Tag Archives: Madagascar

Scientists describe Lavasoa Dwarf Lemur as new primate species

The island of Madagascar harbors a unique biodiversity that evolved due to its long-lasting isolation from other land masses. Numerous plant and animal species are found solely on Madagascar. Lemurs, a subgroup of primates, are among the most prominent representatives of the island’s unique fauna. They are found almost exclusively on Madagascar. The only exceptions are two species of the genus Eulemur that also live on the Comoros Islands, where they probably have been introduced by humans. Thanks to extensive field research over the past decades, numerous previously unknown lemur species have been discovered. Dwarf lemurs in turn received relatively little attention to date and the diversity within this genus is still not well known. Researchers of the universities of Mainz and Antananarivo have investigated lemur populations in southern Madagascar. Based on fieldwork and laboratory analyses, they now identified a previously unknown species of dwarf lemur. …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Phys.org

Shark kills girl swimming near beach on Indian Ocean island

Authorities on the island of Reunion in the Indian Ocean say a teenage girl was killed by a shark as she snorkeled just a few meters from the shore.

While the French island has seen occasional attacks on surfers farther out from shore, attacks on swimmers close to shore are exceedingly rare.

The regional administration for Reunion said Tuesday that the attack occurred Monday in a cove with no lifeguard at Saint-Paul, on the northwest side of the island. Reunion is east of Madagascar off the East African coast.

In a statement, the administration said the girl lived on the French mainland but was vacationing on Reunion. She was swimming with another girl who was not harmed.

Authorities warned swimmers to exercise the greatest caution in the area.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Madagascar candidates told to withdraw or face sanctions

A regional mediator in Madagascar’s political crisis, ex-Mozambican leader Joaquim Chissano, on Saturday warned three controversial presidential candidates to withdraw from running in the vote or face sanctions.

“If we could have the answer by the end of the month, it would be very good,” he told a press briefing after a five-day mission to the troubled Indian Ocean island.

The presidential election — meant to end a four-year deadlock — was postponed to August 23 after the trio’s candidacies and funding problems derailed plans for a July vote.

They include the current ruler Andry Rajoelina, who seized power from then-president Marc Ravalomanana in 2009; Ravalomanana’s wife Lalao who declared herself a candidate; and veteran leader Didier Ratsiraka, who was toppled by Ravalomanana.

Their candidacies have been internationally condemned and Chissano said the United Nations Security Council would be approached if they don’t back down.

If the trio stand their ground, International Contact Group on Madagascar will “strictly enforce” sanctions, warned Chissano whom the Southern African Development Community tasked as mediator in 2009 after the crisis.

The group in late June said it would call on the international community for sanctions that would include a travel ban and asset freeze on the leaders, their families, allies and business partners.

Then the Security Council “will be called upon to adopt a resolution for sanctions and the penalties will be mandatory for everyone,” he said.

The Indian Ocean island has been in political limbo since Rajoelina, a former disc jockey and ex-mayor of the capital Antananarivo, seized power in 2009.

He swore not to run but threw his hat in the race when the wife of his exiled rival Marc Ravalomanana declared her candidacy.

Both pose a legal problem, since he applied after the deadline and she had not lived on the island six months prior to the nominations, as the rules require.

Amid an internationally brokered roadmap aimed at steering the nation back to constitutional rule, Chissano told AFP that the change in attitude was “incomprehensible”.

“We had agreements that have been applauded…and were thrown in the trash,” he said.

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Madagascar villagers accuse army of mass killings

Villagers in southern Madagascar recall with bitterness the day the soldiers came and razed their homes to the ground, but the officer they accuse denies any responsibility.

“The soldiers arrived and started shooting,” said Tongnazy, a farmwoman from Voromiantsa, a village in southern Madagascar a two-day walk from the nearest major town.

“What did we do wrong?” I asked. “A soldier told me to ‘shut up’ and smacked my head with his rifle.”

“Then he said, ‘we are going to burn your village’.”

Preparing rice in a small dark hut she built after her home was razed, Tongnazy traces the origins of her ordeal back to 2012.

That was when the Malagasy military launched Operation Tandroka, a bid to end cattle rustling that has plagued the south and west of the island nation and fuelled inter-communal violence.

Their chief target was a near mythical bandit named Remenabila, blamed for mass rustling and the deaths of several soldiers.

He is accused of stealing countless zebu — humped mammals also known as Brahman cattle — a much-prized livestock on this Indian Ocean island.

A symbol of wealth, zebu are at the heart of southern culture — eaten only at weddings or special celebrations, sacrificed for ancestor worship or in burial rituals.

When southerners were starving after the devastation of Cyclone Haruna earlier this year, some preferred to eat crickets rather than their precious zebu.

But many observers believe that the operation to capture Remenabila — who remains the island’s most wanted man and has a $50,000 bounty on his head — got out of hand.

Amnesty International says entire villages were burned and accuses the “rampaging” security services of torture and mass murder.

Just months into the operation Amnesty reported 40 cattle thieves had been executed and an unknown number of elderly people, the physically disabled and children had been burnt alive as whole villages were razed.

While an international inquiry has been set up, it has not yet begun its work.

For Tongnazy memories are still raw.

“They took out all of our stuff, then they burned the house. My mother was there. They stripped us and told us to go into the bush.”

As Tongnazy speaks a few villagers listen on in silence.

Outside, the village is still in ruins. Only three earth homes have been rebuilt.

The story is echoed across several villages in Andriry, a region of arid mountains where Operation Tandroka was carried out and which is now replete with displaced people.

Villages of Remenabila’s ethnic group — the Zafindravala — were particularly targeted, leading to some allegations of genocide.

Two days walk from Voromiantsa a second village remains in ruins.

“Bevolotanana came,” a resident said, using the nickname of Colonel Rene Rolland Urban Lylyson, who led the operation. “He said, ‘I come to burn your house.'”

Lylyson’s name comes up frequently in conversations throughout this rugged region.

One man on crutches said he had lost everything. “I left. I was too scared. I had to leave my business. My plates. My food. They burned everything. Even my bed.”

Another day’s walk away, the village of Miary Omby is all but …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

New carnivorous dinosaur from Madagascar raises more questions than it answers

The first new dinosaur named from Madagascar in nearly a decade, Dahalokely tokana was a carnivore measuring 9-14 feet long. Its fossils were found in 90-million-year-old rocks of northernmost Madagascar, from the time when Madagascar and India were a single isolated land mass. Dahalokely is potentially ancestral to later dinosaurs of both regions, and shortens a 95-million-year gap in Madagascar‘s dinosaur fossil record by 20 million years.

From: http://phys.org/news285522002.html

UN report says 165 million children worldwide suffering from malnutrition

The United Nations Children’s Fund says that more than a quarter of children under age 5 worldwide are permanently “stunted” from malnutrition, leaving them physically and intellectually weak and prone to early death.

In a report published Monday in Dublin, it says better provision of vitamins, clean water and breastfeeding could have helped these 165 million children achieve normal brain and body development.

The 24 countries with high levels of stunted children are concentrated in Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia.

More than half of children in Timor-Leste, Burundi, Niger and Madagascar are stunted. The country with the largest number of stunted children is India with 61.7 million, or 48 percent of all Indians under age 5.

Ireland has brought together experts worldwide to discuss efforts to combat stunting.

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/world/~3/pu_Ch8lB7Rk/

UN report: 165 million 'stunted' children in world

The United Nations Children’s Fund says that more than a quarter of children under age 5 worldwide are permanently “stunted” from malnutrition, leaving them physically and intellectually weak and prone to early death.

In a report published Monday in Dublin, it says better provision of vitamins, clean water and breastfeeding could have helped these 165 million children achieve normal brain and body development.

The 24 countries with high levels of stunted children are concentrated in Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia.

More than half of children in Timor-Leste, Burundi, Niger and Madagascar are stunted. The country with the largest number of stunted children is India with 61.7 million, or 48 percent of all Indians under age 5.

Ireland has brought together experts worldwide to discuss efforts to combat stunting.

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/world/~3/aqQ9EqyN__8/

Cranston, Mikkelsen, Wilson Join Kung Fu Panda 3

The already star-powered cast of Kung Fu Panda 3 will see the addition of Bryan Cranston, Mads Mikkelsen, and Rebel Wilson.

They join the likes of Jack Black, Angelina Jolie, and Seth Rogen in the tDreamWorks Animation threequel. “Continuing on his now legendary adventures of awesomeness, Po must face two hugely epic, but very different threats: one supernatural and the other a little closer to home,” according to the studio’s official statement.

Given the $1.3 billion global gross and two Oscar nominations earned by first two installments, that story appears to be a recipe for success.

Even though Cranston currently portrays Walter White in the intense and dramatic Breaking Bad, his previous animation work on Madagascar 3: Europe’s Most Wanted and his comedic turn on the long-running Malcolm in the Middle make him a great fit for the silliness of the Kung Fu Panda movies.

Continue reading…

Source: FULL ARTICLE at IGN Movies

Sunridge Gold Adopts Advance Notice Policy

By Business Wirevia The Motley Fool

Filed under:

Sunridge Gold Adopts Advance Notice Policy

VANCOUVER, British Columbia–(BUSINESS WIRE)– Sunridge Gold Corp. (SGC:TSX.V/SGCNF:OTCQX) (“Sunridge”) has adopted a new policy that requires advance notice to Sunridge for nominations of directors other than by management, through a requisition for a meeting or by way of a shareholder proposal.

Among other things, the policy fixes a deadline by which holders of record of common shares of the Company must submit director nominations to the Company prior to any annual or special meeting of shareholders and sets forth the information that a shareholder must include in the notice to the Company for the notice to be in proper written form.

In the case of an annual meeting of shareholders, notice to the Company must be made not less than 30 nor more than 65 days prior to the date of the annual meeting, provided that in the event that the annual meeting is to be held on a date that is less than 50 days after the date on which the first public announcement of the date of the annual meeting was made, notice may be made not later than the close of business on the tenth day following such public announcement.

In the case of a special meeting of shareholders (which is not also an annual meeting), notice to the Company must be made not later than the close of business on the 15th day following the day on which the first public announcement of the date of the special meeting was made.

The new policy is intended to: (i) facilitate an orderly and efficient annual general or special meeting process; (ii) ensure that all shareholders receive adequate notice of the director nominations and sufficient information regarding all director nominees; and (iii) allow shareholders to register an informed vote after having been afforded reasonable time for appropriate deliberation.

The policy is effective immediately and will be placed before Sunridge’s shareholders for approval at Sunridge’s next annual general meeting of shareholders.

ABOUT SUNRIDGE:

Sunridge is a mineral exploration and development company focused on the acquisition, exploration, discovery and development of base and precious metal projects on the Asmara Project in Eritrea and exploration properties in Madagascar. Sunridge currently has approximately 175 million shares outstanding. Sunridge trades on the TSX Venture Exchange under the symbol SGC. For additional information on the Company and its projects please view the slide show on our …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Pacific climate swings found to affect Western Indian Ocean rainfall

(Phys.org) —Giant ancient corals off the coast of Madagascar have revealed that climate swings thousands of kilometres away in the Pacific Ocean have a major impact on rainfall variations in the Western Indian Ocean, adding new insight to managing water resources in a warming climate. …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Phys.org

Google Maps April Fools’ Day 2013: Search For Captain Kidd’s Long-Lost Treasure (VIDEO)

By The Huffington Post News Editors

Do you seek an adventure filled with travel, excitement and possibly, gold? If so, then Google wants you!

In 2012, the search engine was conducting an expedition off the coast of Madagascar for its underwater Street View collection when the divers stumbled upon antique treasure maps reportedly belonging to the infamous pirate, William “Captain” Kidd.

Google then digitized the maps and launched a worldwide treasure hunt. Decipher the maps, and you may just recover Captain Kidd‘s long-lost riches.

Read More…
More on April Fools Day

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

Eggs-treme: Christie's auctions super-sized egg

It’s a foot long, nearly nine inches in diameter, and would once have made a really, really, big omelet.

A London auction house is hoping buyers will be scrambling to take a crack at this natural wonder, a massive fossilized egg laid long ago on the island of Madagascar by a now-extinct elephant bird.

Christie’s said Wednesday that the oversized ovum — laid sometime before elephant birds were wiped out several hundred years ago — is expected to sell for up to 30,000 pounds (roughly $45,000).

Flightless, fruit-gobbling elephant birds resembled giant ostriches and could grow to be 11 feet high (3.4 meters). Christie’s says their eggs are 100 times the size of an average chicken’s.

The egg is being sold during a travel and science sale on April 24.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

A Crood Awakening for Wall Street

By Sean Williams, The Motley Fool

Filed under:

Surprise! DreamWorks Animation actually does know what it’s doing, Wall Street!

By the way the digital animation studio has traded over the past couple of years, you’d be under the assumption that either Disney‘s Pixar was mopping the floor with DreamWorks, or that DreamWorks’ successes were few and far between. In actuality, of the now 26 animated films that DreamWorks has produced, very few have failed to find the mark.

Out with the old and in with the prehistoric
Yes, Rise of the Guardians was a phenomenal, but rare, flop that caused DreamWorks to write down $87 million and was the primary cause of 350 layoffs within the company. However, early results from the release of DreamWorks’ The Croods show that this animator has once again stepped out of its cave and back into the limelight.

For the weekend, The Croods was the No. 1 box office hit — pushing Disney’s The Great and Powerful Oz down to third overall — bringing in $44.7 million in the U.S. and Canada, and an additional $63.3 million in international markets, according to DreamWorks. The combined $108 million is a fantastic start for a movie that cost $135 million to produce and could draw what I’d guess is an additional $30 million to $40 million in marketing costs. As noted by The New York Times, The Croods opening weekend figures are extremely similar to that of How to Train Your Dragon, which grossed approximately $500 million in total. However, How to Train Your Dragon received considerably better views from movie critics.

A definite improvement from a caveman’s tools
Still, this is an important step for DreamWorks in showing moviegoers and investors that it has the technology, partnerships, and the ability to connect with the viewer that made it great in the past.

It’s the company’s introduction of newer animation technology and its partnership with Hewlett-Packard , both in a personal desktop setting as well as in the cloud, that’s allowed the company to stand out. More seamless animation techniques, which can provide instant feedback, as well as the ability to retrieve data from the cloud in multiple locations, have drastically improved efficiency from a hardware and software perspective.

It also doesn’t hurt that DreamWorks has multiple successful sequel opportunities (Shrek and Madagascar worked beautifully, for instance), as well as content partnerships lined up to aid with marketing. DreamWorks has expanded on existing content deals with Netflix and even recently announced a streaming-based children’s series, Turbo: F.A.S.T. which will act as the perfect marketing ploy to CG animated movie Turbo due out later in 2013.

By the numbers
Taking into account the so-so reviews by movie critics for The Croods, it is quite possible that it may not hit $500 million in sales like How to Train Your Dragon. However, the Street seems to forget that a relatively early Easter will have children out of school next weekend, and ticket sales have a …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Afren Reports Earnings Up 95%

By Maynard Paton, The Motley Fool

Filed under:

LONDON — The shares of Afren  advanced 3 pence to 150 pence during early London trade this morning after the oil company reported annual earnings up 95%.

Afren, which has operations and investments in Nigeria, Ghana, Kenya, Madagascar, and the Kurdistan region of Iraq, said its normalised post-tax profits had surged from $125 million to $244 million.

The profit advance followed production improving from 19,284 barrels of oil a day to 43,059 barrels of oil a day, an increase of 123%. The greater production helped revenues climb 151% to $1,499 million.

Afren also revealed its net debt had decreased from $548 million to $488 million despite capital expenditure of $523 million during the year.

A dividend was not declared.

Osman Shahenshah, Afren’s chief executive, said:

In 2012 we achieved record financial results driven by strong production growth at our greenfield developments offshore Nigeria. We realized an E&A success ratio of 88% and a 2P reserves replacement ratio of 265%. We have started our 2013 multi-well E&A campaign with success at Okwok, offshore Nigeria, and Simrit-2 and Simrit-3, in the Kurdistan region of Iraq.

With a track record of project delivery, exploration success and strategic acquisitions, we are well placed to continue to create significant value for shareholders.

Looking to 2013, Mr Shahenshah reckoned production during could average between 40,000 and 47,000 barrels of oil a day, and predicted capital expenditure could rise to $620 million.

Based on today’s results, Afren’s £1.6 billion market cap is equivalent to about 10 times last year’s earnings. Of course, only you can decide whether that valuation and this morning’s figures both combine to make Afren’s shares a buy right now.

Whatever you decide, Afren’s shares have more than ten-bagged since their 2009 low and provide another example of how smart investors can make enormous sums from quality resources shares.

If you already enjoy an Afren investment and are keen to earn wealth-changing returns from the oil sector, this free Fool report should help you on your way.

The report explains the factors you must consider — and the risks you’ll encounter — when evaluating potential multi-baggers within the industry. The report also profiles one part of the sector that looks set to grow considerably.

Just click here to download the special oil report today — it’s free.

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The article Afren Reports Earnings Up 95% originally appeared on Fool.com.


Maynard Paton has no position in any stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

9 new wasp species of the genus Paramblynotus described from Africa and Madagascar

A newly published article “Revision of the Afrotropical Mayrellinae (Cynipoidea, Liopteridae), with the first record of Paramblynotus from Madagascar” by Dr. Simon van Noort, from Natural History Department, Iziko South African Museum, and Dr. Matthew L. Buffington from the Systematic Entomology Lab, USDA offers the description of 9 remarkable new species of wasps. Mayrellinids are extremely rare wasps, which are under-represented in museum collections. Most species are known from single specimens. The study was published in the open access Journal of Hymenoptera Research. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Phys.org

Monsters Vs. Aliens Animated TV Series Trailer

The hit animated film Monsters vs. Aliens is getting the TV show treatment, as Nickelodeon launches a new Monsters vs. Aliens ongoing animated series on Saturday, April 6th.

Prior to that, fans can get an early look at the series on March 23rd, when Nickelodeon airs a half-hour special premiere of the show, “Welcome to Area Fifty-Something,” right after the Kids’ Choice Awards. In the special, all is well at Area Fifty-Something with Team Monster, until a lone alien imprisons the President and makes a permanent home on base.

IGN has your first look at the trailer for the series. Check it out below!

Like the hit 2009 film (which grossed $383 million worldwide), Monsters vs. Aliens follows the further adventures of the beloved monsters- B.O.B., the gelatinous blob without a brain; Link, the prehistoric fish-man; Dr. Cockroach, the half-man/half-insect mad scientist; and Susan (aka Ginormica), the incredible growing woman-as they learn to adapt to a new world filled with bizarre aliens. This 26 episode series marks the third partnership between Nickelodeon and DreamWorks Animation, following The Penguins of Madagascar and Kung Fu Panda: Legend of Awesomeness.

Continue reading…

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at IGN Movies

President Obama Announces More Key Administration Posts

By The White House

WASHINGTON, DC – Today, President Barack Obama announced his intent to nominate the following individuals to key Administration posts:

Deborah K. Jones – Ambassador to Libya, Department of State
James Knight – Ambassador to the Republic of Chad, Department of State

President Obama also announced his intent to appoint the following individual to a key Administration post:

Lesley Weiss – Member and Chair, Commission for the Preservation of America’s Heritage Abroad

President Obama said, “It gives me great confidence that such dedicated and capable individuals have agreed to join this Administration to serve the American people. I look forward to working with them in the months and years to come.”

President Obama announced his intent to nominate the following individuals to key Administration posts:

Ambassador Deborah K. Jones, Nominee for Ambassador to Libya, Department of State
Ambassador Deborah K. Jones, a career member of the Senior Foreign Service, Class of Minister-Counselor, is Scholar-in-Residence at the Middle East Institute in Washington, DC. Previously, she was Senior Faculty Advisor for National Security Affairs at the U.S. Naval War College. From 2008 to 2011, she served as U.S. Ambassador to the State of Kuwait. Ambassador Jones joined the Department of State in 1982. Her additional overseas posts include: Principal Officer at the U.S. Consulate General in Istanbul, Turkey (2005-2007), Deputy Chief of Mission at the U.S. Embassy in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates (1998-2001), Consular Section Chief/Regional Counselor Officer at the U.S. Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia (1992-1994), and Consular Section Chief at the U.S. Embassy in Damascus, Syria (1990-1991). Her Washington assignments include: Director of the Office of Arabian Peninsula Affairs and Iran (2002-2004) and Acting Public Affairs Advisor to the Assistant Secretary for Near East Affairs (1994-1995). Ambassador Jones received a B.A. from Brigham Young University and an M.S. from the National War College of the National Defense University.

Ambassador James Knight, Nominee for Ambassador to the Republic of Chad, Department of State
Ambassador James Knight, a career member of the Senior Foreign Service, Class of Minister-Counselor, is Assistant Chief of Mission at the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad. From 2009 to 2012, he served as the U.S. Ambassador to Benin. His additional overseas assignments include: Team Leader of the Ninewa Provincial Reconstruction Team in Mosul, Iraq (2006-2007); Deputy Chief of Mission at the U.S. Embassy in Luanda, Angola (2004-2006); Deputy Chief of Mission at the U.S. Embassy in Praia, Cape Verde (2001-2003); Political Officer at the U.S. Embassy in Antananarivo, Madagascar (1995-1998); and Political, Economic, and Consular Officer at the U.S. Embassy in Banjul, The Gambia (1993-1995). In Washington, his assignments include: Director of the State Department's Office of East African Affairs (2007-2009) and Country Officer for Ethiopia (1998-2001). Ambassador Knight served in the U.S. Army from 1970 to 1973. He received a B.A. and an M.A. from Wichita State University and a Ph.D. from the University of Chicago.

President Obama announced his intent to appoint the following individual to a key Administration post:

Lesley …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at The White House Press Office