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Archive for July 4th, 2009

Sanctions to be put in place against the Eritrean government

Posted by African Press International on July 4, 2009

Eritrea is siding with those who want to topple the transistion government of Somalia. On the other side, the Ethiopians support the Mogadishu government. Now the AU wants to put sanctions to stop the Eritreans behaviour. (API)

African leaders seek sanctions on Eritrea

SIRTE, Libya (Reuters)

African leaders asked the United Nations on Friday to impose sanctions on Eritrea, saying it was aiding the Islamist rebels fighting government forces in nearby Somalia.

But the African Union, at a summit in Libya, did not adopt a proposed resolution to give African Union peacekeepers in Somalia a mandate to do more than just defend themselves from rebel attacks.

In the third day of heavy fighting in the north of Somalia’s capital, Mogadishu, at least 16 people were killed and 30 were wounded, according to hospital officials, taking the death toll since Wednesday to more than 50.

The United Nations, Somalia’s government and other groups accuse Eritrea of sending weapons and providing training for the insurgents. Eritrean officials deny that.

The 53-member African Union, meeting in the Libyan city of Sirte, adopted a resolution condemning insurgent attacks in Somalia and backing the government.

The resolution said the Union “issues an appeal to the United Nations Security Council … to impose sanctions on all outside actors, either in the region or beyond, in particular Eritrea, which provide support to armed groups.”

It also asked the UN to impose a sea blockade and no-fly zone to stop weapons and other supplies reaching the rebels.

Western nations and Somalia’s neighbours worry that if the rebels, who have links to al Qaeda, succeed in toppling the government, the Horn of Africa nation will become a safe haven for Islamist militant training camps.

Peacekeeping mandate

A senior AU official said earlier on Friday the summit would consider a draft resolution beefing up the peacekeepers mandate but this was absent from the final resolution. Delegates did not explain why the reference was removed.

At the moment, the 4,300 AU peacekeepers from Uganda and Burundi are largely confined to their bases and protect key sites such as the presidential palace, airport and seaport.

The Somali government has been pushing for the AMISOM peacekeeping force to have a mandate which allows it to help government forces take on the rebels.

The Al Shabaab insurgent group warned on Friday that would make the situation worse.

“If the mandate of African peacekeepers in Somalia now changes into a peace-making mission it will only cause fighting to continue,” spokesman Sheikh Ali Mohamud Raage said.

The African Union plan has always been to send 8,000 soldiers but pledges of more troops for the AMISOM force have so far failed to result in more boots on the ground.

Somali President Sheikh Sharif Ahmed met the U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs, Johnnie Carson, on Friday at the summit in Libya.

“Carson again confirmed to President Sharif that full U.S support is ready — training security forces, logistical and financial assistance — to stop these extremists taking over Somalia and having a base to destabilise the world,” an official with the Somali president told Reuters.

Source.nation.ke

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Governor Sarah Palin has decided to resign

Posted by African Press International on July 4, 2009

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (Reuters)

Alaska Governor Sarah Palin, the Republican Party’s vice presidential candidate in 2008, said on Friday she will resign this month, an unexpected move that could signal a run for higher office.

Palin took no questions after a brief news conference in her hometown of Wasilla, Alaska, members of her state Cabinet by her side. She gave no indication of her future plans.

“I’m not seeking re-election” in 2010, Palin said, adding she would transfer authority to Lieutenant Governor Sean Parnell on July 26.

Palin, Arizona Sen. John McCain’s surprise pick as his running-mate in the 2008 presidential race, rallied the party’s conservative base but alienated others who believed she did not have the experience to be vice president.

She has been mentioned as one of the top three Republicans who could vie for the party’s presidential nomination in 2012. Those mentioned most often include Mississippi Governor Haley Barbour and former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney.

“We are not retreating, we are advancing in a different direction,” Palin said. “We know we can effect positive change outside government at this moment in time.”

Palin, 45, said her decision came after much “prayer and consideration.” She said she did not want to waste time on “political blood sport” and cited public criticism of her actions and her family since the 2008 campaign.

“You are naive if you don’t see a full-court press right now on the national level picking apart a good point guard,” Palin said, using a basketball analogy.

“She closed a chapter in Alaska politics on a very weird and bizarre note,” said former Alaska Governor Tony Knowles, a Democrat who served two terms, in a telephone interview.

“Friends or foes alike would have never thought that she would be a quitter, but that’s what she did today.”

What lies ahead

The announcement at the beginning of a three-day holiday weekend, with little Washington news expected, gave Palin wide access to the airwaves and could make for a strong start at gaining public attention.

Republican strategist Sophia Nelson said in the online publication Huffington Post that Palin vowing to work for change “from outside government” was “code for ‘I’m running for president.’”

Other analysts wondered if it was a smart political move.

Andrew Halcro, a Republican who ran against Palin in 2006, said he did not think resigning would help her chances.

“If she was trying to transition to the national stage, there was a much better way to do it,” he said.

Princeton University professor Julian Zelizer said Palin’s future in public life depends on the reason she stepped down.

“If there is any evidence that the decision was a result of political problems or looming scandals, she is done,” he said.

“The Republican Party already feels to be in a moment of crisis,” after losing the presidency and control of Congress to the Democrats. He noted that in 2008 “she revealed many weaknesses … limited policy knowledge, association with fringe groups, weak performances on television and more.”

Palin faced criticism and ridicule from Republicans and Democrats alike after embarrassing television interviews that raised questions about her knowledge and experience.

During the campaign, the mother of five revealed her unmarried 18-year-old daughter, Bristol, was pregnant but planned to marry the baby’s father. The couple split in March.

Palin was cleared of wrongdoing in an abuse-of-power probe into the firing of Alaska’s public safety commissioner.

In May, Palin signed a book deal to tell her own story, for an undisclosed sum, with News Corp’s HarperCollins.

Palin established herself as a party outsider by promoting a natural gas pipeline project opposed by Alaska Governor Frank Murkowski. She ran against the governor in 2006, defeated him in the primary, and then won the general election.

The project to ship abundant North Slope gas reserves to U.S. markets has been dimmed by the economic recession and a sharp dip in natural gas prices.

source.nation.ke

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Malnourished children in Kanem, western Chad need proper attention

Posted by African Press International on July 4, 2009

GLOBAL: “Hunger season” neglected

Photo: Celeste Hicks/IRIN
Malnourished child with her mother in Kanem, western Chad (file photo)

DAKAR,  – – Most of the world’s 600 million hungry and under-nourished people suffer seasonal hunger rather than effects of conflict or natural disasters, but donors and governments often treat recurring nutritional problems as one-off emergencies and this weakens their response actions.

“If you look at Ethiopia, every year [since the 1990s] it has had a humanitarian food aid appeal, and more than four million people have received emergency assistance at roughly the same time each year,” Institute of Development Studies research fellow Stephen Devereux told IRIN. “Obviously the crisis is perceived as being seasonal, but it is categorized as an emergency each year.”

The dilemma is the subject of a new book, Seasonal Hunger – Fighting Cycles of Quiet Starvation Among the World’s Rural Poor, by Devereux, Bapu Vaitla of Tufts University and Samuel Hauenstein Swan of NGO Action Against Hunger.

Millions of rural households in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia are currently in the agricultural lean season.

With the international focus on chronic poverty-related hunger or acute hunger, cyclical hunger often falls through the gap, Devereux said. “Anti-poverty programmes deal with chronic hunger and poverty and emergency programmes deal with short-term crises but no one is focusing on routine hunger. We need to draw attention to this.”

The current aid approach does not allow proven solutions to be implemented on a large-enough scale to make a difference, he said.

Such proven methods include community-based interventions with ready-to-use foods, cash transfers and other measures to boost social safety nets, and nutritional health promotion programmes for pre-school-age children.

''… A minimum essential package against seasonal hunger would cost just 0.1 percent of global domestic product – or roughly 10 US cents per US citizen per year… ''

Scaling up such efforts to create a “minimum essential” package against seasonal hunger would cost just 0.1 percent of global domestic product – or roughly 10 US cents per US citizen per year, the authors say.

When communities provide ready-to-use foods to the 80 percent of malnourished children who are not suffering additional illnesses, it helps families avoid costly hospitalization and is just as effective, schemes in Malawi, Ethiopia and Sudan have shown.

Another approach that has been successful is focusing on health and nutrition in the first years of a child’s life and during pregnancy by promoting breastfeeding and giving supplementary food to pregnant women, lactating mothers and pre-school children.

With 70 percent of the world’s hungry being the families of landless rural labourers or smallholder farmers, social safety nets such as employment schemes and cash transfers also play a vital role in reducing cyclical hunger, the authors say.

Some governments are tackling cyclical under-nutrition, Devereux said. The Ethiopian government runs a countrywide cash-transfer programmed aimed at phasing beneficiaries out within a few years, while the Indian government guarantees every vulnerable rural household 100 days paid employment per year. “They are taking it seriously as a long-term issue.”

Donors such as the UK Department for International Development are taking social protection more seriously, including addressing cyclical hunger, though they do not frame this as seasonal assistance, according to Devereux.

But scaling up community-based nutrition programmes is difficult, given the level of monitoring and training they require, Devereux told IRIN. Rather than rolling out national schemes, he recommends that governments, NGOs and UN agencies replicate existing programmes district by district, to create what he calls “patchwork coverage”.

Part of the reason cyclical hunger was neglected in the 1980s and 1990s came down to the Washington consensus that stressed less government intervention in agriculture and food safety nets, according to Devereux. With food prices still high, an international financial crisis and a renewed focus on agricultural growth, now is the right time to refocus international policy toward cyclical hunger, he said.

Seasonal hunger support is the focus of an 8 July conference at the Institute of Development Studies – the first time global experts convene to discuss this theme in 30 years.

aj/np
source.www.irinnews.org

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African leaders rejects the international court

Posted by African Press International on July 4, 2009

The Meeting of African Heads of State and Government in  Libya ended on Friday after bitter wrangles.

According to the Associated Press, the wrangling led the leaders to agree ” to denounce the International Criminal Court and refuse to extradite Sudan’s President Omar al-Bashir, who has been indicted for crimes against humanity in Darfur.”

AU has reached and agreement. AU member state  leaders will not cooperate with the ICC and that will mean all AU member states will not arrest The Sudanese President and hand him over to The Hague for trial.

Now that the AU has come out strongly to castigate ICC, Sudan has welcomed the move as other African leaders say the AU wanted to teach the West a lesson by telling them on their face that they have to stop imposing things on Africa.

According to  the Associated Press “The 13th AU summit of heads of state, which concluded Friday in Sirte, Libya, also “expresses its preoccupation about the behavior of the ICC prosecutor” Luis Moreno Ocampo, whom African officials describe as too hard on al-Bashir.”

It now remains to be seen if Mr Bashir (the Sudanese President) will dare travel to AU member states without fear of arrest.

Written by Chief Editor Korir /API

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