Purdue researcher awarded $1.3 million for malaria drug trials in Southeast Asia and Africa

Philip Low looks to validate previous trial results and test whether the number of days of an anti-malaria drug therapy can be reduced

WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind., Sept. 15, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — A Purdue researcher is taking a giant leap forward in the fight against drug-resistant strains of malaria in developing countries.

Open Philanthropy has awarded $1.38 million to Philip Low to further validate a drug therapy that he and his colleagues have previously shown to successfully treat the disease. Low (rhymes with “now”) is Purdue University’s Presidential Scholar for Drug Discovery and the Ralph C. Corley Distinguished Professor of Chemistry in the College of Science.

For years, experts have been concerned about the rise of drug-resistant malaria variants in Southeast Asia and the prospect that one or more of these strains might travel to Africa. A similar event occurred in the 1980s with the emergence of drug resistance to the then-standard treatment of chloroquine, which resulted in millions of deaths.

But Low is working to save lives on both continents by conducting clinical trials to validate previous results and to test whether the number of days of an anti-malaria treatment can be reduced.

While studying how malaria propagates in human blood, Low and his research team discovered that the cancer drug therapy imatinib is effective in the treatment of drug-resistant malaria. Trials in Southeast Asia showed that imatinib, when combined with the customary malaria therapy, clears all malaria parasites from 90% of patients within 48 hours and 100% of patients within three days. The patients receiving imatinib were also relieved of their fevers in less than half of the time experienced by similar patients treated with the standard therapy.

Open Philanthropy has awarded Low $600,000 for a larger clinical trial in Southeast Asia to validate his previous trials. The organization has also awarded Low $780,000 to determine whether the usual three-day therapy can be reduced to two days or even one. This work will be focused in the African countries of Kenya and Tanzania where malaria is prominent.

“We found that people in Africa must often walk many miles to obtain treatment for malaria. They will receive three pills, walk all the way home, take one or two pills, start to feel better, and then save the third pill for their next malaria infection,” Low said. “When they don’t finish the course of treatment, only the most drug-resistant strains of the parasite survive and spread. And that’s how people build up drug resistance. So we’d like to eventually be able to cure all patients with just one pill. It would prevent these drug-resistant strains from ever proliferating.”

Open Philanthropy is a grantmaking organization whose mission is to use its resources to help others as much as it can, according to the funder.

“This is yet another case of an organization recognizing Philip Low’s brilliance, scientific vision and mission to help people in all corners of the world,” said Brooke Beier, senior vice president of Purdue Innovates. “The Purdue Research Foundation has been a proud partner in supporting his work, protecting and promoting his intellectual property that is changing lives and making our world a better place to live.”

Since 1988, Low has been listed on more than 145 invention disclosures to the Purdue Innovates Office of Technology Commercialization. He has been listed on more than 600 patents in nearly two dozen countries around the world from the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office and international patent organizations. During his tenure at Purdue, Low has been awarded 213 research grants for more than $43.5 million. His work also receives support from the Purdue Institute for Cancer Research and the Purdue Institute for Drug Discovery.

Imatinib was originally produced by Novartis for the treatment of chronic myelogenous leukemia and other cancers. It works by blocking specific enzymes involved in the growth of cancers.

“When we discovered the ability of imatinib to block parasite propagation in human blood cultures in petri dishes, we initiated a human clinical trial where we combined imatinib with the standard treatment (piperaquine plus dihydroartemisinin) used to treat malaria in much of the world,” Low said.

Malaria infects human red blood cells, where it reproduces and eventually activates a red blood cell enzyme that in turn triggers rupture of the cell and release of a form of the parasite called a merozoite into the bloodstream. Low and his colleagues theorized that by blocking the critical red blood cell enzyme, they could stop the infection. The data from initial drug trials have confirmed that.

“Because we’re targeting an enzyme that belongs to the red blood cell, the parasite can’t mutate to develop resistance — it simply can’t mutate our proteins in our blood cells,” Low said. “This is a novel approach that will hopefully become a therapy that can’t be evaded by the parasite in the future. This would constitute an important contribution to human health.”

The goal, Low said, is to get this into developing countries to save lives. With this new round of funding, he says they’re now closer than they’ve ever been.

About Purdue University

Purdue University is a public research institution with excellence at scale. Ranked among top 10 public universities and with two colleges in the top 4 in the United States, Purdue discovers and disseminates knowledge with a quality and at a scale second to none. More than 105,000 students study at Purdue across modalities and locations, with 50,000 in person on the West Lafayette campus. Committed to affordability and accessibility, Purdue’s main campus has frozen tuition 12 years in a row. See how Purdue never stops in the persistent pursuit of the next giant leap, including its first comprehensive urban campus in Indianapolis, the new Mitchell E. Daniels, Jr. School of Business, and Purdue Computes, at https://www.purdue.edu/president/strategic-initiatives.

About Purdue Innovates

Purdue Innovates is a unified network at Purdue Research Foundation to assist Purdue faculty, staff, students and alumni in either IP commercialization or startup creation. As a conduit to technology commercialization, intellectual property protection and licensing, startup creation and venture capital, Purdue Innovates serves as the front door to translate new ideas into world-changing impact.

For more information on licensing a Purdue innovation, contact the Office of Technology Commercialization at otcip@prf.org. For more information about involvement and investment opportunities in startups based on a Purdue innovation, contact Purdue Innovates at purdueinnovates@prf.org.

Media contact: Steve Martin, sgmartin@prf.org

Sources: Philip Low, plow@purdue.edu

Brooke Beier, blbeier@prf.org

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Steve Martin
Purdue Research Foundation
sgmartin@prf.org

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National Assembly Speaker urges parliamentary ethics

The National Assembly Speaker, Carolina Cerqueira, said Saturday that she is confident that a sense of duty, parliamentary ethics and resilience will contribute to a democratic, prosperous, peaceful and socially just Angola.

In a message addressed to Angolan parliamentarians, one year after the inauguration of the deputies elected in 2022, Carolina Cerqueira said that exercising the legislative function is a noble mission that requires everyone to respect the dignity of every Angolan.

“Although it is democratic to disagree when the interests and values we embrace and believe in are confronted, ethics and understanding must prevail in the exercise of our right or power, never making disrespect prevail in debates and actions, always endeavouring to solidify parliamentary plurality, maintain decorum and respect for institutions as a constitutional duty,” the message reads.

According to the parliamentary leader, in this first year of the fifth parliamentary term, the deputies have proved that it is possible to overcome difficulties and that all means of political consultation must be exhausted, respecting differences in order to find consensus in favour of the best decisions for the well-being of the people.

Carolina Cerqueira said that in the face of the immeasurable challenges on the parliamentary agenda, in a complex international and internally challenging context, tolerance, serenity and everyone’s commitment to social peace and political peace must prevail in favour of democracy, understanding and respect for difference.

“It is in the face of this challenge that we once again call on the Angolans we represent to defend the public interest, with respect for the Constitution and the laws in force,” she stressed.

The National Assembly has 220 deputies elected in the 2022 general elections.

The ruling MPLA obtained 51.17%, electing 124 deputies, against UNITA’s 43.95%, which elected 90 deputies.

The Social Renewal Party (PRS) came third with 1.14 per cent of the vote and elected two deputies.

In fourth place was the FNLA (National Front for the Liberation of Angola), with 1.06% and two seats in the National Assembly. Also with two deputies, but 1.02%, was the PHA (Humanist Party of Angola)

Source: Angola Press News Agency

Angolan President arrives in New York for High Level Debate

Angolan President, João Lourenço, arrived early Saturday in New York, United States of America, to take part in the High Level Debate of the 78th Session of the United Nations (UN) General Assembly to take place from September 18 to 20.

The Angolan Head of State, who comes from Havana (Cuba) where he took part in the G77+China Summit, leads a high-level delegation to take part in various debates towards current world issues, such as terrorism and sustainable development, from the 18th to the 20th of this month.

The annually held United Nations debate brings together the 193 member countries.

President João Lourenço is due to speak on Wednesday 20th, the second day of the general debate.

The Head of State’s agenda includes a long list of political and diplomatic contacts, including meetings with counterparts and heads of government from different countries.

World leaders gather to engage in the annual high-level General Debate under the theme, “Rebuilding trust and reigniting global solidarity: Accelerating action on the 2030 Agenda and its Sustainable Development Goals towards peace, prosperity, progress and sustainability for all.”

Ambassador Dennis Francis of the Republic of Trinidad and Tobago, who was elected to this rotating position on June 1, 2023, chairs the event

The initiative is taking place at a time when the international political, military, economic, social and climate situation is marked by various challenges and crises in different parts of the world, particularly in Europe and the African continent.

One of these challenges, which could be on the agenda of the Heads of State and Government present in New York, is the war between Russia and Ukraine, which has had a significant impact on the international situation.

This conflict, which has been going on for more than a year and a half, has a major impact on diplomatic relations, international and regional security and even the global economy.

The war is having significant humanitarian consequences, with thousands of deaths and an increasing number of refugees and internally displaced people, as well as seriously affecting the global food distribution chain, especially cereals.

Meanwhile, the General Debate is also taking place against a backdrop of persistent conflicts in other parts of the world, such as the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), the Central African Republic (CAR), Libya, Mali, Sudan, Syria and Yemen.

These problems, along with the Israeli-Palestinian crisis, the situation in Western Sahara, expansion of terrorist activities in the Sahel region, Somalia and Mozambique, among other situations have the attention of the participants during the working days.

Source: Angola Press News Agency

FG raises concern over ozone layer depletion

The Minister of State for Environment, Dr Ishaq Salako, on Saturday in Abuja raised concerns over the level of ozone layer depletion in the country.

Salako said this at the 2023 World Ozone Day Celebration which is marked on Sept. 1 annually.

The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the theme is “Montreal Protocol: fixing the Ozone layer and reducing Climate Change”.

The minister, who was represented by Mr Charles Ikeah, Director of Pollution Control and Environmental Health Department in the Ministry, said the Federal Government was committed to phasing out ozone layer depleting substances.

He noted that the ministry had been in collaboration with stakeholders in mitigating ozone depleting substances.

Salako gave assurance that the ministry would soon train technicians on how to handle ozone reduction equipment in an attempt to totally phase out ozone layer depletion equipment.

He pledged the ministry commitment to the Montreal Protocol to ensure a sustainable environment in the country.

The Permanent Secretary of the ministry, Alhaji Ibrahim Yusufu, said that scientific studies over the years had shown that human activities of the use of some depleting chemicals had led to the depleting of the ozone layer.

Yusufu, who was represented by Mr Olubunmi Olusanya, a director in the ministry, further noted that public awareness on the need to safeguard the ozone layer for our overall health is pertinent.

“All importers of ozone depleting chemicals should desist from the importation of such, all technicians and engineers should avoid the use of ozone depleting substances in their operations and sought alternatives,” he appealed.

The permanent secretary urged members of the public to patronise all ozone friendly substances and support the government’s fight against ozone layer depletion.

The National Ozone Officer in the ministry, Mr Idris Abdullahi, said that the ozone layer was an important layer that must not be depleted because of the dangers associated to the depletion.

Mr Ahmed Ibrahim, Coordinator, Nigeria Association of Refrigerators and Air -conditioning Practitioners, said the association had been collaborating with stakeholders to reduce ozone layer depletion.

“We are sensitising manufacturers of refrigerants to manufacture ozone friendly refrigerants.

“We will like to appeal for Refrigeration and Air-conditioner village, where all our members can have a good practice of their craft in Refrigeration and Air-conditioning,” he said.

Mr Oluyomi Banjo, a representative of the United Industrial Development Organisation (UNIDO), said that the ozone layer was a protective blanket in the stratosphere that protects us from harmful radiations, particularly the ultraviolet (UV) rays.

“However, man’s quest for industrialisation has seen the development and production of chemicals that depletes the ozone layer.

“It is expected to restore the stratospheric ozone layer by 2065, avoiding 443 million cases of skin cancer, approximately 2.3 million skin cancer deaths.

“I reaffirm UNIDO’s commitment towards supporting the Nigerian government to promote Inclusive and Sustainable Industrialisation Development without compromising the environment,” he assured.

Source: News Agency of Nigeria

Journalists tasked on reportage of human trafficking, irregular migration

Journalists covering the human trafficking and irregular migration beat have been urged to be in-depth in reportage, and to go the extra mile in investigating and exposing the heinous crimes.

The call was made on Saturday in Abuja at the closing session of a three-day training on ethics, do’s and don’ts of human trafficking and irregular migration reporting organised for some journalists covering the beat.

The training was organised by the Action Against Trafficking in Persons Cluster (AATiP), facilitated by the Justice Development and Peace Commission (JDPC).

It had the support of the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) Palladium Project, which is under the Strengthening Civic Advocacy and Local Engagement (SCALE) course.

Mr Nasiru-Muazu Isah, a Resource Person at the training, said that investigative reporting about human trafficking and irregular migration would go a long way in exposing the heinous crimes.

Isah, a former reporter with the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC), said that investigation and exposure of human trafficking crimes would help to step down the issues in the society.

“Human trafficking is not just about moving people from one country to another, but it is also moving people, adult, underage children from one place (community) to another in the name of getting them job, assisting them and all that.

“The problem is that most people feel that human trafficking happens only when one crosses from one international border to the other. However, human trafficking can happen within the country, within states and communities.

“These small children that you see as house helps are being trafficked, but in most cases, we feel that we are assisting them because we are bringing them into our homes, feeding them, putting them in schools.

“All these assuage our guilt because we feel we are helping them but in actual sense, it is trafficking,” he stressed.

Isah said that investigative reporting would help in knowing why such a trend occurred, and the process involved in the recruitment of such people.

The Executive Director of JDPC, Rev. Fr. Solomon Uko, stated that he was pleased with the attention of the journalists throughout the three-day training.

Uko said: “this is actually my first time going through the training with participants, and I am pleased with the engagement, interest, conversation and discussion that I saw and engaged in at the training.

“I urge journalists to make use of the knowledge they have received in the course of the training to report knowledgeably about human trafficking issues.

“Our expectation is that the knowledge we got from here will be escalated to the entire world on the dehumanising effect of human trafficking, and the fact that human beings must be who they are, and must not be traded like commodities.

“People should say something when they see something that is unwholesome or degrading in any form to the point of being trafficked.

“Journalists should escalate the knowledge obtained from here, and help others know the effect of human trafficking in our society,” he said.

Uko said that the journalists are expected after this training to be fully armed with the weapon they needed to propagate the message and let people know the dangers of human trafficking and irregular migration.

Source: News Agency of Nigeria

Nigeria signs MoU with Cuba for science, technology

The Nigeria’s delegation to the G77+China Summit led by Vice president Kashim Shettima on Saturday signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with the Republic of Cuba.

Mr Olusola Abioa, the Director of Information, Office of the Vice President, in a statement, said the Minister of Innovation, Science and Technology, Mr Uche Nnaji, signed the MoU for the Government of Nigeria.

The signing ceremony, which took place Saturday on the sidelines of the G77+China Summit at Hotel Palco La Habana, was the high point of Nigeria’s participation at the summit.

Nnaji said the MoU would further enhance collaboration in the field of innovation, science and technology between the two countries.

The minister praised President Bola Tinubu for his visionary leadership which had resulted in the signing of the agreement.

Nnaji, who assured that Nigeria would maximise the opportunities provided by the bilateral agreement, emphasised that the implementation of the agreement would commence in earnest.

He expressed determination to put in place the appropriate mechanism to work out the modalities for programme of action.

Earlier, Shettima averred that Nigeria places high premium on South-South cooperation as a platform for promoting sustainable development of the global South.

The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the bilateral agreement would focus on research and development.

Other areas include human resource development which will further deepen partnership between the two countries.

The areas of cooperation covered by the bilateral agreement include biotechnology, scientific investigation and innovation, technological development and human resources development.

Others are specialist exchange in the area of science and technology, and technologies transfer for development areas.

The historic event was witnessed by the Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Amb. Adamu Lamuwa, Nigeria’s Ambassador to Cuba, Amb. Ben Okoyen and other senior government officials. (NAN)

Source: News Agency of Nigeria

Shettima seeks international cooperation to combat global challenges

Vice President Kashim Shettima has emphasised the need for international cooperation towards combating global challenges.

The Director of Information, Office of the Vice President, Mr Olusola Abiola, in a statement, said Shettima, stated this while addressing World leaders at the ongoing G77+China Leaders’ Summit, in Cuba.

Shettima also spoke to an assembly of Heads of State and Government, the UN Secretary-General, Antonio Gutteres and delegates from over 100 countries from the global South.

The vice president also emphasized the need to be focussed leveraging cooperation or partnership for finding realistic solutions to global challenges.

Shettima said: ” We must always remember that cooperation is our compass and the most realistic path towards maximizing the opportunities and resolving challenges before us.

” We must not allow geopolitical tensions in any corner of the world to deter us from forging a collective and mutually advantageous path forward, a roadmap of shared prosperity and progress.”

He, therefore, expressed Nigeria’s commitment to tow the path of partnership with member-States of the G77+China towards addressing global challenges.

Shettima said: ” Allow me to reiterate Nigeria’s commitment to partnering with our fellow member nations of the G77 and China.

” We shall champion initiatives that harness the potential of science, technology, and innovation to confront economic challenges, particularly within the global south.”

On the theme of the summit, ” Current Development Challenges: The Role of Science, Technology and Innovation,” Shettima underscored the prominent role played by science, technology and innovation in resolving challenges from the past to the present.

” Throughout history, science and technology have shaped the course of nations.

“The phases of the Industrial Revolution, from the first to the fourth, and from mechanization to automation, have determined the prosperity of those nations.

” It is crucial to acknowledge that the developing world found itself at a disadvantage in the earliest phases of these transformations, struggling to compete fairly as these revolutions swept across the globe,” he added.

The vice president told his audience that Nigeria was contributing its own share in leveraging science, technology and innovation to resolving challenges such as COVID-19 and the climate crisis.

Shettima said: ” Nigeria understands that the key to advancing innovation in science and technology lies in fostering a vibrant knowledge economy and facilitating the unrestricted exchange of ideas.

” This is the reason why across the globe, one would be hard-pressed to identify a premier institution, even within the most developed nations, where a Nigerian, trained at home, is not contributing significantly.

” Whether as a tech innovator or a medical specialist, in the noble pursuit of improving the human condition.”

On the efforts of the Nigerian government to combat Covid-19 using science and technology, Shettima said that the pandemic, while being a tragic chapter, served as a catalyst for “our brilliant minds in Nigeria to rejuvenate their pursuits in the fields of science and technology.

” Our scientists have successfully positioned our nation as a prominent global hub for mRNA vaccine production, a milestone currently in progress.”

Shettima extolled the contributions of the youth in the nation’s quest for science, technology and innovation advancement.

He also emphasised that Nigeria’s demographic advantage was not limited to the absence of an aging population. Nigeria stands as a beacon of youthful talent and innovation.

He added: ” These young citizens are not only dedicated to integrating human elements into the evolving technological sphere, but their efforts also extend to diverse fields.

” Ranging from telemedicine to the automation of agriculture, all with the aim of making our daily lives more seamless.”

On climate crisis, the vice president opined that the climate crisis around the globe too had dominated Nigeria’s agenda and prompted youthful innovators to engage in crafting solutions.

He said: “This fervent commitment has resulted in the establishment of start-ups like the Climate Action Africa (CMA) Labs.

“It is a hub dedicated to addressing diverse challenges posed by climate change, including severe droughts, flooding, and the escalating agricultural complexities.”

Shettima, while stressing the imperative of global partnership, warned, “the stakes are high. If we fail to act now, the prevailing trend could imperil our attainment of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).”

In his welcome speech at the opening of the summit, the President of Cuba and Chair of G77+China, Miguel Diaz-Canel lamented the precarious situations faced by developing countries who are member-states.

He said that science, technology and innovation had only benefitted developed countries while the global South was largely still facing very serious development challenges.

The president, therefore, called for collective wisdom to address the challenges.

Also, the United Nations (UN) Secretary-General, António Guterres, acknowledged that there were development problems confronting developing countries.

He promised that the UN system would continue to work with the G77 and China to proffer solutions to these challenges.

Source: News Agency of Nigeria

AGF pledges continued publication of FAAC revenue distribution

The Accountant General of the Federation (AGF), Dr Oluwatoyin Madein, has reaffirmed commitment to upholding and promoting prudence, transparency and accountability in government financial transactions.

Madein gave the assurance in statement issued on Friday in Abuja by Bawa Mokwa, Director (Press), Office of the Accountant General of the Federation (OAGF).

She said that OAGF would take steps to permanently resolve observed and potential threats to efficient and continuous implementation of all the financial management reforms initiative of the Federal Government.

She said that she had undertaken in-depth review of the financial reforms and would leverage on the outcome of the review to inject new ideas and strategies for sustainability.

“Recently, the OAGF had meticulous engagements with Integrated Payroll and Personnel Information System (IPPIS) Service providers.

” I can assure you that there has been great improvement in the operations of the payment platform.

“Review of other financial management policies is underway. The objective is to give necessary revitalisation to these policies to make them to function optimally,” she said.

According to Madein, the OAGF will sustain the practice of publishing details of Federation Account Allocation Committee (FAAC) revenue distribution to the three tiers of government.

She said that the practice would keep Nigerians informed about the revenue generation and distribution efforts of the Federal Government.

“It will also help Nigerians to balance government performance with revenue inflows at all levels.

“Government can only thrive if the citizens are carried along in the management of public funds.

“Nigerians need to be aware of the inflows and expenditures.

“With this, they can compare revenue collected with the developments on ground to ascertain whether the government is performing or not,” she said.

Madein said that the 2022 revenue distribution figures were ready for publication, adding that publication of the details of revenue distribution so far in 2023 would also be made.

She expressed satisfaction at the level of interest shown by Nigerians in the revenue generation and distribution efforts of the government.

According to her, efforts are being made to ensure that revenue distribution figures are published monthly.

She said that there had been a remarkable increase in government revenue, and expressed optimism that the trend would be sustained.

“The OAGF will ensure prompt and continuous release of funds to MDAs and the three tiers of government so that development efforts will not be hampered.

Source: News Agency of Nigeria

MoHSS participates in NCUC at Windhoek Central Hospital

The Ministry of Health and Social Services (MoHSS) on Saturday announced that it has cleared two out of four blocks of the nurses’ homes at the central hospital in preparation for building renovations.

This follows the ministry’s previous statement that it would carry out general repairs on the nurses’ home and doctor’s quarters, as these buildings have been reported to be in a dilapidated state in recent years.

During an interview with Nampa at the National Clean-Up Campaign (NCUC) in the Khomas region on Saturday, MoHSS Deputy Director of General Services at Windhoek Central Hospital, Mercia Tjavara, emphasised that aside from health considerations, the campaign is aimed at promoting Namibia to become the cleanest country in Africa and worldwide.

‘I am honoured and grateful to participate in the NCUC, as it is everyone’s social responsibility to keep the nation clean. We come from an African background that teaches us to clean up after our mess, thus discouraging littering,’ Tjavara said.

At the same event, Nasilimwe Lubinda, a general cleaner at MoHSS, expressed her satisfaction with her role in setting an example for the nation regarding cleanliness, stating that Namibia belongs to all of us.

Lubinda pointed out that some of the cleanliness issues at the health facility are exacerbated by the nurses’ home residents, who allegedly litter outside their windows and balconies, as they are not monitored, leading to their ignorance about the environment. Furthermore, it is alleged that residents of the two remaining nurses’ blocks did not participate in maintaining the cleanliness of their surroundings, even after being informed about the NCUC by the Ministry.

Womba Nashiwaya, a member of the Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, expressed her regret that not all Namibians participate in cleaning campaigns like these and emphasised that, as a Christian, it is her responsibility to keep God’s creation as clean as possible.

Source: The Namibian Press Agency

Hishongwa laid to rest at Eenhana

Hundreds of mourners from all over Namibia, including Prime Minister Saara Kuugongelwa-Amadhila, gathered at Eenhana National Shrine on Saturday for the burial of Ambassador Hadino Hishongwa.

Hishongwa died at the age of 80 in the Medipark Private Hospital after an illness on 31 August.

As Hishongwa’s casket got lowered, he was given 17 gun salute.

President Hage Geingob said the late Hishongwa will be remembered for his devotion to Namibia’s struggle for Independence.

Source: The Namibian Press Agency

Dr Alpo Mbamba SSS scoops ACC song competition title

Dr. Alpo Mbambo Senior Secondary School from the Kavango East Region won the Anti-Corruption Song Competition (ACC) during a grand finale held in Swakopmund on Friday evening.

Monica Geingos and Angra Pequena Secondary Schools from Otjozondjupa and //Kharas regions secured second and third place respectively, followed by Mweshipandeka High School from Oshana Region in fourth place.

The competition, aimed at harnessing the power of art and raising awareness about corruption, its detrimental effects on society, and the need for collective action to combat it, was launched in July. A total of 55 schools from 13 regions submitted their entry forms, with the exception of Kunene Region.

Out of these, only 33 schools participated in the first elimination round, where 13 schools were selected for the inter-regional competition, from which the top four were chosen for the grand finale.

Speaking at the event, ACC Acting Director-General Advocate Erna van der Merwe, said the competition is one of the Anti-Corruption Commission’s initiatives to respond to the National Anti-Corruption Strategy and Action Plan (NACSAP) 2021-2025.

“From 03 August 2023, the ACC collaborated with key stakeholders such as the Ministry of Education, Art and Culture; Ministry of Information and Communication Technology, and the Namibia Broadcasting Corporation to promote a culture of integrity through the song competition by secondary school choirs in all 14 regions across the country,” she noted.

Erongo Governor, Neville Andre Itope, expressed that addressing corruption is not solely the responsibility of law enforcement agencies but should be a collective responsibility.

“Corruption has afflicted our country for far too long, hindering progress, eroding trust, and hampering the overall development of our nation. Issues such as bribery, fraud, use of office for gratification, and the misuse of public funds threaten to erode the trust between the government and its people,” he expressed.

The winners received a cash prize of N.dollars 25,000, followed by N.dollars 12,000 and N.dollars 7,500 for second and third places, and N.dollars 5,500 for the fourth-place winners. All prizes are accompanied by a trophy.

Source: The Namibian Press Agency

Shivolo and Shaliaxwe win Navachab half-marathon

Namibian Correctional Service and Namibian Police Force runners Martha Shivolo and Jeremia Shaliaxwe were crowned as the new champions of the Navachab half-marathon after dominating their respective categories on Saturday.

The ninth edition of the Navachab marathon saw over 600 athletes competing in the 21-kilometre (km) race, the newly introduced 10km race, and the five-kilometre fun walk and run.

Shivolo, representing Namibia Correctional Service and crowned as the women’s champion of the 2023 Nedbank Citi Dash a week ago, once again displayed her dominance by winning the women’s category. She completed her race in a time of one hour, 15 minutes, and 44 seconds (01:15:44).

Namibia’s representative at the recently concluded World Athletics Championships in Budapest, Hungary, Alina Armas, secured the second position, while veteran long-distance runner Beata Naigambo clinched the last podium spot.

Meanwhile, in the men’s category, Shaliaxwe became the first-time winner of the Navachab half-marathon, an event he has participated in on more than five occasions in the past.

Shaliaxwe finished ahead of his Namibian Police teammate Simon Matias, with Geson Koper from the /Karas region claiming the third position.

In an interview with Nampa after the race, Shivolo mentioned that this is the first time she has competed in a half marathon and expressed her excitement at being crowned the 2023 Navachab half-marathon champion.

“I enjoyed the run today. It was nice competing against the best as they pushed me throughout the race,” she said, adding that Armas provided strong competition on the day.

Shivolo stated that winning this marathon showed her that with hard work, one can achieve their goals. Therefore, she is determined to train hard in the half-marathon category so she can one day represent Namibia internationally.

Meanwhile, Shaliaxwe told this agency that he has competed in the half marathon before, but winning it means a lot to him.

“Since I started competing in this marathon, I have never finished on the podium, and doing it this year means a lot to me. The Navachab half-marathon is challenging as the route is not flat, and you don’t know when to push or slow down, but I am grateful for being crowned champion this year,” he said.

Source: The Namibian Press Agency