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Showing posts with label NEWS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NEWS. Show all posts

Monday 30 May 2016

AMRI, SHERIA NA MAAGIZO YA BWANA YESU KRISTO

mathayo 7:21-23 ( 21 Si kila mtu aniambiaye, Bwana, Bwana, atakayeingia katika ufalme wa mbinguni; bali ni yeye afanyaye mapenzi ya Baba yangu aliye mbinguni.
 22 Wengi wataniambia siku ile, Bwana, Bwana, hatukufanya unabii kwa jina lako, na kwa jina lako kutoa pepo, na kwa jina lako kufanya miujiza mingi?
 23 Ndipo nitawaambia dhahiri, Sikuwajua ninyi kamwe; ondokeni kwangu, ninyi mtendao maovu.)
Na je kwanini uishi tu bila utaratibu..?? eti tumeokololewa kwa Neema..? unaweza kutenda miujiza mingi...! kwa kutumia jina la kristo YESU lakini mwisho wako ni mauti ukipuuzia Haya...
AMRI, SHERIA NA MAAGIZO YA BWANA YESU KRISTO
1.      Ni lazima kutubu. (Luka 13:3,5; Mathayo 4:17)
2.      Ni lazima kuzaliwa mara ya pili. (Yohana 3:3; Yohana 14:15-17)
3.      Ni lazima tuwe wenye haki kuliko mafarisayo. (Mathayo 5:20; Yakobo 1:22)
4.      Tusifanye uovu. (Mathayo 13:40-43)
5.      Tusiwe watu waovu. (Mathayo 13:47-50)
6.      Ni lazima tusamehe. (Mathayo 6:14-15)
7.      Ni lazima tumpende YESU KRISTO kuliko mtu mwingine yeyote na kuliko maisha yetu. (Luka 14:26; Mathayo 28:19)

Friday 3 April 2015

Monkeys 'hinder India internet drive'

Monkeys 'hinder India internet drive'

Macaque monkeys are considered sacred by Hindus, who often feed them
Macaque monkeys appear to have become an unlikely roadblock in the development of internet services in the northern Indian city of Varanasi.
The authorities in Varanasi have been increasing the network of optical fibre cables as part of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's plan of improving internet services in India.

Saturday 21 March 2015

Boko Haram crisis: At least 70 bodies found in Nigerian town


Chadian soldiers drive in the recently retaken town of Damasak, Nigeria, 18 March 2015. Chadian and Niger troops liberated Damasak, which is near the border with Niger, on Saturday

At least 70 bodies have been found dumped outside the town of Damasak in north-eastern Nigeria, after it was recaptured from Boko Haram militants.
The victims appear to have been killed some time ago, as the bodies were partially mummified by the desert air.

Thursday 12 March 2015

Morocco-Nigeria spat over royal phone call

Nigeria's President Goodluck Jonathan pictured in January 2015
Nigeria's foreign ministry says President Jonathan spoke at length to the Moroccan monarch
Morocco has recalled its ambassador from Nigeria, accusing the authorities there of using King Mohammed VI in an election campaign.
Its foreign ministry issued a statement, denying the king had spoken by phone to Nigeria's President Goodluck Jonathan, as had been stated by Nigeria.

Tanzania bus crash leaves dozens dead in Iringa

scene of the crash


The injured have been transferred to hospital

Two lorries and a bus have collided in Tanzania's highland region of Iringa, killing 41 people, police say.
The accident happened after a lorry driver swerved to avoid a pothole, the regional commander told the BBC.

Sunday 8 March 2015

Ukraine crisis: Russia condemns attack on Kiev embassy

Ukraine crisis: Russia condemns attack on Kiev embassy

Open source image of a lone T-64 battle tank in Snizhne, with no markings, Nato image  

A lone T-64 battle tank is shown in Snizhne, Ukraine, with no markings.

 

White House lockdown: Security alert sparked by souvenir truck catching fire

Friday 6 March 2015

Are smartphones making us STUPID?

'Googling' information is making us mentally lazy, study claims.
Smartphones are making us less able to think for ourselves, researchers have claimed.
A study has shown that people who have strong cognitive skills spend less time on their devices than those with less brain power.
Those who think in an analytical way also pick up their phone less frequently because they remember things or are able to work problems out for themselves.



Smartphones are making us less able to think for ourselves, researchers have claimed. Gordon Pennycook, a PhD candidate and co-lead author of the study, said that heavy smartphone users may look up information that they actually know ‘but are unwilling to make the effort to actually think about it’ (stock image shown)

Smartphones are making us less able to think for ourselves, researchers have claimed. Gordon Pennycook, a PhD candidate and co-lead author of the study, said that heavy smartphone users may look up information that they actually know ‘but are unwilling to make the effort to actually think about it’ (stock image shown)
         The study said that smartphones were making people lazier than ever as we saw them as an ‘extension of our mind’.

Monday 2 March 2015

Many South Sudan boys 'kidnapped to be child soldiers'

Child soldiers prepare to lay down their arms at a ceremony in South Sudan
The UN believes 12,000 children were used as child soldiers across South Sudan last year
Hundreds of boys in South Sudan have been kidnapped and forced to become child soldiers, the United Nations children's agency says.
The figure is a big increase on the 89 child abductions reported by Unicef last month.
Their latest statement blamed a militia group allied to the government.
South Sudan is in a state of civil war with forces loyal to President Salva Kiir pitted against rebels led by former Vice-President Riek Machar.

Saturday 28 February 2015

Robert Mugabe admits Zimbabwe's land reform flaws


Robert Mugabe Robert Mugabe has ruled Zimbabwe since independence in 1980
Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe has admitted failures in the country's controversial land reform programme.
"I think the farms we gave to people are too large. They can't manage them," the 91-year-old leader said in unusually candid comments.
In the past he has tended to blame poor agricultural productivity on the weather and Western sanctions.

Mexico president hails capture of drug lord Servando 'La Tuta' Gomez

Servando La Tuta Gomez after his arrest in Mexico City, 27 Feb 2015
"La Tuta" was one of Mexico's mostpowerful drug lords

Mexican police have captured the country's most wanted drug lord, Servando "La Tuta" Gomez.
Mr Gomez, leader of the Knights Templar drug cartel, was arrested in Morelia in Michoacan state without a shot fired.
He was taken to Mexico City, where he was paraded before television cameras, before being flown by helicopter to a maximum security prison.

Russia opposition politician Boris Nemtsov shot dead



Police stand around the body of Boris Nemtsov in Moscow, with St Basil's Cathedral and the Kremlin in the background, 27 February
Mr Nemtsov was shot on a bridge within sight of St Basil's Cathedral and the Kremlin

A leading Russian opposition politician, former Deputy Prime Minister 
Boris Nemtsov, has been shot dead in Moscow, Russian officials say.
An unidentified attacker in a car shot Mr Nemtsov four times in the back as he 
crossed a bridge in view of the Kremlin, police say.

Friday 27 February 2015

Ugandan gay people 'abused by police'

Ugandan gay people 'abused by police'

A Ugandan man who was seeking asylum in the US in 2010 because of Uganda's stance towards homosexuality
Some gay Ugandans have fled the country, saying they are being persecuted

Ugandan police harass and physically abuse gay people in custody, a report by a human rights group has said.
Chapter Four Uganda documented several cases of men suspected of being homosexual having intrusive physical examinations.

Tuesday 29 July 2014

Australia approves $15.5bn coal and rail project


Australia approves $15.5bn coal and rail project

Fish at the Great Barrier Reef 
critics fear the mine project will have an indirect impact on the Great Barrier Reef
Australia has approved a $15.5bn (£9bn) coal project, despite concern over its potential environmental impact.
The Carmichael project in Queensland would include one of the world's biggest coal mines and a new railway.
It would be overseen by the Indian mining company Adani, which has already won approval to build a new coal port terminal at Abbott Point in Queensland.
But critics have voiced concern over local water use and possible indirect impact on the Great Barrier Reef.
The decision to approve the Carmichael project, which will dig up and transport about 60m tonnes of coal a year for export, mostly to India, was announced on Monday.
Adani is yet to make a final commitment to the project, which would be biggest coal mine ever proposed for Australia.
Environmental impacts
Situated in the Galilee Basin in the central Queensland region, the Carmichael project would include open cut and underground mines.
Coal would be taken from the new mines by rail to Abbott Point coal port north of Bowen.
There are concerns that the mine, which will require some 12 billion litres of water every year, would drain groundwater supplies in the Galilee Basin.
But Australia's Environment Minister Greg Hunt said the approval had been tied to 36 "strict" conditions focused on conserving groundwater.
Separately, environmentalists are also concerned about extensions to the deepwater port at Abbott Point, where Adani already has approval to build a coal export terminal.
In January, Australian authorities approved the dumping of dredged sediment in the Great Barrier Reef marine park as part of an Abbott Point coal port extension project.
Map showing the location of the sediment disposal site
The extension will see Abbott Point become one of the world's biggest coal ports.

The decision was made by the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority even though some scientists had urged it not to back the project, saying the sediment could smother or poison coral.

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Violence keeps crews from MH17 crash site


Violence keeps crews from MH17 crash site

iol pic wld_UKRAINE-CRISIS-AIRPLANE_
An armed pro-Russian separatist is seen at the Malaysia Airlines Flight MH17 crash site near the village of Hrabove, in Ukraine's Donetsk region. 
Kiev - Fighting between Kiev forces and pro-Russian separatists on Tuesday prevented international investigators reaching the MH17 crash site in Ukraine for the third day running, the Dutch justice ministry said.