Saturday, 31 January 2015

Africa in pictures: A selection of photographs from around the African continent this week:

A selection of photographs from around the African continent this week:
Flower girls prepare to enter a wedding reception Saturday January 24, 2015 in Monrovia, Liberia.
Flower girls prepare to enter a wedding reception in Liberia's capital, Monrovia, on Saturday as life slowly returns to normal in some Ebola-hit areas of the country. The bride and groom had waited until the worst of the epidemic had passed before scheduling their wedding as public gatherings and physical touching have been discouraged to stem the spread of the virus.
Party goers dance the night away on a football field near Botswana's capital, Gaborone, Saturday 24 January 2015
On the same day, hundreds of revellers dance the night away on a football field near Botswana's capital, Gaborone. Many young people say they cannot afford going to nightclubs since an alcohol levy was introduced in 2008.
A man pulls a transport platform made of metal barrels carrying a UN vehicle across a section of Lake Chad in Chad - Tuesday 27 January 2015
On Tuesday, a man pulls a transport platform made of metal barrels carrying a UN vehicle across a section of Lake Chad to a refugee camp at N'Gouboua…
A Nigerian girl at a refugee camp in N'Gouboua, Chad, Tuesday 27 January 2015
About 14,000 Nigerians have fled over into Chad to escape recent attacks by the Islamist group Boko Haram, according to the UN refugee agency.
Nigerian riot police in training in Abuja, Nigeria - Wednesday 28 January 2015
The next day, riot police in Nigeria practise crowd control techniques in the capital, Abuja, ahead of general elections next month.
Politician Abdallah Sambi at a campaign rally in Moroni, Comoros, Friday 23 January 2015
Parliamentary elections were held on the Indian Ocean archipelago of the Comoros on Sunday. Former President Abdallah Sambi wraps up his party's campaign on Friday with a rally staged after Muslim prayers in the capital, Moroni.
An areal view of a broken bridge over the Licungo river in Zambezia province, Mozambique, Monday 26 January 2015.
Floods in Mozambique are affecting about 124,000 people and have led to the deaths of close to 80 people. Here people on Monday are stranded on either side of a bridge over the Licungo River.
International Monetary Fund Managing Director Christine Lagarde walks through fabric shops at the Kimironko Marke, Wednesday 28 January 2015 in Kigali, Rwanda.
There is always time for shopping - even when you are one of the world's busiest women. Here International Monetary Fund chief Christine Lagarde walks through a fabric shop in a market in Rwanda's capital, Kigali, on Wednesday.
A park ranger stands next to a northern white female rhinoceros at the Ol Pejeta Conservancy in Kenya, Tuesday 27 January 2015
A park ranger stands next to a female northern white rhino at the Ol Pejeta Conservancy, some 290km (180 miles) north of the Kenyan capital, Nairobi, on Tuesday. She is one of five members of the rhino sub-species left on the planet. This week conservationists and scientists have been meeting there to discuss plans to save them extinction.
Celebrations Hargeisa, Somaliland to welcome the cast of Shakespeare’s Hamlet, Thursday 29 January 2015
Dancers in Somaliland welcome actors from London's Globe theatre to Hargeisa, the capital of the self-declared republic, on Thursday....
A poster about Hamlet in Somaliland taken in Hargeisa, Somaliland - Thursday 29 January 2015
They were there to perform Shakespeare's Hamlet. The cast have been performing on stages around the world to mark the 450th anniversary of the English playwright's birth.
A Democratic Republic of Congo fan cheers for his team in Bata, Equatorial Guinea - Monday 26 January 2015
It has been an exciting week for football fans - like this supporter from the Democratic Republic of Congo on Monday - whose teams have made it through to the quarter finals of the Africa Cup of Nations in Equatorial Guinea....
An upset football Malian football in Equatorial Guinea - Thursday 29 January 2015
But it was a bitter disappointment for Mali's supporters whose fate was decided in a drawing of lots on Thursday because they finished level in Group D with Guinea. It is the first time lots have decided a team's qualification in the tournament since 1988...
A family playing football on a beach in Bata, Equatorial Guinea - Friday 23 January 2015

Mexico blast:Nine babies found alive in the rubble of a Mexican children's hospital after a gas blast have undergone DNA tests .


A crew member works to clear debris the day after a deadly gas truck explosion ripped through a maternity hospital in Mexico CityA nurse and two babies were killed in the gas explosion
Nine babies found alive in the rubble of a Mexican children's hospital after a gas blast have undergone DNA tests to help reunite them with their parents.
The testing was necessary as the babies were not wearing identity bracelets, Mexico City Mayor Angel Mancera said.
The explosion on Thursday killed a nurse and two infants and injured more than 70 others.
It is believed to have been caused by a leak in a hose from a gas lorry fuelling the hospital's tanks.
"There are parents who have identified their children, but as the babies did not have bracelets on, we have to follow a protocol to identify them," Mr Mancera was quoted by Reuters as saying.
Tank workers struggled for about 15 minutes to repair the hose while a large gas cloud formed, witnesses said.
Rescuers work amid the wreckage caused by an explosion in a hospital in Cuajimalpa, Mexico CityThe explosion is thought to have been caused by a leaking hose from a gas tank
Crew members queue to prepare to clear debris the day after a deadly gas truck explosion ripped through a maternity hospital in Mexico CityThousands of tonnes of rubble needs to be cleared after the blast
The explosion shot a fireball into the sky, and was so powerful that much of the building collapsed.
Mothers inside shielded their infants to protect them for the blast. Many of those injured suffered burns or cuts from broken glass.
Rescuers searched under rubble and twisted metal but by late on Thursday said no one was still trapped.
Mr Mancera said a bigger tragedy was avoided as the hospital was able to evacuate many of the people inside before the leak turned into an explosion.
The three operators of the gas lorry have been detained.
There have been a number of other fatal gas explosions in Mexico over recent years.
In February 2013, 37 people died in a blast at the headquarters of the state energy firm Pemex.
Crew members queue prepare to clear debris the day after a deadly gas truck explosion ripped through a maternity hospital in Mexico City

Pakistan mosque blast:Mass funerals for Shia victims


The body of a victim killed in Friday's explosion at a Shia mosque in Shikarpur (31 January 2015)An official day of mourning has been declared across Sindh
Funerals have taken place in southern Pakistan for the victims of a suicide attack on a Shia mosque during Friday prayers which police say killed at least 60 people.
Dozens were also wounded in the attack in Sindh province's Shikarpur district, making it one of the worst sectarian attacks in Pakistan in recent years.
Sunni militants linked to the Taliban said they carried out the attack.
An official day of mourning has been declared across Sindh.
Some Shia groups burned tyres and blocked roads during protest rallies in Shikarpur town - where the attack took place.
Protests also took place in other cities.
Relatives sit near the bodies of victims who were killed in Friday's explosion at a Shia mosque in Shikarpur (31 January 2015)Attacks on Shia targets are relatively rare in the interior of Sindh - in contrast to state capital Karachi
Pakistani Shia Muslims offer funeral prayers for blast victims during the ceremony in Shikarpur (31 January 2015)Shias are demanding the arrest of those who orchestrated the attack
Shias are demanding the arrest of those who orchestrated the attack and better protection for their places of worship.
Police say that the bomber detonated explosives strapped to his body in the centre of the mosque. Four children were reported to be among the dead.
"The bomber selected a place in the mosque that would cause huge destruction," Raja Umar Khitab, a police official in Sindh's counter-terror department, told the AFP news agency.
A man mourns the death of a relative who was killed in Friday's explosion at a Shia mosque (31 January 2015)Thousands of wailing mourners at the mass funeral hit their chests and heads in grief
Mr Khitab said the bomb contained steel pellets, ball bearings and shrapnel to maximise the damage.
Pakistan has over the past decade experienced an increasing number of sectarian attacks, most carried out by hard line Sunni Muslim groups against the minority Shia community, who comprise about 20% of the population.
The Jundallah militant group said it had carried out the attack. The group has been linked to Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan and announced allegiance to Islamic State last year.
Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif condemned the attack and said that those responsible would be tried by a military court, where their cases would be dealt with more quickly.
The attack came as Mr Sharif visited the city of Karachi, the capital of Sindh province.
The BBC's M Ilyas Khan in Islamabad says that attacks on Shia targets have been fairly common in Karachi, on the coast, but are relatively new in the interior of Sindh province, where the influence of a more tolerant Sufi Islamic tradition is more widespread.
BBC map

Serena Williams beats Maria Sharapova to win Australian Open

Serena WilliamsSerena Williams beats Maria Sharapova to win Australian Open
Serena Williams beat Maria Sharapova to win her sixth Australian Open and 19th Grand Slam title.
The American world number one served superbly to win a pulsating final 6-3 7-6 (7-5) after Sharapova fought back in the second set.
Williams, 33, moves past Martina Navratilova and Chris Evert with a 19th major singles title.
She has now beaten Russia's Sharapova, the world number two, 16 times in a row dating back to 2004.
Despite feeling so unwell during a rain delay in the first set that she left the court to vomit, Williams hit 18 aces and 38 winners as she won in one hour and 51 minutes.
Play media
Serena Williams
Australian Open: Rallies 'don't get better than this'
Seemingly unsure for a moment that an ace had sealed victory, she then shook hands with Sharapova and bounded over to the corner of Rod Laver Arena towards her player box.
It was a brilliant performance in a final that exceeded many expectations, bearing in mind the players' head-to-head record.
Sharapova made a nervous start, double-faulting to drop serve in game one, while Williams appeared keener than ever to shorten the points, possibly because of her ailment.
The American crushed the Russian's second serve and was not disrupted by a 12-minute rain break that led to the roof being closed.
Still feeling the effects of a heavy cold that has dogged her over the last week, Williams headed off court - in contrast to Sharapova - but the top seed returned at the potentially dangerous score of 3-2, 30-30, to calmly produce an ace and a forehand winner.
Breaks of serve were swapped before Williams took the set in 47 minutes with a backhand and a scream.
Sharapova was looking at another one-sided defeat when facing break points early in the second, but showed why she is a five-time Grand Slam champion.
She served her way out of trouble and managed to cling on in a set in which Williams hit 15 aces and won almost 90% of first-serve points.
A gripping contest developed, with Serena escaping at 3-2, 0-30 thanks to three aces and a service winner.
Another game of three aces led to the American being called for hindrance after shouting "Come on" before the point had finished, and she mockingly mouthed "calm down" to herself after another winner soon after.
Sharapova would not give in, saving a match point with a screaming forehand winner to make it 5-5, and seeing off a second in the tie-break behind a bold second serve.
Williams had a third opportunity, however, and after an apparent ace was called a let - much to her disbelief - she clinched it with another unplayable serve
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Friday, 30 January 2015

Mitt Romney will not run in 2016 election

Mitt Romney, the Republican beaten by President Obama in the US 2012 election, has decided he will not run for president again.Former GOP presidential candidate Mitt Romney answers a question after his lecture to the student body and guests at Mississippi State University in Starkville, Mississippi

Mr Romney, 67, said he had decided it was "best to give other leaders in the party the opportunity to become our next nominee".
His statement comes weeks after a surprise announcement saying he was considering another bid.
The decision not to run frees up donors to support other Republican candidates.
Former Florida Governor Jeb Bush, New Jersey Governor Chris Christie and Senator Rand Paul are among those who are considering a White House bid.
On the Democratic side, the presumed front-runner is former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, although she has not made any announcement about campaigning.
Mrs Clinton previously ran for president in 2008 but lost the Democratic nomination to Mr Obama.
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2016 runners and riders
Clockwise from top left: Jeb Bush, Chris Christie, Ted Cruz, Elizabeth Warren, Rand Paul, Hillary ClintonClockwise from top left: Jeb Bush, Chris Christie, Ted Cruz, Elizabeth Warren, Rand Paul, Hillary Clinton
No-one has formally declared but these are some of the names to watch:
  • early Republican frontrunner is Jeb Bush
  • but New Jersey Governor Chris Christie could battle Bush for the party's centre ground
  • darling of the Tea Party is Texas Senator Ted Cruz
  • firebrand liberal Elizabeth Warren is championed by many in the Democratic Party
  • libertarian Rand Paul has his supporters - and enemies - among Republicans
  • Hillary Clinton will have learnt much from her failed campaign of 2008
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Mr Romney's campaign raised more than $1bn (£666m) in the 2012 election, when he unsuccessfully challenged President Obama.
He also lost the 2008 Republican nomination to Senator John McCain.
In a statement made during a phone call to donors, Mr Romney said he was "convinced that we could win the nomination", but added that "one of our next generation of Republican leaders... may well emerge as being better able to defeat the Democrat nominee".
He said it was a tough decision for him and his wife, Ann, "but we believe it is for the best of the party and the nation".
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Analysis, Nick Bryant, Washington
This November 7, 2012 file photo shows former US Presidential candidate Mitt Romney in Boston Massachusetts.Mr Romney (seen here in 2012) was hobbled by his image during both runs for president, Nick Bryant says
The shiny black hair, the quarterback smile, the lantern jaw. Mitt Romney has never had any difficulty looking like an American president. But getting voters to elect him to that job has long been a problem.
In 2008, he failed in his first attempt to win the Republican presidential nomination partly because he was seen as inauthentic: a moderate Republican who had been governor of liberal Massachusetts.
In 2012, when he won the nomination but failed to dislodge President Obama, it was his image as an out-of-touch millionaire, more so than his Mormonism, that hobbled his candidacy. A leaked video sounded the death knell. It showed him maligning 47% of the electorate as being dependent on the government (in an ironic twist, Romney won 47% of the vote, compared with Barack Obama's 51%).
At a time when income inequality and stagnant middle class incomes look set to dominate the next presidential race, it would have been hard for him to reinvent himself.
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Mr Romney reportedly discovered after floating a potential run three weeks ago that several of his key fundraisers had decided to support Mr Bush, according to the Associated Press news agency.
Jeb Bush - the son of a former president and brother of another - announced in December he was "exploring" a run.
After Mr Romney's announcement Mr Bush tweeted "Mitt is a patriot and I join many in hoping his days of serving our nation and our party are not over."

Boko Haram Crisis-Nigeria's militant Islamist group Boko Haram is waging the most brutal insurgency in Africa.



Nigeria's militant Islamist group Boko Haram is waging the most brutal insurgency in Africa. It has seized vast amounts of territory, threatening Nigeria's territorial integrity and opening a new frontier by targeting neighbouring Cameroon.
Officials estimate that some three million people are affected by the humanitarian crisis caused by the five-year insurgency in the north-east.
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Why are the militants so lethal?
The group is said to be split into numerous factions, which operate largely autonomously across northern and central Nigeria.
The International Crisis Group (ICG) think-tank estimates there are six of them - the most organised and ruthless one is in Borno state, where Boko Haram has captured large swathes of territory.
Burnt houses in Baga after a Boko Haram attack - Nigeria, 2013
It first sends hundreds of foot-soldiers into a town or village. Often overwhelmed due to inadequate supplies, the Nigerian army flees, paving the way for elite militant fighters to enter and conquer the territory.
This is a remarkable change in its fortunes. Soon after Boko Haram launched its insurrection in 2009, Nigeria's security forces declared victory over the group after killing thousands of its members - including its founder - during an operation in the city of Maiduguri.
Some survivors fled to Algeria, Somalia - and possibly Afghanistan - for military training. Today the group is increasingly brutal in its modus operandi, losing the support, some analysts say, of many local Muslims who once saw it as offering an alternative to the corrupt ruling elite.
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How does it recruit fighters?
Increasingly through conscription - villagers are forced to join en masse or risk being slaughtered. It is also relying on criminals and thugs, "paying them for attacks, sometimes with a share of the spoils", according to the ICG.
Muslims pray at Maiduguri Central Mosque in Nigeria - 2012
With ethnic loyalties strong in Nigeria, most Boko Haram fighters are Kanuri - the ethnic group to which the group's leader Abubuakar Shekau belongs - suggesting that he has influence over some traditional rulers in north-eastern Nigeria.
While it is unclear how many fighters Boko Haram has, UK-based finance and security analyst Tom Keatinge puts the number at more than 9,000.
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Where does it get its money from?
When Boko Haram raids towns, it often loots banks. In 2012, the Nigerian military accused Boko Haram of extorting money from businessmen, politicians and government officials, and threatening them with abduction if they fail to pay up.
A poster displayed along the road shows photograph of Imam Abubakar Shekau, leader of the militant Islamist group Boko Haram, declared wanted by the Nigerian military - Maiduguri, Nigeria, 1 May 2013
Some US officials estimate that the group is paid as much as $1m (£660,000) for the release of a wealthy Nigerian, Mr Keatinge says.
With foreigners, the amount is much higher - Boko Haram was paid $3m ransom for the release of a French family of seven seized in northern Cameroon in February 2013, according to a Nigerian government document seen by Reuters news agency at the time.
With these sources of funding, Mr Keatinge estimates that Boko Haram's annual net income is $10m. Nigerian researcher Kyari Mohammed believes the group is running a low-cost insurgency, as it is made up mostly of young people from rural areas.
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How does it arm itself?
Boko Haram has overrun many police stations and military bases in Nigeria, giving it a huge arsenal - including armoured personnel carriers, pickup trucks, rocket-propelled grenades and assault rifles. And, according to the ICG, it has forged ties with arms smugglers in the lawless parts of the vast Sahel region.
An armoured vehicle recaptured from Boko Haram, Maiduguri, Nigeria - Wednesday 17 September 2014
Some of its weapons are suspected to have come from Libya, where arms depots were looted when Colonel Muammar Gaddafi's regime was overthrown in 2011.
However, most of Boko Haram's bombs are relatively crude, made from local materials that are easy and cheap to obtain, the ICG says.
Some of its bomb-makers, according to Nigeria-based security analyst Bawa Abdullahi Wase, are local university graduates who joined the group in desperation, after failing to find jobs.
And it has recently raided cement factories, including one owned by the French company Lafarge, in search of dynamite for its explosive devices.
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Can it be defeated?
An army commander in Borno state, Nigeria - 2013
The government declared a state of emergency in 2013 in the three north-eastern states worst-affected by the insurgency. The military also armed vigilante groups, vital in remote areas where the military presence is minimal.
Boko Haram was driven from Maiduguri and neighbouring villages and into the vast Sambisa forest along the border with Cameroon. But the sect responded with a new offensive in which - according to the Associated Press news agency - it has taken control of an area about the size of Belgium.
MapThree states are under a state of emergency
If Boko Haram succeeds in its territorial ambitions - seizing towns in Niger, Chad and Cameroon, as its leader has threatened - the conflict could take on a new international dimension. France is likely to become more directly involved in the conflict to protect its former colonies.
So far Cameroon has been relatively successful in repelling Boko attacks, despite having a far smaller army than Nigeria, which has been criticised for not pulling its weight.
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Is Boko Haram linked to IS?
Mr Shekau praised Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi in a video released last year, referring to him as "Oh caliph". He has also praised al-Qaeda's Ayman al-Zawahiri, the IS leader's rival for the loyalty of worldwide jihadists. However, Shekau has not pledged allegiance to either group.
Boko Haram's leader taken from a video released by the group in October 2014
While he often speaks in a mix of Hausa, Arabic and Kanuri, his most recent video - where he praised the Paris attacks - was entirely in Arabic, leading analysts to suggest the Nigerian sect is seeking international appeal.
Solid ties with global jihadi groups would give further momentum to Boko Haram's violent campaign.
More News come up Stay with Us................

Egypt military targeted in deadly Sinai attacks

what !!!!! 26 people, mostly soldiers, have been killed in a series of attacks by Islamist militants in the north of Egypt's Sinai peninsula.Egyptian armoured vehicles head along a road in El-Arish on way to the Rafah. 13 August 2011

Egypt's military has long tried to quell violence in the restive northern Sinai region
At least 26 people, mostly soldiers, have been killed in a series of attacks by Islamist militants in the north of Egypt's Sinai peninsula.
Most of the casualties were in the provincial capital, El-Arish.
Militant group Sinai Province, which changed its named from Ansar Beit al-Maqdis when it pledged allegiance to Islamic State, said it carried out the "extensive, simultaneous" attacks.
Egypt's president cut short a visit to Ethiopia because of the attacks.
They represent some of the worst anti-government violence in Egypt for months, and indicate a previously unseen level of co-ordination, correspondents and analysts say.
The US condemned the attacks, saying it remained "steadfast in its support of the Egyptian government's efforts to combat the threat of terrorism".
Insurgents have intensified attacks since Egypt's Islamist President Mohammed Morsi was ousted in 2013.
Tensions have also been raised across Egypt this week amid protests marking the anniversary of the 2011 uprising that ousted then-leader Hosni Mubarak.
Security officials said rockets were first fired at police offices, a military base and a military hotel in El-Arish, before a car bomb exploded at the rear gate of the military base. Several army checkpoints in the city were also targeted.
Newspaper al-Ahram said its El-Arish office - which is opposite the hotel and base - had been completely destroyed.
Map of North Sinai
Four soldiers were wounded in an attack at a checkpoint outside El-Arish and an army major was later shot dead at a checkpoint in Rafah, medical and security sources said.
More than 50 people were wounded in Thursday's attacks.
North Sinai has been under a state of emergency and a curfew since October, when an attack on a checkpoint killed dozens of soldiers.
The army has launched major operations to try to quell violence in the region, but has so far failed.
Sinai Province has become the biggest threat, staging many attacks on security targets.
The group, which was originally inspired by al-Qaeda but pledged allegiance to Islamic State in November 2014, has called on Egyptians to rebel against President Abdul Fattah al-Sisi.
President Sisi is the former military chief who led the crackdown on Mr Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood. The Brotherhood has said it rejects violence.
Egypt is creating a 1km (0.6-mile) buffer zone along the border with Gaza in a bid to stop militants smuggling weapons in from the Palestinian territory using tunnels.
The project has displaced more than 1,000 families in Rafah and severed an economic lifeline for many Palestinians.
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Thursday, 29 January 2015

Finnish phoenix: The start-ups rising from Nokia's ashes.


Polar Bear Pitching in the Northern Finnish city of Oulu, in an ice hole in the River OulujokiCold calling: Polar Bear Pitching in the northern Finnish city of Oulu, in an ice hole in the River Oulujoki
For many, Finland and Nokia were synonymous.
And when in 2012 and 2013, Nokia shed 24,500 employees and sold Nokia House (and its mobile phone division to Microsoft), they called it the "Elopcalypse" after then-chief executive Stephen Elop.
But the sinking of Nokia has led to an explosion of start-ups, as a skilled workforce jumps ship and begin businesses.
And the coolest pitching in the world now takes place in a cut-out ice hole in the northern city of Oulu in February, where you can speak about your company for as long as you like - so long as you remain standing in freezing water.
"I am willing to say that the Elopcalypse was the best thing to happen to Finnish ICT," says Mika Bostrom, vice president of peer-to-peer betting market Smarkets.
Nokia headquartersNokia's catastrophic shrinkage has been the start-up scene's gain in Finland
Nokia era Finnished
The first two years post-Elopcalypse in Finland involved painful readjustment.
But profitable exits and eye-watering funding infusions have drawn attention to the sparkling northern lights of the tech sector.
This shopping spree included Google's purchase of Helsinki-based mobile 3D graphics venture drawElements last July for an eight-figure sum.
Facebook bought Pryte last summer, a Finnish start-up developing passes to let mobile customers in the developing world use mobile apps without a data plan.
Japan's SoftBank paid $1.5bn (£990m; €1.3bn) for a 51% stake in mobile game developer Supercell, after its Clash of Clans and Hay Day attracted 8.5 million daily plays and revenues of $892m.
And in three years, Helsinki's Slush tech start-up conference has grown from 300 participants to more than 10,000.
"Slush 2012 was a small venue. Slush 2013 was larger. Slush 2014 was huge by anything outside US or UK standards," says Mr Bostrom.
Hay Day screen shotJapan's SoftBank paid $1.5bn for a 51% stake in mobile game developer Supercell, the creators of Hay Day
Norse code
Not surprisingly, many of these start-ups have involved mobile phone technology.
Jolla is one lifeboat which launched from Nokia, with Sailfish, an open-source operating system created from a spiked Nokia project, Meego.
Sailfish debuted at Slush 2012, with all the company's then-60 employees taking the stage.
Co-founder Marc Dillon, who spent 11 years at Nokia, says it offers easier multitasking than existing mobile operating systems.
"You have the ability to see all your applications at once, and interact with them at the same time without going deeply into one, then taking several steps back to go into another," he says.
A second key aspect of Sailfish, says Mr Dylan, is it is open source.
"If 80% of the world is running Android phones, then all the companies and ecosystems and devices are basically tied to one company strategy."
He says the operating system has native apps "in the thousands" but can also run Android ones.
Mr Dylan sees Sailfish's next steps as working with chiefly Asian original design manufacturers, who make the modules mobile companies use.
"You create devices now with modules and other companies do the integration," he says.
Marc Dillon, Jolla's co-founder with his Sailfish OSMarc Dillon, Jolla's co-founder, with his Sailfish OS
Helsinki's Slush tech start-up conferenceHelsinki's Slush tech start-up conference
The sauna side
Jolla is a poster boy for the Nokia Bridge programme, the company's start-up seed funding for departing employees.
Public funding of research and development is another part of Finland's tech start-up success.
It is third in equity financing in Europe, after the UK and France. Tekes, a public R&D funding body, has a €550m (£423m; $637m) annual budget.
There are tech incubators such as Aalto University's Startup Sauna in Helsinki, modelled on Google labs with, yes, saunas. Some 126 start-ups have graduated since 2010.
And the well-reviewed Vigo accelerator, launched by Finland's Ministry of Employment and Economy, follows an Israeli and Singaporean model by giving mentors financial stakes in the companies.
One beneficiary from Tekes was Helsinki wallpaper start-up Feathr.com, started by husband and wife duo Anne and Tom Puukko. She is Finnish and ex-Nokia, he English.
Tom and Anne Puuko, co-founders of Feathr.comTom and Anne Puuko, co-founders of Feathr.com
"The investment gives you a stamp of approval. If you start a business with your own money, even if you're going well, people say no-one else has looked at you and said it's a good idea," says Mrs Puukko.
The couple have gathered wallpaper designs from roughly 300 artists, "everything from tattooists, surfware designers, photographers, fine artists," says Mrs Puukko, and will focus initially on the UK market.
She says wallpaper still largely uses Victorian printing techniques, and digital printing in the sector has not yet been explored.
"We're going back to William Morris," she says.
"He saw wallpaper as a way of bringing beauty into people's lives. Everyone has this amazing canvas in the wall - you've got four of them surrounding you."
Robot wasteland
Another bright spark in the wintry Finnish night is robotics.
ZenRobotics' Recycler robot sorts bits from a conveyor belt of rubbish, and uses artificial intelligence technology to learn to identify different waste objects.
Timo Taalas, the company's chief executive, says the capital's two universities, University of Helsinki and Aalto University, are quite strong in artificial intelligence and machine learning.
"The background of the founders was in artificial intelligence and robotics. We had to find a complex enough problem that could be solved with the combination of those," he says.
ZenRobotics's Recycler robotZenRobotics' Recycler robot sorts bits from a conveyor belt of rubbish
More than 200 gaming start-ups have followed the example of Angry Birds, created in 2009 by Rovio Entertainment in Finland's second largest city of Espoo.
One, Best Fiends, the debut title of Seriously, founded by former Rovio executives, had a million downloads in the week after its October release.
Petri Jarvilehto, Seriously's co-founder, says Nokia invested heavily in mobile gaming from 2003.
"We're kind of a talent pool here that's been already working on mobile games for 10 years," he says. He describes Angry Birds as the first game created from the start for touch.
"In today's world you have mobile games that are reaching 100 million players every single day - there's never been any media, television, movies, where you could have that sort of reach," he says.
Rovio, though, let a fifth of its Finnish employees go in October, saying they had hired "on assumptions of faster growth than have materialised".
Some might call this counting their chickens before they hatched.
Tomi Kaukinen, chief executive of SportacamTomi Kaukinen, chief executive of Sportacam
While Finland's strong secondary and university education and skilled workforce have attracted investors from Silicon Valley and Japan, some wonder whether Finland isn't too awash with investment money.
Tomi Kaukinen, chief executive of Sportacam, a photograph-sharing site for sports, cites the example of the founders of a start-up he met last year who had raised €1.7m.
When he met them again a couple of months ago, they were once again fundraising. "I was like, you need money again?" he says.
"They said, no, we don't really need it, but it's so easy to get - and they raised a couple more million."
Nokia's heyday might be over. But the tech sector here is not Finnished - it's only beginning.