Medecins Sans Frontieres - Belgium ICT Officer Job

Medecins Sans Frontieres - Belgium is looking for an Information & Communication Technology (ICT) Officer

Based in Juba, South Sudan for a fixed term contract (extendable)

The selected candidate will be managed by the Technical and Logistic Coordinator.

He/she will be responsible for correct implementation and endorsement of MSF-B ICT policies, user support, trainings and briefings related to ICT.

Main Tasks include:
Maintenance of ICT equipment, including regular cleaning of computer equipment, solving occurring software and hardware problems, arranging external repairs when needed
Network administration, engine update, regular security and service pack, management of mission back ups,
Internet and emailing system, including managing internet access and email accounts of the mission,
Programming, follow up and maintenance of radios (HF & VHF) used in the mission,
Advising on proper choice of hardware and software,
Training and supports of ICT users in the mission,
Maintaining an inventory of ICT materials and follow up of equipment sent for repairs.
Working hours are according to operational needs (48 hours per week)
Requirements:
Diploma in IT or related field
At least 2 years of experience in the same field, NGO experience is an advantage.
Good knowledge of written and spoken English
Ability to handle complex assignments
Punctual, reliable and responsible
Flexible, motivated, autonomous and able to work in a demanding / challenging work environment
Team player with strong analytical skills
If you meet the above requirements, please send your CV, motivation letter to MSF-Belgium, ATTN Country Administrator, P.O. Box 38897 - 00623 Nairobi, mentioning on the envelope “ ICT Officer (Juba) – SOUTH SUDAN” or email to MSFOCB-Kenya-Admin@brussels.msf.org, mentioning on the subject line: “Application: ICT Officer Juba”.

Applications must be received on or before 02/07/2010.

Only short-listed candidates will be contacted, and must avail themselves for interviews in Nairobi shortly thereafter.

MSF-B is an equal opportunity employer

Uruguay, South Korea have points to prove

Port Elizabeth - Uruguay and South Korea will get the World Cup knockout stages underway on Saturday in a match where both sides will be determined to make their mark after decades of mediocrity in the tournament.

No one is tipping Group A winners Uruguay or Group B runners-up South Korea to get anywhere near the final but their early form has come as a surprise to many teams who could easily have seen them as first-round fodder.

A place in the quarter-finals would mark a stunning turnaround in the World Cup fortunes for either side.

While the likes of World Cup winners Brazil, Germany, Argentina and Italy remain a force in the global game, twice champions Uruguay are a shadow of their former selves having not reached the last eight since 1970 when they were semi-finalists.

Like Uruguay, who are appearing in their 11th finals, South Korea are World Cup regulars but have only advanced from the group phase once, as hosts in 2002 when they made the semis.

The modest Koreans normally play down their chances and speak only about the next game but coach Huh Jung-moo said they were in a hungry mood and looking beyond the second round.

Korea Confident

"I know my players will not be satisfied with just reaching the round of 16 and we will work harder to reach the semi-finals," said Huh.

"My players will be shooting for higher targets now."

South Korea`s performances have matched their bullish rhetoric, with passing flair, confident breaks and lung-busting fitness, but six goals conceded in their last two matches are glaring reminders of their fragility at the back.

In contrast, Uruguay have yet to concede a goal and have to be the favourites to win in Port Elizabeth on Saturday after their two wins and a draw earned them top sot in the group for the first time since the 1950 World Cup which they won.

Uruguay are expected to stick by a winning formation in which influential striker Diego Forlan has played behind forwards Luis Suarez and Edinson Cavani, a fearsome combination to throw at a so far shaky South Korean defence.

Midfielder Diego Perez said their focus would be to maintain their insatiable appetite for attack but tighten their defence against a dangerous and free-flowing Korean side once again carrying the hopes of the world`s most populous continent.

"We are clear that we cannot give away any advantage at all.

We know our limits. We know we are strong in defence and we have a good attack," Perez told Reuters.

"It has been long time since things have gone this way. We know we are on a good road," he added. "We must enjoy it." (F002/T009/S026)

Obama phones US World Cup heroes

Washington - President Barack Obama told America`s World Cup heroes Thursday that the West Wing of the White House erupted in cheers when Landon Donovan scored the dramatic winning goal against Algeria.

Obama called the jubilant United States team as they prepared in South Africa for their round-of-16 knockout clash with Ghana on Saturday.

The president told the team that he was in a high-stakes meeting with new Afghan war commander General David Petraeus in the Oval Office when the injury time winner went in, and could "hear the rest of the West Wing erupt."

"The President then congratulated Donovan on the game-winning goal, asked Tim Howard how his ribs were feeling and asked Clint Dempsey how his lip was doing," Obama`s spokesman Robert Gibbs said in a statement.

"The President wished the team good luck on Saturday and made sure they knew that the entire country was cheering them on."

The Americans beat Algeria 1-0 on Wednesday, and will face Ghana in the round-of-16 match in Rustenburg on Saturday and are now eyeing a deep run in the tournament.

Some members of the US team stopped at the White House before traveling to South Africa and are not lacking for presidential support in a campaign that has attracted rare public fervor back home.

Former president Bill Clinton watched their triumph over Algeria, and Vice President Joe Biden also traveled to South Africa, to watch them play England, a match that ended in a 1-1 draw.(*)

Red Bull's Sebastian Vettel wins European GP

Red Bull's Sebastian Vettel has won the European Grand Prix, dominating the race from pole position while his teammate Mark Webber survived a spectacular crash.

It was Vettel's second win of the season. He completed the 57 laps of the Valencia street circuit Sunday ahead of McLaren's Lewis Hamilton.

Jenson Button was third for McLaren.

Webber emerged unhurt after a collision with Heikki Kovalainen's Lotus flipped his car early in the race.

It was Hamilton's third second-place finish in Valencia, after overcoming a drive-through penalty for overtaking the safety car.

Hamilton leads the overall standings with 127 points, ahead of world champion Button on 121. Vettel improves to third on 115 points.

Nadal overcomes knee, deficit, umpire flap to win

Things got quite complicated for Rafael Nadal on Saturday.
His right knee was bothering him "a lot," something he later would say he's "a little bit scared about." His left elbow was briefly in pain, too, following one particular serve.

He got into a dispute wih the chair umpire over whether Toni Nadal, Rafael's uncle, was coaching during the match, which is against the rules.

And then there was his most immediate concern Saturday: For the second consecutive round at Wimbledon, Nadal fell behind by two sets to one.

For the second consecutive round, though, he generally indefatigable Nadal came back and came through, this time pulling out a 6-4, 4-6, 6-7 (5), 6-2, 6-3 victory over 33rd-seeded Philipp Petzschner of Germany to reach the second week.

"This match was very difficult for me," Nadal acknowledged. "Having a five-set match two days ago and one toda - that's tough. I'm happy to be in the fourth round. I'm going to try to be better for Monday."

That's when the grass-court Grand Slam tournament will resume after observing its traditional day of rest on the middle Sunday, all 32 players still in the event will be on the jam-packed schedule.

Nadalwill meet 66th-ranked Paul-Henri Mathieu of France, who beat Thiemo de Bakker of the Netherlands 7-6 (5), 7-6 (6), 6-7 (8), 6-4. In his previous outing, de Bakker eliminated John Isner, the lanky American who won the longest match in tennis history, 70-68 in the fifth set.

No. 18 Sam Querrey of the United tates won his own lengthy match, reaching Wimbledon's fourth round for the first time by defeating 2002 semifinalist Xavier Malisse of Belgium 6-7 (4), 6-4, 6-2, 5-7, 9-7. The final point was played at 9:23 p.m., and Querrey figured the match would have been susended and continued Monday if he hadn't won when he did.

Next up for Querrey, 22, is a Centre Court contest against No. 4 Andy Murray, trying to become Britain's first Wimbledon men's champion since Fred Perry in 1936.

Murray, who hasn't dropped a set so far, beat No. 26 Gilles Simon of France 6-1, 6-, 6-4 Saturday.

Other fourth-round men's matches Monday will include two-time French Open runner-up Robin Soderling of Sweden vs. No. 9 David Ferrer of Spain, and No. 10 Jo-Wilfried Tsonga vs. No. 32 Julien Benneteau in an all-French pairing.

Neither of those is nearly as intriguing as the women's matcup between 12-time Grand Slam champion Serena Williams and three-time major winner Maria Sharapova. It's a rematch of the 2004 Wimbledon final, which Sharapova won, but Williams leads their career series 5-2.

"I love going on the court and playing someone that's obviously the favorite," Sharapova said. She struggled at the start of her 7-5, 6-3 victory over 68th-ranked Barbora Zahlavova Strycova of the Czech Republic. Defending champion Williams, in contrast, overwhelmed 46th-ranked Dominika Cibulkova of Slovakia at the outset of what would become a 6-0, 7-5 victory. Williams hit 19 aces and afterward declared: "For the most part my serve works when I'm in trouble. At Wimbledon it works the whole match."

Other women's fourth-round matchups include No. 3 Caroline Wozniacki of Denmark of vs. Czech Petra Kvitova; No. 7 Agnieszka Radwanska of Poland vs. No. 9 Li Na of China; and Estonian qualifier Kaia Kanepi vs. Klara Zakopalova of the Czech Republic.

None of the day's developments, however, was as significant as what happened while Nadal faced Petzschner, who lost in the first round at both of the year's first two major tournaments.

Nadal has won seven Grand Slam titles, including at the French Open this month, and never before has he won two five-setters en route to a major's fourth round. But the Spaniard went the distance against 151st-ranked Robin Haase of the Netherlands on Thursday, then did so again Saturday.

At four separate changeovers, Nadal was visited by a trainer, who mostly worked on the player's right knee. Tendinitis in both knees forced Nadal to pull out of Wimbledon a year ago instead of defending his 2008 title, and he disclosed for the first time Saturday that he's been dealing with knee issues this season.

Nadal said he received "new treatment" that helped his left knee after winning a clay-court title at Monte Carlo in April, but did not have time to get the same work done on the right side. Asked to describe the treatment, he said, "I can't explain (it) now, especially in English. Sorry."

He'll skip Spain's Davis Cup quarterfinal against France from July 9-11 so the same procedure can be carried out on his right knee, because he wants to be healthy in August for the U.S. Open, the only major title missing from his resume.

As for how the knee might effect him at Wimbledon, Nadal said: "I hope I'll be fine. I don't know. I'm going to check."

The left-hander was worried momentarily when he felt something in that elbow, but said that went away quickly and declared, "The arm is perfect."

Petzschner, playing his third five-setter in a row, sought help from a trainer for a recurring hip problem and faded late. He wondered aloud about how much medical help Nadal really needed Saturday, saying there didn't appear to be a difference in the No. 1-ranked man's movement before and after the trainer's visits.

"I only could say if I would be injured like this once, I would be happy. I don't know; maybe he had something. Maybe it was just ... clever ... to take a timeout there."

Nadal denied there was gamesmanship involved.
"I never call the physio when I don't have (anything wrong) - not one time in my career," he said. "If I (called) the physio today, it was because it was bothering me a lot, the knee."

Chair umpire Cedric Mourier warned Nadal during the fifth set about getting in-match coaching from his uncle, seated in the front row of the player guest box. Rafael Nadal pointed angrily at the umpire, spread his arms wide and shouted at him before returning to action.

Both Nadals said there was no coaching going on.
Instead, Toni Nadal explained, he was telling his nephew to stay positive.
"Nothing else," Toni Nadal said.

If anything, the admonishment from Mourier appeared to spur on the younger Nadal, who reeled off the final three games of the match. After starting only 1 for 11 on break points, he went 3 for 3 down the stretch - and in sports, of course, all's well that ends well.

"Very difficult," Toni Nadal said, echoing his charge's phrase. "But at least Rafael won the match. So all is OK."

Serena Williams into Wimbledon 4th round

Defending champion Serena Williams put on a serving clinic Saturday, hitting 20 aces in a straight-sets win over Dominika Cibulkova that sets up a possible fourth-round matchup with former champion Maria Sharapova.

The top-seeded American had at least two aces in each of her eight service games and overpowered the 46th-ranked Slovak 6-0, 7-5 in the day's first match on Centre Court.
Williams won 37 of 43 service points and held at love five times. She won 19 of her first 20 service points, with Cibulkova putting only four returns in play in that stretch.

The first set lasted just 18 minutes, with Williams winning 25 of 31 points, serving six aces and hitting 12 winners. She finished the match with 37 winners.

Cibulkova, a semifinalist at the French Open last year, finally got on the scoreboard when she held serve for 1-1 in the second set. From then on, she kept the match competitive by holding serve, although she couldn't cope with Williams' serves.

In the men’s competition, Sweden's Robin Soderling advanced to the fourth round after a straight-sets victory over Brazil's Thomaz Bellucci.

Sixth-seeded Soderling, a two-time French Open finalist, beat the 24th-ranked Bellucci 6-4, 6-2, 7-5 in just under two hours.

After breezing through the first two sets, the Swede faced a stiffer challenge from the left-handed Brazilian in the third, when he saved three break points in the penultimate game of the match.

Soderling, who has reached the round of 16 for the second consecutive year at Wimbledon, is one of only three men yet to drop a set this tournament.

Source: http://www.thejakartapost.com

Brazil's Kaka, Elano, Robinho to return against Chile

Kaka, Elano and Robinho are set to return to Brazil's starting lineup for the second-round match against Chile on Monday, giving the team a much-needed offensive boost.

Coach Dunga may not be able to count on defensive midfielder Felipe Melo, however, who sustained a left ankle injury in Brazil's 0-0 draw against Portugal on Friday in the teams' final Group G match.

Kaka will be back after a suspension for a red card against Ivory Coast, while Elano should be fit after recovering from a right ankle injury that left him out of Friday's match in Durban.

Robinho was rested against Portugal after a minor thigh problem, but Brazil doctor Jose Luis Runco said Saturday the striker can return against Chile.

Source: http://www.thejakartapost.com

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