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UPND disputes defections to PF in Western Province

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The UPND has disputed media reports indicating that senior party officials in Western Province have defected to the Patriotic Front (PF).

UPND Chairman for Logistics, Sibote Sibote has told a media briefing today that no one in the UPND has defected from the party.

Mr. Sibote has claimed that those reported to have defected are people, who were serving indefinite suspensions in the UPND.

On March 22, Patriotic Front National Chairperson Inonge Wina announced that a total number of 8 Provincial UPND leaders in Western Province had defected to Patriotic Front (PF).

According to Mrs. Wina , a group of UPND top Provincial leaders which was lead by Induna Imbwae Imikendo included Kanz Mundia UPND Provincial Chairman, Cornel Makumba trustee, David Muzinda Provincial Vice Chairman, Miss Inonge Mubuyaeta Provincial Chairlady, Miss Rosemary Munalula provincial Vice Secretary and Publicity Secretary Teddy Chimbinde had defected to PF.

She said the eight former leaders defected from UNPD because they were not consulted by Mr. Hakainde before he decided to pull out of the Pact adding that they agree with Professor Clive Chira’s proposal of sharing positions according to the formula of 60% and 40% allocation of parliamentary seats and that Mr. Sata be President of the pact.

Another Parallel FAZ AGM Scenario Looms

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A stand-off at high-noon is looming as Faz stood its ground that the annual general meeting will be staged in Kitwe and not Lusaka despite the Sports Council dramatic announcement this evening that it will be held in the Capital.

NSCZ spokesperson Smart Mwetwa said during a press briefing on Thursday evening that the decision to shift the Faz AGM from Kitwe to Lusaka was reached after intelligence reports that hired thugs would disrupt the meeting.

Mwetwa added that the decision was made after a consensus was reached with all stake holders.

However, Faz officials spoken to this evening after the NSCZ announcement have insisted they are heading to Kitwe.

“It is Moba in Kitwe,” Faz communication officer Erick Mwanza said in reaction to the development.

Mwanza referred to a Fifa letter signed by Fifa president Sepp Blatter today that reaffirmed their last correspondence from March 18 signed by Thierry Regenass of the possibility of a ban from Zurich should a third party interfere with the AGM.

“Who has the power to name the AGM date and venue?Blatter’s letter answers that,” he said.

Meanwhile, the Andrew Kamanga-led faction say they will attend the Lusaka meeting to be held at Mulungushi International Conference Centre.

Simataa Simataa said they will hold a caucus meeting tomorrow in camera in Lusaka ahead of the Mulungushi Hall meeting.

Thursday Faz AGM Round-Up

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Here are Thursday highlights as momentum builds towards Saturdays FAZ annual general meeting.

-Faz has confirmed that the AGM will go ahead at Moba Hotel in Kitwe executive committee member and head of the publicity subcommittee Miles Sampa said.

This follows speculation that government had ordered AGM moved to Lusaka.

-Fifa says Zambia risks ban should National Sports Council of Zambia interfere in the venue of the Faz AGM.

“Faz alone is responsible to organize the AGM and thus to decide on its venue and date,”FIFA director of associations Thierry Regenass said in an official letter to Faz president Kalusha Bwalya dated March 18.

“Should the NSCZ or any other authorities impose different views, FIFA would seize its emergency committee in order to sanction the government interference which could go as suspension of FAZ. It is therefore important that you inform the said authorities of the FIFA position.”

-Simataa Simataa will attend the Faz AGM after the appeals committee today overturned his suspension after asking Faz’s bankers to freeze its accounts at the height of the impasse.

“The fact that the disciplinary committee did not consider the peculiar situation which prevailed at the time was therefore a misdirection, the events do cause us to give the benefit of doubt to the appellant,” appeals committee chairman William Nyirenda said.

“We allow this appeal and restore the appellant’s full rights under the FAZ constitution.”

-The Faz Electoral College will comprise 223 members.
Making up the electoral college will be five national associations and nine provincial associations.

Clubs will comprise the remaining places while 47 provisional non-voting members are also expected to attend the FAZ AGM.

-The Kamanga faction will on Friday hold a consultative meeting with Faz councilors in Ndola.

World TB day

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World TB Day, falling on March 24th each year, is designed to build public awareness that tuberculosis today remains an epidemic in much of the world, causing the deaths of several million people each year, mostly in developing countries. March 24th commemorates the day in 1882 when Dr Robert Koch astounded the scientific community by announcing that he had discovered the cause of tuberculosis, the TB bacillus. At the time of Koch’s announcement in Berlin, tuberculosis, which usually attacks the lungs, was the single biggest disease threat to humanity.Koch’s discovery opened the way towards diagnosing and curing TB.

The theme of World TB Day 2011 is “On the move against TB: Transforming the fight towards elimination”

Today, about one-third of the world’s population is infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb), the bacterium that causes TB. Most people have no symptoms because the bacterium is inactive, or latent, but individuals with symptoms of active TB disease can infect others. According to World Health Organization (WHO) estimates, in 2009 more than 14 million people had active TB, leading to 1.7 million deaths, or 4,600 deaths each day. Among people infected with the bacteria, those who have certain other conditions, such as HIV/AIDS and diabetes, are more likely to develop active TB and to die from it. Because of this deadly synergy, TB has become the leading cause of death among people with HIV/AIDS.

Symptoms of TB

Although your body may harbor the bacteria that cause tuberculosis, your immune system usually can prevent you from becoming sick. For this reason, doctors make a distinction between:

Latent TB

In this condition, you have a TB infection, but the bacteria remain in your body in an inactive state and cause no symptoms. Latent TB, also called inactive TB or TB infection, isn’t contagious.

Active TB

This condition makes you sick and can spread to others. It can occur in the first few weeks after infection with the TB bacteria, or it might occur years later. Most people infected with TB germs never develop active TB.

Signs and symptoms of active TB include:

Cough
Unexplained weight loss
Fatigue
Fever
Night sweats
Chills
Loss of appetite

What organs are affected?

Tuberculosis usually attacks your lungs. Signs and symptoms of TB of the lungs include:

Coughing that lasts three or more weeks
Coughing up blood
Chest pain, or pain with breathing or coughing
But tuberculosis can also affect other parts of your body, including your kidneys, spine or brain. When TB occurs outside your lungs, symptoms vary according to the organs involved. For example, tuberculosis of the spine may give you back pain, and tuberculosis in your kidneys might cause blood in your urine.

When to see a doctor

See your doctor if you have a fever, unexplained weight loss, drenching night sweats or a persistent cough. These are often signs of TB, but they can also result from other medical problems. Your doctor can perform tests to help determine the cause.

Causes

Tuberculosis is caused by bacteria that spread from person to person through microscopic droplets released into the air. This can happen when someone with the untreated, active form of tuberculosis coughs, speaks, sneezes, spits, laughs or sings.

Although tuberculosis is contagious, it’s not especially easy to catch. You’re much more likely to get tuberculosis from someone you live with or work with than from a stranger. Most people with active TB who’ve had appropriate drug treatment for at least two weeks are no longer contagious.

HIV and TB

Since the 1980s, the number of cases of tuberculosis has increased dramatically because of the spread of HIV, the virus that causes AIDS. Tuberculosis and HIV have a deadly relationship — each drives the progress of the other.

Infection with HIV suppresses the immune system, making it difficult for the body to control TB bacteria. As a result, people with HIV are many times more likely to get TB and to progress from latent to active disease than are people who aren’t HIV-positive.

Drug-resistant TB

Another reason tuberculosis remains a major killer is the increase in drug-resistant strains of the bacterium. Ever since the first antibiotics were used to fight tuberculosis 60 years ago, the germ has developed the ability to survive attack, and that ability gets passed on to its descendants. Drug-resistant strains of tuberculosis emerge when an antibiotic fails to kill all of the bacteria it targets. The surviving bacteria become resistant to that particular drug and frequently other antibiotics as well.

Risk factors

Anyone can get tuberculosis, but certain factors can increase your risk of the disease. These factors include:

Weakened immune system

A healthy immune system can often successfully fight TB bacteria, but your body can’t mount an effective defense if your resistance is low. A number of diseases and medications can weaken your immune system, including:

HIV/AIDS
Diabetes
End-stage kidney disease
Cancer treatment, such as chemotherapy
Drugs to prevent rejection of transplanted organs
Some drugs used to treat rheumatoid arthritis, Crohn’s disease and psoriasis
Malnutrition
Advanced age
Poverty and substance abuse

Complications

Without treatment, tuberculosis can be fatal. Untreated active disease typically affects your lungs, but it can spread to other parts of the body through your bloodstream. Examples include:

Bones. Spinal pain and joint destruction may result from TB that infects your bones. In many cases, the ribs are affected.
Brain. Tuberculosis in your brain can cause meningitis, a sometimes fatal swelling of the membranes that cover your brain and spinal cord.
Liver or kidneys. Your liver and kidneys help filter waste and impurities from your bloodstream. These functions become impaired if the liver or kidneys are affected by tuberculosis.
Heart. Tuberculosis can infect the tissues that surround your heart, causing inflammation and fluid collections that may interfere with your heart’s ability to pump effectively. This condition, called cardiac tamponade, can be fatal.

Treatments and drugs

Medications are the cornerstone of tuberculosis treatment. But treating TB takes much longer than treating other types of bacterial infections. With tuberculosis, you must take antibiotics for at least six to nine months. The exact drugs and length of treatment depend on your age, overall health, possible drug resistance, the form of TB (latent or active) and its location in the body.

Most common TB drugs
If you have latent tuberculosis, you may need to take just one type of TB drug. Active tuberculosis, particularly if it’s a drug-resistant strain, will require several drugs at once. The most common medications used to treat tuberculosis include:

Isoniazid
Rifampin (Rifadin, Rimactane)
Ethambutol (Myambutol)
Pyrazinamide

Medication side effects
Side effects of TB drugs aren’t common but can be serious when they do occur. All tuberculosis medications can be highly toxic to your liver. When taking these medications, call your doctor immediately if you experience any of the following:

Nausea or vomiting
Loss of appetite
A yellow color to your skin (jaundice)
Dark urine
A fever that lasts three or more days and has no obvious cause
Completing treatment is essential
After a few weeks, you won’t be contagious and you may start to feel better. It might be tempting to stop taking your TB drugs. But it is crucial that you finish the full course of therapy and take the medications exactly as prescribed by your doctor. Stopping treatment too soon or skipping doses can allow the bacteria that are still alive to become resistant to those drugs, leading to TB that is much more dangerous and difficult to treat.

To help people stick with their treatment, a program called directly observed therapy (DOT) is sometimes recommended. In this approach, a health care worker administers your medication so that you don’t have to remember to take it on your own.

[Sources- Mayoclinic.com,Stoptb.org]

With copper price at all time high, workers demand 50% pay rise

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FLASHBACK: RB Commissioning the Chambishi Copper Smelter plant.

Unionized workers at Chambishi Copper Smelter downed tools and held a peaceful demonstration today demanding better conditions of service.

National Union of Miners and Allied Workers-NUMAW Chambishi Copper Smelter Branch Chairman Reuben Kalale told ZNBC News in an interview that the workers are not happy with the 12% salary increment which the management has offered them.

Mr. Kalale has that the miners want at least a 50% salary increment.

Some of the striking workers told ZNBC News that they expect to get better pay because copper prices on the international market have gone up.

The management announced the 12% increment on Wednesday after concluding negotiations with NUMAW.

But this morning the annoyed workers gathered outside the mine premises and demanded to be addressed by management.

Chambishi Copper Smelter Public Relations Manager Everisto Mutale said the management team is meeting union leaders to try and resolve the matter.

Mr. Mutale said that management would issue a statement on the outcome of the meeting later.

ZNBC

Government writes to UN over Zamtel

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Government has engaged the United Nations to seek clarification on whether the UN Security Council’s resolutions on Libya have an effect on LAP Green’s investment in Zamtel.

The UN Security council has passed a resolution to freeze asserts which are owned by individuals in the government of Libya following the uprising in the North African country.

Lap Green which holds 75 percent in Zamtel is owned by the government of Libya.

Finance and National Planning Minister Situmbeko Musokotwane has told parliament that the Ministry of Foreign Affairs has already gotten in touch with the UN on the way forward.

Dr Musokotwane says government will ensure that operations at Zamtel continue, pending response from the UN.

He says the objective of the UN Security Council resolution aim at blocking monies that may be remitted to support the violence against Libyan civilians.

He points out that Zambia has taken the stand because it wants to fully comply with the UN resolution

ZNBC

Minister warns cops

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File:Home Affairs Minister Mkhondo Lungu

Home Affairs Minister Mkhondo Lungu has warned police officers against engaging in partisan politics because they risk being dismissed from the Police Service.

 

Officiating at the Zambia Police senior commanders’ workshop with the theme ‘Violence-free 2011 elections’ at Ibis Gardens in Chisamba yesterday, Mr Lungu said indiscipline and unprofessional conduct by police officers could trigger violence due to the highly emotive state of the people in an election environment.

Mr lungu said such conduct would make it difficult for officers to maintain law and order.

Mr Lungu said such a scenario would not just be an embarrassment to the Police Service, but it would erode public confidence in the service and it was important for police to reflect on ensuring professional conduct and exhibiting impartiality at all times.

“As minister of Home Affairs, I am praying that this year’s elections shall be free of violence. What is needed is for us to find the best strategies of handling and managing the elections,” he said.

He said the police had a mammoth task with regard to facilitating peaceful elections with current national debates that involved the majority of citizens calling for incident-free polls, as against a few who were predicting violence.

“I, therefore, urge you to consider how to handle these areas in conformity with the Public Order Act and the Electoral Code of Conduct. I urge you to study these materials carefully, put appropriate strategies in place and then impart the knowledge to your subordinates,” Mr Lungu said.

Speaking earlier, Inspector General of Police Francis Kabonde warned those advocating for violence to re-think their actions because violence did not only negatively affect the country’s democratic process, but jeopardised its development, peace and tranquillity.

Mr Kabonde commended President Rupiah Banda, some political parties and the Church for having come out in support of peaceful presidential and general elections.
[ Times of Zambia ]

Katele Kalumba, William Banda ask court to recall Father Frank Bwalya

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File: Father Frank Bwalya addressing a PF rally
MMD national secretary Dr. Katele Kalumba and MMD’s Lusaka province Chairperson William Banda have submitted that they want Father Frank Bwalya recalled to testify again in a case in which they have been sued for defamation of character.

The duo who have jointly sued with the attorney general in their submissions say that because Father Bwalya is no longer change life executive director, it is necessary for him to be recalled so that he can clarify his status in the matter.

They say that Father Bwalya sued them in his capacity as Change Life Executive director but that it has come to their attention that Father who is the petitioner in the matter has published a statement in the media stating that he is not executive director of Change life.

But father Bwalya’s lawyers feel that the application to recall their client on the stand is prejudice.

And in another case the Lusaka high court has granted directors of Change life Zambia an injunction restraining Father Frank Bwalya from representing himself as the organization’s executive director.

Father Bwalya is a Roman Catholic priest who has been advocating for the change of government through his red card campaign.

However, following criticisms he has received from some of the directors of the Change life Zambia regarding his programs, father Bwalya has decided to change the name of his organization to Get Involved Zambia.
[ MUVI ]

MMD nominations to remain open till eve of voting

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CHAIRPERSON of the electoral commission of the MMD, Christopher Mundia has said the filing in of nomination papers for candidates intending to contest for positions at the party’s convention will remain open until 24 hours before voting takes place.

Mr Mundia said the lodging in of nomination papers at Mulungushi International Conference Centre in Lusaka tomorrow will go on as scheduled.

He said the commission had decided to receive nomination papers earlier than 24 hours before voting takes place to facilitate for the smooth preparations of the electoral process before the convention, and to allow candidates enough time to sell themselves to the electorate.

Mr Mundia said all aspiring candidates would be expected to be fully paid-up members of the party for at least two years, be delegates to the convention and should not be less than 18 years of age.

They should also be card-carrying members of the MMD with the renewal receipt for 2011.

He said candidates should be members in good standing in accordance with the party constitution and 1999 electoral rules.

Mr Mundia said other requirements were that the aspirants should have a prescribed nomination fee as stipulated and a receipt of payment would be the only proof of such payment.

Presidential candidates are expected to pay a non-refundable fee of K10 million. Candidates for the vice-presidency would pay K5 million and other NEC positions K2.5 million.

He said all candidates, including those for the position for president and vice-president, should be supported by two delegates to the convention, who were fully paid-up members and were in good standing with the party.

[Times of Zambia]

New gratuity law not for RB – Ronnie

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Chief government spokesperson Lt Gen Ronnie Shikapwasha

CHIEF Government spokesperson Ronnie Shikapwasha has said the Presidential Emoluments Amendment Bill is not meant to benefit President Rupiah Banda as suggested by some sections of society, but to address a gap in the law to ensure that every person who serves as president receives their dues accordingly.

Lieutenant-General Shikapwasha said in Lusaka yesterday that the current law on presidential emoluments was unfair and against basic human rights.

Gen Shikapwasha, who is Information and Broadcasting Services minister, was reacting to Patriotic Front (PF) leader Michael Sata who has written a letter to President Banda demanding that he withdraws the Bill from Parliament.

“The Bill is not in anyway tailored to benefit President Banda. It covers anybody who will be president in future.

“The Bill is intended to address a lacuna in the law over a president who serves less than five years,” he said.

He said the current law did not allow a person who served as president for less than three years to get gratuity, which he said was unfair and against human rights.

Gen Shikapwasha said it was unfair for a person who had served in the office of president for three years or so not to get any gratuity, and that the Presidential Emolument Amendment Bill, currently before Parliament, was meant to address the anomaly.

He said the Government would not make laws targeted at individuals like what Mr Sata used to do when he was in government.
“For Mr Sata, he sees everything as a mater of personal benefit. Didn’t they tailor a law (on motor vehicle theft) which caught up with him?

“Mr Sata was locked up over a vehicle, and as Government we saw it was a bad law and it was removed,” he said.

Gen Shikapwasha said Mr Sata made bad laws when he was in government and he would do the same if he became Zambia’s president going by his advocacy for laws to recognise gays and lesbians.

[Times of Zambia]

Where Will The Faz AGM Be Held?

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Faz is in a catch-22 situation over the staging of its annual general meeting in Kitwe this Saturday after news that State House has requested it be staged in Lusaka instead.

The Faz AGM, which is attaining soap opera status, is set to be held in Kitwe and not Lusaka as being demanded by government.

Sources familiar with the development said this evening said Fifa has told them that they will not entertain the government’s request for the AGM to the shifted from Kitwe to Lusaka.

The sources say Fifa deems that as a third party interference.

However, Faz has yet to make a decision on whether to go ahead and let delegates travel to Moba Hotel in Kitwe or back to Lusaka with Mulungushi International Conference Centre the preferred venue by GRZ.

“We are caught in the middle,” the source said.

Lap Green’s Zamtel shares to be frozen-Musokotwane

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Government has acknowledged that there is a high likelihood that LAP Green Networks’ shareholding in ZAMTEL will be frozen following the U.N resolutions 1970 and 1973 which freeze Libyan assets around the world following the crisis in that country.

LAP Green Networks which owns 75% shares in Zamtel is a subsidiary of the Libya Investment Authority which is Libya’s sovereign investment fund.

Finance and National planning Minister Situmbeko Musokotwane told parliament in a ministerial statement today that the purpose of the UN resolution on Libya’s asset freeze is not to prevent or impede the operations of companies such as Zamtel in which Libyan companies own equity.

He said that there was no reason for concern regarding the prevailing situation in Libya as it relates to Zamtel operations.

Dr Musokotwane assured the house that when the privatization of Zamtel was completed in July 2010, a number of transaction documents were agreed and signed between the Zambian government,Zamtel and LAP Green Networks which include key agreements such as the sale and purchase agreement, the shareholders agreement and the escrow of funds agreement.

He said that the documents were negotiated with great care and gives government all the necessary procedural controls with respect to the measures which are the subject matter of the asset freeze provisions of the UN resolutions.

Dr Musokotwane added that as a further cautionary measure government will seek final clarification from the UN sanctions committee whether LAP Green holding in Zamtel and other relevant assets fall within the definition of assets to be frozen under the UN resolution.

And Dr Musokotwane has pledged government’s commitment in compliance with UN resolutions on Libya.

He said that government plans to adopt formal general administrative measures that will under the framework provided by the Zambian law prevent any breach of the UN resolutions 1970 and 1973.

QFM

Middle East Crisis will affect fuel supply – Konga

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People waiting for fuel during the 2009 fuel shortage in Lusaka

Energy Minister Kenneth Konga says the current crisis in the Middle East will greatly affect the supply of crude oil in the country.

 

Mr Konga however said government has put up measures to ensure the steady supply of fuel if the crisis continues.

Mr Konga said government is stocking up the strategic fuel reserves so that the country is not affected by the crisis.

The Energy also said cabinet has not yet sat to discuss the submissions made on the way forward on Indeni petroleum Refinery Company following the pull-out of its equity partner Total International of France.

He said the decision on whether government should source for an equity partner in Indeni will only be made after the matter has been discussed by cabinet.

Mr. Konga however, said government has been reluctant to source for an equity partner because it has been able to run the company effectively single handed.

Government currently holds a 100 percent stake in Indeni oil refinery.

Total pulled out citing lack of government commitment to reinvest in the oil refinery.

And Energy Deputy Minister Lubinda Imasiku has told parliament that the country is consuming 1.6 million litres of diesel daily, and 650 000 litres of petrol.

He says the daily consumption of Jet 1 fuel now is 150 000 litres while that of kerosene is 50 000 litres a day.

Mr Imasiku says the country is spending K11 billion on the daily consumption of diesel and another K8 billion on the daily consumption of Petrol.

The Deputy Minister was responding to a question from Gwembe Member of Parliament Brian Ntundu who wanted to know the daily consumption of fuel in the country.

[ZNBC/QFM]

Imprest probe team appointed

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Ministry of Finance and National Planning Permanent Secretary Anthony Undi shakes hands with the President

Government has appointed a team of officers to address the problem of unretired imprest by civil servants.

 

Ministry of Finance Permanent Secretary Anthony Undi says a team of officers from the office of the Accountant General and Auditor General have been appointed to sit on the committee tasked to resolve the problem.

Mr Undi was speaking when he appeared before the Parliamentary Public Accounts Committee in Lusaka.

He told the Committee Chaired by Mbabala Member of Parliament, Emmanuel Hachipuka that the team’s terms of reference include devising means of avoiding the problem of unretired imprest.

Mr Undi says the team has been given five weeks to research and come up with recommendations.

The Permanent Secretary was responding to audit queries highlighted in the Auditor General’s report of 2009.

Earlier, Mr. Hachipuka wondered why the problem of unretired imprest keeps on appearing in the Auditor General’s annual reports.

[ZNBC]

Ndola National Stadium cheers Veep

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An architectural impression of the Ndola Stadium when its completed

Vice President George Kunda says the new Ndola National Stadium will not only help improve soccer but also add to Zambia’s economic growth.

 

Mr. Kunda said Zambia appreciates the support it receives from China.

He said this when he visited the stadium construction site today.

Mr. Kunda says he is impressed with the progress made so far.

And ENHUI Foreign Construction Company vice-president Chen Ju says works are progressing well.

Mr. Chen says the stadium is likely to be handed over to government ahead of schedule.

[ZNBC]