Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta Quénia. Mostrar todas as mensagens
Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta Quénia. Mostrar todas as mensagens

sábado, setembro 07, 2024

A baronesa Karen Blixen, autora do livro África Minha, morreu há 62 anos

      
Karen Christence, baronesa de Blixen-Finecke, mais conhecida pelo pseudónimo de Isak Dinesen (Rungstdlund, 17 de abril de 1885 - Rungstedlund, 7 de setembro de 1962), foi uma escritora dinamarquesa.
   
Infância
O seu pai, Whihelm Dinesen, era um militar, e cometeu suicídio quando Karen tinha apenas dez anos de idade, atormentado por não conseguir resistir à pressão de sofrer de sífilis, enfermidade que naquela época estigmatizava. A sua mãe, Ingeborg Westenholz, ficou sozinha com cinco filhos para criar, e os pode manter graças à ajuda de familiares. Karen, como suas irmãs, estudou em prestigiadas escolas suíças.
    
Vida na África
Em 1914, Karen casou com um primo afastado, o barão sueco Bror von Blixen-Finecke, e foram viver no Quénia, onde iniciaram uma plantação de café. Porém, Bror era um mulherengo e passava longos períodos afastado de casa, em safáris e campanhas militares. Entre 1915 e 1916, Karen contraiu sífilis, provavelmente de Bror, embora alguns estudiosos acreditem que ela tenha herdado a doença de seu pai. Os Blixens separaram-se em 1921 e divorciaram-se em 1925.
Em Nairobi, Karen Blixen conheceu e apaixonou-se por Denys Finch Hatton, um piloto do exército britânico e caçador. Viveram juntos de 1926 a 1931. Mantiveram uma relação amorosa intensa, porém cheia de altos e baixos. Engravidou duas vezes, mas perdeu os bebés, provavelmente em consequência da sua saúde frágil. A relação terminou com a morte de Denys num acidente de avião, em 1931. Ao mesmo tempo, o fracasso da plantação de café forçou-a a abandonar as suas terras e retornar à Dinamarca.
   
Escritora
Antes do retorno à Dinamarca, Karen escreveu A vingança da verdade, publicado em 1926. Após o retorno, o seu primeiro livro foi Sete contos góticos, publicado em 1934 sob o pseudónimo de Isak Dinesen; o terceiro livro, o mais conhecido mundialmente, foi Den afrikanske Farm (A fazenda africana no Brasil ou África Minha em Portugal), publicado em 1937 e baseado no período em que ela viveu no continente africano. O sucesso alcançado com esta obra firmou a sua reputação como escritora, tendo sido premiada com o Tagea Brandt Rejselegat em 1939. Em 1985, o livro foi adaptado para o filme, com o nome de Out of Africa, sob a direção de Sydney Pollack e com Meryl Streep, Robert Redford e Klaus Maria Brandauer nos papéis principais.
Durante a segunda guerra mundial, Karen escreveu Contos de inverno, publicado em 1942, e o romance As vingadoras angélicas, sob o pseudónimo de Pierre Andrezel, e publicado em 1944. Escreveu também Ironias do destino, de 1958, e que inclui o conto A festa de Babette, também transformado num filme em 1987, e Sombras na pradaria, de 1960, entre outros.
Ele também participou de uma turnê nos Estados Unidos em 1959, durante o qual ela conheceu Arthur Miller, E. E. Cummings e Pearl Buck, que admiravam  a sua habilidade como escritora. Apesar de ser dinamarquesa, Blixen escreveu as suas histórias em inglês e depois traduziu-as para o dinamarquês.

quarta-feira, agosto 07, 2024

Um duplo atentado em África matou, há vinte e seis anos, 223 pessoas...

Aftermath at the US embassy in Nairobi

The 1998 United States embassy bombings were a series of attacks that occurred on August 7, 1998, in which hundreds of people were killed in simultaneous truck bomb explosions at the United States embassies in the East African capitals of Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, and Nairobi, Kenya. The date of the bombings marked the eighth anniversary of the arrival of American forces in Saudi Arabia.
The attacks were linked to local members of the Egyptian Islamic Jihad, brought Osama bin Laden and Ayman al-Zawahiri to the attention of the American public for the first time, and resulted in the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation placing bin Laden on its Ten Most Wanted Fugitives list. The FBI also connected the attack to Azerbaijan, as 60 calls via satellite phone were placed by Bin Laden to associates in Baku regarding the strike. Fazul Abdullah Mohammed was credited for being the mastermind behind the bombings.
 
A Nissan Atlas truck, similar to that used in Dar es-Salaam
   
The bombings are widely believed to have been revenge for American involvement in the extradition, and alleged torture, of four members of Egyptian Islamic Jihad (EIJ) who had been arrested in Albania in the two months prior to the attacks. Between June and July, Ahmad Isma'il 'Uthman Saleh, Ahmad Ibrahim al-Sayyid al-Naggar, Shawqi Salama Mustafa Atiya and Mohamed Hassan Tita were all renditioned from Albania to Egypt, with the cooperation of the United States; the four men were accused of participating in the assassination of Rifaat el-Mahgoub, as well as a later plot against the Khan el-Khalili market in Cairo. The following month, a communique was issued warning the United States that a "response" was being prepared to repay them for their interference.
According to journalist Lawrence Wright, the Nairobi operation was named after the Holy Kaaba in Mecca; the Dar es Salaam bombing was called Operation al-Aqsa in Jerusalem, but "neither had an obvious connection to the American embassies in Africa. Bin Laden initially said that the sites had been targeted because of the 'invasion' of Somalia; then he described an American plan to partition Sudan, which he said was hatched in the embassy in Nairobi. He also told his followers that the genocide in Rwanda had been planned inside the two American embassies."
Wright concludes that bin Laden's actual goal was "to lure the United States into Afghanistan, which had long been called 'The Graveyard of Empires.'" According to a 1998 memo authored by Mohammed Atef and seized by the FBI, around the time of the attacks, al-Qaeda had both an interest in and specific knowledge of negotiations between the Taliban and the American-led gas pipeline consortium CentGas.
In May 1998, a villa in Nairobi was purchased by one of the bombers for the purpose of accommodating bomb building in the garage. Sheikh Ahmed Salim Swedan purchased a beige Toyota Dyna truck in Nairobi and a 1987 Nissan Atlas refrigeration truck in Dar es Salaam. Six metal bars were used to form a "cage" on the back of the Atlas to accommodate the bomb.
In June 1998, KK Mohamed rented House 213 in the Illala district of Dar es Salaam, about four miles (6 km) from the U.S. Embassy. A white Suzuki Samurai was used to haul bomb components hidden in rice sacks, from House 213.
In both Nairobi and Dar es Salaam, Mohammed Odeh supervised construction of two massive, 900kg destructive devices. The Nairobi bomb was made of 400 to 500 cylinders of TNT (about the size of soda cans), aluminum nitrate, aluminum powder and detonating cord. The explosives were packed into some twenty specially designed wooden crates that were sealed and then placed in the bed of the trucks. Muhsin Musa Matwalli Atwah ran a wire from the bomb to a set of batteries in the back of the truck cab and then to a detonator switch beneath the dashboard. The Dar es Salaam bomb used a slightly different construction: the TNT was attached to fifteen oxygen tanks and gas canisters, and was surrounded with four bags of ammonium nitrate fertilizer and some sand bags to tamp and direct the blast.
The bombings were scheduled for August 7, the eighth anniversary of the arrival of American troops in Saudi Arabia, likely a choice by Osama bin Laden.
   
Attacks and casualties
On August 7, between 10:30 am and 10:40 am local time (3:30–3:40 am Washington time), suicide bombers in trucks laden with explosives parked outside the embassies in Dar es Salaam and Nairobi, and almost simultaneously detonated. In Nairobi, approximately 212 people were killed, and an estimated 4,000 wounded; in Dar es Salaam, the attack killed at least 11 and wounded 85. Seismological readings analyzed after the bombs indicated energy of between 3–17 tons of high explosive material. Although the attacks were directed at American facilities, the vast majority of casualties were local citizens; 12 Americans were killed, including two Central Intelligence Agency employees in the Nairobi embassy, Tom Shah and Molly Huckaby Hardy, and one Marine, Sergeant Jesse Aliganga, a Marine Security Guard at the Nairobi embassy.
While driver Azzam drove the Toyota Dyna quickly toward the Nairobi embassy along with Mohamed Rashed Daoud Al-Owhali, local security guard Benson Okuku Bwaku was warned to open the gate immediately – and fired upon when he refused to comply. Al-Owhali threw a stun grenade at embassy guards before exiting the vehicle and running off. Osama bin Laden later offered the explanation that it had been Al-Owhali's intention to leap out and shoot the guards to clear a path for the truck, but that he had left his pistol in the truck and subsequently ran off. As Bwaku radioed to Marine Post One for backup, the truck detonated.
The explosion damaged the embassy building and flattened the neighbouring Ufundi Building where most victims were killed, mainly students and staff of a secretarial college housed here. The heat from the blast was channelled between the buildings towards Haile Selassie Avenue where a packed commuter bus was burned. Windows were shattered in a radius of nearly one kilometer. A large number of eye injuries occurred because people in buildings nearby who had heard the first explosion of the hand grenade and the shooting went to their office windows to have a look when the main blast occurred and shattered the windows.
Meanwhile, the Atlas truck in Dar es Salaam was being driven by Hamden Khalif Allah Awad, known as "Ahmed the German" due to his blonde hair, a former camp trainer who had arrived in the country only a few days earlier. The death toll was less than in Nairobi as the U.S. embassy was located outside the city center on Bagamoyo Road on a large plot with no immediate neighbours close to the gate where the explosion occurred.
Following the attacks, a group calling itself the "Liberation Army for Holy Sites" took credit for the bombings. American investigators believe the term was a cover used by Egyptian Islamic Jihad, who had actually perpetrated the bombing.
   
Aftermath and international respons
In response to the bombings, President Bill Clinton ordered Operation Infinite Reach, a series of cruise missile strikes on targets in Sudan and Afghanistan on August 20, 1998, announcing the planned strike in a prime time address on American television.
In Sudan, the missiles destroyed the Al-Shifa pharmaceutical factory, where 50% of Sudan's medications for both people and animals were manufactured. The Clinton administration claimed that there was ample evidence to prove that the plant produced chemical weapons, but a thorough investigation after the missile strikes revealed that the intelligence was false.
The United Nations Security Council passed Resolution 1189 condemning the attacks on the embassies.
Both embassies were heavily damaged and the Nairobi embassy had to be rebuilt. It is now located across the road from the office of the World Food Programme for security purposes. A few months after the attacks and subsequent American missile strikes in Afghanistan, the American energy company Unocal withdrew its plans for a gas pipeline through Afghanistan.
Within months following the bombings, the United States Department of State Bureau of Diplomatic Security added Kenya to its Antiterrorism Assistance Program (ATA), which was originally created in 1983. While the addition was largely a formality to reaffirm America's commitment to fighting terrorism in Kenya, it nonetheless sparked the beginning of an active bilateral antiterrorism campaign between the United States and Kenya. The U.S. Government also rapidly and permanently increased the monetary aid to Kenya. Immediate changes included a $42 million grant targeted specifically towards Kenyan victims.
  

terça-feira, abril 02, 2024

O ataque contra a Universidade de Garissa foi há nove anos...

Kenyan soldiers and ambulance workers run as they prepare to evacuate students

(imagem daqui)

 

Em 2 de abril de 2015, homens armados invadiram a Universidade de Garissa, no Quénia, matando pelo menos 148 pessoas. Os terroristas afirmaram serem membros do grupo militante Al-Shabaab e que atacaram a instituição pois ela estava em território muçulmano colonizado por não-muçulmanos. Os militantes tomaram vários alunos como reféns, libertando os muçulmanos, mas retendo os cristãos.

 

in Wikipédia

terça-feira, dezembro 19, 2023

Richard Leakey nasceu há 79 anos...

 

Richard Erskine Frere Leakey (Nairobi, 19 December 1944 – Nairobi, 2 January 2022) was a Kenyan paleoanthropologist, conservationist and politician. Leakey held a number of official positions in Kenya, mostly in institutions of archaeology and wildlife conservation. He was Director of the National Museum of Kenya, founded the NGO WildlifeDirect, and was the chairman of the Kenya Wildlife Service. Leakey served in the powerful office of cabinet secretary and head of public service during the tail end of President Daniel Toroitich Arap Moi's government

Leakey co-founded the "Turkana Basin Institute" in an academic partnership with Stony Brook University, where he was an anthropology professor. He served as the chair of the Turkana Basin Institute until his death.
     
(...)   
    

Leakey spoke fluent Kiswahili and moved effortlessly between white and black communities. While he rarely talked about race in public, racism and gender inequality infuriated him.

Leakey came from a family of renowned archeologists. His mother, Mary Leakey, discovered evidence in 1978 that man walked upright much earlier than had been thought. She and her husband, Louis Leakey, unearthed skulls of ape-like early humans, shedding fresh light on our ancestors.

Leakey stated that he was an atheist and a humanist. He died at his home outside Nairobi, on 2 January 2022, less than a month after his 77th birthday. In accordance with his wishes, he was buried on a hill along the Rift Valley.
  

quinta-feira, setembro 07, 2023

A baronesa Karen Blixen, autora do livro África Minha, morreu há 61 anos

      
Karen Christence, baronesa de Blixen-Finecke, mais conhecida pelo pseudónimo de Isak Dinesen (Rungstdlund, 17 de abril de 1885 - Rungstedlund, 7 de setembro de 1962), foi uma escritora dinamarquesa.
   
Infância
O seu pai, Whihelm Dinesen, era um militar, e cometeu suicídio quando Karen tinha apenas dez anos de idade, atormentado por não conseguir resistir à pressão de sofrer de sífilis, enfermidade que naquela época estigmatizava. A sua mãe, Ingeborg Westenholz, ficou sozinha com cinco filhos para criar, e os pode manter graças à ajuda de familiares. Karen, como suas irmãs, estudou em prestigiadas escolas suíças.
    
Vida na África
Em 1914, Karen casou com um primo afastado, o barão sueco Bror von Blixen-Finecke, e foram viver no Quénia, onde iniciaram uma plantação de café. Porém, Bror era um mulherengo e passava longos períodos afastado de casa, em safáris e campanhas militares. Entre 1915 e 1916, Karen contraiu sífilis, provavelmente de Bror, embora alguns estudiosos acreditem que ela tenha herdado a doença de seu pai. Os Blixens separaram-se em 1921 e divorciaram-se em 1925.
Em Nairobi, Karen Blixen conheceu e apaixonou-se por Denys Finch Hatton, um piloto do exército britânico e caçador. Viveram juntos de 1926 a 1931. Mantiveram uma relação amorosa intensa, porém cheia de altos e baixos. Engravidou duas vezes, mas perdeu os bebés, provavelmente em consequência da sua saúde frágil. A relação terminou com a morte de Denys num acidente de avião, em 1931. Ao mesmo tempo, o fracasso da plantação de café forçou-a a abandonar as suas terras e retornar à Dinamarca.
   
Escritora
Antes do retorno à Dinamarca, Karen escreveu A vingança da verdade, publicado em 1926. Após o retorno, o seu primeiro livro foi Sete contos góticos, publicado em 1934 sob o pseudónimo de Isak Dinesen; o terceiro livro, o mais conhecido mundialmente, foi Den afrikanske Farm (A fazenda africana no Brasil ou África Minha em Portugal), publicado em 1937 e baseado no período em que ela viveu no continente africano. O sucesso alcançado com esta obra firmou a sua reputação como escritora, tendo sido premiada com o Tagea Brandt Rejselegat em 1939. Em 1985, o livro foi adaptado para o filme, com o nome de Out of Africa, sob a direção de Sydney Pollack e com Meryl Streep, Robert Redford e Klaus Maria Brandauer nos papéis principais.
Durante a segunda guerra mundial, Karen escreveu Contos de inverno, publicado em 1942, e o romance As vingadoras angélicas, sob o pseudónimo de Pierre Andrezel, e publicado em 1944. Escreveu também Ironias do destino, de 1958, e que inclui o conto A festa de Babette, também transformado num filme em 1987, e Sombras na pradaria, de 1960, entre outros.
Ele também participou de uma turnê nos Estados Unidos em 1959, durante o qual ela conheceu Arthur Miller, E. E. Cummings e Pearl Buck, que admiravam  a sua habilidade como escritora. Apesar de ser dinamarquesa, Blixen escreveu as suas histórias em inglês e depois traduziu-as para o dinamarquês.

segunda-feira, agosto 07, 2023

Um duplo atentado matou, há vinte e cinco anos, 223 pessoas em África...

Aftermath at the US embassy in Nairobi

The 1998 United States embassy bombings were a series of attacks that occurred on August 7, 1998, in which hundreds of people were killed in simultaneous truck bomb explosions at the United States embassies in the East African capitals of Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, and Nairobi, Kenya. The date of the bombings marked the eighth anniversary of the arrival of American forces in Saudi Arabia.
The attacks were linked to local members of the Egyptian Islamic Jihad, brought Osama bin Laden and Ayman al-Zawahiri to the attention of the American public for the first time, and resulted in the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation placing bin Laden on its Ten Most Wanted Fugitives list. The FBI also connected the attack to Azerbaijan, as 60 calls via satellite phone were placed by Bin Laden to associates in Baku regarding the strike. Fazul Abdullah Mohammed was credited for being the mastermind behind the bombings.
 
A Nissan Atlas truck, similar to that used in Dar es-Salaam
   
The bombings are widely believed to have been revenge for American involvement in the extradition, and alleged torture, of four members of Egyptian Islamic Jihad (EIJ) who had been arrested in Albania in the two months prior to the attacks. Between June and July, Ahmad Isma'il 'Uthman Saleh, Ahmad Ibrahim al-Sayyid al-Naggar, Shawqi Salama Mustafa Atiya and Mohamed Hassan Tita were all renditioned from Albania to Egypt, with the cooperation of the United States; the four men were accused of participating in the assassination of Rifaat el-Mahgoub, as well as a later plot against the Khan el-Khalili market in Cairo. The following month, a communique was issued warning the United States that a "response" was being prepared to repay them for their interference.
According to journalist Lawrence Wright, the Nairobi operation was named after the Holy Kaaba in Mecca; the Dar es Salaam bombing was called Operation al-Aqsa in Jerusalem, but "neither had an obvious connection to the American embassies in Africa. Bin Laden initially said that the sites had been targeted because of the 'invasion' of Somalia; then he described an American plan to partition Sudan, which he said was hatched in the embassy in Nairobi. He also told his followers that the genocide in Rwanda had been planned inside the two American embassies."
Wright concludes that bin Laden's actual goal was "to lure the United States into Afghanistan, which had long been called 'The Graveyard of Empires.'" According to a 1998 memo authored by Mohammed Atef and seized by the FBI, around the time of the attacks, al-Qaeda had both an interest in and specific knowledge of negotiations between the Taliban and the American-led gas pipeline consortium CentGas.
In May 1998, a villa in Nairobi was purchased by one of the bombers for the purpose of accommodating bomb building in the garage. Sheikh Ahmed Salim Swedan purchased a beige Toyota Dyna truck in Nairobi and a 1987 Nissan Atlas refrigeration truck in Dar es Salaam. Six metal bars were used to form a "cage" on the back of the Atlas to accommodate the bomb.
In June 1998, KK Mohamed rented House 213 in the Illala district of Dar es Salaam, about four miles (6 km) from the U.S. Embassy. A white Suzuki Samurai was used to haul bomb components hidden in rice sacks, from House 213.
In both Nairobi and Dar es Salaam, Mohammed Odeh supervised construction of two massive, 900kg destructive devices. The Nairobi bomb was made of 400 to 500 cylinders of TNT (about the size of soda cans), aluminum nitrate, aluminum powder and detonating cord. The explosives were packed into some twenty specially designed wooden crates that were sealed and then placed in the bed of the trucks. Muhsin Musa Matwalli Atwah ran a wire from the bomb to a set of batteries in the back of the truck cab and then to a detonator switch beneath the dashboard. The Dar es Salaam bomb used a slightly different construction: the TNT was attached to fifteen oxygen tanks and gas canisters, and was surrounded with four bags of ammonium nitrate fertilizer and some sand bags to tamp and direct the blast.
The bombings were scheduled for August 7, the eighth anniversary of the arrival of American troops in Saudi Arabia, likely a choice by Osama bin Laden.
   
Attacks and casualties
On August 7, between 10:30 am and 10:40 am local time (3:30–3:40 am Washington time), suicide bombers in trucks laden with explosives parked outside the embassies in Dar es Salaam and Nairobi, and almost simultaneously detonated. In Nairobi, approximately 212 people were killed, and an estimated 4,000 wounded; in Dar es Salaam, the attack killed at least 11 and wounded 85. Seismological readings analyzed after the bombs indicated energy of between 3–17 tons of high explosive material. Although the attacks were directed at American facilities, the vast majority of casualties were local citizens; 12 Americans were killed, including two Central Intelligence Agency employees in the Nairobi embassy, Tom Shah and Molly Huckaby Hardy, and one Marine, Sergeant Jesse Aliganga, a Marine Security Guard at the Nairobi embassy.
While driver Azzam drove the Toyota Dyna quickly toward the Nairobi embassy along with Mohamed Rashed Daoud Al-Owhali, local security guard Benson Okuku Bwaku was warned to open the gate immediately – and fired upon when he refused to comply. Al-Owhali threw a stun grenade at embassy guards before exiting the vehicle and running off. Osama bin Laden later offered the explanation that it had been Al-Owhali's intention to leap out and shoot the guards to clear a path for the truck, but that he had left his pistol in the truck and subsequently ran off. As Bwaku radioed to Marine Post One for backup, the truck detonated.
The explosion damaged the embassy building and flattened the neighbouring Ufundi Building where most victims were killed, mainly students and staff of a secretarial college housed here. The heat from the blast was channelled between the buildings towards Haile Selassie Avenue where a packed commuter bus was burned. Windows were shattered in a radius of nearly one kilometer. A large number of eye injuries occurred because people in buildings nearby who had heard the first explosion of the hand grenade and the shooting went to their office windows to have a look when the main blast occurred and shattered the windows.
Meanwhile, the Atlas truck in Dar es Salaam was being driven by Hamden Khalif Allah Awad, known as "Ahmed the German" due to his blonde hair, a former camp trainer who had arrived in the country only a few days earlier. The death toll was less than in Nairobi as the U.S. embassy was located outside the city center on Bagamoyo Road on a large plot with no immediate neighbours close to the gate where the explosion occurred.
Following the attacks, a group calling itself the "Liberation Army for Holy Sites" took credit for the bombings. American investigators believe the term was a cover used by Egyptian Islamic Jihad, who had actually perpetrated the bombing.
   
Aftermath and international respons
In response to the bombings, President Bill Clinton ordered Operation Infinite Reach, a series of cruise missile strikes on targets in Sudan and Afghanistan on August 20, 1998, announcing the planned strike in a prime time address on American television.
In Sudan, the missiles destroyed the Al-Shifa pharmaceutical factory, where 50% of Sudan's medications for both people and animals were manufactured. The Clinton administration claimed that there was ample evidence to prove that the plant produced chemical weapons, but a thorough investigation after the missile strikes revealed that the intelligence was false.
The United Nations Security Council passed Resolution 1189 condemning the attacks on the embassies.
Both embassies were heavily damaged and the Nairobi embassy had to be rebuilt. It is now located across the road from the office of the World Food Programme for security purposes. A few months after the attacks and subsequent American missile strikes in Afghanistan, the American energy company Unocal withdrew its plans for a gas pipeline through Afghanistan.
Within months following the bombings, the United States Department of State Bureau of Diplomatic Security added Kenya to its Antiterrorism Assistance Program (ATA), which was originally created in 1983. While the addition was largely a formality to reaffirm America's commitment to fighting terrorism in Kenya, it nonetheless sparked the beginning of an active bilateral antiterrorism campaign between the United States and Kenya. The U.S. Government also rapidly and permanently increased the monetary aid to Kenya. Immediate changes included a $42 million grant targeted specifically towards Kenyan victims.
  

segunda-feira, dezembro 19, 2022

Richard Leakey nasceu há 78 anos...

 
Richard Erskine Frere Leakey (Nairobi, 19 December 1944 – Nairobi, 2 January 2022) was a Kenyan paleoanthropologist, conservationist and politician. Leakey has held a number of official positions in Kenya, mostly in institutions of archaeology and wildlife conservation. He has been Director of the National Museum of Kenya, founded the NGO WildlifeDirect and is the chairman of the Kenya Wildlife Service.
As a small boy, Leakey lived in Nairobi with his parents, Louis Leakey, curator of the Coryndon Museum, and Mary Leakey, director of the Leakey excavations at Olduvai, and his two brothers, Jonathan and Philip. The Leakey brothers had a very active childhood. All the boys had ponies and belonged to the Langata Pony Club. They participated in jumping and steeplechase competitions but often rode for fun across the plains to the Ngong Hills, chasing and playing games with the animals. Sometimes the whole club were guests at the Leakeys' for holidays and vacations. Leakey's parents founded the Dalmatian Club of East Africa and won a prize in 1957. Dogs and many other pets shared the Leakey home. The Leakey boys participated in games conducted by both adults and children, in which they tried to imitate early humans, catching springhare and small antelope by hand on the Serengeti. They drove lions and jackals from the kill to see if they could do it.
  

quarta-feira, setembro 07, 2022

Karen Blixen, a autora do livro África Minha, morreu há sessenta anos

      
Karen Christence, baronesa de Blixen-Finecke, mais conhecida pelo pseudónimo de Isak Dinesen (Rungstdlund, 17 de abril de 1885 - Rungstedlund, 7 de setembro de 1962), foi uma escritora dinamarquesa.
   
Infância
O seu pai, Whihelm Dinesen, era um militar, e cometeu suicídio quando Karen tinha apenas dez anos de idade, atormentado por não conseguir resistir à pressão de sofrer de sífilis, enfermidade que naquela época estigmatizava. A sua mãe, Ingeborg Westenholz, ficou sozinha com cinco filhos para criar, e os pode manter graças à ajuda de familiares. Karen, como suas irmãs, estudou em prestigiadas escolas suíças.
    
Vida na África
Em 1914, Karen casou com um primo afastado, o barão sueco Bror von Blixen-Finecke, e foram viver no Quénia, onde iniciaram uma plantação de café. Porém, Bror era um mulherengo e passava longos períodos afastado de casa, em safáris e campanhas militares. Entre 1915 e 1916, Karen contraiu sífilis, provavelmente de Bror, embora alguns estudiosos acreditem que ela tenha herdado a doença de seu pai. Os Blixens separaram-se em 1921 e divorciaram-se em 1925.
Em Nairobi, Karen Blixen conheceu e apaixonou-se por Denys Finch Hatton, um piloto do exército britânico e caçador. Viveram juntos de 1926 a 1931. Mantiveram uma relação amorosa intensa, porém cheia de altos e baixos. Engravidou duas vezes, mas perdeu os bebés, provavelmente em consequência da sua saúde frágil. A relação terminou com a morte de Denys num acidente de avião, em 1931. Ao mesmo tempo, o fracasso da plantação de café forçou-a a abandonar as suas terras e retornar à Dinamarca.
   
Escritora
Antes do retorno à Dinamarca, Karen escreveu A vingança da verdade, publicado em 1926. Após o retorno, o seu primeiro livro foi Sete contos góticos, publicado em 1934 sob o pseudónimo de Isak Dinesen; o terceiro livro, o mais conhecido mundialmente, foi Den afrikanske Farm (A fazenda africana no Brasil ou África Minha em Portugal), publicado em 1937 e baseado no período em que ela viveu no continente africano. O sucesso alcançado com esta obra firmou sua reputação como escritora, tendo sido premiada com o Tagea Brandt Rejselegat em 1939. Em 1985, o livro foi adaptado para o filme, com o nome de Out of Africa, sob a direção de Sydney Pollack e com Meryl Streep, Robert Redford e Klaus Maria Brandauer nos papéis principais.
Durante a segunda guerra mundial, Karen escreveu Contos de inverno, publicado em 1942, e o romance As vingadoras angélicas, sob o pseudónimo de Pierre Andrezel, e publicado em 1944. Escreveu também Ironias do destino, de 1958, e que inclui o conto A festa de Babette, também transformado em filme em 1987, e Sombras na pradaria, de 1960, entre outros.
Ele também participou de uma turnê nos EUA em 1959, durante o qual ela conheceu Arthur Miller, E. E. Cummings e Pearl Buck que admiravam suas habilidades como escritora. Apesar de ser dinamarquesa, Blixen escreveu as suas histórias em inglês e depois traduziu-as para o dinamarquês.

domingo, agosto 07, 2022

Há vinte quatro anos um duplo atentado matou 223 pessoas em África...

Aftermath at the US embassy in Nairobi

The 1998 United States embassy bombings were a series of attacks that occurred on August 7, 1998, in which hundreds of people were killed in simultaneous truck bomb explosions at the United States embassies in the East African capitals of Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, and Nairobi, Kenya. The date of the bombings marked the eighth anniversary of the arrival of American forces in Saudi Arabia.
The attacks were linked to local members of the Egyptian Islamic Jihad, brought Osama bin Laden and Ayman al-Zawahiri to the attention of the American public for the first time, and resulted in the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation placing bin Laden on its Ten Most Wanted Fugitives list. The FBI also connected the attack to Azerbaijan, as 60 calls via satellite phone were placed by Bin Laden to associates in Baku regarding the strike. Fazul Abdullah Mohammed was credited for being the mastermind behind the bombings.
 
A Nissan Atlas truck, similar to that used in Dar es-Salaam
   
The bombings are widely believed to have been revenge for American involvement in the extradition, and alleged torture, of four members of Egyptian Islamic Jihad (EIJ) who had been arrested in Albania in the two months prior to the attacks. Between June and July, Ahmad Isma'il 'Uthman Saleh, Ahmad Ibrahim al-Sayyid al-Naggar, Shawqi Salama Mustafa Atiya and Mohamed Hassan Tita were all renditioned from Albania to Egypt, with the cooperation of the United States; the four men were accused of participating in the assassination of Rifaat el-Mahgoub, as well as a later plot against the Khan el-Khalili market in Cairo. The following month, a communique was issued warning the United States that a "response" was being prepared to repay them for their interference.
According to journalist Lawrence Wright, the Nairobi operation was named after the Holy Kaaba in Mecca; the Dar es Salaam bombing was called Operation al-Aqsa in Jerusalem, but "neither had an obvious connection to the American embassies in Africa. Bin Laden initially said that the sites had been targeted because of the 'invasion' of Somalia; then he described an American plan to partition Sudan, which he said was hatched in the embassy in Nairobi. He also told his followers that the genocide in Rwanda had been planned inside the two American embassies."
Wright concludes that bin Laden's actual goal was "to lure the United States into Afghanistan, which had long been called 'The Graveyard of Empires.'" According to a 1998 memo authored by Mohammed Atef and seized by the FBI, around the time of the attacks, al-Qaeda had both an interest in and specific knowledge of negotiations between the Taliban and the American-led gas pipeline consortium CentGas.
In May 1998, a villa in Nairobi was purchased by one of the bombers for the purpose of accommodating bomb building in the garage. Sheikh Ahmed Salim Swedan purchased a beige Toyota Dyna truck in Nairobi and a 1987 Nissan Atlas refrigeration truck in Dar es Salaam. Six metal bars were used to form a "cage" on the back of the Atlas to accommodate the bomb.
In June 1998, KK Mohamed rented House 213 in the Illala district of Dar es Salaam, about four miles (6 km) from the U.S. Embassy. A white Suzuki Samurai was used to haul bomb components hidden in rice sacks, from House 213.
In both Nairobi and Dar es Salaam, Mohammed Odeh supervised construction of two massive, 900kg destructive devices. The Nairobi bomb was made of 400 to 500 cylinders of TNT (about the size of soda cans), aluminum nitrate, aluminum powder and detonating cord. The explosives were packed into some twenty specially designed wooden crates that were sealed and then placed in the bed of the trucks. Muhsin Musa Matwalli Atwah ran a wire from the bomb to a set of batteries in the back of the truck cab and then to a detonator switch beneath the dashboard. The Dar es Salaam bomb used a slightly different construction: the TNT was attached to fifteen oxygen tanks and gas canisters, and was surrounded with four bags of ammonium nitrate fertilizer and some sand bags to tamp and direct the blast.
The bombings were scheduled for August 7, the eighth anniversary of the arrival of American troops in Saudi Arabia, likely a choice by Osama bin Laden.
   
Attacks and casualties
On August 7, between 10:30 am and 10:40 am local time (3:30–3:40 am Washington time), suicide bombers in trucks laden with explosives parked outside the embassies in Dar es Salaam and Nairobi, and almost simultaneously detonated. In Nairobi, approximately 212 people were killed, and an estimated 4,000 wounded; in Dar es Salaam, the attack killed at least 11 and wounded 85. Seismological readings analyzed after the bombs indicated energy of between 3–17 tons of high explosive material. Although the attacks were directed at American facilities, the vast majority of casualties were local citizens; 12 Americans were killed, including two Central Intelligence Agency employees in the Nairobi embassy, Tom Shah and Molly Huckaby Hardy, and one Marine, Sergeant Jesse Aliganga, a Marine Security Guard at the Nairobi embassy.
While driver Azzam drove the Toyota Dyna quickly toward the Nairobi embassy along with Mohamed Rashed Daoud Al-Owhali, local security guard Benson Okuku Bwaku was warned to open the gate immediately – and fired upon when he refused to comply. Al-Owhali threw a stun grenade at embassy guards before exiting the vehicle and running off. Osama bin Laden later offered the explanation that it had been Al-Owhali's intention to leap out and shoot the guards to clear a path for the truck, but that he had left his pistol in the truck and subsequently ran off. As Bwaku radioed to Marine Post One for backup, the truck detonated.
The explosion damaged the embassy building and flattened the neighbouring Ufundi Building where most victims were killed, mainly students and staff of a secretarial college housed here. The heat from the blast was channelled between the buildings towards Haile Selassie Avenue where a packed commuter bus was burned. Windows were shattered in a radius of nearly one kilometer. A large number of eye injuries occurred because people in buildings nearby who had heard the first explosion of the hand grenade and the shooting went to their office windows to have a look when the main blast occurred and shattered the windows.
Meanwhile, the Atlas truck in Dar es Salaam was being driven by Hamden Khalif Allah Awad, known as "Ahmed the German" due to his blonde hair, a former camp trainer who had arrived in the country only a few days earlier. The death toll was less than in Nairobi as the U.S. embassy was located outside the city center on Bagamoyo Road on a large plot with no immediate neighbours close to the gate where the explosion occurred.
Following the attacks, a group calling itself the "Liberation Army for Holy Sites" took credit for the bombings. American investigators believe the term was a cover used by Egyptian Islamic Jihad, who had actually perpetrated the bombing.
   
Aftermath and international respons
In response to the bombings, President Bill Clinton ordered Operation Infinite Reach, a series of cruise missile strikes on targets in Sudan and Afghanistan on August 20, 1998, announcing the planned strike in a prime time address on American television.
In Sudan, the missiles destroyed the Al-Shifa pharmaceutical factory, where 50% of Sudan's medications for both people and animals were manufactured. The Clinton administration claimed that there was ample evidence to prove that the plant produced chemical weapons, but a thorough investigation after the missile strikes revealed that the intelligence was false.
The United Nations Security Council passed Resolution 1189 condemning the attacks on the embassies.
Both embassies were heavily damaged and the Nairobi embassy had to be rebuilt. It is now located across the road from the office of the World Food Programme for security purposes. A few months after the attacks and subsequent American missile strikes in Afghanistan, the American energy company Unocal withdrew its plans for a gas pipeline through Afghanistan.
Within months following the bombings, the United States Department of State Bureau of Diplomatic Security added Kenya to its Antiterrorism Assistance Program (ATA), which was originally created in 1983. While the addition was largely a formality to reaffirm America's commitment to fighting terrorism in Kenya, it nonetheless sparked the beginning of an active bilateral antiterrorism campaign between the United States and Kenya. The U.S. Government also rapidly and permanently increased the monetary aid to Kenya. Immediate changes included a $42 million grant targeted specifically towards Kenyan victims.