Tuesday, 30 July 2013

West Africa cholera down but officials vigilant


Some 1,700 people in West Africa have contracted cholera since mid-June, a significant decline compared to the same seven-week period in 2012 when 11,834 were affected.

Kenya: Hands Off Our Elephants, Says First Lady


First lady Margaret Kenyatta on Friday evening launched an anti-poaching campaign to respond to rampant poaching, which continues to reap Kenya of its most affluent and significant tourist attractions.

Dolphin breaks free, reunites with its family


A dolphin named Sampal broke free from a Korean Rehab facility to unite with its family.

NOA urges Nigerians to stop acts leading to flooding

The Director of the National Orientation Agency (NOA) in Abia, Mrs Ngozi Uduma, has called on Nigerians to desist from acts capable of endangering the environment.

Illegal marijuana cultivation threatens Nigeria's forests and chimps

                                                         Pix Courtesy Stuttershock
The world's highest deforestation rate, the execution of eight environmental activists including a Nobel Peace Prize nominee, and ongoing turmoil surrounding oil operations in the Niger River Delta has created a notoriously disreputable environmental record for the West African country. Now, a new threat is rising in the already-compromised forests of Nigeria: illegal marijuana cultivation.