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Friday, 19 April 2024

Botswana Energy Options: Solar is the Way to Go

Columns

The great Thomas Edison, who logged a total of 1093 patents singly or jointly in his 84-year lifespan and who was the driving force behind a whole host of innovations which included the incandescent light bulb, once said, “I’d put my money on the sun and solar energy.

What a source of power! I hope we don’t have to wait until oil and coal run out before we tackle that.” At the onset of the still-in-force NDP 11, which runs from April 2017 to March 2023, government hived off P2.25 billion (a move engendered by the irregular, if not corrupt, depletion of the National Petroleum Fund) from the BPC subsidy budget pertaining to that time horizon and re-oriented it toward the development of the bulk petroleum product storage terminal at Tshele Hills near Rasesa village in Kgatleng District.
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As much as this was a step in the right direction given the gasoline doldrums that has rocked the country lately, I nonetheless contend that it amounted to an inapposite re-direction of resources. Though government advisedly robbed Peter, it did not necessarily pay Paul. That money should have been devoted wholly to kick-starting the generation of eco-friendly electrical energy in this rackety day of ours where hydrocarbons have become something of a swear word.

The Tshele Hills project is no less crucial, but it should have been catered to in a separate budget. With the unemployment bug, which of necessity must be tweezed out, so doggedly dug in, it would not have been profligate for the two projects to run concurrently.

BOTSWANA’S PALTRY SOLAR POWER OUTPUT

If there is one geophysical endowment in which Botswana has an immutable comparative advantage, it is sunshine. With 3000 kilowatt-hour of solar energy per square metre per year, which is a third higher than the sub-Saharan average of 2000, we are one of the sunniest countries in the whole wide world. Sunshine in Botswana is not only abundant: it is more reliable than many a territory across the globe.

It defies belief that all this solar wealth had gone begging until only a few years ago, when it dawned on us that we have all along been passing up a grand opportunity to broad-base our energy fount. In May 2017, BPC invited prospective investors to bid for the construction of the first two of the envisaged 12 solar parks with an output of 50 MW apiece. The tender award is slated for next month, with the supply expected to come on stream by August 2022.

It goes without saying that solar energy can substantially reduce our dependence on the environmentally deleterious traditional fuels that are coal and oil, and escalate the share of renewable energy sources in the energy mix, not to mention ensuring an ecologically sustainable approach to development and generating new job opportunities.

Moreover, it could avail electricity to the remaining 20 percent or so of the population who are not connected to the national grid in double-quick time, As I write, there is only one operating grid-connected solar power plant of consequence, located near Phakalane. This, though, is only enough for solar water heating and small-scale electricity generation, largely for rural applications.

It was built in 2012 and officially opened in September that year with the assistance of the Japanese government, who popped up a gratuitous 80 percent of the total project cost of P106 million. Hitherto, solar energy consumption in Botswana was an ugly big naught.

Yet it need not have begun that belatedly. Government simply was not that galvanised for a solar energy solution to our chronic power deficit. Way back in 1983, I approached BPC and government with a view to embarking on solar power production at Phakalane, with a prospective German partner in tow.

My pitch to BPC was that I produce solar power to meet both our needs as Phakalane Pty Ltd and to sell the surplus to BPC. BPC totally rejected the idea, insisting that it had the sole right to provide power to the nation, notwithstanding the fact that it came at a premium for both domestic and industrial consumers.

My alternative suggestion that I provide the surplus power free of charge to BPC but that they in turn undertake to provide power to Phakalane free of charge in the event of a prolonged rainy or overcast weather situation was equally pooh-poohed. I just had to buy power from BPC come rain or shine, so I was told. Had government obliged, the solar power dispensation in Botswana would have begun forty years ago folks, not in 2012.

When I was energy minister in the 90s, I had a pilot photovoltaic solar project get going at Manyana village. It turned out to be a roaring success and was even extended to other villages. It seems the project was discontinued after I left the ministry in 1998. I am still in the dark as to why a curtain was drawn upon it.

Again whilst I was energy minister, prospective American investors approached me and proposed a joint solar venture with government, with each party putting in $300,000. When my officials accordingly presented a funds requisition to the finance ministry, they were told the window period of accessing funds had closed the previous day and would reopen months later. The Americans were pissed off and bid farewell to the matter. One wonders where we would be today if the project had come to fruition.

THE SUN KEEPS RISING AND THE COSTS KEEP FALLING

Although solar photovoltaic cells (devices which directly covert light energy into electricity) were invented in 1954, it is only in the last decade or so that they have picked up take-up momentum. The reason the world has been so glacially slow at mainstreaming solar power had to do with the reluctance on the global military-industrial complex who had poured billions in traditional forms of energy such as crude oil and coal and were yet to recoup their investment, and the astronomical costs associated with erecting a solar power plant.

As recently as 2006, the solar power tab was 20 times that arising from coal. Not anymore. Today, the cost of solar power has so plummeted that in Europe, China, the Middle East, and the America’s, it is the cheapest source of electricity. According to the International Energy Renewable Agency, solar power costs fell 77 percent between 2010 and 2018.

In fact, industry watchers inform us that within just a decade’s time, it will be cheaper to shut down coal-fired plants and build new solar plants in their place! This shift represents a substantial victory for green energy, as it may offer the push the industry needs to become the new norm. It is projected that in the next twenty years, renewables will provide most of the world’s electric power, with wind, solar and other renewable energy sources gaining ground at a faster pace than any fuel through human history.

Earlier in the year in Abu Dhabi, a solar deal was clinched at only $0.0135 per kilowatt-hour (equivalent to 11 Thebe), only marginally besting similar deals a few months prior in Dubai and Qatar. In much of the world, the average cost of solar energy is $0.05 per kilowatt-hour, or about 6 Thebe.

Contrast that with the present BPC asking domestic consumer price of P1.38 (inclusive of VAT) per kilowatt-hour. Each time solar capacity has doubled, the total price of solar energy has fallen by about 30 percent. For as long as the sun rises, solar power is guaranteed, with the added boon that the associated costs will keep heading south.

Notwithstanding this rapidly bullish trend of recent times, solar energy accounts for only 2 percent of electrical energy consumption on the globe. On our continent in particular, there are just 5 Gigawatts of solar photovoltaic energy installed, less than a single country such as the UK, for instance, which ironically receives far fewer hours of sunshine in a year. The world has been on the marks and has even got set but it yet has to go as far as monumentally embracing solar energy is concerned.

MZANSI AND OTHERS A STEP AHEAD

In Africa, the stereotyped “Dark Continent”, solar and wind power energy constitutes only 3 percent in the energy availability graph when in other regions it is more than double that. That does not subtract from the fact that the solar energy zing is slowly taking hold as the proverbial first step in a journey of a thousand years. Industry seers in fact posit that Africa may be on track to rely wholly on renewable energy by the year 2050.

As I write, nineteen of the ECOWAS line-up have seen a significant leap in off-grid access to electricity through standalone solar systems in particular. They include Ghana, Nigeria, and Cameroun.
In Nigeria for one, there are many villages, such as Wuna on the peripheries of the Abuja metropolis and parts of Oguni State, that are wholly solar-powered courtesy of the plug-gap mission of the Niger Delta Power Holding Company (NDPHC).

Through its pay-as-you-go modelled PayGo solar home systems project, NDPHC is braced to afford 70 million Nigerians living in  HYPERLINK “https://www.esi-africa.com/news/south-africas-first-off-grid-business-to-open-in-johannesburg/” \t “_blank” off-grid communities with clean, sustainable and reliable solar home solutions using solar mini-grids in phased rollouts followed by nationwide deployment.

According to one report, “The solar home systems are said to have the capacity to power four LED bulbs providing up to 8 hours of lighting, a radio and a USB port with charging cables for mobile phones. Customers pay the monthly top-up rate via mobile money for 36 months after which time the unit can be unlocked and the customer has full ownership.”

Elsewhere on the continent, a new breed of African innovators is harnessing mobile money, along with advances in solar power and battery storage, to leapfrog the continent’s gaps in electric power generation. The Kenya-based M-Kopa has sold more than 600,000 household solar power kits in partnership with the Japanese multinational Mitsui, and in Uganda, Engie is making strides, with a tally of 140,000, mostly to residential customers in remote areas using the mobile money transactional platform.

Earlier this year, a R1.2 billion Public-Private partnership solar farm was approved by South Africa’s National Treasury for the Kannaland Municipality. The Kannaland Municipality is situated in the western part of the Little Karoo and includes the towns of Ladysmith, Calitzdorp and Zoar.

Altogether, there is R209 billion worth of investment in 112 renewable energy programs across the length and breadth of Mzansi. Certainly, with the help of Solar and Micro-Grid technologies, an energy revolution can happen in Africa.

GOVERNMENT, CEDA SHOULD FACILITATE TAKE-OFF

Granted, solar energy costs are tumbling, to the extent where firms like Lumos, a noted supplier of off-grid power in Nigeria, is able to claim that it costs them $15 a month to provide solar power to households compared to $70 for captive generator power. However, solar power suffers from two fundamental drawbacks.

First, though solar companies have a vast base of potential customers, this latent clientele lacks the wherewithal to afford system upfront payment as the initial capital costs are enormous. Whilst renewable energy options are inexpensive to operate, and routinely become cheaper over the long-term, they have high installation costs which require massive get-go financing.

This is where governments should come in, by way of subsidising renewables through either direct part-payments to green energy investors or tax breaks/concessions for a specified period of time. One source of the subsidy capital on the part of government could be a new tax on carbon emissions in the form of a surcharge at the pump price.

And given the problems potential investors face in securing loans, CEDA’s role is paramount both as part of a comprehensive approach to financing and if the potentially lucrative solar boom is not to be stalled.

Second, the energy efficiency of the flat solar panels in vogue is limited to approximately 17 to 22 percent, the reason we realistically talk in terms of an energy mix scenario. But again, that is already on the rise, courtesy of one particular company called SolSuntech, which this year introduced 3D solar panels with an energy efficiency of 33 percent. The US-based company is poised to make this innovative technology available to African and global markets. Any takers in BW?

MUTILATERAL CONNECTIONS CAN HELP

According to the 2015 Paris Agreement, every government on the planet committed to limiting the greenhouse effect of global warming to no more than 2 percent of pre-industrial levels. Botswana is under obligation to do just that and that is only tenable using the renewable energy route. For example, the Nigerian government has undertaken to power generation from eco-friendly energy sources to 23 percent of total electric generation in 2025 and 36 percent in 2030, up from roughly 13 percent presently.

If Botswana has to take a new, low-carbon approach to development, it must mobilise public, private, and multilateral and bilateral donor financing to raise the funds needed for renewable-energy projects – like what several other African countries have done. Early in 2019, Nigeria incepted six pilot mini solar grids in six states which had the residences of 15,000 people electrified 24 hours a day.

Part of the funding, amounting to $1.9 million, came from the EU and the Germany government, though Nigerian energy companies planned, built and run the mini-grids. Thanks to the Paris Agreement, developed countries have pledged the equivalent of 0.12 percent of the world’s GDP through to 2025 to help developing countries mitigate energy needs so that most governments in Africa, for instance, reach universal access to electricity by 2030 in line with the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals.

The World Bank for one has a $225 million Regional Off-Grid Electrification Project (ROGEP) aimed at benefitting about 1.7 million people who are either without electricity altogether or who continue to reel from unreliable supply, as well as to bolster business and public institutions who use standalone solar systems. As if not to be outdone, the African Development Bank also embarked on a campaign to “light up Africa” which committed $12 billion to energy projects between the years 2017 band 2022.

In 2013, the US alone instituted the Power Africa project, whose aim was to add 20,000 MW of generation capacity and expand electricity access to 50 million people in sub-Saharan Africa in seven years’ time. I am given to understand that Power Africa is currently working with BPC, the Department of Energy, and BERA, with energy equipment, solar heating systems, solar photovoltaic equipment, and engineering services touted as the best sub-sector prospects. The nation would of course want to be apprised as to how the collaboration is panning out.

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GONE FISHING

28th March 2023

In recent years, using personal devices in working environments has become so commonplace it now has its own acronym, BOYD (Bring Your Own Device).  But as employees skip between corporate tools and personal applications on their own devices, their actions introduce a number of possible risks that should be managed and mitigated with careful consideration.  Consider these examples:

Si-lwli, a small family-run business in Wales, is arguably as niche a company as you could find, producing talking toys used to promote the Welsh language. Their potential market is small, with only some 300,000 Welsh language speakers in the world and in reality the business is really more of a hobby for the husband-and-wife team, who both still have day jobs.  Yet, despite still managing to be successful in terms of sales, the business is now fighting for survival after recently falling prey to cybercriminals. Emails between Si-Iwli and their Chinese suppliers were intercepted by hackers who altered the banking details in the correspondence, causing Si-Iwli to hand over £18,000 (around P ¼ m) to the thieves. That might not sound much to a large enterprise, but to a small or medium business it can be devastating.

Another recent SMB hacking story which appeared in the Wall Street Journal concerned Innovative Higher Ed Consulting (IHED) Inc, a small New York start-up with a handful of employees. IHED didn’t even have a website, but fraudsters were able to run stolen credit card numbers through the company’s payment system and reverse the charges to the tune of $27,000, around the same loss faced by Si-Iwli.  As the WSJ put it, the hackers completely destroyed the company, forcing its owners to fold.

And in May 2019, the city of Baltimore’s computer system was hit by a ransomware attack, with hackers using a variant called RobinHood. The hack, which has lasted more than a month, paralysed the computer system for city employees, with the hackers demanding a payment in Bitcoin to give access back to the city.

Of course, hackers target governments or business giants  but small and medium businesses are certainly not immune. In fact, 67% of SMBs reported that they had experienced a cyber attack across a period of 12 months, according to a 2018 survey carried out by security research firm Ponemon Institute. Additionally, Verizon issued a report in May 2019 that small businesses accounted for 43% of its reported data breaches.  Once seen as less vulnerable than PCs, smartphone attacks are on the rise, with movements like the Dark Caracal spyware campaign underlining the allure of mobile devices to hackers. Last year, the US Federal Trade Commission released a statement calling for greater education on mobile security, coming at a time when around 42% of all Android devices are believed to not carry the latest security updates.

This is an era when employees increasingly use their smartphones for work-related purposes so is your business doing enough to protect against data breaches on their employees’ phones? The SME Cyber Crime Survey 2018 carried out for risk management specialists AON showed that more than 80% of small businesses did not view this as a threat yet if as shown, 67% of SMBs were said to have been victims of hacking, either the stats are wrong or business owners are underestimating their vulnerability.  A 2019 report by PricewaterhouseCoopers suggests the latter, stating that the majority of global businesses are unprepared for cyber attacks.

Consider that a workstation no longer means a desk in an office: It can be a phone in the back of a taxi or Uber; a laptop in a coffee shop, or a tablet in an airport lounge.  Wherever the device is used, employees can potentially install applications that could be harmful to your business, even from something as seemingly insignificant as clicking on an accidental download or opening a link on a phishing email.  Out of the physical workplace, your employees’ activities might not have the same protections as they would on a company-monitored PC.

Yet many businesses not only encourage their employees to work remotely, but assume working from coffee shops, bookstores, and airports can boost employees’ productivity.  Unfortunately, many remote hot spots do not provide secure Wi-Fi so if your employee is accessing their work account on unsecured public Wi-Fi,  sensitive business data could be at risk. Furthermore, even if your employee uses a company smartphone or has access to company data through a personal mobile device, there is always a chance data could be in jeopardy with a lost or stolen device, even information as basic as clients’ addresses and phone numbers.

BOYDs are also at risk from malware designed to harm and infect the host system, transmittable to smartphones when downloading malicious third-party apps.  Then there is ransomware, a type of malware used by hackers to specifically take control of a system’s data, blocking access or threatening to release sensitive information unless a ransom is paid such as the one which affected Baltimore.  Ransomware attacks are on the increase,  predicted to occur every 14 seconds, potentially costing billions of dollars per year.

Lastly there is phishing – the cyber equivalent of the metaphorical fishing exercise –  whereby  cybercriminals attempt to obtain sensitive data –usernames, passwords, credit card details –usually through a phoney email designed to look legitimate which directs the user to a fraudulent website or requests the data be emailed back directly. Most of us like to think we could recognize a phishing email when we see it, but these emails have become more sophisticated and can come through other forms of communication such as messaging apps.

Bottom line is to be aware of the potential problems with BOYDs and if in doubt,  consult your IT security consultants.  You can’t put the own-device genie back in the bottle but you can make data protection one of your three wishes!

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“I Propose to Diana Tonight”

28th March 2023

About five days before Princess Diana and Dodi Al Fayed landed in Paris, General Atiku, a certain Edward Williams was taking a walk in a woods in the Welsh town of Mountain Ash. Williams, then 73, was a psychic of some renown. He had in the past foretold assassination attempts on US President Ronald Reagan, which occurred on March 30, 1981, and Pope John Paul II, which came to pass on May 13, 1981.

As he trudged the woods, Williams  had a sudden premonition that pointed to Diana’s imminent fate as per Christopher Andersen’s book The Day Diana Died. “When the vision struck me, it was as if everything around me was obscured and replaced by shadowy figures,” Williams was later to reminisce. “In the middle was the face of Princess Diana. Her expression was sad and full of pathos. She was wearing what looked like a floral dress with a short dark cardigan. But it was vague. I went cold with fear and knew it was a sign that she was in danger.”

Williams hastily beat a retreat to his home, which he shared with his wife Mary, and related to her his presentiment, trembling like an aspen leaf as he did so. “I have never seen him so upset,” Mary recounted. “He felt he was given a sign and when he came back from his walk he was deeply shaken.”

The following day, Williams frantically sauntered into a police station to inform the police of his premonition. The officer who attended to him would have dismissed him as no more than a crackpot but he treated him seriously in view of the accuracy of his past predictions. He  took a statement and immediately passed it on to the Special Branch Investigative  Unit.

The report read as follows:

“On 27 August, at 14:12 hrs, a man by the name of Edward Williams came to Mountain Ash police station. He said he was a psychic and predicted that Princess Diana was going to die. In previous years, he has predicted that the Pope and Ronald Reagan were going to be the victims of assassination attempts. On both occasions he was proved to be correct. Mr Williams appeared to be quite normal.”

Williams, General, was spot-on as usual: four days later, the princess was no more.

Meanwhile, General,  even as Dodi and Diana were making their way to the Fayed-owned Ritz Hotel in central Paris, British newspapers were awash with headlines that suggested Diana was kind of deranged. Writes Andrew Morton in Diana in Pursuit of Love: “In The Independent Diana was described as ‘a woman with fundamentally nothing to say about anything’. She was ‘suffering from a form of arrested development’. ‘Isn’t it time she started using her head?’ asked The Mail on Sunday. The Sunday Mirror printed a special supplement entitled ‘A Story of Love’; The News of the World claimed that William had demanded that Diana should split from Dodi: ‘William can’t help it, he just doesn’t like the man.’ William was reportedly ‘horrified’ and ‘doesn’t think Mr Fayed is good for his mother’ – or was that just the press projecting their own prejudices? The upmarket Sunday Times newspaper, which had first serialised my biography of the princess, now put her in the psychiatrist’s chair for daring to be wooed by a Muslim. The pop-psychologist Oliver James put Diana ‘On the Couch’, asking why she was so ‘depressed’ and desperate for love. Other tabloids piled in with dire prognostications – about Prince Philip’s hostility to the relationship, Diana’s prospect of exile, and the social ostracism she would face if she married Dodi.”

DIANA AND DODI AT THE RITZ

Before Diana and Dodi departed the Villa Windsor sometime after 16 hrs, General, one of Dodi’s bodyguards Trevor Rees-Jones furtively asked Diana as to what the programme for the evening was. This Trevor did out of sheer desperation as Dodi had ceased and desisted from telling members of his security detail, let alone anyone else for that matter, what his onward destination was for fear that that piece of information would be passed on to the paparazzi. Diana kindly obliged Trevor though her response was terse and scarcely revealing. “Well, eventually we will be going out to a restaurant”, that was all Diana said. Without advance knowledge of exactly what restaurant that was, Trevor and his colleagues’ hands were tied: they could not do a recce on it as was standard practice for the security team of a VIP principal.  Dodi certainly, General, was being recklessly by throwing such caution to the winds.

At about 16:30, Diana and Dodi drew up at the Ritz Hotel, where they were received by acting hotel manager Claude Roulet.  The front entrance of the hotel was already crawling with paparazzi, as a result of which the couple took the precaution of using the rear entrance, where hopefully they would make their entry unperturbed and unmolested. The first thing they did when they were ensconced in the now $10,000 a night Imperial Suite was to spend some time on their mobiles and set about touching base with friends, relations, and associates.  Diana called at least two people, her clairvoyant friend Rita Rogers and her favourite journalist Richard Kay of The Daily Mail.

Rita, General,  was alarmed that Diana had proceeded to venture to Paris notwithstanding the warning she had given Dodi and herself in relation to what she had seen of him  in the crystal ball when the couple had consulted her. When quizzed as to what the hell she indeed was doing in Paris at that juncture, Diana replied that she and Dodi had simply come to do some shopping, which though partially true was not the material reason they were there. “But Diana, remember what I told Dodi,” Rita said somewhat reprovingly. Diana a bit apprehensively replied, “Yes I remember. I will be careful. I promise.” Well,  she did not live up to her promise as we shall soon unpack General.

As for Richard Kay, Diana made known to him that, “I have decided I am going to radically change my life. I am going to complete my obligations to charities and to the anti-personnel land mines cause, but in November I want to completely withdraw from formal public life.”

Once she was done with her round of calls, Diana went down to the hair saloon by the hotel swimming pool to have her hair washed and blow-dried ahead of the scheduled evening dinner.

THE “TELL ME YES” RING IS DELIVERED

Since the main object of their Paris trip was to pick up the “Tell Me Yes” engagement ring  Dodi had ordered in Monte Carlo a week earlier, Dodi decided to check on Repossi Jewellery, which was right within the Ritz prencincts, known as the Place Vendome.  It could have taken less than a minute for Dodi to get to the store on foot but he decided to use a car to outsmart the paparazzi invasion. He was driven there by Trevor Rees-Jones, with Alexander Kez Wingfield and Claude Roulet following on foot, though he entered the shop alone.

The Repossi store had closed for the holiday season but Alberto Repossi, accompanied by his wife and brother-in-law,  had decided to travel all the way from his home in Monaco  and momentarily open it for the sake of the potentially highly lucrative  Dodi transaction.  Alberto, however, disappointed Dodi as the ring he had chosen was not the one  he produced. The one he showed Dodi was pricier and perhaps more exquisite but Dodi  was adamant that he wanted the exact one he had ordered as that was what Diana herself had picked. It was a ploy  on the part of Repossi to make a real killing on the sale, his excuse to that effect being that Diana deserved a ring tha was well worthy of her social pedigree.  With Dodi having expressed disaffection, Repossi rendered his apologies and assured Dodi he would make the right ring available shortly, whereupon Dodi repaired back to the hotel to await its delivery. But Dodi  did insist nonetheless that the pricier ring be delivered too in case it appealed to Diana anyway.

Repossi delivered the two rings an hour later. They were collected by Roulet. On inspecting them, Dodi chose the very one he had seen in Monte Carlo, apparently at the insistence of Diana.  There is a possibility that Diana, who was very much aware of her public image and was not comfortable with ostentatious displays of wealth, may have deliberately shown an interest in a less expensive engagement ring. It  may have been a purely romantic as opposed to a prestigious  choice for her.

The value of the ring, which was found on a wardrobe shelf in Dodi’s apartment after the crash,  has been estimated to be between $20,000 and $250,000 as Repossi has always refused to be drawn into revealing how much Dodi paid for it. The sum, which enjoyed a 25 percent discount, was in truth paid for not by Dodi himself but by his father as was the usual practice.

Dodi was also shown Repossi’s sketches for a bracelet, a watch, and earrings which he proposed to create if Diana approved of them.

DIANA AND DODI GUSH OVER IMMINENT NUPTIALS

At about 7 pm,  Dodi and Diana left the Ritz and headed for Dodi’s apartment at a place known as the Arc de Trompe. They went there to properly tog themselves out for the scheduled evening dinner. They spent two hours at the luxurious apartment. As usual, the ubiquitous paparazzi were patiently waiting for them there.

As they lingered in the apartment, Dodi beckoned over to his butler Rene Delorm  and showed him  the engagement ring. “Dodi came into my kitchen,” Delorm relates. “He looked into the hallway to check that Diana couldn’t hear and reached into his pocket and pulled out the box … He said, ‘Rene, I’m going to propose to the princess tonight. Make sure that we have champagne on ice when we come back from dinner’.” Rene described the ring as “a spectacular diamond encrusted ring, a massive emerald surrounded by a cluster of diamonds, set on a yellow and white gold band sitting in a small light-grey velvet box”.

Just before 9 pm, Dodi called the brother of his step-father, Hassan Yassen, who also was staying at the Ritz  that night, and told him that he hoped to get married to Diana by the end of the year.

Later that same evening, both Dodi and Diana would talk to Mohamed Al Fayed, Dodi’s dad, and make known to him their pre-nuptial intentions. “They called me and said we’re coming back  (to London) on Sunday (August 31) and on Monday (September 1) they are

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RAMADAN – The Blessed Month of Fasting

28th March 2023

Ramadan is the fasting month for Muslims, where over one billion Muslims throughout the world fast from dawn to sunset, and pray additional prayers at night. It is a time for inner reflection, devotion to Allah, and self-control. It is the ninth month in the Islamic calendar. As you read this Muslims the world over have already begun fasting as the month of Ramadan has commenced (depending on the sighting of the new moon).

‘The month of Ramadan is that in which the Qur’an was revealed as guidance for people, in it are clear signs of guidance and Criterion, therefore whoever of you who witnesses this month, it is obligatory on him to fast it. But whoever is ill or traveling let him fast the same number of other days, God desires ease for you and not hardship, and He desires that you complete the ordained period and glorify God for His guidance to you, that you may be grateful”. Holy Qur’an  (2 : 185)

Fasting during Ramadan is one of the five pillars upon which the structure of Islam is built. The other four are: the declaration of one’s belief in Allah’s oneness and in the message of Muhammad (PBUH); regular attendance to prayer; payment of zakaat (obligatory charity); and the pilgrimage to Mecca.

As explained in an earlier article, fasting includes total abstinence from eating, drinking, smoking, refraining from obscenity, avoiding getting into arguments and including abstaining from marital relations, from sunrise to sunset. While fasting may appear to some as difficult Muslims see it as an opportunity to get closer to their Lord, a chance to develop spiritually and at the same time the act of fasting builds character, discipline and self-restraint.

Just as our cars require servicing at regular intervals, so do Muslims consider Ramadan as a month in which the body and spirit undergoes as it were a ‘full service’. This ‘service’ includes heightened spiritual awareness both the mental and physical aspects and also the body undergoing a process of detoxification and some of the organs get to ‘rest’ through fasting.

Because of the intensive devotional activity fasting, Ramadan has a particularly high importance, derived from its very personal nature as an act of worship but there is nothing to stop anyone from privately violating Allah’s commandment of fasting if one chooses to do so by claiming to be fasting yet eating on the sly. This means that although fasting is obligatory, its observance is purely voluntary. If a person claims to be a Muslim, he is expected to fast in Ramadan.

 

The reward Allah gives for proper fasting is very generous. Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) quotes Allah as saying: “All actions done by a human being are his own except fasting, which belongs to Me and I will reward it accordingly.” We are also told by the Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) that the reward for proper fasting is admittance into heaven.

Fasting earns great reward when it is done in a ‘proper’ manner. This is because every Muslim is required to make his worship perfect. For example perfection of fasting can be achieved through restraint of one’s feelings and emotions. Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) said that when fasting, a person should not allow himself to be drawn into a quarrel or a slanging match. He teaches us: “On a day of fasting, let no one of you indulge in any obscenity, or enter into a slanging match. Should someone abuse or fight him, let him respond by saying: ‘I am fasting!’”

This high standard of self-restraint fits in well with fasting, which is considered as an act of self-discipline. Islam requires us to couple patience with voluntary abstention from indulgence in our physical desires. The purpose of fasting helps man to attain a high degree of sublimity, discipline and self-restraint. In other words, this standard CAN BE achieved by every Muslim who knows the purpose of fasting and strives to fulfill it.

Fasting has another special aspect. It makes all people share in the feelings of hunger and thirst. In normal circumstances, people with decent income may go from one year’s end to another without experiencing the pangs of hunger which a poor person may feel every day of his life. Such an experience helps to draw the rich one’s conscience nearer to needs of the poor. A Muslim is encouraged to be more charitable and learns to give generously for a good cause.

Fasting also has a universal or communal aspect to it. As Muslims throughout the world share in this blessed act of worship, their sense of unity is enhanced by the fact that every Muslim individual joins willingly in the fulfillment of this divine commandment. This is a unity of action and purpose, since they all fast in order to be better human beings. As a person restrains himself from the things he desires most, in the hope that he will earn Allah’s pleasure, self-discipline and sacrifice become part of his nature.

The month of Ramadan can aptly be described as a “season of worship.” Fasting is the main aspect of worship in this month, because people are more attentive to their prayers, read the Qur’an more frequently and also strive to improve on their inner and outer character. Thus, their devotion is more complete and they feel much happier in Ramadan because they feel themselves to be closer to their Creator.

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