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Archive for July 16th, 2011

US President’s visit to Kenya may be delayed or cancelled if Kisumu International airport is not fully operational

Posted by African Press International on July 16, 2011

By Chief editor Korir, API

The scheduled visit by President Obama to Kenya on the 14th September may be delayed or cancelled if Kisumu International Airport is not fully operational by then. The president is expected to arrive at Jomo Kenyatta International Airport in the Morning on the 14th September, and is expected to visit Kogelo outside Kisumu in the evening before departing to Tanzania. The president is expected in Tanzania at 20.00 East African time the same day.

It was reported earlier that the airport was airport was complete.. and would be operational by May this year... This is not the case. It has not been opened for international flights. More work is needed before Airforce One can land at the airport.

It is therefore, necessary to have Airforce One fly him to Kisumu after his discussions with President Kibaki at State House Nairobi. Landing at Kisumu International Airport can only be possible if the airport is fully operational and able to receive the huge Airforce One.

The President will visit a school named after him in Kogelo and also meet his step-grandmother. The president will travel from Kisumu International airport to Kogelo village in American military helicopter. Tight security from the US will accompany the President. While Obama is in the country, Kenya air space will be completely closed.

In Kogelo, The president is expected to join his grandmother eating a traditional Luo meal. A source in the White House has confirmed that the President will be accompanied to Kogelo by Prime Minister Raila Odinga. The Prime Minister is expected to receive President Obama at Kisumu International Airport late afternoon on the 14th September if the trip is not delayed or cancelled due to “not fully operational Kisumu International airport”.

If all goes as planned, it is expected that all Luo Members of Parliament will be in Kisumu with the PM to welcome Obama.

It is already a fact that 12 special US agents have arrived in Kenya secretly checking on things. They arrived at the US embassy in Nairobi on Tuesday last week. This weekend, some of the agents were in Kisumu where they posed as tourists while secretly inspecting the airport. Others were reported to be in Mombasa. Their mission in Mombasa was not immediately known, but analysts say it may be due to the fear of Somali pirates. American military Ship is already patrolling the waters outside Mombasa. The US ship is said to be on the way to Mombasa port.  The special agents early arrival in the country is due to fears that Al Shabaab organization may bomb targets in Kenya to disrupt the President’s visit to the country.

Al Shabaab has roots in Kenya and Uganda. This is said to be the main reason why President Obama chose to be in Kenya for twelve hours only, and move very fast to Tanzanian capital where he is expected to spend the night.

It is however, not clear if the President will spend the night in his Airforce One while in Tanzania or whether he will spend the night at the US ambassador’s residence.

End

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GMO – Genetically modified maize, said to have caused prostate cancer and infertility in Europe may soon be marketed in Kenya

Posted by African Press International on July 16, 2011

By Chief editor Korir (API)

Genetically modified maize that is reportedly a cause to health hazards is said to be on its way to Kenya.

The maize said to be the cause of prostate cancer and infertility in Europe will soon find its way to developing countries. The maize in question is discarded by European countries because scientist say they have discovered that there is a connection between the use of the maize in question and developing less interest for sex. After loosing interest for sex those affected (in the case of male) will experience less production of sperm that will lead to having no interest for sexual contact with female counterparts.

Those who develop severe complications become infertile and may end up developing prostate cancer.

The type of maize in question is said to be more dangerous to men than women, although it is said a female develops infertility slower than their male counterparts, while the male develops infertility faster, and is most likely to develop prostate cancer in a period of 12 months.

The Standard Media, Kenya reports that the Kenya Cabinet has approved the importation of the GOM. It now remains to be seen if Kenya will let the population be inflicted by the causes that accompany the use of  genetically modified maize.

It is reported that while approving the importation, “the Cabinet has directed strict management of genetically modified maize imports, while approving Sh9 billion to buy food for drought-hit areas, ” adding that “all GMO maize imported will only be used to make flour, and not as seeds,” and further that the cabinet resolved that, “any in-coming GMO food must be certified by the National Biosafety Authority.”

One Kenyan minister, however, has questioned why the GOM is to be used in Kenya while developed countries like Germany do not approve of its use in their country. The minister has got support from many Parliamentarians who have now voiced their concern.

End.

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New report gives insights on mobile apps potentials in Africa

Posted by African Press International on July 16, 2011

 By Isabelle Gross, Balancing Act, igross at balancingact-africa.com

There has hardly been a week without headlines on mobile apps in the last six months. The launch of the Apple apps store in July 2008 has undoubtedly been a turning point in what is today considered as a sector that generates at the global level US$ billion of annual revenues through apps downloads.
Consultancy and research company, Balancing Act, has just released a new report entitled “Mobile apps for Africa: Strategies to make sense of free and paid apps” which analyses the nascent apps ecosystem in Africa while providing an analytical framework allowing African mobile operators or other
stakeholders to decide on what strategy to adopt regarding mobile apps.

 The 131 pages report “Mobile apps for Africa: Strategies to make sense of free and paid apps” contains 15 illustrated boxes, 26 tables, 39 charts and 2 maps. It is divided into three distinctive parts: Part 1: The users, the device and the usage; Part 2: The developers and the content; Part 3: Distribution platforms and distribution strategies.

 According to Isabelle Gross, the author of the report, there is sufficient evidence to indicate that smartphones will take a significant market share in Africa too. Usage surveys show that African mobile users are carrying out more and more “non-voice” activities on their phone. The rate of smart phone
penetration in South Africa for example is promising and more African countries will follow on its path as smartphones prices will come down in the next two years.

 The handsets pyramid which currently is made up of over 80% basic phones in some African countries will be shifting in the next years and the changes will be top-down with a larger representation of smartphones and feature-rich phones. The report provides smart phone penetration forecasts for different markets. At present, Nokia’s handsets remain African’s favourite mobile phones but as the adoption of smartphones gathers pace, it will lose it leadership in favour of other OEMs. BlackBerry is currently the favourite brand among young South Africans.

 African countries with a large subscriber base and a growing smart phone penetration rate present the best opportunities for mobile apps. Smartphones
drive the consumption of mobile apps and as more African mobile users will
have a smart phone in their pocket in the near future, the case of providing
 them with content is getting more compelling for local developers.

 The report finds that African mobile apps developers are usually young graduates. In terms of gender, male developers outpace female developers.
However, there are no figures on their number per country but estimates
suggest a couple of hundred in small African countries and two or three thousand in large African countries. The African “developers’ ecosystem”
remains fragmented but there is a growing number of initiatives that try to
bring in more structure as well as funding to support interesting projects
and talented developers. The report provides further insights on what type
of mobile apps are more likely to make money in Africa as well as recommendations for African developers on how to optimise the revenue that
they can expect to be making from the various apps stores that are available
today to them. For local developers it is all about knowing what mobile users want and what are the best ways to get it to them.

 The revenues generated by the main international apps stores are tantalising
for mobile operators and most of them across the world still have to decide if they want to become a mere “dump” pipe channelling all the content to their mobile subscribers’ handsets or decide to step in and start to supply content to their subscribers in order to get a share of this revenue. African mobile operators and in particular those one that have launched 3G services, are facing precisely this dilemma.

 The report provides an overview of the “distribution platforms ecosystem”
and evaluates how disruptive the international apps stores have been so far
for African mobile operators. Several African mobile operators are looking at launching their own apps store but so far only Orange Tunisie and Tunisiana have officially announced the launch of their apps store.. The report further looks at how the growth of the international apps stores will affect Africa and what is changing in the apps ecosystem that could benefit Africa.

 A set of 8 recommendations are also provided to help mobile operators to identify what to look for when planning to launch an apps store. They are based on early lessons from emerging countries mobile operators that have launched apps stores. The report concludes by a detailed business case on launching an apps store in an African country and forecast revenue from paid applications, data revenue from apps downloads and revenue from advertising and in-apps purchases.

End

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Major floods hit Benin in 2010

Posted by African Press International on July 16, 2011

DISASTERS: ECOWAS stepping up response

Major floods hit Benin in 2010

ABUJA, 13 July 2011 (IRIN) – Following years of discussion, representatives from the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) are now testing joint disaster responses in light of increased flooding and more severe droughts in West Africa over the past decade, according to the African Centre of Meteorological Application for Development (ACMAD).

“Major efforts” are under way for “south-south cooperation between member states”, according to Andrea Diop, disaster focal point at ECOWAS, including setting up an Emergency Flood Fund for disaster response which individual countries can tap into; a natural disaster reduction task force; and an Emergency Response team.

Disaster focal points from ECOWAS member states convened in Abuja in late June to simulate a regional emergency and forge a joint response.

Floods affected 2.2 million people in West Africa in 2010, and killed 500. Nigeria recorded the highest death rate from floods (118), followed by Ghana (52), and Benin (43). The Nigeria Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) is currently trying to respond to floods in the commercial capital, Lagos, which have displaced thousands and killed at least 10. Government officials describe them as the worst in decades.

Conflicts over land are also on the increase in parts of Sahelian West Africa as the rainy season in some areas has dwindled to just two months, causing pastoralists to stay longer on farmers’ land, according to Youcef Ait Chellouche, adviser at the UN International Strategy for Disaster Reduction.

ECOWAS member states are also trying to improve joint weather forecasting to predict major disasters, according to Diop. At a recent meeting in Dakar sponsored by the US Agency for International Development, representatives from 11 West African countries agreed to provide more support for meteorological and hydrological services so they could more accurately forecast extreme weather events.

But for collaboration to be more effective, member states’ finance ministries need to put more money aside for disaster risk reduction, Chellouche told IRIN. A distinct budget line for ECOWAS disaster response is not yet in place.

aa/aj/wb/cb  source www.irinnews.org

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The damage to infrastructure that Pakistan suffered during the 2010 floods is estimated at US$10 billion

Posted by African Press International on July 16, 2011

Analysis: Pakistan’s post-flood blues

The damage to infrastructure that Pakistan suffered during the 2010 floods is estimated at US$10 billion (file photo)

ISLAMABAD, 12 July 2011 (IRIN) – Nearly one year after devastating floods swamped vast tracts of land across Pakistan, affecting over 20 million people, many survivors are still struggling to rebuild their lives as this year’s monsoon season is about to start.

“I have patched up my house the best I could, using what few resources I could gather – but the roof consists of just plastic sheeting in some places, and it really offers little protection to my extended family of 11,” Ghulam Hussain, 40, a villager in the Thatta District of Sindh Province, told IRIN.

The first monsoon rains of 2011 have started falling, according to the Meteorological Office, and this is raising anxiety. “We have been able to repair our badly damaged home, but we are still afraid of what may happen now that the rains have begun,” Ahmed Daud Khan, in the town of Nowshera in Khyber Pakhtoonkhwa Province, told IRIN.

The two have good reason to be afraid. Last week flash floods killed seven people in the South Waziristan tribal agency on the Pakistan-Afghan border after heavy downpours led to houses collapsing.

In Sindh Province, said World Vision Pakistan, the Indus river has already risen. Coupled with melting glaciers and snow in the mountainous north, the situation is threatening 30,000 people in 30 villages in Ghotki District.

The province was the worst hit by the floods, but media reports say 57,000 people have not received assistance. Many have been unable to rebuild or fully repair homes mainly due to large-scale mismanagement in the running of government schemes to help them.

Local residents say a government investigation into alleged scams earlier this year, achieved nothing.

Some piece-meal rebuilding efforts have continued, including the re-housing of 334 families in the Dadu and Thatta districts of Sindh in new homes built by the Pakistan Army, but a paucity of funds has adversely affected efforts. Donations, for example, have generally been slow to come in even though innovative methods such as mobile phone games were used to solicit much-needed resources.

“People want jobs,” Oxfam country director Neva Khan said in a press statement. ”They are not looking for handouts. They want to work their way out of poverty and rebuild a better life than before. They are calling for food they can afford, health care when they are sick, and somewhere to live – the most basic of basics.”

Early this month, Ahmed Kamal, spokesman for the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA), told the media in Islamabad that the Authority had worked out a contingency plan to tackle any new flood emergency. “NDMA is following two plans for floods, including a plan for a worst-case scenario under which a maximum of six million people can be affected, and a likely scenario under which 2.2 million people can be probable victims,” he said.

''My fields were destroyed, and my house reduced to sticks of timber, and my own wrist broken while trying to save my family…Some NGOs helped us in the beginning, but then we were left on our own. The words of government officials mean nothing to me.''

But many remain skeptical. “My fields were destroyed, and my house reduced to sticks of timber, and my own wrist broken while trying to save my family,” Azeemullah Khan, a villager in the Charsadda District of Khyber Pakhtoonkhwa Province, told IRIN. “I am still struggling to earn a living or just put food on the table. Some NGOs helped us in the beginning, but then we were left on our own. The words of government officials mean nothing to me.”

Support still needed

Locals in Lahore told IRIN that rehabilitation of the affected areas has started, but most areas are still without basic infrastructure. Similarly, the Watan Card scheme that the government started, to support those affected, has not helped many people, especially widows who were unable to get any money because they did not fulfil the “head of the family” requirement.

In Khyber Pakhtoonkhwa Province, Nathan Shah, an area in Sindh that was completely submerged, normalcy is yet to return. The area was to have been built into a “model” settlement, but nothing has happened.

Last week, UN Emergency Relief Coordinator Valerie Amos warned: “Families affected by the floods continue to need support to rebuild their livelihoods. The 2011 monsoon is about to start and up to two million people are again at risk from flooding, partly due to lack of funds for reconstruction.

“Major efforts are needed immediately to reduce the vulnerability of these families and implement urgent recovery and flood preparedness work on river banks, irrigation channels and other infrastructure.”

According to the UN, moderate flooding could result in the worsening of conditions. For example, on 24 May, a heavy downpour flooded Suleman Mountains
which run through Balochistan and into Afghanistan, close to the Punjab-Balochistan border district of Dera Ghazi Khan. While local authorities provided initial relief assistance to 4,000 affected people, stored wheat and the cotton crop were destroyed.

“The [2010] flood had a severe impact on people’s homes, livelihoods and assets,” said a government assessment report: “Most people do not know when they would be able to resume their livelihoods.”

The floods, it noted, wiped out about 2 percent off Pakistan’s annual growth rate and “inflicted a massive damage” of US$10 billion on the economic infrastructure. World Vision said acute malnutrition rates reached 22.9 percent in flood-affected areas of Sindh.

“The areas affected by floods were consistently lagging behind in terms of socio-economic and educational indicators as compared to the areas unaffected by the floods,” the report said. “The loss to infrastructure and livelihood sources will push them behind further. The people most severely affected were predominantly small farmers and unskilled labourers.”


Photo: Mohammad Reja/IRIN
The floods caused extensive damage to property especially in Sindh Province (file photo)

At least 1,200 people died in the floods, the world’s second worst in 10 years, according to the Belgium-based Centre for Research on Epidemiology of Disasters.

Women most affected

One group that has suffered most in the flood aftermath are women.

“Violence against women has since increased. With no steady income and homes, a lot of the flood victims vent their anger on their wives, sisters and daughters,” said Sonu Khangrani, head of the Sindh Rural Support Organization. “In these societies it is considered a norm if a man barters his 10-year-old daughter for a new wife.”

Some teenage girls, she added, had run away from their homes because parents tried to sell them off. “All these cases were from the flood-hit areas,” Khangrani told IRIN. “We were able to help the younger flood victims with regards to trauma and hardships, [but] we could not do much apart from providing legal support to the girls.”

Rahim Bux (not his real name), a 50-year-old man from Shikarpur, married away his 16-year-old daughter for Rs. 50,000 ($581) in February, but the girl ended up in a brothel. “I intended to use the money to rebuild our house, get a better roof than the thatched one that we had,” he said. “What I did not know was that my daughter would end up becoming a prostitute.”

The floods, a Federal Investigation Agency official said, opened doors for traffickers.”Poverty is rampant and when you offer money for a `bride’, people are more than willing to give away their daughters,” the official, who identified himself only as Fahin, said.

A trip to Karachi’s red light area along Napier Road reveals that girls as young as 12 were bought from flood-hit communities. “My father thought that I was being married off,” Bux’s daughter Nida told IRIN at the brothel where she lives.” What he did not know was that I would be sold off by my husband.”

The brothel owner, Jamal Ara, wants Rs 120,000 ($1,400) to release Nida. “I got Nida for slightly over 100,000. If her parents or for that matter anyone wants to take her away, they are more than welcome to buy her back,” he said.

Ineffective law

Pakistan enacted a Prevention and Control of Human Trafficking Ordinance in 2002, but it has done little to stop trafficking.

“Kashmore, Jaffarabad, Nasirabad, Larkana are districts that were badly hit by the floods,” Fahin added. “These are notorious for violence against women and here the [trafficking] rings are very active. There have been cases where girls as young as seven were kidnapped and sold.

“Since it is a matter of honour, people do not register the complaints if it is a girl who goes missing. Rather the emphasis is on tracking down the victim and killing her to `redeem’ their honour.”

According to the UN’s Amos, more than $600 million is still needed to support early recovery activities including rehabilitating water wells, refurbishing the primary health care system and rebuilding schools.

“I am extremely concerned,” she noted, “that the lack of funds is preventing the pre-positioning of necessary medical supplies and the continuation beyond July of the district level Disease Early Warning System.”

kh/sj/eo/cb source www.irinnews.org

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Women turn to traditional healer

Posted by African Press International on July 16, 2011

HEALTH: Ancient wisdom, new knowledge

Women turn to traditional healer Fatoumata Kané when their children are ill

DAKAR, 11 July 2011 (IRIN) – No one can tell 64-year-old Fatoumata Kané anything new about the plants and tree bark around her town of Banamba in western Mali, but the traditional healer recently learned how to measure a child’s upper arm to detect malnutrition.

Scores of families bring ailing children to Kané each week. She is renowned in the region for her healing powers, but now refers suspected malnutrition cases to the public health centre. The collaboration, initiated by local health agent Oumou Sangaré of Helen Keller International (HKI), is an example of how NGOs are tapping into the influence of traditional healers and local elders to fight under-nutrition.

Across sub-Saharan Africa health experts commonly train traditional healers to detect conditions needing something other than indigenous medicine; the fact is that when illness strikes many people’s first move is to go to the local healer.

“It is always people’s first choice here,” said a doctor in Sierra Leone who requested anonymity. “It’s a custom people are addicted to.”

It is custom, but often it is also the only health care people can afford or physically access. In some countries in Africa and Asia 80 percent of people depend on traditional medicine for their primary health care, according to the World Health Organization.

Often traditional medicine is the answer. Africa has tens of thousands of plant species, many therapeutic, and the basis for effective remedies. Kouamé Koffi Samuel, a chauffeur in Côte d’Ivoire, said he has first-hand experience of women who are expert at healing closed fractures with massage, herbs and incantations. “I’ve seen it – it’s far more rapid and effective than a cast.”

But child under-nutrition is one of the conditions untreatable by such means, health workers say. If a parent does not understand the signs, symptoms and causes, various conditions could be suspected. The Sierra Leonean doctor said some families think immediately of a spell.

“When a child is malnourished people think it’s a witch. When a child is very anaemic they say a witch has drawn all the blood from the child.”

He added: “We need to do more education on this.”

Health experts say one strong conduit for that education are the traditional healers and elderly women who already have people’s confidence. 

''Traditional healers and grandmothers are the first-line healers in a community''

“If [Banamba healer Kané] were to tell a woman not to take a child to the health centre, the woman wouldn’t do it, no matter what,” HKI’s Sangaré told IRIN. “Such is the women’s trust in her.”

Sangaré said she first approached Kané when she noticed that too many malnourished children in Banamba were not getting the medical attention they needed.

Collaborating with local healers

She said initially Kané, who makes her living as a healer, was hesitant but then agreed to talk. They met several times to talk about children’s health; Sangaré explained to Kané the role she could have in detecting malnutrition and helping children get the care they need. “Now she’s had training and she’s helping us detect cases of malnutrition.”

Kané, from her home in the Hamdallaye neighbourhood of Banamba, told IRIN traditional and modern medicine can function well together. “I have practiced for more than 20 years now; the gift I have for healing is not going anywhere. But modern medicine can complement it, and vice-versa.”

Vanessa Dickey, senior nutritionist with HKI Mali, said collaborating with local healers means more children who need medical care will get it.

“Targeting just mothers can get us only so far,” Dickey told IRIN. “People are going to listen to a traditional healer or a grandmother.” HKI also has a project in Burkina Faso to boost maternal and child health through the influence of older women, to whom young women invariably turn for advice on pregnancy, motherhood and feeding their families.

“Our object is to screen as many children as we can to see who needs attention,” Dickey said. “And traditional healers and grandmothers are the first-line healers in a community.”

Traditional plus modern

Nurses and doctors told IRIN it is common to see families consult both a traditional practitioner and a doctor.

Soro Awa, holding her nephew whose mother had recently died in childbirth, talked to IRIN at a Côte d’Ivoire nutritional centre in Korhogo: “Without this centre my sister’s son would not be alive,” she said. Still, she plans to see the local healer once she returns to the village “to protect the child from sorcery”. 


Photo: Aly Ouattara/IRIN
Some people go to hospital and a traditional healer, to cover all possible causes

“Often, people assume someone has cast a spell on a child, not knowing that a child is malnourished or has an illness that can be easily treated at hospital,” said Soro Pènè, from Korhogo’s Waraniené village. “Anyway, I am all for traditional healers because they do have their place in our customs and they are very effective in some cases.”

Salimata Koné, who runs the Korhogo centre, says some parents bring their children in directly without going to a local healer. But as the Sierra Leonean doctor explains, family pressure often weighs in later. “A parent could have a child treated at hospital, then a friend or family member will come round advising that it’s best to also consult the traditional healer.”

“It can be OK if people go to both,” he said. “But only if the traditional healer is competent and knows the limits of his or her capabilities.”

It is not a question of ruling out traditional practitioners, said Dickey. “They can continue to do follow-up. We do urge them not to give malnourished children herbs or teas to consume. The body of a malnourished child is really in chaos; these kinds of plants, which might not harm another person, could be dangerous for a child in this state.”

As in so many circumstances, the hard evidence of a healthier child is the most powerful message, Koné in Korhogo told IRIN. “It’s important not to condemn the practice of going to a traditional healer; we don’t want to frustrate people. But the fact is once a malnourished child regains health after proper diagnosis and treatment, that recovery is concrete proof and has a huge influence on others.”

Recovery is the common objective. “My role is to lighten mothers’ hearts, by helping heal sick children,” said Kané. “When a child is healthy, the mother is relieved and things go better in the household.”

np/ao/sc/cb source www.irinnews.org

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