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Archive for April 11th, 2010

TANZANIA: Tackling drug abuse in the islands

Posted by African Press International on April 11, 2010


Photo: Ann Weru/IRIN

A Former drug user at a ‘sober house’ in the Mombasa area of Zanzibar

———–

KWAMCHINA-MOMBASA, – From the outside, there is little that sets the three-bedroom house apart from its neighbours in this suburb of Stone Town. But inside, the building offers a rare lifeline to two dozen young men from across Zanzibar trying to kick their drug habits.

While reliable figures are hard to come by, specialists say there has been a significant increase in the use of hard drugs over the past few decades, and a corresponding increase in HIV prevalence among intravenous drug users (IDUs).

When you stop using drugs you get so scared, you think you are going to die, but here you draw support from others. You ask why is the other person able to stop but not me? Abdulrashid Salum, a recovering addict at the house, told IRIN.

The sober house provides classes on anger management, self esteem and drug relapse signs.

We learn to accept that we are powerless against drugs, that we should avoid former leisure groups and the use of drugs such as alcohol to avoid sliding back into using drugs Salum added. It is a dangerous thing to relapse; many end up in jail or dead. Relapse is a choice not bad luck.

The programmes are based on spiritual principles emphasizing abstinence and behaviour change, founder Suleiman Mauly said. We have no counsellors, doctors or police here it is based on peoples free will to change, he said. The six-month programme costs about 100,000 Tanzanian shillings a month (US$74).

Meditation is a key component. This helps recovering addicts to get rid of resentment. They identify situations which can cause them to relapse, said Mauly. Journal writing is encouraged and shared during peer sessions.

It is from such sessions that we have learned the need to avoid engaging in promiscuous sexual relationships unlike in the past when this would happen when one was high, he added. Most affected are people aged 14-35, with marijuana and heroine most abused.

The sober houses are run by former addicts; rent is covered by the Detroit Recovery Project, while contributions from well-wishers meet other costs. Staff salaries are paid in kind too.

We [former addicts] are experts to some extent, we know how it feels, the withdrawal effects, it helps make sense to the recovering addicts, Mauly said. When you use drugs, you can influence others to use them, similarly when you are clean, you can influence them to recover.

Mauly, 29, who quit using heroin two years ago, recalled his experience: I did not have any idea how powerful addiction was. I would try to limit my use to weekends but it did not work. I even tried substituting it with softer drugs such as alcohol and marijuana, but failed.

Addiction is a powerful disease, some of us were thieves and beggars; we have not come here from offices or mosques, so telling people to observe rules in the house after such a background is difficult.

HIV risk

The Zanzibar Association of Information Against Drug Abuse (ZAIADA) is among organizations linking affected youth to the sober houses through outreach workers and peer educators.

When you ask them [the youth] why they use drugs, they say, because we are jobless, Mbarouk Said Ali, a programme officer with ZAIADA, told IRIN. Stone Town and the northern region, where most tourist resorts are located, are the most affected.

Easy access to drugs and the presence of many visitors to the island have fuelled drug availability, Mbarouk noted.


Photo: Ann Weru/IRIN
A motivational poster at a ‘sober house’ for recovering addicts in the Mombasa area of Zanzibar

Long-term rehabilitation is, however, a problem. We are seeking to build a skills training centre, he said. For now, the most we can do is provide information and referrals for treatment.

With the community, ZAIADA is looking into supplying fresh syringes with a view to reducing HIV infection from syringe sharing by IDUs. The community is okay with this as long as the reason is to prevent HIV, he said.

Zanzibar has a low HIV/AIDS prevalence in the general population at about 0.6 percent. However, HIV is more concentrated in high-risk groups such as drug users, men who have sex with men, and sex workers.

A 2006 government study found a link between substance abuse and HIV/AIDS. It showed that 30 percent of IDUs were HIV positive, compared with 12 percent of non-IDUs. Of the IDUs who shared needles, 28 percent were infected, against 5 percent who did not share needles.

Mohamed Dahoma, director of HIV/AIDS at the Ministry of Health and Social Welfare, told IRIN the number of drug abusers had been growing in Zanzibar. He said easier infiltration, as in most coastal areas, and a demand-driven supply were among the causes.

Surveys in 2005 and 2007 found a high correlation between drug use and high-risk behaviour, he said. The surveys found that substance abusers were more likely to engage in flash-blood and needle sharing, low condom use and transactional sex, he said. Hepatitis B and C and HIV/AIDS were also documented.

The lack of trained personnel and insufficient funding are other challenges, Reychad Abdool, the regional HIV/AIDS adviser, Africa and Middle East, at the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), told IRIN. UNODC is helping to build the capacity of government and civil society organizations to address drug abuse, including injecting drug use and related HIV prevention, and drug dependence treatment, Abdool added.

Meanwhile, the sober houses are helping to make a difference. We are helping some drug users quit. We get a chance to save some lives, Mauly said. However, he added: There are other issues such as the lack of jobs for former addicts. We do not want dry junkies [people who quit drugs but lack vision].

aw/am/mw source.irinnews

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HAITI: Humanitarian best practice – dignity, not just digits

Posted by African Press International on April 11, 2010


Photo: Nancy Palus/IRIN
Haiti is putting international aid agencies to the test

DAKAR, – As established standards of humanitarian response are being put to the test in Haiti, aid experts say safeguarding the dignity of those affected by Januarys earthquake requires agencies to think beyond mere numerical benchmarks.

Most commonly cited standards are enshrined in the Sphere Project, a collaboration of hundreds of NGOs, UN agencies and academics, which produced a handbook for humanitarian responders (currently under revision).

A team of quality and accountability experts is currently in Haiti to monitor adherence to Sphere by agencies providing water, food, shelter and sanitation facilities to around 1.5m people in the wake of what the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) described as the biggest natural disaster in history.

Standards versus indicators

While aid workers sometimes use the words standards and indicators interchangeably, in the context of Sphere they have distinct meanings.

Standards are qualitative. Of latrines, for example, the handbook says: People should have adequate numbers of toilets, sufficiently close to their dwellings, to allow them rapid, safe and acceptable access at all times of the day and night.

Indicators are more concrete and in many cases purely quantitative. A maximum of 20 people use each toilet, for example.

One of the things that concerned me [early on] in Haiti was that a lot of people were throwing up their hands and saying: We cant meet Sphere here, said Anne Lloyd, a consultant providing training and support in accountability and Sphere.

Sphere is more than just numbers. Rather than thinking of Sphere as numbers and saying we cant meet these here, full stop, the approach [must be] looking at Sphere overall and at how we can achieve these and what happens if we cant achieve them.”

Conditions [in Port-au-Prince] are difficult, Lloyd said. There is not a lot of space. We are talking primarily about an urban area which was very overcrowded in the first place and suddenly people are all tumbled out of their houses and on tiny squares in city centres…

When agencies say its so difficult to do Sphere here, I agree. Its incredibly difficult to follow those standards and indicators in that environment. However, dont throw it out completely. Have a look at it What is Sphere about? Sphere is about people having rights to a life with dignity, she said, adding that effective disaster response requires paying attention to Sphere common standards, which cover such aspects as beneficiary participation, monitoring of response actions and aid worker responsibilities.


Photo: Nancy Palus/IRIN
People at a water distribution point in the Port-au-Prince neighbourhood of Cit Soleil

Mdecins Sans Frontires emergency desk officer Mego Terzian cautioned that any kind of benchmarks can be troublesome. The problem with Sphere as with any standards is that they are not adapted to the particular situation in Haiti. And NGOs can find it difficult to move away from these to adapt their responses to the specific needs at hand.

Gauging effectiveness

For some NGOs, such as Oxfam-Great Britain, the local context is integral to aid activities in Haiti and the evaluation in terms of adherence to Sphere.

The overall success of the humanitarian community in ensuring attainment of Sphere should never be judged simply by reference to [generic] quantitative indicators, said Nicholas Brooks, who coordinates the agencys water sanitation and hygiene activities in Haiti.

For example, we measure our WASH [water, sanitation, hygiene] achievements not only through records of litres of water supplied to camps and numbers of latrines, but also through water use surveys and sanitation monitoring, which frequently indicate practices of returning to original homes to access alternative water supplies and more familiar toilet facilities.

The WASH cluster in Haiti has a strategy for gradually improving sanitation, Brooks said, by reducing the ratio of people per latrine from 100:1 for the first three months of the crisis to 50:1 for the next three months, and to 20:1 after a year.

Vivian Paulsen, IFRC communications coordinator in Haiti, said while NGOs are not reaching Spheres water and sanitation indicators due to the scale of the disaster, the situation is improving. In the beginning humanitarian organizations provided five litres of water per person per day. That has now increased to approximately 10 litres.

np/cb source.irinnews

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YEMEN: Food crunch warning for July

Posted by African Press International on April 11, 2010


Photo: Annasofie Flamand/IRIN

WFP will run out of food to distribute at the end of June, affecting the 3.2 million people who normally receive food aid

SANAA, – Aid organizations are warning of a food crisis in Yemen unless international food aid funding is dramatically increased before June 2010.

The World Food Programme (WFP) says it has only received a quarter of its annual budget for 2010 (US$25.6 million out of $103.2 million), and will run out of food for 3.2 million people by the end of June.

According to several aid agencies and NGOs, the 250,000 Yemeni internally displaced persons (IDPs) in the north and 19,000 mainly Somali refugees in the south are at greatest risk.

If WFP stopped its distribution of food, it would be a catastrophic scenario, said Kamel Ben Abdallah, head of Young Child Survival and Development for the UN Childrens Fund (UNICEF) in Yemen. Without regular food distribution, the situation would definitely deteriorate and they [refugees and IDPs] would starve.

Pablo Marco Blanco, head of Mdecins Sans Frontires (MSF), said he was concerned that a halt to food distribution in IDP camps in the north would accelerate the return of displaced families to their places of origin in Saada Governorate, where basic requirements, such as food, health and education, are not yet available.

Most of the population in the [three] al-Mazraq camps [in Hajjah Governorate] are getting their food from WFP distribution, so a potential stop in the distributions could have a strong impact, he said, adding that MSF was ready to scale up its nutritional services in the camps, with some targeted food distribution for the most vulnerable. But we will not be able to cover the WFP gap.

Andrew Moore, country director for Save the Children, said his organization could not take over WFPs food distribution role. We do not have enough funds; our US-funded health and nutrition programme is complementary to WFP, he said.

Because of funding shortfalls, in February WFP reduced food rations to 72 percent of the required daily kilocalories for IDPs and to 90 percent for refugees; in March it rations were up slightly to 85 percent for IDPs, but down to 75 percent for refugees.

Only by borrowing $4.8 million from its Immediate Response Account (a kind of contingency fund for disasters) has it been possible for the agency to distribute food until the end of June.

One third of population food insecure

Apart from IDPs and refugees, one third of Yemens 23 million people are food insecure, and of these, 2.7 million are severely food insecure, according to a recently released WFP report entitled Comprehensive Food Security Survey 2010.

In the cases of severe food insecurity, households spend up to 30 percent of their income on bread alone. They have virtually no balanced diet and often have to skip meals.

''If WFP stopped its distribution of food, it would be a catastrophic scenario. Without regular food distribution, the situation would definitely deteriorate and they [refugees and IDPs] would starve.''

Yemen has one of the highest rates of malnutrition in the world. Some 46 percent of all Yemeni children under five are underweight, the fourth highest rate in the world, according to the UN Development Programmes Human Development Report 2009.

Some 58 percent of children are malnourished, or have stunting, second only to Afghanistan, according to UNICEFs report Tracking Progress on Child and Maternal Nutrition 2009.

Without WFP, we will see more cases of severe malnutrition, said Ben Abdallah of UNICEF. This means UNICEFs burden will increase and we are already unable to cover all the severe cases in Yemen. Without WFP the situation would be dramatic.

Food insecurity has long plagued Yemen, but several factors have exacerbated the situation recently.

Firstly, Yemen has been hard hit by the hike in global food prices over the past two years. Secondly, the countrys oil revenues have been falling. Thirdly, the financial crisis has had an adverse effect on remittances from Yemenis working abroad.

It is a triple F crisis, Giancarlo Cirri, WFP country director in Yemen, said referring to food, fuel and financial.

Other factors are the high population growth rate (one of the highest in the world at 3 percent) and severe water shortages.

asf/ed/cb
source.irinnews
(Paragraph 3 corrected to remove mention of starvation)

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Handing over suspects from Kenya: The president will have to abide by the ICC rules, but what of if he is also wanted?

Posted by African Press International on April 11, 2010

Law binds Kibaki to hand over suspects to ICC

ByMURITHI MUTIGA
PostedSaturday, April 102010at21:00

In Summary

  • INVESTIGATION: The provisions of the Rome Statute force Kenya to cooperate in the conduct of an investigation by the prosecutor or the ICC, in the bringing and determination of proceedings before the ICC and in other measures imposed by the court

President Kibaki will have no alternative but to hand over key allies in his Cabinet suspected of having committed war crimes if Luis Moreno-Ocampo succeeds in securing indictments.

The decision of the pre-trial chamber of the International Criminal Court at The Hague to allow Mr Moreno-Ocampo to take up the Kenya case has triggered debate over whether the President and Prime Minister Raila Odinga will agree to order the arrest of any suspects against whom warrants are issued.

But according to the International Crimes Act which Parliament passed into law in December 2008, the government has no discretion over whether to cooperate with the ICC .

Section 4 (1) of the Act demands that authorities cooperate with the ICC in keeping with the Rome Statute to which Kenya is a signatory.

The law says: The provisions of the Rome Statute . . . shall have the force of law in Kenya in relation to the following matters the making of requests by the ICC to Kenya for assistance and the method of dealing with those requests; the conduct of an investigation by the Prosecutor or the ICC; the bringing and determination of proceedings before the ICC; the enforcement in Kenya of sentences of imprisonment or other measures imposed by the ICC, and any related matters; (and) the making of requests by Kenya to the ICC for assistance and the method of dealing with those requests.

Securing justice

This means one of the last remaining hurdles to securing justice for the victims of the blood-letting that followed the last General Election the failure by the government to arrest suspects has been removed.

Albert Kamunde, the chairman of the International Commission of Jurists (ICJ) Kenya chapter, said authorities must comply with international law.

Since Kenya ratified the Rome Statute and has domesticated the statute, it has an obligation to cooperate. This is what the minister (for Justice Mutula Kilonzo) has been saying, and we believe that is the governments position, he told the Sunday Nation.

ICC officials arrived in the country last week to formally begin investigations that could see senior politicians behind the campaign of violence waged after the disputed election face trial.

At least 1,300 are estimated to have died in the violence. Mr Moreno-Ocampo contends that politicians, prominent business people and community leaders instigated and financed the violence.

War crimes

A 2-1 majority ruling at the ICC pre-trial chamber allowed the chief prosecutor to investigate war crimes committed in Kenya.

The judges relied on reports of the Commission of Inquiry into Post-Election Violence headed by Justice Philip Waki and other reports like the Kenya National Commission on Human Rights (KNCHR) investigation into the violence.

Cabinet ministers Uhuru Kenyatta and William Ruto have gone to court seeking to have their names expunged from the KNCHR report.

On Thursday, Beatrice Le Fraper Du Hellen, the ICCs director for jurisdiction, told the Sunday Nation the arrival of the advance team of officials was one of the first steps in the process of securing justice for victims.

The investigators will meet officials from the Attorney-Generals office and the ministries of Justice and Internal Security.

The International Crimes Act, in section 9 (b), spells out sanctions for those who attempt to obstruct justice.

(Anybody who) with intent to interfere in any way with the administration of justice of the ICC, is guilty of an offence and liable on conviction to imprisonment for a term of not more than fourteen years.

The act expressly forbids any attempts to influence ICC investigators and similarly spells sanctions for ICC officials who may accept money, valuable consideration, office, place or employment in exchange for blocking justice.

People who threaten witnesses or their families will be breaking the law, according to Section 17 (1).

It states: A person who, by act or omission, does anything against a person or a member of the persons family in retaliation for the persons having given testimony before the ICC is guilty of an offence and liable on conviction to imprisonment for a term of not more than five years.

Similar protection is offered to lawyers representing various parties at the ICC and their families. The only ray of hope for some of the suspects is that a High Court judge will have to decide whether a warrant should be executed after an ICC request.

But, in an earlier interview with the Sunday Nation, Ernst Jan Hogendoorn, the Horn of Africa project director for the International Crisis Group, said the government would find it difficult to say no to Mr Moreno-Ocampo if indictments are ultimately issued.

Credible process

I would be very surprised if the Kenyan government declines to go along with the requests of the chief prosecutor, he said. There is so much frustration among ordinary people about the lack of a credible process to try perpetrators that (President) Kibaki and (Prime Minister) Odinga would find it very hard to dismiss any requests for cooperation.

International pressure is expected to increase on Kenyan authorities if Mr Moreno-Ocampo secures indictments.

US President Barack Obama, leaders of the European Union and former United Nations secretary-general Kofi Annan have been vocal in demanding the arrest of suspects, arguing that their punishment would serve to deter future acts of impunity.

It is assumed that Mr Moreno-Ocampo will not seek the indictment of either Mr Kibaki or Mr Odinga for any role they might have played because he recognises arresting either would be politically untenable.

That is one of the lessons the ICC has learnt from its indictment of Sudans President Omar al-Bashir, who has defiantly stayed on in power despite an arrest warrant hanging over his head. In Kenya, the suspects facing arrest may not be so lucky.

source.nation.ke

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