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Archive for February 18th, 2012

Gays are getting attention

Posted by African Press International on February 18, 2012

SWAZILAND: Reaching out to gays for the first time

Taboo in Swaziland

MBABANE,  – If caught, any Swazi engaged in a same-sex relationship will be arrested and jailed. But public health officials are using Valentine’s Day to urge gays to trust promises of confidentiality and test for HIV.

“February is known as the month of love, when couples express their love for each other through gifts, especially on Valentine’s Day. The purpose of our new campaign, called ‘The Love Test’, is to encourage couples to undergo HIV testing,” said Simon Zwane, Deputy Director of Health.

He acknowledged that in Swazi society gay sex is taboo but said the health ministry was actively extending its reach to include gay couples in HIV counselling and testing.

“Couples need to be consistently aware of their HIV status. This will result in them making joint decisions on risk reduction in their relationships,” said Zwane.

Swaziland’s HIV prevalence has remained the world’s highest for years, with about a quarter of all adults living with HIV.

Several NGOs, including the Alliance of Mayors’ Initiative on Coordinated Action against AIDS at the Local Level (AMICAALL) and the family planning company, PSI International, are partners in the nationwide campaign, the first health initiative in the small impoverished country to acknowledge the existence of gays and welcome them to make use of HIV testing and counselling services.

“We may be oppressed but we are going to survive.”
  Sabelo Simelane (not his real name), 21, has an easy smile, a quick laugh and gestures animatedly when he talks. If he feels he can take you into his confidence, he is forthright about his life as someone whose sexual preference makes him an outlaw and a social outcast in his country, Swaziland, where same-sex partnerships are a crime.

“As long as I can have my friends and do what I want, I don’t mind keeping my secret. If I want to live out in the open I can move to South Africa, which is only an hour away. But my mother needs me, not just financially because I support her but she likes me keeping her company. My father lives with his second wife. I may be a man now but he still beats me when he sees me, out of habit I guess. He doesn’t know who I love, no one does except Paul, my special friend.

I see on the Internet that… in America [people] blamed gays [for] bringing AIDS there, but in Swaziland nobody blames gays because government refuses to believe there are gay Swazis. Lots of my friends sleep with women – I do – but my heart isn’t in it. My heart is with Paul. He is like Paul in the Bible. He had his Damascus moment when he had to choose which path to take. He saw me on this path and he joined me, and we’ve been in love ever since.

I got HIV tested because I am responsible. They don’t ask if you are gay and I don’t tell – why would anyone do that and get discriminated against? People think they have a right to insult and even throw stones at gay people. We keep quiet. We are very knowledgeable about HIV – all my friends know to get tested and wear condoms. We may be oppressed but we are going to survive.”

jh/kn/he

 

“Just admitting that there are gays in Swaziland is a big step for a government ministry,” said Alicia Dlamini, a HIV testing counsellor in Manzini, the country’s industrial hub.

Three months ago the Minister of Justice and Constitutional Affairs, Magwagwa Gamedze, a traditional chief appointed by King Mswati, dismissed a recommendation by a United Nations working group on human rights that Swaziland enact a law to protect gay members of society. Gamedze said so few, if any, gays live in Swaziland that the bother of drafting such a law was not worth the effort.

“It was difficult for government to formulate a policy on homosexuals or enact a law to recognize them because they actually formed a minority if ever they existed. Their numbers do not permit us to start processing a policy,” the justice minister said.

Very little information is available on same-sex couples in Swaziland and no gay organizations are involved in “The Love Test” campaign. The Gays and Lesbians Association of Swaziland (GALESWA), formed in the 1990s, has only one known member.

The constitution does not safeguard the rights of homosexuals, and sodomy laws dating from the early 20th century are still on the books. King Mswati has reportedly called same-sex relationships “satanic”, and Prime Minister Barnabas Dlamini has called homosexuality “an abnormality and a sickness”.

Human rights groups regularly criticize Swaziland for its anti-gay laws, and note that discrimination against gays is routine and acceptable in the conservative society of this small country.

“AIDS is not a ‘gay disease’ in Swaziland. It is almost entirely spread by heterosexual relationships… No one blames gays for AIDS in Swaziland, they just blame gays for being alive and being gay, so it is hard for a gay person to risk exposure,” Alicia Dlamini pointed out.

Dlamini’s fellow HIV counsellor, Thamie Shongwe, feels the health ministry’s Valentine’s campaign to test couples will fail to attract same-sex couples.

Lucky Gama (not his actual name), 24, a gay auto mechanic, agreed. “A lot of gays are afraid that if they go to get tested they will be found out and disgraced. Maybe the police will be called to arrest you, because this is Swaziland.”

There is a high level of mistrust. “I have heard of my gay friends say they are in fear because there is a test they give you without you knowing it that shows if you are gay,” Gama said. “I did get an HIV test but it was at school when all the students volunteered to take a test, so the testers were not on the lookout for gays.”

jh/kn/he
source www.irinews.org

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Farmers are increasingly uncertain about when to plant

Posted by African Press International on February 18, 2012

DISASTERS: Smart weather data can make a difference

Photo: CIMMYT
Farmers are increasingly uncertain about when to plant

NAIROBI,  – “When should we plant?” is a question increasingly being asked by small farmers in sub-Saharan Africa who depend on rain-fed agriculture. To help answer such questions, climate scientists are being urged to provide more reliable and relevant local climate data, and better communicate their knowledge on climate adaptation techniques. 

“When we think about preparing for imminent disasters it is not possible to prepare for flooding, for example, just a few days in advance, which we get from the weather forecast. We need to think about preparedness further in advance and think in terms of what kind of decisions we can make, say, three months in advance, such as moving important resources away. We need a continuum of information,” said Simon Mason, the chief climate scientist at Columbia University’s International Research Institute (IRI) in the USA.

According to Mason, more effective short, mid-range and seasonal weather forecasting is needed for the development of useful early warning systems. 

Spatial weather tools, including satellite imagery and weather forecasts, allow the processing of weather data over different space and time frames. By allowing better integration of historical data with real-time weather data, such tools can improve the accuracy and impact of forecasts.

“If we are using projections of what will happen in 80 years to plan for the next 10 years, then we will have very bad information,” he said. “We have to match the kind of climate information we have with our decision-making time frames… For [climate] adaptation, we are much more interested in what is going to happen in the next few years,” he said.

Mason was speaking at a recent forum on disaster risk management at which a partnership between the UN International Strategy for Disaster Reduction (ISDR) and the African Centre of Meteorological Applications for Development (ACMAD) was launched. The partnership is aimed at facilitating the linkage between climate scientists and disaster risk managers as well as policymakers. 

“There is a need to convert the information coming from scientists into usable material such as maps… There is a need to strengthen more partnerships with regard to climate change in the Horn of Africa region,” said ISDR Africa head Pedro Basabe. 

Poor linkages in the past have meant that climate research does not necessarily inform policy for disaster mitigation: Complicated, long-range climate projections are often hard to sell to policymakers. 

“We are fairly renowned for being incomprehensible to everybody,” said Mason.

User-friendly data

To help make climate data more palatable, the World Meteorological Organization’s Global Framework for Climate Services (GFCS) is helping with capacity-building in regional climate bodies such as ACMAD, the Inter-Governmental Authority on Development (IGAD), and the Climate Predication and Applications Centre (ICPAC). This in turn can assist national bodies produce customized information that is more relevant for communities. 

Communication training workshops with climate scientists are also planned. 

“There is a need to provide the science in summary for the policymakers. We need to try [to] communicate science in a more simple and relevant manner,” said Maarten van Aalst, director of the Red Cross/Red Crescent Climate Centre. 

In a situation where climate projections are fraught with uncertainty, van Aalst said: “We need to plan [for disasters] in as practical circumstances as possible, even in anticipation of better information.”

aw/cb
source www.irinnews.org

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Ready to die at sea

Posted by African Press International on February 18, 2012

INDONESIA: Sayed Ahmed Abdellatif, “I’m ready to die at sea”

Sayed Ahmad Abdellatif

BOGOR,  – Egyptian asylum-seeker Sayed Ahmed Abdellatif, married with six children, says he is ready to risk everything to reach Australia – even his family.

Hundreds of asylum-seekers lose their lives each year on the dangerous journey, many of them women  and children. In December, an overloaded vessel, carrying some 250 mostly Iranian and Afghan asylum-seekers, sank off Indonesia’s eastern Java island, killing all but 47 on board.

But for 41-year-old Abdellatif, who faces possible extradition and a 15-year prison sentence of hard labour in Egypt for his religious affiliations, the risk is worth it. He now plans to pay people smugglers up to US$17,000 to move his family to Australia. IRIN met Abdellatif outside the Indonesian town of Bogor, now a hub for asylum-seekers in the country, on the eve of his trip.

“It’s been almost 20 years that I have been on the run and I can’t take it any more. I’ve given up hope. Egypt is supposed to be a Muslim country, but in reality it isn’t. Those who follow their beliefs openly face the risk of arrest and detention. I myself was arrested three times. Thousands of people face similar persecution, which is why I fled.

“Since leaving Egypt, I have taken my family from Albania to the UK and then onward to Iran. For years I languished in an Iraqi refugee camp there – pretending to be Palestinian lest I be found out and returned to Egypt. Later we travelled to Malaysia via India on fake passports and onward to Indonesia; again illegally. Throughout this journey, I faced repeated arrest and detention, as have members of my family.

“I arrived in Malaysia from Iran in 2010 before making my way to Indonesia in the hopes of taking my family to the UK. After boarding the plane in Jakarta, we were again arrested in Singapore and sent back to Indonesia on 3 June 2010. I applied for refugee status on 30 August 2010, but almost two years on have no idea what is happening with my case.

“As a result, I have no choice but to make my way to Australia on my own. I cannot return to Egypt and I can’t stay here. I lost 20 years of my life looking for a safe place for myself and my family. Now I need to risk it all, including the life of my one-year-old son who was born here.

“Everyone tells me it’s dangerous and yes, the risks are high, but I have to do it. We will sell everything we have to make this happen, including my wife’s gold, to make what I’m told is a three-day journey to Australia. Generally people smugglers charge $6,000 per person, but they charge less for young children.

“I know there is no guarantee I will make it. I also know I am putting the lives of my children at risk, but I’m ready to die at sea.

“If I go by boat, at least I have a hope of reaching Australia. If I stay here, I have nothing.”

According to the UN Refugee Agency, UNHCR, there are more than 4,000 asylum-seekers and recognized refugees in Indonesia today.

ds/mw source www.irinnews.org

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