POLITICS-MOZAMBIQUE: Ready To Roll

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Monday, November 03, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

John Keitta

CHIMOIO, Mozambique, Nov 3 (IPS) – The posters and flyers are ready, and so is Marta Simango. Ready for Nov. 4, when the municipal elections campaign officially kicks off in Mozambique.

Simango is running for a second term at the Municipal Assembly in the eastern province of Manica, bordering Zimbabwe. Her party is the opposition coalition Mozambican National Resistance Movement-Electoral Union (Renamo-UE, in Portuguese).

Renamo holds 15 of the 39 seats at the Municipal Assembly, and four belong to women. The ruling Front for the Liberation of Mozambique party (Frelimo) holds 24 seats, with 10 women (originally 12, but two died in office).

Overall, women account for 36 percent of Manica’s Municipal Assembly, beating the National Assembly, where 30 percent are women — one of the highest proportions in sub-Saharan Africa, where the average of women in Parliament is 16 percent.
[Read more...]

ECONOMY-MAURITIUS: Textile Manufacturing Goes Green and Clean

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Saturday, November 01, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

Nasseem Ackbarally

PORT LOUIS, Nov 1 (IPS) – ‘‘The cost of production is high in Mauritius as we are far away from our main markets. Our island is so small that at times our clients do forget us. We no longer benefit from any trade preferences. We don’t have any natural resources but we have plenty of sunshine and wind and we have decided to use these resources.”

These are the thoughts that Kendall Tang, director of Richfield Tang Knits Ltd, a factory at La Tour Koenig south of the capital, shared with European buyers recently.

They visited his factory before attending the International Textile Manufacturers Federation’s (ITMF) conference on the theme of a greener and a more sustainable textile industry last month.

Richfield Tang Knits Ltd, or RT Knits as it is known, has devised a new strategy based on green production to reduce its costs of production and to improve its work environment. The company is betting on the availability of the sunshine and the stable direction of the wind 10 out of 12 months yearly.
[Read more...]

DRC: Aid Agencies Fear Humanitarian Disaster in North Kivu

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Thursday, October 30, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

Ulrich Knapp

UNITED NATIONS, Oct 30 (IPS) – The situation in the strategic city of Goma in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) was relatively calm Thursday after a night of fierce shooting and widespread looting, the Office of the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) reported.

However, tens of thousands of Congolese fleeing the latest fighting between government forces and armed opposition groups is straining the already overburdened system of camps for North Kivu province’s estimated one million internally displaced persons.

”The humanitarian situation at the moment is terrible,” said Jaya Murthy, the spokesperson for the U.N. children’s agency UNICEF in the eastern DRC. ”We have about between 40,000 and 50 000 people that are in a couple of small camps five kilometres outside of [the provincial capital of] Goma.”

UNHCR also reported that many Congolese were heading towards Uganda looking for safety. Its team at the border said that on Thursday, some 8,000 entered Uganda at the Busanza border crossing.

Most of them are staying with host families and in public buildings, such as schools and churches. But around 2,000 of the refugees have opted to be transferred to the Nakivale refugee settlement further inside Uganda.

Most of the refugees in Uganda are dispersed over a large area, and the first major challenge, besides water and sanitation, will be the provision of food, as the area generally depends on local food imports from the DRC, UNHCR says.

The World Food Programme (WFP) said that it was able to distribute food to key nutritional centres and hospitals inside Goma on Wednesday.

Meanwhile, Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs John Holmes has called on the government and all armed groups in the area to protect civilians and to facilitate the work of humanitarian organisations.

”We all hope that Wednesday’s ceasefire will quickly help to restore minimum security conditions and allow humanitarian actors to work with civilian authorities to assess needs and mount emergency operations to address them,” Holmes said. ”Unconditional access, and respect for the independence, impartiality and neutrality of humanitarians as they go about their essential work have to be a top priority.”

The Security Council, in a presidential statement on Wednesday night, condemned the recent offensive of the Congrès national pour la défense du peuple (CNDP) in the eastern DRC, and demanded its immediate end.

In the statement read by Security Council President, Ambassador Zhang Yesui of China, the Council also welcomed the announcement of a ceasefire by the group’s leader, Laurent Nkunda.

The Council called on the U.N. mission in the country (MONUC) to take robust actions to protect civilians at risk and to deter any attempt to threaten the political process by any armed group.

Expressing concern at reports of heavy weapons fire across the border between the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Rwanda, the Council also called on the authorities in both countries to take concrete steps to defuse tensions and restore stability in the region, and called on all regional governments to cease all support to armed groups.

In regard to beefing up the MONUC force, the Council said it would ”expeditiously study” the request of the Secretariat in view of developments on the ground.

Rights groups say it is clear that more U.N. peacekeeping troops must be quickly sent to the region.

”We’re calling for the United Nations Security Council to take immediate and urgent steps to make sure that MONUC…is reinforced and provided with the military hardware in order to enable it to discharge its mandate of protecting civilians in eastern DRC,” Tawanda Hondora, deputy director of Amnesty International’s Africa programme, told Voice of America news.

”There are countries obviously that provide both moral and material support to some of these armed groups operating in eastern DRC. They need to be leaned upon to stop these attacks. They’re killing civilians, women and children. And if not checked, we will see a situation where neighbouring countries also begin to be destabilised.”

The DRC government has accused Rwanda of supporting the CNDP, while Rwanda accuses the DRC army of siding with the Rwandan Hutu armed group, the FDLR.

”We cannot wait to see another situation develop in eastern DRC, which is similar to the one witnessed between 1998 and 2002, where more than three million people died. It has to be stopped,” Hondora said.

The United Nations has less than 6,000 of its 17,000-strong DRC peacekeeping mission in the east, because of unrest in other provinces. In a video-link conference on Tuesday, Alan Doss, special representative of the secretary-general in DRC, said the force was badly overstretched and urgently needed reinforcement.

Earlier this month, Doss asked the Security Council for more peacekeepers, air support and other equipment. The Council has not yet responded to his request.

MONUC said on Wednesday rebels loyal to General Laurent Nkunda had fired five rockets on a U.N. convoy assigned to protect civilians on a road near Goma on Tuesday. The U.N. Mission emphasised that it will continue to intervene to protect civilians and urban centres across North Kivu.

DRC’s 1998-2003 war and an ongoing humanitarian crisis have killed more than five million people. With 17,000 troops deployed, MONUC is currently the U.N.’s biggest mission.

RIGHTS-SUDAN: New Trials Could Condemn more to Death

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Thursday, October 30, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

Blake Evans-Pritchard

KHARTOUM, Oct 30 (IPS) – The number of people sentenced to death for their alleged role in the rebel attacks on Khartoum last May could rise if the government carries through its plans to set up more special anti-terrorism courts, according to human rights lawyers.

So far, 50 people have been condemned to death for laying siege to the nation’s capital on May 10. The attack was led by one of Darfur’s most prominent rebel groups, the Justice and Equity Movement (JEM).

Twenty more alleged rebels also faced death penalty trials in the next weeks ”if the government is allowed to establish more anti-terrorism courts”, Kamel Jazouri, a lawyer on the defence team, told IPS.

The special courts were set up for these trials for the first time under the country’s Anti-Terrorism Law. This was adopted after the September 11, 2001 attacks on the U.S.
[Read more...]

POLITICS-ZIMBABWE: Women Demand Movement On Talks

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Wednesday, October 29, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

Ephraim Nsingo

HARARE, Oct 28 (IPS) – Over 300 women gathered outside the Rainbow Towers Hotel in Harare on the morning of Oct. 27, dressed mostly in black and white. They were there to protest the prolonged impasse over the allocation of Cabinet ministries among Zimbabwe’s rival parties.

As members of the Women’s Coalition of Zimbabwe (WCoZ) and the Feminist Political Education Project (FePEP) were trying to organise the demonstration, armed riot police pounced, and the women fled in different directions.

When calm was restored, 47 women had been arrested, while 11 had been injured.

”I do not see any reason why women who wanted to come into the venue should be stopped,” said Theresa Mugadza, one of the FePEP coordinators. Mugadza said the attack was confirmation of ”what we have always been saying, that these talks are being shrouded in secrecy.”
[Read more...]

EAST AFRICA: Trade Opportunities Turn Out To Be Death Traps

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Tuesday, October 28, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

Wambi Michael

KAMPALA, Oct 28 (IPS) – New trade opportunities after 20 years of fighting in Southern Sudan have turned out to be death traps for traders because of violence and physical intimidation by the military and civilians alike.

More than 100 trucks and buses from Uganda pass daily through the border at Nimule to Southern Sudan, carrying foodstuffs, construction materials, groceries and beverages from Uganda and Kenya.

The trade has largely been profitable since the Sudanese civil war ended in 2005 but traders are now threatening to pull out of Sudan, complaining about extreme violence, intimidation from the military and civilians and unfair ‘‘duties”.

Some female traders have allegedly been raped while others have lost their lives.
[Read more...]

AFRICA: Financial Crisis May Increase Pressure for Debt Repayment

Global Geopolitics Net Sites – Global Analyst Online / IPS
Saturday, October 25, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

Stanley Kwenda*

MANZINI (Swaziland), Oct 25 (IPS) – The collapse of the financial markets may force the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) to come down hard on African countries to repay their debts because the huge rescue packages for collapsing banks will need to be recuperated.

This is the view of Munyaradzi Gwisai of the International Socialist Organisation (ISO) of Zimbabwe. He spoke at the recently held seventh Southern Africa Social Forum in Manzini, Swaziland. The ISO is concerned with justice and liberation and working towards a ‘‘future socialist society”.

The demand for repayment ‘‘will result in further cuts on education, health and social services budgets, which will result in severe and savage cuts on the standards of living of the people in Africa and will leave the attainment of the United Nations’ Millennium Development Goals in danger,” said
Gwisai.
[Read more...]

SOUTHERN AFRICA: More Debt But Still No Development

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Saturday, October 25, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

Stanley Kwenda*

MANZINI (Swaziland), Oct 25 (IPS) – Shupikai Machinya, a Zimbabwean cross-border trader who attended the recent Southern Africa Social Forum in Manzini, Swaziland, is one of the many delegates who wanted to understand just how a country ends up in debt.

Machinya frequently travels to South Africa where she acquires basic goods for resale in Zimbabwe. In Zimbabwe basic commodities such as salt, sugar, rice, cooking oil, bathing soap and maize-meal are rarities as a result of the devastating economic problems that the country is facing.

Although she belongs to the fledging Cross-Border Traders Association of Zimbabwe, debt and development remain distant issues for her. ‘‘I only know that debt is money borrowed by the government from outside but how it’s used and for what reason nobody knows,” Machinya told IPS.

‘‘We have heard that our government has borrowed lots of money since independence to build roads but no new roads were built after 1980 (the year Zimbabwe achieved independence). They even lied that they wanted to make the road from Harare to Beitbridge dual carriage as nothing has happened.” Beitbridge is a border post between Zimbabwe and South Africa.

The just ended social forum meeting in Manzini discussed debt among Southern African countries and how it can be effectively managed for the benefit of communities.

The three-day meeting, attended by several civil society organisations from the Southern African Development Community (SADC) region, resolved to initiate debt audits to force governments to account for monies borrowed.

But why the fuss about debt?

‘‘The problem of debt is central, it’s a social problem. The United Nations Development Programme estimates that poor countries pay four times more than they borrow, yet they ought to be spending more on health and education,” argued Dakarayi Matanga, executive director at the Zimbabwe Coalition on Debt and Development (ZIMCODD).

ZIMCODD is a civil society organisation interested in developing Zimbabwean people’s capacity to redress the debt burden and unjust trade practices and building and promoting alternatives to the neoliberal economic and social agenda.

Matanga regards debt audits as necessary to understand how debts are incurred and repaid and whether citizens are involved in the whole process of incurring them. Matanga urged SADC countries to initiate debt audits, saying regional countries have a common history of debt and how it affects citizens.

He gave a comprehensive synopsis of the different kinds of debt that countries accrue. He said debt is a situation where a person, country or organisation owes some money or possessions to another person, country or organisation.

He said there are several kinds of debts. Bilateral debt is owed by one government to another. Commercial debt is to private sector creditors and commercial banks. Domestic debt is owed to creditors resident in the same country and is denominated in local currency. External debt is owed to foreign creditors and denominated in foreign currency.

Multilateral debt is owed to a consortium of lenders, like the World Bank or regional development banks such as the African Development Bank. Official debt, he said, is owed to public sector lenders. Publically guaranteed debt originates from loans made to state-owned enterprises
or private companies where the payment is guaranteed by the government of the debtor country.

‘‘We should be concerned about the issue of a country’s indebtedness because debt is an obstacle to human development. Debt results in the use of scarce resources for servicing debt instead of investing in people’s wellbeing,” said Matanga.

According to ZIMCODD, Zimbabwe is one of the countries with a high and unsustainable level of indebtedness. Zimbabwe’s total external debt stood at 4,9 billion dollars in 2007, an amount as big as the country’s gross domestic product (GDP).

Matanga further stressed that for ordinary citizens like Machinya to benefit from debt, a host of things have to be put in place. He recommended that SADC civil society organisations keep an eye on government borrowing; institute legal reforms through advocacy to parliaments to force governments to be accountable to citizens; and launch mass public education on debt issues.

*This is the first of two articles. Follow the link below to read the second.

KENYA: Biofuels Boom and Bust

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Friday, October 24, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

John David Bwakali

NAIROBI, Oct 24 (IPS) – The Kenyan government has hailed bio-diesel as an innovation that combines green politics with poverty reduction. But recent drops in biofuel prices have caused concern about the sustainability of alternative fuel production.

Rural farmers who have invested all their savings into growing oil seeds now fear they have opted for the wrong venture.

Over the last few years, the Kenyan government, NGOs and industry have pushed the production of bio-diesel — which is environmentally sustainable because it emits fewer toxic air pollutants and greenhouse gasses than petroleum-based fuels — and many small-scale farmers have placed their hopes into oil seeds as a new avenue to earn money. Initially, biofuel projects seemed to be a success, with farmers more than doubling their usual income.

In Ngurumani, a small town in Kenya’s Rift Valley, for example, farmers started to sell the seeds of the jatropha tree for bio-diesel production, which had an immediate, positive impact on reducing poverty and hunger in the region. Farmers who previously used to plant food crops for household consumption only, started selling seeds for as much as $10 per kilo.

Esther Siteyia, a 28-year-old Maasai from Ngurumani, told IPS she bought and sold over five tonnes of the seeds during the last twelve months. ”For the first ten months that I sold Jatropha seeds, my income tripled. I would buy seeds from farmers and sell them to the highest bidder at a handsome profit,” she says. Small-scale farmers who sold the seeds to her also made good profits, increasing their income to more than $1 a day.

Originally from Central America, the drought-resistant jatropha tree has been growing in Ngurumani for decades. Yet, until recently, the Maasai, who traditionally use jatropha trees for fencing of homesteads, marking graves or treating cuts, were unaware that the black seeds of the trees were in fact valuable sources of biofuel.

In another town in Central Kenya, Naromoru, a collaboration between NGO Help Self Help, the Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology in Nairobi and Dutch bio-diesel manufacturer Solarix launched Kenya Eco-Energy, a project that encourages rural farmers to use two other types of seeds, castor and croton, for environmentally friendly bio-diesel production.

Small-scale farmers earned $0.15 per kilogramme of castor or croton seeds. ”Every day, I now make about 200 shillings ($2.5) from the seeds,’ says Ann Njeri, a housewife and mother of three who lives on a small farm outside Naromoru.

Prices dropped

However, the farmers’ luck ran out in April when biofuel prices suddenly plummeted from an average of $10 per kilo to less than $0.5 per kilo. Biofuel research companies, producers and NGOs supporting the production of environmentally friendly diesel had created an artificially high demand for the seeds, which resulted a high pricing structure that could not be maintained in an open market in the long-term.

In addition, the development of regulatory policy frameworks and local infrastructure needed to manufacture bio-diesel took longer than expected. As a result, Kenya has only few biofuel processing plants that struggle to keep up production with seed supply, and many rural farmers cannot afford the costs of transporting their seeds to the nearest factory.

Siteyia’s storeroom in Ngurumani, for example, is now filled to the brim with Jatropha, but she has no buyers for her seeds. The Kenya Eco-Energy project, to which she initially sold the seeds, has run out of capacity, and the nearest oil seed processing plant in Central Kenya is more than 200 kilometres from her village, too far for her to transport the seeds herself.

Although the production of biofuels creates environmental sustainability, farmers will not be able to continue investing in them if they don’t have a market to sell their produce. Numerous Kenyan farmers who have put their little savings into the planting of oil seed producing trees have now lost their initial investments.

Linet Kanini, a small-scale farmer from Tala in eastern Kenya, has found herself to be financially worse off now than before investing into oil seeds. More than a year after planting Jatropha on her five-acre farm, she harvested a few kilos of seeds — far less than she expected — and has no customers. She says she regrets deciding to plant the oil crop: ”Although I have harvested a few kilos, I have nowhere to sell them.”
Lack of infrastructure

Yet, energy experts remain optimistic, predicting the demand for biofuels to increase in the near future. According to the International Energy Outlook of 2007, global oil consumption is projected to increase by about 36% by 2030. In Africa, oil consumption is projected to double in that time.

Already, global bio-diesel production is on the increase, growing from one billion litres in 2000 to six billion litres in 2006. If this trend continues, oil seed farmers may reap substantial profits within the next few years.

Farmers now set their hopes into the Kenyan energy ministry that promised to support bio-diesel production as a poverty reduction strategy. It recently passed policies to encourage the building of bio-diesel refineries in rural areas and said it expects the country’s bio-diesel industry to increase household income levels by 30% by 2012.

John Kioli, director of Nairobi-based NGO Green Africa Foundation, agrees that more money needs to be invested into small-scale biofuel production to turn around the downward trend in pricing. ”For profitable and sustainable markets to be realised, local communities need their own processing plants that absorb locally available seeds. The guiding principle should be to use local raw material for local production and for local consumption,” he explained.

Biodiesel is not only supported by governments for poverty alleviation and environmental reasons, it is also cheaper than regular diesel.

At a filling station in Naromoru, a long line of motorists cue to fill their vehicles with bio-diesel. At $1.1 per litre, bio-diesel is ten cents cheaper than ordinary petrol, a price difference that accumulates to substantial savings for drivers.

”Every day, I cover 300 kilometres with my public minibus. I am now saving about $90 every month because of using bio-diesel,” minibus driver Maina Kamau told IPS.

DEVELOPMENT-CAMEROON: Sweet Deal For Bee-Keepers

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Thursday, October 23, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

Tamfu Hanson

GAROUA, Oct 23 (IPS) – Paul Mboui’s family will soon move into the attractive new bungalow he is building. Then he will rent out his present compound as a warehouse to Guiding Hope, the honey trading company that has made him prosperous.

”I have come to realise that one can make it even in the village depending on hard work, honesty and dedication,” says Mboui, 42. Mboui is the epitome of success in Ngaoundal, home to one of Cameroon’s oldest military training camps, about 560 kilometres from the capital, Yaoundé. Mboui is field operations manager for Guiding Hope, a company formed to improve income for bee-keepers in the area around Ngaoundal.

Guiding Hope’s shareholders include Mboui, who coordinates purchasing and processing of honey and wax, Managing Director Michael Njikeu and Production Manager Herman Tcamba, responsible for processing honey for the national market. Verina Ingram oversees environmental policy and international relations, while Yves Soukontua is in charge of research and development. Coordinating client relations is the sixth and final shareholder, Rebecca Howard, indisputably the driving force behind Guiding Hope.

Five years ago, Howard was an undergraduate student of anthropology interning with a network of community-based NGOs, one of which took her along to meet the bee-keepers in the Adamawa area of northwestern Cameroon. ”I developed an interest in traditional methods of bee-keeping and the role it plays in the local economy and immediately realised the need for a more reliable market,” recounts Howard.

Back in Britain, she linked up with Tropical Forest Products, a company dealing in tropical products and buying honey from Zambia, and proposed the idea of importing good quality honey from Cameroon.

As a volunteer development coordinator for the company, Howard gained a wealth of experience about honey quality, and the challenges of exporting it to the European market. She traveled to Uganda and Rwanda to learn more about honey production in the African context while maintaining her Cameroon connections.

Fair trade for traditional bee-keepers

Three years ago, Howard returned to Cameroon create Guiding Hope whose objective is to develop profitable, environmentally and socially responsible trade of high quality, fair-trade organic honey and other bee products for the African and European markets. Working closely with about 10,000 bee keepers, Guiding Hope is promoting and helping to refine traditional apiculture methods; introducing new, high-value wax products such as soap and candles; and promoting export.

Products include the naturally smoky flavoured liquid from beehives in the rich flowering Adamawa forest savanna. There is also a creamy, naturally granulated white honey from the Kilum-Ijum forest — one of the last remnants of cloud forest rich in biodiversity. Guiding Hope also produces hand-made soaps, candles and other beeswax-derived products.

Last year Guiding Hope sold two million litres of honey worth an estimated at $400,000 to Chad, Nigeria and Gabon as well as within Cameroon. Wax brought in approximately $240,000.

If all goes well, five containers of honey and five more of wax will be exported to the European market by June 2009. ”But if we don’t make a quick breakthrough in Europe, we may be turning to South Africa and other places,” says Howard.

The export of honey to the European Union is hanging in the balance as Guiding Hope is still working with the government and partners on setting up a honey monitoring residue system.

”We are working towards organic certification with a strict system of control and traceability from bee farmers to the bottle to ensure purity, quality and consumer confidence,” says Guiding Hope director Njikeu.

”With the assistance and guidance of Guiding Hope, we are adding more value to our products. I learned bee keeping from my dad, but I am doing better than he was in his days. I pay school fees for my three junior brothers and my own daughter,” declares Aminatou Hamoa, a 25 year old single mother who is in the honey business.

A local administrative official of the ministry of agriculture, Joseph Samaki, is quick to add that the project will tremendously improve the welfare of the population. ”It will wipe the sweat of bee keepers who hitherto received very little for their efforts,” he stresses.

Guiding Hope was one of winners of the 2008 awards for innovative projects for sustainable development awarded by the SEED Initiative. SEED — ”Supporting Entrepreneurs for Sustainable Development” — is a global network that supports progress on Millennium Development Goals in line with the principles outlined at the World Summit on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg in 2002.