Km 40 Organic Farmers’ Group established

Tad Yuang Tourism Development Company has announced the establishment of the KM 40 Organic Farmers’ Group to promote commercial production of organic vegetables and fruits of KM 40 village, Paksong district, Champassak Province.

“The commercial farming of organic vegetables and fruits has plaid an important role in improving the living conditions of local people,” the meeting of the group was told on Wednesday, Jan 25.

The meeting was attended by Deputy Governor of Paksong district Sappathip Xayavong, Director of the Agriculture and Forestry Office of Paksong district Khamhou Moukdara, members of the group and representatives of relevant authorities.

President of the Tad Yuang Tourism Development Company and President of the KM 40 Organic Farmers’ Group Sonethida Ounaphom said, “Couple years ago, the Tad Yuang Tourism Development Company initiated the project, encouraging people in KM 40 village to form a group so that they and their fellows in nearby communities who are well-known for their hard working can generate more incomes and take part in developing Tad Yuang Waterfall in a participatory manner.”

“The villagers can generate secondary incomes from selling organic vegetables, fruits to the resort which can then be used for cooking healthy dishes for tourists, and to the Tadyeuang fresh market, or even to overseas market so that they can live a better life,” said Sonethida Ounaphom.

The group has 60 member families and comprises 4 sup groups of vegetable and fruit farmers. Most of its agricultural produce are planted in members’ coffee farmlands with a total area of 87 ha and sold to the Tadyeuang Tourism Development company at guaranteed prices.

The group has supplied more than 48 tonnes of vegetables and fruits to the company over the past 12 months.

Currently the group can supply only 24 kinds of agricultural products including 18 kinds of vegetables and 5 kinds of fruits to the company along with charcoal although the company needs to buy up to 44 kinds of vegetable and fruits from the group every month.

Besides from the incomes of selling their agricultural products, the member families are also given 200 kip per each kilo of vegetable and fruits they sell as their social security fund (10 million kip).

Source: Lao News Agency

Late Poet Credited with Rescue of Kashmiri Language

The literary world of Indian-administered Kashmir is mourning the death of a beloved poet and champion of the Kashmiri language, which he is largely credited with rescuing from obscurity.

Abdur Rehman Rahi, an acclaimed writer and professor of literature who died earlier this month at age 97, is being hailed as a living testament to Kashmir’s literary prestige who helped establish a unique identity for the once-endangered language.

“With Rahi’s death, we have lost one of the crown jewels from Kashmir’s literary landscape. His death marks an end of an era,” remarked Shad Ramzan, himself a highly regarded writer and Kashmiri-language scholar.

Rahi’s talents were recognized with numerous awards, including India’s leading literary prize, the Jnanpith Award, in 2007 for his poetic collection Siyah Rood Jaeren Manz (In Black Drizzle), and India’s fourth-highest civilian honor, the Padma Shri, in 2000.

But his more lasting legacy will stem from his tireless efforts to preserve and popularize the Kashmiri language, which is spoken today by some 6 million people in the Kashmir Valley and surrounding region.

The native tongue had fallen into deep decline in the decades after the end of British rule in 1947, with the federal government discontinuing its teaching in elementary schools in 1955.

The language “has always been given less preference from the rulers of the erstwhile state of Jammu and Kashmir. There is no mention from the political parties in their manifestos regarding the planning and development of the Kashmiri language,” says an article in the Interdisciplinary Journal of Linguistics, a publication of the University of Kashmir.

Ramzan says a key to Kashmiri’s renewed life was the establishment 1974 of a research cell for the study of the language at the University of Kashmir. Five years later, Rahi oversaw the conversion of the research cell into a full-fledged postgraduate department.

“Rahi introduced critical thinking of East and West poetry in the curriculum of the postgraduate program,” Ramzan said in an interview.

Continued agitation by Rahi and other scholars, social and cultural groups led to the language being taught more broadly, and by 2008, it had become mandatory in the former state of Jammu and Kashmir for students enrolled in kindergarten through eighth grade.

Outside the classroom, Rahi also worked to introduce the language to a global audience through his poetry. “He shifted the focus from the classical Kashmiri poetry that had previously dominated the literary landscape,” explained Salim Salik, an editor at the Jammu and Kashmir Academy of Art, Culture and Languages.

Muhammad Maroof Shah, another Kashmiri writer, agreed that Rahi’s success lay in his ability to write Kashmiri-language poetry worthy of international attention in the contemporary idiom. He praised Rahi for presenting the Kashmiri tradition in terms that could be understood and appreciated universally.

Despite his unquestioned literary genius, Rahi was criticized at times for not applying his talents to the political tensions that bedevil Kashmir, the focus of a long-running insurgency and repeated wars between India and Pakistan.

“I felt that he observed self-censorship fearing reprisal from both state and non-state actors,” said Bilal A. Jan, an award-winning filmmaker from Srinagar who directed a biographical documentary on Rahi’s life and works titled, “The Poet of Silence.”

“Rahi shared some incidents with me when he was threatened for his work,” added Jan, who told VOA he believes Rahi’s poetry was influenced by Marxist ideology while focused on the human predicament and day-to-day life issues of humans.

One of Rahi’s colleagues at the University of Kashmir, Shafi Shauq, challenged the notion that Rahi avoided the most challenging issues, saying, “One of his best poems is ‘Thyanvi Ros Sadaa’ (A Call without Sound) which speaks of the contemporary situation.”

Rahi was essentially a distinguished poet who tried to create his own style by mixing personally coined words, archaisms, allusions and verbal rhythms, Shauq told VOA.

“Although his popularity is based on a few lyrics sung by our best singers, the serious poetry contained in his three collections is beyond the comprehension of common readers. His two collections of literary essays are in keeping with his individual notion of poetic composition.”

Rahi is survived by three sons, all of whom work in the medical profession, and a daughter who worked for a time at the Jammu and Kashmir Academy of Art, Culture and Languages.

One of the sons, Dildar Ahmad, told VOA his father was a gentle and soft-spoken man who used to treat people equally irrespective of class, caste or age.

The daughter, Rubina Ellahi, said Rahi had been not only a father but also her best friend. “We used to discuss poetry for hours together,” she said in an interview. “He has left some unpublished work, which I will publish at an appropriate time.”

Source: Voice of America

Lao PDR: The First Country in ASEAN to achieve ICM’s midwifery education accreditation

The International Confederation of Midwives (ICM), an accredited non-governmental organisation representing midwives and midwifery to organisations worldwide, has officially made a decision to accredit three centres of excellence for midwifery education in the Lao PDR on 07 January 2023.

This follows an in-country visit to assess the three institutions in second half of 2022. The three institutes are the Colleges of Health Sciences in Champasak, Luang Prabang and Xiengkhouang Provinces. The colleges have met 35 out of a total of 37 Standards of ICM, with only two Standards partially met. It was a tremendous achievement by the colleges.

ICM’s Midwifery Education Accreditation Programme (MEAP) is based on international best practices in midwifery education and accreditation. Its goal is to evaluate pre-service midwifery education programs against the ICM Global Standards. The MEAP is also a benchmark for midwifery education programs that seek to meet international standards, and Lao PDR is the first country in ASEAN to obtain such accreditation.

Dr Bounfeng Phoummalaysith, Minister of Health congratulated all three colleges on their efforts to obtain International Accreditation. “The three Colleges received their National Accreditation last year, and their goal to achieve the MEAP status is also fulfilled. For Lao PDR, MEAP will help ensure consistency in midwifery education and identify best practices and gaps for partners/implementers to provide more focused, effective, and sustainable support for high-quality midwifery education.”

Source: Lao News Agency

Ancient Tomb Discovered in Egypt

An excavation team in Egypt has unearthed an ancient tomb containing a mummy believed to be 4,300 years old. It is among dozens of artifacts recently discovered.

After a year-long excavation, renowned archaeologist Zahi Hawass announced the findings at Gisr al-Mudir, also known as the Great Enclosure, one of the oldest known stone structures in Egypt. Among them – Khmumdjedef – a priest from the fifth dynasty, Meri, a palace official who held the title “keeper of the secrets,” and a man named Hekashepes.

“This mummy may be the oldest and most complete mummy found in Egypt to date,” Hawass said about Hekashepes, in a statement. Other major discoveries from the excavation included statues, amulets, and a well-preserved sarcophagus.

“I put my head inside to see what was inside the sarcophagus: A beautiful mummy of a man completely covered in layers of gold,” said Hawass.

Over the past week, researchers have made many other discoveries, such as dozens of burial sites from the New Kingdom Era, which dates from 1800 to 1600 B.C., near the southern city of Luxor.

Additionally, a group of scientists from Cairo University announced details Tuesday about a previously uncovered mummified teenage boy. Through the use of CT scans, they were able to shed new light on the boy’s high social status by examining the intricate details of the amulets inserted in his mummified body as well as the type of burial he received.

The Egyptian tombs are a large tourist draw and the North African country often advertises them as a way to bring in more money. The number of visitors, however, has been negatively affected since an uprising in 2011, the coronavirus pandemic, and, most recently, the war in Ukraine.

Source: Voice of America

Asteroid on Path for Close Call With Earth

An asteroid the size of a delivery truck will whip past Earth on Thursday night, one of the closest such encounters ever recorded.

NASA said it will be a near miss with no chance of the asteroid hitting Earth.

NASA said Wednesday that the newly discovered asteroid will zoom 3,600 kilometers above the southern tip of South America. That’s 10 times closer than the bevy of communication satellites circling overhead.

The closest approach will occur at 7:27 p.m. EST (9:27 p.m. local.)

Even if the space rock came a lot closer, scientists said most of it would burn up in the atmosphere, with some of the bigger pieces possibly falling as meteorites.

NASA’s impact hazard assessment system, called Scout, quickly ruled out a strike, said its developer, Davide Farnocchia, an engineer at the agency’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California.

“Despite the very few observations, it was nonetheless able to predict that the asteroid would make an extraordinarily close approach with Earth,” Farnocchia said in a statement. “In fact, this is one of the closest approaches by a known near-Earth object ever recorded.”

2023 BU

Discovered Saturday, the asteroid known as 2023 BU is believed to be between 3.5 meters and 8.5 meters feet across. It was first spotted by the same amateur astronomer in Crimea, Gennadiy Borisov, who discovered an interstellar comet in 2019. Within a few days, dozens of observations were made by astronomers around the world, allowing them to refine the asteroid’s orbit.

Earth’s gravity will alter the path of the asteroid once it zips by. Instead of circling the sun every 359 days, the rock will move into an oval orbit lasting 425 days, according to NASA.

Source: Voice of America

FAO strengthens agricultural development with MAF with signing three additional projects

The Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations (FAO) continues to support strengthening the Agriculture and Rural Development Sector of the Lao People’s Democratic Republic. Three new projects agreements were signed between the Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry (MAF) and FAO.

During the ceremony three projects on Strengthening Capacity for Planning and Development of Tea Master Plan; Mainstreaming Biodiversity across Agricultural Sectors; and Technical Assistance for the Development of National Action Plan for Sustainable Food System.

Dr. Phet Phomphiphack, Minister of Agriculture and Forestry, while speaking on the occasion emphasised that food insecurity is one of the global concerns that need to be handled strategically and the Lao PDR needs to take the same approach. This requires support from all relevant stakeholders, namely those from the government, academic and private sectors.

In this regard, the minister, expressed his appreciation of the long-standing support and contribution made by FAO to the agricultural sector. This support is helping to ensure the people in the country have sufficient and nutritious food to survive as well as to generate means to increase their income and improve their livelihoods.

Mr. Nasar Hayat, FAO Representative to the Lao PDR, noted that “FAO is always honoured to support the development of the Lao PDR through its agricultural sector”. He stressed that “the tea sector has remained underdeveloped largely due to fragmented information and lack of investment in key areas of the tea value chains, lack of long-term overcome, Lao tea growers will enjoy higher benefits”.

The FAO Representative also highlighted that “FAO aims to bring sustainable biodiversity-friendly practices to scale by integrating biodiversity in decision-making across policies, projects, economies and throughout society. Through biodiversity mainstreaming, agrifood systems have the potential to make a significant contribution to biodiversity conservation, sustainability, and restoration, and to the 2030 Agenda as a whole”. In addition, “with the effort to establish a national process and coordination mechanism as a follow up from the Food System National Dialogue, FAO also aims to help build capacities of MAF and other government ministries required to focus on priorities and implement key recommendations identified in the Synthesis Report 2021 (Pathways to Sustainable Food Systems)”, he added.

Mr. Nasar Hayat also reiterated FAO’s commitment of supporting the Lao PDR in achieving better production, better environment, better nutrition, and better life while leaving no one behind.

The event held on Jan 25 in Vientiane, attended by Director Generals and Deputy Director Generals and other colleagues from Department of Irrigation, Department of Forestry, Department of Forest Inspection, Department of Rural Development, and others.

Other FAO colleagues and development partners were also present.

Source: Lao News Agency