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TUESDAY - 8 MARCH 2022 - DAY 2 (P1-P4)

TUESDAY - 8 MARCH 2022 - DAY 2 (P1-P4)

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RHS ESSENTIAL 

How to manage time: Avoid Distractions When Studying

This is probably one of the hardest time management tips for high school students to get down.
We love distractions. We love procrastination when we don’t want to do the hard work.
Here’s what I recommend you start doing now…

  • Turn your phone off for tasks that take longer than 30 minutes
  • Put your computer on full screen to avoid opening other tabs
  • Only listen to music that is designed for focus (songs without lyrics)
  • Study on a full stomach and have water next to you

Write the 4 bullet points above on a piece of paper and stick it on your wall in front of your desk so you never forget!
We get distracted by every little thing that we can, so cut them out for good when you’re studying. 

(https://modernteen.co/time-management-tips-for-high-school-students/)

TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS

birthday

Leeyah Pillay (Grade 8)

SPORT PRACTICES ARE COMPULSORY TODAY:

Note that the final team selection will take place today for the Trinity House Sports Day on Saturday. Learners who miss today's practice sessions will not be included in the teams.


history

1994Mangope calls out troops as unrest flares in Bophuthatswana

1982: The United States accuses the Soviets of killing 3,000 Afghans with poison gas.

1948: The U.S. Supreme Court rules that religious instruction in public schools is unconstitutional.

1917First celebration of International Women’s Day

TEN/11 LOUNGE SPECIAL: Chicken Wrap R35

tuck

NEWS

AU ‘disturbed’ by reports Africans stopped from escaping Ukraine

African bloc says all people have right to cross international borders during conflict as Ukraine-Russia war continues.

African countries have been scrambling to evacuate their citizens from Ukraine since Russia sent troops across the border on Thursday [Wojtek Radwanski/AFP]

By Hamza Mohamed
Published On 8 March 2022The African Union (AU) says it is “disturbed” by reports that African nationals in Ukraine are been prevented from safely crossing the border to flee the raging conflict in the country.
In a statement late Monday, the pan-African body said: “[A]ll people have the right to cross international borders during conflict, and as such, should enjoy the same rights to cross to safety from the conflict in Ukraine, notwithstanding their nationality or racial identity.”

African nationals, mostly students, have accused Ukrainian security forces of stopping them from boarding trains headed to the border regions. Videos shared on social media also show Ukrainian border forces pushing African nationals as they attempt to leave Ukraine.
“Reports that Africans are singled out for unacceptable dissimilar treatment would be shockingly racist and in breach international law,” the AU statement continued.
Al Jazeera spoke to several African and Asian nationals who said they were turned away by Ukrainian authorities at the border to Poland.
“We were the last people to get on anything, it was always like that.” Madi Kemel Dinga, a Congolese student, told Al Jazeera at a reception centre in Korczowa, eastern Poland.
“They will first put their people first. And then us. For me, it was discriminating but for them, it is normal,” Dinga added.

Some of the people Al Jazeera spoke to said a country at war could be forgiven for putting its people first. Others, some with Ukrainian families of their own, said the contrast in treatments was too stark.
“We understand that they need to save their citizens but we have been loyal to Ukraine,” Ronald Mangu Achu, a Cameroonian student, told Al Jazeera. “We have been in their country lawfully. We have showed them love. I believe the least they could do is evacuate us.”
African countries have been scrambling to evacuate their citizens from Ukraine since Moscow sent its troops across the border on Thursday.
Nigeria said it has about 8,000 nationals in the country and some have managed to cross the border into neighbouring countries.

On Sunday, the Nigerian government expressed concern over reports of discriminatory behaviour by Ukrainian and Polish border guards against its nationals.
“There have been unfortunate reports of Ukrainian police & security personnel refusing to allow Nigerians to board buses and trains heading towards [the] Ukraine-Poland border,” the Nigerian presidency said in a statement posted on Twitter.
“We understand the pain [and] fear that is confronting all people who find themselves in this terrifying place. We also appreciate that those in official positions in security and border management will in most cases be experiencing impossible expectations in a situation they never expected,” the statement added.
“But, for that reason, it is paramount that everyone is treated with dignity and without favour. All who flee a conflict situation have the same right to safe passage under UN Convention and the colour of their passport or their skin should make no difference,” it said.
Several African students told Al Jazeera they were prevented from boarding trains [Bernat Armangue/AP]
Nigeria’s foreign minister Godfrey Onyeama told Al Jazeera on Monday the evacuation of the country’s nationals from Ukraine would start on Wednesday. Onyeama said more than one thousand students have made it to Bucharest in neighbouring Romania.
The minister said Abuja was in touch with the Polish and Ukrainian governments, expressing their displeasure at the reported cases of discrimination.
On Sunday, South Africa’s foreign ministry spokesman Clayson Monyela said in a tweet that several students from his country were stuck at the Ukraine-Poland border.
The South African ambassador to Poland was at the border trying to get the students through, Monyela added. South African and other African students have been treated badly at the border, Monyela said.
Meanwhile, the United States said it was coordinating with UN agencies and other governments “to ensure every individual, including African students, crossing from Ukraine to seek refuge is treated equally – regardless of race, religion, or nationality.”