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Archive for December 19th, 2011

COTU man Atwoli, Stop fooling Kenyans to go on strike and later insist to become their mediator

Posted by African Press International on December 19, 2011

By Thomas chieng, API   

 It has been said that one can fool people at times but not all the time. Kenya promulgated a new constitution with hopes and aspirations of changing the political, social and economic status of its people. Yet to some this provided a fodder for all sorts of shenanigans under the guise of fighting for people’s rights. Since when did brinkmanship and parochial vested interest become a national objective?

Francis Atwoli the confederation of Trade Unions - in Kenya COTU  boss has perfected the art of opportunism never witnessed before in the history of this country’s trade union movement. Trade union played a very pivotal role in the independence struggle for this nation, it provided a platform for freedom fighters to articulate issue in a structured way, but most importantly it was a vehicle of bringing this nation together, the vision of trade union founder the late Tom Mboya gives a clear picture of why it was formed.

Today the once vibrant organization has become a tool for a few opportunists to gain under the disguise of fighting for workers. How can a person fighting for the poor live in opulence. Mr Atwoli earns millions monthly yet workers he claims to represent earn peanuts. Is the issue of agitating for workers rights vocation or a top career like in the blue chip companies in Kenya where one is expected to be paid millions, live in posh residences, drive the latest  state of the art cars, wine and dine in the classic places in the city.

Mr Atwoli should tell Kenyans how the common worker has benefited since he became the  head of COTU.  I bet he will not give any status to the effect that the reason he will always like to deflect attention from scrutiny by looking for people who can strike, then he becomes a mediator.

During the recent strike by doctors union, which coincidentally his own son is an official, had a meeting with the government whereby Mr. Atwoli was the main negotiator in which an agreement was reached and afterwards the doctors claim they were arm twisted. Atwoli needs to clarify this issue because he was seen very happy with the said deal and was full of praise for the government.

It is true Kenyans need to have freedom, but it must also be tempered by responsibility, the government true has a lot of misgivings and it needs a very serious look on its agenda, but we should also develop a spirit of give and take.

 The implementation of this constitution with its numerous commissions and the devolved government will be very expensive for this nation at its conception, this calls for sobriety on approaching of issues. But the opportunists like Atwoli and the like are doing this country a disservice. The question is, how long will he continue to fool us.?

Ends.

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Kim Jong il has died

Posted by African Press International on December 19, 2011

by api

The strong man of Northern Korea has died.

The world expects his son to take over. The population is in mourning for the loss their leader.

Washington says his death may provide an opportunity for reconciliation between North and South Korea.

The people in the North has lost a feared dictator whom they so much-loved.

End

 

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Al Bashir’s Sudan urges Kenya to cut ties with the International Criminal Court

Posted by African Press International on December 19, 2011

by api

Now Sudan is interfering with Kenya’s sovereignty as a nation. Sudan does not like ICC because the court wants their president arrested.

Recently, a Kenyan court issued an order demanding Al Bashir’s arrest if he entered Kenya. This is in accordance with the ICC arrest warrant in connection with crimes against humanity.

When the Kenyan judge issued arrest order against Al Bashir, Sudan reacted angrily and ordered the Kenyan ambassador to leave the country, the same time recalling theirs from Nairobi.

Kenya, however, through the foreign ministry calmed the situation down and no ambassador was affected. They promised Sudan that they would have the Kenyan court to cancel the arrest warrant.

That made Sudan to cool down.

According to the Kenya media, the Sudanese ambassador to Kenya, now says, if the Kenya government does not manage to convince the court to cancel the arrest warrant, the Sudanese government will not break the diplomatic relations. He says their earlier  reaction was as a result of shock that Kenya wanted their president arrested and handed over to the International Criminal Court.

They seem to have seen sense in it all. You cannot interfere with the courts.

End.

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Going on strike in Kenya has now become like a game of fun

Posted by African Press International on December 19, 2011

by api

Kenya’s new constitution is very good in many ways. Many, however, are beginning to question the way some people are using it to exercise their rights by calling strikes to paralyse activities taking place in the country.

Strikes has become the order of the day. When one union is through with their strike, another one is ready to call a strike. They all say they are fighting for the workers rights.

Recently, the doctors were on strike, before they finished, the civil servants were out there threatening, with a strike and soon after they were  followed by Postal workers union.

Now COTU has also called a strike over petrol and the strike will hurt many people who want to travel during the holiday season.

COTU says it is not meant to hurt, but if it is so, why not wait until after January and call the strike. By calling the strike now when many need to be transported to their rural homes is a way to hold the government hostage.

If COTU wanted to call a strike over petrol prices – fine do so, but why is COTU trying to force the Matatu Owners Association to join. They have already managed to get the leader of the Matatu Welfare Organization to join the strike. The intention is to punish the Kenyan people who depend on Matatu transport at this time of need.

The Kenyan people will be lucky, however, because the MOA leaders have decided to used their brains by refusing to join the strike because it will hurt the public who would like to travel to join their families. It is good to learn that the MOA has chosen to work with the police so that no hooligans will stop the transportation of people wherever they want to go.

It seems the freedom to strike given as a right by the new constitution will be put to test and may serve the people negatively in the long run if everybody who wants something can just mobilise people and go on strike to force a demand to be fulfilled.

Soon we may see the Military going on strike!

The best could have been for the thieves, thugs and criminals of all kind to go on strike complaining that there is too much security in the land and demand a round table discussion on reduction of security – their strike would be very much appreciated because that would give people a good break – hopefully, if it would mean no theft, no robberies and any other form of criminal acts as long as the negotiations are going on.

End

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Unless we strengthen our own research capacity, dependence on donors will be perpetuated

Posted by African Press International on December 19, 2011

Greater local ownership of HIV research needed

HIV research is largely “donor-driven”

Unless African governments increase their funding for and engagement in HIV research, the continent cannot hope to attain equal status in determining its research agenda and priorities, speakers said at the 16th International Conference on AIDS and Sexually Transmitted Infections (STIs) in Africa.

“In most low-income or poor countries, health research is donor-driven, with insignificant local budgets compared to the 2 percent annual budget recommended by WHO [World Health Organization],” said Dr Beyene Petros, chair of the Ethiopian Bioethics Initiative.

Donor-driven funding often means that research starts and ends on the say-so of funders, rather than being based on a country’s needs. Beyene noted a Dutch grant of approximately US$13 million to the Ethiopian government to investigate capacity development in HIV/AIDS research for eight years.

When the grant ended in 2002, the Ethiopian government applied for a renewal. It was denied, leaving scientists, who had been hoping to launch a local vaccine initiative, at a loss. The Dutch government instead decided to fund family planning and HIV prevention activities in the country.

The field of HIV research – largely donor-driven – is vibrant in eastern and southern Africa. But “West Africa, in particular, is characterized by an absence in of clinical trials of potential HIV vaccines, and or microbicides, and a lack of data on drug-resistant tuberculosis,” said Dr Souleymane Mboup, of Senegal’s Cheikh Anta Diop University.

Prof Nelson Sewankambo, principal of the College of Health Sciences at Uganda’s Makerere University, said heavy donor involvement in local research can actually harm existing national institutions, which may lose strategic direction and become retarded by the loss of key staff to research projects and distortion of institutional structures and governance.

“Inequities in collaboration can lead to lack of transparency in the decision-making process, as well as disputes over publication rights, ownership of data, specimens and equipment,” Sewankambo said.

Speakers also noted that inadequate community engagement was common when partnerships were skewed in favour of the donor priorities. “There ought to be distributive justice and fair partnerships between sponsors, investigators, subjects, communities and countries,” said Cameroonian writer Prof Godfrey Tangwa, of the University of Yaounde.

Sewankambo noted that in the past, weak local institutions had allowed ethical violations in research projects, such as the use of placebos in studies on mother-to-child HIV transmission.

“Even when these issues were pointed out, the debate began in the North. Where were we Africans when these wrongs were going on? It is not enough for us to blame countries in the North for the state of health research – we need to look at what we in the South are not doing right in government funding of research and in negotiation of research partnerships,” he said.

Sewankambo noted that there was a need to build new, more equitable partnership models and expand local capacity to sustain research activities once donor-funded projects ended.

The involvement of policy-makers is key to ensuring that research is turned into evidence-based policy, said Anne Cockroft, of Canada’s Global Health Research Initiative (GHRI). She pointed out that there was often a gap in “knowledge translation” between researchers and policy-makers, leading to poor decisions being taken.

''Unless we strengthen our own research capacity, dependence on donors will be perpetuated''

“[HIV] prevention research results have to be translated into policies and action, and research users and decision-makers need skills to evaluate findings and prioritise for action,” she said, adding that outside interests and funding often led to externally driven policy decisions, while poor understanding of research led to policies based partly on evidence, or based on poor evidence.

GHRI has been working with parliamentarians in Botswana to expand their ability to make decisions based on evidence after many said they experienced difficulties in interpreting scientific evidence.

There has been some progress in the past few decades. Wen Kilama, managing trustee of the African Malaria Network Trust, said partnerships have largely moved on from “colonial style” research, in which Africans had little or no say in research conducted in their countries, and African scientists are now more involved in priority-setting and actual research.

“The Ugandan government has created an enabling environment for research and recently came up with a law which led to the creation of the Uganda National Health Research Organization, which, if managed properly, has the potential to greatly improve the way research is conducted in the country,” Sewankambo said.

Kenya and Tanzania have similar bodies, and African scientists have created several networks to strengthen research capacity, but regulation has lagged behind the development of research capability.

The East Africa Consortium for Clinical Research has been established, but it has yet to develop a regional policy to guide the regulation of health research and clinical trials, and remains largely donor-dependent in the development of health research policy.

Ethiopia’s Beyene pointed out that “Unless we strengthen our own research capacity, dependence on donors will be perpetuated.”

kr/he
source www.irinnews.org

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Obama has shown political will and leadership… he has made a down-payment on ending the AIDS crisis globally

Posted by African Press International on December 19, 2011

Obama applauded for new treatment pledge

The US government will put six million people on ARVs by 2013

AIDS activists have welcomed a pledge by US President Barack Obama to provide antiretroviral treatment to some six million people globally by 2013, an increase of two million on the previous target.

“Obama has shown political will and leadership in doubling the pace of treatment initiation… he has made a down-payment on ending the AIDS crisis globally,” said Asia Russell, director of international policy at the health advocacy NGO, Health Global Access Project (Health GAP), which has been urging the US to take the lead in the global fight against HIV/AIDS.

In 2010, some 3.2 million people were accessing ARVs through the US President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR); globally, some 6.6 million people have access to HIV treatment out of an estimated 15 million who need it.

The pledge, however, does not come with an increase in PEPFAR funding from the US$48 billion pledged in 2008 for five years.

“We are looking at smarter programming and greater efficiencies, and costs are also coming down,” said Michael Strong, country coordinator for PEPFAR in Uganda. “We will continue existing programmes and increase the number of people on ARVs to six million.”

Strong noted that the US was also working to persuade other countries to take greater responsibility in the fight against HIV. “China, for instance, should not be a recipient of donor funds for HIV – it is the world’s second-largest economy,” he said. “We are urging rich countries like Germany and Sweden to commit fully to efforts to fight AIDS.”

Obama said the US would also provide ARVs to prevent mother-to-child HIV transmission to 1.5 million women, support 4.7 million male circumcisions in eastern and southern Africa, and fund the distribution of at least one billion male condoms.

HPTN 052 [a large randomized controlled study that showed the effectiveness of ARVs as prevention] showed that treatment not only saves lives, but slashes rates of infection; Obama has shown that he is willing to take action on the basis of that science,” Russell added.

''Obama has shown political will and leadership… he has made a down-payment on ending the AIDS crisis globally''

The news comes as a relief for those involved in the fight against HIV, which is severely underfunded and recently suffered an additional blow when the Global Fund to fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria was forced to cancel its 11th round of funding due to insufficient resources. Activists have called on donor countries to follow Obama’s lead in ensuring treatment is made available for all those in need.

“We are calling for an emergency donor conference within the next 200 days as an opportunity for donors to raise at least US$2 billion towards meeting the costs of treatment,” said Tido von Schoen-Angerer, executive director of the Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) Access Campaign. “It is very frustrating that we have had such a year of scientific achievement in terms of understanding how to have real impact and possibly end the epidemic, but at the same time funding is running out and we risk going backwards in the fight against HIV.”

Cautious optimism

Obama’s announcement on 1 December, World AIDS Day, was welcomed with cautious optimism in developing countries. “If the pledge is kept, it will be an important step in the global goal of getting 15 million people on treatment by 2015, but it is important to realize that we are not out of the woods yet, unless the rich countries of the north keep their pledges to the Global Fund… because this is the biggest source of funding for many poor countries,” said Nelson Otuoma, national coordinator of the Network of People Living with HIV/AIDS in Kenya (NEPHAK).

Health GAP’s Russell cautioned that high-burden countries would need to play their part in ensuring donor funds were used in the most effective way; in particular, countries such as Uganda – the only PEPFAR-funded country where new HIV infections are on the rise – would need to become more aggressive in using effective prevention technologies and scaled-up treatment programmes to show results.

“It will be vital for high-burden countries to step up and match Obama’s commitment with money, leadership and accountability,” she said.

kr/ko/mw
source www.irinnews.org

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Most countries rely heavily on donor funding – Feeling the pinch in connection with HIV/ AIDS

Posted by African Press International on December 19, 2011

Most countries rely heavily on donor funding

Faced with the global economic downturn and less money from donors, national HIV programmes in East and Southern Africa – the region hardest hit by HIV/AIDS – are struggling to stay afloat. IRIN/PlusNews brings you a wrap of countries feeling the biggest pinch.

Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC)

According to medical relief agency Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), funding shortfalls caused the government to cap the number of people starting on antiretroviral (ARV) treatment at 2,000 new patients for 2011, even though an estimated 15,000 people are on waiting lists for the drugs. Only 12 percent of those in need of the life-prolonging medication are receiving it.

NGOs have been asked by the Ministry of Health to limit HIV testing because there is no money available to buy drugs to treat those eligible for ARVs. Access to drugs for opportunistic infections and testing for CD4-counts or viral loads is extremely limited.

DRC is largely dependent on the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis (TB) and Malaria to finance its treatment programmes, and other donor projects are winding up, making the country even more dependent on dwindling Global Fund grants.

Uganda

Poor funding in 2010 led HIV care facilities to reduce patient enrolment. Service providers said they were afraid to encourage people to test for HIV in case they needed ARVs and were unable to provide the medication. In August PEPFAR responded to appeals from healthcare providers overwhelmed by patients by making a commitment to increase its support to the national treatment programme.

However, HIV programmes remain poorly funded and Uganda’s appeal for $270 million from the Global Fund in Round 8 was rejected. Although the government now contributes some $60 million annually to buying HIV drugs from a local manufacturer, critics say HIV/AIDS efforts will remain stunted unless the government makes a more meaningful contribution.

South Africa

In November 2011, South Africa’s leading HIV/AIDS lobby group, the Treatment Action Campaign (TAC), which is largely dependent on the Global Fund, released a statement warning that without this money, TAC will be forced to close its doors and retrench 280 employees in 130 branches at the end of January 2012. TAC volunteers distribute over 5 million condoms a year and the group’s treatment literacy project educates patients about HIV treatment in many of the country’s public health facilities.

As some donors pull out entirely and others shift from programme implementation to technical assistance, many patients who previously got their treatment from well run NGOs are being transferred to already overcrowded public health facilities.

Burundi

Following a Global Fund rejection of its application for money in November 2007, the government said there was a gap of $83 million to cover all the needs of the national AIDS strategic plan from 2007 to 2011.

In 2010, HIV-positive patients in some parts of the country complained that they were unable to access drugs to treat opportunistic infections and many could not afford a CD4 test, which measures immune strength and is required before health facilities can initiate patients on ARVs.

At the end of June 2011, World Bank funding – more than $50 million over a nine-year period – for Burundi’s AIDS response ended and has not been renewed. The Global Fund and the World Bank have been Burundi’s largest HIV donors. In September, associations of people living with HIV reported that several of their members had died due to an ongoing shortage of ARV drugs.

Swaziland

The country with the highest HIV prevalence has been grappling with shortages of HIV treatment, testing kits and laboratory tests essential for initiating and managing patients on ARV treatment, caused mainly by a drop in revenue from the Southern Africa Customs Union (SACU) as a result of the global economic downturn.

Swaziland recently received emergency funding from PEPFAR to help supply first-line ARVs until the end of April 2012, but further ARV shortages have been predicted.

Mozambique

An estimated 96 percent of the HIV budget is donor-funded, with the Global Fund and PEPFAR providing the largest portion. Mozambique’s Round 9 funding has not yet been released due to concerns over poor financial and supply management, and its Round 10 grant proposal was not approved. Other donors, including the Clinton HIV/AIDS Initiative, have withdrawn support as the UNITAID grant comes to a close.

Mozambique is expected to face shortages of first-line ARVs by the end of 2012 or even earlier, unless an emergency funding request to the Global Fund is approved. The country is looking for other funding alternatives to help bridge the projected shortfall.

Kenya

HIV/AIDS funding received a blow when the Global Fund rejected its proposals in rounds eight and nine. Kenya has a projected $167 billion shortfall to cover its HIV programmes up to 2013. The country has put more than 400,000 people on ARVs, but another 600,000 need the drugs and have no access to them.

At the end of November 2011, HIV-positive people in Coast Province, eastern Kenya, held demonstrations over the lack of drugs in health facilities, forcing people to purchase the drugs from private pharmacies, but many who can’t afford the drugs are going without.

Kenya’s Cabinet has proposed that the Ministry of Finance create an HIV/AIDS Trust Fund to support scaling up the HIV response. If approved, the government will contribute 1 percent of its annual revenue to the fund.

kr/kn/he
source www.irinnews.org

Posted in AA > News and News analysis | Leave a Comment »

 
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