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Posts Tagged ‘Malawi’

Football: Algeria, Cameroon, Ivory Coast, Tunisia target World Cup

Algeria, Cameroon, Ivory Coast and Tunisia could qualify for the 2010 World Cup in South Africa this weekend. Ivory Coast need one point at bottom-of-the-table Malawi Saturday in Group E to clinch a second successive appearance at the quadrennial international football showpiece. But

Madonna accepts damages over wedding pics

Madonna has accepted damages from the Mail on Sunday over ”purloined” photographs of her wedding to Guy Ritchie.
The paper had admitted privacy and infringement of copyright after publishing 10 pictures from her wedding in the Scottish Highlands in December 2000, reports The Daily Star.
The singer was not present at London’’s High Court for the settlement [...]

Boss of Madonna’s Raising Malawi charity quits after falling for her trainer

Queen of pop Madonna has lost the head of her Raising Malawi charity after he fell for her trainer.
Executive director Philippe van den Bossche, who helped Madonna adopt her daughter Mercy, is leaving the charity’s Los Angeles headquarters to live with petite but perfect Tracy Anderson in New York.
“Philippe and I have been together for [...]

Progress made

More children are reaching their fifth birthday than ever before

MORE children are surviving beyond their fifth birthday, according to a new report from the United Nations Children’s Fund (Unicef). The child mortality rate—the number of under-fives dying per thousand live births—declined from 90 in 1990 to 65 in 2008, a drop of over a quarter. The number of deaths has fallen from 12.5m in 1990 to 8.8m last year, the lowest since records began in 1960. The biggest improvements are in Latin America and the former Soviet Union, where mortality rates have fallen by more than half. Progress in sub-Saharan Africa, which now accounts for half of all deaths, has been slower, but Niger, Malawi, Mozambique and Ethiopia have seen reductions of more than 100 per 1,000 livebirths since 1990. The report notes that despite big improvements in preventing malaria, one of the three main causes of deaths, much more needs to be done to treat the other two causes, pneumonia and diarrhoea.

Hard road

By Brian Hungwe
Harare

Human smugglers are running a complex multi-million dollar network, fleecing distressed Somalis seeking a way out of their war-torn country and desperate Ethiopians caught up in vicious cycles of hunger, floods and political repression.

Trafficked person

Thousands of people leave their countries every year, trekking thousands of miles through eight countries from the Horn of Africa, via East Africa down to South Africa.

Bribes oil their journeys across the region by air, overland and sea.

And immigration and police are complicit. The state of the airports and the corruption that goes on there mirrors the body politic of the countries involved. And this has security implications for the countries involved.

"The next five to 10 years, Somalia will have nobody there"

Ismail, Somali truck driver in Malawi

In a recent report on smuggling in the region, the International Organization for Migration (IOM) noted that "guardians of national border integrity… are deeply compromised, creating a threat to national security".

It says their complicity is keeping the smuggling business afloat and that they "should be considered part of the illegal and abusive enterprise" where "cupidity appears to be the foremost and only visible motivation".

Huge sums

IOM’s Tal Raviv, based in Nairobi, acknowledges that the smuggling ring is "sophisticated."

Street scene in Eastleigh, Kenya

"Tens of thousands of people are able to move from Somalia and Ethiopia, all the way down to South Africa, and they arrive successfully," she said.

"All the borders are porous, it’s just that," points out Mokotedi Mpshe, who heads South Africa’s National Prosecuting Authority.

Mr Mpshe knows the extent to which corruption has permeated his society.

"Some government officials can let you down. We may try to fight human trafficking, but at the same time there may be elements amongst ourselves that are working against us," he said.

Cash-strapped governments can’t match the huge sums smugglers pay immigration and police officers to ease the path of illegal immigrants en route to South Africa.

Expanding business

I found that immigrants pay smugglers on average $1,500 – $2,000 before the journey begins.

map of africa

The IOM also estimates the smuggling business generates annual revenue of about $40m. Along the way the immigrants lose much more to robberies.

And rape and other abuse is common.

Over the years, the flow of Somalis has been growing, and thus, according to the IOM, "providing smugglers an expanding and lucrative business opportunity".

"The next five to 10 years, Somalia will have nobody there," said Ismail, a Somali truck driver living in Malawi.

"There is no peace which is coming, there is nobody who is fighting for Somalia."

Lions and snakes

Salma left Somalia with her son Nasir, 3, six years ago, when she was 23. She left her mother and brother behind, and has no clue where they are.

"Sometimes [smugglers] ask the women to sleep with them. You sleep with them, otherwise they leave you behind"

Salma, Somali migrant

From her flat in Cape Town, South Africa, she says that everyone in Somalia is trying to flee the fighting there.

She says she walked on foot for 24 days during the journey.

In Kenya, Salma met Amina, a smuggler linked into a network that carried her across several countries.

Nairobi’s Eastleigh district is, according to IOM, the smuggling hub of the region.

It is a little Mogadishu in the heart of Nairobi, whose life runs 24 hours, hosting a close-knit Somali community that keeps itself to itself.

Money transfers are done with ease, and anything goes. Vehicles with tinted windows are a common sight, and haulage trucks move goods in and out every hour.

It is here that Salma gave $1,000 to the smuggler, Amina, who accompanied her and a small party of migrants on the first half of their journey.

Police bribed

In Tanzania, six members of the party were arrested.

Salma says the smuggler bribed the police to secure their freedom.

She says they had similar experiences in Zambia and Zimbabwe.

"[Smuggler] paid some money and we came out."

Militiaman in Mogadishu

Six years later, Salma’s journey is still vivid for her, as she recounts how she was terrified of lions and snakes as she trudged through the bush.

"Sometimes [smugglers], they ask the women to sleep with them," Salma remembers.

"You sleep with them, otherwise they leave you behind… they do that."

The IOM’s Tal Raviv confirmed that almost all smuggled women get raped, and her organisation has also received reports of the same thing happening to men.

Salma’s journey was even tougher than usual because she was travelling with a child, so the smugglers told her they could not give her accommodation.

"I was struggling too much," she remembers.

Nasir, now nine, vividly recalls sleeping in the forest, his mother walking long distances, and sometimes going for days without food.

"I never ever, I don’t want to do again that journey."

To listen to Brian Hungwe’s full investigation, tune in to African Perspectiveon the BBC World Service.The program is first broadcast on Saturday 1 August at 1106 GMT. It will be available online from 2106 GMT, for one week.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Scientists seek new tools to fight malnutrition

ST. LOUIS (AP) — Missouri researchers have launched a new effort in their fight against worldwide hunger: bringing together a doctor who has long treated the malnourished with plant scientists working to improve the nutritional content of food.
The group hopes to create a bridge from greenhouses and labs in Missouri to health centers and farms [...]

Matthew Kavanagh: African Activists Demand: Show Us the Money

At the International AIDS Society conference in Capetown South Africa this past week leading AIDS and human rights groups from the region launched an impressive…

Powerful idea

By Jonathan Fildes
Technology reporter, BBC News, Oxford

William Kamkwamba (TED/J D Davidson)

Earlier this month, US President Barack Obama said Africa must take charge of its own destiny.

At the TED Global conference in Oxford this week, one speech resonated with that message.

The speaker was William Kamkwamba from Malawi.

Unlike the eclectic mixture of scientists, technologists and designers gathered at the hi-tech conference, Mr Kamkwamba grew up as a farmer in the East African country.

He came to the conference to tell how people how, at the age of just 14, he had built his own wind generator.

"Before I discovered the wonders of science I was just a simple farmer," he said.

But after the family’s maize crop failed in 2001, they could no longer afford to pay for him to go to school.

"It was a future I could not accept," he said.

‘Never give up’

So, Mr Kamkwamba would visit a library in his spare time, reading science books.

One in particular taught him that windmills could be used to generate electricity and pump water.

"I decided to build one for myself but I didn’t have the materials."

William Kamkwamba on his windmill (TED/Tom Rielly)

Undeterred, Mr Kamkwamba scoured a local scrap yard, finding the necessary components: a tractor fan, shock absorber, PVC pipes and a bicycle frame.

"Many people, including my mother, thought I was crazy," he admitted.

His first model powered one light. But a later, more powerful version was able to run four bulbs.

"Soon people were turning up at my house to charge their mobile phone," he said.

This was not the first time Mr Kamkwamba, now 19, had spoken at TED; his first encounter with the elite conference was in 2007 at the TED Global conference in Arusha, Tanzania.

"Before that time I had never been away from my home in Malawi. I had never seen an internet," he said.

He said he was so nervous when he had to give his first presentation that he "wanted to vomit".

This year, he said he was feeling better. And he had one message for this year’s crowd at TED Global – a message which echoes that of the US president.

"Trust in yourself and believe. Never give up," he told the audience.

Mr Kamkwamba’s story has now been turned into a book: The Boy who Harnessed the Wind.

The TED Global conference runs from 21 to 24 July in Oxford, UK.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Daily antiretroviral therapy may prevent mother-to-child HIV transmission

A daily dose of antiretroviral syrup to breastfeeding infants or treating their HIV-infected mothers with highly active antiretroviral drugs could be a safe way to prevent mother-to-child HIV transmission through breast milk, according to a study.
The Breastfeeding, Antiretrovirals and Nutrition (BAN) study, led by Dr. Charles van der Horst from University of North Carolina at [...]

Ivory Coast fined for stampede

People carry an injured person after a stampede at a football stadium inin Abijdjan, Ivory Coast ( 29 March 2009)

Fifa has fined the Ivorian Football Federation $47,000 following the enquiry into the stadium tragedy where 20 fans died in Abidjan in March.

Football’s world governing body imposed a series of safety measures after concluding the long investigation.

Fifa also announced a donation $96,000 to a fund set up for the families of the victims.

The safety measures will be in place for the Elephants’ next round of the 2010 World Cup qualifiers in September.

The capacity for the match against Burkina Faso on 5 September will be set at 20,000, with a control cordon to be set up at least one kilometre from the stadium.

A separate spectator control cordon around 200 metres away to prevent non-ticket holders getting through.

"The total capacity of the stadium (34,600) will only be allowed in subsequent matches if the above-mentioned measures are applied for each match," Fifa said in a statement.

Fifa investigators spoke with Ivorian police, football and government officials but the disciplinary ruling did not blame anyone.

More than 130 people were injured as Ivory Coast beat Malawi 5-0, with a reported 36,000 trying to cram into a stadium which has a capacity of 34,600.

The crush occurred when thousands of fans massed outside the Felix Boigny stadium before the World Cup qualifier. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.