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Archive for February 13th, 2012

Kenya: Affordable cooking gas

Posted by African Press International on February 13, 2012

By Thomas Ochieng, API correspondent in Kenya

With climatic changes affecting the world, a new cooking concept to check the rampant pollution that has contributed to the most alarming climate change has been launched in Kenya by Premier gas limited with technical and financial support from the International Finance Corporation IFC the lending arm of the World Bank. The new product known as Pima gas comes in a 1kg gas cylinder that can be refilled with as little as Ksh.50.

With 68% of Kenya’s urban households using kerosene for their cooking needs, this new low-cost cooking gas concept the first of its kind in Africa is poised to reduce the ramification of climate change. During the launch the Premier gas General manager  Michael Momanyi called upon Kenyans to embrace this new and affordable concept to help in mitigating the effects of climate change, “Pima gas will enable users to cook in cost-effective, clean and sustainable manner that is beneficial to the health of both the people and the environment” Said Momanyi, adding that the affordable refill concept has unique attributes that makes it easy for consumers to purchase and use the liquefied petroleum gas LPG.

The company has also embarked on a massive consumer education sensitizing consumers on safety in using the gas cylinder. “The company has invested 25% of its initial operating capital towards safety of the consumers and the distributors in the city and its environs” emphasized the General Manager adding that the selected distribution points will be inspected to comply with the specified safety standards set by the international standards.
 
Ends.

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Jonglei violence: The UN estimates 140,000 people need help

Posted by African Press International on February 13, 2012

SOUTH SUDAN: Briefing on Jonglei violence

The UN estimates 140,000 people need help

JUBA,  – Several clashes involving thousands of combatants in South Sudan’s Jonglei state have highlighted the volatility of the world’s newest country, affecting some 140,000 people. A major new offensive has been announced to start in early March.

What is Jonglei?

With a surface area of 123,000 sqkm, the largest and also the most densely populated of the 10 states in South Sudan. It suffers from a dearth of basic infrastructure such as roads, as well as chronic insecurity rooted in resource conflicts, and frequent floods.

Crop production is the primary economic activity, although cattle and fishing play an important role in livelihoods. Sudan’s second civil war began in Jonglei in 1983. the region is home to six Nilotic ethnic groups: the Nuer, Dinka, Anyuak, Murle, Kachipo and Jieh.

Its lack of infrastructure has greatly limited the interest of external investors; French oil giant Total has been unable to explore its concessions there. Stability is a prerequisite for fulfilling the tourism potential offered by some of Africa’s largest migrations of wildlife.

Who are the combatants?

Broadly, two communities: the Lou and other Nuer groups, fighting under the resurrected banner of the White Army, local defence units initially set up to protect cattle and property, which were militarized during the 1983-2005 civil war; and the Murle, a minority group based mainly in Jonglei’s Pibor county.

Some members of the powerful Dinka community have joined the White Army.

What drives the conflict?

Like many proximate livestock-raising communities in marginal lands, rival groups in Jonglei have a long history of raiding each another’s cattle, and arming themselves to defend against such raids.

The civil war led to a massive increase of small arms as both Khartoum and the then-rebel Sudan People’s Liberation Army (SPLA) mobilized various communities, fomenting localized proxy conflicts. Such support is reported to have continued well after the 2005 signing of the Comprehensive Peace Accord.

Recent years have seen an increasing sophistication in the retaliatory cattle raids, with the use of satellite phones, modern weapons and military tactics.

Deaths resulting from these raids have risen accordingly and clashes have evolved from targeting only armed youths to attacking – or abducting – any members of a rival community, including women, children and the elderly.

In 2011, inter-communal violence claimed 1,100 lives in Jonglei.

Other contributory factors are a scarcity of central government authority, security, development and justice mechanisms, as well as a change in social fabric that has left elders with much less influence over the youth, many of whom are being initiated into combat at a very young age.

The latest large-scale Lou Nuer offensive was preceded by an announcement that their intention was to “invade Murleland and wipe out the entire Murle tribe on the face of the earth”. Claiming that the Juba government had failed to protect their cattle, children and women, they said they had to take the matter into their own hands “through the barrel of the gun”.

The Murle contend they are discriminated against, sidelined for development projects and under-represented in the political sphere. At state government level, they say representatives are given little power or money to improve things, and that the authorities often describe the Murle as “pests” or a “nuisance”.

Underdevelopment is considered a conflict driver. Pibor county is a vast area with just one aid agency providing medical services to more than 160,000 people, a dearth of schools and no employment opportunities.


Photo: Hannah McNeish/IRIN
Russia, which has eight helicopters and 120 personnel in UNMISS, is due to withdraw from the peacekeeping mission in April

Mass devastation and some 80,000 heads of cattle taken from Murle areas in January have left tens of thousands homeless and dependent on overstretched aid agencies for food, after crops were scorched in attacks.

What are the effects of the violence?

The top government official in Pibor reported 3,000 deaths, a figure that is impossible to confirm given the large area involved and access difficulties. Survivors have spoken of seeing hundreds of bodies near villages after attacks.

The UN has registered more than 140,000 people in Jonglei needing assistance, many of them displaced.

Cattle have been stolen and people made homeless in their tens of thousands. Large areas under cultivation have been scorched.

Without cows and the women they saved years to raise enough cattle to marry, many men are destitute, with little or no ability to rebuild a modicum of economic security. Such disaffection is likely to fuel the cycle of violence.

Recent attacks have led to the deliberate, widespread destruction of essential basic services, such as water points, health posts and schools, as well as crucial humanitarian centres, where supplies were looted. Such destruction greatly complicates the return of the displaced populations.

In Pibor county, medical charity Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) has warned of a high number of malaria cases from people sleeping outside, and rising levels of acute malnutrition.

MSF has treated numerous gunshot and stab wounds and expressed shock at the number of women, children and elderly people hurt in attacks, often in the presence of family members, leading to psychological trauma.

Why were civilians not better protected?

The UN Mission in South Sudan (UNMISS) was able to track an 8,000-strong column of armed men marching towards Pibor village before some of the worst violence. But with only 400 peacekeepers and 800 government troops in place, they were vastly outnumbered, and urged residents to flee the column and take refuge behind their defensive lines in Pibor. UNMISS also said the diffuse and unpredictable nature of the attacks on remote villages compromised its ability to protect civilians.

UNMISS has since increased its Jonglei presence to around 1,100 peacekeepers in new permanent bases, roughly half the mission’s in-country combat-ready troops, and has called on Juba to deploy a “a significant number” of troops to fill substantial gaps in a planned buffer zone.

The UN force’s capacity will be affected by the April departure of its contingent from Russia, which provides many of UNMISS’s pilots and aircraft. In late 2011, Russian pilots went on strike over alleged harassment by SPLA forces in Jonglei.

The army said it would bring up to 6,000 soldiers to Jonglei - where, local officials say, 3,000 SPLA troops are currently deployed, 1,000 of them in Pibor town. Locals say the presence of the troops will not necessarily deliver protection, especially if the individual soldiers are drawn from the same community as some of the combatants, which would limit their willingness to engage militarily.

What is being done to prevent more violence?

The government has said the army will forcibly disarm all communities in Jonglei state in the near future. Security experts have deemed this premature and an extremely dangerous move that could spark mass violence unless carried out in conjunction with comprehensive peace talks and by soldiers belonging to none of the ethnic groups involved in the violence.

They say lessons must be learnt from previous operations – notably the 2006 forced disarmament of the White Army in Jonglei, during which several hundred Nuer youths were killed – which tended to expose disarmed communities to attack, leading them to quickly obtain new weapons.

There has been little in the way of dialogue between rival groups, despite repeated appeals by religious leaders, community elders and aid agencies.

Instead, the rhetoric is increasingly combative. The “Nuer and Dinka White Army” recently released a statement saying some 30,000 “well-armed youth” comprising Dinka and Nuer in Jonglei and 10,000 Ethiopian Nuer, would from early March embark on “Operation Savanna Storm” with the aim of preventing future raids by Murle youth.

“The operation will be permanent until Murle do not pose security threats to their neighbours,” the statement said.

hm/am/mw
source www.irinnews.org

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Months after fighting ended in Côte d’Ivoire, at least 15,000 displaced people are still in camps

Posted by African Press International on February 13, 2012

COTE D’IVOIRE: Loss of relief aid could threaten fragile peace

In the village of Zeaglo in Moyen-Cavally, northwest of Guiglo, a group of women said that since returning to their village, members of their ethnic group had been threatened by Dozos

GUIGLO,  – Nine months after fighting ended in Côte d’Ivoire, at least 15,000 displaced people are still in camps, many of the half million returnees require food aid, the groundwork for reconciliation in many parts of the west has not yet been laid – and aid workers are worried funding will dry up, threatening the fragile peace.

“I don’t want the world to move on and say everything in Côte d’Ivoire is fine,” Catherine Bragg, assistant secretary-general for humanitarian affairs and deputy emergency relief coordinator for the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), said on 17 January in Duékoué, 400km northwest of Abidjan.

She was on a three-day tour of the county, which included a visit the Nahibly camp for internally displaced persons (IDPs) in Duékoué which hosts 4,557 people.

“There are still people displaced without water, electricity, and dependent on food assistance,” she added.

Thousands of returnees who missed the planting season are also dependent on food aid for survival, and their prospects for planting this year are poor. Most were unable to return to their fields because their land was taken over after they were displaced.

Bragg launched a consolidated appeal in Abidjan for Côte d’Ivoire on 16 January. UN agencies are seeking more than US$173 million to cover the needs of over three million people from now until the end of December 2012.

“If they don’t receive humanitarian help, tensions could escalate again,” Max Hadorn, head of OCHA operations in Côte d’Ivoire, told IRIN.

To kick-start what OCHA describes as a “vital humanitarian response”, it said the Central Emergency Relief Fund had just allocated $8 million for life-saving projects in the country.

Farmers typically begin preparing the fields in February and planting in March. “If they don’t plant, they will be dependent on humanitarian aid for the rest of the year,” he added.

Shelter shortages

“We’re here because we don’t have a home to return to,” said Juliette Tehe, who has been displaced at Nahibly IDP camp since last spring. She comes from Niambly, a village 6km east of Duékoué.

Niambly was set on fire in March 2011 during fighting between government and anti-government forces. At least 1,000 homes were partially or completely destroyed in the village, which is still scattered with residents’ charred belongings.

Neil Brighton of the UN Refugee Agency, which is leading on shelter for the displaced, said in the country’s western region at least 18,000 homes had been destroyed, and there was only enough funding to rebuild 4,000, of which 400 had so far been completed.

“The needs are huge and, at the moment, only three or four agencies are actually building,” he said.

Tehe, who remains displaced, said even with shelter, there were Dozos (fearsome looking traditional hunters) in the village, which may prevent her family from returning. “There are people with guns around. All the fields are blocked,” she said.

“It’s our fields we’re worried about”

In the village of Zeaglo in Moyen-Cavally, northwest of Guiglo, a group of women said that since returning to their village, members of their ethnic group had been threatened by Dozos when they attempted to enter their farms. One of the village residents, Marceline Dodien, used to farm cassava, cocoa and bananas, but is now idle because her fields were seized during the three months of her displacement during which she lived in the forest.

The women are part of the Guéré ethnic group which overwhelmingly supported ousted President Laurent Gbagbo in 2011. Tensions over land rights with other ethnic groups predate the 2011 crisis. However, politically, Alice Tiemoko, a farmer, said, there was improvement.

“We are unified now. We think well of the [current] president. It’s our fields we’re concerned about,” she said.

Reconciliation obstacles

While many Ivoirians express willingness to reconcile, the women said the groundwork for reconciliation was still missing in Zeaglo.

“If we had our basic needs met – maybe, but our hearts are still filled with anger. We want to get back what was taken from us,” Irene Gueï said.

The women blamed “foreigners” for taking their land, but many of the so-called “foreigners” came to the region decades or generations ago, and also claim rights to the land

Tiemoko told IRIN the different ethnic groups living in Zeaglo got along in the village. “We laugh together in the village. We get along here, but outside we don’t,” she said.

Bragg applauded the return of over a half a million people in the last nine months, which she said was a testimony to increasing security; the resolution of the crisis; international support; and a tribute to the hard work of the international community. But, she added: “There are still substantial needs that require substantial resources to deal with persisting problems.”

She appealed to donors for continued funding throughout 2012, adding that help for the most vulnerable persons remained “an absolute priority”, especially in the country’s western and southwestern regions.

“Considerable needs remain in several areas such as protection of civilians, restoration of means of livelihood, shelter, access to basic services and voluntary return and reintegration of displaced persons and refugees,” she said on 18 January at the end of her visit. “A premature exit of humanitarian actors could aggravate the situation.”

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source www.irinnews.org

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Families queue for food at a feeding point in Mogadishu last year

Posted by African Press International on February 13, 2012

HORN: Fears of a new drought as La Niña returns

Families queue for food at a feeding point in Mogadishu last year

JOHANNESBURG, The climatic conditions linked to the drought in the Horn in 2011 have persisted, and some early warning officials say the aid community should brace themselves for a possible re-run of last year’s food crisis.

However, in their forecast, the World Meteorological Organisation (WMO) says they expect the impact of the La Niña to wane over March to May 2012, which is the major rainfall period for pastoral and agricultural areas of northern Kenya, southern Ethiopia, and most of Somalia, accounting for 50-60 percent of annual rainfall.

“That is the official line, but the latest modeling suggests that the [La Niña ] conditions seem quite similar to 2011,” said an early warning official. “The message out there is to be prepared to respond before it is too late.”

La Niña occurs when the surface of the central and eastern Pacific Ocean – the world’s largest body of water – cools, and has a climatic impact in other regions of the world.

According to the Famine Early Warning Systems Network (FEWS NET) , “the western Pacific is currently exhibiting a sea surface temperature and rainfall pattern which is similar to patterns experienced during the drought years of 1984, 2000, 2004, 2007, 2008, 2009, and 2011. This analysis suggests that if these conditions persist, eastern Kenya, southern Somalia, and southeastern Ethiopia may experience dry conditions.”

But the current La Niña is “relatively weaker” than the one recorded in 2011, said Rupa Kumar Kolli, chief of the World Climate Applications and Services Division at WMO.

He noted that the WMO forecast was a global outlook, and various local factors would come into play when looking at the event’s impact regionally. “For instance conditions [temperature and rainfall patterns] in the Indian Ocean would be a factor that would influence rainfall patterns in the Horn.”

The Greater Horn of Africa Climate Outlook Forum, which monitors such local conditions, is meeting from 27 to 29 February in Rwanda and will provide greater forecast clarity, said both Kolli and FEWS NET.

jk/oa source www.irinnews.org

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