Friday, August 10, 2012

Jamaica Observer Olympics Gallery | BOLT FLORAL STATUE

Usain Bolt Breaks Twitter Record After 200-Meter Victory

http://www.inquisitr.com reports...

Usain Bolt breaks Twitter record after 200-meter win

Usain Bolt‘s 200-meter win made him the first man to retain both Olympic sprint titles, but his win helped him break a different record. Bolt’s history-making win made him the most talked about Olympic athlete on Twitter, with over 80,000 tweets per minute coming in during his victory.


Twitter’s communication service broke the news by sending out a tweet that read,
“Record alert! @usainbolt sets a new Olympic Games conversation record with over 80,000 TPM for his 200m victory. #Olympics.”
When he won the 100-meter, Bolt was being discussed at 74,000 tweets per minute.
Bolt didn’t acknowledge his Twitter record, but he did give thanks to his fans for supporting him throughout his journey. He wrote,
“Thanks to all my real fans and people who believe in me. I am now a living legend that’s for sure.”
Bolt also gave a shout out to his coach, saying,
“A lot a thanks goes out to the greatest coach ever. ‘Glen Mills’ Really blessed the day the heavenly Father brought you in my life”
Usain Bolt finished the 200-meter sprint in 19.32 seconds, earning him a place in a debate about who was the world’s greatest athlete. US decathlete Trey Hardee said his teammate Ashton Eaton, who won the decathlon Thursday, is “the best athlete to ever walk the planet, hands down” and that “just because you’re fast doesn’t make you an athlete.”
Eaton shrugged off the comment, saying, “There’s no fight. Usain is clearly awesome. He’s an icon in his own right. Titles are for books.”
Not one for humility, Usain Bolt acknowledged his awesomeness by saying,
“I just know I’m a legend. Bask in my glory.”
What do you think of Usain Bolt’s declaration that he is a living legend?

Read more at http://www.inquisitr.com/298120/usain-bolt-breaks-twitter-record-after-200-meter-victory/#qXwszRvguchr4rqW.99

Usain Bolt wins 200m to make Olympic athletics history

from the bbc:

Usain Bolt
Jamaica's Yohan Blake, Usain Bolt and Warren Weir

Usain Bolt became the first man to retain both Olympic sprint titles as he led home a gold and green Jamaica clean sweep in the 200m.

Bolt matched Michael Johnson's then world-record time from the Atlanta Games of 19.32 seconds as he held off training partner Yohan Blake in silver and Warren Weir in bronze.
Blake had beaten Bolt at the Jamaican trials, his last race over the distance before London, but the double 100m championran a brilliant bend from lane seven to lead by a metre coming into the straight.
Glancing to his left he was aware of Blake closing in a fraction at 150m, but held his form to cross the line with a finger to his lips.
"This is what I wanted and I got it. I'm very proud of myself," the 25-year-old told BBC Sport.
"After a rough season I came out here and did it. I thought the world record was possible. I guess I was fast but not fit enough.
"I could feel my back strain a little bit, so all I did was to keep my form. I'm very dedicated to my work and London meant so much to me."
Blake's 19.44 secs was a season's best, while 22-year-old Weir set a new personal best with 19.84 secs to complete the Jamaican party.
But this was Bolt's race, and these have once again been Bolt's Games.
A month ago, his form questionable and his hamstrings and back giving him serious problems, there was genuine doubt whether the 25-year-old could retain one Olympic title here in London, let alone two.
Bolt has made those misgivings seem laughable. He now has five Olympic gold medals, the most decorated Jamaican Olympian of all time, and with the 4x100m still to come can make it six before he heads home to the embrace of an ecstatic nation.
On a warm, still summer evening perfect for sprinting, Bolt had clowned around as he waited to be called to his blocks, as ever a study in easy relaxation despite the magnitude of the occasion.
He flirted with the girl looking after his kit and then gave a regal wave before taking his rivals apart from the moment the gun sounded.
While there was no new mark on Thursday evening, this was the joint fourth fastest 200m in history - a display to rank among the best the event Bolt calls his own has ever seen.

Fastest 200m of all time

  • Usain Bolt - 19.19 secs (2009)
  • Yohan Blake - 19.26 secs (2011)
  • Usain Bolt - 19.30 secs (2008)
  • Usain Bolt - 19.32 secs (2012)
  • Michael Johnson - 19.32 secs (1996)
  • Usain Bolt - 19.40 secs (2011)

Analysis

"Blake found after the start that Bolt was already gone. He displayed some speed endurance that I haven't seen before. He looked at the clock, realised that he was not on world-record pace and decided to celebrate a little bit early!"

Final Results


RankAthleteCountryMedal momentResult
1BoltJAMWatch:Medal moment19.32 SB
2BlakeJAMWatch:Medal moment19.44 SB
3WeirJAMWatch:Medal moment19.84 PB
View full results for Men's 200m





PRESIDENT MILLS’S LAST LETTER TO RAWLINGS



http://www.abadawoode.com/ reports...




If there‘s ever one great achievement I should praise myself after 68 years of existence on this turbulent planet called earth, then it was my ability to resist the temptation to reply you. Not only did you reduce my personality to that of a nonentity but you also created the platform for boys and girls young enough to be my children to subject me to ridicule and contempt.

Like a refuse dump, I endured all the insults and your humiliation with peerless stoicism.But today, I’m unable to keep quiet and allow you to go on this way. I make this appeal not for my own sake, but for the sake of Naadu and my family members, who are already swaying wearily under heavy weight of-indescribable grief.

I heard you on the BBC the other day and I couldn’t help but shed tears.


I was not surprised that such words could come from you, but I was sad that after all these years of serving you and doing everything humanly possible to please you, you still have not found a place in your heart to recognise this.

Mr Rawlings, in that interview you said if I had done something wiser, I “could probably have survived another six or seven months.” This was after you said that the cancer affected my ear and eye and I could not concentrate for more than three hours a day.

I can’t tell if you were in the place of God to determine how long I could have lived. But what I know for a fact that if you, your wife and those who like you had shown me a little love, I could have lived for a few more years.
The deterioration in my health, I think, had more to do with psychological torture than a physiological breakdown.Any healthy person put in my shoes might not have survived after a few months of going through the hell you created for my presidency. What made the vulture bald is enough to kill the crow. And I can say that the frustration and depression that conspired with ill health to put me here after many years of battle was enough to finish any healthy person in months.

Mr Rawlings, I didn’t die a happy man. This is not because I had not paid my dues to our dear nation. I have served this nation well as a public officer, a sports administrator, a teacher and a politician. But I spent sleepless nights during my presidency thinking why nothing I did seemed to please you and others around you.
I was aware, long before I became president, that anybody in that position must expect opposition. But in my case, I had to contend with both internal and external opposition and nothing I did seemed to please people.
Ever since you granted that BBC interview, the discussion about my death has shifted from sympathy to blame. As usual, you’ve provided my detractors with weapons to attack and they are firing from all angles. And I don’t understand why you and my haters now care so much about my life.

Indeed, you’re behaving like outsiders weeping more than the bereaved and now pretend you now wanted me to live. Are you offended you will not have the opportunity to torment me again?
I must, however, say I have no regret going at this stage. I believe the Lord I served knew it would happen. He also permitted it to happen. His ways are not our ways and his thoughts are not ours. I know everything happens for a reason, and Ghana has more to gain that lose in my demise.

In the first place, my death brought about unity and has poured cold water on the tension that was hitting its climax in the run up to the 2012 elections. It is also the best thing that has happened to the NDC in recent times. Our party had too many factions with deeply entrenched positions. So dangerous was this that if I refused to contest the primaries, the party could have been torn into shreds.
But I think the party is now stronger than ever since we reclaimed power. This is not only good for the umbrella family, but also for the health of our democracy.

Another gain my death has for Ghana is the enormous lessons you have to learn. The events leading to my death only confirms what the Bible says in Proverbs 18:21: “Death and life are in the power of the tongue, and those who love it will eat its fruit.”

Many people swore that Atta-Mills would become the first one-term president in the Fourth Republic. And they have got it. That’s the fruit of their tongue.

In recent past, we heard about the Rawlings government and the Kufuor government. However, when it was my turn, it became the “Mills/Mahama” government.

First I thought it was an attempt to destroy the political future of my hardworking vice president by soiling him with any dirt of my administration. But it turned out to be what was uttered by the tongue of Ghanaians.
Perhaps, Ghanaians can learn to utter positive things about their nations and it will surely come to pass.
Another lesson from which Ghanaians stand to gain is the fact that life is meaningless and there’s no point hating, killing and trying to bring one another down because of power.

A few days ago, not many Ghanaians could come near the Osu Castle. I also had my private house cordoned off by security personnel and at any point in time someone had to be awake because of me.
From where I lie now, I see life as meaningless.

Now I share the same building with ordinary people. I sleep here together with that mad woman who was knocked down by a vehicle the other day, and many other categories of persons no one would want to be associated with. That is the reality of life, which I think Ghanaians should learn.
Death is, indeed, a leveller.

I also see now that life is not about wealth. Real wealth is the impact you make in the lives of others when you’re alive. When I was being rushed to the 37 Military Hospital that Tuesday afternoon, I did not pick with me an office pin. And when I was been dumped here, no designer wear was used to cover me.Here I am, cold and naked.
When you told your “Atta Mortuary Man” joke at our Tamale Congress, people think it was too insulting for my personality. But All of a sudden, I’m in the hands of mortuary man who utters disdainful words. “His Excellency John Evans Atta-Mills” was my name a few days ago. But the mortuary attendant contemptuously refers to me as “the body.”

I don’t know how much my ex-gratia would be, but what I know is that no pesewa would ever get to me. All is vanity, indeed.

Mr Rawlings, I see life differently and I think instead of spending the rest of your life to vilify me, you can do yourself a favour by learning from my life and death. No one will ever become a stone.

Everyone is bound to go. That is the certainty. What is uncertain is where, when and how we shall go. Yours may be better or worse than mine so be moderate in your attacks of me. You don’t know your end.

When I got to the office that Tuesday, I didn’t know that before sunset, I would cease to be the President of Ghana. Whether I lived longer or not, it would have come one day.

But as I have stated, I have no regrets. I lived my life for humanity. I wanted to see others happy and did the best I could to bring myself to the level of the ordinary person. But the quest to demonise me clouded everything I did. I tried to share the pain of others. But all I heard was that Atta-Mills is bad. I sometimes felt like weeping because only the negative side was known.

And they still believed every lie and malicious rumour about me even when some journalists came out to confess that they had been publishing falsehood about me.
Until my death, no journalist ever mentioned that I called to sympathise with them and apologise to them in person when others mishandled them. I was a true believer in quiet diplomacy and did not want to practice my piety in public as the good book admonishes us against. I could have called invited Cyrus De-Graft Johnson of Joy FM to the castle in the presence of cameras in order to score a political point. Or better still, I could have publicly called on the AMA Mayor to apologise to him after his guards manhandled the journalist.

Mr Rawlings, I don’t think the Atta Mills debate will end soon. But I appeal to you in the name of the Lord to spare me any more disgrace.
I have suffered a lot.

I know I was not an angel. I had my shortcoming. But is left with the Lord I served to judge me where I am now.
You too were not an angel either. Your administration fraught with problems but we helped you to succeed. There was corruption in your presidency and some of your ministers and government officials under your watch were later tried and jailed for corrupt practices. Even your wife was fingered and tried.

Our elders say a drum may sound differently from what its maker intended. If you think you were infallible, I think otherwise and I pray Ghanaians to forgive me in whatever way I erred.

I wish you well and hope that you will help to conduct the 2012 elections in a peaceful manner. We have no option but to make this country better for the future generation. This is the only country we have and we must not send our people out to be refugees in other lands. From where I lie, cold and naked, I don’t think it is worth dying for someone to gain power. I realised that Tuesday afternoon that when your time is up, no amount of power, wealth or influence can make any difference.

I greet all Ghanaians in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ. We shall all meet again when Christ appears, in all his glory and splendour, to welcome those who were never ashamed of Him into His eternal kingdom.
Until then I remain your humble servant,

John Evans FiifiAtta-Mills, or “the body” as the mortuary attendant here calls me.

*Manasseh Azure Awuni
Manasseh is a freelance journalist with MA in Communication Studies from the University of Ghana.
He has written many thought provoking pieces from when he was still a student at the Ghana Institute of Journalism to date. The above is his latest work.

Atta Mills’ Burial Happening Now: (Live Updates)

http://www.abadawoode.com reports...







Tears are flowing like water on the faces of many Ghanaians across all the 10 regions of the country as former President John Evans Atta Mills is buried today.
The state funeral is currently underway at the Independence Square in Accra with tens of thousands of Ghanaians in attendance.
The  burial ceremony will be marked distinctive military traditions  as the former President was also the Commander-in-Chief of the Ghana Armed Forces.
After the religious ceremonies that would be tinged with poignant evocation of hymns and the performance of the final funeral rites by the family of the late leader at the Independence Square, the Military would take over the casket, escorting the body of the one-time Commander-in-Chief of the Ghana Armed Forces (GAF) to his final resting place at the Geese Park on the Castle Drive.
Before the body of the late President Mills is interred, the casket containing his remains would be placed on a gun-carriage by eight pall-bearers of Brigadier General rank and taken on a State drive on a selected route lined with personnel of other security services.
The cortege would be escorted by a Ghana Airforce helicopter.
When the cortege finally gets back to the Independence Square after the State drive, military personnel in full ceremonial garb, will line both sides of the Castle Drive, with reversed arms to give the departed leader his last honours.
At the Geese Park, the pall-bearers will lower the casket from the gun-carriage and place it on the grave, where military buglers will sound the “last post” amidst the booms of a 21 gun salute by a detachment of personnel of the 66 Artillery Regiment of the GAF.
Simultaneously, there would be a fly-past by three Ghana Air Force jets ejecting long lines of smoke in the national colours, with Ghana Navy ships also performing ceremonial maneuvers on the shoreline behind the Independence Square.
After final prayers, the body of the late President Mills would be lowered into the grave to start his journey into the world beyond.
The late President Mills, 68, who died at the 37 Military Hospital on July 24, is survived by a wife, Ernestina Naadu Mills, and a son, Samuel ‘Fiifi’ Atta Mills.
The late Atta Mills is the first ever Ghanaian President to die in office.
The US Secetary of States, Madam Hilary Clinton and about 15 Heads of State are currently in the country to pay him their final respect.
*www.samuelobour.com with additional files from GNA



Thursday, August 9, 2012

MOVERS AND SHAKERS; MY FIRST ENCOUNTER WITH THE ANGELIC AND TALENTED MOIPEI SISTERS QUARTET





MOVERS AND SHAKERS; MY FIRST ENCOUNTER WITH THE ANGELIC AND TALENTED MOIPEI SISTERS QUARTET

Year 2009 was magical for me! I was a form 3 student back in Pumwani High School, Nairobi and an opportunity arose for me to visit Braeside International School- a fancy, uptown and classy school for the affluent.

Little did I know that this Nairobi conservatoire Orchestra event pitting the who is who in the music scene in Nairobi would lead me to an encounter with a talented quartet I had only before then admired on TV.

Although I did not have the 100 bob required for the event, for this one-in – a –lifetime opportunity, I had to debt my pals.

Fate brought me to an encounter with the Moipei Quartet. To date I still hold on to the diary page they personally autographed for me and one that earned me envy and talk of the school that week.

At the Nairobi Orchestra event, I had an opportunity to see and hear their dad perform. What really stuck with me about the 4- triplets Mary, Martha, Magdalene and Seraphine was their jovial moods and smile. But above all their humbleness despite their fame and the ability to stoop down below and blend with commoners like me in a magical and unique way won my admiration for them.

The 4 are adept at the African and classical genres. But what do you expect? They started their singing career at only age 2 and they have grown to date to incorporate acting and drama too.

Not only have they sung for International audiences, they have also used their talent in the campaign for children’s right. And the United Nations Children Education Fund (UNICEF) has made them child ambassadors, to raise awareness on rights of children.

The girls have won the hearts of many Kenyans and the whole world with their ability to sing in different languages. Their professional music teacher cum dad has been encouraging them to learn new cultures, languages and also he has been helping them learn to play musical instruments.

That’s the Moipei Quartet for you. To them, it is not all about the fame but the quest to use and exploit their talents positively to help and inspire others!







IN THIS HOLY MONTH OF RAMADHAN, WE TAKE A LOOK AT COMMON PHRASES USED IN ISLAM.




1.      when starting to do something; “Bismilahir Rahmanir Raheem”.( in the name of Allah, the compassionate, the merciful)
2.      when mentioning something that will be done in the future; “Inshallah” ( If Allah wills)
3.      when praising something say, “Subhanullah” ( glory to Allah)
4.      when in pain or distress; “Ya Allah” (o Allah)
5.      when appreciating something say, “ Masha-Allah” (As Allah willed)
6.      when thanking someone; “Jazakullah Khair” ( Allah reward you)
7.      when you see something bad. “Nowthdhubillah.” ( Allah protect us)
8.      When saying you’re sorry to Allah for a sin; “Astaghfirullah.” ( Allah forgive)
9.      After sneezing or when you’re happy about something; “Alhumdulillah.” (praise Allah)
10. when meeting someone; “Assalamu ‘alaykum’” ( peace be upon you)
11. replying to the above greeting; “ Wa ‘alaykum assalam’” ( and upon you be peace)
12. When hearing about a death or tragedy; “Inna lillahi wa inna ilayhi rajion.”( to Allah we belong and to Him we return)
13. when giving in charity; “ Fee eemanullah” ( in Allah’s faith)
14. when taking an oath; “Wallah” ( I swear to Allah)
15. If someone sneezes and they say, “Alhumdullilah”, you reply with, “Yarhamakullah.” (Allah has mercy upon you). The sneezer will reply back, “Yehdi Kumullah”, which means, “Allah guide you.”

“ R
AMADHAN IS THE MONTH WHOSE BEGINNING IS MERCY, MIDDLE IS FORGIVENESS AND END IS FREEDOM FROM HELL FIRE.”
THE AFRICAN HANGOUT BLOG WISHES ALL THE MUSLIMS WORLDWIDE RAMADHAN KAREEM AND SAUM MAQBUL.