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Archive for July 29th, 2009

Kenya: Interdenominational Church Leaders pleased with President Kibaki’s recent visit to Nyanza

Posted by African Press International on July 29, 2009

As Interdenominational Church Leaders from Nyanza Province we would like to take this early utmost opportunity to laud his Excellency President Mwai Kibaki for his successful and fruitful tour of Nyanza province.

As Members of the Religious Faiths through the Nyanza Council of Church leaders we take quick note of the fact that the tour of the President and the Prime Minister Raila Odinga would go along way in spurring development in Nyanza province.

We would also like to appeal to other members of the Grand Coalition Government to emulate the head of State and the Prime Minister in working together for faster development of the country as a whole.

The tour that lasted three days we believe would go along way in cementing the relationships between the Luos and the Kikuyu and the people of Nyanza and Central provinces respectively.

It is our humble prayer that other communities and all the other forty two tribes in Kenya; will also borrow a leaf from the president and the Prime Minister and work together for the sake of peace and unity of the country.

The fact that Kenya as a nation is bigger than an individual or tribal egos and other vested egocentric interests in not in question; we  therefore appeal to Mps especially cabinet Ministers to preach Unity amongst the various ethnic groups to support initiatives of the two principles

We as Church leaders from this part of the country prayed in Unity for one week prior to the head of state’s visit so that his busy tour could be successful. Let me report that the Church in Nyanza remained united throughout the busy

Schedule and we therefore appeal to the Head of state to reconsider coming to Nyanza again.

Finally it is our humble appeal through the grace of God that the Grand Coalition Government works and remains united until the year 2012 when Kenyans go to the next general elections. To elect the President of their choice peacefully without shedding the blood;. God bless Kenya.


Send in by Bishop Dr. Washington Ogonyo Ngede H.S.C.

Chairman Nyanza Council of Church Leaders.

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PAKISTAN: Alzheimers patients mistreated due to lack of diagnosis, awareness – Patients with dementia need specail attention and care

Posted by African Press International on July 29, 2009



Photo: Kamila Hyat/IRIN
Patients with dementia need specail attention and care, say doctors

LAHORE, – It was a neighbour who suggested to Faisel Khan that his aging father could have Alzheimers disease. Till then, Khan and his family had believed his fathers bizarre behavior, his lack of ability to recognize his own wife or children, his tendency to wander out of the house and get lost in a neighbourhood he had known for decades, his sudden inability to drive and his mood swings were symptoms of mental ill-health.

We had no idea what Alzheimers was, or that it could be linked to physical changes in the brain, Khan told IRIN in Lahore, capital of Pakistans Punjab province. Getting a diagnosis proved no easy matter, with nearly a dozen doctors visited, including general practitioners (GPs), psychiatrists and neurologists, before Alzheimers was identiified.

Professor Shaukat Ali, head of the neurology department at the Jinnah Postgraduate Medical Centre (JPMC) in Karachi, told IRIN: There is no definite diagnostic test for Alzheimers, which is basically a problem of memory loss. Most cases are age-related. An MRI [Magnetic Resonance Imaging]shows general brain atrophy and other changes that can help with a diagnosis. Issues like Vitamin B12 deficiency, hypothyroidism, depression and head injury need to be ruled out.

Ali said Alzheimers was often confused with multiple strokes, which he said were very common in Pakistan.

Though there is no cure for Alzheimers, drugs can slow its progression. Those marketed by multinational companies cost around US$100 a month, putting them beyond the reach of many families. Locally manufactured drugs cost $25-37 a month.


Photo: Kamila Hyat/IRIN
A free daycare centre for people with Alzheimers in Lahore

About 26 million Alzheimers sufferers

Alzheimers accounts for 60 to 70 percent of all cases of dementia (a non-specific set of symptoms for which affected areas of cognition can be memory, attention span, language capability and problem solving) and around 26.6 million people in the world are believed to be living with the disease. Researchers predict global prevalence will quadruple by 2050, as populations age.

The precise number of people with Alzheimers in Pakistan is unknown, but Hussain Jafri, secretary of Lahore-based NGO Alzheimers Pakistan, estimates their number to be about 1 million. He said many of those cases may never be diagnosed.

Jafris own grandfather has suffered Alzheimers since 1993 but it was not detected initially, demonstrating how educated families are also capable of mistreating Alzheimers sufferers when there is no diagnosis. My family members thought my grandfather was deliberately being difficult to attract attention. He would pray again and again, scribble on walls and demand food repeatedly. They stopped giving him food and he lost nearly 40 kilograms, Jafri said.

His organization runs a free daycare centre for people with Alzheimers. Sabiha Shahid, the centres administrator, told IRIN: These patients need constant supervision. This is now very hard in homes, especially as the extended family is breaking up and more and more women work. This centre offers a place where patients can be cared for and offered light physical and mental exercise.

Ali of JPMC said that while the disease is most common among the elderly, with 50 percent of those over 85 affected, it can sometimes strike younger people. Genetics is thought to be responsible in some of these cases.

The progression is faster when younger people are affected, said Frank Schaper, CEO of Alzheimers International in Western Australia, Australias first support group for people with dementia and their carers.

Increase in cases predicted

Jafri said that recent research pointed to a particularly high Alzheimers rate in India and China. The reasons are unknown although some findings suggest lifestyle habits diet, smoking, drinking and so on could play a part in triggering the disease.

There is now evidence this unknown factor could be triggering the disease up to 10 years or so before there is any physical evidence, said Schaper.

Specialists say the number of cases of Alzheimers seems likely to increase in Pakistan as people live longer.

It is important that GPs be made aware of what to look out for. Families usually consult these doctors first and they need to be able to refer patients to specialists so they can receive help, Shahid said. There is still a lack of awareness about the disease, even among medical professionals who offer primary care.

kh/at/ed source.www.irinnews.org

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Raila’s gamble: Saving the Mau Forest

Posted by African Press International on July 29, 2009

Kenyan Prime Minister Raila Odinga says he will risk his career to save Kenyas biggest source of water, the Mau Forest. Photo/FILE

Kenyan Prime Minister Raila Odinga says he will risk his career to save Kenyas biggest source of water, the Mau Forest. Photo/FILE

ByBERNARD NAMUNANEPostedTuesday, July 282009at22:30

Nation: In your own words, why is it important to save Mau Forest?

Mr Odinga: This country has five water towers: the Cherangany, Mt Kenya, the Aberdares, Mt Elgon and of course the Mau. Of these, the Mau is the largest, covering 400,000 hectares and is a source to 25 rivers, a livelihood to large numbers of people, bird life and game life. This is why it is very critical to the national environment and if it is not conserved, the consequences will be far reaching: The rivers will dry, bird and game life destroyed and agriculture adversely affected.

And the impediments to conserving it?

Mr Odinga: There has been a lot of encroachment on the Mau. Previous governments excised portions of land and degazetted them for settlement. There has been an invasion by individuals, wanton destruction of the forest by cutting trees for charcoal burning and timber. Now rivers are drying up, bird life and game life are affected because the wetlands have been invaded. This is the situation as it is and the responsibility of the government is to reverse it and ensure that people who invaded it are outside.

What political risk do you see in the position you have taken?

Mr Odinga: There are people who want to use the Mau for political reasons; they want to use the plight of the people who settled in the Mau for their own selfish political interests by masquerading as the defenders of their rights. Yet in actual sense, the intention is not to defend the people of Mau. It is for political populism to take them to greater political heights.

When I appointed the taskforce, I was very conscious in my mind that people are going to be affected. That is why the taskforce has to look at the number of people to be affected and how best we can conserve the forest. Now we have a report and some of those who are making noise are members of the Cabinet who should raise issues in the Cabinet.

Last week, I met all MPs from the Rift Valley and we unanimously agreed on the recommendations and they made comments which will be taken on board. The resolution of the meeting was to remove people from the Mau and we said all title holders, regardless of how they acquired the title deeds, will be compensated because third party individuals are not to blame. It is the grabbers who were given free land who are to blame. It is only those who have no titles who will leave; there is no compromise on that.

If you allow everybody to be compensated, you open a pandoras box. People will invade the Mau and demand compensation. I must make it clear that people who live in Mau are Kenyans and some are my supporters. There will be no forceful evictions … But there is a price to be paid. The only problem is that people are being incited by irresponsible politicians greedy for power. We will not give in to blackmail.

How do you plan to manage that risk?

Mr Odinga: In politics, if you cannot take risks, you cannot move just like it is in business. It is people who are prepared to take risks who have been able to transform the world. I know this is a risk I am taking but for every dark cloud, there is a silver lining. We cannot allow a few people to turn this country into a desert. It will be irresponsible for us to do so.

You have said some ministers are irresponsible. Which ones are they?

Mr Odinga: I have not talked about ministers, I have talked about leaders. This includes religious leaders, civil society, MPs and leaders of political parties. Members of the Cabinet are enjoined by the collective responsibility to support decisions of the Executive. Every minister has to support government decisions and there are avenues to raise any issues they may have in the Cabinet. The taskforce report will be presented to the Cabinet and they will have an opportunity to raise any issues.

You have scolded ministers for not bringing their concerns to the Cabinet and taking them to the public platform. Isnt this an approach you have taken yourself?

Mr Odinga: We as leaders must act responsibly because we are examples to the public. When we begin to quarrel, condemn or criticise each other, the public increasingly gets anxious. We polarise the country more when we try to propel an ethnic agenda. This country requires a unity of purpose because last year we went through the most difficult times since our independence. We are in the process of healing and we dont want to open old wounds.

When you have in the past disagreed with other leaders you have characterised it as healthy debate and democracy. Dont Rift Valley MPs have the same right?

Mr Odinga: It is true I have talked about the fundamental right to hold different views. We have, for a long time, fought for the freedom of association, speech and assembly. I will be the last person to trample on it. But what I am saying is that I am entitled to disagree with your views. I have never tried to stop leaders from any region exercising their rights. What I have said is that they should stop inciting people. Those I have said should not go public are members of the Cabinet.

How do you suggest to deal with MPs who have land in the Mau?

Mr Odinga: The report will reveal all of them, even those who got plots and proceeded to sell them. Some are holding plots in the names of proxies and have not disclosed them. There is need to disclose interest in the issue of Mau yet some of them have not done so.

Some have constituents settled in the Mau and would want to defend them. Others look at the Mau to gain politically by posing as the defenders of the peoples rights. Rift Valley MPs are being hypocritical because we met last week and agreed. They are introducing tribal politics. As a government, and President Kibaki and I have said so, we will not be intimidated or given conditions on the Mau.

Where will money for compensation of the settlers come from?

According to the report of the taskforce, Sh38 billion is required to deal with the Mau issue. Phase One will not need much money because it will involve people without titles moving out of the forest. There will be money required for the comprehensive surveying of the Mau, to demarcate it and put up beacons.

This will be followed by fencing of the catchment areas to avoid any future encroachment. Money will be required for re-afforestation of the destroyed areas. Then we will need money to protect the wetlands. Money will also be required to resettle those to be moved: Some to buy land elsewhere to resettle people and cash to pay some who will not get land.

The government must make a provision for that. Of course we expect some money from development partners and donors. We also hope to benefit from carbon trading.

source.nation.ke

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