Tag Archives: zambia

Baby Baller On The Way? Matt Kemp Confirms Whether Or Not His Girlfriend Is Pregnant With Their Child [Photos]

The end/beginning of the year is always prime time for celebrities to announce things like pregnancies or engagements, but is fine azz MLB baller Matt Kemp up next to take on the role of proud papa? This report started circulating via X17 Online earlier today, claiming that an unidentified “source” confirmed that Matt and his girlfriend of the last year are expecting… Baseball star Matt Kemp, 30, is expecting his first child with stylist girlfriend Nchimunya Wulf, 35, after keeping their relationship on the down-low for the past year, X17online can report exclusively. Kemp previously dated Rihanna and Khloe Kardashian, but his days of being a player seem to be coming to an end! A source close to the expectant couple tells X17online exclusively: “They’ve been living together for about a year and she’s four months along. They’ve gone on a number of trips together, and she’s even traveled with his family too. They may not be super public with their romance, but they’re head over heels and thrilled to become parents.” Earlier this fall the two traveled to her home country of Zambia to work with the Chipakata Children’s Academy Foundation, of which she is the Executive Director. Wulf recently returned to Chipakata, where she debuted her baby bump. Our source tells us: “Nchimunya was born in Zambia and she grew up in Kenya and Congo, so it really meant a lot for her to get Matt so involved with her charity. She’s also been on a handful of trips with his mother, Judy Henderson, so this isn’t coming as a surprise to those close to the couple.” The report quickly made its’ way around the internet, which prompted Matt to take to his Twitter shortly after to put an end to the speculation. Peep page 2 to see what he had to say, along with pics of the “baby bump” mentioned above.

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Baby Baller On The Way? Matt Kemp Confirms Whether Or Not His Girlfriend Is Pregnant With Their Child [Photos]

Michael Chilufya Sata wins in Zambia 2011 presidential election

According to the ECZ announcement, Michael Chilufya Sata amassed a total of 1, 150,045 votes, representing 43 percent of the votes while leader of the Movement for Multiparty Democracy (MMD) and incumbent President Rupiah Bwezani Banda got 961,796 votes, representing 36. 1 percent of the votes. Leader of the Zambian opposition Patriotic Front Michael Chilufya Sata has emerged winner of the Sept. 20 presidential race in the southern African country, the Electoral Commission of Zambia (ECZ) anno

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Michael Chilufya Sata wins in Zambia 2011 presidential election

Gates Foundation and Cargill paper to force soy monoculture into Africa

“The SOYA MODEL implies a war against the population, the emptying of the countryside, and the elimination of our collective memory in order to shoehorn people into towns and convert them into faithful consumers of whatever the market provides. The impacts of this model go beyond the borders of the new Soya Republics. The dehumanisation of agriculture and the depopulation of rural areas for the benefit of the corporations is increasing in the North and in the South.” – Javiera Ruli in United Soya Republics. The Truth about Soya Production in Latin America Read the Press Release here… http://www.biosafetyafrica.net/index.html/index.php/20100901329/The-Gates-Founda… The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation has announced a new project to develop the soya value chain in Africa in partnership with American NGO, TechnoServe and agricultural commodity trading giant Cargill. The US$8 million project will be implemented as a four year pilot in Mozambique and Zambia with the intention of spreading the model to other regions in the future. The Gates Foundation continues to back agricultural strategies that open new markets for strong corporate interests while assisting in the creation of policy environments to support foreign agribusiness’ interests. The programme will yoke African farmers into the soya value chain and open the door for major agribusiness players such as Cargill, while displacing African agricultural practices and traditional crops. In addition, there is a very real threat that this project could be a foot in the door for the introduction of genetically modified soya onto the Continent. Since the green revolution of the 1960s, the soya bean has become the number one forage crop on the international market. About 85% of the world’s soybeans are processed into soya bean meal and oil, about 98% of that meal is further processed into animal feed, the balance is used to make soya flour and proteins. Approximately 95% of the oil is consumed as edible oil with the rest being used for industrial products such as fatty acids, soaps and agrofuel. In the last 40 years, production of soya bean has increased by over 500%, driven by the growing affluence of Chinese consumers, who are now eating more meat than ever before, as well as a significant increase in demand for soya beans as feedstock for biodiesel. In addition, soya beans fix nitrogen in the soil, thereby improving soil fertility and making it an excellent rotation crop. The United States, Argentina and Brazil are the three major producers of soya in the world. The aggressive expansion of soya monocrops in Latin America has wreaked socio-economic and environmental disaster – in 2008 over 30 million hectares of soya was grown in Brazil and Argentina, where soya monocrops are notorious for displacing rural populations and causing mass deforestation. In April 2006, Greenpeace announced that in the 2004/2005 growing season, 1.2 million hectares of the Amazon rainforest was deforested as a consequence of soya expansion. The vast majority of global soya crops are genetically modified to withstand applications of herbicides. (Approximately 93% of soya production in the USA is GM, 98.9% in Argentina and 70.7% in Brazil). The introduction of herbicide tolerant soya has created a sharp increase in the use of highly toxic herbicides – in the USA the use of herbicides has increased by 382.6 million pounds over the past 13 years, with herbicide tolerant soya beans accounting for 92% of that increase. No multinational on the planet has greater interests in soya production and trade than the American corporation Cargill. Cargill’s business operations include purchasing, processing and distributing grain and agricultural commodities, the manufacture and sale of livestock feed and ingredients for processed foods and pharmaceuticals. Their assets and business operations in Latin America are staggering; it is responsible for over 75% of Argentina’s grain and oilseed production. It also has great interest in fertiliser production, having a two-thirds stake in one of the world’s leading fertiliser companies, Mosaic. Their business interests in Africa are scant in contrast. It has now partnered with the Gates Foundation to introduce a soya value chain in Africa. cont. added by: JanforGore

Miss Universe 2010 winners

This year’s batch of candidates include 83 women from Albania to Zambia who are all vying for the title to be vacated by Miss Venezuela Stefania Fernandez, who was crowned Miss Universe at 18 years old when the event was held in Bahamas last year. An online poll held in the run up to the pageant night shows Miss Philippines Venus Raj, Miss Bolivia Claudia Arce Lemaitre, and Miss Venezuela Marelisa Gibson among the leading vote getters. It will be a battle of beauty and brains when the Miss Univ

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Miss Universe 2010 winners

REVIEW: Ridiculous Twelve Overdoses on Utter Vapidity

For a film meant to delve into the experience of being young, rich, and messed up in New York City, Twelve rarely lets its subjects open their mouths. Instead it plays like the filmstrip an anthropology student from Zambia might make about Upper East Side teenagers after a semester of research involving nothing but episodes of Dragnet and Gossip Girl . And maybe The Rules of Attraction , the atrocious 2002 adaptation of Bret Easton Ellis’s novel of the same name. Over-narrated by Kiefer Sutherland in full “this is extremely important and also very, very cool” mode, from its first self-important minutes Twelve seems as if it can’t possibly be serious. Would that it were not.

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REVIEW: Ridiculous Twelve Overdoses on Utter Vapidity