Vytelle Expands to Brisbane, Australia with Sixteenth Global Bovine In Vitro Fertilisation Laboratory

BRISBANE, Australia,, July 13, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Vytelle, a precision livestock company, is progressing on their five-year plan to provide accessible, hormone-free, bovine in vitro fertilisation to producers across the globe. Announced today, Vytelle has expanded to Brisbane, Australia with its sixteenth global laboratory.

Vytelle’s integrated technology platform combines Vytelle ADVANCE, a breakthrough in vitro fertilisation (IVF) technology, with Vytelle SENSE, an animal performance data capture system, and Vytelle INSIGHT, an artificial intelligence based genetic analytics engine.  The platform provides progressive cattle producers the technology to make reliable data-driven mating decisions that improve the predictability of genetic progress, replicating the right genetics faster.

The Brisbane-based, Australia laboratory brings accessibility to modern reproduction technology like never before to Australia’s eastern states’ beef herds. Vytelle’s hormone-free in vitro fertilisation process, including their proprietary media, will deliver high-quality embryos to producers allowing them to make more valuable calves, faster to maximise sustainability.

“Vytelle is the fastest growing bovine IVF company in the world,” commented Kerryann Kocher, CEO of Vytelle. She continued, “We are thrilled to open our doors in Brisbane, positioning Vytelle to serve 70% of the total beef herd in Australia from this location.”

 Vytelle has a long history in Australia through its Vytelle SENSE phenotypic data capture technology to measure and select for feed efficiency. With this investment, Vytelle is positioned to help Australian producers improve efficiencies and make faster genetic progress across the supply chain to consistently market more efficient and sustainable beef. “The large-scale adoption of IVF will be driven by the successful use of frozen embryos,” stated Andrew Donoghue, Regional Manager for Australia and New Zealand. He continued, “Unlike other technologies, the Vytelle system allows us to deliver frozen results producers can count on, providing reliable IVF to herds historically underserved with fresh programs.”

The Australian-based team is serving beef and dairy producers with on-farm ovum pick-ups immediately. Visit www.vytelle.com or contact Andrew Donoghue at andrew.donoghue@vytelle.com or +61 428 442 1555 to accelerate your herd’s genetic progress today.

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Andrew Donoghue
Vytelle
+61 428 442 1555
andrew.donoghue@vytelle.com

GlobeNewswire Distribution ID 8874359

Zimbabwe’s chess ‘queens’ are checkmating adversity

In an epic scene from the 2016 Mira Nair-directed biographical film, Queen of Katwe, the actor playing 10-year-old Ugandan chess prodigy Phiona Mutesi has a distraught look on her face as her mentor Robert Katende checkmates her. She pauses for a fraction of a second before giving up, at which Katende gently berates her, "No...no, Fiona. Never tip your king so quick."

Far away from Hollywood's recreation of the life of a champion, at Chivhu in Zimbabwe, 12-year-old Grace Zvarebwa has been practising for four years the art of not tipping her king too quick.

Along the way, this unassuming girl born into a family of subsistence farmers from a town 146km south of the capital city of Harare has etched her name as a potential global star by becoming Zimbabwe's national junior chess champion.

Grace aspires to be a FIDE Grandmaster, no less, and mentor others like her back home to become champions.

"In June, I won in the under-16 category in Zimbabwe, and we are supposed to travel to Egypt next for the African Youth Chess Championship. I am hoping for funding so that I can go there and win the tournament," Grace tells TRT Afrika. "I will use the cash prize to help my parents and sponsor my colleagues."

Since taking up the sport four years ago, Grace has won more than 15 medals in tournaments across Zimbabwe. In some of these, she defeated players almost twice her age.

Her dream of succeeding outside her country is now shared by many others like her, thanks to mentorship initiatives like those that pulled Phiona Mutesi out of poverty and made her a household name.

Queens of Chivhu

Godknows Dembure, who teaches at Makumimavi Primary School, is doing in Chivhu what Katende did at Katwe, a slum in the Ugandan capital of Kampala, after meeting school dropout Phiona during a missionary-run outreach.

At Nharira Primary School, his previous workplace, Dembure established a chess club named Queens of Chivhu — inspired by Queen of Katwe — to help girl students improve their critical thinking and mathematics skills through chess. Dembure had himself learned to play chess when he was a trainee teacher.

"When I started this chess project, it was as a kind of antidote to the problems that existed in the area where I was teaching. Child marriages, pregnancy and dropout rates were high, prompting me to look for a way to help these girls gain confidence and wriggle out of the situation they were in," Dembure tells TRT Afrika.

"When I started this chess project, it was as a kind of antidote to the problems that existed in the area where I was teaching. Child marriages, pregnancy and dropout rates were high, prompting me to look for a way to help these girls gain confidence and wriggle out of the situation they were in," Dembure tells TRT Afrika.

Zimbabwe National Statistics Agency (Zimstat) data shows that rural girls are twice more likely to be married before 18 than their urban counterparts.

Zimstat also notes that 33.7% of girls aged under 18 are already married, which works out to one in three girls under 18. In comparison, only 2% of boys get married before reaching the age of 18.

Zimbabwe is among the 20 African countries where child marriages are rampant.

Funding challenges

In Zimbabwe, chess is still considered an elite sport, played mostly in the country's top schools. A rural chess hub like Chivhu is the exception. Girls emerging from Dembure's Queens of Chivhu club have already triumphed at various levels of the sport, competing in and winning local, national and international competitions.

Dembure says funding to enable his wards to attend competitions is a challenge in the absence of income-generating avenues. Parents in the area already struggle to pay for their children's education – so, there's little else they can provide for chess.

Sometimes, Dembure ends up funding the club with his own earnings so that the girls can go to tournaments and gain competitive experience.

Bigger arenas beckon

Besides Grace, two other players from Queens of Chivhu — Lynne Chidanhire and Patricia Madziva — are supposed to travel to Egypt this year for the African Youth Chess Championship. One of the girls doesn't have a passport yet.

The club won the Zimbabwe national championships in 2018, but could not attend the Africa tournament in Egypt due to financial constraints. Last year, the team had players qualify for the African Youth Chess Championship in Ghana, but couldn't send them there for want of funding.

In 2019, a GoFundMe initiative on Twitter made a breakthrough by raising US $5,000 in less than 24 hours for a four-member Queens of Chivhu team to compete in the African Schools Individual Chess Championship in the Namibian capital of Windhoek. Grace just missed out on a medal, finishing fourth in her age group.

The African Youth Chess Championship, the highest level in the continent, serves as the qualifying stage for the World Chess Championship to be held next year from April 3 to 25 in Toronto, Canada.

For Grace and the rest of the Queens of Chivhu, all the extraneous challenges of old remain, but their talent in the royal game of 204 squares has ensured that life isn't a stalemate any longer.

Source: TRTworld.com

US Boxer Mayweather Stumps for Zimbabwe’s Ruling Party

Former champion U.S. boxer Floyd Mayweather Jr. is in Zimbabwe to promote the sport a year after making a similar trip to Nigeria. But in Zimbabwe, Mayweather also appears to be supporting the ruling Zanu-PF party for August elections.

Mayweather's private white jet landed Thursday in Zimbabwe, where he was welcomed and joined in dancing to African drums. The American former champion boxer told waiting reporters he was excited to be in Zimbabwe and back in Africa after his first trip to the continent in Nigeria a year ago.

"It is always great to come back to Africa. The motherland, a beautiful place, beautiful people, coming back to see my people. They embrace me with open hearts," he said.

Like his visit to Nigeria, Mayweather's trip to Zimbabwe was billed as promoting the sport of boxing. But his Zimbabwe trip is not without controversy.

Mayweather attended a political rally Thursday for the ruling Zanu-PF party, which critics accuse of using authoritarian tactics against opponents and mismanaging the struggling economy.

The 46-year-old former boxer is being hosted by Scott Sakupwanya, a controversial gold dealer who is running for parliament in next month's elections on the Zanu-PF ticket.

Sakupwanya in April was named in an Al Jazeera investigative documentary, "The Gold Mafia," that exposed a gold smuggling and money laundering ring involving top officials. A convicted gold smuggler in the documentary named Sakupwanya as Zimbabwe's "biggest gold guy," to which he has not responded.

Zimbabwe's central bank froze the assets of four men named in the documentary, and the government says it is investigating the allegations.

Sakupwanya welcomed Mayweather to the Zanu-PF rally in Mabvuku, the Harare suburb where he is running for office.

"[Mayweather] is happy to be here, and wants to come again. He told me that people in America do not really know what is happening here," Sakupwanya said. "He did not even bring his security details because he knows [Zimbabwe] is a peaceful country. He says this shows that foreigners shouldn't talk about Zimbabwe before they come here, and they must leave politics where it's not necessary."

Sakupwanya gained public attention in 2020 when photos of him surfaced on social media posing with gold bars and millions of dollars in cash.

Some social media posts criticized Sakupwanya for campaigning with Mayweather, who is also known for flashing wealth, when most Zimbabweans are living in poverty.

Tendai Biti, vice president of the main opposition party, the Citizens Coalition for Change, said: "It's obscene, it's immoral and it shows the wrong priorities of Zanu-PF. I hope the residents of Mabvuku are wise enough and will vote for a right candidate in the plebiscite to be held on August 23, 2023."

Biti said Mayweather should be ashamed for becoming an implicit part of alleged illicit financial flows.

When called by VOA, a designated media team for Mayweather and Sakupwanya refused to comment on the issue.

The American former boxer is expected to fly to South Africa on Friday, and then return Sunday to visit Victoria Falls on Zimbabwe's border with Zambia before returning to the U.S.

Source: Voice of America

Zimbabwe president approves controversial patriotic law

Zimbabwe’s President Emmerson Mnangagwa has signed a bill into law that imposes penalties on Zimbabweans who are found to have wilfully harmed the sovereignty and national interest of Zimbabwe.

The controversial patriotic bill faced widespread opposition from lawyers and activists describing it as a grave assault on human rights.

It comes weeks before a crucial general election which the opposition believe will not be free or fair.

The law imposes sentences ranging from fines to the death penalty for those who take part in meetings which encourage international military action or trade boycotts.

President Mnangagwa and much of his inner circle are under US economic and travel sanctions which they say were a result of the opposition's lobbying.

Legal analysts believe the new patriotic law is vague and therefore open to abuse.

Source: BBC

Anti-corruption Coalition initiates children to demand accountability

The Ghana Anti-Corruption Coalition (GACC) has engaged schoolchildren and urged them to demand accountability and help protect the public purse.

The GACC further urged the schoolchildren to reject all corrupt and corruptible practices and stand up for the country by reporting all acts of corruption to appropriate channels.

The engagement was part of activities to commemorate this year's Africa Union (AU) Anti-Corruption Day.

Madam Beauty Emefa Narteh, Executive Secretary of GACC, who made the call in a speech read on her behalf during the commemoration of the day at Gbambaya T.I Ahmadiyya Junior High School (JHS) in the Sagnarigu Municipality of the Northern Region, said engaging the schoolchildren meant spreading anti-corruption information to both students and their teachers.

Madam Narteh, whose speech was read by Mr Masud Aziz Rauf, Executive Director of RUWA-GHANA, said: 'Whilst the young people-armed with the information-can spread the message to their parents and other community members, the teachers become a sustainability channel as they will be able to further impart the knowledge gained to generations of students.'

The event was organised by the GACC in partnership with RUWA-GHANA, both non-government organisations.

The GACC organised a similar event in 30 other districts in 14 Regions across the country.

The AU Anti-Corruption Day, held on July 11, every year, is a day set aside by the AU to remind Africans and African Leaders of the urgent need to address the pervasive issue of corruption within their societies.

Madam Narteh said: 'Corruption has been identified as a major root cause of poverty, deprivation, and underdevelopment. In the case of Ghana, corruption has resulted in unemployment and under-employment, poor service delivery and a lack of access to basic necessities of life, challenges mostly borne by young people.'

Mr Samuel Harrison Cudjoe, Programmes Officer, GACC told the students that 'You are the future of this country. You will be comfortable if Ghana becomes a good place. If you do not resist corruption, you cannot get a good future and your children will also not have a good future.'

He added: 'When you see something going wrong, talk about it. Report it to somebody. You should also do the right things.

Alhaji Ibrahim Baba Nassam, Headmaster of Gbambaya T.I Ahmadiyya JHS, lauded the initiative and said it would help to ensure judicious use of state resources for the benefit of all.

He urged the students to send the message home for all to join the fight against corruption in the country.

Source: Ghana News Agency