PowerChina soutient la formation de talents hautement qualifiés en Zambie

LUSAKA, Zambie, 6 janvier 2023 /PRNewswire/ — Sur la rivière Kafue, à environ 90 km au sud de Lusaka, capitale de la Zambie, la première centrale hydroélectrique à grande échelle de Zambie tourne à plein régime.

Mise en service en juillet 2021, la centrale hydroélectrique inférieure de Kafue Gorge, construite par PowerChina, prévoit l’installation de cinq turbines Francis, pour une capacité totale installée de 750 MW.

En plus d’avoir accéléré le processus d’industrialisation de la Zambie, cette centrale a également changé le destin de nombreux jeunes zambiens. Gift Kapanda, 35 ans, est l’un d’entre eux.

PowerChina Supports Cultivation of Highly Skilled Talent in Zambia

En 2017, la vie de ce jeune Zambien a pris un tournant inédit après sa visite de l’institut de formation Sinohydro, fondé par PowerChina dans le but de dispenser des cours de formation professionnelle gratuits afin de former des travailleurs qualifiés pour le projet hydroélectrique et de générer des talents pour des projets locaux en Zambie. M. Kapanda s’est inscrit à l’institut pour étudier l’ingénierie électrique et a commencé sa « transformation ».

Comme M. Kapanda, le destin de plus de 300 jeunes en Zambie a complètement changé grâce à l’institut de formation Sinohydro. Les compétences acquises à l’institut ont transformé leur vie.

Avec un investissement de 1,45 million de dollars, l’institut a été créé par PowerChina en 2017, et recrute des étudiants de toute la Zambie, leur fournit une éducation et une formation gratuites, un logement gratuit et des allocations de subsistance, dans le but de cultiver des talents qualifiés dont la Zambie a un besoin urgent dans le domaine de la construction d’infrastructures.

Jusqu’à présent, l’institut a formé 332 étudiants, dont 10 femmes, en tant que techniciens, qui sont devenus les piliers de ce projet ainsi que d’autres projets d’ingénierie en Zambie. La plupart d’entre eux travaillent pour le projet d’électricité après leur formation, a déclaré Fang Zhi, doyen de l’institut, à ChinAfrica.

« Avant, j’étais un électricien ordinaire qui ne pouvait faire que des câblages ou des réparations simples, mais c’est différent maintenant. J’ai reçu une formation professionnelle et systématique. À force de pratique, je suis devenu un bon ingénieur électricien », a confié M. Kapanda à ChinAfrica.

L’aide apportée par la Chine à l’Afrique a été faussement accusée de « néo-colonialisme », et l’image des entreprises chinoises en Afrique a également été déformée et diffamée. « Le fait est que les entreprises chinoises en Afrique emploient un grand nombre de travailleurs locaux grâce à la localisation des ressources humaines, ce qui favorise grandement l’emploi local, améliore le niveau de vie de la population locale, et renforce le sentiment d’appartenance, de bonheur et de responsabilité des employés locaux », a déclaré Zhou Qingguo, chef de projet du Bureau de la centrale hydroélectrique inférieure de Kafue Gorge, à ChinAfrica.

Depuis la mise en service de la centrale hydroélectrique inférieure de Kafue Gorge, plus de 10 000 employés locaux ont été embauchés, soit 90 % de la main-d’œuvre du projet.

Depuis son entrée sur le marché zambien en 2001, PowerChina s’est profondément impliquée dans le développement du pays. « En formant et en employant la population locale, il est possible de renforcer les échanges entre les peuples chinois et africains, afin de rapprocher davantage leurs cœurs », a déclaré Song Mingming, représentant national de PowerChina en Zambie.

Photo – https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1977060/PowerChina_Supports_Cultivation_Highly_Skilled_Talent_Zambia.jpg

SADC Essay competition winners receive award

Luanda – Southern African Development Community (SADC) announced the three Angolan winners of the 23rd edition of 2022 Secondary School Essay Competition on Friday.

The SADC Secretariat has allocated USD 1000 as prize money for national winners of the competition as follows: USD 500 for first prize, USD 300 for the second prize and USD 200 for the third prize winner.

The top three winners of 2022 Southern African Development Community (SADC) recently announced are:

In the first place was the student Casimira Pimenta in Angola’s Huambo province from the Secondary School Joaquim Kapango (12th grade), Irina Sardinha from the Commercial high Institute of Luanda (12th grade), and Ecliseaste Ricardo from Polytechnic Institute of Benguela (12th grade).

The competition takes place in two phases, with Irina Sardinha, second ranked in Angola, obtaining 10th place in the regional contest.

In 2022, under the theme: How SADC can increase production capacity in the face of Covid-19´´, 33 newsrooms competed across the country and the top three went to the regional competition.

Speaking at the ceremony, the Secretary of State for Pre-school and Primary Education, Pacheco Francisco, said he was pleased and called for more efforts by the sector in order to evolve and win better places.

To him, the creation of the competition, in 1999, helps young people to deepen their knowledge about the region and create proposals for mitigation, as well as stimulating reflection on the resilience of different sectors.

The ceremony also served to launch the 2023 edition, with the theme: How SADC can promote industrialisation for inclusive, resilient and sustainable economic growth.

The SADC Secondary Schools Essay Competition is a regional competition for students from schools and member countries to provide new opportunities for further knowledge.

SADC currently has 16 member countries.

They are Angola, South Africa, Botswana, DRC, Lesotho, Madagascar, Malawi, Mozambique, Mauritius, Eswatini, Namibia, Tanzania, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Seychelles and Comoros.

Source: Angola Press News Agency

Historically Black US School Leaps Into College Gymnastics

Jordynn Cromartie entered her senior year of high school facing a daunting choice, one countless other Black gymnasts have faced for decades.

The teenager from Houston wanted to attend a historically Black college or university. And she wanted to compete in the sport she’s dedicated most of her life to.

One problem. She knew she couldn’t do both, something Cromartie brought up over Thanksgiving dinner while talking to her uncle, Frank Simmons, a member of the Board of Trustees at Fisk University, a private HBCU of around 1,000 students in Nashville, Tennessee.

“He and my aunt were like, ‘Oh you haven’t made a decision, you should come to Fisk,’” Cromartie said. “I’m like, ‘Well, they don’t have a gymnastics team.’ To go to a college that doesn’t have what I would be working for forever was crazy to me.”

Simmons, stunned, made a promise to his niece.

“Watch,” he told her. “I’ll make it happen.”

In the span of a few weeks, Simmons connected Derrin Moore — the founder of Atlanta-based Brown Girls Do Gymnastics, an organization that’d been trying to drum up support for an HBCU for years — with Fisk’s trustees. One trustee listened to Moore’s pitch and offered to make a $100,000 donation on the spot if Fisk adopted the sport.

And seemingly in a flash, all the roadblocks and misconceptions Moore had encountered while spending the better part of a decade trying to persuade an HBCU to take the leap on an increasingly diverse sport evaporated.

On Friday afternoon at Orleans Arena in Las Vegas, barely 14 months after Fisk committed to building a program from the ground up, Cromartie — now a freshman at her uncle’s alma mater — and the rest of her teammates will make history when they become the first HBCU to participate in an NCAA women’s gymnastics meet. The Bulldogs will compete against Southern Utah, North Carolina and Washington as part of the inaugural Super 16, an event that also includes perennial NCAA powers like Oklahoma, UCLA and Michigan.

“I feel like it’s nice to show that Black girls can do it, too,” Cromartie said. “We have a team that’s 100% of people of color and you’ve never seen that before anywhere. … I feel like we have a point to prove.”

The face of high-level women’s gymnastics is changing. While athletes of color have excelled at the sport’s highest level for decades, participation among Black athletes has spiked over the last 10 years thanks in part to the popularity of Olympic champions Gabby Douglas and Simone Biles.

Black gymnasts account for around 10% of scholarships at the NCAA Division I level, an increase from 7% in 2012, when Douglas became the first Black woman win to Olympic gold. More than 10% of USA Gymnastics members self-identify as Black.

It’s a massive jump from when Corrinne Tarver became the first Black woman to win an NCAA all-around title at Georgia in 1989.

“When I first went to school, there were a scattering of (Black gymnasts),” said Tarver, now the head coach and athletic director at Fisk. “One on this team, one on that team … there wasn’t a lot of African-American gymnasts around back then compared to today.”

Still, it caught Umme Salim-Beasley off guard when she began exploring her college options in the early 1990s. Salim-Beasley grew up in the Washington, D.C., area and competed in the same gym as four-time Olympic medalist Dominique Dawes. Salim-Beasley wanted to go to an HBCU. When she approached an HBCU recruiter at a college fair and told the recruiter she was a gymnast, the response she received shocked her.

“They didn’t see it as a sport for women of color,” said Salim-Beasley, who ended up competing at West Virginia and is now the head coach at Rutgers. “And that was the perception, that gymnastics was not a sport that was welcoming or had enough interest from women of color.”

Which has made the response to Fisk’s inaugural class even more rewarding.

For years, Moore and Salim-Beasley — a member of the advisory council at Brown Girls Do Gymnastics — would struggle just to set up exploratory interviews with HBCU athletics officials. In the months since Fisk’s program launched, Moore and Salim-Beasley have talked to presidents at nine HBCUs.

“People are really interested,” Moore said. “They still have a lot of questions and still not pulling the trigger, but they are reaching out.”

All of which puts Fisk in an enviable if challenging spot. The program is a beta test of sorts as other HBCUs watch from afar to see how Fisk handles the massive logistical and economic hurdles that come with launching a program.

The Bulldogs don’t have an on-campus facility and are currently training at a club gym a few miles from campus, though they are fundraising in hopes of remedying that soon. They are competing this year as an independent while waiting to get their NCAA status sorted out.

And Tarver immediately threw the program into the deep end of the pool. Their inaugural schedule includes meets at Michigan, Georgia and Rutgers.

“It would have been really easy to just put in schools that were not as strong and then make our whole schedule like that and then just hope for the best,” Tarver said. “But I didn’t want to do that. I wanted them to realize that they belong on that stage.”

In that way, Tarver is following through on her recruiting pitch last spring, when she spent hours on Zoom asking young women of color to believe in something that had never existed before.

“Basically, I pitched them on the dream,” Tarver said. “I told them they’ll be a part of history. Their names will go down in history as the first HBCU ever.”

It proved to be a far easier sell than Tarver imagined.

Morgan Price initially committed to Arkansas so she could compete with her older sister, Frankie. Yet once Fisk announced it was going to take the ambitious step of competing in 2023, Price felt drawn to the opportunity.

“Since we are the first, it’s kind of special,” Price said. “We get to build it from the ground up.”

And yes, the perks of being the first don’t hurt. Several Bulldogs appeared on Jennifer Hudson’s talk show in the fall. An Emmy-winning documentarian is following them throughout the season. The splash on social media has been sizable.

So has the splash in real life. When Price returned to her club gym in Texas shortly after committing to Fisk, the energy she felt from younger gymnasts of color as they peppered her with questions was palpable.

“They were telling me, ‘I can’t wait until I can be recruited so I can be an HBCU gymnast as well,’” Price said.

That’s the big-picture plan. Moore is optimistic several HBCU schools will follow in Fisk’s footsteps soon.

They just won’t be the first. That honor will go to the women in the blue-and-gold leotards who will salute the judges for the first time Friday, as the team filled with athletes who “come from backgrounds where they were kind of told that they weren’t as good,” as Tarver put it, makes history.

Athletes who no longer have to choose between heritage and opportunity.

“Already being an HBCU, we’re the underdogs,” Cromartie said. “We haven’t had much time to practice. We don’t have the resources of other schools yet … but we are eager to prove we can keep up with everyone else. That we belong.”

Source: Voice of America

Bills’ Hamlin Breathing on His Own, Joins Team Via Video

It was uplifting enough for the Buffalo Bills staff and players to see Damar Hamlin appear on the video screen in the team’s meeting room Friday — “larger than life,” as coach Sean McDermott put it — for the first time since the safety collapsed and had to be resuscitated on the field.

What sent everyone’s emotions over the top was hearing Hamlin, his mouth and throat still raw shortly after having a breathing tube removed, softly say: ” Love you, boys.”

“Amazing. Touching. To see Damar, No. 1, through my own eyes, I know it’s something I’ve been looking forward to, kind of needing to see,” McDermott said. “And to see the players’ reaction. They stood up right away and clapped for him and yelled some things at him. It was a pretty cool exchange.”

Four days since his heart stopped after making what appeared to be a routine tackle in a game, the 24-year-old Hamlin from his hospital room in Cincinnati and the Bills enjoyed a moment of jubilation in celebrating the next step in what his doctors have termed a remarkable recovery.

“We got our boy, man. It’s all that matters,” left tackle Dion Dawkins said.

“To see the boy’s face, to see him smile and to see him go like this in the camera,” Dawkins said, flexing his muscles to mimic Hamlin, “it was everything. And then to hear him talk, it was literally everything. That’s what we needed.”

Hamlin is now breathing and walking on his own and traded in the writing pad he had been using to communicate. Though there is no timetable for his release, Hamlin’s doctors said Thursday that both breathing on his own and showing continued signs of improvement are the final steps for him to be discharged from the University of Cincinnati Medical Center.

Hamlin spent his first two days in the hospital under sedation. Upon being awakened Wednesday evening, Hamlin was able to follow commands and grip people’s hands. The breathing tube was removed, the team said Friday, and Hamlin’s “neurologic function remains intact.”

The team did not say whether Hamlin’s status remains critical or whether he’s been moved from intensive care.

“The hair on the back of my neck stood up when he said, ‘I love you boys,'” said general manager Brandon Beane, who returned to Buffalo Thursday after spending the three days at Hamlin’s bedside along with the player’s family.

The turning point in Hamlin’s recovery, for Beane, anyway, came Thursday morning when the two exchanged hugs.

“Just to be able to hug him and the grip strength that he had,” Beane said, before recalling what he told Hamlin’s father, Mario. “I told him, I’m not a crier, but man it was emotional and a lot of grown men in there [were] crying yesterday. Something I’ll never forget.”

The sight of Hamlin collapsing, which was broadcast to a North American TV audience on ESPN’s “Monday Night Football,” has led to an outpouring of support from fans and players from across the league. Fans, team owners and players — including Tom Brady and Russell Wilson — have made donations to Hamlin’s Chasing M’s Foundation, which had raised just short of $8 million by Friday afternoon.

Source: Voice of America

Duck Creek to acquire Imburse Payments, a modern payments platform

Strategic acquisition will add digital, out-of-the box payments capabilities to Duck Creek’s comprehensive suite of SaaS solutions for P&C and general insurers

Boston, MA, Jan. 05, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Duck Creek Technologies (NASDAQ: DCT) (“Duck Creek”), the intelligent solutions provider defining the future of property and casualty (P&C) insurance, today announced a definitive agreement to acquire Imburse Payments (“Imburse”), a Swiss-based modern payments platform.

Imburse’s cloud-native software-as-a-service (SaaS) payment solution is built for the insurance industry. The modern payments platform brings greater ease and efficiency into end-to-end insurance transactions. Imburse enables insurance carriers to quickly connect to the entire payments ecosystem at a lower cost, seamlessly integrate with existing finance infrastructure and processes, and manage multiple partners for collections and disbursements, all in one place. The platform is consumer friendly and provides policyholders with both an easy-to-use, flexible payments experience and the ability to quickly and securely direct payments.

As part of Duck Creek, Imburse will continue to serve its existing client base and markets, while accelerating expansion plans for new clients across Europe and into North America and Asia-Pacific. The Imburse platform will continue to be available on a stand-alone basis and will also be fully integrated with Duck Creek’s suite of technology solutions, further enabling carriers’ digital transformation goals with modern tools.

“Imburse has developed a great product for the global insurance industry that is not only easy to integrate and implement, but also gives carriers incredible flexibility and payment choices,” said Mike Jackowski, CEO of Duck Creek Technologies. “Imburse has a strong team that embodies Duck Creek’s core values. They have deep expertise across the payments ecosystem and will help to broaden Duck Creek’s insurance industry leadership.”

“Being part of Duck Creek will further accelerate our mission to simplify how businesses around the world access the global payments ecosystem,” said Oliver Werneyer, CEO of Imburse. “We are excited to be part of Duck Creek and to work jointly to deliver modern technology innovations that transform the insurance industry for the future.”

The acquisition remains subject to customary closing conditions and is expected to close during the second fiscal quarter of 2023.

Conference Call Information

Duck Creek Technologies will host a conference call today, January 5, 2023, at 5:00 p.m. (Eastern Time) to discuss Duck Creek’s financial results and business outlook, as well as the proposed acquisition of Imburse Payments. A live webcast of the call will be available on the “Investor Relations” page of the Duck Creek’s website at https://ir.duckcreek.com/. To access the call by phone, please go to this link (registration link), and you will be provided with dial in details. To avoid delays, we encourage participants to dial into the conference call fifteen minutes ahead of the scheduled start time. A replay of the webcast will also be available for a limited time at https://ir.duckcreek.com/.

About Imburse Payments

Imburse is a modern payments platform built for insurers. Via a single connection, directly or through a current core system provider, insurance carriers can access the entire global payment ecosystem to collect or pay-out using any technology, any provider, in any market.

About Duck Creek Technologies

Duck Creek Technologies (NASDAQ: DCT) is the intelligent solutions provider defining the future of the property and casualty (P&C) and general insurance industry. We are the platform upon which modern insurance systems are built, enabling the industry to capitalize on the power of the cloud to run agile, intelligent, and evergreen operations. Authenticity, purpose, and transparency are core to Duck Creek, and we believe insurance should be there for individuals and businesses when, where, and how they need it most. Our market-leading solutions are available on a standalone basis or as a full suite, and all are available via Duck Creek OnDemand. Visit www.duckcreek.com to learn more. Follow Duck Creek on our social channels for the latest information – LinkedIn and Twitter.

Attachment

Drake Manning
Duck Creek Technologies
drake.manning@duckcreek.com

Carley Bunch
Duck Creek Technologies
carley.bunch@duckcreek.com

Michael Sharp
Imburse Payments
michael.sharp@imbursepayments.com

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Principal Operadora da Ásia-Pacífico Utiliza o Synchronoss Email Suite para Apoiar o Crescimento Significativo de Mais de 50 Milhões de Usuários

Empresa Expande Implantação On-Premise Existente da Plataforma de Mensagens Mx9, Oferecendo uma Matriz de Novos Recursos para Garantir a Segurança, Privacidade de Dados e uma Melhor Experiência do Usuário

BRIDGEWATER, N.J., Jan. 04, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — A Synchronoss Technologies, Inc. (“Synchronoss” ou a “Empresa”) (Nasdaq: SNCR), líder global e inovadora em nuvem, mensagens e produtos e plataformas digitais, anunciou hoje a assinatura de um contrato de US $ 3,6 milhões para apoiar o crescimento significativo da base de assinantes de mensagens com uma das maiores operadoras de telefonia móvel e de telecomunicações da região da Ásia-Pacífico. Com base em um longo relacionamento de mais de 20 anos, a Synchronoss Email Suite agora passa a oferecer suporte a mais de 50 milhões de usuários.

A Synchronoss Email Suite inclui a plataforma de mensagens de núcleo Mx9 altamente escalável com uma arquitetura sem estado, projetada para ser tolerante a falhas. Ela integra a criptografia para garantir o máximo em segurança e privacidade de dados.

O Mx9 oferece uma interface intuitiva de usuário (UI) na web para e-mail, contatos e calendário. Através do recurso Huge Mail, o Mx9 dá suporte a grandes trocas de arquivos e integra o Razorgate, um recurso incomparável de filtragem de mensagens projetado para remover spam e mitigar a ameaça de phishing e vírus.

“Com suporte a implantações on-premise e na nuvem, a nossa Synchronoss Email Suite oferece a capacidade de fornecer um potente e fácil de usar pacote de comunicações escalável com capacidade de suporte de milhões de usuários”, disse Jeff Miller, Presidente e CEO da Synchronoss. “O crescimento e a expansão da nossa parceria com esta operadora líder da Ásia-Pacífico ressaltam o compromisso da nossa equipe de inovar continuamente e fornecer soluções altamente escaláveis que atendam às necessidades dos principais provedores de serviços de comunicação atuais de todo o mundo.”

Atualmente, a Synchronoss Email Suite dá suporte a 20 grandes implantações de e-mail por meio de provedores de serviços na América do Norte, Europa e Ásia-Pacífico, e hospeda mais de 180 milhões de caixas de correio. Para mais informação sobre a plataforma e outras soluções de mensagens, visite https://synchronoss.com/products/engagex/email-suite.

Sobre a Synchronoss
A Synchronoss Technologies (Nasdaq: SNCR) cria software que capacita empresas ao redor do mundo a se conectarem com seus assinantes de forma confiável e significativa. O conjunto de produtos da empresa ajuda a agilizar as redes, simplificar a integração e envolver os assinantes, permitindo novos fluxos de receita, redução dos custos e aumento da velocidade no mercado. Centenas de milhões de assinantes confiam nos produtos da Synchronoss que se mantêm em sincronia com as pessoas, serviços e conteúdo que elas gostam. Saiba mais em www.synchronoss.com

Contato de Relações com a Mídia:
Domenick Cilea
Springboard
dcilea@springboardpr.com

Contato de Relações com Investidores:
Matt Glover/Tom Colton
Gateway Group, Inc.
SNCR@gatewayir.com

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