Ayoub mzee with Laura Vecrman- Captain of the Dutch fleet
LONDON, United Kingdom — The U.K. Ministry of Defence has placed the first order for a new generation of helmet-mounted displays developed by BAE Systems. The Royal Navy will purchase 12 remote sighting systems incorporating BAE Systems’ Q-Sight™ display, for its Lynx Mk8 helicopters.
“Q-Sight makes aviators more effective in many situations, including degraded visual environments such as brown-out conditions,” said Jim Garceau, vice president of defense avionics for BAE Systems. “Its lightweight design increases pilot comfort, and its wide field of view enables pilots to keep their heads up and eyes out of the cockpit while performing their missions. Q-Sight also provides important capabilities to other crew members, including door gunners and loadmasters
The 12 Gunner Remote Sighting Systems will be delivered to the MoD by May 2010, with initial systems delivered at the end of 2009 for training use. Deployment of the equipment will be worldwide and provide a significant capability enhancement for maritime force protection, counter-piracy, and counter-narcotics operations.
Captain Laura with her Crew
DSEi's truly comprehensive scale makes attendance a must for everyone in the defence, security and military aerospace community. Visitors come from UK and all over the world to experience first-hand the latest land, air and sea capabilities of more than 1,350 companies from 40 countries over four packed business day
DSEi's truly comprehensive scale makes attendance a must for everyone in the defence, security and military aerospace community. Visitors come from UK and all over the world to experience first-hand the latest land, air and sea capabilities of more than 1,350 companies from 40 countries over four packed business day
The world’s largest fully integrated defence and security exhibition, bringing together senior international trade and military experts from across the entire supply chain in an optimal business environment in happening in London.
The carrebean Pirates
The carrebean Pirates
THE PIRATES OF THE CARREBEAN
Ridhiwani Kikwete Msimamizi Mali
Wa Miradi yote ya UVCCM..
MTOTO wa Rais Jakaya Kikwete,Ridhiwani Kikwete(Pichani)amepewa wadhifa nyeti ndani ya Umoja wa Vijana wa Chama cha Mapinduzi (UVCCM), mali na miradi yote ya umoja huo zitakuwa chini yake.Kwa habari zaidi Bofya na Endelea....>>>>>>
Wa Miradi yote ya UVCCM..
MTOTO wa Rais Jakaya Kikwete,Ridhiwani Kikwete(Pichani)amepewa wadhifa nyeti ndani ya Umoja wa Vijana wa Chama cha Mapinduzi (UVCCM), mali na miradi yote ya umoja huo zitakuwa chini yake.Kwa habari zaidi Bofya na Endelea....>>>>>>
Greetings,
Just a reminder to say, there is just 7 days to go until the next event. If you have not yet confirmed your place, please do so as soon as possible. If you have already confirmed your place, I thank you and look forward to seeing you next week.
There are currently spaces available on Black Economic Empowerment course starting Wednesday 16th September 2009. If you are interested and would like more information, please contact us at http://uk.mc245.mail.yahoo.com/mc/compose?to=info@blackhistorystudies.com
Our next event presented by Robin Walker is titled:
Christianity in Early Africa
Africa was an early centre of Christianity. Many of the early Church Fathers were African as were the first Christian martyrs. This presentation tells their story.
This event will take place on MONDAY 14th SEPTEMBER 2009 from 6.45pm to 9.30pm.
The event will be held at the PCS Headquarters, 160 Falcon Road, Clapham Junction, London SW11 2LN, (3 minutes walk from Clapham Junction mainline station. Buses to the venue 35, 37, 39, 49, 77, 87, 156, 170, 219, 239, 295, 319, 337, 334, 345, C3, G1).
There will be an admission charge of £4 per person.
PLEASE ARRIVE AT LEAST 15 MINUTES EARLY. Refreshments will be provided. For further information and other enquiries about the event, you can call or text us on 07951 234 233.
In order for us to manage seating and room layout, we would be grateful if all who are attending this event could confirm their attendance in advance. Please confirm via email http://uk.mc245.mail.yahoo.com/mc/compose?to=info@blackhistorystudies.com how many of you will be attending this event. Please can you also notify any cancellations made after confirmation.
The book Before the Slave Trade and Learning Resource will be available at the event. Check out the website at http://www.beforetheslavetrade.com/ and watch the trailer for the book!
(Please note, photographs will be taken at this event and may be used for promotional purposes).
We would appreciate if you could forward this information to all who you believe will be interested.
We look forward to seeing you for another exciting night of Black History Studies.
Regards
Charmaine Simpson
Chief Executive
Presentation Dates for your diary:
- Monday 14th September 2009- 'Christianity in Early Africa'
- Monday 12th October 2009- 'The Amazing History of Black People in Britain'
- Monday 9th November 2009 - ' Tribute to Ivan Van Sertima and the New Concept of Black History'
*** The new book 'Before The Slave Trade: African World History in Pictures' by Robin Walker is now available! Check out the official website at http://www.beforetheslavetrade.com/
Check out these short trailers for the book
Before The Slave Trade Part 1- http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=SqPT3eTVekA
Before The Slave Trade Part 2- http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=VqQNZPPL1fg
Before The Slave Trade Part 3- http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=xljZ9bTC4jI
Black History Studies
Educating the community to educate themselveshttp://www.blackhistorystudies.com/
http://www.beforetheslavetrade.com/
Pichani ni Mwendesha pikipiki akiwa amembeba askari wa usalama barabarani ambaye hajavaa kofia ya kujikinga na ajali kama walivyokutwa Kariakoo jijini Dar es Salaam.Picha na Silvan KiwaleJust a reminder to say, there is just 7 days to go until the next event. If you have not yet confirmed your place, please do so as soon as possible. If you have already confirmed your place, I thank you and look forward to seeing you next week.
There are currently spaces available on Black Economic Empowerment course starting Wednesday 16th September 2009. If you are interested and would like more information, please contact us at http://uk.mc245.mail.yahoo.com/mc/compose?to=info@blackhistorystudies.com
Our next event presented by Robin Walker is titled:
Christianity in Early Africa
Africa was an early centre of Christianity. Many of the early Church Fathers were African as were the first Christian martyrs. This presentation tells their story.
This event will take place on MONDAY 14th SEPTEMBER 2009 from 6.45pm to 9.30pm.
The event will be held at the PCS Headquarters, 160 Falcon Road, Clapham Junction, London SW11 2LN, (3 minutes walk from Clapham Junction mainline station. Buses to the venue 35, 37, 39, 49, 77, 87, 156, 170, 219, 239, 295, 319, 337, 334, 345, C3, G1).
There will be an admission charge of £4 per person.
PLEASE ARRIVE AT LEAST 15 MINUTES EARLY. Refreshments will be provided. For further information and other enquiries about the event, you can call or text us on 07951 234 233.
In order for us to manage seating and room layout, we would be grateful if all who are attending this event could confirm their attendance in advance. Please confirm via email http://uk.mc245.mail.yahoo.com/mc/compose?to=info@blackhistorystudies.com how many of you will be attending this event. Please can you also notify any cancellations made after confirmation.
The book Before the Slave Trade and Learning Resource will be available at the event. Check out the website at http://www.beforetheslavetrade.com/ and watch the trailer for the book!
(Please note, photographs will be taken at this event and may be used for promotional purposes).
We would appreciate if you could forward this information to all who you believe will be interested.
We look forward to seeing you for another exciting night of Black History Studies.
Regards
Charmaine Simpson
Chief Executive
Presentation Dates for your diary:
- Monday 14th September 2009- 'Christianity in Early Africa'
- Monday 12th October 2009- 'The Amazing History of Black People in Britain'
- Monday 9th November 2009 - ' Tribute to Ivan Van Sertima and the New Concept of Black History'
*** The new book 'Before The Slave Trade: African World History in Pictures' by Robin Walker is now available! Check out the official website at http://www.beforetheslavetrade.com/
Check out these short trailers for the book
Before The Slave Trade Part 1- http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=SqPT3eTVekA
Before The Slave Trade Part 2- http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=VqQNZPPL1fg
Before The Slave Trade Part 3- http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=xljZ9bTC4jI
Black History Studies
Educating the community to educate themselveshttp://www.blackhistorystudies.com/
http://www.beforetheslavetrade.com/
As part the STS-128 mission's first spacewalk, astronauts Danny Olivas and Nicole Stott (right) removed an empty ammonia tank from the station's truss and temporarily stowed it on the station's robotic arm. Olivas and Stott also retrieved the European Technology Exposure Facility (EuTEF) and Materials International Space Station Experiment (MISSE) from the Columbus laboratory module and installed them on Discovery’s payload bay for return. Image Credit: NASA
Keynote Address
bH.E Ato Meles Zenawi,
Prime Minister of the FDRE
at
The Special Session of the African
Partnership Forum on climate change
Addis Ababa September 3, 2009
Your Excellencies, Ladies and Gentlemen.
I am delighted to be here with you, at what I consider to be one of the most important meetings of the APF precisely because this meeting will
discuss the issue that potentially poses an existential threat to all of us. I would like to thank the APF partners, the AU Commission, the ECA, and all those who have contributed to the meeting. In this regard, I wish to highlight my gratitude to my good friend Lord Nicholas Stern for educating me on climate change issues and for providing his invaluable contribution towards the elaboration of a common African position on the matter. I understand Africa's positions on the matter will be discussed in the afternoon session. I would therefore wish to deal with the general and overarching issues.
For the first time in its history, Africa will field a single negotiating team empowered to negotiate on behalf of all the member states of the
African Union. To that effect the Summit in Sirte has established a high-level committee to steer the process on behalf of Africa and I am delighted to be in that committee and as of a few days ago to chair it. This unprecedented move on the part of Africa is bound to pose a series of organizational and managerial issues precisely because we have no precedent to learn from. But I believe more important than the challenges will be the opportunities opened up by this decision. Over fifty countries, more than ¼ of the member states of the United Nations will be speaking with one voice. That should make the negotiations much more manageable than would have been the case in the absence of such a decision. Africa's interest and position will not be muffled as has usually been the case when each African country speaks for itself or tries to do so on behalf of Africa without the necessary mandate. I think it is in the interests of our globe as a whole that this bold new experiment of fielding one negotiating team on behalf of the continent succeeds. I would therefore hope that you will bear
with us as we overcome our teething problems and assist us to positively contribute to the success of the climate change negotiations.
As we discuss Africa's specific expectations from the climate change negotiations, we need to highlight what is often taken for granted and is thus often missed. Our interest is not to claim compensation for climate change and its damages. Our interest is to prevent that from happening in the first instance. That is our primary interest precisely because Africa's eco-systems are amongst the most fragile in the world and hence highly vulnerable to catastrophic changes due to small changes in temperature. It makes no sense to us for someone to make large parts of our continent unlivable and then pay some compensation for doing so. We understand that a certain degree of global warming is already happening and increase in global temperatures of about 20c are practically unavoidable. We will have to live with that because we do not seem to have any other option. We will live with the damage caused by the unavoidable levels of global warming and seek compensation and assistance to limit the damage. What we are not prepared to live with is global warming above the minimum unavoidable level. We will therefore never accept any global deal that does not limit global warming to the minimum unavoidable level, no matter what levels of compensation and assistance are promised to us. Africa, Ladies and Gentlemen, will squarely and unequivocally side with those who are committed to limit global warming to the unavoidable minimum level.
I am sure you will agree with me that we Africans have contributed virtually nothing to global warming and there is precious little that we can
do to curb it. But we have no intention to free ride. We want to keep our forests intact and re-afforest those that have over the years been degraded.
We want to do so precisely because such an approach is economically more rewarding and sustainable. We want to quickly adopt green technologies among other things because we do not have the dead weight of massive investment in dirty technologies. Africa is a green field for investment because it is the least developed region in the world. By partnering with us on green development, the developed world could create a more robust market and overall environment for the mitigation efforts that it alone must shoulder. In other words Africa wants to be part of the solution even on matters of mitigation if it is enabled and assisted to do so.
Your Excellencies, Ladies and Gentlemen.
Unlike the G-8 outreach programmes and the G-20 summits to which we are kindly invited by the organizers, programmes that I have had the
honor, and to some extent the misfortune of representing African in, we will participate in the upcoming climate negotiations not as invitees but as full blooded negotiators. We will participate in the negotiations not as supplicants pleading for our case but as negotiators defending our views and interests and reaching out to others to achieve our common positions. The fact that Africa will be represented by one negotiating team reinforces our role as key stakeholders and negotiators.
We as the prime victims of climate change and among the primary beneficiaries of a meaningful agreement on the matter cannot but be
responsible actors and negotiators. Even as we defend our corner we cannot but highlight our common humanity and destiny. We cannot but reach out to everyone to curb the insanity that is global warming. Africa's effective participation in the upcoming negotiations is thus bound to contribute to a more progressive and environmentally friendly outcome than would otherwise have been the case.
I do not want to be misunderstood. Africa will not be there to express its participation by merely warming the chairs or to make perfunctory
speeches and statements. We want to be and deserve to be in the thick of it all. We will not participate to merely adorn the positions of this or that party but to protect our common interest and within that common interest that of the specific interest of Africa. While we will reason with everyone to achieve our objective we are not prepared to rubber stamp any agreement by the powers that be as the best we could get for the moment. We will use our numbers to delegitimize any agreement that is not consistent with our minimal position. If needs be we are prepared to walk out of any negotiations that threatens to be another rape of our continent.
But with your support I know none of that will be necessary. I am confident that in the coming months we will be able to build the necessary consensus to prevent any such disruption. We wish and plan to engage you between now and December and I hope we will have fruitful discussions to facilitate a successful outcome in Copenhagen. I wish you all successful deliberations and a happy brief stay in Addis.
I thank you
Prime Minister of the FDRE
at
The Special Session of the African
Partnership Forum on climate change
Addis Ababa September 3, 2009
Your Excellencies, Ladies and Gentlemen.
I am delighted to be here with you, at what I consider to be one of the most important meetings of the APF precisely because this meeting will
discuss the issue that potentially poses an existential threat to all of us. I would like to thank the APF partners, the AU Commission, the ECA, and all those who have contributed to the meeting. In this regard, I wish to highlight my gratitude to my good friend Lord Nicholas Stern for educating me on climate change issues and for providing his invaluable contribution towards the elaboration of a common African position on the matter. I understand Africa's positions on the matter will be discussed in the afternoon session. I would therefore wish to deal with the general and overarching issues.
For the first time in its history, Africa will field a single negotiating team empowered to negotiate on behalf of all the member states of the
African Union. To that effect the Summit in Sirte has established a high-level committee to steer the process on behalf of Africa and I am delighted to be in that committee and as of a few days ago to chair it. This unprecedented move on the part of Africa is bound to pose a series of organizational and managerial issues precisely because we have no precedent to learn from. But I believe more important than the challenges will be the opportunities opened up by this decision. Over fifty countries, more than ¼ of the member states of the United Nations will be speaking with one voice. That should make the negotiations much more manageable than would have been the case in the absence of such a decision. Africa's interest and position will not be muffled as has usually been the case when each African country speaks for itself or tries to do so on behalf of Africa without the necessary mandate. I think it is in the interests of our globe as a whole that this bold new experiment of fielding one negotiating team on behalf of the continent succeeds. I would therefore hope that you will bear
with us as we overcome our teething problems and assist us to positively contribute to the success of the climate change negotiations.
As we discuss Africa's specific expectations from the climate change negotiations, we need to highlight what is often taken for granted and is thus often missed. Our interest is not to claim compensation for climate change and its damages. Our interest is to prevent that from happening in the first instance. That is our primary interest precisely because Africa's eco-systems are amongst the most fragile in the world and hence highly vulnerable to catastrophic changes due to small changes in temperature. It makes no sense to us for someone to make large parts of our continent unlivable and then pay some compensation for doing so. We understand that a certain degree of global warming is already happening and increase in global temperatures of about 20c are practically unavoidable. We will have to live with that because we do not seem to have any other option. We will live with the damage caused by the unavoidable levels of global warming and seek compensation and assistance to limit the damage. What we are not prepared to live with is global warming above the minimum unavoidable level. We will therefore never accept any global deal that does not limit global warming to the minimum unavoidable level, no matter what levels of compensation and assistance are promised to us. Africa, Ladies and Gentlemen, will squarely and unequivocally side with those who are committed to limit global warming to the unavoidable minimum level.
I am sure you will agree with me that we Africans have contributed virtually nothing to global warming and there is precious little that we can
do to curb it. But we have no intention to free ride. We want to keep our forests intact and re-afforest those that have over the years been degraded.
We want to do so precisely because such an approach is economically more rewarding and sustainable. We want to quickly adopt green technologies among other things because we do not have the dead weight of massive investment in dirty technologies. Africa is a green field for investment because it is the least developed region in the world. By partnering with us on green development, the developed world could create a more robust market and overall environment for the mitigation efforts that it alone must shoulder. In other words Africa wants to be part of the solution even on matters of mitigation if it is enabled and assisted to do so.
Your Excellencies, Ladies and Gentlemen.
Unlike the G-8 outreach programmes and the G-20 summits to which we are kindly invited by the organizers, programmes that I have had the
honor, and to some extent the misfortune of representing African in, we will participate in the upcoming climate negotiations not as invitees but as full blooded negotiators. We will participate in the negotiations not as supplicants pleading for our case but as negotiators defending our views and interests and reaching out to others to achieve our common positions. The fact that Africa will be represented by one negotiating team reinforces our role as key stakeholders and negotiators.
We as the prime victims of climate change and among the primary beneficiaries of a meaningful agreement on the matter cannot but be
responsible actors and negotiators. Even as we defend our corner we cannot but highlight our common humanity and destiny. We cannot but reach out to everyone to curb the insanity that is global warming. Africa's effective participation in the upcoming negotiations is thus bound to contribute to a more progressive and environmentally friendly outcome than would otherwise have been the case.
I do not want to be misunderstood. Africa will not be there to express its participation by merely warming the chairs or to make perfunctory
speeches and statements. We want to be and deserve to be in the thick of it all. We will not participate to merely adorn the positions of this or that party but to protect our common interest and within that common interest that of the specific interest of Africa. While we will reason with everyone to achieve our objective we are not prepared to rubber stamp any agreement by the powers that be as the best we could get for the moment. We will use our numbers to delegitimize any agreement that is not consistent with our minimal position. If needs be we are prepared to walk out of any negotiations that threatens to be another rape of our continent.
But with your support I know none of that will be necessary. I am confident that in the coming months we will be able to build the necessary consensus to prevent any such disruption. We wish and plan to engage you between now and December and I hope we will have fruitful discussions to facilitate a successful outcome in Copenhagen. I wish you all successful deliberations and a happy brief stay in Addis.
I thank you