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AfricaTonight's movieSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on January 2, 2004 - 5:55pm.
on Africa "Fear of a Black Hat", a documentary about the career of a rap group called NWH, or Niggaz With Hats. For white folks around my age, think "This Is Spinal Tap" Changes I been going throughSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on December 31, 2003 - 2:47am.
on Africa Searching to Bring the Lessons Home By Amy Argetsinger It had been more than four years since she persuaded the people of Enoosaen to send her to college in the United States -- to support, for once, those grand ambitions in a girl. She had made many promises in exchange for their endorsement and had half assumed that she'd be ready to return by now to start delivering on them. That she would be trying to open a school for girls. Or a clinic. Or helping those women sitting around her mother's table start their own businesses. But for now she was not doing any of those things. She was getting ready for her senior year at Randolph-Macon Woman's College in Lynchburg. Her education had made her realize just how big the world was. How vast the needs. And how much more she had to learn before she could really make a difference in a Kenyan village with no running water, with no paved roads. She would have to get a master's degree. And then a doctorate. Or perhaps a law degree, which would mean several more years in America before she could try to make good on her promises. Earlier in the summer, Ntaiya had received news that fed her guilt over leaving home. Her 20-year-old sister Naserian was getting married -- throwing away the education their mother had labored to provide and rushing into the kind of careless young union that Ntaiya felt had doomed so many of their childhood friends to poverty. "If I were there," she said bitterly, "I could stop this marriage." But she was not there. And so there were things she simply could not do, and things she could not see. Like how a few homes now had electricity. And how the policies of Kenya's new president had filled the village school with children. And how, among even some of the people closest to her, attitudes about women and education were fast evolving. Her home was changing, without her. Just as she was changing without her home. About This Series These articles are based on interviews with and observations of Kakenya Ntaiya (pronounced kah-KEHN-yah n-ta-YAH) that began in spring 2001, the year after she arrived in Lynchburg, Va., to attend Randolph-Macon Woman's College. In August, staff writer Amy Argetsinger and staff photographer Jahi Chikwendiu spent a week with Ntaiya's family, neighbors and teachers in Enoosaen (pronounced eh-noh-sah-YEHN), Kenya. Swahili and Maa translators assisted with some interviews there. Other sources were Ntaiya's classmates, professors and college officials in Virginia. More From Series
What's been happening while you weren't looking at AfricaSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on November 30, 2003 - 2:41pm.
on Africa SUDAN: OIL COMPANIES COMPLICIT IN RIGHTS ABUSES (London, November 25, 2003) ? The Sudanese government?s efforts to control oilfields in the war-torn south have resulted in the displacement of hundreds of thousands of civilians, Human Rights Watch said in a report released today. Foreign oil companies operating in Sudan have been complicit in this displacement, and the death and destruction that have accompanied it. The report, "Sudan, Oil, and Human Rights," investigates the role that oil has played in Sudan?s civil war. This 754-page report is the most comprehensive examination yet published of the links between natural-resource exploitation and human rights abuses. ?Oil development in southern Sudan should have been a cause of rejoicing for Sudan?s people,? said Jemera Rone, Sudan researcher for Human Rights Watch. ?Instead, it has brought them nothing but woe.? The report documents how the government has used the roads, bridges and airfields built by the oil companies as a means for it to launch attacks on civilians in the southern oil region of Western Upper Nile (also known as Unity state). In addition to its regular army, the government has deployed militant Islamist militias to prosecute the war, and has armed southern factions in a policy of ethnic manipulation and destabilization. Human Rights Watch urged that the current peace negotiations deal comprehensively with the legacy of Sudan?s oil war, particularly the ethnic divisions that persist in oilfields of the south and threaten the long-term peace. The report provides evidence of the complicity of oil companies in the human rights abuses. Oil company executives turned a blind eye to well-reported government attacks on civilian targets, including aerial bombing of hospitals, churches, relief operations and schools. ?Oil companies operating in Sudan were aware of the killing, bombing, and looting that took place in the south, all in the name of opening up the oilfields,? said Rone. ?These facts were repeatedly brought to their attention in public and private meetings, but they continued to operate and make a profit as the devastation went on.? Project 21 opens an African branchSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on November 30, 2003 - 2:12pm.
on Africa Let's see if anyone gets the title. Group Wants AU Scrapped The Nation (Nairobi) By Ngumbao Kithi A US-based organisation has called for the dissolution of the African Union and the establishment of a new continental body strictly for democratically elected governments. The Free Africa Foundation president, Mr George Ayittey, from Ghana, said the AU could not solve conflicts because its leadership comprises "mafia states" practising politics of exclusion. He suggested that the new body to take over from the AU should ensure independent and free Press in member states, independent Judiciary and electoral commission. AIDSSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on November 26, 2003 - 4:49pm.
on Africa UN says AIDS deaths at new high By John Donnelly, Globe Staff, 11/26/2003 PRETORIA -- The global AIDS epidemic is entering its deadliest phase so far, with high numbers of new HIV infections being matched by an unprecedented number of deaths in many southern African nations, according to a United Nations report released yesterday. Saying there were no signs of the epidemic abating, the Joint United Nations Program on HIV/AIDS, or UNAIDS, found that one out of every five adults in southern Africa is infected with HIV and that two countries, Botswana and Swaziland, recorded an astounding infection rate of 39 percent of adults last year. UNAIDS estimated that a record 3 million people will die this year from AIDS-related illnesses, a 10 percent jump from 2002 estimates, and a record 5 million people will become infected with HIV, which causes AIDS. "The epidemic continues to deepen, to expand, and it is tightening its grip on southern Africa and threatening Southeast Asia," Peter Piot, UNAIDS executive director, told reporters in a conference call from London. The numbers of those infected in southern Africa, he said, are "a really dramatic illustration how the epidemic is further eroding this part of the continent." Piot also said he was worried about the spread of the virus in China, India, and Russia, in particular. He pointed out that Russia was spending only a "few million dollars" a year on AIDS, while the billion-plus populations of both China and India mean that if the epidemic crosses the 1 percent threshold in those countries, more than 20 million people will be infected.Now, an estimated 40 million people are infected worldwide, according to the report, 7.4 million in Asia alone.The report, released six days before World AIDS Day, also reflected a growing caution about estimating the numbers of those who are infected or have died from the disease. Some critics, pointing to poor record-keeping throughout sub-Saharan Africa, have cast doubt on previous estimates of the impact of AIDS, impact, saying they were vastly inflated. This year's report, based on data collected from pregnant women at prenatal clinics and from door-to-door surveys in at least seven nations, estimated that the number of people infected was between 34 million and 46 million worldwide. The report selected the midpoint between the estimates, or 40 million. Last year, UNAIDS estimated that 42 million worldwide were infected with HIV or AIDS. Piot and Karen Stanecki, chief demographer for UNAIDS, stood strongly behind the numbers and stressed that this year's lower estimate did not mean that the epidemic was declining, but rather reflected more accurate statistics gathered in the past year. In particular, demographic studies taken in rural areas found that previous reports had overestimated prevalence rates in those areas. War crimesSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on November 20, 2003 - 12:13am.
on Africa All Sides in Liberian Conflict Make Women Spoils of War TOTOTA, Liberia ? On that burning hot morning, peace had already been declared in this war-beaten country, West African peacekeepers were on the ground and President Charles G. Taylor had already left the country, ushering in what was widely seen as an end to strife. Yet the lingering sound of gunfire sent Annie Joe running frightened through the woods and into a group of four or five men with AK-47's on their shoulders. They demanded that she go with them. They kept her in a house all night and raped her, one after the other. In the morning they told her to go away. There was no use resisting. "When you want to fight, they say, `We kill you,' " she recalled. Here as in other places, war made women the spoils of conquest, not unlike sacks of rice and four-wheel-drive vehicles. But what stands out is that in the succession of conflicts in Liberia since 1989, many women, and sometimes the same women, were raped by fighters from all sides. THE SOUTHERN AFRICAN SOCIAL FORUMSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on November 13, 2003 - 7:49pm.
on Africa Press Statement Zambia has been host to the first ever Southern Africa Social Forum held at the Mulungushi Conference Center, from Sunday, 9 November, till today, 11 November. We have been meeting as anti-globalisation activists, social movements, NGOs and unions opposed to neo-liberalism and corporate-led globalisation. We have drawn our inspiration from the growing international anti-globalisation movement as symbolized in the form of the World Social Forum, and from its African counterpart, the African Social Forum. INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS AND DEVELOPMENT IN AFRICASubmitted by Prometheus 6 on November 13, 2003 - 7:47pm.
on Africa http://www.pambazuka.org/index.php?category=Editorial Akong Charles Ndika In less than a year, the African Development Bank (AfDB) will be celebrating its 40th anniversary. This comes at a time when there is growing consensus all over the continent on the need for Africa to have ownership of its development. In tune with this, African heads of states in June 2003 committed their leadership to the New Economic Partnership for Africa's Development (NEPAD), which centres on African ownership and management of the agenda, strategy and process of the continent's development. In fact, the overarching goal is for ?Africa to claim this millennium?. The AfDB is tasked with co-ordinating and facilitating NEPAD. The African Development Bank (AfDB) is widely regarded as the premier financial and development institution of Africa. The Bank started operations in 1966 with a clear mandate to promote the economic and social development of its regional members and to promote international dialogue and understanding of development issues relevant to Africa. Within its general policies, the AfDB emphasised the importance of planning an energy sector for social and economic development, and indicated the intention to provide energy services to the maximum number of households at the least economic and environmental cost. This was to be done through loans, equity investments, and technical assistance to regional member countries. This envisaged regional leadership has remained a pipe dream, however, as institutions of global economic governance like the World Bank and International Monetary Fund provided external influences on Bank operations. Meanwhile…Submitted by Prometheus 6 on November 11, 2003 - 1:25am.
on Africa Taylor Seen as Still Meddling in Liberia November 11, 2003 JOHANNESBURG, South Africa ? A $2-million bounty approved last week by the U.S. government for the capture of former Liberian President and international war crimes fugitive Charles Taylor comes amid reports that the exiled leader is making persistent efforts to meddle in the affairs of the fragile nation. The measure specifies that $2 million will be used "for rewards for an indictee of the Special Court in Sierra Leone," which is seen as a clear reference to Taylor. The money would be given to anyone responsible for delivering Taylor to the war crimes tribunal in Sierra Leone, following the precedent of war criminals captured after the war in Bosnia-Herzegovina and the Rwandan genocide. The action against the warlord is an indication of Taylor's continuing influence and the fragility of Liberia's nearly 3-month-old peace accord as the West African nation awaits the arrival of 11,500 United Nations peacekeepers in the coming weeks. Those troops will reinforce 4,500 soldiers, many of them Nigerians, already on the ground. Nigeria, which gave Taylor asylum in August to hasten peace efforts in Liberia and to protect him from a U.N. war crimes indictment for his involvement in a war in Sierra Leone, is one of the United States' major oil suppliers and a key political ally in Africa. Nigerian leaders heightened security around Taylor's villa in the city of Calabar over the weekend and warned that they would not tolerate any breach of territorial integrity, making imminent U.S. military action unlikely. But the reward, which was signed into law Thursday by President Bush as part of an $87-billion spending bill to rebuild Iraq and Afghanistan, is a clear shot across the bow for Taylor and his supporters in Liberia. It is also meant to be an inducement for Nigerian officials to turn over Taylor to the war crimes tribunal, said U.S. congressional aides who requested anonymity. More peace in the works for AfricaSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on October 22, 2003 - 4:49am.
on Africa Powell: Sudanese Commit to Reaching Deal Wednesday October 22, 2003 12:01 PM NAIVASHA, Kenya (AP)- Secretary of State Colin Powell said Wednesday that the Sudanese government and rebels fighting a 20-year civil war have committed themselves to reaching a comprehensive peace deal by the end of December. Powell, who was flanked by Sudanese Vice President Ali Osman Mohammed Taha and rebel leader John Garang, promised that the United States would help implement a final agreement. …The announcement came a day after the secretary of state promised to review U.S. sanctions in Sudan if the parties reached a deal to end the conflict that has left more than 2 million people dead, mainly through war-induced famine. Garang, who leads the Sudan People's Liberation Army, or SPLA, and Taha said they were committed to peace but difficult issues still needed to be resolved. Reality checkSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on October 21, 2003 - 1:59pm.
on Africa IMF admits it is failing Africa The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has admitted that one of its key African initiatives is in trouble. The IMF's initiative for Heavily Indebted Poor Countries was launched in 1996. Its aim was simple: to cut the mountain of debts that countries had run up, reducing them to more manageable levels. At the same time, the programme encouraged states to increase their spending on the poor - on badly needed policies aimed at building schools and paying teachers. SOMALIA: TALKS IN KENYA "ON COURSE"Submitted by Prometheus 6 on October 17, 2003 - 2:44pm.
on Africa SOMALIA: TALKS IN KENYA "ON COURSE", SAYS OFFICIAL Organisers say the Somali peace talks underway in Kenya are on course, and contrary to reports, have not stalled. James Kiboi, a member of the Inter-Governmental Authority on Development (IGAD) technical committee which is steering the talks, admitted that "some personalities are not at the talks", but that the proceedings were continuing. This could be the start of something goodSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on October 17, 2003 - 2:42pm.
on Africa I want to make special note of what the article says is the major reason peace is now possible in Africa: But there is no doubt that many long-running wars have been ended. The reason?
The end of the cold war meant that the Soviets and the Americans no longer backed rival African movements as a way of undermining each other. Peace breaks out in Africa By Martin Plaut BBC News This week could mark something of a turning point for Africa: in Liberia a new interim government is due to be sworn in and peace talks aimed at ending the decades old Sudanese civil war get under way in Kenya . This comes after last week's signing of a peace pact between the government and rebels in Burundi. Does this mean that Africa - wracked by years of international strife and civil war - can finally look forward to peace? Okay, I ain't feeling them on thisSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on October 8, 2003 - 7:11pm.
on Africa There's still a disturbing amount of slavery going on around the world. And yes, I shut off the comments and pings on this one. Slave Colonies Daily Champion (Lagos) THE recent discovery of seven slave colonies in Nigeria provokes serious questions on national security. The colonies, located in Ogun, Oyo and Osun states, had over 400 child slaves from Benin Republic working in inhuman conditions at granite quarries. The WTO meeting in CancunSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on October 2, 2003 - 12:55pm.
on Africa If you're interested in African developments, then you know about the recent WTO trade talks in Cancun that "collapsed." Pambazuka News interviewed four African activists that were in attendance for the African side of the story. When you read about Green room processes, you'll see why I said they were in attendance rather than participating. And you may understand why the African Union refused to go along with the program. Somebody in Nigeria finally did the right thing hereSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on September 25, 2003 - 5:05am.
on Africa Justice (This Time)!
Finally, sense comes to Nigeria -- Amina Lawal is free. The Shari'ah Court of Appeal yesterday overturned the sentence of death by stoning for the 31-year-old mother convicted of adultery in March 2002. According to the court, the conviction was invalid because Lawal was already pregnant with her daughter at the time an Islamic court sentenced her to die. Now, can we please be done with this stoning to death shit? Times change, people. But it's time to start now, right?Submitted by Prometheus 6 on September 25, 2003 - 2:45am.
on Africa South African Leader Defends Delay in Offering AIDS Drugs By FELICITY BARRINGER President Thabo Mbeki of South Africa yesterday defended his government's delay in distributing anti-AIDS drugs until this year, saying that it had been necessary to create a critical mass of public health care workers who knew how to instruct patients on the drugs' use. "It's incorrect merely to say: `Distribute anti-retroviral drugs, problem solved,' " he said. "It can't be correct. It isn't. You've got to come at it in a more comprehensive way. "The assumption in a country like the United States," he added, is "of a health infrastructure and system that is as good as here." President Mbeki has been widely criticized in recent years for his willingness to consult scientists who argue that there is no proof that human immunodeficiency virus causes AIDS. South Africa is one of seven African countries with H.I.V. infection rates of more than 20 percent, according to a new United Nations population report. The report projects the country's population in the year 2050 at 9 percent below the 2000 level of 44 million, and 44 percent lower than it would have been had there been no epidemic. Another view on a unified monetary system for AfricaSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 20, 2003 - 2:39pm.
on Africa African Money Good, But Fix Politics First
The Monitor (Kampala) August 20, 2003 Kampala African central bank chiefs are mulling over the almost utopian thought of having a single currency for the continent. If for nothing else, the notion is a good one. The 27th meeting of the Association of African Central Banks currently sitting in Kampala has also stated that the success of any proposed monetary union will be pegged on political backing from the respective governments. Now, while there is on-going thinking around this idea, everyone involved must reflect on why almost all post-colonial regional bodies have ended up as talking shops for politicians with over-inflated egos. Some Sub-Saharan African countries did try to set up an economic body, the Preferential Trade Area, in the 1980s but not very much has come out of it. A new experiment is currently underway to revive the East African Community (EAC). The EAC collapsed in 1977 because of irreconcilable differences between the leaders of the three countries. The Economic Community of West African States (Ecowas) appears to be the only example of anything near success. Ecowas has shown promise in handling political upheaval, first in Sierra Leone and now in Liberia. At the July 8, 2002 launching of the African Union in Durban, South Africa, that country's President, Thabo Mbeki, said it is time for the continent to "take its rightful place in global affairs". He also said that through this body, which replaced the moribund Organisation of African Unity, the marginalisation of Africa would be fought. Mbeki's pronouncement and the bankers' noises about monetary union can become a reality only after the continent fixes its politics. Today, most of the countries are stuck with corrupt dictators, either of the benevolent sort or the more common brutal variety. With this type of leadership in place, you do not expect to build a sustainable political foundation upon which economic integration can thrive. We must first get rid of the predator regimes that are destroying many African countries before we can even begin to entertain thoughts of integration in all its aspects. To paraphrase a famous quote: It is the politics! Reasons why Africa needs to get it togetherSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 20, 2003 - 2:35pm.
on Africa Reopen Dialogue On Consensus
The Post (Lusaka) August 20, 2003 Lusaka There's no alternative to regional integration. Chaos rules in our world, both within countries' borders and beyond. Blind laws are offered up as divine norms that will bring peace, order, well-being and security our planet so badly needs. That is what they would have us believe while three dozen developed and wealthy nations monopolise economic, political and technological power, offering us the same recipes that have only served to make us poorer, more exploited and more dependent. The poverty and underdevelopment prevailing in most of our nations as well as inequality in the distribution of wealth and knowledge in the world are basically at the source of the present conflicts. It cannot be forgotten that our current underdevelopment and poverty have resulted from conquest, colonisation, slavery and plunder by the colonial powers and from the emergence of imperialism and the brutal wars motivated by new divisions of the world. We must be aware of what we have been so far and what we cannot continue to be. There's nothing in the existing economic and political order that can serve our interests. Currently, we have accumulated enough knowledge and ethical values to move toward a new historical era of true justice and humanism. People frequently talk about the horrors of the holocaust and the genocides that have taken place throughout the last century, but they forget that every year as a result of the current economic order, millions of people starve to death or die of preventable diseases. They can wield statistics of apparently positive growth, but in the end things in our part of the world remain the same or even worsen. Growth often rests on the accumulation of consumer goods that contribute nothing to true development or to a better distribution of wealth. The truth is that after several decades of neoliberalism, the rich are becoming increasingly rich while the poor are both more numerous and increasingly poor. We have meditated a lot on these problems and have come to the conclusion that a high level of unity is required among countries if have to face what appears to be a sombre future with hope. More signs Africa needs to get it togetherSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 20, 2003 - 2:32pm.
on Africa SUDAN: Special Report on women in the south
© UNICEF/Stevie Mann (2002) Southern Sudanese mother attending a special class for women who have missed out on schooling NAIROBI, 20 Aug 2003 (IRIN) - While the international community watches Sudan's leaders edge closer to a peace deal, the average southern Sudanese woman, although desperate for peace, has more immediate concerns. Historic under-development, over 20 years of war, and inequalities in traditional power structures have left southern women in a precarious position - they now suffer some of the poorest quality of life indicators in the world. In some war-affected areas the rate of maternal deaths rises as high as 865 per 100,000 births, according to a UNICEF-sponsored study by Nimila Chawla entitled, “From Survival to Thrival: Children and Women in the Southern Part of Sudan”. This compares with a rate of 550 per 100,000 births across the whole of Sudan, as reported in the UN Human Development Report for 2003. In addition, estimates made by a group of major aid agencies in 1998 suggest the literacy rate among women in parts of southern Sudan could be as low as 10 percent. Even among literate women only a small number have had the luxury of attending secondary school. Apart from deprivations resulting directly from war and underdevelopment, a drastic reduction in the male population in some areas has placed additional responsibilities on many of the women left behind. |