‘Ozone-depleting emissions have stopped since scientists raised alarm’

‘Ozone-depleting emissions have stopped since scientists raised alarm’

Illegal emissions of an ozone-destroying chemical once used in refrigerants and foam insulation have virtually come to a halt, scientists reported this week, nearly three years after the rogue emissions were first documented. Researchers say the result is a major win for the international treaty that protects the ozone layer....

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Rugby Africa formally launches referees committee

Rugby Africa formally launches referees committee

Rugby Africa (RA) Referees Committee that was formed in December last year has been formally launched. The committee will, among other things, oversee the growth and development of the sport, besides enforcement of the rules of the game and monitoring playing trends on the continent. Speaking at the launch in...

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WHO Covid origin search draws a blank, scientists want the mystery resolved

WHO Covid origin search draws a blank, scientists want the mystery resolved

Scientists say that the hunt for the origins of the Coovid-19 pandemic must continue after a World Health Organisation (WHO) team’s visit to China produced no answers to key questions about how the coronavirus started infecting people. At a press briefing on February 9 in Wuhan, China, members of the...

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Terrorism? Day hacker tried to poison water supply of a Florida city of 15,000

Terrorism? Day hacker tried to poison water supply of a Florida city of 15,000

Around 8am last Friday, an employee of a water treatment plant in the 15,000-person city of Oldsmar, Florida, noticed that his mouse cursor was moving strangely on his computer screen, out of his control, as local police would later tell it. Initially, he was not concerned; the plant used the...

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Grey market: Incentive to produce charcoal illicitly or legally set to rise in Kenya

Grey market: Incentive to produce charcoal illicitly or legally set to rise in Kenya

Despite a longstanding moratorium on charcoal production and trade in Kenya, current high demand for the fuel that has been enforced by expansive alternatives such as liquified gas and kerosene has given rise to a booming ‘grey market’ that now threatens to exacerbate ecological degradation. Increased production and trade in...

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There are spying eyes everywhere – and now they share a brain

There are spying eyes everywhere – and now they share a brain

One afternoon in the fall of 2019, in a grand old office building near the Arc de Triomphe, I was buzzed through an unmarked door into a showroom for the future of surveillance. The space on the other side was dark and sleek, with a look somewhere between an Apple...

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Cocaine pipeline to Europe grows as drug peddlers target lucrative market

Cocaine pipeline to Europe grows as drug peddlers target lucrative market

Europe has emerged as the world’s leading illicit drugs market over the past eight years for cocaine and heroin produced in Latin America, a new report by the Global Initiative Against Organised Crime shows. With the traditional market in the Untied States of America having either shrunk due to unending...

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Centurion Plus launches Africa’s free trade area preliminary impact report

Centurion Plus launches Africa’s free trade area preliminary impact report

Long-awaited African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) that became operational January 1 this year, has published guidelines on how the world’s largest economic bloc by membership, will conduct business. However, it remains to be seen how the continent will resolve issues related to non-tariff barriers, such as infrastructure, that are...

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Forget blood, your skin is able to ‘know’ if you are sick

Forget blood, your skin is able to ‘know’ if you are sick

A river of biological information flows just beneath the outermost layers of your skin, in which a hodgepodge of proteins squeezes past each other through the interstitial fluid surrounding your cells. This “interstitium” is an expansive and structured space, making it, to some, a newfound “organ.” But its wealth of...

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On the trail of QAnon: How Trump turned conspiracy theory research upside down

On the trail of QAnon: How Trump turned conspiracy theory research upside down

For people around the world, the now-iconic images of a man in a horned headdress roaming the US Capitol during the January 6 insurrection came as a shock. For Kate Starbird, the images were frighteningly familiar. ‘QAnon Shaman’ – the online persona of Jacob Anthony Chansley, or Jake Angeli –...

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