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Archive for March 25th, 2009

Tanzania: We can’t vote out albino killings by secret ballot

Posted by African Press International on March 25, 2009

Dar es Salaam (Tanzania) – According to government statistics, 46 albinos were murdered in Tanzania between June 2007 and January.

In the same vein, 2,869 people were murdered during 2003-2008 on suspicion that they were witches.

The albino killings are particularly brutal — with, for instance, the victims painfully bleeding to death after their body parts are hacked off. The objective is to obtain organs like hair, skin, and inner vitals. These fetch inordinately high returns for both the murderers — up to Tsh30 million ($28,600) apiece — and local “witchdoctors.”

The latter apparently use the parts to concoct potions for which their clients pay a small fortune in return for a supposedly inordinate success: Greater fortunes in business or career, promotion workplaces, marital happiness, fertility, etc.

Some perpetrators are desperate enough to take up grave-robbing of body parts from already dead and buried albinos.

Such albino troubles are not new, or unique to Tanzania. For instance, albino women have been raped in Zimbabwe in the belief that this cures HIV/Aids.
Pregnant women refuse to shake hands with albinos — and point them out in admonishing unruly children.

Indeed, albinos are ostracised by society — routinely shunned, positively discriminated against. But the rate and brutality with which albino killings have picked up in Tanzania has fixed attention on the matter.

The government railed against it, with Premier Mizengo Pinda shedding tears at their plight in Parliament — having suggested as a remedy Biblical eye-for-eye, tooth-for-tooth reprisals against perpetrators caught in the act.

Addressing the press in Dar es Salaam on February 27, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon called for “concerted efforts to end the brutality.”

On March 5, the premier launched a secret poll in which Tanzanians will name those they associate with albino killings. Ballots will also be cast for “known” witchdoctors, necromancers, grave-robbers, drug peddlers and habitual criminals-on-the-loose.

However, within a week of the launching, two albino atrocities were reported in northwestern Tanzania — suggesting that tackling the malady through the ballot box is no remedy.

There, indeed, isn’t much difference between this type of justice administration and the mob justice routinely meted out to street muggers and pickpockets!

Justice wrapped in a ballot paper has no basis in law — especially in a country which doesn’t recognise black magic as a reality. Besides, the exercise is draining public funds that would have been better used in enhancing albino welfare.

But has Tanzania come to a point where it is compelled to dispense justice through arbitrary balloting, convicting perceived or trumped-up suspects on a balance of (whimsical individual) probability?

If yes, then it says much about what’s wrong with the country’s regular law enforcement organs in particular, and the justice system in general.

Reportedly, hundreds of suspects of albino killings and maiming have been arrested. Some police and other local officials are also reported to have covered up for suspects, thereby going against the course and cause of justice.

Yet, no salutary action has been taken to deter this. The reason? Rampant, institutionalised corruption, of course.

Karl Lyimo is a freelance journalist based in Dar. Email: israellyimo@yahoo.com

source.The East African (Nairobi), by Karl Lyimo *

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Rwanda: 34 percent succumb to aids and related illnesses

Posted by African Press International on March 25, 2009

Kigali (Rwanda) – 34 percent of deaths of Rwandans above the age of five are caused by HIV/AIDS and other related illnesses like Tuberculosis (TB) or prolonged Malaria each year.

The revelations were made yesterday by the Minister of Health, Dr Richard Sezibera, ahead of the Health Week.

He disclosed that during the coming week, special emphasis will be made on the immunization of children and awareness creation around the parent’s collective role of upholding health status among families.

“Women should bring their children for medical treatment during this week and their husbands must also play a helping role. Bringing up children is a collective responsibility by both parents,” Sezibera said.

“As much as we try to streamline our health services, individuals should desist from bad practices like spitting or coughing irresponsibly because this contributes to the spread of disease,” he said.

The Ministry of Health will also build more maternity wards and boost human resource in health centres as well as empower health mobilizers at the community level, he announced.

In a bid to bring health services closer to the population, the ministry has also unveiled plans to have at least three ambulances in each district to ease emergencies.

Hon. Liberata Kayitesi, a member of the Parliamentary Committee on Public Welfare, underscored the importance of awareness campaigns despite the shortcomings that have hampered the process.

“However, awareness alone is not enough practical solutions to the health problem like periodically carrying out tests or going for medical checkups in case of a suspected infection are necessary,” Kayitesi said.

During this week, special emphasis will be on the fight against TB and other HIV related infections.

 

source.The New Times /Rwanda)

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The market is not a deity and we are not at its mercy

Posted by African Press International on March 25, 2009

Faith Manuel interviews Allan Boesak, former president of the World Alliance of Reformed Churches and anti-apartheid cleric
Cape Town (South Africa) – Churches from South Africa and Germany are critically interrogating neoliberal globalisation in a process that they want to take up to United Nations level and also to their congregations to build responsibility among people for what is happening in their world.

In 2004 the World Alliance of Reformed Churches (WARC) adopted the Accra Confession, a stringent critique of the neoliberal capitalist world order. The planet and human society are regarded as in a crisis because of neoliberal beliefs that unrestrained competition, consumerism and the unlimited economic growth and accumulation of wealth are the best for the whole world.

These beliefs further are, according to the Accra Confession, that the ownership of private property has no social obligation; and that capital speculation, liberalisation and deregulation of the market, privatisation of public utilities and national resources, unrestricted access for foreign investments and imports, lower taxes and the unrestricted movement of capital will achieve wealth for all.

Moreover, neoliberalism is attacked for suggesting that social obligations, protection of the poor and the weak, trade unions and relationships between people are subordinate to the processes of economic growth and capital accumulation.

The Accra Confession criticised neoliberal globalisation for claim(ing) to be without alternative, demanding an endless flow of sacrifices from the poor and creation. It makes the false promise that it can save the world through the creation of wealth and prosperity, claiming sovereignty over life and demanding total allegiance, which amounts to idolatry.

After the confession was adopted in Accra, the capital of the West African country Ghana, tensions emerged among churches about the confession. As a way of developing a mutual understanding on these issues, South Africa’s Uniting Reformed Church and Germany’s Evangelical Reformed Church are working together on what has become known as the globalisation project. The three-year-project is aimed at seeing how best to popularise understanding of neoliberal globalisation through churches, congregations, church ministers and civil society organisations so that ordinary people can begin to talk about and take responsibility for these issues.

The Accra Confession followed a model adopted by South African black reformed churches. In 1982, they adopted the Belhar Confession which condemned apartheid. At the time, cleric and founder of the anti-apartheid United Democratic Front Dr. Allan Boesak led the process. The globalisation project is headed by Boesak and his German counterpart Johann Weusmann, the deputy president of the Evangelical Reformed Church. They recently held their second joint meeting where academics and civil society representatives presented papers, along with theologians. Faith Manuel spoke to Boesak, who heads the project in his capacity as professor extraordinaire at the Beyers Naud Centre for Public Theology of the University of Stellenbosch in South Africa.

IPS: Is the global economic crisis an affirmation of what the churches warned against back in 2004?

Allan Boesak: The WARC foresaw some of these things in 2004 and warned against it. We spoke about idolatry – this thing of acting as if the market is God; that the market dictates; or how the market will respond, as if the market is some deity and as if we are all at its mercy.

So now we will show that this deity has feet of clay. The effects of the crash of the financial markets in Europe are now clear for everyone to see.
The financial crisis is the direct result of the unfettered desire of global capitalism not to be regulated; the so-called free market, that basic thing that says the market dictates everything. People and their needs don’t count. The market will respond.

The market will do this and the market will do that – this is what the church in 2004 called idolatry. There has almost been enslavement to the demands of capitalism over the last few years.

IPS: Let us talk about the build up to the globalisation project and the ideas behind it.

AB: The WARC remains sensitive to issues of justice and injustice and issues of our responsibility in the world on different levels and different matters. So we began to think of this phenomenon called globalisation driven by global capital.

What do we say about war and peace and the role of the churches – the so-called war on terror? What happens if everybody buys into militarisation? Well, for a country in the third world, it is quite simple. Every single dollar spent on guns means we cannot spend it on health, education, job creation, putting food on the table.

The effects of these things over the last few years have been horrific. There is no other way to describe it. The churches raised their voices to say there are only a few people in the world benefiting from globalisation; a few rich countries in the North. In under-developed countries you have an elite class that’s benefiting but the masses remain poor and are getting poorer. The gap between rich and poor countries has grown and also the gap between rich and poor within poor countries like South Africa.

IPS: What are the issues that you have touched on in your deliberations thus far? Where are you now?

AB: We discussed issues like this bizarre phenomenon that the European Union as a block of Northern, rich, powerful nations come and hold trade negotiations with South Africa as a single country, one-on-one, and they call that lateral. We have put on the table things like the financial markets that used to rule the world and which have, since we begun this project, collapsed. We have spoken about global militarisation, about the impact of globalisation on gender. So, we are halfway there.

The advocates for globalisation say, it is like a tsunami. You cannot stop it. Governments have almost no power. The South African government (for instance) has no power because transnational corporations only have to threaten that it will remove its investments and close down factories. We have discovered that it is not true that national governments have no power. It means that our people in a democracy are not disempowered.

IPS: So what are the alternatives?

AB: The church is beginning to understand that neoliberal capitalism is not what it pretends to be. It is not an unchangeable turn of history that nobody can do anything about. We are beginning to see that, if it is true that we can reclaim our democratic space in our own countries where we live and work, that means we can help our people to understand how to begin to challenge the situation – whether it is through protest, whether it is through education, whether through critical reading of the media, whether it is by coming together as churches.

If I have my way and the project has its way, our final report will not just be delivered to our two churches but it will go to the WARC and all its member churches next year. We also asked (Emeritus) Archbishop Desmond Tutu and he has said, yes, it is a good idea if we hand it over to The Elders, of which he is the chairperson and then, through The Elders, we are hoping to take it to the United Nations. (The Elders is a group of world leaders formed by, among others, Tutu and Nelson Mandela, to provide guidance on global problems.) So we can take it up to a world stage and say this is how these churches responded to challenges of our responsibility as citizens of the world to what is happening in and to our world and to our people in the world.

source. Inter Press Service (IPS)

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