Skip to main content

Interesting things to know about the towel

How often do you wash your towel? Some people wash once a week, while some, once a year. The towel is a fertile breeding ground for millions of microbes, especially those found on human skin and on the gut.  No wonder the towel is one of the objects that facilitate fecal-oral contamination (literally connecting the two ends of the gut).  Worse still, most people keep towels in the bathroom (near the toilet). Every flush of the toilet sends mist with millions of microbes, ranging from H.pylori,  salmonella and other deadly bacteria and viruses. When you wash your hands ready for a meal, and dry them with your body towel, there's high chance you are directly ingesting your fecal matter, or, if in a shared lavatory, someone else's faeces. Unless cleaned well, viruses such as human papillomavirus (causes warts, anal cancer and cervical cancer) can be transmitted when towels are shared with infected individuals. So, what to do? 1. Launder towels once a week. 2. Use hot water and det...

Kenya’s Bid Bond Talks Continue in The US And UK This Week Despite Attempts to Look East

Kenya is about to issue its first international bond, bringing a two-year odyssey to an end amid renewed appetite for emerging- and frontier-market assets—and mounting concerns over a binge of African borrowing. Officials from East Africa’s biggest economy are set to start meeting investors this week about the debut dollar bond sale. BarclaysBARC.LN -0.51%, J.P. Morgan ChaseJPM +0.14%, Standard BankSBK.JO +1.07% and QNB Capital, a unit of Qatar National Bank, are arranging the meetings, which will take place in the U.K. and the U.S.between June 5 and June 13, according to a person familiar with the matter. The Kenyan government hopes to raise about $1.5 billion in its first dollar-denominated bond. If it succeeds, it will be one of the biggest dollar bonds ever sold by an African country. But the sale has been delayed a number of times because of a 10-year-old public-procurement scandal. The Kenyan government recently lost a court case relating to a contested 1990s procurement contract and had to pay $16 million to entities that won the contract—an obstacle it said it needed to clear before issuing a bond. The payment, made in May, caused a furor in Kenya: the parliament didn’t approve it, but President Uhuru Kenyatta went ahead with it by presidential decree. The government needs to issue the bond before the end of this month to cover spending it has already committed to. Investors seem unperturbed. “The timing is really good for Kenya,” said Kevin Daly, a fund manager at Aberdeen Asset Management, which oversees about $541 billion of assets. Demand should be healthy, Mr. Daly said, but for many investors price will be key. “I’m not going to buy this in the 6.5% range. If we’re talking in the low 7%-area, maybe there would be some value,” he added.

Comments