NEW XADE, Botswana — In the end, the Bushmen of Molapo village could neither hunt nor gather, they said. Nor could they tend crops, collect firewood or lead their goats to pasture. After tens of thousands of years, the dry but life-giving vastness of the Kalahari Desert was declared off-limits by police and wildlife officers.
Author: WHES
Case lifts Nigerian police veil of impunity. Nigerian police kill six young people in car, plant weapons in the car, and pass deaths off as ‘fight with dangerous criminals.’ Surprisingly, commission of inquiry is called.
ABUJA, Nigeria — Shortly after midnight on June 8, Officer Danjuma Ibrahim fired an automatic rifle into a carload of six young people at a police checkpoint in this capital city, according to public testimony. The driver, Ifeanyi Ozor, 25, died instantly. His fiancee, Augustina Arebun, 22, bloodied but alive, let out a wail of anguish.
Liberian ex-President Charles Taylor doing business as usual in Nigeria: international war crimes prosecutors, human rights groups and U.S. officials concerned
CALABAR, Nigeria — From all appearances, Charles Taylor’s life in this tourist town in southeastern Nigeria has been an extended holiday. The exiled Liberian president sleeps in a rambling, red-roofed mansion, travels in a pair of Land Rovers with tinted-glass windows and buys food and electronic gadgetry in such abundance that residents complain he has caused inflation.
Virginity becomes a commodity In Uganda’s war against AIDS
KITATYA, Uganda — Mousisi Anatolius moved from hut to hut, taking notes in a tattered ledger as he interviewed parents and their young daughters. He was searching for virgins.
Net tightens around northern Uganda’s brutal rebel militia: Lord’s Resistance Army unchecked for 20 years
KAMPALA, Uganda — It was one more incident in what has been called Africa’s forgotten war — a 20-year crusade by a cult-like militia that has driven more than 1.6 million people off their farms, killed tens of thousands and become notorious for kidnapping children into slavery and mutilating civilians.
Nigerian police clash with Nigerian troops
Three Nigerians have died in clashes in Lagos as soldiers fought running battles with police.
Progress and Challenges in Strengthening African Agriculture
For the first time, Africans are implementing a comprehensive, African-driven plan to strengthen their agricultural sectors, in which most Africans earn their livelihoods. This plan has a chance at real success in reducing poverty and improving human well-being if African institutions and policymakers, as well as their development partners, can effectively negotiate the challenges that face them at this point in the plan’s implementation.
The African Union’s New Partnership for Africa’s Development (AU/NEPAD) sees higher, sustained agricultural growth as a key component in spurring economic development and achieving the Millennium Development Goals across the continent. As a consequence, AU/NEPAD, with the help of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, has developed the Comprehensive Africa Agriculture Development Programme (CAADP). The program has set a goal of 6 percent annual growth for the agricultural sector over the next decade. It is articulated around four main pillars dealing with natural resources, agribusiness and trade, hunger and nutrition, and science and technology. In addition to committing themselves to improve political and economic governance as part of the broader NEPAD agenda, African heads of state pledged in the 2003 Maputo Declaration to increase allocations for agriculture to 10 percent of their national budgets within five years. Several countries have already started increasing the share of agriculture in their budgets.
It was decided at the outset that Africa’s regional economic communities and their member countries would implement programs under NEPAD. The AU/NEPAD Secretariat therefore had to find a process for effectively transferring the ownership and leadership of the implementation process to these regional economic communities. After a slow start, the Secretariat has made significant progress over the past eight months. With assistance from IFPRI, it has developed and implemented a road map to speed up implementation of the CAADP agenda. The road map emphasizes the role of the Secretariat as a facilitator and a mobilizer of resources and places the bulk of the implementation process at the regional and national levels.
In the wake of five regional planning meetings between January and April 2005, a May 2005 summit in Accra, Ghana, and a series of consultations with the Group of Eight (G8) countries and other leading development partners, the CAADP implementation process has now reached a stage where it can be rapidly scaled up. The regional economic communities and their member countries have firmly taken ownership of the implementation process. All major regions have identified priority investment programs, including a set of early actions to be implemented by December 2006. They have agreed upon basic principles and procedures for implementation and governance. The agribusiness and farming communities have been brought into the process. Finally, the credibility of the implementation process has been established among development partners, including G8 leaders, who have endorsed CAADP as a framework for providing assistance to agriculture in Africa.
Despite this significant progress, several key challenges remain. The regional economic communities must effectively coordinate the implementation process, starting with speedy implementation of the early action agenda. National governments must meet the pledges of increased funding and improved governance for the agricultural sector, align their national strategies with the CAADP objectives, establish effective partnerships with the private sector, and integrate the smallholder sector in the implementation process. The regional economic communities and their member countries will need to set up systems for peer review, monitoring and evaluation, and knowledge management. Finally, countries will need to align long-term development assistance to agriculture with CAADP objectives. The most critical step now is to rapidly implement the early action agenda in order to test the capacity of the regional economic communities to coordinate the process, the commitment of national governments to do business more effectively, and the willingness of development partners to align assistance with African priorities.
In the medium to long run, other challenges will arise. National governments will have to deal with the need to intensify cross-border trade and advance the integration of regional agricultural markets. Development partners will have to address the need to liberalize international agricultural policies and create a conducive environment for agricultural growth in Africa. A continuation of global agricultural protectionism would undermine the long-term success of the CAADP agenda and severely limit returns to assistance to African agriculture.
These challenges are significant, but they should be manageable, and if African countries and their development partners can meet them, it may be their best chance in decades to make a substantial improvement in the lives of millions of poor Africans.
Ousmane Badiane is the Africa coordinator for the International Food Policy Research Institute.
The rise of a market mentality means many go hungry in Niger
MARADI, Niger, Aug. 10 — With her family’s stocks of millet long gone, Rachida Abdou tied her shrunken baby girl to her back and grabbed the emaciated hand of her 7-year-old son. Together, they set out in search of food, or for somebody who might help.
One-third of Zimbabwe’s teachers are HIV-positive
(Harare, Zimbabwe August 10, 2005) Teachers are relied on to counsel their students about AIDS, but statistics indicate they are no more knowledgeable about avoiding infection than other Zimbabwean adults.
“Teachers are at high risk of getting infected with HIV and AIDS, and already one-third of them are likely to be infected with the virus,” according to a report presented by a state-appointed education assessment team.
The rate among teachers mirrors Health Ministry statistics showing an estimated 27% of Zimbabweans aged 18-49 are infected with HIV, with at least 3 000 deaths a week.
Southern Africa is at the epicenter of the global Aids pandemic.
The shock contents of the report follow another report which concluded that at least 55 percent of Zimbabwe’s troops were HIV-positive.
The report was delivered to a workshop considering introducing HIV and AIDS awareness classes at teacher training colleges and into the junior and secondary school curricula.
“There seemed to be an assumption that the teachers are so knowledgeable about HIV and its transmission that they are willing to talk about it with their students, and that all teachers will make acceptable counselors and mentors,” said Josiah Mahlangu, national commissioner for the UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization in Zimbabwe.
Teachers had been viewed wrongly as persons who just delivered the curriculum, without bearing in mind “the teacher was also very much at risk,” Mahlangu said.
Zimbabwe has almost 80,000 teachers and at one stage 3.8 million children in school, although enrollment is believed to have dropped due to current economic hardship.
This article was published by www.Zimbabwe.com
In pictures: hunger hits Niger
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