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Archive for August 7th, 2012

ICC discloses witness 4, 11 and 12 to Uhuru Kenyatta

Posted by African Press International on August 7, 2012

The International Criminal Court which is now ready for the Kenya case has decided to make it easier for the defence when it comes to the redacted documents that has helped hide the names of three prosecution witnesses whose evidence wants to pin down Uhuru Kenyatta when his case starts in April next year..
The three witnesses have contradicted themselves and yet they claim to have attended the same meeting that Uhuru Kenyatta is supposed to have attended and planned the 2007/2008 Violence that caused many people their lives.

Uhuru has denied the charge. Now that he knows who they are, he has the opporunity to dig well into their background and their intentions.

It was reported earlier that the same witnesses wanted to be the defence witnesses but at a cost, only to switch sides when the offer by the prosecution became lucrative.

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Norwegian handball women wins over Brazil now ready for semi-finals

Posted by African Press International on August 7, 2012

The Norwegian team advanced today to the semifinals. They are hoping to reach the finals. The team plays Thursday.

They managed to knock down the Brazilians, a team that experts were betting on as unbeatable. The Brazilians were not in the game at all the last 20 minutes of the game.

If Norway does well at the semifinals, they stand a chance for gold.
They will fight it out with the South Koreans who beat the Russians in the struggle to get to the semifinals

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Economic Crisis might hit Norway

Posted by African Press International on August 7, 2012

The European economic crisis that has hit many Eurozone countries might begin to affect Norway. Steven Desmyter an expert at a British investment company suggests that Norway is not immune to an economic crisis and that pressure on the economy will continue.

Mr. Steven says that Norway is already feeling the negative effects because due to higher value of the krone as investors seek shelter from the storm, which hits the export industry.

The expert believes the crisis will be felt strongly in Norway if it worsens. He also emphasized that he is only expressing his view of the market.

“The Norwegian export industry with the exception of oil and gas industry will become less competitive, and you may have problems with deflation. Nevertheless this is peanuts in relation to the problems that other countries are struggling with,” he told (NRK) The Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation.

Earlier this week Norway’s Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg also spoke about Norway’s economic situation, expressing concern over the future of the Euro and warning it would be naive to believe that oil would keep Norway safe from an economic crisis.

There has been an influx in the number of Europeans coming to Norway to find work, from countries hit by the economic crisis. Greece, Spain and Italy are among the countries that are worst hit by the crisis and unemployment rate in these countries has risen to more than 50%.

– By Elizabeth M.Koikai

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Shaping a greener future for our children

Posted by African Press International on August 7, 2012

Shaping a greener future for our children

JOHANNESBURG,  - Two consecutive power outages affecting at least 600 million people spelt out India’s energy crisis as August began. Caused in part by a coal shortage and in part by poor rains, the lack of power makes a strong case for an urgent global need to consider alternative sources of electricity.

Electricity is the engine that drives modern lives and economies, so seeking innovative sources of power implies that economies will also have to be run differently.

It is in this context that the term “green economy” – an alternative to a conventional or “brown” one that spews greenhouse gas emissions and warms the atmosphere – has gained some traction. A major internet search engine shows more than 29 million hits on “green economy”, which is considerable for a phrase that only came into regular use five years ago.

“Green economy” was the cause of controversy in the recent Rio+20 Earth Summit. Here is a quick look at what it is about, and whether we should be concerned about it.

What does it mean?

There is no common understanding of what is meant by a green economy. The term emerged in 1989 to describe environmental economics, according to the UN Council for Sustainable Development. Many use it in that sense – an economy in which there is an improved sense of human wellbeing and social equity, with reduced environmental and ecological risks.

The UN Environment Programme (UNEP), which has spent considerable resources on promoting the concept, defines it as “[An economy] which is low-carbon, resource-efficient and socially inclusive.”

But the continuing volatility in international markets, the hike in fossil fuel prices, the food price crisis, and the unfolding impact of climate change have pushed the concept in various directions and given it different definitions and agendas. The approach varies according to who is behind it.

Die-hard environmentalists say a green economy relies completely on renewable energies with “zero” greenhouse gas emissions, and they do not regard a “low-carbon” economy as “green” because it still releases harmful emissions.

The Centre for Community Innovation at the University of California reviewed several reports on the green economy in 2008 and found few had bothered to define it, but all agreed that “clean energy is its core”.

Making the switch

The countries that signed the Kyoto Protocol in 1995 under the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), agreeing to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions, sooner or later will have to switch to greener sources of energy.

But when to make the switch, and how, has been hotly contested in negotiations to extend the Kyoto Protocol, the first phase of which expires in December 2012. When UNEP introduced the term “green economy”, many developing countries regarded it with some suspicion. Most of them would like to chart their own development routes based on equity, to ensure that all their citizens have access to clean energy and opportunities to grow, rather than being dictated to by anyone.

''Almost all countries have a policy or proposal for a “greener” economy that details their plans to make the transition to greater dependence on renewable energy, but it is based on their own level of preparedness and comfort''

Almost all countries have a policy or proposal for a “greener” economy that details their plans to make the transition to greater dependence on renewable energy, but it is based on their own level of preparedness and comfort.

For instance, South Africa, which depends on local coal for about 77 percent of its energy needs and raises revenue from exports (it is the world’s fourth largest exporter), says it is not going to give up on coal for at least two decades. Coal mining employs more than 250,000 people and provides electricity in a country where most people still rely on wood and paraffin, which have health risks. The coal deposits are relatively shallow and therefore cheap to mine, and will last for at least another 50 years.

But the government does have plans to make use of renewable energies – wind and solar power, low-carbon sources such as gas,nuclear energy, and imported hydroelectricity – and wants to create “green jobs” that will take care of people and the environment.

The science

Warnings from science to make the switch have grown more insistent and frequent. The International Energy Agency (IEA) warned in 2011 that reliance on coal – expected to increase to 65 percent by 2035 – will “lock” the world in the next five years on a path that could see global temperatures soar by two degrees Celsius and beyond by the turn of the century. Energy experts point out that to prevent this scenario, all future energy needs would have to be zero-carbon.

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and other climate scientists regard global warming of two degrees Celsius as catastrophic, bringing water stress to arid and semi-arid countries, more floods in low-lying coastal areas, coastal erosion in small island states, and the elimination of up to 30 percent of animal and plant species.

But such warnings have only added fuel to hotly contested debates in the UNFCCC process on who should make drastic cuts in their reliance on fossil fuels first. Developing countries stand by the Kyoto Protocol, which places the onus of making mandatory cuts on the developed world, as it is held responsible for historical emissions.

At the 2011 UNFCCC conference in Durban, South Africa, countries agreed to set up a mechanism by 2012 to support developing countries in adopting cleaner energies by providing the technology and capacity to do so.

The Rio+20 outcome

Some developed countries put a “green economy” on the agenda for the Rio+20 meeting in Brazil in 2012 as a roadmap to global sustainable development, which the UN defines as “development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs”.

But developing countries at Rio+20 were concerned that the developed world, using their own interpretation of the term “green economy”, could abuse it to impose trade restrictions or set new conditions for providing loans.

Most developed countries supported a text calling for a transition to a green economy that included phasing out fossil fuel subsidies, the use and production of renewable energies, and creating “green” jobs in this new economic model.

“While we do not object to this vision, the way it was set out meant a major economic restructuring, with the possible trade-offs and implications that could be involved in the process down the road not really spelt out for us,” said Qazi Kholifuzzaman Ahmad, an economist and member of Bangladesh’s negotiating team at Rio+20.

“We remember the time we were asked to restructure [by the Bretton Woods institutions in the 1990s], with the condition that if we did not we would not receive finances, and everyone knows its consequences,” he noted.

Brazil’s chief negotiator at Rio+20, Andre Correa Do Lago, pointed out that there are no examples of a green economy to emulate, even in the developed world. The final outcome left it to countries to determine their own pathways to sustainable development, suggesting that a green economy could be one such approach.

What models are there?

South Korea, which is credited with coining the term “green growth” in 2008, when the global economy began to slow down, is still trying to fine-tune the concept. In 2009 the South Korean government responded to the recession by announcing a US$38.1 billion stimulus package, 80 percent of which it devoted to efficient use of resources such as fresh water, waste, energy-efficient buildings, renewable energies, low-carbon vehicles and the rail network.

It also announced an $83.6 billion five-year plan for green growth. UNEP said the country faces enormous challenges in making the transition, as it imports 97 percent of its energy needs. Nevertheless, it is setting up a policy architecture for such an economy, which could be useful for other countries.

The South Koreans have adopted a green procurement law to promote the consumption of environmentally friendly products. It introduced a carbon cash-back system that awards carbon points to people purchasing such products, which can be exchanged for concessions at government outlets.

The “development first” approach to the green economy has been pushed by the African Union, said eminent African scientist Youba Sokona, the co-chair of the IPCC’s Working Group III (mitigation issues). In a paper prepared by him as the coordinator of the African Climate Policy Centre, Sokona described this approach as an “opportunity to transform climate challenges into development opportunities … to modernize and upgrade their water, energy, urbanization plans and agricultural systems.”

He said countries in the region had adopted the concepts of a “green economy” and “green growth”, which did not “originate in Africa”, but that these concepts “needed to be re-articulated to have real meaning in the African condition, and the entry point for us is that it has to reduce poverty and make us climate resilient.”

Sokona called for “leapfrogging” directly to cleaner technologies and sustainable land-use solutions, but said these should be home-grown, built by an African pool of researchers and industry that needed to be nurtured. Importing technology to produce renewable energy could be prohibitively expensive.

A number of networks of organizations and the private sector have suggested ways, or developed frameworks, on how to initiate a green economy.

Everyone acknowledges that “going green” is a complicated process, and each country will have to determine the colour of its future.

jk/he
source http://www.irinnews.org

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Some Syrian families are selling their livestock to survive

Posted by African Press International on August 7, 2012

Some Syrian families are selling their livestock to survive

DUBAI,  - The Syrian conflict has left up to three million people in need of food assistance and agricultural support in the next year, according to the UN and the Syrian government.

Family income has dropped; the cost of fuel is rising; remittances are down; farmers and herders have lost their assets and livelihoods; the wheat harvest has been delayed; and deforestation is rising, the World Food Programme (WFP), the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), and the Syrian Ministry of Agriculture and Agrarian Reform found in a joint assessment conducted in June.

Syria’s agricultural sector has lost US$1.8 billion this year because of the Syrian crisis, the assessment found.

“The effects of these major losses are first, and most viciously, felt by the poorest in the country. Most of the vulnerable families the mission visited reported less income and more expenditure – their lives becoming more difficult by the day,” WFP Representative and Country Director in Syria Muhannad Hadi said in a statement.

WFP and FAO say they need $100 million to scale up food distributions and assistance to rural people. A broader appeal by the UN for $180 million, launched in April, to respond to humanitarian needs in Syria remains one-quarter funded.

ha/cb source http://www.irinnews.org

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Hillary Clinton had no business in lecturing Kenyan leaders

Posted by African Press International on August 7, 2012

The Americans have decided to be dictators. This last weekend president Obama dispatched Clinton to Kenya in heris effort to mislead Kenyan voters so as to reject presidential hopefuls William Ruto and Uhuru Kenyatta.

This dictatorship. The US also wanted to help the government in purchasin election metric kits. The government turned the offr and turned Canada for help.

When Clinton visited the Chief Justice it has now been confirmed that she said Kenya will be sanctioned if either Mr Ruto or Mr Kenyatta were to win the election.

This is a very bad move by the US AND MUST BE REJECTED by all peaceful loving Kenyans..

END

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