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Archive for January 31st, 2012

Is Raila Odinga and ODM ready for elections now?

Posted by African Press International on January 31, 2012

by api

The problem the ICC has brought upon Kenya after confirming the charges against 4 Kenyans including the then finance minister and now still Deputy PM Uhuru Kenyatta is huge. It is causing headache in many quarters.

Less than two years, when ODM and PNU were fighting their political wars, Raila Odinga said he was ready to go for early elections. Is the party now ready to force out the DPM Kenyatta, a good reason to go for early elections?

Many observers do not think the MPs now want to have their salaries stopped for the sake of early election, one that many of them know will lock them out of the next parliament. We think they will be more interested to continue quarreling until the election date while they pick their salaries. Some are even fighting to extend their term to March next year – a few more months to earn more, instead of allowing the elections this year.

Last time, Raila got them (PNU) in  a corner, but this time it is the other way round. There will be no ODM leader or MP who will accept to face the electorate now..

The Kenya Daily Nation online reported when the ODM had the upper hand that  “Mr Orengo said the new constitution would only work as expected if Mr Odinga becomes Kenya’s president.”

According to the Nation Online at the time, “Mr Midiwo said ODM was not ready to lose the political battle if PNU reneges on the process of constitution-making.  Mr Midiwo is ODM chief Whip in Parliament. When Raila Odinga talked of early elections, he got Midiwo’s support.

Speaking at the time to the media he warned of early elections saying;  ““We will come back to the people if the PNU wing of the coalition government proves to be difficult to accept our equal demand,” warned the ODM chief Whip.”

The question Kenyans are asking now is – what will happen next?. Is the ODM leaders ready to take the bull by the horns this time, by sponsoring a vote of no confidence in Parliament against DPM Kenyatta, knowing that it may result in early elections because of the deal signed between their Party and PNU when creating the coalition government? – No one thinks so.

The quarrel last time was about PNU’s wish to remove ODM’s Namwanba as Chairman of Legal Affairs Committee. The majority of the eleven member committee removed him, saying they no longer had confidence in him. Instead of Namwamba and ODM accepting the removal, the party at the time threatened with early elections. Now they have the chance to create opportunity for early elections if they are willing to lose their salaries.

A few months ago, the two parties were also locked in a wrangle when President Kibaki appointed a new Chief Justice and other two. The Prime Minister said the President did not consult him and there they were in a wrangle that forced the President to withdraw the nominees.

When the disagreement at the time was boiling high, then Finance minister Uhuru Kenyatta got very angered and told a press conference that he would no longer sit and keep quiet. He angrily asked reporters; “Does it mean that this country cannot do anything unless Raila said so….

This time around, Uhuru says he will not resign as DPM as demanded by ODM. He is getting support from PNU.

According to Raila, he says he just wants his share of the cake as equal partner in the coalition when complaining of the lack of consultation. His intention is not to derail the implementation but says he fears that those who opposed the new constitution may be out to stop the implementation process.

End

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ICC in Europe: Show me a European leader who has cooperated with ICC and I will show you six Kenyans

Posted by African Press International on January 31, 2012

By api
The ICC process is going on well in the case of Kenya. No one is in detention in the Hague because the Kenyans decided to cooperate with the ICC, saying they have nothing to hide.

Now the ICC has decided to take 4 out of six to a full trial charging them of crimes against humanity. The Kenyans have said they will cooperate with the ICC to the end. That means no Kenyan will be detained as for now.

This is good for their careers and their families.
The four have now appealed the decision to face a full trial.

The ICC will decide soon on the way forward. The only thing Kenyans have to do is wait and stop speculations.

End

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Uhuru Kenyatta should move on

Posted by African Press International on January 31, 2012

By Thomas Ochieng  (API - Kenya)

 
The embattled Kenya’s Deputy Premier and finance minster Uhuru Kenyatta has handed over the finance docket to his ally Robinson Githae in what pundits call a game of musical chairs, the deputy prime minister in the pecking order in government still remain Githae’s boss hence the argument that Uhuru Kenyatta is still technically in government contrary to chapter six of the current constitution which calls for integrity of state public holders.

The conformation of the charges on Uhuru Kenyatta by the international criminal court at The Hague should be taken by the State as a game changer in the scheme of things; hence it cannot be business as usual. The process that led to this verdict was appreciated and with the participation of all the parties involved. The Kenyan government put en to paper its commitment to the ICC process and committed to itself relive duty any public official mentioned and charged by the court in relation to the post-election violence of 2008.

In any civilized society governed by the rule of law the innocence or guilt of any party is a preserve of the court and the accused is always given the benefit of doubt by being presumed innocent until proved otherwise with the burden of proof being upon the prosecution, the judges on confirming the charges against the four Kenyans stressed this principle. The charges being confirmed on the deputy prime minister being a state official should as a matter of principle and integrity step aside to pave way for the adjudication of the
charge without prejudice or putting the office of the Deputy prime minister
into question.

Uhuru Kenyatta should take time to be with his family and his legal team away from the glare of the public and political chest thumping and busy bodies around him. His family should be his immediate concern, not the self seekers around him whom are only concerned about reaping from the tide around the moment, many of the people shouting the loudest in support of Hon. Uhuru Kenyatta are only seeking their respective political ambitions they only
want to use the misfortune of Uhuru Kenyatta to ascend to their thrones. Nelson
Mandela was ounce labeled a terrorist but today he is one of the greatest world’s statesmen,Uhuru should take this misfortune in it stride and move on. It’s always said that one step forward two-step forward is still advancing.

Ends.

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Many Afghans are dependent on aid year after year

Posted by African Press International on January 31, 2012

Analysis: Where Afghan humanitarianism ends and development begins

Many Afghans are dependent on aid year after year

DAMQOL,  – Afghanistan suffers from cyclical natural disasters – floods and drought – which affect people annually and require expensive emergency responses, but their impacts could well be avoided, or at least mitigated, if proper water management systems or dams were built, for example.

Some farmers could switch from rain-fed wheat crops, which require a lot of water, to other crops, like grapes or almonds. But these kinds of transitions require long-term multi-year plans, inherently at odds with emergency responses, based on annual appeals for funding.

“Responding to eight droughts in 11 years makes no sense,” Michael Keating, the UN humanitarian coordinator in Afghanistan, said recently. “There is something going wrong.”

“It is not a complete mystery how some of these problems can be addressed,” Keating told IRIN. “They shouldn’t be addressed by basic emergency humanitarian action.”

And yet, for much of the past decade, humanitarians have been drawn into things like infrastructure and early recovery programmes.

“A lot of humanitarian assistance has been partly diverted from its objective,” said Laurent Saillard, head of the European Commission’s humanitarian aid arm (ECHO) in Afghanistan. “Instead of being used for what it’s supposed to be used for – life-saving emergency interventions – it is trying to address chronic poverty, and of course, at the end of the day, not achieving sustainable results.”

Over the past 10 years, a cumulative US$3.2 billion has been spent in Afghanistan on programmes outlined in the international community’s annual appeals for humanitarian funding – the Consolidated Appeals Process (CAP). The CAP is estimated to account for only half of all humanitarian funding.

“[There is] frustration from the population which receives the assistance [because it] is not exactly what they need… frustration from the implementing agencies, [who] realize that they have been present for 10 years, repeating all sorts of interventions, and yet they have not addressed the problem… and frustration from the donors, [who] feel that the money is being wasted, in a way,” Saillard told IRIN.

This year’s drought – affecting 2.8 million people – brought the problem to new heights: “That is a scale that is simply not sustainable,” said Aidan O’Leary, the head of OCHA in Afghanistan.

“At the end of the day, humanitarian actors can only ever bring emergency relief,” he added. “We cannot bring solutions. [People] want houses, roads, livelihoods. Humanitarian actors can’t deliver that. They’re never going to be able to deliver that.”

New approach

This year’s CAP, launched in Kabul on 28 January, aims to “go back to basics” by focusing on more strictly humanitarian needs. “If you make the field too broad, you can’t get anything done,” O’Leary told IRIN.

The international humanitarian community has requested one quarter less than last year, even though humanitarian needs are increasing. It has asked for $437 million to help 8.8 million Afghans, including help for civilians affected by armed conflict, initial assistance for refugees and internally displaced people returning to their areas of origin, and life-saving actions for those affected by natural disasters.

This excludes projects for the “chronically vulnerable populations” – a task deemed better left to development actors.

How we got here

Much of the problem, aid workers say, lies in the fact that the billions of dollars in development aid invested in the country over the last decade have not been spent cohesively or based on needs, but rather driven by short-term political and military aims.

Around $57 billion dollars of development assistance have been spent in Afghanistan since 2001, and yet 10 million people are still living on the edge, Keating said.

“That does raise the question: Have the investments been equitable? Is the money being used in a way that helps these communities reduce their vulnerability and doesn’t expose them to repeated humanitarian crisis?”


Photo: Heba Aly/IRIN
Villagers of Damqol were in need of assistance when drought hit

Falling through the cracks

Nor has the government provided the answer, aid workers say. Saillard argues the humanitarian community is partly to blame in allowing the government to defer its responsibilities, often under the guise of lack of capacity. “The fact that there is this presence keeps the right actors sometimes outside the game,” he noted.

But the minister of rural rehabilitation and development, Jarullah Mansoori, argues that with its budget of $500 million per year, his ministry has made great strides in building communities’ resilience to shocks and in managing the impacts of disasters.

It has created a central coordinating body, the Afghanistan National Disaster Management Authority; has dug irrigation canals; encouraged rural enterprise development; and improved access to health and education in rural areas. The ministry’s flagship National Solidarity Programme has been credited with reaching the local level with cash-for-work or cash-for-assets programmes.

“If you compare the damage of disasters eight years ago to… now, you will see a lot of differences,” the minister told IRIN. “But still, since this country went through more than three decades of very damaging and destructive war and crisis, it needs a lot of effort in every aspect.”

Other aid workers say mitigation projects, like flood protection walls, have fallen through the cracks. They are not a central part of the Afghanistan National Development Strategy, which the UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan is mandated to support; nor are they technically part of OCHA’s mandate. The UN Development Programme (UNDP), which might traditionally take on such projects, has been focused on improving governance and reducing poverty, and is scaling back its direct presence across the country in order to increasingly work through the government.

“Disaster risk reduction is almost non-existent,” said one development worker. “I’ve noticed that gap. There’s very little proactive work done here. It’s all reactive.”

Dialogue

Another part of the problem has been a lack of understanding of what exactly “humanitarian” means and where the line is drawn. “It’s quite blurred,” as one field worker put it. “Is any one activity development or humanitarian?”

The UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) has been dealing with this question for years, as refugees returning from Iran and Pakistan – given an initial humanitarian assistance – struggle to integrate in the longer term.

“Where does humanitarian assistance stop and where does development aid begin?” Suzanne Murray Jones, a senior adviser at UNHCR, has been asking herself. “How do we bridge the gap?”


Photo: Heba Aly/IRIN
Afghan villagers lay gravel on a newly-created road as part of a cash-for-work project to help them get through the drought season

Part of the answer, she said, is a greater dialogue between humanitarian and development partners to encourage development investments in the same areas where people are returning en masse.

“We know nothing about development of livelihoods or about large-scale agriculture. It’s not our expertise. It’s for the FAOs or ILOs to go to these sites and say this is what’s needed,” she said, in reference to the Food and Agriculture Organization and the International Labour Organization. “It’s getting the synergy together to work together.”

To that end, humanitarian actors now participate in monthly meetings of the heads of developmental agencies to try to flag issues of concern, and O’Leary is increasingly advocating development.

“We have to be more vocal,” he said. “I have no interest in having humanitarians indefinitely here in Afghanistan. We have to be looking for our exit strategy. That involves a peace process and development actors developing the key issues. Is it going to take decades? Yes. But it has to be on the agenda now.”

Gaps

In the meantime, as humanitarians try to return to their more traditional role, they find themselves in a tricky position. Keating recalls an informal settlement he visited in Kabul where people were living with “nothing”.

“You can’t respond on a humanitarian basis endlessly, and yet there is no development activity that we could perceive to address their needs,” he said. “They’re falling between two stools. I suspect that is true of a very large number of people in rural areas as well.”

Aid workers acknowledge that pulling back could lead to holes in coverage. But for Saillard, it might be a necessary evil. “Sometimes you have to create gaps for the right actors to wake up and take their responsibilities seriously,” he said.

ha/eo/cb
source www.irinnews.org

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Disabled children in the quake zone have to struggle to get to school

Posted by African Press International on January 31, 2012

PAKISTAN: Disabled by the 2005 quake and still out of school

Disabled children in the quake zone have to struggle to get to school

PESHAWAR,  – Jawad Khan, 15, spends most of his day at home in his village in the remote Battagram District of Khyber Pakhtoonkhwa Province (KP), sometimes glancing at a magazine, or occasionally helping his mother shell peas or cut up potatoes.

His three younger siblings spend their day in school, and Jawad, a top student in his grade till a year ago, assists them with revision and homework. He has himself refused to go to school for over a year as the new private school set up in the area lacks a ramp to accommodate his wheelchair.

Jawad lost both legs after he was trapped for over two hours under the rubble of his public school during the devastating quake of 2005 which killed at least 73,000 people in parts of KP (then known as the North West Frontier Province) and Pakistan-administered Kashmir.

That school is still to be built, and Jawad says he “feels too embarrassed” to be carried into his classroom. To add to his problems, his wheelchair, donated soon after his legs were amputated when he was nine, has also virtually fallen apart. “My family cannot afford a new one,” he told IRIN.

According to the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF), the 2005 quake left 23,000 children disabled. UNICEF itself is building “child friendly” schools across the quake zone, complete with facilities for the disabled, and last year opened 16 more such schools.

“At the Child Friendly Schools UNICEF is building, we try to mainstream disabled children. Ramps are provided when needed, but issues like access to schools for children in remote areas are huge ones,” Jan Madad, an education specialist at UNICEF, told IRIN.

But the 165 schools UNICEF has agreed to build cannot cater for the needs of all the quake-affected children.

According to the Earthquake Relief and Rehabilitation Authority, set up by the government immediately after the quake, 5,751 educational institutions damaged or destroyed by the quake needed to be reconstructed. Some 73 percent had been completed by the start of September 2011. Work continues on others, but this still means many children have lacked access to school. Some still do, while for the disabled it is sometimes impossible to go back to inaccessible classrooms.

Difficult terrain

Apart from school design, the terrain where the quake struck affects this. Ali Khan, now 12, lives in the Allai administrative unit of Battagram District. With his legs damaged during the quake, he can only hobble about on crutches. But the 4km walk down a steep mountain path to the school nearest his village is too arduous for him to make.

Ali, who once dreamt of becoming an engineer, told IRIN: “This is fate. I have to live with it, and I just help my father the best I can around our farm. This is all that is left for me know.”

Scattered across the quake zone, other children are in a similar situation. The 5km distance along a rickety path in her village near Bagh in Kashmir cannot be negotiated in the wheelchair used by Asma Sharif, 13, and she receives only occasional lessons at home from her uncle. “He is too busy to help any more, but at least I have kept up some of the studies I had begun before the quake,” Asma told IRIN from Bagh.

Zahoor Uddin, a doctor at the Islamabad-based Hashoo Foundation NGO, which has worked with quake victims since 2005, told IRIN: “The problems are exacerbated because wheelchairs wear out quickly in that terrain, and the victims have no funds to replace them.” In some cases he said tutors had been arranged for children unable to reach school.

Carried to school

The problems for many children are acute. “I have a nine-year-old pupil, Gul Muhammad, who is carried to school on his father’s back. His friends help him to the toilet, and the hard chairs are uncomfortable for him as he has a back problem. I feel sorry to see him and wish our school had better facilities,” said Alimuddin Ali, 35, a school teacher in Battagram.

He told IRIN he knew of disabled children in other villages with no access to school – either because of distance or the way schools were designed.

“I have read of education by radio in some areas of the world for children in remote communities. Perhaps we can use FM radio to offer them broadcasted lessons,” he suggested.

“The thing is these children need to go to schools. Radio can’t help them. My son is growing, I am getting older, and I worry about how long I can carry him to school,” said Gul’s father, Hakim Uddin.

kh/eo/cb
source www.irinnews.org

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The war separated children due to leaders’ hunger for power

Posted by African Press International on January 31, 2012

COTE D’IVOIRE: Separated children yet to return home

“Juliana” (real name unknown) at the Sainte Philomene Orphanage in Man. She was among a group of people who fled mass killings in Blolequin early in 2011

MAN,  – Hundreds of children in Côte d’Ivoire were separated from their parents when people fled their villages during post-election violence in 2011, but nine months after the conflict formally ended only a quarter of those children have been reunified with their families, says the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF).

Most are living with strangers who offered to take in the children. “I have difficulty supporting them but God is great,” said Brigitte Lahou, a subsistence farmer.

In March 2011, she took three separated children into her home outside Danané in western Côte d’Ivoire. One of the children – Doriane aged six – now has contact with her father and will be moving back home soon. However, the others – Davila, eight, and Junior, seven – have still not seen their parents since leaving home.

“[Davila] lost her family along the road and can’t explain where she came from. She was crying when she arrived,” Lahou said from under a tree in front of her dilapidated wooden home.

UNICEF and its partners documented 686 children who were separated or unaccompanied in Côte d’Ivoire as a result of the 2011 conflict, in which one million people were displaced. One hundred and thirty-seven have been reunified and 60 have returned on their own, their records show.

A UN Weekly Situation Report for 9-18 January, compiled by the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, also shows that by mid-January, some 1,600 unaccompanied and separated children were still living in refugee camps in Liberia’s Nimba and Grand Gedeh counties. Some 128,000 refugees remain in Liberia.

Barriers to reunification

The reunification of children requires people on the ground to do the tracing, to do the reunification, and others who can go to the most isolated rural zones. “We still have reports of families living in the forested area along the Liberian border. This is all posing a challenge for reunification,” said Christina de Bruin, deputy head of UNICEF Côte d’Ivoire.

UNICEF and partners Save the Children, International Rescue Committee and Caritas Côte d’Ivoire also had limited access to the region for months following the capture of former President Laurent Gbagbo in April 2011.

“The continuous volatile security situation hampered access and hampered the research,” de Bruin said.


Photo: Laura Burke/IRIN
Brigitte Lahou, right, took in three children to her home outside of Danané during the 2011 conflict

In addition, the area where children were separated is vast and many of the villages are isolated. Finding the families of very young children poses special challenges. “There are cases where we don’t have any information about the families,” said Irene Capet, an emergency response coordinator with Caritas Côte d’Ivoire.

At Sainte Philomene Orphanage in the western city of Man, Capet stands over a group of children who are too young to explain where their villages are, their parents’ names, or even their own.

“We don’t know her real name, but we call her Juliana,” said Capet, pointing to a toddler sitting alone on a plastic mat playing with a spoon, her head bandaged from a fall at the orphanage.

In April, “Juliana” was found following a group of people fleeing killings in Bloléquin, an Ivoirian town about 40km east of the Liberian border. No one in the group knew from where she had come. When she arrived at the orphanage, she showed signs of acute trauma. Capet said the girl did not talk for three months and had lost most of her hair. Efforts to locate the child’s family members – by posting her photos in camps for the displaced and disseminating messages through other NGOs – have failed.

“We have no idea where her parents are,” Capet said.

Best interests of the child

In some cases, organizations charged with reunification establish contact between a child and his or her parents, but contact does not result in automatic reunification.

“A key principle for UNICEF is the best interest of the child so we will not force reunification if it is not in the best interest of the child,” de Bruin said.

Determining what is best for each child requires specialists. Red Cross volunteers, in close coordination with the International Committee of the Red Cross, have been very involved in reunification.

“When we manage to trace the parents, we ask them if they want us to repatriate their children; then we ask the children if they agree to return to their parents,” Albert Jamah, charged with restoring family links for the ICRC in Liberia, said in a January statement. “Every family must meet the best interests of the child.”

With the displaced returning to their villages and continued improvements in security, it may be easier to reunify children now. “The program will be scaled up and accelerated in coming months,” says de Bruin.

lb/oss/cb
source www.irinnews.org

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