OpEd by HSH Princess Charlene: Day of the African Child

Photo: Eric Mathon and Gaetan Luci/Palais Princier
Photo: Eric Mathon and Gaetan Luci/Palais Princier

Introduction by Nancy Heslin: June 16 is Day of the African Child, which has been observed since 1991. It marks the 1976 Soweto Uprising when 10,000 black school children marched a mile demanding the right to better education and to be taught in their own language. Hundreds of the young protestors were shot and in the two weeks that followed, hundreds were killed and more than a thousand injured.

It is no coincidence that HSH Princess Charlene, in partnership with the RNLI and Bloomberg Philanthropies, would chose Day of the African Child to publish her first OpEd. The Princess has been empowering children around the world since she set up the foundation that bears her name five years ago and, in her humble and compassionate style, she continues to lead by example in showing how a community can work together to make a difference.

Water – it’s everywhere, and in just about everything and everyone on this wonderful planet of ours. 70 per cent of the Earth’s surface is covered by oceans, seas, rivers, lakes, and glaciers. Water’s in the air we breathe, the ground we walk on, and we humans are pretty much made up of water too. Water, in short, is life. And for a long time, water was my life.

Discovering the joy of swimming inspired me to dedicate 20 years of my life to training and realising my dream to become an Olympic swimmer. Training and competing in the water taught me the importance of discipline, respect for oneself and others, team spirit and dedication. Most significantly, I saw how learning to swim could not only change lives, as it did mine, but also save lives.

My love affair with the water took me to sporting heights and it remains a huge part of my life whether surfing or paddleboarding, racing on a water bike for charity, crawling lengths in the pool or splashing around with my children. Despite that, I’m also all too aware of the risks associated with water. Learning to respect the water, and learning how to swim and stay safe in it can reduce these risks and give us great confidence and freedom.

During my competitive swimming career, it was important to me to share my passion and knowledge of the water with children, and teach them how to be safe in the water. Now I have my own children, one of my top priorities has been to teach them to swim. It is an essential life skill, like learning to safely cross a road. Far too many people, often children, drown because they can’t swim.

In South Africa, where I grew up, drowning is the second leading cause of accidental death after road accidents. It’s not much talked about. You could say it’s a hidden epidemic in a supposedly dry continent. In fact, Africa has vast swathes of seas, lakes and rivers. In coastal cities like Dakar, Durban, Dar Es Salaam and Freetown, you often find the shoreline crowded with people but as most of them can’t swim, they simply dip their toes at the water’s edge. The trouble is that it doesn’t take much for a child, or an adult, to slip and drown in a few centimetres of water or be swept out by a rogue wave or current.

The World Health Organisation (WHO) estimates that drowning claims the lives of more than 60,000 children under the age of five and more than 360,000 people globally each year. It claims a similar number of lives today as diseases such as diarrhoea and measles did in the 1970s and 1980s.

As with those then leading killers, there must be a concerted and coordinated effort to prevent deaths by drowning. Africa’s drowning death statistics are sadly the highest in the world but they are such an everyday occurrence that they barely get a mention in local media.

As Patron of the South African Red Cross Society, I am promoting water safety and learning to swim, as well as first aid and CPR training – for children and by children. Education like this is crucial to saving lives and stopping the needless grief that afflicts the families of those who drown.

In 2012, I set up my Foundation to teach children essential water safety skills and how to swim and so far we’ve reached over 300,000 people, mainly children, in 30 countries. Equipping young people with essential life skills will not just save lives, it will prepare them for a future in which they can be active and responsible citizens.

For as Nelson Mandela reminded us in 1995, “Our children are the rock on which our future will be built, our greatest asset as a nation. They will be the leaders of our country, the creators of our national wealth, those who care for and protect our people”.

This is why, this year, we organized the Riviera Water Bike Challenge, a 21km ProAm relay race from Nice to Monaco with 10 teams of 5 competitors, an event which saw David Coulthard, Nico Rosberg, Paula Radcliffe, Ryk Neethling and Percy Montgomery among others battle it out along the Cote D’Azur to be crowned champions. The project raised the funds to design and establish the first aquatic rescue centre in Burkina Faso, an ambitious project for my Foundation in partnership with the Red Cross Monaco and the Red Cross Burkina Faso.

On this Day of the African Child, as we celebrate the joy, laughter and future of our precious children, I urge the world’s governments to put water safety and the elimination of drowning on the development agenda. If countries, NGOs, and international bodies join forces, drowning need no longer be a silent killer, whether in Africa or elsewhere. Together we can save lives – one person, one family, one community at a time. Water is precious and so are our children.

The Princess Charlene of Monaco Foundation is trying to raise awareness of this cause in partnership with the RNLI and Bloomberg Philanthropies. For more see: www.fondationprincessecharlene.mc, www.rnli.org and www.bloomberg.org

Article first published June 16, 2017.

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Winner of Monaco Classic races towards the Olympics

Brendan McCarty, Monaco Classic Week, sailiing
Brendan McCarty, Captain of Rowdy, which won Monaco Classic Week EPM (Epoque Marconi) category. Photo: Monaco Life

New Zealander Brendan McCarty may have won the Vintage Marconi category in Monaco Classic Week, which took place from September 13-17, but he has his sails set for the 2020 Olympics in Tokyo.

“The Monaco Classic is a very special regatta that we’ve had the privilege of competing in every two years,” Brendan told Monaco Life. “The Yacht Club does an amazing job, both on the water and with social events after racing, and it has become one of the favourite events for the 14 members of our crew.”

Racing once a day over the 4-day event, the boat’s finishing place represents the number of race points. At the end of the week, scores are tallied and the boat with the lowest score wins. “Last year we were first equal with another boat and so we are excited to pick up the trophy this year.”

The 28-year-old has been professionally sailing since he was 15, when he left home and started a sail-making apprenticeship in a small loft in the north of New Zealand. Three years later, upon completing the internship, Brendan decided that superyachts was the path for him, so he got his Yachtmaster certification. “I was picked up by S/Y Tiara – a 55m sloop – and from there started my journey to becoming a captain,” Brendan said.

Currently he’s working on a 43-metre yacht, and also racing helmsman of the owner’s other yacht, a 20-metre classic “Rowdy”, which took podium on Sunday.

Brendan has sailed the 23-tonnes refitted Rowdy for six regattas across Europe this summer. “Rowdy is a beautiful example of a New York 40 class racing yacht from 1916.  Over the past four years we have either won or been on the podium for 95 percent of the events entered so we are very proud of that.”

Two years ago, Brendan has a realisation. “It hit me that I missed the racing I had grown up with, Finn sailing, and that I had to take the opportunity to chase my childhood dream and campaign for the 2020 Olympics in Tokyo.”

This lead Brendan to Valencia, Spain, where he now lives and trains full-time at the world’s leading Finn training academy.

“The Finn is an amazing boat that has produced some of the best sailors ever to live such as the great Paul Elvstrom and Ben Ainsley,” Brendan explained. “It’s the only boat in the Olympics designed for big athletes – most of the top guys in the fleet are 100 kg and 195 cm tall – and has earned the reputation as a heavy weight class that breaks many athletic boundaries.”

Over 3.6 million people watched Finn sailing at the Rio Olympics; the sport reached 1.8 million users on Facebook. Part of what feeds the audience’s enthusiasm is that live media feed from competitors’ GoPro cameras at all major racing events.

“I figure if I make it in this fleet it will be an achievement I hold proud for life.”

On his quest to the Olympics, Brendan McCarty is looking for a sponsorship in exchange for “unprecedented marketing support”. Contact: brmyachting@gmail.com


READ ALSO: Veterans’ charity looks to launch sailing program

Photo: Jack/Kingdom Visual
Photo: Jack/Kingdom Visual

 

 

A fun family weekend to celebrate Mobility Week

European Mobility Week is celebrated in the Principality every year from September 16 to 22. Across the week, numerous activities will encourage the public to “travel differently”.

On the initiative of the Department of the Environment and in partnership with the Electric Vehicles Club, Monaco Sustainable Development (MC2D) and Monaco City Hall, this year’s events will be an opportunity for adults to test-drive electric vehicles and for children to take part in a game to promote awareness of the various types of mobility now available.

From Saturday, September 16, to Sunday, September 17, a festive mobility event will take place at Rose des Vents in Larvotto from 10 am to 6 pm, when Renault and Eccity will be offering free test-drives of two- and four-wheeled electric vehicles.

The Monegasque Bus Company and Mobee will be offering the chance to try their self-service electric vehicles, bikes and Twizys – an opportunity to find out how these concepts work and learn about memberships.

The Mediterranean Institute for Market Research and Sustainable Development will present and lead games on the theme of mobility, while younger visitors will be able to take part in Bio-Logika, a fun, educational game to raise awareness of the various forms of mobility – cars, bicycles, buses, walking – as well as a variety of recreational workshops.

Several challenges will be offered for 5 to14 year-olds. There will be various recreational, sporting and educational workshops, in which children can compete with their parents in a good-natured atmosphere.


RELATED ARTICLE: Mobility and leisure, let’s live together

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Meridien mixology course makes learning fun

“We want to transform our hotel bar into Monaco’s trendiest cocktail bar," says Yohann Loustaud
“We want to transform our hotel bar into Monaco’s trendiest cocktail bar,” says Yohann Loustaud

Registration is now open for the Meridien’s new Mixology class, which starts September 19.

Set in the sea-front hotel with a private beach in the background, the cocktail course is the initiative of Yohann Loustaud, head bartender of the hotel’s bar, Longitude 7° 26’.

“We want to transform our hotel bar into Monaco’s trendiest cocktail bar,” Yohann told Monaco Life. “In the US, when you want to have a good cocktail, you go to a hotel, like in the movies. But in France, you never think about a hotel bar to have a drink … and we want to change that.”

The Mixology course follows four keys steps: Learning, mixing, decorating, tasting. Yohann will explain the cocktail ingredients, where they’re from, and how to pair with a spice or aromatic plant. Then, the fun part: crushing ice in a giant shaker and adding syrup, liquor or anything else required. Afterwards, there’s advice on how to decorate a drink with fruit or flowers before the final (and best) part: tasting your hard work.

meridiencocktail

The bar’s top-end ingredients help to make exclusive creations, such as “Absolutely Crushed” – with spicy Sailor Jerry rum, Amaretto liquor and a fusion of violet and frozen pear juice – or “Into the Woods”, a woody blend of chanterelle-infused rye whiskey, maple syrup, chocolate chip and blackberries.

Until December, the Merdien travel-themed cocktail classes run every second Tuesday, from 6 pm to 7:30 pm: Eastern Europe (September 19), South America (October 3 and 17), the West Indies (November 7 and 21) and Japan (December 12).

The easiest way to travel the world in 90 minutes is now right in Monaco.

The Meridien’s Mixology/Cocktails classes (€38) start September 19. Call +377 9315 7888 to reserve or for more information on their wine (€55) or cooking (€98) courses.


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Surprise resignation of judicial chief

Philippe Narmino. Photo: Charly Gallo/DC
Philippe Narmino. Photo: Charly Gallo/DC

Monaco’s long-standing Director of Judicial Services has announced his early retirement.

In a press communiqué issued on the afternoon of Thursday, September 14, Philippe Narmino said: “At the start of a new judicial year, I have decided to abandon my continuing duties by asking for my rights to early retirement. The personal accusations against me and the repeated attacks suffered by the judicial system no longer allow me to adequately protect them.”

He added that his decision was primarily determined by the interests of the Monegasque justice system “which must be able to continue to be met with the serenity required”.

He said that by taking early retirement he would be able to find his freedom of speech and action after nearly forty years spent in the service of justice.

The resignation comes after the publication in Le Monde of an investigative article on the ongoing legal wrangle between Dimitri Rybolovlev, majority owner of AS Monaco, and art dealer Yves Bouvier.

Referring to the affair as “Monacogate”, the prestigious French daily reported that it was in possession of SMS messages between Tetiana Bersheda, a lawyer acting for Mr Rybolovlev, and the former director of the Monaco police force, Regis Asso, and Mr Narmino.


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Oceanographic hosts colloquium on trash in the sea

romage, enviornment, monaco
romage, enviornment, monaco
Robert Calcagno, Director of the Oceanographic Museum, with Anne Vissio (left), Executive Secretary of the RAMOGE Agreement, on the left, and Fannie Dubois, Secretary
Executive of the Pelagos Agreement, Photo: Manuel Vitali/DC

The secretariats of the RAMOGE and Pelagos Agreements have held a successful colloquium at the Oceanographic Museum to raise awareness of the acute problem of marine litter.

The event, on September 12, was aimed at both coastal and inland communities. Scientists, representatives of the countries parties to the Agreements – France, Monaco, and Italy – as well as local actors took part.

Environmental and health issues related to marine litter, government actions to combat this form of pollution and innovative initiatives to stop it were the highlights of the event, the aim of which was to come up with concrete measures to prevent it.

The problem of waste reduction is a common concern to the RAMOGE and Pelagos Agreements because of the pollution that threatens marine species and in particularly marine mammals.

Considering that 80 percent of the waste is of land-based origin, it is essential to develop policies in order to avoid detritus found at sea.


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