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Pambazuka News 288: World Social Forum 2007
The authoritative electronic weekly newsletter and platform for social justice in Africa
Pambazuka News is the authoritative pan African electronic weekly newsletter and platform for social justice in Africa providing cutting edge commentary and in-depth analysis on politics and current affairs, development, human rights, refugees, gender issues and culture in Africa.
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CONTENTS: 1. Highlights from this issue, 2. Features, 3. Comment & analysis, 4. Pan-African Postcard, 5. Advocacy & campaigns, 6. Letters & Opinions, 7. Books & arts, 8. Podcasts, 9. African Union Monitor, 10. Women & gender, 11. Human rights, 12. Refugees & forced migration, 13. Elections & governance, 14. Corruption, 15. Development, 16. Health & HIV/AIDS, 17. Education, 18. Racism & xenophobia, 19. Environment, 20. Land & land rights, 21. Media & freedom of expression, 22. News from the diaspora, 23. Conflict & emergencies, 24. Internet & technology, 25. Fundraising & useful resources, 26. Courses, seminars, & workshops, 27. Jobs
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Highlights from this issue
Featured This Week
2007-01-26
http://pambazuka.org/en/category/highlights/39465
FEATURE: Firoze Manji writes about the lack of politics at the World Social Forum in Nairobi
COMMENT AND ANALYSIS: Read all about what happened at the World Social Forum in Nairobi
PODCASTING: Hear the voices of the World Social Forum with unique Pambazuka News podcasts from Nairobi
PAN-AFRICAN POSTCARD: Tajudeen Abdul-Raheem expresses frustration with NGO funding of events like the World Social Forum
AU MONITOR: An AU summit takes place in Addis Ababa at the end of January
CONFLICT AND EMERGENCIES: The AK47 stands accused of being the worst weapon of mass destruction on the 21st century
HUMAN RIGHTS: Businesses ignore human rights
WOMEN AND GENDER: Women urged to fight for their rights at WSF
REFUGEES AND FORCED MIGRATION: The way refugees are presented is detrimental to their rights, says a new report
ELECTIONS AND GOVERNANCE: Concern over ongoing strike in Guinea
DEVELOPMENT: Call for social equity at World Social Forum
CORRUPTION: Peer review highlights South African corruption concerns
HEALTH AND HIV/AIDS: Striving towards a world free of TB
EDUCATION: ARVs and schooling in Kenya
RACISM AND XENOPHOBIA: Non-whites more likely to be questioned at airports, says report
ENVIRONMENT: Why Uganda is a funny place to store carbon
LAND AND LAND RIGHTS: Innovation for land rights
MEDIA AND FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION: New report on freedom of expression in Senegal
NEWS FROM THE DIASPORA: Call for action on Haiti
PLUS: e-Newsletters and Mailings Lists; Fundraising and Useful Resources; Courses, Seminars and Workshops
Fahamu launches books on women's rights; China and Africa
2007-01-26
http://pambazuka.org/en/category/highlights/39456
* Grace, tenacity and eloquence: The struggle for women’s rights in Africa
The traditional perception of African women is that they face grinding poverty and harsh cultural, traditional and social prejudices. Yet while it is true that African women are not equal to men, this is only one part of the story.
For in Africa, women are fighting for their rights. And they are fighting with grace, tenacity and eloquence. The contributors describe how African women won a cross-continental campaign for a protocol to protect their rights. In a rich variety of articles, they consider topics such as: women and conflict, the impact of current US policies on women’s health in Africa, women’s rights in Islam, and the implications of the Jacob Zuma trial for women in South Africa.
The articles first appeared in the prize-winning weekly electronic newsletter, Pambazuka News. They provide an easy-to-read introduction to the struggle for women’s rights in Africa.
* African perspectives on China in Africa
China’s involvement in Africa has provoked much debate and discussion. Is China simply the latest imperial power out to exploit Africa’s natural resources, putting its own economic interests above environmental and human rights concerns? Or is China’s engagement an extension of ‘South–South solidarity’, enabling African countries to free themselves from the multiple tyrannies of Western debt, aid conditionality, unfair trading rules and political interference?
Much existing commentary on China focuses on the vested interests of the West. Lost in the cacophony have been the voices of independent African analysts and activists. Here, they present social, cross-continental perspectives on Chinese involvement in Africa in a unique collection of essays. The articles demonstrate that although there is no single ‘African view’ about China in Africa at a continental level, the authors are united in the belief that Africans must organise their side of the story, together, in their own interests, and in the interest of social justice for all.
>>>>>Visit www.fahamu.org/pzbook.php#wrbook for more information.
Good-bye Mandisi, welcome Sokari
2007-01-26
http://pambazuka.org/en/category/highlights/39467
Mandisi Majavu, who has been Pambazuka News Online News Editor for the last six months, has won a scholarship to study a two-year Masters Degree in Psychology starting from next year February. This is an opportunity of a life-time for Mandisi, and it was with reluctance that he resigned from his position. We are delighted to inform you that Sokari Ekine has taken over as Online News Editor as of this week. Sokari will be known to many of you both as the founder of the award-winning Black Looks blogsite as well as a regular columnist for Pambazuka News providing, amongst other things, a regular update on African blogs.
Apologies
2007-01-26
http://pambazuka.org/en/category/highlights/39468
We had hoped to send out several issues of Pambazuka News during the World Social Forum. However, it turned out that this was more ambitous than we had imagined, both because of the difficulties of getting access to the internet and because of Pambazuka News staff were tied up with producing podcasts. To make matters worse, there were problems with internet connections during the day yesterday in Cape Town as well as in Nairobi, so we have to apologise for the late delivery of this weeks Pambazuka News. However, we are please to have been able to include copy from the Institute PANOS in West Africa with whom we collaborated during WSF.
Features
World Social Forum: just another NGO fair?
Firoze Manji
2007-01-26
http://pambazuka.org/en/category/features/39464
The World Social Forum, which took place in Nairobi, Kenya for the first time in Africa, was supposed to be a forum for the voices of the grassroots. But Firoze Manji writes that, despite the diversity of voices at the event, not everyone was equally represented.
As one would expect, WSF was highly heterogeneous. There was a lot going on. At one level no one can deny the diversity of people from all parts of the world. WSF seemingly reflected the heterogeneity of civil society internationally: there were initiatives from grassroots women’s organisations, from feminists, social movements, small and large African organisations, international (or is it ‘multinational’?) organisations, donors and funders, grantees, activists, hustlers and the hassled. There were vociferous anti-capitalists and anti-(capitalist) globalisation meetings and discussions, as one would expect of an event that evolved out of the need to assert an alternative to imperialist globalisations of the Davos kind. And there were those whose politics could reasonably be viewed as part of the civil society infrastructure of modern-day imperial expansion.
But to describe only the diversity would be to miss the real, and perhaps more disturbing, picture. The problem was that not everyone was equally represented. Not everyone had equal voices. This event had all the features of a trade fair – those with greater wealth had more events in the calendar, larger (and more comfortable) spaces, more propaganda – and therefore a larger voice. Thus the usual gaggle of quasi donor/International NGOs claimed a greater presence than national organisations – not because what they had to say was more important or more relevant to the theme of the WSF, but because, essentially, they had greater budgets at their command. Thus the WSF was not immune from the laws of (neoliberal) market forces. There was no levelling of the playing field. This was more a World NGO Forum than an anti-capitalist mobilisation, lightly peppered with social activists and grassroots movements.
And the sense of the predominance of neoliberalism was given further weight by the ubiquity of the CelTel Logo – the Kuwaiti owned telecommunications company that had exclusive rights at the WSF; a virtual monopoly provided to a hotel that provided food at extortionate prices that most Kenyans, if they were allowed in, could hardly afford. And rumours were rife that the business of catering involved people in high places winning exclusive contracts. Hawkers, on whom most of Nariobians depend for providing everything from phone cards to food and refreshment were for a while excluded physically (as well as financially) from entering the China-built Moi Sports Stadium in Kasarani, the venue for the WSF. And it was only when frustrated activists took direct action to occupy the offices of the organisers that a more liberal policy for entry was implemented.
This was the first full WSF held in Africa (Mali was host to one of the polycentric WSF’s last year). But the forum was marked by the under-representation of social activists from Africa – or indeed from the global south. Inevitably this reflected on how debates and discussions were framed. Pambazuka News staff had hoped that this space would be the basis for forging a broader radical pan-Africanism. But that was, sadly, not to be. The white North, with it hegemonic parochialism, was over-represented. Social movements from the South were conspicuous by their numerically small presence at the forum.
Probably the most consistently heavily attended forum throughout the week was that organised by the Human Dignity and Human Rights Network which had the largest tent, and held meeting after meeting throughout most of the week, with a caste of well known speakers. But like most of the events at WSF, the set-up of the meetings was of a traditional platform of speakers with the audience being talked at rather than being engaged in discussion. While we heard the experience of both survivors of human rights abuses and human rights defenders, there was little political analysis.
And that probably catches the sense of most, thankfully not all, of the WSF events: there was lots of talking and sloganeering. There was much discussion about policies and alternatives to existing policies. But one couldn’t help feel the absence of politics. It’s as if many believe that nice policies (or human rights legislations) get made by nice people. But the reality is that what ends up as policy is the outcome of struggles in the political domain – fundamentally between the haves and the have-nots. But in a week in which the voices of the have-nots were under-represented, I guess we should not be surprised by the absence of politics.
I think everyone was disappointed by the surprisingly low turn-out: estimates of 30,000 to 50,000 people attended, compared with an expected crowd of 150,000. What made so many keep away in droves? Despite asking many this question, I have found no satisfactory reasons offered.
* Firoze Manji is director of Fahamu and editor of Pambazuka News
* Please send comments to editor@pambazuka.org or comment online at www.pambazuka.org
Comment & analysis
Another media is possible
Roseleen Nzioka
2007-01-26
http://pambazuka.org/en/category/comment/39450
Media practitioners in Africa have been challenged to help African governments in formulating a regulatory environment that is conducive to the establishment of indigenous media.
Speaking at a media session 22 January at the ongoing World Social Forum at Kasarani in Nairobi, the Director of Highway Africa News Agency (HANA), Chris Kabwato said there was urgent need to engage African governments in media best practices. This kind of dialogue with the government would enable indigenous African practitioners to invest in producing culturally relevant content and counter the highly
Skewed Euro-centric content that Africans are currently consuming. Mr Kabwato said that Africa had for years been infiltrated by foreign media and this had reduced Africans to almost pure consumers of media and not producers. Time had come he said, for Africans to establish home-grown media as alternatives to the foreign media which dominate broadcast and print media in Africa. Mr Kabwato warned that some of the alternative media in Africa relied heavily on donor funding for their operations. This he said was dangerous because it meant that the media were not self-sustainable.
Other issues he outlined as crucial for African government’s to address in order to create indigenous African media with culturally relevant content were : access of media ; citizenship versus consumerism ; the north/south relationship ; hegemony ; and diversity and pluralism. Speaking at the same forum, the Africa director of Inter Press Service news agency, Ms Farai Samhungu revealed that although IPS was formed with the ideal of the South to generate home- grown news, the agency was still donor dependent 43 years later. Ms Samhungu said although IPS publishes in about 20 languages, the cost of translations was exorbitant.
“For example it may cost us three times more to produce a French translation of a news report from English”, said Ms Samhungu emphasizing the expenses involved in producing multi-lingual content. She however said there is room for the co-existence of information as a commodity as well as for the common good.
A communication activist, Jason Nadi, spoke about the liberalization of media content production. Mr Nadi said that the modern information communication technologies such as the Internet, had enabled individuals to produce their own news content culminating in a information society. In common parlance an information society is one where information is treated as a form of currency at different platforms and fora. Mr Nadi said this individually produced media is an alternative to the traditional mass media. Mr Nadi said that in Europe, media conglomerates in individual countries have distorted media freedom as giant companies had the financial power to control content and the manner of distribution. He said information through mass media is becoming less reliable because it is treated as merchandise for consumers not audiences.
“To counter this we need communities to be able to create and exchange their own content and use different platforms”, said Nadi adding that modern technology in the media was operating amid medieval media governance structures. Jon Barnes from the PANOS London office said that his organisation had identified weaknesses and challenges within the African media and began redressing them. For example, he said, PANOS was engaged in building African journalists capacity to report effectively on trade issues especially at international level where there is a dearth of African generated content.
* Please send comments to editor@pambazuka.org or comment online at www.pambazuka.org
Health Budget : 15% Now!
Joan Wangui
2007-01-26
http://pambazuka.org/en/category/comment/39451
Health campaigners and activists led by 2004 Nobel Laureate Prof Wangari Mathai have petitioned the African Union member states for failing to honour their 15 per cent pledge of their annual budgets on health care.
This fact became public knowledge as the WSF entered the third day.
The petition comes ahead of the forthcoming AU Heads of State and Government summit in Addis Ababa.
The petition by South African Nobel Laureate Arch Bishop Desmond Tutu, but signed on his behalf by Prof Mathai calls for Africa leaders to act fast and implement their pledges in a bid to reverse the ugly trends of treatable diseases in Africa.
“We write to appeal to you to act without further delay on arguably the most crucial challenge African leaders will have to confront in modern times, that of taking immediate and concrete actions to end the tragic loss of an estimated 8 million African lives annually to preventable, treatable or manageable diseases, illnesses and health conditions,” the Petition read in part.
Prof Mathai noted that sustainable financing for public health in Africa is arguably the most important challenge facing our continent today but which is put at the bottom of their agenda. She has thus challenged African leaders to revisit their 15% commitment as a matter of urgency lest Africans risks dying before their time.
In a campaign rally dubbed ’ 15% now’ activists noted that Africa risks loosing all her people to preventable and manageable diseases that have failed to top its leaders’ budgetary agendas. Yet in 2001 AU member states signed the Abuja declaration that called for each country to commit at least 15% or more of national budgets to health care.
“Africa is at the brink of extinction because our leaders have failed to prioritize the lives of their people. An estimated 40 million people Africans have died from health related conditions as a result of the Abuja commitment not being met.”
Citing the example of her own government’s negligence, she noted that the Kenyan government has failed to stop companies from producing thin plastic bags that litter the streets of Nairobi, acting as breeding grounds for mosquitoes and causing malaria.
Rotimi Sankore of CREDO Africa, an organization that campaigns for African rights lashed on African leaders for failing to break the ceilings as regards health issues. He accused them of prioritizing their own political interests in the expense of the lives of their people.
“Denying people of their health rights is like a death sentence. This is like genocide as generations will continue to be wiped off. Without mincing words, Sankore presented the grim statistics from UNAIDS and WHO indicating that 40 million Africans have died from health related conditions and many more will continue dying if our leaders fail to act accordingly.
The 2006 statistics from global and African health institutions indicate that at least 586,911 Africans are dying from TB annually, this is 35% of the world total. Figures also show that 24 million people living with HIV Aids have TB and that over 4 million children under the age of five die annually due to TB related infections.
Sankore sees the whole picture as damning as these statistics are merely seen as figures. The annual Aids death figures for Africa alone is 2.1 million. An estimated 24.7 million Africans are living with HIV and new infections are as high as 2.8 million. In the case of malaria, annual African deaths are estimated at 1,136,000. Also over 12 million African children have been orphaned by HIV Aids.
Chair of the Nigerian Social Forum, Abiola Akiyode-Afolabi said that Africa presents the worst indicator of women health issues with the continent having the highest number of women living with HIV Aids.
Gender budgeting, she said was crucial if women are to overcome some reproductive health issues that continue to surface amongst them. She urged nations to build alliances and mobilize health institutions. “Our leaders have signed these agreements so it is time we force them to ratify the protocols of the rights of women.
* Please send comments to editor@pambazuka.org or comment online at www.pambazuka.org
Indigenous group despair over land loss
Glory Mushinge
2007-01-25
http://pambazuka.org/en/category/comment/39417
The plight of about 3000 indigenous Kenyans, on the verge of losing their land has come to the fore at the Kenyan WSF.
They claim that they are fast losing their means of survival to internal displacement by American investors. The investors under the Dominion group of companies are reported to have bought off a bigger part of the Yala area of Siala district, west off Kenya, where the people live and earn their bread through farming. The citizens’ economic mainstay is agriculture and fishing, and the successful sale of the land could spell doom for the activities through denial of access to the land for cultivation and the river for fishing.
These facts came to light when a participant in the on-going World Social Forum expressed dismay at the way the Kenyan government was allegedly handling foreign investment issue in the country. Rapudo Hawl a community mobiliser in the ‘Friends of Yala Swamp’ told African Flame that the investors had taken the land and set up a plant for rice growing in Yala river, the district source of Fish farming, without any proper compensation to the dwellers. He alleged that because of the dam built for the activity, the villagers now have to migrate from their homes to other places such as churches or trees whenever it rains as the water in the dam overflows into their homes.
“This is the second year since the government gave them the authority to take the land and government can’t do much about the situation because the politicians have been compromised and they made sure they signed the treaty to pass a law on investment” claimed Hawl. “It has affected their livelihoods because they have been depending on agriculture and fishing, and the company can’t allow them to go near the river or they will be arrested.” He added that the people who did not heed the prohibition order had in the past been arrested and taken to court. He however stated that his organisation was working towards lobbying government to revisit the decision, saying a survey was being conducted to obtain facts about the consequences of the investment decision on the indigenous people. “The survey was done in October and is ready but is not yet in circulation. We need to lobby government because they say there is no evidence to our claims” he added.
* Please send comments to editor@pambazuka.org or comment online at www.pambazuka.org
Organising the World Social Forum
Brenda Zulu
2007-01-26
http://pambazuka.org/en/category/comment/39449
African Flames Brenda Zulu speaks with Wahu Kaara, Convener of Mobilisation, WSF
On the main challenges of hosting the WSF in Kenya
The irony of it is that many members of the Kenya Social Forum can not afford to pay the US$ 5 registration fee and these people are from homeless communities like Kibera. The other thing is that we were operating under the budget. I have been convener of mobilisation but was not able to raise the funds.
On the main issues that Kenyans would love to address
Kenyans would love to create a consciousness of good governance because of multi party politics. It should be known that not all the solutions are in politics
On what WSF will do for Kenya and Africa?
It would be able to give us another identity of being an equal actor with others. It would put the record right that we are not a nation of insecurity and not what the Americans are doing to Somalis by chasing them out of their own country.
The World Social Forum has already demonstrated that the government, civil society and mass movements can work together. We have enjoyed having meetings with our government. The World Social Forum has also bridged the working relation between us and the government.
This World Social Forum will give Africans presence and voice in bringing about paradigm shift from neo-liberalism that has perfected exclusion, disposition, violence in the guise of globalisation for prosperity; yet it is globalisation for commoditisation of all aspects of life and natural wealth to serve the interest of market and wealth.
On the impact of the forum
The NGOs and Civil societies have no choice than let go the leadership of social movements in demonstrating this leadership.
On the Forum’s handicap
For our local media there have been no media reports. This has been the main handicap because the media has not been interested in publicising this event.
* Please send comments to editor@pambazuka.org or comment online at www.pambazuka.org
Sexuality and Social Justice
Sokari Ekine
2007-01-25
http://pambazuka.org/en/category/comment/39418
The LGBTI activists presented a workshop on Sexuality and Social Justice which included Fikile Vilakazi is the director of the Coalition of Africa Lesbians (CAL), Wendy Landau of Behind the Mask, Bridge from the UK and Manohar from Sangama in Bangalore in India. The focus of the workshop was sexual rights and social justice. The concept of sexual rights is a different way of talking about sexual issues in which an integrated approach to sexuality must include women broadly because they made be denied their sexual rights in various ways. The concept is to move away from identity politics to one of integration of sexual minorities such as , sex workers, gays, lesbians, bisexuals, transgender, and also breaking these down into class and gender. The approach is a new and radical one which moves to incorporate all minorities and to make alliances with as many oppressed groups across a broad spectrum of the communities in which we live.
Fikile Vilakazi is the director of the Coalition of Africa Lesbians (CAL) which covers 12 countries including, Zimbabwe, South Africa, Namibia, Uganda, Nigeria, Botswana, Kenya, Tanzania. The CAL run a number of programmes for lesbians across Africa including a Creative Expression project to help lesbians come out through writing, discussions, poetry and art. The main issues facing the lesbian community in Africa is that even in countries like South Africa where lesbian rights are enshrined in the constitution, society itself is still very homophobic which puts them at risk of hate crimes including rape, beatings, and even murder. The recent Civil Union / Same Sex Marriage Bill passed by the South Africa parliament is not the primary concern of the LGBTI community in South Africa. Rather women are concerned over the curative hate crimes, and the homophobia in society. Despite the fact the lesbians are legally able to adopt children people still ask how can lesbians be parents in South Africa? There is also the issue of fundamentalist religions, Christians, Muslims and Hindus .
The legalising of of same sex marriage in South Africa has had repercussions in various African countries such as Nigeria and Uganda which have been extremely negative in their response and have used the South Africa decriminalisation to enforce even more draconian punishments of homosexuality in their countries. On a postive note the response by these governments has been that there is now an active dialogue in Africa around LGBTI issues and more and more of the LGBTI community are coming out and challenging their respective governments and religious institutions on the issue of sexuality and human rights.
Manohar of Sangama spoke eloquently about the innovative movement to bring together different sexual minorities across class and caste divisions in India.
* Sokari Ekine is the new Online News Editor of Pambazuka News
* Please send comments to editor@pambazuka.org or comment online at www.pambazuka.org
The Feminist Charter of Principles
Brenda Zulu
2007-01-25
http://pambazuka.org/en/category/comment/39416
The launching of the Charter of Feminists Principles for African Feminists at the 3rd International Feminist Dialogue marks a major contribution by the African Feminist Forum (AFF) and the larger feminist movement to the on-going world social forum. The AFF took place last year in Ghana and this space was created as an autonomous space in which African feminists from all walks of life and at different levels including local levels and the academia, could reflect on a collective basis and chart ways to strengthen and grow the feminists movement on the continent.
Mercy Siame an activist from Zambia sees the launch as a breakthrough in African feminism and encouraged other feminists to rally behind it and support it. “It may be difficult for the AFF to be accepted. We should spend more time and explain the ideologies to the people especially our leaders”. Director Coalition of African Lesbians, Fikile Vilakazi a first time participant to the International Feminist Dialogue is amazed that the space has rallied people from different background of fundamentalism. She says she has learned a lot on the situation of women in conflict situations and issues on gender based violence which she say is a different experience from her native South Africa.
The International Feminist Dialogue was held prior to the WSF from 17th to 19th January 2007 under the theme “Transforming Democracy: Feminist Visions and Strategies”. Over 250 women from different parts of the World attended to deepen the intensive dialogues on feminist perspectives and strategies in addressing fundamentalisms, militarism and neo-liberal globalisation. In organizing the third International Feminist Dialogues, the Coordinating Group (CG) created a vital space for critical minded feminist activists to re-examine, re-imagine and move forward the vital political project of feminist movement building and new forms of democratic processes.
The setting of the WSF in Africa in January 2007 offers a strategic space for feminists to come together in their broad diversity to explore the current moment, their differences and common ground, and their role in the larger social movements. Feminist Dialogues (FD) is a transnational meeting of feminist networks and organizations usually held before the WSF being one such space for this kind of strategic dialogue. The pre-WSF meeting is meant to promote effective intervention in the broader WSF process as feminists organizing for change, and to establish strategic and politically relevant links with other social movements. The first FD was held in Mumbai in January 2003, the second in Porto Alegre, Brazil and the third now in Nairobi, Kenya.
* Please send comments to editor@pambazuka.org or comment online at www.pambazuka.org
The Rural Women’s Movement
2007-01-25
http://pambazuka.org/en/category/comment/39419
The Rural Womens Movement is based in Kwa Zula Natal. The organization began in 1998 but was not officially launched until 2000. The RWM grew out of the need to address gender inequalities in the rural areas in post Apartheid South Africa.
RWM works to enable women to access, own, control, use, and manage land and natural resources in their own right. They work mainly with indigenous, poor and landless women and at present there are some 500 community based organizations with a membership of some 15,000 women. of whom 50 percent live below the poverty line.
Yesterday I spoke with Olivia Nomzamo who is a young agricultural activist with the Rural Women’s Movement and who lives in a small village in Kwa Zulu Natal called Underburg. She left school in 1994 and worked in a garage for one year but then decided she wanted to learn about farming as a way of supporting herself so she went to work on a farm. In 1999 Olivia joined the RWM and began to talk to other women in her village about the possibility of acquiring some land and using it to set up a collective farm project and cultivate the land which would bring some income for the women and enable them to feed themselves.
They approached the Traditional Authority in their area which is managed by local chiefs many of whom had been imposed on the community by the Apartheid government. The land is actually held on behalf of the people but the Chiefs act as if they own the land and in many instances people have to pay bribes of 3000 rand plus gifts of beer and vodka in order to receive an allocation of land.
The women of Underburg were given 10 acres for their farm project by the Chiefs and with the help of other local farmers who taught them how to cultivate the land and also lent them equipment they were able to begin the project. The women are divided into 5 groups each with between 20 and 25 members. They all contribute to the purchasing of seeds, one group manages the seedlings and the other 4 groups manage the transplanted seedlings on the main farm where they grow potatoes, beans and vegetables. They have still not been able to purchase any of their own equipment and totally rely on borrowing from male farmers in the area. Most of the food is sold to local markets and a small amount is divided up between the women and used to feed their families. The money they make has enabled them to improve their lives generally including sending their children to school. There is a local clinic in the area which has recently had a change of staff and who are providing a much better service.
Many of the women in the farming project are AIDS widows and some 90 percent of the women are HIV positive so access to decent health care is a huge priority for the village. There is also a large number of orphaned children some who live with relatives but quite a few who live on their own as street kids with no support and have to fend for themselves.
The women of the rural communities in regions like Kwa Zulu Natal and the Eastern Cape have benefited the least from the New South Africa. Many of the women in these areas who were ANC activists or part of families who were ANC activists were hounded, beaten and killed by the Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP). The regions have the largest numbers of illiteracy due to the poor educational provision during apartied and not much has changed for them since then. In fact many are suffering and starving due to lack of unemployment and HIV/ AIDS. Women are particularly vulnerable as men blame them for the spread of HIV. Women have been evicted from their homes by their husbands or dead husbands male relatives when they have revealed their HIV status as it is the women that go to get tested whilst the men refuse to do so.
Sizani Ngubane is the founder and director of the Rural Women’s Movement and you can listen to an interview with her on Pambazuka Broadcasts. She lives in Pietermaritzburg, is self-educated and has been an ANC and Women’s activist for most of her adult life. If you wish to contact the RWM you can do so at rwm at mail dot ngo dot za
* Please send comments to editor@pambazuka.org or comment online at www.pambazuka.org
Pan-African Postcard
World Social Forum Winds-Up in Nairobi
Tajudeen Abdul Raheem
2007-01-26
http://pambazuka.org/en/category/panafrican/39448
The World Social Forum (WSF) that took place in Nairobi was one of those 'once in a life time' events for many people; and 'once a year' events for the veterans who continue to attend every one.
It is an all-comers forum. For instance, the gay and lesbian lobby in Africa are there along side the Maoists, Anachists, peasant movements, trade unionists, radical scholars, grassroots movements, all kinds of gender activists and more. The reactionaries will say: all lunatics are in town.
It should be no surprise if there were many Africans since this is taking place in Africa, but so marginalized are we in our own affairs that one is always happy to see Africans at these meetings even when they are happening here. Many of the usual suspects are around, from the veteran radicals to the budding ones; and not only from Africa but from across the world. If you want to gauge the state of global revolutionary consciousness, the frustrations, the challenges and opportunities of the global forces for change and transformation, the WSF is the place to be.
But these gatherings always frustrate me for many reasons. One; they show up Africa's weaknesses whether they are held outside or inside Africa. One of the critical areas is our level of participation and preparedness. A majority of the African participants - even many from Kenya itself - were brought by foreign paymasters or organisations funded by outsiders. Often they become prisoners of their sponsors. They must attend events organized or supported by their sponsors who need to put their 'partners' on display, and the 'partners' in turn need to show their loyalty to their masters.
Two; even when these meetings happen in Africa, the participation of local groups and citizens are constrained by the three factors of fees for participation, language of discourse, and location. Local activists and sympathizers in the WSF had to organize a protest and even a temporary occupation before the fees for Kenyan participants were waived.
Three; we go to these events without adequate preparation about our own agenda and line up behind other peoples' not-so-hidden agendas, although at this WSF there were a number of attempts to forge a Pan-African agenda before the summit consultations. One of them was the Pan-African Youth Forum working closely with the Youth Commission of the WSF. But the truth remains that many of the youth who came did so on the platform of one donor or the other and were mostly not African.
This dependence on foreigners, both financially and ideologically, is so pervasive that it cannot be ignored anymore. There are signs that an increasing number of Africans are not only outraged by it but becoming ashamed by it, and are looking for ways and means of freeing our activism from the clutches of donor funding and donor-driven agendas. These issues were frankly and honestly discussed at many forums before and during the summit.
This dependence on foreigners raises a lot of disturbing issues about the state of Africa's NGOs and CSOs, and their capacity to contribute to lasting changes in the social, economic and political conditions of Africans in favour of social justice.
The first is a question of legitimacy. Who do these NGOs represent? Who are they accountable to? To whom do they owe their loyalty: to their donors or to the African people they claim to speak for? The second is the related question of the generally anti-government posture of these NGOs. They take money from foreign governments/agencies like DFID, USAID, DANIDA, SIDA, allegedly as independent CSOs. But why should foreigners be helping us to be independent of our own governments? How are their own citizens independent of them? The same African NGOs that queue up to suck up to all kinds of foreign governments and funders will raise their eye-brows and shout 'autonomy' and 'sell out' if any of their members has close financial or political links with their own governments.
In effect, the autonomy they are asserting is one of being sovereign against their own government and subservience to any foreigner. Where governments are illegitimate or have bad governance records this may hold for sometime, but in the long run it delegitimises the NGOs concerned.
The third issue is the constant conflation of NGOs to mean CSOs which should not be the case. Genuine CSOs will include trade unions, guild and professional associations, self-help groups, village or town associations, faith-based charities or interest groups, etc. Their most distinctive character is that they are voluntary, membership-based and generate their funds from their members.
How many of our busy-body, noise-making NGOs qualify in this sense? It is similar to our governments being dependent on the aid of outsiders, and we demanding that they should be accountable to us. We do not pay taxes but demand representation and wonder why the leaders are more responsive to any noise that comes from outsiders?
The worst excesses of the dependence on foreign sponsors are the various scams that have developed in many of these NGOs about 'creative accounting', which does not mean accountability: Per diem wrangles, multiple claims, bogus ticket refunds, multiple accounting, budgeting and reporting for similar proposals from the same organisation and many other unsavoury practices that make these organisations not dissimilar to the governments we climb on holy mountains to attack for being corrupt, inefficient and unaccountable.
And this issue of dependence on foreign donors is not just because there are no resources. How come the nationalists freed this continent from the yoke of colonialism without writing proposals to any funder? Why are our peoples not willing or able to support our activism? Could it be that the people do not associate themselves with the self-given mandate of these largely middle-class led, elite focused, and urban-based counter elite? Or worse still, people may be seeing that these self-declared crusaders, whether foreign or local, are only there for their own interest. The proliferation in the last decade of MONGOs (My Own NGO), GONGOs (Governmental NGO) , BONGOs (Business NGO), PONGO (Private NGO), all over Africa, may be an indication of democratic openings, or state collapse, or of the irresponsive state, but are not good indicators of building democratic, people-led, people-based organisations connected to and organically linked to the wider social movements without whom social progress, democracy and development is not possible.
If they truly belong to the masses the masses will defend them. And if they are truly based on the interests of our peoples their first allegiance will be to those they serve.
In that sense it should worry us that the African participation in the first ever WSF in Africa in Nairobi is more of a gathering of NGOs than that of the real social and political movements and peoples' organisations who can make lasting change possible. Many of our successful NGOs and INGOs, like their forebears, have become gate-keepers - or to use a better term - commissioned agents between the masses and their oppressors, occupying spaces for the poor and the marginalized when most of them do not or no longer belong to that class or share their vision of change.
* Dr. Tajudeen Abdul-Raheem is the Deputy Director for the UN Millennium Campaign in Africa, based in Nairobi, Kenya. He writes this article in his personal capacity as a concerned Pan-Africanist.
* Please send comments to editor@pambazuka.org or comment online at www.pambazuka.org
Advocacy & campaigns
Ethiopia: Fear of torture or ill-treatment
2007-01-24
http://web.amnesty.org/library/Index/ENGAFR250012007
Amnesty International's global Urgent Action network provides an effective and rapid means of preventing some of the most life-threatening human rights violations against individuals. Tilahun Ayalew (m), Anteneh Getnet (m), Meqcha Mengistu (m), all officials of the Ethiopian Teachers' Association (ETA) are prominent members of Ethiopia's main teachers' trade union, which has been critical of the government. Tilahun Ayalew and Anteneh Getnet are reported to be in custody, and are believed to have been tortured. Amnesty International considers them prisoners of conscience, detained solely for the non-violent expression of their opinions and trade union activities.
Kenya: Peace Caravan 2007
2007-01-24
http://tinyurl.com/2ze99s
Voluntary Youth Philanthropists (VYP) is a Kenyan based organization, with active regional networks that has been lobbying for good governance and youth participation since its inception in 2000. The theme for the Peace Camel Caravan 2007 is “Youth leading change”. Its mission is creating awareness on leadership and peace in Kenya, targets 5 million people directly and indirectly in all eight provinces. It will start in April 2007 in Nairobi and with support vehicles will cover 1,500km in 15 days, according to AfricaFiles.
Letters & Opinions
WSF debate
Victoria Ebin
2007-01-26
http://pambazuka.org/en/category/letters/39462
Your column on WSF by Tajudeen Abdul-Raheem is exactly the sort of stuff that US leaders point to when they want to discredit the WSF and those who support it (http://www.pambazuka.org/en/category/features/39303). It's full of mistakes and raving.
Books & arts
Burkina Faso: Twenty Tunisian Films to Take Part in Ouagadougou International Film Festival
2007-01-24
http://allafrica.com/stories/200701190324.html
With recent films, (both long and short feature films) Tunisia will take a big part in the 20 th edition of the "Ouagadougou International Film Festival" (Fespaco) in Burkina Faso. The festival, Africa 's second film festival, which will be held from February 24 to March 3, 2007 , will also feature a round table around the theme: Tunisia 's experience in producing '10 short films ten gazes'.
Zimbabwe: 2007 NAMA Nominees Announced
2007-01-24
http://tinyurl.com/24vacl
The 2007 National Arts Merit Awards nominees were announced in Harare on Wednesday (17 January). This year's edition of the awards, to be held on February 4 at the 7 Arts Theatre, has 25 categories with the media awards being the latest addition. In the outstanding musician category, urban groover Rufaro Cindy Munyavi has sprung a surprise by taking on Oliver Mtukudzi, Kireni Zulu and Amai Charamba. Her song, Spare wheel, is also vying for the outstanding album award together with Joseph Garakara's Idya Banana, Alexio Kawara's Tinodanana and Ellen Kupusa Smith's Mbudzi, reports Kubatana.
Podcasts
WSF special broadcast: Conscious music from the Nairobi slums
2007-01-25
http://www.pambazuka.org/blogs/wsf2007/?p=34
As part of our special reports from the World Social Forum, conscious musicians Hope Raisers speak to Robtel Pailey from Pambazuka News about their music, justice and the obstacles they face being political artists living in the slums of Nairobi. Music in this podcast is brought to you by Hope Raisers and Freddy Macha.
WSF special broadcast: Land rights in Kenya
2007-01-25
http://www.pambazuka.org/blogs/wsf2007/?p=30
George Wenda from Kenya talks about the plight inflicted on rural people in his country by foreign TNCs who land grab.
WSF special broadcast: LGBT rights in Zimbabwe
2007-01-25
http://www.pambazuka.org/blogs/wsf2007/?p=22
As part of our special reports from the World Social Forum, Fadzai Muparutsu from GALZ speaks to Sokari Ekine from Pambazuka News about LGBT rights in Zimbabwe. Music in this podcast is brought to you by Freddy Macha.
WSF special broadcast: Occupation of Western Sahara
2007-01-25
http://www.pambazuka.org/blogs/wsf2007/?p=24
As part of our special reports from the World Social Forum, Abd Mohammed from the Western Sahara talks to Sokari Ekine from Pambazuka News about the ongoing occupation of his country by Morocco. Music in this podcast is brought to you by Freddy Macha.
WSF special podcast: Lesbian Rights in Africa
2007-01-25
http://www.pambazuka.org/blogs/wsf2007/?p=14
As part of our special reports from the World Social Forum, Fikele Vilakazi & Vanesha Chitty spoke to Robtel Pailey from Pambazuka News about their work at the forum and on rights for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender communities in Africa.
African Union Monitor
Africa: Addis awaits to host Africa Peer Review Mechanism session
2007-01-26
http://www.pambazuka.org/aumonitor/
The 6th Summit of the committee of participating Heads of State and Government of the African Peer Review Mechanism (APR Forum) is set for Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, on 28 January 2007. Click on a link for a draft programme of the summit. The programme of the NEPAD Heads of State and Government implementation committee is expected to be finalised before the end of this week.
Africa: AU roots for United States of Africa
2007-01-26
http://www.pambazuka.org/aumonitor/
The African Union Commission has released a draft agenda of the eighth ordinary session due to take place in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia between January 29-30, 2007. The main highlights of session include: the election of the chairperson of the African Union Commission and bureaus of the Assembly, adoption of the 2007 budget, adoption of the special report titled An African Union Government: Towards the United States of Africa and consideration of integrating NEPAD into the AU structures.
Africa: Draft agenda of 8th ordinary session of the AU
2007-01-26
http://www.pambazuka.org/aumonitor/
The African Union Commission has released a draft agenda of the eigth ordinary session due to take place in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia between January 29-30, 2007. The main highlights of session include: the election of the chairperson of the African Union Commission and bureaus of the Assembly, adoption of the 2007 budget, adoption of the special report titled An African Union Government: Towards the United States of Africa and consideration of integrating NEPAD into the AU structures.
Africa: Stand up to be counted: Is the AU's vision in jeopardy?
2007-01-26
http://www.pambazuka.org/aumonitor/index.php/AUMONITOR/comments/stand_up_to_be_counted_is_the_aus_vision_in_jeopardy/
A report on the African Union commissioned by three civil society organisations—AfriMAP, AFRODAD and Oxfam—and endorsed by nineteen others, will be launched this evening (January 24) in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. The report titled Towards a People-driven African Union: Current obstacles and New Opportunities interrogates the key challenges facing the African Union in realising its vision and mandate. The 72-page report is the first independent, substantive and public assessment of the progress of the African Union towards the goal of greater accountability and accessibility since it was founded in 2002. It reviews and makes extensive recommendations on the interaction between the African Union and various sectors, including civil society, in articulating its vision for the continent.
Raising the bar on rights in Africa
2007-01-26
http://www.pambazuka.org/aumonitor/index.php
Africa’s Foreign Ministers meeting in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, are today expected to agree on a draft charter setting out new benchmarks on democracy, good governance and respect for fundamental rights and freedoms. The draft charter outlines measures required to entrench these values and hence foster democracy and the rule of law in Africa. The charter sets out a new threshold against which Africa’s governments can be judged through existing mechanisms which regularly audit their performance such as the Africa Peer Review Mechanism (APRM) or those charged with arbitrating violations of rights such as the Africa Court on Human Rights.
Women & gender
Global: Fight for your rights, despite globalisation, women urged
2007-01-26
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=57152
Women, especially in the developing world, who continue to bear the burden of the negative impact of globalization, must fight for their rights. "We are not powerless; women are standing together in spite of the burden to dispossess us," Wahu Kaara, an activist and one of the organizers of the WSF, said at the United Nations offices in the Kenyan capital, Nairobi.
Global: What role can men play in the challenge for gender equality?
2007-01-24
http://www.awid.org/go.php?list=analysis&prefix=analysis&item=00361
There has been resounding international awareness and recognition, accelerated by the Millennium Development Goals, that gender equality and women's rights are key to development. What has emerged on the sidelines however, is a growing debate on the value of including and encouraging the engagement of men. How can men be allies in the fight for gender equality and women's rights? This article canvasses the issues, the debate and ways that men can (and whether they should) join the battle.
Global: Women and Conflict - An Introductory Guide to Programming
2007-01-26
http://tinyurl.com/3xhtn8
While conflict inflicts suffering on everyone, women are particularly affected by its short- and long-term effects. Sexual assault and exploitation are frequently employed as tools of war; victimization leads to isolation, alienation, prolonged emotional trauma, and unwanted pregnancies that often result in abandoned children. USAID has published a guide to developing programming for women in conflict.
Liberia: Government, women's groups decry post-war sexual violence
2007-01-24
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=57065
Rising levels of reported rape and sexual exploitation of women and teenage girls in Liberia have sparked concern by both the government and women's rights groups. Despite a peace agreement in 2003 that ended the particularly brutal 14-year civil war, during which fighters sexually assaulted girls and women and sometimes used them as "sex slaves", these types of violent abuse were still common, according to Lois Bruthus, head of the Association of Female Lawyers of Liberia (AFELL), a leading advocacy group.
Human rights
Global: Businesses ignore human rights
2007-01-24
http://ipsnews.net/africa/nota.asp?idnews=36210
From Iraq to Nigeria, multinational corporations are ignoring human rights, entrenching a culture of abuse and impunity that is difficult to eradicate, a leading anti-apartheid activist warns. Kader Asmal, a former South African minister of education, says the abuses run from environmental degradation around the world to the more than 90,000 security contractors, engaged in murky multi-billion-dollar businesses, in war-torn Iraq.
Rwanda: Killings Threaten Justice for Genocide
2007-01-26
http://hrw.org/english/docs/2007/01/19/rwanda15126.htm
Rwandan police and judicial authorities must ensure prompt and effective law enforcement to deal with recent killings of participants in the justice system for genocide known as gacaca, Human Rights Watch said in a new report. The 20-page report, “Killings in Eastern Rwanda,” documents two incidents in late November 2006 in which 13 persons were killed.
Rwanda: New law criminalizing same sex conduct proposed
2007-01-24
http://www.iglhrc.org/site/iglhrc/section.php?id=5&detail=709
On 15 January 2007, IGLHRC and ILGA sent a letter to the president of Rwanda, Paul Kagame, asking him to reconsider plans to include a provision that would penalize homosexuality as part of an overall revision to the Rwandan penal code currently being debated. The provision appears as Article 160 in the French version and article 158 in the English version of the draft penal code currently on the website of the Ministry of Justice.
Senegal: Speed Up Trial of Chadian Ex-Dictator, says Human Rights Watch
2007-01-26
http://hrw.org/english/docs/2007/01/25/senega15183.htm
Six months after Senegal agreed to an African Union request that it prosecute Chad's former dictator, it has moved very slowly in bringing Hissène Habré to trial on charges of crimes against humanity, Human Rights Watch said in a briefing paper. Human Rights Watch noted that Senegal had not even passed the legislation needed to try Habré.
Refugees & forced migration
DRC: Britain Urged to Reconsider Deportation of Women to Congo
2007-01-25
http://www.worldpress.org/Europe/2642.cfm
Civil rights activists are urging Liam Byrne, the British minister of state for nationality, citizenship, and immigration, to release Congolese women from detention and review their cases. Ambrose Musiyiwa of the World Press reports that the Home Office has failed to adequately address the current situation in Congo and continues to carry out removals.
Elections & governance
Angola: What can the courts do for the poor?
2007-01-24
http://www.eldis.org/cf/search/disp/DocDisplay.cfm?Doc=DOC23347&Resource=f1
This paper examines the role that may be envisioned for the courts in Angola with respect to the poor. Looking at the period from 1992 - 2004, it analyses the factors that are necessary for getting social rights litigation successfully through the courts and identifies the type of impediments which exist. The paper finds that the failure to implement social and economic rights in Angola is not primarily due to constitutional limitations, but rather due to the lack of resources among the poor as well as to lack of human and technical resources within the justice system itself.
Guinea: International Trade Union Pressure on Authorities
2007-01-24
http://www.ituc-csi.org/spip.php?article613
The International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC) has reiterated its deep concern regarding the situation in Guinea. Whilst the Guinean inter-union group was meeting in Conakry to take stock of the situation following the bloody repression that had claimed 30 lives on Monday, its leaders were summoned to the palace of President Lansana Conté on Tuesday afternoon.
Guinea: More trouble in Guinea could shake region
2007-01-24
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=57169
Guinea's long borders and central position mean analysts view it as a regional lynchpin, saying serious domestic instability could easily spill over, ending tenuous progress towards the consolidation of peace in Liberia and Sierra Leone, which both experienced devastating civil wars in the 1990s.
Kenya: Billions to be spent on campaigns
2007-01-26
http://www.nationmedia.com/dailynation/nmgcontententry.asp?category_id=2&newsid=90189
Two leading political parties are preparing budgets running into billions of shillings to finance their candidates in this year’s General Election. While ODM Kenya has a tentative budget of Sh2 billion, Narc Kenya’s leadership is working on its own estimates for the election which sources said could go up to Sh5 billion.
Nigeria: Nigeria, Nigerians and 2007 Elections
2007-01-26
http://tinyurl.com/3xjyaf
The Tide Online reports that in a recent conversation with a group of educated, enlightened and experienced Nigerians, most were disenchanted with the current style of campaigns and primaries by some politicians who are either looking for a second term or aspiring for higher political offices.
Corruption
DRC: Bemba warns Kabila over corruption, abuses
2007-01-26
http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/L24410224.htm
In his strongest attack since he accepted defeat in landmark elections last year, presidential contender Jean-Pierre Bemba warned President Joseph Kabila on Wednesday that abuses and corruption could undermine democracy and threatened to call opposition strikes and protests, reports Joe Bavier for Reuters.
Kenya: Anti-graft agency directors retire
2007-01-26
http://www.nationmedia.com/dailynation/nmgcontententry.asp?category_id=1&newsid=90332
Key members of the local chapter of Transparency International board have retired in a move widely seen as aimed at ending the perception that it was close to President Kibaki’s Government. The Daily Nation reports that the decision is being seen as a move by TI-Kenya to cleanse itself especially after two directors were forced to resign by the board.
Liberia: Snowe Wants International Involvement In Alleged Bribery Probe
2007-01-24
http://www.analystnewspaper.com/
The embattled Speaker of the House of Representatives, Edwin Snowe, Jr. has called on the Ministry of Justice to relax activities leading to investigating the alleged bribery involving lawmakers and re-direct its investigation to the disappearance of the chairs of the Speaker and the Deputy Speaker from the Centennial Pavilion.
Namibia: Secret Nujoma-Muyongo document surfaces
2007-01-24
http://www.namibian.com.na/
A potentially explosive document related to the Caprivi, which the Swapo Party has persisted in saying does not exist, has suddenly surfaced in Namibia. Compiled over 40 years ago and signed by former President Sam Nujoma, it describes the merger in the 1960s of Swapo and a political party led by Caprivi secessionist Mishake Muyongo.
South Africa: Peer review sees corruption as South Africa pitfall
2007-01-26
http://tinyurl.com/2paddh
A long-awaited report on good governance in South Africa identifies crime, graft and xenophobia as potential pitfalls for the continent's biggest economy, according to a leaked copy obtained by Reuters. The APRM report, which will be presented to heads of state at an African Union summit in Ethiopia on Sunday, places official corruption among South Africa's biggest problems.
Development
Global: Forum ends with calls for social equity
2007-01-26
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=57194
The World Social Forum (WSF) ended in Nairobi, the Kenyan capital on Thursday, with participants hailing the event as an opportunity for people from around the world to exchange ideas on global social problems often overlooked by capitalist interests they said dominated the world.
SADC: Strategic resource for unrolling development plans
2007-01-24
http://www.eldis.org/cf/search/disp/docdisplay.cfm?doc=DOC23373&resource=f1
To inform development in Southern Africa, the region needs information that is locally produced, analysed and delivered. This background paper considers the concepts of Knowledge for Development (KfD) as it applies to southern Africa, placing it within the context of regional development and cooperation plans currently being rolled out by the Southern African Development Community (SADC).
South Africa: SA, EU hope to finalise partnership action
2007-01-24
http://www.bilaterals.org/article.php3?id_article=6994
The finalisation of a joint action-plan for the establishment of a so-called ’Strategic Partnership’ between South Africa and the European Union (EU) - proposed by the EU last year - would be prioritised during Germany’s Presidency of the EU, which runs from January to the end of June.
Health & HIV/AIDS
Africa: Breastfeeding and HIV
2007-01-24
http://www.aidsmap.com/en/news/F2784693-8CA7-44F6-B490-78F0CC388254.asp
A prospective cohort study has found that HIV-positive Kenyan mothers who breastfed their babies had faster declines in CD4 cell count and body mass index than those who formula-fed. However, breastfeeding had no effect on viral load or overall mortality among the mothers after two years.
Global: Striving towards a world free of TB
2007-01-24
http://www.eldis.org/cf/search/disp/DocDisplay.cfm?Doc=DOC23383&Resource=f1health
This World Health Organization paper defines the Stop TB Strategy which underpins the second global plan to stop TB (2006-2015). The goal of the strategy is to reduce dramatically the global burden of TB by 2015. It aims to achieve universal access to high-quality diagnosis and treatment; reduce the suffering and socioeconomic burden associated with TB; protect poor and vulnerable populations from TB; and support development of new tools and enable their timely and effective use.
Tanzania: Bird flu still a threat in Zanzibar, minister says
2007-01-26
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=57193
The government of Tanzania's semi-autonomous island of Zanzibar will not lift a ban imposed in 2005 on poultry imports, despite pressure from poultry farmers and retailers, the island's Chief Minister, Shamsi Vuai Nahodha, said on Thursday. The ban will remain in force indefinitely," Nahodha said in a statement issued in the capital, Stone Town.
Zambia: Shielding children from their HIV status does more harm than good
2007-01-26
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=57198
Zambia's attempts to promote paediatric antiretroviral (ARV) drug adherence are being undermined by families and communities who shield children in their care from knowing their HIV/AIDS status, health experts say. A report by IRIN revealed that it is easier to counsel adults living with the virus, but families caring for HIV-positive children often hide the truth from the child.
Zimbabwe: Costs of ARVs spiral
2007-01-26
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=57199
A rise of more than 100 percent in the price of antiretroviral drugs is likely to put the life-prolonging medication beyond the reach of hundreds of thousands of Zimbabweans living with HIV. Pharmacists in Bulawayo increased the price of a monthly course of ARVs from an average of Z$30,000 (US$120 at the official exchange rate) to between Z$80,000 (US$320) and Z$100,000 (US$400).
Education
Africa: Africa’s education system needs an Afro-centric curriculum
2007-01-26
http://www.newtimes.co.rw/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=583&Itemid=41
If the present political condition of modern Africa can be judged by current western media headlines, the judgment-call of history is not in Africa’s favour. Current headlines correspond to a biased interpretation of the reality on the ground, encourage the cult of Afro pessimism among its readers, reports John Gashugi for the New Times of Rwanda.
Africa: Marriage and childbirth as factors in school exit
2007-01-24
http://www.eldis.org/cf/search/disp/DocDisplay.cfm?Doc=DOC23387&Resource=f1educ
This paper explores the potential importance of marriage and childbirth as determinants of school-leaving in sub-Saharan Africa and identifies some of the common underlying factors that contribute to premature school-leaving and early marriage and childbearing.
Kenya: Children's nutrition and schooling
2007-01-24
http://www.cgdev.org/content/publications/detail/12218
The provision of life-saving antiretroviral (ARV) treatment has emerged as a key component of the global response to HIV/AIDS, yet little is known about the impact of this intervention on the welfare of children whose parents receive treatment. In this working paper CGD post-doctoral fellow Harsha Thirumurthy and his co-authors use longitudinal household survey data collected in collaboration with a treatment program in western Kenya to provide the first estimate of the impact of ARV treatment on children’s schooling and nutrition.
Liberia: Squeezing in an education
2007-01-26
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=57168
The government of President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf aims to dramatically increase the country’s enrollment rate through the Education for All law that was enacted in 2004. "The enforcement is getting the results we want. Children are now coming from the farms, off the street and into the classrooms," Sirleaf recently told reporters.
Morocco: Slow March to Literacy
2007-01-24
http://ipsnews.net/africa/nota.asp?idnews=36283
Morocco's "march towards light" as its literacy programme is called is brightening up as official figures go, but with far too many shady areas still. Two years after the launch of the programme intended to eradicate illiteracy by 2015 in line with the Millennium Development Goals, officials claim that illiteracy has diminished to 38 percent of the population of 30 million, from 80 percent in 1960 and 48 percent in 1999.
Racism & xenophobia
Botswana: Bushmen return home despite police presence
2007-01-24
http://www.survival-international.org/news.php?id=2174
A group of forty Bushmen have managed to return to their homes in the Central Kalahari Game Reserve this weekend, despite a heavy police presence and attempts to persuade them to stay in the relocation camps. All the Bushmen in the convoy were allowed into the reserve by the wildlife guards at the gates, although some were only issued with temporary permits.
Environment
Africa: Continent spearheading solutions to climate change
2007-01-24
http://tinyurl.com/2c8y4l
African countries are spearheading ways to tackle climate change and have important lessons for how others can cope in future, says a soon to be released report. The report by the International Research Institute for Climate and Society (IRI) at Columbia University, United States, shows how certain countries are integrating climate information into development and planning. This helps them to manage climate risks such as flood and drought, reports SciDev.
Global: Promoting a political ecology perspective on river basin water management
2007-01-24
http://www.eldis.org/cf/search/disp/DocDisplay.cfm?Doc=DOC23277&Resource=f1biodiv
This report discusses the evolution of the concept of a river basin in order to give a more politicised view of integrated water management. The paper argues that the river basin has been associated with various strands of thinking and sometimes co-opted or mobilised by particular groups to strengthen the legitimacy of their agenda. The author argues that the river basin is a political and ideological construct where the environment and political/administrative systems meet.
Kenya: Hear Our Voices: "Why I attended the World Social Forum” - slum resident
2007-01-26
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=57201
Duncan Otieno, 22, lives in Huruma, one of four main slums in Kenya's capital, Nairobi. Otieno has lived there since coming to the city in 2003 after finishing school in Kisumu, in the west of the country. Four years on, he remains unemployed except for the odd construction job, which helps him pay the rent of his one-roomed house and support his younger brother.
Uganda: “A funny place to store carbon”
UWA-FACE Foundation’s tree planting project in Mount Elgon National Park, Uganda
2007-01-26
http://www.wrm.org.uy/countries/Uganda/book.html
UWA-FACE Foundation’s tree planting project in Mount Elgon National Park, Uganda, by Chris Lang and Timothy Byakola, documents human rights abuses at Mount Elgon National Park in east Uganda, where the Dutch FACE Foundation has been planting carbon ‘offset’ trees since 1994.
Land & land rights
Africa: Innovation for land rights
2007-01-24
http://www.id21.org/nr/n5nk1g1.html
Many people in Africa do not have the security of formal titles to land. Policymakers can learn from the various approaches that different countries have taken to improve land tenure security. Land tenure systems reflect the influence of history, culture, population growth, urbanisation and contemporary politics. Research from the International Institute for Environment and Development in the UK examines current trends in land tenure and sources of insecurity. Using seven case studies, the paper describes new approaches to securing tenure rights in Africa.
Ghana: Livelihoods at the edge of expanding cities
2007-01-24
http://www.id21.org/urban/u7ea1g1.html
Kumasi, with a population of one million, is the second city of Ghana and the capital of the Ashanti Region. The city is growing rapidly both in area and population. This is affecting the natural environment and the livelihoods of the people living in rural areas around the city.
Media & freedom of expression
Africa: Group identifies media's weaknesses
2007-01-24
http://tinyurl.com/2hz3dr
The African Media Development Initiative (AMDI), launched a year ago to mobilise international support for the development of African media, has called for increased resources to address the weaknesses dogging the fourth estate on the continent, according to a Pana report posted on Africa News. In a 142-page report unveiled in Nairobi, Kenya, AMDI, noted that while there had been "a massive proliferation of media during the last five years," in the 17 sub-Saharan African countries surveyed, the "professional, technical, ethical and management standards" of the sector "remain low," reports Journalism.co.za.
Kenya: IFJ Condemns Illegal Sacking of Seven Employees of Nation Media Group
2007-01-26
http://pambazuka.org/en/category/media/39430
The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) has vehemently condemned the unlawful sacking of seven members of the Kenya Union of Journalists (KUJ) from the Nation Media Group who lost their jobs because of their involvement in the union.
INTERNATIONAL FEDERATION OF JOURNALISTS - Media Release
25 January 2007
IFJ Condemns Illegal Sacking of Seven Employees of Nation Media Group in Kenya
The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) today vehemently condemned the unlawful sacking of seven members of the Kenya Union of Journalists (KUJ) from the Nation Media Group who lost their jobs because of their involvement in the union.
According to the KUJ, there has been a systematic pattern of harassment and intimidation targeting the KUJ leadership and its members that work for the Nation Media Group. The Group not only provides poor working conditions for journalists and media workers, but has also instituted a clause in the contract of its employees that bars them from joining a trade union.
"This is a flagrant violation of the fundamental human and labour rights of the employees as guaranteed by the Kenyan Constitution and the International Labour Organisation conventions which guarantee freedom of association," said Gabriel Baglo, Director of the IFJ Africa Office. "The right to unionise guarantees peace and social justice, and it is the right of the employees of the Nation Media Group to join or form unions if they so wish" said Baglo.
The IFJ urges the Nation Media Group management and its owner, His Highness The Aga Khan, to ensure that the rights of its journalists and media workers in Kenya and in Africa in general are fully respected and guaranteed.
Harassment, intimidation and threats of dismissal aimed at the employees must cease immediately, the IFJ said. Management should place as its priority the improvement of the working conditions of its employees and ensure that a conducive environment is created that guarantees maximum efficiency in compliance with international Labour Standards.
In solidarity with the KUJ, the IFJ calls for the immediate reinstatement of all employees that were recently sacked unjustly and illegally by the Nation Media Group management. The IFJ says that the right to unionise is a fundamental human right and, therefore, management should revoke without delay all such clauses in the employees' contracts that violate this basic right.
For further information contact the IFJ: +221 842 01 43
The IFJ represents over 500,000 journalists in more than 110 countries
Senegal: New Report Published on the State of Freedom of Expression
2007-01-26
http://pambazuka.org/en/category/media/39426
Ahead of the Senegalese presidential elections on February 25, ARTICLE 19 publishes a new report on the state of freedom of expression in Senegal which presses for the legal, political and institutional framework for freedom of expression in Senegal to be reformed.
PRESS RELEASE
ARTICLE 19
For immediate release - 25 January 2007
Senegal: New Report Published on the State of Freedom of Expression
Ahead of the Senegalese presidential elections on February 25, ARTICLE 19 publishes a report on the state of freedom of expression in Senegal.
The legal, political and institutional framework for freedom of expression in Senegal must be reformed, urges a new report published by ARTICLE 19 just ahead of February 2007 elections. The report outlines key challenges and obstacles to freedom of expression in the lead up to presidential elections.
The report highlights the arrests, attacks and harassments of journalists, political opponents and human rights defenders. It also highlights the excessive government control over the national television and the lack of independence of the broadcasting and telecommunication regulatory bodies in Senegal.
"We are concerned by the unjustified attacks on freedom of expression especially in the lead up to the elections and the resistance of the Senegalese government to adopt legislation that conform with international standards on freedom of expression" says Agnès Callamard, Executive Director of ARTICLE 19.
ARTICLE 19 hopes to contribute to the improvement of Senegal's legal and institutional framework in accordance with international norms on freedom of expression, with the aim of consolidating democracy and freedom of expression. ARTICLE 19 hopes that Senegalese policymakers and all national and international stakeholders will take into account challenges that need to be overcome before and during the upcoming presidential and legislative elections in February 2007, as well as the necessary reforms on the long term.
Below are some of the recommendations formulated by ARTICLE 19:
The Senegalese government should:
• Take urgent measures to repeal all press offenses, such as the provisions in the penal code and the penal procedures regarding criminal defamation, the publication of false news, insults and offenses towards the Head of State and national and foreign institutions;
• End attacks, intimidation, administrative and judicial harassments against journalists and political opponents who peacefully express their opinions;
• End the excessive and undemocratic restrictions on the right to protest publicly and peacefully;
• Establish in consultation with stakeholders in the broadcasting sector a clear and transparent process to ensure the complete liberalisation of television and radio, which takes into account the three existing sectors (public, private and community/association), diversity and the pluralism of information;
• Transform Radio Télévision Sénégalaise (RTS) into a true public service broadcaster, accessible to all with editorial independence and governed by an independent executive board, in order to meet the needs for pluralism of information for all sectors of Senegalese society;
• End all partisan propaganda by the RTS for the benefit of the governing party and ensure that it respect its duties as a public service broadcaster especially during the period of the presidential elections of February 2007;
• Adopt a law on freedom of information in accordance with international standards, and in consultation with all national stakeholders.
Media practitioners and institutions should:
• Reinforce the respect of ethical standards and take into account the public interest in the delivery of information;
• Initiate a revision of the collective bargaining convention of journalists with the view to protecting journalists from corruption, and an unfavourable financial situation.
• Contribute to financing the self regulatory mechanism, strengthen its capacity and respect its rulings and recommendations.
• Ensure that government subsidies to the media are used according to the law.
For a copy of the report, see http://www.article19.org/pdfs/publications/sengal-liberte-d-expression.pdf
NOTES TO EDITORS
For more information, please contact Fatou Jagne-Senghor, Africa Programme Officer: fatou@article19.org
ARTICLE 19 is an independent human rights organisation that works around the world to protect and promote the right to freedom of expression. It takes its name from Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which guarantees free speech.
Tunisia: UN Chief urged to call attention to censorship
2007-01-24
http://www.ifex.org/en/content/view/full/80559/
An international coalition of free expression groups has urged new U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon to remind Tunisia of its obligations under international law to respect freedom of expression and other human rights. The IFEX Tunisia Monitoring Group (IFEX-TMG) says more than one year after Tunisia hosted the U.N.-sponsored World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS), the state of free expression is as poor, if not poorer, now than it was when the conference was held in November 2005.
Zimbabwe: Editors condemn withdrawal of Ncube’s passport
2007-01-24
http://www.misa.org/cgi-bin/viewnews.cgi?category=2&id=1169045937
Trevor Ncube, who is the publisher of the privately owned Zimbabwe Independent and Zimbabwe Standard as well as the Mail and Guardian of South Africa is seeking a High Court order compelling the Registrar-General Tobaiwa Mudede to renew his passport following his application for Zimbabwean citizenship.
News from the diaspora
Global: Rene Civil — Still in Jail !!!
2007-01-25
http://www.haitiaction.com/News/HAC/12_9_6/12_9_6.html
From the Haiti Action Committee: “Rene Civil, one of Haiti's most well respected grass roots activists, is still in jail. Despite massive protests in Haiti calling for the release of all political prisoners, Rene and hundreds of others remain locked down in Haiti's jails. It is past time for their release. We call upon the government of President Rene Preval to stand up to the US/UN occupiers of Haiti and release these political prisoners.”
Global: A Call to Action: Join the International Day in Solidarity with the People of Haiti!
2007-01-25
http://www.haitiaction.com/News/HAC/1_11_7.html
The United Nations forces in Haiti (MINUSTAH) — backed to the hilt by the US, France and Canada — are continuing their bloody assault on the poor majority, targeting especially leaders and supporters of the Lavalas grassroots democracy movement.
Global: US Embassy in Haiti acknowledges excessive force by UN
2007-01-25
http://www.haitiaction.com/News/HIP/1_23_7/1_23_7.html
HIP - Port au Prince, Haiti - In the early morning hours of July 6, 2005 more than 350 UN troops stormed the seaside shantytown of Cite Soleil in a military operation with the stated purpose of halting violence in Haiti. When the shooting stopped seven hours later, more than 26 people, the majority of them unarmed civilians lie dead with scores more wounded.
Nigeria: Nigerian Diaspora honours Obasanjo, others
2007-01-24
http://news.africast.com/africastv/article.php?newsID=61030
The Nigerians In Diaspora Organisation (NIDO), has honoured President Olusegun Obasanjo with an "Exemplary and Visionary Leadership Award". NIDO in Americas Chairman, Ola Kassim, announced the award at a dinner in Toronto, Canada, to end the four-day First Nigeria Worldwide Diaspora Conference.
Conflict & emergencies
Africa: Small arms and mass destructions
2007-01-24
http://www.africafiles.org/atissueezine.asp
Small arms, particularly the ubiquitous AK-47, are the real weapons of mass destruction in the 21st century. They are responsible for more deaths than any other, especially in Africa. AK-47s are too cheap and too available in places like the Horn of Africa (Sudan, Somalia, Eritrea and Ethiopia), the pastoralist areas of East Africa, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and the oil-rich Delta Region of Nigeria. Something must be done to control the supply of small arms whose lucrative source is primarily the five permanent members of the Security Council, the networks of arms brokers who get them to the trouble spots of Africa, and the poverty and unemployment that provide willing hands to use them.
Guinea: Liberian repatriation to go ahead despite general strike tensions
2007-01-26
http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/UNHCR/f6c49bf53befd11d1f4d919f43e6a569.htm
The UNHCR reports that the general strike paralysing Guinea over the last two weeks has limited access to camps hosting Liberian refugees. Despite this, the organization planned to go ahead with a voluntary repatriation convoy on the 27th of January which will bring to 46,000 the number of refugees it has helped to return to Liberia from Guinea since the repatriation programme started in October 2004.
Somalia: South Africa opts out of Somalia peackeeping force
2007-01-26
http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/L26792669.htm
South Africa will not contribute troops to an African peacekeeping force in Somalia, but will study other ways to help to stabilise the war-ravaged country, a Defence Ministry spokesman said on Friday. Defence Minister Mosiuoa Lekota made the decision after reviewing South Africa's overseas peacekeeping commitments in other parts of the continent.
Somalia: The Tough Part Is Ahead
2007-01-26
http://www.crisisgroup.org/home/index.cfm?id=4630&l=1
There is now a political vacuum across much of southern Somalia, which the ineffectual Transitional Federal Government (TFG) is unable to fill, reports the International Crisis Group. Elements of the Courts, including Shabaab militants and their al-Qaeda associates, are largely intact and threaten guerrilla war. Peace requires the TFG to be reconstituted as a genuine government of national unity but the signs of its willingness are discouraging. Sustained international pressure is needed.
South Africa: UN Terror List Hangs Over Two Cousins
2007-01-24
http://ipsnews.net/africa/nota.asp?idnews=36278
Two South Africans are fighting the U.S. plan to put their names on the United Nations Security Council list of suspected terrorists alleged to have ties to al-Qaeda and the Taliban. The United States accuses Junaid Dockrat and Farhad Dockrat of being "financers, recruiters and facilitators of al-Qaeda and the deposed Taliban in Afghanistan".
Sudan: Thousands flee Darfur attacks
2007-01-24
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=57179
Recent attacks on villages in the Sudanese state of West Darfur have forced up to 5,000 people to flee their homes and seek refuge in two camps around El Geneina, a nongovernmental organisation working in the volatile area said.
Internet & technology
Africa: 'Microsoft is imperialistic' says open source advocates
2007-01-26
http://pambazuka.org/en/category/internet/39438
Hana News Agency reports that Microsoft Corporation's products have been locked out of the on-going World Social Forum (WSF) in Nairobi Kenya. With over 300 computers provided for participants and the press, organizers of the WSF have preferred to provide open source software products and blocked all Microsoft related products for the forum's usage and its related activities.
HANA News Agency
Microsoft Corporation's products have been locked out of the on-going World Social Forum (WSF) in Nairobi Kenya.
With over 300 computers provided for participants and the press, organizers of the WSF have preferred to provide open source software products and blocked all Microsoft related products for the forum's usage and its related activities. Participants attending WSF, which for the first time is entirely taking place in an African country say that this was a gesture done as a way of promoting the free social movement at the same time also as a way of fighting Microsoft's 'imperialistic tendencies.' Activists at the forum also believe that since Microsoft is a corporate brand from the United States of America, a country they believe has intentions of maintaining the status quo of a unipolar world over which it is above international law and the UN, the brand should be locked out.
In its sixth year, the WSF has developed itself as one of the foremost expressions of the struggle of social and political movements on the planet. Open source activists have since joined these movements. Anoop Sukumaran of the Focus on the Global South, said that, since one has to pay licenses for any kind of Microsoft 's software, the multinational computer technology corporation is in a way controlling the flow of global information instead of releasing it free without any charge.
Microsoft has no thinking. And the unfortunate thing is that the whole third world including almost all of Africa is being forced to use Microsoft products, through the pretext of these trade treaties like the WIPO and the WTO? Sukumaran says.
The open source movement is providing Linux, a robust free software. Everybody owns it and it can be shared. And this is what WSF is all about - a free society, a movement fighting for ownership of free resources? he adds.
With an annual revenue of over US$44.28 billion as of July 2006, Microsoft develops, manufactures, licenses, and supports a wide range of software products for computing devices.
Participants from the International South Group Network (ISGN) who are advocating for open source software at the WSF are set to give out over 100 free CDs of the kubuntu brand of the open source software here at the forum as a way of fighting Microsoft.
Open source is a conceivable tool of communication, a weapon to fight for ones own right. Users of open source software are (generally) able to view the source code, alter and re-distribute the software.
Africa: eLearning Africa Press Release
2007-01-26
http://pambazuka.org/en/category/internet/39432
The call for papers for the second eLearning Africa conference, which will take place from May 28 to 30 in Nairobi, Kenya, has just closed. The annual event is rapidly becoming the preeminent eLearning capacity-building event for the entire African continent and a forum for all stakeholders engaged in the planning and implementation of technology-supported learning and training.
Press Release, January 15, 2007Berlin/Nairobi.
eLearning Africa: Great Response to Call for Papers
The call for papers for the second eLearning Africa conference, which will take place from May 28 to 30 in Nairobi, Kenya, has just closed. The annual event is rapidly becoming the preeminent eLearning capacity-building event for the entire African continent and a forum for all stakeholders engaged in the planning and implementation of technology-supported learning and training.
More than 300 proposals from 46 countries have reached the conference organisers. Rebecca Stromeyer, co-organiser of eLearning Africa, is optimistic that a finalised first version of the agenda will be ready by the end of February.
“We have received numerous proposals of excellent quality from a wide range of public institutions, higher education organisations, and development organisations as well as from the corporate training sector”, says Stromeyer. “The organising committee will now evaluate the proposals, and we can already say at this stage that participants can look forward to an extensive and substantial agenda featuring presentations from major players in the African education and development sector.” The Kenyan government will organise a high-level summit for policy makers and industry leaders within the conference at which the building of ICT infrastructures and capacities for African educational systems will be addressed. The UNESCO invites participants to an “African Summit for Technical and Vocational Education and Training”, which will highlight the great relevance of this educational sector for mass education in developing countries.
Consistent with the 2007 conference’s motto “Building Infrastructures and Capacities to Reach out to the Whole of Africa“, the event will reach out beyond the conference centre and will feature large-scale lectures in Kenyan universities that address both fundamentals as well as R&D topics in technology-enhanced education and training. In addition, there will be two break-out workshops devoted to the needs in rural areas and regional institutions: one in Mombasa on the Indian Ocean and one in Kisumu on Lake Victoria.
Regularly updated information on the conference and the programme can be found at www.elearning-africa.com eLearning Africa 2007 is taking place under the patronage of the Hon. Prof. George Saitoti, Minister for Education, Kenya. The event is supported by the European Commission, the United Nations International Center for Technical and Vocational Education and Training UNEVOC, as well as by BiBB, the German Federal Institute for Vocational Education and Training.
http://www.elearning-africa.com/press_releases_html/pr_3_cfp_closed_2007.html
Africa: ICTs Are Not Change Agents - Humans Are
2007-01-24
http://www.highwayafrica.ru.ac.za/
There is need for African governments to embrace Free and Open Source Software (FOSS) to enable internet access in schools. Advocates of Sciences and Technology for the People (AGHAM) chairperson Dr Giovanni Tapang says schools in third world countries need to have alternative models to make internet access cheaper. Dr Tapang said only 38 percent of schools in developing countries are connected to the internet of which less than 1 percent is African countries while developed countries have fully connected their primary and secondary schools to the internet.
South Africa: Multinationals ignore patent law
2007-01-24
http://www.tectonic.co.za/view.php?id=1331
"Does Microsoft intend to continue to break the law by filing software patents in South Africa?" This was the question Derek Keats of the University of the Western Cape asked Microsoft national technical officer, Potlaki Maine, in an open debate held at Freedom to Innovate South Africa's workshop on software and business method patents last Friday (January 19).
Fundraising & useful resources
Global: 2007 Fellowships for Threatened Scholars
2007-01-26
http://pambazuka.org/en/category/fundraising/39428
The Institute of International Education's Scholar Rescue Fund provides fellowships for scholars whose lives and work are threatened in their home countries. These fellowships permit scholars to find temporary refuge at universities and colleges anywhere in the world, enabling them to pursue their academic work and to continue to share their knowledge with students, colleagues, and the community at large.
Scholar Rescue Fund Fellowships
IIE Scholar Rescue Fund Fellowships
The Institute of International Education's Scholar Rescue Fund provides fellowships for scholars whose lives and work are threatened in their home countries. These fellowships permit scholars to find temporary refuge at universities and colleges anywhere in the world, enabling them to pursue their academic work and to continue to share their knowledge with students, colleagues, and the community at large. When conditions improve, these scholars will return home to help rebuild universities and societies ravaged by fear, conflict and repression.
How the Scholar Rescue Fund Works:
* Academics, researchers and independent scholars from any country, field or discipline may qualify. Preference is given to scholars with a Ph.D. or other highest degree in their field; who have extensive teaching or research experience at a university, college or other institution of higher learning; who demonstrate superior academic accomplishment or promise; and whose selection is likely to benefit the academic community in the home and/or host country or region. Applications from female scholars and under-represented groups are strongly encouraged.
* Fellowship recipients are expected to resume their teaching, lecturing, research, writing and publishing at an academic institution outside the region of threat.
* Fellowships are awarded for visiting academic positions ranging from 3 months to one calendar year. The maximum award is US $20,000.
* Fellowships are disbursed through host academic institutions for direct support of scholar-grantees. In most cases, host campuses are asked to match the SRF fellowship award through partial salary/stipend support, research materials, medical insurance, and other in-kind assistance.
* Applications are accepted at any time. Emergency applications receive urgent consideration. Non-emergency applications will be considered according to the following schedule:
Winter 2007: Applications received by January 23; decision by March 1.
Spring 2007: Application received by April 1; decision by June 1.
Fall 2007: Applications received by September 1; decision by November 1.
To apply, please download the information and application materials from: http://www.iie.org/programs/srf/apply.htm
For universities and colleges interested in hosting an SRF scholar, please visit:
http://www.iie.org/programs/srf/host.htm
We welcome your questions and comments. Please contact us at:
IIE Scholar Rescue Fund Fellowships
809 U.N. Plaza, Second Floor
New York, New York 10017
Tel: (USA) 1-212-984-5472
Fax: (USA) 1-212-984-5353
E-mail: SRF@iie.org
Web: www.iie.org/SRF
Global: Ford Foundation International Fellows Programme
2007-01-24
http://www.fordfound.org/news/more/11272000ifp/index.cfm
The International Fellowships Programme (IFP) provides opportunities for advanced study to exceptional individuals who will use this education to become leaders in their respective fields, furthering development in their own countries and greater economic and social justice worldwide. To ensure that Fellows are drawn from more diverse backgrounds than ever before, IFP will actively recruit candidates from social groups and communities that lack systematic access to higher education.
South Africa: HIV/AIDS and the Media Fellowships
2007-01-24
http://tinyurl.com/22vltr
The HIV/AIDS and the Media Project investigates the role and the impact of the news media on the HIV/AIDS pandemic in South Africa. We offer two annual 4-6 month fellowships to working journalists to undertake longer term and in-depth research and writing outside of the newsroom. The writing that results from these fellowships is published in a wide range of media and peer-reviewed journals, posts Journalism.co.za.
Courses, seminars, & workshops
Global: Papers requested for special issue of Feminist Media Studies
2007-01-26
http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/titles/14680777.asp
Feminist Media Studies, a trans-disciplinary, transnational forum for scholars, professionals and activists pursuing feminist approaches to the field of media and communication studies, is inviting contributions to a special issue entitled "Feminist Contributions to Cultural Policy." To find out more, e-mail Alison Beale, Guest Editor at beale@sfu.ca
Global: Talking about ICTs and development
2007-01-24
http://www.tectonic.co.za/view.php?id=1330
The Open Source Centre at the Meraka Institute will be hosting a two-day colloquium from February 6-8 on the importance of ICTs to development and transformation. Issues to be discussed at the meeting include open content and open access in academia, open content and development, free and open source and accessibility, research policy and access, the digital divide, intellectual property and policy, digital rights management and free and open source software.
North Africa: Youth for Human Rights
2007-01-24
http://www.hrea.org/dlp-mena.html
This long-term training programme will provide intensive training and support for young human rights defenders in the Arab World in order to increase advocacy and monitoring capacity and foster a regional network of human rights advocates.
Jobs
Cape Town: Program Coordinator
Association for Women's Rights in Development (AWID)
2007-01-24
http://www.awid.org
The Association for Women's Rights in Development - an international, multigenerational, feminist, agenda-setting, creative, future-oriented membership organization working for women's rights - is looking for up to two Program Coordinators to assist in the implementation of AWID's exciting new Strategic Plan.
DRC: Technical Advisor
National Malaria Prevention Program
2007-01-24
http://www.eldis.org/cf/search/disp/DocDisplay.cfm?Doc=DOC23417&Resource=f1
Population Services International (PSI) is the world's leading non-profit social marketing organization, operating in more than 60 developing countries. PSI creates demand for essential health products and services by using private sector marketing techniques and innovative communications campaigns to motivate positive changes in health behavior.
Tanzania: Executive Director
Hakielimu
2007-01-26
http://pambazuka.org/en/category/jobs/39433
HakiElimu is one of the leading CSOs in Tanzania. Our vision is to realize public education and debate that enhances citizen agency, fosters creativity and critical thinking, and advances human rights and democracy. For more information visit www.hakielimu.org or google ‘HakiElimu’. For more information on this position, visit the website.
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Issa G. Shivji (2009) Where is Uhuru?.