science journalism in Kenya
and Africa at large from both journalists-the ones practicing it and
journalists in other areas like business and politics-and folks outside the profession.
To many sceptics,
science and its products like research, patents, innovations are not yet
developed in Africa and could, therefore, offer very little for one to
continuously put his skills and energy on as an area of coverage and also make
a living out of it.
Out there,
the continent could be well known for civil strife like in the Democratic
Republic of Conge, Darfur in Sudan, Northern Uganda, mismanagement of public
affairs at the highest levels of leadership like in Zimbabwe, corruption, the
HIV/Aids scourge of which Sub-Saharan Africa is the global epicenter. Wow! The
list is long-but not for scientific advancements in different spheres of life.
The sceptics
are not entirely mistaken. True, Africa needs to build her own biological,
physical and chemistry sciences and use that knowledge at all levels of life
but that doesn’t mean there is nothing going on. Well, a lot in science and
research is going on in Africa that remains very invisible. And a lot also
needs to be done, still more, which is what makes science journalism even more
imperative in Africa, and the rest of the developing world.
Little space for science news
But it isn’t
easy to ply science journalism in this part of the world – Kenya and Africa at
large. Most news channels — such as print, audio, visual and online — have very
little space allocations for stories on environment and science topics. Worth
noting is that most journalists in this segment are correspondences whose
monthly monetary gains are pegged on the number of stories published, and very
few successfully ‘compete’ for space.
This has in
fact forced some to abandon science journalism and take to other areas of the
profession that enjoys favours with chief gatekeepers of specific media
establishments or opt for more sustaining areas outside the profession.
The research
institutions and government departments makes life miserable for science
journalists by the lack of well-defined infrastructure and policies that
ensures fast and effective facilitation of the channeling out of information
and within the shortest time possible given the high perishable nature of news.
How many institutions are computerised and you could access information only at
the touch of a mouse?
In the age of
globalisation exacted upon us by the Information and Communication Technology
wizardry, there is much new knowledge pouring from millions of research
projects and studies around the world that push the boundaries of man’s
knowledge to new heights, almost daily.
Making hard concepts easy
The changes
are frequent and so specialised and difficult if not absolutely impossible for
a lay person to understand. As long as science or scholarship remains enshrined
in technical language and laden with heavy jargon it will need specially
trained reporters who can communicate with scientists and help translate the
new developments accurately and clearly for the less erudite readers who needs
the information most to thrive-or try to-in their day-to-day lives.
For instance,
reporting on a research project is quite often an assignment largely different
from any other given to a journalist. He/she will face three challenges; the
researcher[s], research project and the accurate and interesting interpreting
of the project to the various publics. And such specialised trainings needed
for a creditable job are very scarce for science journalists in Africa and most
of the developing world.
The first
audience of a journalist is the editor who he/she has to explain his storyline
to hoping for a hearing and objective evaluation of the intended piece[s]. You
will explain your lead, tie-back and additional features and details to the
lead paragraph. But in most cases the editors’ themselves have scanty grasp of
the various scientific issues unfolding in their societies and the world at
large. They, therefore, become the bulwark against the practice of science
journalism.
“Necessary”
cooperation scarcity
A problem
facing most science journalist also involves the “necessary” cooperation of the
scientists and some of their organisations with the media. Some are extremely
sensitive to criticisms from the media; they often shun journalists and
institutions decline to provide information needed for accurate and balanced
reporting.
At the Land
Ocean Interaction in the Coastal Zones [LOICZ] Open Science meeting in Egmond
aan Zee in The Netherlands in 2005, a professor in coastal science, after
listening to my presentation on The Media and Environmental Protection,
declared it was not their duty to disseminate information but to do research
and they have absolutely nothing to do with media. This clearly illustrates
some of the dilemmas faced by science journalists all over the world.
The inability
to make enough money from the practice of science journalism accounts for the
dearth of what have become basic tools lack laptops among this lot of people.
These are just but a few. The hurdles are many but despite these, science
journalism still remains an exciting practice.
Saturday, December 29, 2018
Conflagration welling up in Cameroon: Africa is deep asleep
Ochieng’ Ogodo
Journalist-Kenya
[NAIROBI] Something absurd, inimical to human civilisation – dynamite just welling up and a tap away from conflagration – is sweeping across Cameroon. It’s been a simmering pot of hatred that Africa seems to care less about. Yet, it has the potential of another African bloodbath of Rwandan proportion if not more.
Hostility
The hostile dispositions pitting Francophones and Anglophones in that country is teetering on the verge of a demonic outburst. The recent killing and public dragging of Anglophones in the Francophone - Bangourain - West Region is a signpost of bad moving to worse.
Francophones and Anglophones in the hotspot areas seems to have shed off restraint and refrain from hate speech and retaliation against one another – And the government led by Paul Biya (85 years in age) who has been Cameroonian President since 6 November 1982, after rising rapidly as a bureaucrat under President Ahmadou Ahidjo in the 1960s, is not working with all parties to have a dialogue and end the Anglophone crisis.
Stunning trends and turns
The stunning trends and turns of events in the Anglophone Northwest and Southwest Regions of Cameroon that is constantly degenerating into events with the potential magnitude of upsetting neighbouring Francophone Region of the West Region is real.
Hate crime, retaliatory ethnic conflict, indoctrination and violent extremism as a result of cross-regional attacks from armed separatist groups and villagers of affected communities if fast snowballing into an absolute dreadful explosion.
Just as people were about the usher in the 2018 December festive season, news from media and individuals trickling in from the areas were of an arson attack allegedly led by hundreds of armed men –about 300 in number - from Bangolan (in Babessi sub-division in the Northwest Region) targeting a village in Bangourain, a sub-division in the neighbouring Noun Division, which led to the destruction of dozens of houses – counted at least 85 affecting over 100 families – with the death of at least one person, several others wounded and abduction of at least 15 persons and resultant heavy material and financial losses of other infrastructures.
Retaliatory attack
In a retaliatory attack on 26 December residents of the affected neighbourhood in Bangourain, two persons suspected to be arsonists were apprehended, lynched, and their bodies dragged on the ground attached to motor bikes with chains.
This hate rhetoric from both sides is a sad reflection of bloody events that preceded the Rwandan genocide, also known as the genocide against the Tutsi, where there was a mass slaughter of Tutsi in Rwanda during the Rwandan Civil War, which had started in 1990.
Africa must act
This repugnant act is calling for a solution for hate crime; immediately from within and without Cameroon. Regardless of their ethnic, religious, political, ideological, cultural or economic denominations, there is need for an urgent action to ground sanity.
The stories from the impacted areas are horrible and foresight is urgent on the Cameroonian government, the Anglophone and Francophone west. But even more importantly, Africa as a continent swinging into a more serious engagement in more genuine peace-building processes.
The Cameroon government’s continued military operations in the Northwest and Southwest Regions that has fuel the inhuman crimes perpetrated by both the defense and security forces and the armed separatist groups needs to come to an end, and an immediate cease fire put in place.
Why should people who share so much in common and similarities and only separated by languages SAVAGELY turn on each other? Why have they taken leave from exercising restraint and avoiding involving themselves in actions that endanger human life, cause injuries, destroy private and public property, cause material and financial losses, and aggravate the already preoccupying tensions between the populace, government forces and separatist groups?
Has the Cameroon government lost legitimacy to initiate investigations into the happenings and seek justice where necessary, reparation, and reconciliation of parties to the conflicts?
Africa – a continent with so much stake in Cameroon - has to act (and fast) before we even think of global bodies such as The UN.
#ASEWACHO
#ASEWACHO
Wednesday, September 19, 2018
Remittance income: A major economic driver for Africa
Ochieng’ Ogodo
Journalist-Kenya
[NAIROBI] Many African countries have had an economic
slowdown but projections show that most African countries are having a positive
economic outlook.
According to the Institute of Chartered Accountants (ICAEW)
in England and Wales latest report in Economic
Insight: Africa Q3 2018 launched in Nairobi today, the regions include;
East Africa, West and Central Africa, Franc Zone, Northern Africa, Southern Africa.
The report that was commissioned by ICAEW and produced by
partner and forecaster, Oxford Economics, provides a snapshot of the region's
economic performance and reveals that East Africa continues to be the
continent's best performing region with a GDP forecast at 6.3 per cent.
This positive outlook is due to the region's economic
diversification and investment-driven growth. Ethiopia remains the region's
powerhouse, with growth forecast at 8.1 per cent due to the recent reforms
under Prime Minister, Abiy Ahmed.
Central and West Africa has a growth forecast at 2.9 per
cent, and the constrained growth in the region is due to subdued non-oil
economic activity by Nigeria - the region's powerhouse. The best performing
country in the region is Ghana with a forecast growth of 6.5 per cent.
Michael Armstrong, Regional Director, ICAEW Middle East,
Africa and South Asia say: "Despite the recent growth slump; all regions
in Africa are projected to report a positive economic outlook, with remittance
income expected to be a key economic booster in the coming months."
Growth in the African Francophone regions is forecast at 4.6
per cent, largely driven by a boost of 7.4 per cent in the region's biggest
economy, Ivory Coast, where investment is driving rapid expansion.
In North Africa, Egypt is forecast at 5.3 per cent as a
result of structural and policy reforms, which have boosted manufacturing and
investment. The county's tourism sector has also continued to recover. Similarly,
Libya is expected to record a growth of 16.5 per cent owing to posted
improvements in oil production after the civil conflict.
However, Southern Africa has been affected by continued slow
growth by the regional heavyweight South Africa, forecast at 1.5 per cent while
Angola, the region's other economic leader, has the same forecast of 1.5 per
cent. Strong growth in both Botswana and Zambia is said to have little effect
on the region's overall performance.
Remittance income was emphasised in the report as a major
economic factor for most African countries with Nigeria being the biggest
receiver of remittances on the continent. The West African economic powerhouse
received 29 per cent (US$ 22bn) of total remittances flowing to the continent
in 2017, mostly from the gulf, the US and United Kingdom.
Egypt came second on the continent with US$20 billion of
remittances. One of the countries highlighted where remittance flows continues
to play an important role in terms of external accounts is Ghana.
According to the World Bank, remittance inflows amounted to US$2.5bn
in 2014: equal to roughly 18.6 per cent of total exports that year. However, in
2017 the remittance inflows subsequently declined to US$2.2bn equivalent to
15.8 per cent of exports.
Uganda's economic growth was reported to have recovered
markedly last year. The country is expected to post a surplus of about 5.6 per
cent of the Gross Domestic Product –national wealth- this year, supported by
project aid and remittances inflows.
The full Economic Insight: Africa report can be found here: https://www.icaew.com/technical/economy/economic-insight/economic-insight-africa
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)