KABISSA-FAHAMU-SANGONET NEWSLETTER 40 * 7861 SUBSCRIBERS
KABISSA-FAHAMU-SANGONET NEWSLETTER 40 * 7861 SUBSCRIBERS
Humanitarian organisations are increasingly concerned by declining standards in refugee protection in East Africa, the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies reported this week.
Stats SA, tasked with conducting the current census has apologised for its inconsistency in collecting data in respect of gay and lesbian couples.
The UN refugee agency said on Wednesday that most of the Zanzibari refugees remaining in Dadaab, northeastern Kenya, could be voluntarily repatriated within not much more than a week.
The Canadian International Development Research Centre (IDRC), in collaboration with the Development Bank of Southern Africa (DBSA), has launched a new publication covering the most significant information policy formulation and implementation processes in Southern Africa.
A Sudanese government delegate to the United Nations General Assembly, Ilham Ibrahim Muhammad Ahmad, on Tuesday urged the international community to condemn the actions of rebel groups, mainly in the south of the country, where, she said, "children are kidnapped and forced to fight or, if they refuse, used as [human] shields".
Millions of people in Sudan are in a precarious humanitarian position, and the situation requires "unrestricted access by aid workers in order to save lives", UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan stated in a report released on Tuesday.
The Equality Project has welcomes the ruling by the Pretoria High Court that lesbian and gay couples can now co-adopt children.
The Third African Development Forum (ADF III), to have taken place at the headquarters of the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (ECA) from 9 - 13 December 2001, has been postponed and will now be held from 24 - 28 February 2002.
The Sudan People's Liberation Movement/Army (SPLM/A) said on Tuesday that it aimed to shut down all the oilfields run with government backing in southern Sudan.
At his initial appearance at the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda, the former prefect of Kigali-rural prefecture, Francois Karera, pleaded not guilty on Friday to charges of genocide and crimes against humanity.
The National Union of Mineworkers (NUM) has proposed that an HIV/AIDS summit for the mining sector be held next month to map out a common approach to the pandemic.
Burundi's national assembly adopted by acclamation on Saturday the transitional constitution that will guide the workings of the three-year government due to begin functioning on 1 Nov., the state-owned ABP news agency reported.
Two armed opposition movements in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) have agreed to form "a joint military force to track down, arrest and disarm negative forces" including the Interahamwe (Rwandan Hutu militias), the ex-FAR (former Rwandan Armed Forces), and the Mayi-Mayi (Congolese militias), rebel-controlled RTNC radio reported in Goma on Monday.
The Editorial Board of the Labour Bulletin seeks to appoint a new Editor to lead the exciting process of restructuring and re launching South Africa's premier labour publication.
One of Rwanda's main dilemmas is the belief that the country is no longer in need of humanitarian aid when "many people" still suffer from food insecurity caused by drought or, paradoxically, heavy rains in March and April, OCHA reported on 30 September.
The Youth Developments Network (YDN) is a national network of seven youth development NGO's and currently seeks a Project Co-ordinator: Research and Documentation.
No society could think of a successful future and sustained development without making the issue of children its priority, Lulit Zewde Gebremariam, an Ethiopian representative told a UN General Assembly meeting on children's rights, on 26 October.
Hundreds of thousands of Somali's in the southwestern region of Gedo are at risk of starvation following drought and poor harvests, a spokesman for the French NGO Action contre la faim (ACF) told IRIN on Thursday.
The Ethiopian Ministry of Health said on Wednesday that the government had launched a strategic plan designed to reduce malaria mortality by 50 percent by the year 2010.
A recent nutrition study conducted by the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) in Cote d'Ivoire found that women need 30 percent more energy than their male counterparts, the agency said in a statement last week.
Islamic Sharia law will come into effect on Friday in northern Kaduna State despite opposition by Christians there, news organisations reported on Monday. State Governor Ahmed Makarfi, who made the announcement in a state-wide broadcast on Friday, said that the Islamic legal code would only be applicable in areas where there was a Muslim majority, BBC reported.
An Ethiopian film, The Father, that has been winning awards across Africa, is serving as a reminder that President Robert Mugabe has been sheltering one of the world’s most notorious dictators in Zimbabwe for the past decade. Colonel Mengistu Haile Mariam, the "Butcher of Addis Ababa", ruled Ethiopia for 17 years, imposing a regime based on a strategy of total fear that he himself called the "Red Terror".
A dusk-to-dawn curfew along a 450 km stretch of the Kavango river could prevent Angolans fleeing intense fighting between government and rebel forces in Angola's southeastern Cuando Cubango province from seeking asylum in Namibia, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) has warned.
Increasing instability in Angola's interior had led to a steady influx of internally displaced people into "most provincial capitals" from 8-12 October, according to the UN's World Food Programme (WFP).
Zambian President Fredrick Chiluba said on Wednesday that international election observers were welcome to monitor the country's upcoming general elections, but warned that they should not interfere. Chiluba has yet to announce an election date.
Dennis Dube lost everything when his neighbours torched his home and threatened to kill him if he was seen in the area again. "I'm just so sad that they (South Africans) can treat me like this, I've never known anything like this," he told IRIN on Wednesday.
The defence ministers of Uganda and Rwanda have ended a meeting in the Ugandan border town of Kabale, agreeing to try to reach an amicable solution to rising tensions between their two states.
Zimbabwe's ruling party is standing firm against sanctions threats by the European Union.
We, the undersigned groups, believe that a new approach is required toward US-Africa economic relations.
When representatives of the wealthiest country in the world sit down this week with representatives of countries from the world's poorest region, the new U.S.-Sub Saharan Africa Economic Cooperation Forum should be used to promote a new form of economic cooperation less narrowly centered on trade and more focused on supporting sustainable development of African societies.
Washington should recognize that its limited efforts to promote trade as the principal arena of economic engagement with Africa have benefitted few African countries. Current U.S.-Africa trade policy is limited to the providing market access for low wage, low skill, and raw material based production for export which due to inherent volatility and structural declining terms of trade simply sustain poverty as opposed to supporting development. Moreover, the U.S. obsession with trade and free market solutions to development challenges in Africa is dangerously misguided at this critical juncture.
Africa is the region most vulnerable to external shocks and with warnings of an impending global economic crisis in the wake of the Sept 11th terrorist attacks on the U.S. it should be evident that Africa requires extraordinary support beyond the prevailing programs of cooperation.
We believe that a new framework for economic cooperation between the U.S. and the countries of Africa must include the following:
1. Cancellation of Africa's external debts
2. Support for Africa's key positions at the World Trade Organization
3. An increase in U.S. development assistance
4. A shift in U.S. trade policy to simplify expanded market access to the US market for a larger number of African products and to lift economic conditionalities imposed under the U.S. Trade and Development Act of 2000
Finally, we call on the U.S. administration to withdraw its unseemly effort to force "fast track" (renamed the Presidential Trading Authority-PTA) through Congress by wrapping free trade in the flag of patriotic duty. Giving the President executive privilege to negotiate binding trade agreements with other countries without for example requiring environmental protection and labor rights guarantees, or other necessary measures, is a recipe for disaster for U.S. workers and African countries alike.
The inauguration of a new forum to regularly discuss and negotiate U.S.-African economic cooperation at this important moment provides the opportunity to forge a more comprehensive approach that joins the instruments of Aid, Trade, Investment and Debt relief together in pursuit of sustainable development in Africa.
(1) Cancel the Debt
Sub-Saharan Africa's massive external debt is perhaps the single largest obstacle to the continent's development efforts and its economic independence. The more than $300 billion which African countries owe to international financial institutions and foreign creditor governments represents an unsustainable burden that undermines Africa's attempts at economic growth. Any serious effort at promoting Africa's economic development must therefore begin by removing the crippling burden of its foreign debt.
The 48 countries of sub-Saharan Africa spend $13.5 billion each year repaying debts to rich foreign creditors. The debts themselves are largely illegitimate, based on their origins and their effects. Repaying these debts diverts money directly from spending on health care and education, and economic development. Over the past two decades, African countries have paid out more in debt service to foreign creditors than they have received in development assistance or in new loans. As a result, throughout Africa, average incomes have declined and conditions of poverty have worsened. The creditors of Africa's external debt, including the US and other governments and especially international institutions like the World Bank and International Monetary Fund, continue to insist that the debts be repaid, despite the economic and social costs of this massive outflow of resources. Africa's debt crisis traps the continent in a perpetual cycle of underdevelopment.
The current international debt relief framework, the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries Initiative (HIPC), launched by the World Bank and IMF in 1996 and "enhanced" in 1999, has failed to provide a solution to the debt crisis. In the 22 countries that have qualified for HIPC debt relief to date, governments still spend more on debt repayments than on health care. On average, these countries have seen only a 27% reduction in annual debt repayments. In two African countries, Zambia and Niger, debt repayments have actually increased since qualification for HIPC assistance.
Despite the clear flaws in this debt relief framework, the leaders of the world's richest countries, meeting at the G-8 summit in Genoa in July 2001, refused either to further enhance the initiative or to acknowledge that it has failed. The reality is that the HIPC initiative is designed to serve creditors by squeezing the maximum possible in debt payments from the world's poorest economies. It does not benefit debtor countries, and it should therefore be considered obsolete. United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan has concluded that the HIPC Initiative does not provide an adequate response to the debt crisis and has called for an immediate moratorium on debt repayment.
If the world's richest countries and financial institutions are serious about committing themselves to Africa's development, they must cancel the continent's unsustainable burden of debt. They should also consider who bears the responsibility for failed economic policies imposed on Africa, as well as the longer historical reasons for Africa's impoverishment, and ask the question "who really owes whom?".
The US is a both a bilateral creditor of African countries, and the single largest shareholder in both the World Bank and IMF. As such, it holds major influence over the international response to Africa's debt crisis. As the US holds its first annual economic summit with African Trade and Finance Ministers, it must commit itself to the cancellation of Africa's external debt as a first step to true economic cooperation and as a prerequisite to Africa's economic growth.
(2) Support for Africa at the World Trade Organization (WTO)
Economic conditions in Africa remain highly fragile. Only a few countries have combined high growth rates with rising domestic savings and investment. The deregulation of agricultural markets does not appear to have triggered the acceleration of growth. Trade liberalization may have increased the importance of international trade for Africa, but Africa's share of world trade has declined. Africa entered the new millennium increasingly integrated into the global economy at the bottom.
More horrifying for Africa's millions of people living under the poverty line is the loss through trade of over half of all net resource flows to the region as a result of market barriers, declining terms of trade and other external factors. Added to debt interest payments, profit remittances and other capital outflows, this loss is a direct net transfer of real resources from Africa to the rest of the world.
The UN panel on Financing for Development estimates the total cost of trade barriers in the North to Southern exports at more than $100 billion each year. This figure is many times more than the total development aid provided by the developed countries. Dismantling these trade barriers would significantly increase income and assist poverty alleviation in Africa by providing added impetus to economic growth.
Until this happens, understandably, poor people, the general African public and their Governments are wary of new trade relationships that fail to address economic security and net resource transfers in 2001. We share their concerns.
Last month's OAU meeting of African Governments in Abuja, Nigeria reflected on the relevance of a new WTO round for Africa and on the African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA), now enacted under the Trade and Development Act. African Governments stressed the need for a rules-based multi-lateral trading system that promotes economic development, facilitates African regional integration, and contributes to the eradication of poverty.
There is an urgent need to support meaningful and effective Special & Differential Treatment provisions, for developing countries in general, and Africa in particular, given the structural weaknesses in their economies and declining share of world trade. These provisions are included in trade agreements to allow for special difficulties faced by developing countries. But such measures are not now strong enough to spare these countries from being forced to implement policies that are only appropriate for much stronger economies, with often devastating effects.
Seattle collapsed under the weight of a lack of transparency and unfair policy privileges in favor of the developed nations. It collapsed because the US and Europe delegations negotiated in a manner that reduced the WTO to a multilateral vehicle for their domestic interests.
Sadly, recent statements by the US, EU and multilateral institutions such as the World Bank and UNDP champion the need for a new round of trade talks without seriously considering the weight of existing legitimate grievances by African and other developed countries with the current rules. Without changing this context, it will be impossible to find common global ground in a democratically oriented international body in the fourth WTO ministerial conference.
We support the unified position of African Governments that a new round should only take place when there is agreement on a new and specific development and poverty eradication agenda, as well as more equitable, transparent and accountable procedures for negotiating. The following three demands are central to this:
* The next round must enable flexibility in the Agreements on Intellectual Property Rights and Agriculture to support the rights of developing countries to protect farmers' livelihoods, food security, access to labor, and the supply of essential herbs and medicines. Particularly important is the proposed declaration by African and other developing countries affirming that nothing in existing trade agreements "shall prevent members from taking measures to protect public health."
* The United States and other northern countries should eliminate all domestic and export subsidies to agriculture that artificially increase their big agribusiness sectors' competitiveness and crowd out exports from poor farmers in African countries.
* The US should support the adoption of a decision at the WTO meeting that makes respect for Special & Differential Treatment provisions for developing countries legally binding on developed countries.
The Economic Cooperation Forum launched today should produce new U.S. support for these key African positions at the upcoming WTO meeting.
(3) Increase Development Assistance
Foreign aid (Official Development Assistance) from donor governments is a key source of funding for the development efforts of African countries. The immense social and economic challenges faced by these countries since independence require greater resources than African governments themselves command, and the sources of finance available are limited. The importance of this type of support from the US and other wealthy economies to African countries cannot be underestimated, and such assistance has been in decline during the past decade. In an era of ever-increasing economic globalization, those countries that benefit the most from the world economy must share in the necessary public investment for those parts of the world that bear more than their share of the disadvantages.
The US has a special obligation to provide assistance to African countries for several reasons. As the world's richest country, it is in a position to provide strong financial support to promote economic growth and development in African countries. The US also has a special historical relationship with Africa that brings with it a unique responsibility towards the continent and its social and economic circumstances. Yet the US has consistently failed to devote bilateral aid to African countries that is commensurate either with its obligations or with these countries' needs.
During the Cold War, US foreign aid to developing countries was dictated less by the actual needs and capacities of recipient countries than by strategic concerns. For much of this period, development assistance was used for political patronage. When the Cold War ended, over a decade ago, the changed global context meant that aid could be directed towards true development objectives. However, in the post-Cold War era, levels of development assistance have fallen in a consistent downward trend, and US spending on foreign aid has declined, relative both to the size of the US economy and to the federal budget.
While the world's richest countries, represented in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), have repeatedly promised to devote 0.7% of gross national product (GNP) for official development assistance to poorer countries, only five small European countries now meet that target, and the US ranks at the very bottom. The US provides only 0.1% of GNP for development assistance, and sub-Saharan Africa receives only about one-tenth of this. The total of Official Development Assistance from all sources to Sub-Saharan Africa has fallen by 29% since 1990.
This decline in aid comes at a time when Africa needs financial support more than ever. Throughout the continent, the burden of external debt, the massive health crisis, and the effects of failed economic policies often imposed by foreign creditors have left countries facing overwhelming challenges. Development assistance is critical to enabling African governments to address these difficulties. Further lending to poor countries is inappropriate as a primary method for funding development when it only exacerbates the debt crisis and entrenches economic dependency. Prior to the G8 meeting in Genoa, Italy, President Bush suggested that the World Bank should provide development grants rather than loans to poor countries.
Recent polls in the US have also shown that the American public believes that the US has vital interests in Africa, and that foreign aid forms an important part of how the US promotes mutual interests with Africa. If the US and other wealthy countries are serious about promoting sustainable development in Africa, they must dramatically increase the levels of development assistance they provide. It is in their own interests to do so, because social and economic development in Africa will ultimately promote greater stability at an international level. The U.S.-Africa Economic Cooperation Forum must place increasing development assistance prominently on its agenda.
(4) Reform the African Growth and Opportunity Act
On May 18, 2000 former President Bill Clinton signed into law the Trade and Development Act of 2000, which contained both the African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA) and the US-Caribbean Basin Trade Enhancement Act. Many American and African officials said that AGOA symbolized a new American political-economic partnership with Africa.
With the evolution of bilateral, regional and multilateral trade liberalizing initiatives, international trade has become the latest "mainstream" dimension of international development. In the case of Africa, neo-liberal based arguments suggest a causal relationship between Africa's poverty and African societies being marginalized in an increasingly globalized world economy. From the premise that African economies are poor because of they are relatively "closed" to the wonders of free trade and capital flows, trade liberalization and export orientation are offered as viable development policy prescriptions. However, these policies also link national economic growth to increasing volatile global capital expansion and developed nation import growth. Based on this flawed premise and inadequate analysis of the structural causes of Africa's poverty and complexity of development challenges, US economic policy under AGOA concentrates on increasing Africa's integration into the global economy. However, such policies tie national economic growth and development to the inherently volatile boom and bust logic of global capital flows and rich nation import growth.
AGOA is fundamentally a U.S. policy tool for liberalizing the structure and orientation of the "playing fields" governing trade and investment activities between African societies and America. AGOA is not trade and investment agreement per se, it is a framework for negotiating future economic relations. AGOA represents a pro-active, bilateral example (in tandem with other multilateral trade and development approaches in the WTO, IMF and World Bank) of how US Government policy and institutions are utilized as instruments to re-create or perpetuate the economic rules of the game, often at the expense of Africa's development needs.
The failure of AGOA to address the structural sources of Africa's poverty and constraints on development, raise questions about its ability to serve as a source of total net resource transfers for supporting sustainable growth and development in Africa societies. Even with the technical adjustments in the AGOA textile provisions now being considered as "AGOA 2", this approach will have limited positive impact.
An alternative approach to US economic policy would seek to: help Africa reverse its declining terms of trade; remove the burden of foreign indebtedness; support gross domestic capital formation; increase levels of effective demand, domestic consumption and purchasing power; provide technical assistance to address human and productive capacity constraints; provide market access to African agricultural products; and permit African nations greater authority to utilize national and regional trade, investment and industrial policies as strategic tools for governing national resources, markets and factors of production to support internally oriented development processes.
We support the call of African Governments that AGOA provisions be amended to encompass a wider range of African products and the simplification of rules to match the industrial capacity of African countries. We further call for the elimination of eligibility criteria that impose economic policies on African countries and undermine their sovereignty and democratic control of development policies.
Signed,
Africa Action
Oxfam America
ActionAidUSA
President Bush's speech to the African Growth and Opportunity Forum:
Bush Adminstration Reduces Africa Aid Bid:
http://allafrica.com/stories/200110260001.html
Why AGOA Will Not Benefit African Countries:
http://allafrica.com/stories/200110220587.html
The Kenyan government has announced that it will go ahead and collect more than 170,000 acres of public forest for private use. Among the targeted forests is the one inhabited by the Ogiek indigenous community who may finally lose their cultural land.
The U.S.-Africa Business Summit hosted by the Corporate Council on Africa (CCA) begins Tuesday in Philadelphia. It will be the largest gathering of U.S. and African business and government leaders ever to come together on U.S. soil (outside the United Nations in New York). AllAfrica.com's Charles Cobb Jr. spoke with CCA President Stephen Hayes about AGOA and U.S. trade and investment in Africa.
The U.S.-Africa Business Summit hosted by the Corporate Council on Africa (CCA) begins Tuesday in Philadelphia. It will be the largest gathering of U.S. and African business and government leaders ever to come together on U.S. soil (outside the United Nations in New York). AllAfrica.com's Charles Cobb Jr. spoke with CCA President Stephen Hayes about AGOA and U.S. trade and investment in Africa.
Human Rights activists yesterday warned that Africa is sinking into a food insecurity crisis because women, the main agricultural producers, are denied access and control of land.
Nelson Mandela, former South African president and mediator of the Burundi peace process, together with several African leaders, are scheduled to attend the installation of a transitional government in the Burundian capital Bujumbura on Thursday, 1 November.
In what appeared as his first public reaction to last week's reprisal killings by soldiers in Benue State, President Olusegun Obasanjo yesterday stated that anybody who kills a Nigerian soldier should be ready for the consequences because such people would be inviting disaster on themselves.
October 29 2001 marks the third anniversary since the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) handed its final report to then State President, Nelson Mandela. In Volume Five of this report, the TRC identified persons who were victims of apartheid's gross violations of human rights and proposed a reparations and rehabilitation policy that encompassed both individual and community forms. The TRC specifically recommended that urgent interim reparations grants, as well as final individual reparations be given to the victims. Since 1999 however, victims have been waiting for government to decide on and implement its policy for reparations.
Climate talks have resumed to finalize the procedures and institutions that will make the Kyoto Protocol fully operational. The world’s governments are meeting here from today through November 9 to work out exactly how to reduce the emissions of six greenhouse gases that are linked to global warming.
Harry Mutasa, sculptor from Harare has won a Commonwealth award in April 2001 and is currently working as an artist-in-residence at OCAD in Toronto, Canada. "Through struggling as a young artist l used to work on different subject matters like heritage and things l needed to research and always ended no way. Then l realized that my feelings are the only true thing l really know in my alien being trying to fit in and overstand life. Being African and being from this culture is what people tell me l am, so my art is not african, cultural, black, human or any titles, it is me, the inner, the soul which l am still uncovering with feelings which comes out."
Published by Transparency International-Czech Republic, this review focuses on measures employed by 25 countries world-wide to combat the threat of police corruption.
Experts addressing a forum on corruption and good governance last Friday called on the Kufuor Administration to provide and disseminate anticorruption guidelines, especially with regard to gift giving and receiving.
e-Readiness assessments and e-strategies seem to be all the rage at the moment. In an understandable desire to try and understand the impact of ICT on their countries, African governments (and their external funders) commission these documents to help provide a focus for action. Sadly all too often these studies are long on aspirations and short on implementation and action. The more complicated task of knitting together active initiators of a strategy in government, the private sector and civil society is sometimes overlooked or avoided. Margareet Visser of Durban-based Bridges.org provides an overview of a field littered with forgotten studies.
SAGE Publications is providing free access through the intermediary, ingenta, to over 250 electronic journals during the months of November and December 2001. This includes full text files for the 2001 subscription year, as well as back files for 2000 and 1999 where available. If you already have an account with ingenta, access will automatically be available to all SAGE's journals at no charge during these two months. If you do not have an ingenta account, then simply register with ingenta at their website: www.ingenta.com. Access will then be available to all SAGE's journals at no charge, direct from the relevant journal page on this website.
The Internet Society (ISOC) has recently launched a new series of papers directed to their members. You can see some of the briefings on their web site (primarily very technical papers on Internet development). It is currently soliciting papers on any digital divide issues.
A boon to teachers of English as a Second Language (ESL), this database of ESL-related educational resources comes from the National Clearinghouse for Bilingual Education and the ERIC Clearinghouse on Languages and Linguistics, with funding from the US Department of Education's Office of Bilingual Education and Minority Languages Affairs (OBEMLA) and Office of Educational Research and Improvement (OERI).
The Hot Topics series provides a free sampling of the resources in Cambridge Scientific Abstracts (CSA) and the Internet Database Service (IDS). The 30 topics span subjects in the humanities, engineering, environmental policy, and medicine.
Dan Gillmor interviews Tim Berners-Lee on Microsoft's latest "browser tricks". Microsoft has not made a smart move by making the MSN web site accessible to Internet Explorer users only, explains Berners-Lee. It flies in the face of the spirit of the Web, which is open communication and information sharing. The interview contains advice to web designers/ coders and this page has links to many other weblogs.
There are alternatives to Microsoft software. Many people are sceptical of them, and so they should be. Can you use it? Can you maintain it? What about applications for email, web browsing and word processing - are they available and do they work? This site presents sensible answers and is very interactive. It lists options and claims not to have a biased agenda, but simply to provide information for those who wish or need to use another product.
Released on October 15, this new annual report from Transparency
International (TI, see the September 7, 2000 Scout Report for Business &
Economics) reviews the "state of corruption" worldwide, July 2000-June
2001. After the introduction and prefatory material, the report is divided into three main sections: Regional reports, Global issues (such as money laundering and an update from OECD on implementing the Anti-Bribery Convention), and Data and research, which summarizes a wide variety of research projects from governments, private organizations, scholars, international organizations, and more. The About the GCR link on the front page of the report gives a summary of authors contributing to the different report sections and an overview of the report as a whole. The report is designed for a wide audience and should appeal both to policymakers and interested members of the general public.
Source: From The Scout Report, Copyright Internet Scout Project 1994-2001: http://scout.cs.wisc.edu/
Southern Hemisphere is currently offering two new exciting courses in Negotiation Skills and Human Rights Indicators. Both courses offer the most up to date material, with facilitation by experts in the fields. Due to popular interest, and demand Southern Hemisphere is also running its Project Monitoring and Evaluation Course for a third time this year. This course is currently on offer as an in-house programme.
World Lecture Hall (WLC) is a portal to free online course materials from around the world. Try the advanced search function if you are looking for something specific.
NICRO is an organisation that works for a Safer South Africa. Our Provincial Office is situated in Durban, although the work of the organisation stretches throughout KwaZulu Natal. A confident and extrovert person is required to carry out our fund-raising marketing and media work.
An international security monitoring group (CERT, the Computer Emergency Response Team Coordination Center) warned that Internet attacks are expected to double this year. Read NetAction's useful guide to Internet security and data integrity.
In the last edition of KFSN we ran an item on The NOMA Children's Hospital in Northern Nigeria, but failed to mention the source of the report: Dateline Health Nigeria No. 57, 2001, available at: . We apologise for failing to credit the source, and we will endeavour in the future to always credit our sources, without which we could not put this newsletter together.
Are there no news from Tanzania it seems you have only for S. Africa, Zimbabwe, Nigeria and Uganda.
Our reply: We try to cover news as widely as possible from across Africa, but are inevitably constrained by the agendas and priorities of our news and information sources. If you have information that you would like to see featured in KFSN, please submit your information to us. Details on submitting items can be found below.
Dear Editor, Thank you for your Notice. I look forward to visit your site frequently.
I am in the process of setting up an environmental NGO that deals specificaly with solid waste management. How right you are about the 'western paid consultants'. In my view they are paid exurbitant sums of money to say a lot which means nothing to a county's uprateing. Especially in solid waste management in the 3rd world countries, strategies are dreamed up just to push western technology. Any way keep up the good work. I am interested to make contact with African NGOs interested in Solid Waste management. One only hears of solid waste when it is too late and contamination is rampant. It does not have to be like this. Solid waste (when well managed)can be a source of good jobs in sorting, recycling etc.
Mandat International is a non-profit-making non-governmental organization which has as its principal missions to welcome and help non-governmental delegates (in particular those from developing countries) coming to Geneva to participate in international conferences. The themes of this conference will be: The themes to be covered will be: Information society, Civil society, International Organization cooperation, Health promotion, Environment, commerce and sustainable development, Indigenous women, Human rights and humanitarian law, The right of people to self-determination, Civil society, private sector cooperation, Peace and disarmament.
Closing date: 28 November 2001
The deadline for applications is November 12, 2001
Special Report -- Do your data measure up? - Kenya puts its immunization records under the auditors' microscope (DQA). News -- Yellow fever vaccine stocks still low as fears of new outbreaks grow. Grassroots -- Training vaccinators in a time of change: preparing to cope with new vaccines and new equipment. Briefing -- Why the fridge loses its cool: finding solutions to the problems of maintaining the cold chain.
People are often surprised when they hear about CDRA's monthly "Homeweek" because it is unusual for an NGO to devote that much time to learning. Many NGOs have been inspired to develop their own kind of homeweeks and sought our support in their design. So we often get asked to write up something about this homeweek – its role, what it consists of and how it works. This Nugget attempts to provide this, certainly not as a blueprint but as an example of what we have experienced as effective internal organisational practice.
The NBI is the hope for real development in Nile Basin countries (NBCs). The 10 countries of the Nile Basin include 6 of the 10 poorest nations of the world. But, is the NBI taking the right way to development? Most probably it is, in view of the sensitive political issues it has to address.
Information on grant application procedures, present and past grants, grantees and students, and research accomplishments from past and present grants by the FORUM.
Deposit tracking, loan tracking, and general ledger. Handles individual loans as well as group loans, used as Grameen Banking as well as Village Banking organisations and Credit Unions.
Works to strengthen women's organizations outside USA by providing small, flexible and timely grants in general support ranging from US$500 to US$15,000. The Fund supports organizations that demonstrate a commitment to women's equality and human rights.
Fellowship provides $20,000, for study-leave over a 4 month period. Applicants should be mature journalists interested in studies or programmes that benefit the community at large and at the same time enhance their competence.
Annual prize of a $15,000 cash award and an expense-paid trip to Washington DC presented by The Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies and Novartis. Journalists from around the world are invited to compete in competition for excellence in international journalism.
An international challenge competition providing seed capital to NGOs for innovation in local resource mobilisation offered by The Citizen Base Initiative, a programme of Ashoka, aims to spark, identify and support local resource mobilisation as an alternative to international fundraising.
Applicants for the Grants offered by the UNDP/World Bank/WHO Special Programme for Research and Training in Tropical Diseases must be nationals of, and employed in, the developing disease endemic countries. Grants are awarded for studies leading to a postgraduate degree or for acquiring specialized skills. Studies must be on one or more of the TDR target diseases (listed in details).
Annual prize of US$ 30,000 awarded to individuals who, at great personal risk, stand up to oppression in the nonviolent pursuit of respect for human rights.
This interdisciplinary program will explore the uses of a human security framework for identifying non-discriminatory, sustainable policies for women and girls, drawing into dialogue critical theories in the humanities and social sciences, and discourses of policymakers and activists. Applications for 2002/2003 are due 31 January 2002.
Starting date: ASAP (posting date 29.10.2001). Based in Berlin.
Fulltime/part-time interns and volunteers sought for the following programmes:
1. Civil Reparation for Human Rights Violations
2. Research on Universal Jurisdiction
3. Country Research on Reparation for Torture
4. Preparatory Commission for the International Criminal Court
5. REDRESS' casework programme
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KABISSA-FAHAMU-SANGONET NEWSLETTER 39 * 7861 SUBSCRIBERS
KABISSA-FAHAMU-SANGONET NEWSLETTER 39 * 7861 SUBSCRIBERS
Ghana's President Kufuor has launched a new campaign, 'Life Choices', as a result of increasing population growth. Commenting on Ghana's greatest challenge, he said the current practice where families are not planned undermines the efforts to provide adequate health, housing, and employment for citizens.
A visit to Africa turned Duncan Brooker's serious vinyl habit into a mission to rescue Afro funk and its creators from oblivion.
About 1,000 of the 2,200 teachers trained annually in Zambia are dying of AIDS related complications each year, according to a report issued Wednesday, Agence France-Presse reports.
A recent publication by the UN Non-Governmental Liaison Service - Voices from Africa 10 - is focused on NGO Responses to HIV/AIDS. It includes country experiences from Burkina Faso, Morocco, Mozambique, Senegal, South Africa, Uganda, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Cote d'Ivoire, DR Congo, Ethiopia, Malawi and Nigeria. The issue of increasing the involvement of the target group in the design and implementation of the activity is one that comes out strongly in the material. So too does the role of the media. It will be available online shortly.
How rapidly does child malnutrition respond to income growth? Are current goals for reducing malnutrition achievable through income growth, or are additional measures needed?
What is peace building? Can NGOs make a difference against the array of forces driving complex political emergencies? A detailed study of the impact of NGO activities in Liberia from the University of Manchester examines the role of aid workers in bringing peace.
In the aftermath of the Rwanda genocide international consensus emerged that aid cannot substitute for political action during conflict. There was, it was argued, a need for greater coherence of humanitarian and conflict reduction objectives. Is this ‘new humanitarianism’ working? Can the tension between conflict management and humanitarian principles of impartiality and neutrality be resolved? Are political criteria shaping aid allocation decisions?
The European Union’s response to irregular migration is wanting. EU states have alternately regularised the status of unwanted guests, clamped down on those who bring them to Europe or signed agreements with countries of origin to facilitate deportation. Governments are loath to admit their borders are porous or to face up to the real costs of prevention and deterrence. What impels people to undertake desperate journeys? What should Europe do when they arrive?
Why do local structures set up by external NGOs to co-manage environmental projects invariably fail? Can local farmers, herders, hunters, gatherers, transhumants and fishermen learn to cooperate? What can be done to help local stakeholders draw up sustainable collective rules for resource management? Are traditional social structures anachronistic or can they meet new challenges?
In 1998 more than 100,000 people perished in the Bahr el Ghazal region of Southern Sudan. The immediate cause was famine. But could better research and more adequate aid have prevented many of the deaths? The famine was triggered by a combination of civil unrest, extreme climactic conditions, poor market strategies and weak public action. Yet, did the failure of the international community to understand the famine from the point of view of its victims, make it even worse?
Should farming be allowed in Zimbabwe’s wetlands? The wetlands - or vleis - are used by smallholders for dry season vegetable production and economic returns are high. Colonial administrators cited the risk of environmental degradation to prevent farmers from using the vleis. Today, the government and scientists disagree on the desirability of maintaining the unpopular, and increasingly flouted, prohibition on their use.
How can donors work together to increase the chances of aid achieving poverty reduction? The World Bank and Nordic agencies have enthusiastically promoted Sector-Wide Approaches (SWAPs) to coordinate development assistance. Can SWAPs improve the chances of reaching the ambitious International Development Goals target of halving poverty by 2015?
Who are the winners and losers in the ICT revolution? What are the likely consequences of the slow development of ICT infrastructure in many developing countries? As globalisation deepens, what have we learnt about the economic growth and poverty reduction potential of new information technologies?
Has the case for water privatisation been exaggerated? Are public sector water providers really that inefficient? Could public sector water undertakings (PWUs) or public-public partnerships (PUPs) between northern and southern public water utilities be more efficient, pro-poor, and more accountable than the much-vaunted and better-known Anglo-French model of public private partnerships (PPPs)?
The South African Gender Based Violence and Health Initiative (SAGBVHI)plans to host an annual conference on gender based violence and health in April 2002. Set to become an annual event, the conference will attempt to raise awareness about intersection between gender based violence and health and to find creative ways of building a violent free society. A call for papers will be issued in November 2001.
The NOMA Children Hospital located in the Rungin Sambo area of Sokoto, Northern Nigeria is bringing succour to many impoverished children from Sokoto, Kebbi, Taraba and such far flung states like Bauchi, Jigawa and Borno States, suffering from the devastating disease known as NOMA or Cancrum Oris.
Nigeria has won a significant victory in the high court in its efforts to recover more than $1bn of stolen money laundered through London banks by the family of its late military ruler Sani Abacha.
Contrary to widespread fears of violence and chaos, Gambia's crucial presidential poll proceeded and ended peacefully on Thursday. Reliable sources on the ground told allAfrica.com that the voter turn-out was surprisingly good, there were no major incidents and polling stations across the country closed at 1600hrs GMT.
Information and communication technology (IT) has become a potent force for transforming social, economic and political life globally. Yet, the uneven distribution of IT within societies and across the globe is resulting in a digital divide between those who have access to technology and those who do not. Most women in developing countries are in the deepest part of the divide. This report identifies some of the key barriers to women's access to information technology, as well as instances where women are participating in and benefiting from the use of information technology. The report is available for download online from the USAID website or you can request a hard copy by email.
Reviewed by Bipasha Baruah. There are a number of reasons why this book stands out in contemporary feminist literature on gender and development. The author, Martha Nussbaum, introduces and links the vital concept of justice with discussions about development, equality and peace in a very convincing manner. She argues that international political and economic thought must view gender difference and oppression as a problem of justice. She bases this argument on the fact that women in many societies are not treated as ends in their own right but instead as mere instruments of the ends of others. Cambridge University Press, New York (USA) and Cambridge (UK) 2000. 312pp.
A suspicious letter, sent to the United Nations Environment Programme Headquarters in Nairobi, has failed to test positive for anthrax, the UN agency announced today.































