Body found in Ivory Coast may be missing reporter | Top News | Reuters #chocolate #childlabor #investigation

Body found in Ivory Coast may be missing reporter

PARIS (Reuters) - Investigators in Ivory Coast have unearthed a body which they say may belong to Franco-Canadian journalist Guy-Andre Kieffer, who went missing in country's economic capital Abidjan in 2004, his brother told France 3 television on Friday.

The team of French and Ivorian investigators have sent samples from the body, exhumed in the Issia region several hundred kilometres (miles) to the northeast of Abidjan, to France for genetic identification tests.

"Judge (Patrick) Ramael started the excavations this morning on the basis of information obtained some time ago and he found a body in the exact spot where the informer had indicated," Bernard Kieffer told France 3.

Lieutenant Alassane Doumbie, Ivory Coast army chief of operations in the Issia region said that villagers told him three months ago that they had witnessed the "strange burial of white man" in Yaokro, about 20 km (12 miles) from Issia.

"I carried out investigations and discovered a grave ... the body had been summarily buried on the outskirts of the village," Doumbie told Reuters by telephone.

"I told French military authorities and they put me in touch with the judge handling the case. He came here this afternoon and we exhumed the body which is that of Kieffer, but this has yet to be confirmed by further testing in Abidjan," he said.

He said the remains would be taken to Abidjan later on Friday, accompanied by Ramael, who has been investigating the case, and would be examined there by authorities.

French investigators are following up allegations of a political link in Kieffer's disappearance involving members of the entourage of former President Laurent Gbagbo.

Gbagbo was captured in April, 2011 in Abidjan by fighters loyal to his rival Alassane Ouattara after four months of civil war following a disputed presidential election, in which more than 3,000 people were killed and one million displaced.

Ouattara, who was sworn in as president shortly afterwards, sent his rival to face charges of crimes against humanity at the International Criminal Court late last year.

Kieffer was believed to be investigating corruption in the cocoa sector of the Ivory Coast - the world's largest producer - when he disappeared. French investigators have established that he was abducted in a car park in Abidjan on April 16, 2004.

See "The Dark Side of Chocolate" documentary film about African child labor and human trafficking within the cocoa industry. http://www.thedarksideofchocolate.org/

#Cacao, The #Medicine Of The Century

Got Sacred Cacao Chocolate Beans

Hello Chad,
According to Keith Scott-Mumby, MD, PhD, cacao is one of the most important anti-aging foods known. It reduces heart attack, strokes and cancer by up to 90%!
Marina Murphy reported in Chemistry & Industry, the magazine of the SCI, that the health benefits of epicatechin, a powerful heart-protective compound found in cacao, are so striking that it may rival penicillin and anesthesia in terms of importance to public health. Norman Hollenberg, MD, professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, told C&I that epicatechin is so important that it should be considered a vitamin.
Hollenberg has been studying the benefits of cacao consumption on the Kuna people in Panama for years. He discovered that the risk of 4 of the 5 most common killer diseases: stroke, heart failure, cancer and diabetes, is lowered to under 10% in the Kuna. They can consume up to 40 cups of cacao a week. Natural and raw cacao has high levels of epicatechin...

To Your Health,
Will

Ultimate Superfoods « OrganicFoodee.com - Super Food Cacao Smoothie recipe

Got Sacred Cacao Chocolate Beans

Ultimate Superfoods « OrganicFoodee.com

 

Ultimate Superfoods

Robert Williams spends a substantial amount of time in Ecuador’s Amazon Basin. He’s a cacao hunter. He finds the purest, richest sources of cacao beans on Earth, which is the Criollo Arriba Nacional Fino De Aroma variety and offers them through his company, Ultimate Superfoods. He insists on heirloom beans, and only offers one variety: the criollo bean. Criollos are the original and best cacao beans, as all the other kinds were developed with practical considerations in mind, like high yield. Heirloom criollo beans are all about flavor, and flavor is based on the wide profile of micronutrients naturally in the beans. Robert oversees harvesting and production in South America for Ultimate Superfoods, so you can imagine, he has a rich knowledge of all things cacao.

Robert also sources other extraordinary ingredients, including the only agave nectar I eat. Offered under the company’s Ojio brand, Robert’s agave nectar is the only agave that I trust is totally organic, raw and unadulterated agave. They squish pulp and bottle it in glass. Nothing refined, nothing hidden. You can taste the difference immediately. I hate the flavor of every brand of agave except Robert’s.

So, every day around 4 p.m. I give my afternoon a little lift by enjoying a delicious superfood smoothie using my friend Robert’s incredible ingredients. The recipe and quantities vary, but the general recipe is this:

1 tablespoon ground cacao
1/2 tablespoon cacao nibs
1 tablespoon agave nectar
2 tablespoons mesquite powder
2 tablespoons coconut oil
1 tablespoon flax seeds
1 tablespoon hemp seeds
1/4 teaspoon shilajit powder
1/4 teaspoon amla powder
1/4 teaspoon powdered reishi
1/2 teaspoon local bee pollen
1 banana
4 cups / 1 liter good cold water

Then I’ll throw in something else, like 1/4 vanilla bean pod, some soaked gojis or half a dozen fresh, ripe berries. Other brands of cacao taste nice, but Ultimate Superfoods cacao tastes better. Hit the blender and you’re set to enjoy the ultimate superfood smoothie!