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Archive for the ‘Africa’ Category

Article Link: ESA Irrevelant–and Deadly–Cuts in Foreign Assistance

As I was visiting hospitals and health huts in Senegal, I was also receiving e-mailed updates on House GOP budget cuts. The Global Fund, down 40 percent. Child survival programs, which include anti-malaria efforts, down 10 percent. AIDS relief, down 8 percent. Development assistance, down 30 percent.These reductions were intended to be symbolic, but what do they symbolize? Fiscal responsibility? Hardly. No one can reasonably claim that the budget crisis exists because America spends too much on bed nets and AIDS drugs. … Claiming courage or credit for irrelevant cuts in foreign assistance is a net subtraction from public seriousness on the deficit. So, do these cuts symbolize the Republican rejection of fuzzy-headed liberalism? Actually, the main initiatives on malaria and AIDS were created under Republican leadership.

via The Sider Center at Eastern University.

Article Link: Call to Action:The Child Soldier Crisis – DISCOVER THE JOURNEY | SPEAK UP. ENSURE JUSTICE.

Child Soldiers

There are more than ever.

And the urgency for intervention, action, RE-action to this growing and unending phenomenon demands our world’s response.

While in Congo, finishing production on our documentary following the lives of two child soldiers, I was appalled to discover that for children like them, there is really nothing for them if they are able to leave a life of war.

There are large institutions offering institutional care, but there is not specialized, individualized, long-term rehabilitation, much less integration. With the billions of dollars of aid pouring into the country and one of the largest UN missions in the world, how can the crisis of child soldiers have gone so blatantly unaddressed?

These children, right now, leaving the armed groups, will form the future generation of Congo’s contributors to civil society. It is essential that they are targeted now, and given options besides going back to war.

via The Child Soldier Crisis – DISCOVER THE JOURNEY | SPEAK UP. ENSURE JUSTICE..

Celebrate World AIDS Day from Food for the Hungry

Today, 33.4 million people are living with HIV, 2.1 million of whom are children. For every person receiving treatment, six more individuals are newly infected with HIV. We can stop this number from growing—HIV can be prevented.

“To have HIV virus is not the end of life”

—Rose Mbabu, HIV positive,

Community Health Worker/Kenya

Food for the Hungry is seeking justice for victims of HIV/AIDS by organizing preventive and treatment programs in Ethiopia, Uganda, Mozambique, Kenya, Rwanda and Haiti. Learn about the stories of our programs and join individuals who have experienced hope in celebrating their victory against HIV/AIDS.

via Celebrate World AIDS Day.

Categories: Africa, AIDS

Good segment on NBC Nightly News

Categories: Africa

Food Security in Africa

One organization working to improve food security in in Africa is AGRA: The Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa.

Here are a few of their articles:

African Voices Call for a Green Revolution

AGRA Partners with IFC to Boost Agricultural Growth in Africa, Alleviate Hunger and Poverty

AGRA VP Calls for Sustainable Green Revolution at UN Meeting in Namibia

Resource: AIDS is Real and It’s in Our Church

AIDS is Real and It’s in Our Church: HIV/AIDS in the African Church

Is a website and featuring a downloadable pdf book and online version on AIDS and the Church in Africa. This looks to be a very good resource for churches and individuals dealing with HIV/AIDS in Africa.

Categories: Africa, AIDS, Christianity

Some of SIM’s Africa Pages

Here are links to some of SIM’s African Country pages. These mostly are from Central and Southern Africa which is the primary area I am interested in. Many are neighbors of the DR Congo. These pages describe their work there, ongoing projects and have links to sources of more information and profile videos. The profile videos (where included) are outstanding!

Zambia

Namibia

Mozambique

Malawi

Tanzania

Kenya

Central African Republic

Botswana

Angola

Zimbabwe

Interesting Interview with Archbishop Desmond Tutu in the Atlantic

Here is a very interesting article which is an interview of Archbishop Desmond Tuto by the Atlantic Magazine.

The African in Him

Archbishop Desmond Tutu reflects on terrorism, torture, and what the first African American president might mean for Africa.

Quote from the article:

If you want peace, you don’t talk to your friends. You talk to your enemies.

Categories: Africa

World Harvest Mission Uganda Blogs

Here are some blogs I found really intersting by a group of missionaries for World Harvest Mission posted in Uganda.

Paradox Uganda

BundiNutrition: Surviving and Thriving

Salt-Coated

Called to One Hope

Life Is A Journey

Called to Uganda

Kwegesiya

Koinonia

WHM Sudan

Ashley Woods Blog

Traveling

Nathan’s Notes

All in all some very good reading.

Background:New York Times Interactive Article: Paradox of Plenty

The New York Times has a very interesting interactive article: The Paradox of Plenty.

It “recount(s) how some, mostly outsiders, built great fortunes off of Africa’s material riches — and for centuries its people as well — while it remained the poorest continent in the world.”

It features a narrated slideshow covering the topics of slavery, ivory, rubber, minerals and oil.

Global Post: New World News Site

This looks very promising. Global Post is a new world news site by the people at World Focus TV. The sight is sort of fancy and a little hard ( at least for me to navigate) Rather graphic intensive. But the articles appear to be very good.

Here are some I found interesting.

For Which it Stands: NGOs: Despite a self-image as generous, America gives less foreign aid per capita than most wealthy countries (This is an excellent article very good background on current US Foreign Aid.)

Part I: The deadly new tuberculosis

KwaZulu Natal, the sleepy, tropical province on South Africa’s Indian Ocean coast, is the epicenter of a worldwide epidemic of a new drug-resistant tuberculosis.

Part II: The deadly new tuberculosis

Part III: The deadly new tuberculosis

Zimbabwe: the perfect humanitarian storm

Exclusive: Mugabe should be charged : Doctors say Zimbabwe president is a criminal for the cholera epidemic that is killing thousands.

For Which It Stands: Africa: Advice to Obama’s team: Keep Africa a priority

Congo struggles to move from conflict to peace

Narrated slideshow on the situation in Eastern DRC

Categories: Africa, DR Congo, World Events

Human Development Index DRC

Accroding to the Human Development Index the DR Congo ranks 177th of 179 countries.  Only Central African Republic and Sierra Leone fair worse.

Human Development Report Main Index

Human Development Index country rankings

DRC 2008 Statistical Update

Human Development Comparison Map

Categories: Africa, Developement, DR Congo

Enough Project: Obama, Africa, and Peace

Obama, Africa, and Peace is a position paper by the Enough Project.

Reframing the Overall Approach to U.S. Relations with Africa

The Obama administration has an opportunity to fundamentally remake U.S. relations with Africa during its tenure, and a cornerstone of that effort needs to be a much greater emphasis on the most cost-effective element of our foreign policy tools: peacemaking. An investment in ending some of the world’s deadliest, most destructive, and costliest wars would yield great results in those countries and the positive repercussions from such engagement would rebound across the continent.

As the first president of the United States with immediate African roots, President Obama not only has an important reservoir of goodwill on the continent, he also has the ability to move beyond the tendentious “North-South” debate between developed and less developed countries that has made more transformational policies difficult to attain. Efforts by the dying generation of Africa’s strong men who believe they should rule for life, such as Zimbabwe’s President Robert Mugabe, to portray President Obama as a former colonial master will have little resonance in Africa or elsewhere. President Obama will represent a fresh start, but the problems facing Africa and how best to address them will be no less acute.

Another Article on China in Africa

A Business website Fast Company has ab in-depth article on China in Africa:

Special Report: China Invades Africa

The sub-Sahara is now the scene of one of the most bare-knuckled resource grabs the world has ever seen.

While America is preoccupied with the war in Iraq (cost: half a trillion dollars and counting), and while think-tank economists continue to spit out papers debating whether vital resources are running out at all, China’s leadership isn’t taking any chances. In just a few years, the People’s Republic of China (PRC) has become the most aggressive investor-nation in Africa. This commercial invasion is without question the most important development in the sub-Sahara since the end of the Cold War — an epic, almost primal propulsion that is redrawing the global economic map. One former U.S. assistant secretary of state has called it a “tsunami.” Some are even calling the region “ChinAfrica.”

Categories: Africa, Foreign Policy

More Articles from World Focus on DR Congo and Africa

January 11, 2009 1 comment
Categories: Africa, DR Congo

Resource: Maps from Le Monde Diplomatique

Categories: Africa, DR Congo, Historical, Maps

The Silent Tsunami

Aid agencies are calling the deepening world hunger situation the “Silent Tsunami”. A number of factors have combined to reverse the trend that had seen more and more people no longer suffering hunger each year. Now hunger is increasing.

Here are a few articles:

The Silent Tsunami

A SILENT tsunami of hunger is engulfing the world, afflicting nearly a billion people in 60 countries and killing 25,000 men, women and children every day. The global food crisis, triggered by high prices, shortages and bad weather, is deepening as the world’s economy moves into recession. Millions more people are now facing poverty, starvation, disease and death.

Countries struggling to slow increase in child hunger

Hunger is now the biggest threat to child development across the world, with global progress on eradicating malnutrition slowing, stalling, or sliding into reverse in some countries. But a new international index from Save the Children also reveals that some poor countries are making greater progress in reducing child deprivation.

Child malnutrition in Zimbabwe increasing as emergency aid pipeline falters

Acute child malnutrition in parts of Zimbabwe has increased by almost two thirds compared with last year, according to Save the Children.

Alertnet Food and Hunger Topic Index

Enough food is produced globally to feed the planet but even so roughly 923 million people go to bed hungry every night. Hunger is a leading cause of death, killing an estimated 9 million people every year – more than AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria combined

Hunger’s Global Hotspots: 24 December 2008

The Challenge of Hunger 2008 Global Hunger Index

World Food Programme

WFP Food Reaches War-torn Corner of Eastern Congo

Famine Early Warning Systems Network

Alertnet FACTSHEET: Hunger, the world’s silent killer

LONDON (AlertNet)- While acute food emergencies such as those in Niger in 2005 and Ethiopia in 1984 grab headlines, galvanising the public and donors to respond, most people who die of hunger worldwide do so out of the media spotlight.

At the end of the above article is a very telling quote: “If reporters from Mars visited earth don’t you think that their lead story would be: ‘One in six humans go hungry’? And yet that never makes headline news.” British news presenter Jon Snow

Alertnet FAMINE RESOURCE FILE: The reality of hunger

QUIZ: Five myths about famine and hunger

Life-cycle of a Famine

TALKING POINT: The global food aid controversy

Many aid professionals think food aid should be a last resort, arguing in favour of giving cash or vouchers to hungry people instead. They say food aid can disrupt local markets and make it harder for people to recover from a crisis.

People who subscribe to this view say hunger rarely exists because there’s no food in the area – it’s just that the food is too expensive for people to buy during a crisis.

Meanwhile, aid workers often argue that the current food aid system puts the interests of donor countries above the needs of hungry people.

African hunger

More than 210 million people do not have enough to eat in Africa. The reasons for this are varied and complex. The causes of malnutrition in one country might be quite different in the next. Even regions within individual countries can be subject to variations in politics, climate, society or economy that can affect the prevalence of hunger in quite different ways.

Decades of progress wiped out’ as hunger spreads

The food and financial crises have wiped out nearly 30 years of progress on reducing hunger, warns ActionAid, reacting to new figures from the Food and Agriculture Organization, which show that the number of hungry rose to 963 million in 2008.

Categories: Africa, Developement, Hunger

Medicines Sans Frontieres: Top Ten Humanitarian Crises of 2008

This website was highlighted by an excellent segment on the News Hour with Jim Lehrer

The Medecines Sans Frontieres: Top Ten Humanitarian Crises of 2008

The DR Congo, TB and HIV, and Childhood Malnutrition all made the list.

As usual the MSF website is excellent.

Very important resource on the current situation in the DR Congo

Medicins Sans Frontieres has set up a very powerful site on the situation in the DR Congo at present.

Condition Critical This site includes:

News

Blogs

Eyewitness

Memory

MSF Activities

and a Photo Timeline

The site combines very powerful images and hard-hitting compelling text. This is a must see for anyone concerned about the situation in the DRC.

Congo History: William Sheppard

William Sheppard was a black Presbyterian missionary who spent 2 decades in the Congo and helped to publicize some of the atrocities being committed in the Congo under King Leopold II and the Belgians. Strangely he was sent out by the Southern Presbyterian Church omething very unusual for his day.

Here are some links to learn more about him.

“Black Livingstone” Blazed Trail in Dark Congo of 1800s by National Geographic

A ‘Black-White’ Missionary on the Imperial Stage:

William H. Sheppard and Middle-Class Black Manhood by The Journal of Southern Religion

Jewel of the Kingdom: William Sheppard by Mission Frontiers

William Sheppard by Wikipedia

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