Proteas cricket team gradually taking on a migrant hue

Cape Town (South Africa), Mar.16 (ANI): Four of South Africa’s top six batsmen in the forthcoming Test match have brown skins, and had tall left-arm fast bowler Lonwabo Tsotsobe recovered from knee surgery, most of Graeme Smith’s team would have included players from previously repressed communities.

We are talking about Ashwell Prince, who blasted 254 of the best at the weekend to remind the selectors about what they had been missing in the two-nil series defeat against Australia.

Another brown-skinned star in the making is Imraan Khan, who stroked a stylish 145 for KwaZulu-Natal at the Pietermaritzburg’s cricket ground.

Hashim Amla and J.P. Duminy are the other two belonging to minority communities in South Africa, who have made a name for themselves in international cricket.

The current crop confirms that the game is rising in all groupings in South Africa, and is no longer restricted to the whites.

The various non-white communities have never been away from the game. Cricket was strongly played by Indian groups in Natal, where Amla and Imraan were reared, and also in the Cape, where Prince and Duminy took guard.

But it is one thing to play matches against neighbours, another to produce Test cricketers.n the 1990s, South African teams led by Kepler Wessels and Hansie Cronje often did not include a single non-white player.

To now have half of the side non-white is a remarkable achievement, and it has been effected without a bloody revolution.

Imraan is a smallish, left-handed opening batsmen. The 24-year-old has scored hundreds in each of his past four provincial matches.

Mahatma Gandhi’s conscience was awoken after he worked as a lawyer among fellow Indians in Natal.

Although not much of a cricketer, the great man would have been delighted to see Imraan score a hundred for a Natal team that was captained by Ahmed Amla, Hashim’s elder brother.

The Amlas are products of a professional and prosperous Indian family.

Their parents are doctors and the boys attended Durban High School, a prestigious establishment with a strong cricketing tradition.

Makhaya Ntini was shepherding sheep until his ability was recognized and he was sent to Dale College. The Amlas followed a well-trodden path.

Prince was omitted from the first two Tests because the selectors did not want to disrupt a successful side.

Although logical, it meant leaving out a batsmen respected by these opponents who averaged 60 last year.

Unfortunately, Neil McKenzie did not justify the faith shown in him. Even now Prince has been asked to open.

He is entitled to feel aggrieved. Regardless, he has achieved far more than expected. Even with the selectors searching for coloured players, he did not catch the eye.

Except his returns, nothing in his batting tells of exceptional talent. His rise has confirmed the role of character and commitment in batting.

It has also carried a higher significance, forcing those with old minds to confront their demons. (ANI)

Microbicide gel offers promising HIV prevention method for women

Washington, March 6 (ANI): A vaginal microbicide gel has for the first time shown some promise to prevent HIV infection in women in a clinical trial involving more than 3,000 subjects in the U.S. and southern Africa.

While making a presentation on the trial’s findings at the Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections (CROI), the researchers said that one 0.5 per cent dose of a microbicide designed to prevent HIV from attaching to cells in the genital tract, was 30 per cent effective.

While the results of the study known as HPTN 035 are encouraging, the researchers behind it say that additional evidence is needed to determine more definitively its effectiveness.

“These findings provide the first signal that a microbicide gel may be able to prevent women from HIV infection,” says Dr. Salim S. Abdool Karim, professor of clinical Epidemiology at Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health, pro vice-chancellor (research) at the University of KwaZulu-Natal in Durban, South Africa, and director the Center for the AIDS Program of Research in South Africa, who led the multi-center study for the U.S.-based Microbicide Trials Network (MTN).

“Indeed, for the millions of women at risk for HIV, especially young women in Africa, there is now a glimmer of hope. But these findings also indicate that more research is needed; we can’t yet say that we have an effective microbicide,” he added.

Microbicides are substances intended to reduce or prevent the sexual transmission of HIV and other sexually transmitted infections when applied topically.

While various microbicides are being tested in clinical trials, none of them has ben approved for use as yet because previous trials have yielded disappointing results.

The study-conducted between February 2005 and September 2008, and involving 3,099 women at six sites in Africa and one in the U.S.-evaluated the safety and effectiveness of two candidate microbicides for preventing male-to-female sexual transmission of HIV.

“I am particularly impressed by and grateful to the women who took part in HPTN 035. “We have reached an important milestone in HIV prevention research, and these women deserve credit for the success of the study,” said Dr. Sharon Hillier, vice chairman and professor, department of obstetrics and gynecology and reproductive sciences at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, and MTN principal investigator. (ANI)

Six killed in KwaZulu-Natal storm

Johannesburg  – A storm which struck KwaZulu-Natal province killed at least six people, including a family of four, the South African agency Sapa reported Sunday, citing government officials.

Social Development Minister Meshack Hadebe said of the storm’s devastation: “It is huge. At least 10 areas have been devastated and more than 2,000 families were affected.”

He confirmed that a family of four had died in Ndwedwe. Another person was killed in the Dalton area and another in Vryheid.

Premier Sbu Ndebele told Sapa the damage was extensive and that he, together with Hadebe would be visiting the affected areas.

“Once we visit these areas to assess the damage, we will compile a report and then decide whether to declare any of them disaster areas,” Hadebe said. (dpa)