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Emmerson Mnangagwa sworn in as new leader of Zimbabwe

Zimbabwe’s new President Emmerson Mnangagwa vowed sweeping change at his swearing in on Friday, seeking to reassure foreign investors and pledging to fight poverty and corruption after Robert Mugabe’s shock resignation.

In his inaugural address, Mnangagwa set out a program of dramatic change that promised a stark reversal of many of Mugabe’s signature policies.

He pledged that his government would compensate white farmers whose land was seized by Mugabe, protect international investments in the country, and re-engage with foreign powers.

Elections scheduled for 2018 would go ahead as planned, he said.

“I humbly appeal to all of us that we let bygones be bygones,” he said at the ceremony in the 60,000-seat national stadium in Harare, which was packed to capacity.

“We must work together — you, me, all of us who make this nation.

“I stand here today, to say that our country is ready for a sturdy re-engagement program with all the nations of the world,” he said.

After reciting the oath of office, the 75-year-old leader was given a ceremonial chain and sash of office flanked by his wife Auxilia, receiving salutes and pledges of allegiance from the country’s military and security chiefs.

Mnangagwa also used his speech to pay tribute to Mugabe, describing him as one of the “founding fathers of our nation”. (AFP)

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How A Dating App In India Is Helping Disabled People To Find Their Love Match

Inclov, which has created opportunities for India’s 26.8 million disabled people to strike up relationships, has helped 6000 people to meet their spouses.

Launched in 2016, Inclov, which has around 19,000 registered app users, also organizes offline meetup.

Online dating is a common route for many to meet new people, one of whom, you hope, will be your potential partner. But when you’re disabled, forming a romantic relationship online can be one of the hardest things, especially in India, where discrimination and stigma make them among the most excluded.

Opening up possibilities for India’s 26.8 million disabled people, of whom over 40% never marry according to 2011 census, led Kalyani Khona and Shankar Srinivasan to launch Inclov — the world’s first matchmaking mobile app for people with disabilities and health disorders.

“I was disheartened by the general attitude of people in matrimonial portals towards those with physical impairment or disability,” says Khona.

Since many disabled people fear being judged on regular dating websites,  Khona says the option of a matchmaking app offering them the chance to meet others facing a similar challenge is welcome. “There are many dating apps in the market but Inclov is a truly inclusive platform to find love. We even have people without any disabilities.”

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Japan is building the fastest supercomputer in the world

Japan is aiming to regain the edge in technology innovation which it lost to China and South Korea, by building the world’s fastest computer.

The Japanese government is to spend 19.5 billion yen ($173 million) on creating the fastest supercomputer known to man with a 130 petaflops processing power that would propel the country into a new technological era.

Currently China’s Sunway TaihuLight holds the record with 93 petaflops capacity, churning calculations at the rate of 93 quadrillion per second.

Engineering and Technology reports:

The computer, to be capable of 130 quadrillion calculations per second, will be available for a fee to Japanese companies developing driverless cars, robots, medical diagnostics and other systems.

“As far as we know, there is nothing out there that is as fast,” said Satoshi Sekiguchi, a director general at Japan’s National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, where the computer will be based.

The currently fastest supercomputer in the world is China’s Sunway Taihulight, which is used for weather forecasting, pharmaceutical research and industrial design, but is only capable of 93 quadrillion calculations per second.

The fastest supercomputer ever built in Japan, the Oakforest-PACS developed by Fujistsu, is only capable of 13.6 petaflops.

The new machine, dubbed ABCI for Artificial Intelligence Bridging Cloud Infrastructure, will be completed by the end of 2017. It will provide Japanese innovators with a domestic capability to perform complex analyses involving massive amounts of data. Japan also hopes to advance in the field of artificial intelligence and deep learning, which mimics processes in the human brain to develop smart computer systems.

The technology will help create better algorithms for self-driving cars, capable of analysing large amounts of visual traffic data, and optimise factory automation.

Japanese companies can bid for the project until 8 December.

SOURCE : yournewswire.com

Theresa May to advise tech firms over apprehension content

Technology companies must go “further and faster” in removing extremist content, Prime Minister Theresa May is to tell the United Nations.

She will urge social networks and search engines to act when she addresses the general assembly.

Mrs May will also host a meeting with other world leaders and firms including Facebook, Microsoft and Twitter.

Separately, tech giant Google has said it will give a total of £1m to fund counter-terrorism projects in the UK.

  • Google launches UK ‘anti-terror fund’
  • Politicians take on the internet over extremism

The prime minister has repeatedly called for an end to the “safe spaces” she says terrorists enjoy online.

Ministers have called for limits to end-to-end encryption, which stops messages being read by third parties if they are intercepted, and measures to curb the spread of material on social media.

On Wednesday, the prime minister will hail progress made by tech companies since the establishment in June of an industry forum to counter terrorism.

But she will urge them to go “further and faster” in developing artificial intelligence solutions to automatically reduce the period in which terror propaganda remains available, and eventually prevent it appearing at all.

The UK, France and Italy are to call for a target of one to two hours to take down terrorist content wherever it appears.

 

READ MORE: http://www.bbc.com/news/uk-politics-41327816

Russia Accuses U.S. of working with Al-Qaeda Affiliate

Russia’s military has accused U.S. intelligence of ordering militants affiliated with Al-Qaeda to attack government forces in order to divert their attention from a battle they are fighting against the Islamic State militant group (ISIS). Bashar AL-Assad’s regime is battling ISIS in Deir Ezzor, once a stronghold of Islamist extremists.

Since officially entering the Syrian conflict to support Assad’s faltering regime in late 2015, Russia has repeatedly said it is fighting “terrorism,” though its broad definition of the term includes no explicit list of organization. Instead, the groups they consider “terrorists” are frequently groups supported by Western forces, and are determined via the judgment of Assad’s forces, by the Kremlin’s own admission.

The U.S. initially provided logistical support for moderate anti-Assad rebels; however, the fracturing of factions in the conflict means that in recent years U.S. equipment has ended up in the hands of disparate Islamist groups. The U.S. military’s most direct participation in the conflict is airstrikes targeting ISIS. However, in November 2016 the White House ordered U.S. forces to also target Al-Nusra, an affiliate of Al-Qaeda.

But on Wednesday Russian military accused U.S. forces of cooperating with that very group in order to obstruct the assault on Deir Ezzor.

“According to information we have the advance in question was instigated by American special services in order to halt the successful movement of government troops, to the east of Deir Ezzor,” Sergei Rudskoy, head of the Main Operations Directorate of the Russian armed force’s general staff said, according to state news agency Itar-Tass. He did not elaborate on what specific function he believed the U.S. played in the attack.

The alleged assault took place in western Syria, near the city of Hama in Idlib province on Wednesday morning, Rudskoy said, adding that with Russian support government forces repelled the offensive almost entirely.

The U.S. government has no formal ties with the group, and, despite the group’s attempted re-brand last summer, the Pentagon confirmed that the group remains a designated “terrorist organization.” Earlier this week Washington accused Russian forces of being too indiscriminate with their fusillade in the Deir Ezzor area, wounding U.S.-backed fighters in the Syrian Democratic Forces who are also fighting ISIS.

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