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  • A triptych mural painted by Kenyan and Ukrainian artists in Nairobi on March 10, 2023. VIKTART MWANGI-Photo Courtesy 
 
  • On March 10, a head-turning triptych mural was painted along Kenyatta Avenue, Nairobi. The paintings contained artworks depicting the Kenyan and Ukrainian flags side by side standing out boldly.

    This is the work of the ‘The Wall Project’ which consists of a collection of artists drawn from several countries including the two represented in the art.

    “The Wall symbolises resistance, stability, and armor that fences off Europe from the war,” read a statement from the Port website, a Ukrainian art agency.

    Ukraine's Ambassador to Kenya, Andriy Pravednyk
    Ukraine's Ambassador to Kenya, Andriy Pravednyk FILE
     

    The Wall has projects in Vienna, Austria, Marseille in France, Berlin in Germany, and now Nairobi, Kenya.

    A triptych is a picture or art piece on three panels and was a common format for altar paintings in the middle ages. Typically, the panels are hinged together vertically. 

    However, this is a triptych mural, which are three paintings covering the walls of three multi-storey buildings standing side by side.

    One of the murals showsf an African hand representing Kenyan people  shaking that of a Caucasian representing Ukrainian people.

    On the right side, it has a spear from the coat of arms of Kenya and on the left side, a trident from the coat of arms of Ukraine.

    The joint project of Kenyan and Ukrainian artists uses such symbols to show the friendly relationship between Kenyans and Ukrainians.

    The Wall presents art as a protest against the Russian invasion of Ukraine which kicked off on February 24, 2022.

    Kenya has a long history of trade with Ukraine. For instance, in November 2022, Kenya received 53,000 tonnes of wheat from Ukraine. 

    This is the second large mural in Kenya in recent months. In January 2023, a mural of marathon great Eliud Kipchoge was unveiled in Eldoret.

    Kenyan and Ukrainian artists paint a mural in Nairobi on March 10, 2023.
    Kenyan and Ukrainian artists paint a mural in Nairobi on March 10, 2023. TWITTER VIKTART MWANGI  -By Steve Thuku, Kenyans.co.ke
     
 

 

DAR ES SALAAM, March 7 (Xinhua) -- The government of Tanzania and the World Bank on Tuesday reaffirmed their commitment to supporting women in accessing and using digital technologies.

"Together, we can break down barriers and build a more inclusive and equitable future for women in technology in Tanzania," said Nape Nnauye, the minister of Information, Communication and Information Technology, at a one-day Tanzania Women and Technology Conference in Dar es Salaam held ahead of International Women's Day.

International Women's Day is marked globally on March 8 as a focal point in the women's rights movement, bringing attention to issues such as gender equality, reproductive rights, and violence and abuse against women.

Nnauye said his ministry has, starting the 2023/2024 financial year, planned to start the provision of short- and long-term training of up to master's degree level to 450 ICT professionals employed in government, mostly women.

He disclosed the ministry is in the final stages of developing a National Digital Economy Strategy that sets out strategies for a period of 10 years to ensure a digital society while fully thriving to eliminate ICT-related gender inequalities.

Nnauye said the tech industry still has a significant gender gap, with women underrepresented in leadership roles and the workforce as a whole despite the fact that females in Tanzania are the majority of citizens as was revealed in the 2022 population census.

He said that statistics by the Tanzania ICT Commission showed that there were 1,011 male registered ICT professionals and only 170 female registered ICT professionals. "Despite the increase in the use of ICT in many countries of the globe, women and youth participation remain low, especially in developing countries like Tanzania," said Nnauye.

Nathan Belete, the World Bank's country director for Malawi, Tanzania, Zambia, and Zimbabwe, said the bank was financing the Digital Tanzania Project, which it hoped to be an important driver for ensuring that more Tanzanian women are engaged in the digital ecosystem.

Belete said it is noteworthy that there is currently a good deal of activity and efforts underway to improve the participation of women in ICT in Tanzania. "Equally, however, there is much that could and should be done." - Xinhua

Aerial photo, taken on Feb. 5, 2023, shows makeshift houses of the Sirmaqabe IDP camp on the outskirts of Mogadishu, the capital of Somalia. /Xinhua

The Ongoing conflict in Somalia is worsening the humanitarian situation, making it harder for humanitarian organizations to access the populations in most need of assistance, aid agencies have said.

In a joint statement issued Sunday evening in Mogadishu, the Somali capital, local and international agencies under the umbrella of the Somalia NGO Consortium said the recently displaced 185,000 people due to the fighting in Las Anod in northern Somalia require urgent humanitarian assistance.

"Millions of people are at risk. There is no time to wait. Without urgently and immediately scaling up humanitarian assistance, hunger-related deaths are likely to be as high as those of the 2011-2012 famine in Somalia, when 260,000 people died, half of them children," Nimo Hassan, the director of the Somali NGO Consortium, warned.

According to the UN, Somalia is witnessing a five-year historic dry spell -- a situation not seen in more than 40 years -- and an expected sixth failed rainy season is bound to displace many more families, as famine looms on the horizon.

The agencies said about 6.5 million people need urgent and extremely high humanitarian lifesaving assistance in Somalia.

They said women and girls face increased risks of gender-based violence due to multiple displacements, overcrowded and poorly lit shelters and toilets in camps, and the need to travel long distances to fetch water and firewood.

The organizations said child marriage has become a harmful coping mechanism for families struggling with drought-induced poverty.

"The scale of this crisis is terrible, and the suffering of millions unimaginable. Women and girls are most at risk. We are morally obliged to do more to protect the most vulnerable. Somalia cannot be forgotten at this most critical time," said Paul Healy, the country director of Trocaire, an aid agency.

It is estimated that 1.8 million children under the age of five, nearly half of the country's under-five population, will likely suffer acute malnutrition as food security conditions deteriorate, according to the UN.

This, the agencies said, is gravely concerning, given that in 2022 more than 1,000 children died in nutrition centers across Somalia, noting that the figures are likely to be higher as there are many who never made it to the nutrition centers.  Source(s): Xinhua News Agency & CGTN

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