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  • Compared to Western nations, many areas of Africa lack extensive infrastructure, entrenched financial institutions, a high degree of political stability and/or large pools of capital. In most traditional senses, these challenges constrain opportunities for growth on the continent.

    Yet in many respects, they also create opportunities for the growth of blockchain technology. By design, blockchain frameworks thrive in environments characterized by many of the challenges that Africa and its residents face today.

    For this reason, blockchain technology is in a remarkable position to transform African societies and economies. The process is already underway as blockchain adoption grows within Africa, despite challenges like the difficulty of retaining African blockchain developers.

    Africa’s Challenges, Blockchain Solutions

    In several key ways, blockchain technology offers meaningful solutions to some of Africa’s most pervasive social, political and economic problems.

    Consider the following challenges that many African nations face and the ways in which blockchain technology can help solve them:

    Instability of central authorities: Unlike traditional currencies, blockchain-based cryptocurrencies do not depend on governments or the credit of the state in order to guarantee their value. They are also immune to localized inflation triggered by political crisis or war. These factors make cryptocurrencies like bitcoin particularly attractive within African countries that suffer from recurring political upheaval or military conflict.
    Lack of infrastructure: The exchange of data or property on the blockchain typically requires nothing more than an internet connection. A lack of highways, airports and other types of traditional infrastructure does not impact the efficacy of a blockchain.
    Lack of capital: Investment capital — whether for governments, businesses or individuals — is limited in Africa, due to a high dependence on non-Africans as a source of capital and a relatively small financial services industry on the continent. About 80 percent of sub-Saharan Africans are unbanked. Blockchain can solve this challenge by providing a means of exchanging capital without relying on traditional banks. Plus, because blockchains are not administered by complex bureaucracies, they can provide fast and cost-efficient access to capital, whether it is a microloan for an individual or a large government bond.
    Limited educational opportunities: Acquiring the specialized expertise necessary to work with many types of modern technology can be difficult in many parts of Africa. But because most blockchain technologies, such as Bitcoin and Ethereum, are open-source and fully documented on the internet, it is easy for anyone, in any part of the world, to learn how they work and develop business strategies based on them. In other words, access to information about blockchain technology is not a privilege reserved for people living in countries with strong educational systems in the same way that professions like engineering or medicine sometimes can be.
    Blockchain in Africa Today

    The application of blockchains as solutions to challenges within Africa is not just theoretical. A number of companies are already using blockchain technology to offer innovative solutions for people on the continent. While they work to solve Africa’s problems, they are taking blockchains in directions that could one day help people all over the world.

    BitHub.Africa is one example. Founded in December of 2015 and based in Kenya, BitHub.Africa offers consulting, development and support services to organizations working with blockchain technology on the continent. The initiative aims to promote blockchain use in a range of areas, from financial services to identity management.

    Bitland, a blockchain company based in Ghana, has a more specific focus. It is building a blockchain-based land management system, which will allow people to register property ownership via a blockchain, eliminating the need for reliable political authorities to guarantee property rights and confirm transactions.

    In the realm of financial transactions, the South African company Bankymoon is working to leverage Bitcoin and other blockchain-based cryptocurrencies to enable securities trading and electronic payments. The company is especially interested in using blockchain to extend financial services to populations whose access to traditional banks is limited.

    African blockchain developers are innovating in the area of education, too. Development group otlw, which was founded in Nairobi, is using smart contracts and blockchains to build solutions for assessment of educational content and to drive group learning.

    The Challenge of “Brain Drain”

    Although otlw was originally based in Africa, its team members are now spread between North America and Dubai. Their exodus from the continent is representative of a broader brain-drain challenge that Africa faces, as some of its talented, native blockchain developers move away to work in areas where blockchain technology is more established.

    In order for innovative companies like the ones described above to succeed in Africa, a critical mass of African blockchain experts needs to remain on the continent and education around blockchain technology needs to increase.

    Fortunately for these companies, some African blockchain developers have affirmed their commitment to do so, partially out of a principled commitment to improving their homeland through blockchain applications.

    And while the specter of brain drain is likely to remain a challenge for Africa as blockchain solutions mature on the continent, the momentum that African blockchain companies have already established in a wide range of niches suggests that the technology is on the path to innovative advancement in Africa, where it promises to help overcome significant roadblocks that the people there have long faced.
    Compared to Western nations, many areas of Africa lack extensive infrastructure, entrenched financial institutions, a high degree of political stability and/or large pools of capital. In most traditional senses, these challenges constrain opportunities for growth on the continent. Yet in many respects, they also create opportunities for the growth of blockchain technology. By design, blockchain frameworks thrive in environments characterized by many of the challenges that Africa and its residents face today. For this reason, blockchain technology is in a remarkable position to transform African societies and economies. The process is already underway as blockchain adoption grows within Africa, despite challenges like the difficulty of retaining African blockchain developers. Africa’s Challenges, Blockchain Solutions In several key ways, blockchain technology offers meaningful solutions to some of Africa’s most pervasive social, political and economic problems. Consider the following challenges that many African nations face and the ways in which blockchain technology can help solve them: Instability of central authorities: Unlike traditional currencies, blockchain-based cryptocurrencies do not depend on governments or the credit of the state in order to guarantee their value. They are also immune to localized inflation triggered by political crisis or war. These factors make cryptocurrencies like bitcoin particularly attractive within African countries that suffer from recurring political upheaval or military conflict. Lack of infrastructure: The exchange of data or property on the blockchain typically requires nothing more than an internet connection. A lack of highways, airports and other types of traditional infrastructure does not impact the efficacy of a blockchain. Lack of capital: Investment capital — whether for governments, businesses or individuals — is limited in Africa, due to a high dependence on non-Africans as a source of capital and a relatively small financial services industry on the continent. About 80 percent of sub-Saharan Africans are unbanked. Blockchain can solve this challenge by providing a means of exchanging capital without relying on traditional banks. Plus, because blockchains are not administered by complex bureaucracies, they can provide fast and cost-efficient access to capital, whether it is a microloan for an individual or a large government bond. Limited educational opportunities: Acquiring the specialized expertise necessary to work with many types of modern technology can be difficult in many parts of Africa. But because most blockchain technologies, such as Bitcoin and Ethereum, are open-source and fully documented on the internet, it is easy for anyone, in any part of the world, to learn how they work and develop business strategies based on them. In other words, access to information about blockchain technology is not a privilege reserved for people living in countries with strong educational systems in the same way that professions like engineering or medicine sometimes can be. Blockchain in Africa Today The application of blockchains as solutions to challenges within Africa is not just theoretical. A number of companies are already using blockchain technology to offer innovative solutions for people on the continent. While they work to solve Africa’s problems, they are taking blockchains in directions that could one day help people all over the world. BitHub.Africa is one example. Founded in December of 2015 and based in Kenya, BitHub.Africa offers consulting, development and support services to organizations working with blockchain technology on the continent. The initiative aims to promote blockchain use in a range of areas, from financial services to identity management. Bitland, a blockchain company based in Ghana, has a more specific focus. It is building a blockchain-based land management system, which will allow people to register property ownership via a blockchain, eliminating the need for reliable political authorities to guarantee property rights and confirm transactions. In the realm of financial transactions, the South African company Bankymoon is working to leverage Bitcoin and other blockchain-based cryptocurrencies to enable securities trading and electronic payments. The company is especially interested in using blockchain to extend financial services to populations whose access to traditional banks is limited. African blockchain developers are innovating in the area of education, too. Development group otlw, which was founded in Nairobi, is using smart contracts and blockchains to build solutions for assessment of educational content and to drive group learning. The Challenge of “Brain Drain” Although otlw was originally based in Africa, its team members are now spread between North America and Dubai. Their exodus from the continent is representative of a broader brain-drain challenge that Africa faces, as some of its talented, native blockchain developers move away to work in areas where blockchain technology is more established. In order for innovative companies like the ones described above to succeed in Africa, a critical mass of African blockchain experts needs to remain on the continent and education around blockchain technology needs to increase. Fortunately for these companies, some African blockchain developers have affirmed their commitment to do so, partially out of a principled commitment to improving their homeland through blockchain applications. And while the specter of brain drain is likely to remain a challenge for Africa as blockchain solutions mature on the continent, the momentum that African blockchain companies have already established in a wide range of niches suggests that the technology is on the path to innovative advancement in Africa, where it promises to help overcome significant roadblocks that the people there have long faced.
    DISTRIBUTED.COM
    Is Africa the Next Hub for Blockchain Development?
    Compared to Western nations, many areas of Africa lack extensive infrastructure, entrenched financial institutions, a high degree of political stability and/or large pools of capital. In most traditional senses, these challenges constrain opportunities for growth on the continent.Yet in many ...
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  • ለቅሶ ለመድረስ ለምትፈልጉ የለንደን ነዋሪዎች፥፥

    ሰሞኑን በለንደን በተከሰተው የእሳት አደጋ ብዙ ሰዎች ከዚህ ዓለም በሞት ተለይተዋል፥፥ ይህ አስከፊ አደጋ ብዙ ኢትዮጵያዊና ኤርትራዊ ወገኖቻችንን በሞት ነጥቆናል፥፥ በዚህ አደጋ ጥቂት የማይባሉ ለጋ ህፃናት ከወላጆቻቸው ጋር በአሰቃቂ ሁኔታ በሞት ተለይተውናል፥፥ ሀዘኑ የጋራ ነው፥፥ የወገን ህመምም የሁላችንም ህመም ነው፥፥ የወገን ስቃይ በእጅግ ያማል::

    በዚህ አደጋ የቅርብ ዘመድ የሞተባቸውንና እስካሁን ያሉበት ሁኔታ ያልታወቁ ወገኖች ቤተሰቦችን ለማፅናናትና ለቅሶ ለመድረስ የምትፈልጉ ወደ ሚቀጥሉት አድራሻዎች በመሄድ ወገኖቻችንን ማፅናናት ትችላላችሁ፥፥ እንደዚሁም የአቅማችሁን የገንዘብ እገዛ ማድረግ ትችላላችሁ፤፤

    የይስሃቅ እናት ገነት እና ቤተሰቧ ጋ እንዲሁም የብርክቲ ቤተሰቦች ጋ ለቅሶ ለመድረስና ለማፅናናት አድራሻው የሚቀጠለው ነው፥፥
    Dalgarno Trust,
    Dalgarno Way
    W10 5LE

    የሀሺምን ቤተሰቦች ከታች ባለው አድራሻ ማግኘትና ማፅናናት ትችላላችሁ፥፥
    ATM House
    Market Approach
    off Lime Grove
    Shepherd's Bush
    London W12 8DD

    ላልሰሙ ወገኖች አሰሙ፥፥ ለወገን ደራሽ ወገን ነው፥፥
    ለቅሶ ለመድረስ ለምትፈልጉ የለንደን ነዋሪዎች፥፥ ሰሞኑን በለንደን በተከሰተው የእሳት አደጋ ብዙ ሰዎች ከዚህ ዓለም በሞት ተለይተዋል፥፥ ይህ አስከፊ አደጋ ብዙ ኢትዮጵያዊና ኤርትራዊ ወገኖቻችንን በሞት ነጥቆናል፥፥ በዚህ አደጋ ጥቂት የማይባሉ ለጋ ህፃናት ከወላጆቻቸው ጋር በአሰቃቂ ሁኔታ በሞት ተለይተውናል፥፥ ሀዘኑ የጋራ ነው፥፥ የወገን ህመምም የሁላችንም ህመም ነው፥፥ የወገን ስቃይ በእጅግ ያማል:: በዚህ አደጋ የቅርብ ዘመድ የሞተባቸውንና እስካሁን ያሉበት ሁኔታ ያልታወቁ ወገኖች ቤተሰቦችን ለማፅናናትና ለቅሶ ለመድረስ የምትፈልጉ ወደ ሚቀጥሉት አድራሻዎች በመሄድ ወገኖቻችንን ማፅናናት ትችላላችሁ፥፥ እንደዚሁም የአቅማችሁን የገንዘብ እገዛ ማድረግ ትችላላችሁ፤፤ የይስሃቅ እናት ገነት እና ቤተሰቧ ጋ እንዲሁም የብርክቲ ቤተሰቦች ጋ ለቅሶ ለመድረስና ለማፅናናት አድራሻው የሚቀጠለው ነው፥፥ Dalgarno Trust, Dalgarno Way W10 5LE የሀሺምን ቤተሰቦች ከታች ባለው አድራሻ ማግኘትና ማፅናናት ትችላላችሁ፥፥ ATM House Market Approach off Lime Grove Shepherd's Bush London W12 8DD ላልሰሙ ወገኖች አሰሙ፥፥ ለወገን ደራሽ ወገን ነው፥፥
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    Seifu Fantahun: ሰይፉ ፋንታሁን ኢትዮጵያውያንን ጭምር ስላጠቃው የለንደን እሳት - ሊደመጥ የሚገባው
    Check Out Ethiopian News, New Ethiopian Musics, Ethiopian Comedy and More Ethiopian Videos by Subscribing Here: https://goo.gl/kATImk Unauthorized use...
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    Teddy Afro - Marakiye - Video from a young fan
    A video from Surafel Teshome. Thank You! Send your videos you made to [email protected] and we will share it as needed. More @ www.teddyafromuz...
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  • Three Ethiopian men stand accused of violently raping a women at a carnival in Mühlhausen last year. The woman told the court on Monday that she recognized the men.
    “Each of them raped me three times,” she said during her hours-long statement.

    The woman described how the men lured her into a secluded spot near the railway station during the Mühlhausen Carnival at the end of August last year, the Thüringer Allgemeine reports.

    ADVERTISING
    inRead invented by Teads
    The men then repeatedly raped her, sometimes as a group sometimes one after the other, the woman alleged.

    She said that she was pushed, beaten, kicked and had her hair pulled during the ordeal.

    The men forced her to have unprotected vaginal, anal, and oral sex, the 28-year-old said.

    She described how she had tried to run away before the rape, but that the men had taken away her phone as she tried to call for help. One of the men later used the phone to film part of the crime.

    Earlier in the trial, one of the defendants claimed that he had had consensual sex with the woman on the day in question.

    “I was very drunk at the carnival and I slept with her once,” said the 23-year-old. Two other men had been there at the time, but not the two co-defendants, he claimed.

    The other two men claim to have gone to bed early that night, refuting any connection to the crime.

    Prosecutors charge the trio with group rape and bodily harm. They say that the men strangled the woman, beat her and held her mouth closed in order to make her comply.

    The case against the men is based on DNA traces found on the woman, and the testimony given by the victim.
    Three Ethiopian men stand accused of violently raping a women at a carnival in Mühlhausen last year. The woman told the court on Monday that she recognized the men. “Each of them raped me three times,” she said during her hours-long statement. The woman described how the men lured her into a secluded spot near the railway station during the Mühlhausen Carnival at the end of August last year, the Thüringer Allgemeine reports. ADVERTISING inRead invented by Teads The men then repeatedly raped her, sometimes as a group sometimes one after the other, the woman alleged. She said that she was pushed, beaten, kicked and had her hair pulled during the ordeal. The men forced her to have unprotected vaginal, anal, and oral sex, the 28-year-old said. She described how she had tried to run away before the rape, but that the men had taken away her phone as she tried to call for help. One of the men later used the phone to film part of the crime. Earlier in the trial, one of the defendants claimed that he had had consensual sex with the woman on the day in question. “I was very drunk at the carnival and I slept with her once,” said the 23-year-old. Two other men had been there at the time, but not the two co-defendants, he claimed. The other two men claim to have gone to bed early that night, refuting any connection to the crime. Prosecutors charge the trio with group rape and bodily harm. They say that the men strangled the woman, beat her and held her mouth closed in order to make her comply. The case against the men is based on DNA traces found on the woman, and the testimony given by the victim.
    WWW.DAILYMAIL.CO.UK
    Woman, 28, 'raped nine times by three asylum seekers in Germany' 
    Laura G, 28, said asylum seekers Medhanie A., 29 (pictured), Dawit T., 22, and Isaak N., 23, took it in turns to rape her after luring her from a town fair in Mühlhausen, Germany, to a train station.
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