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                    <title>TIGblogs - Henry Ekwuruke's TIGBlog</title> 
                    <link>http://ekwuruke.tigblog.org/</link> 
                    <description>What's on the minds of young leaders from around the globe?</description> 
                    <language>en-us</language> 
             
                <item> 
                    <title>Land reforms vital in fight against poverty</title> 
                    <link>http://ekwuruke.tigblog.org/post/546485</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[Experts from the African Union Commission, the UN Economic Commission for Africa (ECA) and the Africa Development Bank (AfDB) have reiterated the fact that land policy and land reforms are fundamental in addressing issues of poverty, food security and general stability in the African region.<br />
<br />
They were speaking at the opening session of a three-day regional consultative workshop on land policy in North Africa. Officials from the AUC, UNECA, and AfDB underscored the urgent need to build solid partnerships for land reforms in Africa.<br />
<br />
Dr. Josue Dioné, Director of the Division of Food Security and Sustainable Development at the ECA, said that “many parts of the continent are riddled with conflicts related to failures in systems for land governance, control and use”.<br />
<br />
Mr. Peter Mwanakatwe of the African Development Bank drew a link with the attainment of the Millennium Development Goals, including the promotion of gender equality and women empowerment and explained that they are interwoven with land use.<br />
<br />
Dr. Abebe H. Gebriel of AUC spoke on behalf of Mrs. Rhoda Peace Tumusiime, AU Commissioner for Rural Economy and Agriculture. He pointed out that “in order to ensure that land policy and agrarian reforms address pertinent issues in Africa, we must recognize the need for a policy framework that addresses issues related to state sovereignty over land; the unequal distribution of land resources, the dualistic nature of property systems, land tenure… and land issues in the post-colonial reconstruction”.<br />
<br />
The Addis Ababa workshop is the sixth in a series of regional stakeholder consultations aimed at coming out with a consensus document to be tabled at the AU Assembly of Heads of State and Government during its July 2009 Summit.<br />
<br />
There have been regional consultations for Southern Africa in Windhoek, Namibia (29-31 August 2007); Eastern Africa in Kigali, Rwanda (16-18 January 2008); West Africa in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso (15-18 April 2008) and Central Africa in Yaounde, Cameroon (6-8 August 2008).<br />
<br />
The current workshop hopes to reach consensus on the revisions to finalize the regional background document on land policy in North Africa.<br />
<br />
It will also discuss specificities initiatives that should be included in the continental framework.<br />
<br />
The key outcome of the regional consultation will be an enhanced regional background document whose elements will enrich the draft continental framework and guidelines, and inputs to the development of relevant benchmark indicators.<br />
<br />
The initiative started with a Continental Consultative Workshop in 2006 that discussed major land policy issues and has gone through several phases of assessments and stakeholders consultations leading to the drafting of the “Framework and Guidelines”.<br />
<br />
It is supported by the African Union Commission, the Economic Commission for Africa and the African Development Bank. ]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Thu, 04 Dec 2008 15:47:00 EST</pubDate> 
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                    <title>Development Generation Africa International observes World AIDS Day 2008</title> 
                    <link>http://ekwuruke.tigblog.org/post/544925</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[On December 1, Development Generation Africa International members joined the rest of the world in observing the World AIDS Day 2008.<br />
<br />
At the occasion, the organization launched the Primary ABIA Project against HIV/AIDS to look into the plight of young people living with HIV/AIDS especially in the areas of nutrition and empowerment.<br />
<br />
Director of Health-HIV/AIDS of the organization, Christopher Ezemobi who addressed participants stressed the need for the World AIDS Day event to lead, empower and deliver young people from the grip of AIDS in the 21st century and promised that the project will go a long way to present their plight to the people and involve them in solutions.<br />
<br />
He said some of the problems being highlighted by young people living with HIV/AIDS is an indication that “We must continue to speak up openly about AIDS. No progress will be achieved by being timid, refusing to face unpleasant faces, or prejudging our fellow human beings. In the ruthless world of AIDS, there are no us and them…and in that world, silence is death.”<br />
<br />
Children, young people and civil society groups attended the event as well as government officials.]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Tue, 02 Dec 2008 16:14:00 EST</pubDate> 
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                    <title>Development Generation Africa International observes World AIDS Day</title> 
                    <link>http://ekwuruke.tigblog.org/post/544765</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[On December 1, Development Generation Africa International members joined the rest of the world in observing the World AIDS Day 2008.<br />
<br />
At the occasion, the organization launched the Primary ABIA Project against HIV/AIDS to look into the plight of young people living with HIV/AIDS especially in the areas of nutrition and empowerment.<br />
<br />
Director of Health-HIV/AIDS of the organization, Christopher Ezemobi who addressed participants stressed the need for the World AIDS Day event to lead, empower and  deliver young people from the grip of AIDS in the 21st century and promised that the project will go a long way to  present their plight to the people and involve them in solutions.<br />
<br />
He said some of the problems being highlighted by young people living with HIV/AIDS is an indication that “We must continue to speak up openly about AIDS. No progress will be achieved by being timid, refusing to face unpleasant faces, or prejudging our fellow human beings. In the ruthless world of AIDS, there are no us and them…and in that world, silence is death.”<br />
<br />
Children, young people and civil society groups attended the event as well as government officials. ]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Tue, 02 Dec 2008 15:37:00 EST</pubDate> 
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                    <title>Change came to America</title> 
                    <link>http://ekwuruke.tigblog.org/post/520747</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[Change...<br />
Change...<br />
Change...<br />
That is what happened<br />
That was what Obama preached.<br />
Peace...<br />
Peace...<br />
Peace...<br />
Not heard <br />
Change is coming..<br />
It truly came<br />
Change...<br />
Change...<br />
Obama changed.<br />
That is a new concept in America<br />
Change...<br />
Let's laugh for change.<br />
Change is possible.<br />
Change...<br />
We are all change.<br />
New order in America<br />
Change will change thinks<br />
Change...<br />
Fix America and renew hope<br />
Change is permanent.<br />
Change is Obama...<br />
Celebrate Change first.<br />
Then ask questions<br />
Because Change is change.<br />
Change...<br />
Now that it is on ground.<br />
Change will rebuild America<br />
Change...<br />
In my little opinion.<br />
Change proved me wrong, and...<br />
Change...<br />
Only Change...the real change.<br />
Change is definitely going to change things<br />
Change is as of the beginning.<br />
Change is Obama, the 'change-bearer'<br />
The "Change-maker of America"<br />
Change...<br />
Truly came to America<br />
Like never before...<br />
Change! Change! Change!<br />
That name is good---]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Fri, 07 Nov 2008 14:28:00 EST</pubDate> 
					<guid isPermaLink="true">http://ekwuruke.tigblog.org/post/520747</guid>
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                    <title>Ethiopia launch commodity exchange for Afric development</title> 
                    <link>http://ekwuruke.tigblog.org/post/517405</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[Ethiopia, a country of chronic food shortages and malnutrition, has launched an agriculture commodity exchange in a daring experiment to raise food production by creating a safe, transparent agriculture market.<br />
<br />
The idea to create a commodity exchange was hatched by a former senior economist at the World Bank, Eleni Gabre-Madhin, who was born in Ethiopia and educated in the United States. Gabre-Madhin did her doctoral research on the role of markets in developing countries and refined her ideas while at the International Food Policy Research Institute. She now is the chief executive of the exchange.<br />
<br />
Gabre-Madhin said the Ethiopian government began to consider a commodity exchange after the food crisis in 2002-2003; a bumper crop and price collapse in 2002 were followed by drought that threatened 14 million people with starvation the next year.<br />
<br />
"In the bumper harvest, prices fell so low that farmers could not repay their loans, despite abundant production. The next year, not enough food was produced to feed the population. This led the government to think about the market: 'Why don't people store grain from year to year? Why can't the market deliver in bad times and save in good times?'" she said.<br />
<br />
Although Ethiopia is the biggest grain producer in Africa, its traditional markets are small because of narrow networks of trust among buyers and sellers. "Most farmers trade within 12 kilometers of their farms and only with people they know," Gabre-Madhin said. She said more than two-thirds of farmers have faced contract defaults, and only 4 percent have received legal enforcement of contracts.<br />
<br />
In the traditional trading system, grain changes hands four to five times between producer and consumer. With each change, the grain is put into new sacks. This system enables buyers to know what they are getting in terms of quality and quantity, as the contents are inspected and weighed, but it is vulnerable to price shocks.<br />
<br />
The Ethiopia Commodity Exchange began operating in April, creating transparency and predictability in the national market and connecting Ethiopian commodities to international markets.<br />
<br />
The U.S. Agency for International Development provided $1 million to launch the exchange.<br />
<br />
The exchange provides warehousing, a reliable payment system, real-time market information, and quality control. Producers sell directly to the exchange, which assures payment within 24 hours.<br />
<br />
"In the past, truck drivers took payment in envelopes filled with cash. It was never certain if or how much of the money would make it back into the hands of the seller," Gabre-Madhin said. Buyers in the traditional system do not know the quality of what they get unless they open up the sacks and inspect the contents. The exchange has assumed the grading task and guarantees the quality, so a distant buyer can be confident of what he is purchasing.<br />
<br />
The Ethiopian exchange is linked to commodity markets around the world, making it possible for a trader in India, for instance, to buy futures of the prized Ethiopian lentils.<br />
<br />
As for Ethiopia's major export, coffee, 461 coffee suppliers have obtained one-year memberships on the new commodity exchange.<br />
<br />
"We're going to disseminate New York prices on our trading floor, and we'll feed our prices to the New York market. That means if you are looking at Ethiopian, Colombian or Rwandan coffee, you will have a basis for comparison," Gabre-Madhin said.<br />
<br />
Agricultural traders have deluged the exchange with applications for membership, which, in Gabre-Madhin's view, is a sign that market confidence is building. "Worries about getting paid and getting the expected quality are being eliminated," she said.<br />
<br />
Gabre-Madhin said she expects the exchange will create incentives for farmers to bring more of their produce to market. In the traditional trading system, about one-fourth of Ethiopia's grain is brought to market. She said the goal of the exchange is to handle 50 percent of Ethiopia's grain production in five years.<br />
<br />
She said that nearly half of Ethiopia's rural households are net buyers of food. "Poor people buy food as well as sell food, which means that markets matter a lot, even at this low level of income," she said.<br />
<br />
The exchange is not without its critics. Some say it will not work as a market institution because government officials occupy six of the 11 seats of the board. Gabre-Madhin believes that the government's involvement with the exchange will help it learn quickly how markets function.<br />
<br />
Another concern has been that the exchange will further increase food prices, which have doubled in the past year. If Ethiopia's food-deficient neighbors can buy Ethiopia's commodities, then there will be less food for the country's already malnourished people, critics say.<br />
<br />
Gabre-Madhin counters that the exchange is not the panacea for all of Ethiopia's food problems, but it is an important element for a functioning agriculture-based economy.]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Tue, 04 Nov 2008 17:33:00 EST</pubDate> 
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                    <title>G-20 and so what?</title> 
                    <link>http://ekwuruke.tigblog.org/post/515481</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[Brazil will host the Group of Twenty Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors Meetings in 2008. <br />
<br />
What is The G-20?<br />
<br />
G-20 is an important forum to promote dialogue between advanced and emerging countries on key issues regarding economic growth and stability of the financial system. Brazil’s chair to this group aim to consolidate previous efforts and to give a stronger impetus towards a more balanced and stable environment for global economic.<br />
<br />
Since 1999, the G-20 has contributed to strengthen the international financial architecture and to foster sustainable economic growth and development. In 2004, for instance, members agreed to the G-20 Accord for Sustained Growth and committed to standards of transparency and fiscal governance in order to combat abuse of the financial system, money laundering and terrorism financing. Moreover, the forum has dealt with financial crises, international co-operation policies and reform of international financial institutions.<br />
<br />
For 2008, Brazil proposes dialogue on Competition in Financial Markets, Clean Energy and Economic Development and Fiscal Elements of Growth and Development. To follow with the discussions, there will be three technical workshops in the first semester and two Deputies Meetings. The objective of these meetings is to provide an updated view on those themes that will be further discussed on the Ministers' and Governors' Meeting.<br />
<br />
As is usual practice, the organization of the G-20 events during the year will be shared between the Ministry of Finance and the Central Bank. This year the G-20 will work closely with South Africa and United Kingdom, and other G-20 members, whose valuable experience will help promote a successful term. South Africa, i believe would promote the African peoples interests.<br />
<br />
I am optimistic this forum can make clear its objectives and give young people a space to express, but would the proposed dialogue fail, what is our hope and future? We are expectant that the G-20 would make aFRICAN DEVELOPMENT AND GROWTH A PRIORITY IN THE FACE OF THE GLOBAL FINANCIAL CRISIS!]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Sun, 02 Nov 2008 12:29:00 EST</pubDate> 
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                    <title>U.S. to Help Farmers in Vulnerable Countries Boost Yields</title> 
                    <link>http://ekwuruke.tigblog.org/post/515039</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[Helping to increase the food production of farmers in 25 to 30 of the countries most vulnerable to food shortages is a key aim of the United States' increased focus on agricultural development and food aid, says Josette Lewis, the top agriculture official of the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID).<br />
<br />
More than 920 million people worldwide do not get enough to eat. In 2007, the number of undernourished increased by 75 million because of rising food prices, according to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations.<br />
<br />
Addressing the World Food Prize Symposium held in mid-October in Des Moines, Iowa, Lewis said USAID especially wants to help small farms in sub-Saharan Africa double their yields of rice, maize and other staple crops by 2015 and increase farm incomes. The international community agreed in 2000 to a goal of cutting in half the number of people living in poverty and hunger around the world by 2015.<br />
<br />
Cutting hunger and poverty in half is "an achievable goal," Lewis said, and one envisioned in proposed legislation now before Congress that would significantly increase U.S. support for agriculture development.<br />
<br />
Senators Richard Lugar of Indiana and Robert Casey of Pennsylvania have proposed $10 billion in new funding for international agriculture programs. For the period 2008-2009, the United States has committed $5.5 billion in foreign food and agricultural assistance.<br />
<br />
The United States wants to "strengthen every link of the food-value chain," including agricultural research and information sharing, credit programs for small farmers and the use of new high-yield seeds that are resistant to diseases and drought, Lewis said.<br />
<br />
Lewis said the United States will support more training programs for farmers in developing countries to help them use modern food-production techniques.<br />
<br />
The training will help developing countries reduce by 75 percent their reliance on food aid, she said.<br />
<br />
Lewis said USAID also is focusing on improving the nutritional value of the food aid it gives for children under age 5 and is refining its community-based nutrition monitoring programs. In addition, USAID is refining its forecasting tools to obtain better information on where a food emergency is likely to occur.<br />
<br />
The United States is already working with other donor nations on the implementation of a strategy presented in June at an international forum in Rome to address the food crisis. That includes providing immediate aid to countries most vulnerable to rising food prices. Between 2007 and 2008, global food prices rose 52 percent, according to the U.N.'s Food and Agriculture Organization.<br />
<br />
The U.S. strategy also includes encouraging policies that can expand regional trade in farm products and ease infrastructure constraints such as poor roads and border checkpoints that slow trade, Lewis said.<br />
<br />
In the long run, USAID plans to form partnerships with private-sector companies, she said.<br />
<br />
She said a number of U.S.-based companies such as John Deere, Land O'Lakes Inc. and the Monsanto Company "have made it clear they are ready to step up" and partner with various organizations to help boost agricultural productivity and reduce poverty in developing countries.<br />
<br />
"It's time for a second Green Revolution that enlists a broader array of actors," Lewis said, referring to the first Green Revolution in the early 1970s that increased agricultural yields through development of new varieties of grains. New types of disease-resistant wheat created then are credited with saving more than 1 billion people in Asia from starvation.<br />
<br />
Also at the forum, U.S. Agriculture Secretary Edward Schafer and World Food Prize President Kenneth Quinn signed an agreement to enhance information sharing between the two entities and to bring more agricultural scientists and farmers from developing countries to the United States to learn about agricultural technology from their U.S. counterparts. ]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Sat, 01 Nov 2008 15:17:00 EDT</pubDate> 
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                    <title>Early Impacts from the World Bank's Global Response Food Program</title> 
                    <link>http://ekwuruke.tigblog.org/post/504873</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[The $1.2 billion Global Food Response Program (GFRP) - the World Bank's fast-track food crisis initiative - was created in May 2008 to rapidly disburse assistance to countries hardest hit by the food crisis.<br />
 <br />
"Hunger knows no boundaries," said Africa Region Vice President Obiageli Ezekwesili.  "All across the African continent, poor people are bearing the brunt" of soaring food prices.<br />
 <br />
As of end-September 2008, the World Bank has approved $83 million in GFRP financing to ten Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) countries: Burundi, Central African Republic, Guinea, Guinea Bissau, Liberia, Madagascar, Niger, Rwanda, Sierra Leone and Somalia.  In addition, $100 million in IDA financing has been approved or reallocated for eight countries: Ghana, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Malawi, Togo, Eritrea, Cote d'Ivoire, and Madagascar.  Through these projects, farmers are receiving seeds, fertilizers, and technical expertise. School feeding programs are also being launched, and food safety nets targeting vulnerable groups are being created.  The Bank expects to provide a total of more than $800 million in financing to the GFRP.<br />
 <br />
The GFRP is based on several dimensions:<br />
across time-thus addressing short-term and medium-term needs; <br />
across sectors-such as agriculture, health, social protection, energy; and <br />
across instruments-budget support to help mitigate short-term financial stresses; safety net programs for the most vulnerable; and investment lending to stimulate an agricultural supply response.<br />
<br />
A basic principle of the GFRP is that a country can select from a large comprehensive menu of possible interventions, depending on its specific needs. The Bank provides detailed technical guidance appropriate to these interventions.  A sample of interventions in SSA includes:<br />
Food Distribution to School Children and Other Vulnerable Groups<br />
In Liberia ($10 million disbursed), monthly distributions of 300-400 tons of food targeting more than 60,000 school children in five counties started at the beginning of the school year in October, 2008.  Distributions of food rations for pregnant and lactating women attending clinics and hospitals have also started. <br />
<br />
In Burundi ($10 million disbursed), the WFP has been implementing a school feeding program in six provinces (out of 17) in the country.  The GFRP grant makes it possible to provide 120,000 additional students in 60 additional primary schools with hot meals since the beginning of the school year.  The Grant has also helped the Government to maintain fiscal stability after the suspension of import duties on 13 basic food items undertaken by the authorities to mitigate the impact of food crisis. <br />
<br />
In Sierra Leone ($3 million disbursed), the Bank is providing budget support to partly compensate for lost revenues resulting from reduced tariffs on food and fuel imports.  The budget support is creating fiscal space for the Government to provide food to more than 21,000 people, including school children and patients (lactating mothers and children under the age of five) in district hospitals and community health centers.  In addition, 78 food-for-work projects will begin shortly; and preparations are underway to distribute 300 to 400 metric tons of food in target communities.<br />
The GFRP is also working for bountiful harvests. In Rwanda, $10 million has been allocated for filling a financing gap for bulk fertilizer purchase and supporting the development of private sector-friendly auctions and voucher distribution schemes. Vouchers for purchasing fertilizers have been distributed to farmers ahead of the fall planting season.<br />
 <br />
Reform of Food Policies:<br />
<br />
In Madagascar ($10 million disbursed), the increase of rice prices has been slowed, due in part to the temporary elimination of VAT on rice.  The Bank's budget support operation helped mitigate the fiscal impact of this policy action. <br />
<br />
In Guinea ($10 million allocated), budget support from the Bank is supporting the Government's policy to reduce customs duties on rice from 12.75 to 2.75 percent. <br />
<br />
In Burundi ($10 million allocated and disbursed), Bank financing has helped mitigate the fiscal impact of the suspension of import duties on 13 basic food items.<br />
<br />
Other SSA countries in the pipeline to receive GFRP disbursements include Benin ($9 million for fertilizer); Central African Republic ($7 million, school feeding, inputs, extension, infrastructure); Comoros ($1 million for seeds, risk management, access to credit); Guinea-Bissau ($5 million for safety nets, inputs); Mali ($5 million for budget support); Mauritania ($9 million for inputs, safety nets, irrigation, livestock); Mozambique ($20 million for budget support); Somalia ($7 million, for inputs, irrigation, livestock); Southern Sudan ($5 million for seeds and other inputs); and Togo ($7 million for safety nets, agricultural production).]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Fri, 17 Oct 2008 14:28:00 EDT</pubDate> 
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                    <title>Gender equality and empowerment of women.</title> 
                    <link>http://ekwuruke.tigblog.org/post/504585</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[Women’s full participation in decision-making <br />
<br />
The full participation of women in political decision-making at all levels, including their involvement in measures to achieve all other MDGs, is of paramount importance to achieving gender equality and the empowerment of women. In addition to the political arena, women’s full participation in decision-making positions in the private sector, academia, civil society and the media is also crucial to build synergies across different sectors. Women’s public participation is a human rights issue; women have a right to be represented. Increased women’s participation also ensures that women’s interests are represented in decision-making and their participation widens policy debates and priorities. Research has shown that increased participation of women in decision-making has a positive impact on development priorities and poverty reduction, and that, when empowered, women make decisions that not only have a positive effect on themselves, but the lives of their families and communities as well. Progress in increasing the political representation of women in national parliaments has been increasing at a steady but slow pace, but growth has been uneven across regions. Insufficient data are available on women’s role at local government level as well as on their role in senior positions in other areas, such as the private sector and civil society. <br />
<br />
Women’s economic independence <br />
<br />
Women’s economic independence is critical to achieving all MDGs, not only MDG3. Even though women’s participation in paid employment outside agriculture has increased, women’s work continues to be characterized by a concentration in low status and low pay jobs, which are often temporary and informal. Globally, gender wage gaps exist and unemployment rates for women are higher than for men. While inequalities continue to define the quality, conditions and characteristics of women’s labour market participation, they also shoulder a disproportionate share of responsibilities at home. Women perform the majority of unpaid work which restricts their access to employment opportunities outside of the home and reinforces the traditional division of labour between women and men. Increasing women’s participation in paid employment is one of the most important strategies for poverty reduction, as is the promotion of women’s entrepreneurship. However, the employment must be based on decent work principles such as labour standards, social protection and recognition of workers’ rights. In addition, it is important to recognize the value of women’s unpaid work, and develop and promote policies that facilitate the reconciliation of employment and family responsibilities for all workers, women and men.<br />
<br />
In addition, women’s access to and control over productive and economic resources is central to their empowerment and must be expanded if gender equality is to be achieved. Women’s access to land and property, including through inheritance, is critical to their economic empowerment. Land ownership has direct economic benefits, for example as a source of income, as a key input for production, and as collateral for credit. Without equal access to credit and other financial services, such as insurance or savings, women’s economic empowerment will remain limited. <br />
<br />
Issues for discussion<br />
<br />
What good practices exist to increase women’s access to decision-making positions at all levels? <br />
What measures need to be taken to increase women’s access to employment opportunities, and access to and control over productive resources? <br />
How can measurement of progress in these areas be strengthened? <br />
]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Thu, 16 Oct 2008 14:07:00 EDT</pubDate> 
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                    <title>GLOBAL: Donor response to food crisis inadequate, agencies say</title> 
                    <link>http://ekwuruke.tigblog.org/post/504583</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[Food security experts say international donors' response to the world's food crisis has been inadequate when compared to interventions to contain the global financial meltdown.<br />
<br />
"Huge financial resources have been mobilised by the international community in a matter of days" in response to the global financial crisis, wrote Teresa Cavero in a report by the international NGO Oxfam released on 16 October - World Food Day.<br />
<br />
While the US government put up US$700 billion to bail out financial institutions in one day, on 3 October, total global development aid for 2007 was $104 billion, according to Alexander Woollcombe, food security advocacy adviser at Oxfam in Dakar.<br />
<br />
This year's food crisis threw an additional 75 million people into hunger and poverty in 2007 according to the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO). The World Bank estimates there are currently 967 million malnourished people in the world.<br />
<br />
FAO says the financial crisis, following on the heels of the food price crisis, could deepen the plight of the poor in developing countries.<br />
<br />
Remittances dropping<br />
<br />
FAO Director-General Jacques Diouf stated in a 15 October news release: "Borrowing, bank lending, official development aid, foreign direct investment and workers' remittances - all may be compromised by a deepening financial crisis."<br />
<br />
There are no precise numbers yet about the impact of the financial crisis on developing countries, said Josef Schmidhuber, senior economist at the FAO's Global Perspectives Unit, but he noted that when industrialised countries face a crisis, fewer people work and fewer remittances are sent to developing countries.<br />
<br />
"We're already hearing noises from Mexico that fewer remittances are being sent back. These [remittances] are more important than credits and foreign direct investment," he stressed.<br />
<br />
Mexico receives $22 billion in annual remittances, and Bangladesh $4 billion, according to Schmidhuber. In Haiti and Honduras remittances make up over 20 percent of gross domestic product (GDP).<br />
<br />
Response 'a slow trickle'<br />
<br />
The FAO's Schmidhuber said donors promised $20 billion in aid to agriculture at the Rome FAO conference in June 2008, but according to Oxfam, five months on just $1 billion of this has been dispersed. Oxfam's Woollcombe said this is partly because "it takes time to distribute cash for agricultural production. The problem is it is not clear when or where it is actually coming."<br />
<br />
The UN has estimated that $25 billion to $40 billion is needed to lessen the impacts of high food prices on developing countries.<br />
<br />
"With the new commitments of the financial crisis, I would not be surprised if we don't get much more than the trickle that has arrived so far," said Schmidhuber.<br />
<br />
The UK government's commitment of US$ 1.4 billion pledged at the Rome meeting still stands, said Matt Wells, spokesperson for the UK Department for International Development (DFID).<br />
<br />
"Yes, there are challenges we are all facing, but we are continuing to call on other donors not to let the economic crisis deflect the fact that we need to remain focused on supporting those most in need," Wells told IRIN.<br />
<br />
Building up resilience<br />
<br />
To boost vulnerable people's resilience to crises, Oxfam and the Washington DC-based International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) stress the need for donors and international finance institutions to support 'social protection' such as aiding access to health and education, which they say will have a knock-on boost on their food-purchasing power.<br />
<br />
Such measures could include targeted cash transfers, nutritional interventions, and fee waivers on targeted services, according to an October World Bank report 'Rising food and fuel prices: addressing the risks to future generations.'<br />
<br />
It is the erosion of the global food system's resilience that underlies the food price spikes, according to Steve Wiggins, research fellow at the UK-based Overseas Development Institute.<br />
<br />
The world needs to replenish severely depleted global grain reserves, which have dropped from 30 percent to 19 percent of annual grain use, Wiggins said. "Rebuilding stocks would help to calm nerves and restore the resilience of the global food system."<br />
<br />
See related story: Cereal banks in Niger<br />
<br />
FAO's Schmidhuber said as an alternative to real grain reserves, which are expensive to build and keep up, 'virtual grain stocks' should be developed; developing countries would purchase the right to buy at subsidised prices.<br />
<br />
He said such alternatives would lead to a more efficient market that could also protect poor communities, adding that export bans and subsidies in the developed world distort markets and discourage production.<br />
<br />
Progress is being made on both sides, he said. "We are starting to see a convergence between the developing and developed world as they shift these opposing approaches."<br />
<br />
As the FAO's World Food Security Committee discusses these and other challenges in Rome from 14 to 17 October, Schmidhuber said governments should start by taking a simple step. "They need to do what they've said they are already committed to doing, and deliver the money."<br />
]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Thu, 16 Oct 2008 14:05:00 EDT</pubDate> 
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                    <title>Blog Action Day 2008: Make Poverty History</title> 
                    <link>http://ekwuruke.tigblog.org/post/504287</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[Poverty is making people get mad. Support the world movement against poverty and be your brothers and sisters neighbour.<br />
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					<pubDate>Wed, 15 Oct 2008 16:11:00 EDT</pubDate> 
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                    <title>Corruption in Africa in the Cross-Hairs of UN-Sponsored Conference</title> 
                    <link>http://ekwuruke.tigblog.org/post/504277</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[Scholars, policy makers and civil society leaders from within and outside Africa are currently meeting in Addis Ababa in a three-day United Nations-sponsored conference aimed at giving momentum to the fight against corruption on the continent.<br />
<br />
It is vital for Africans to "regain the discourse and agenda on anti-corruption in Africa" and "explore ways by which [they] can effectively tackle the problem," UN Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA) Deputy Executive Secretary of ECA Lalla Ben Barka told the conference on "Institutions, Culture and Corruption in Africa" which opened yesterday.<br />
<br />
She stressed the need for Africans to "think outside the box" in tackling the problem and urged delegates to "come up with practical suggestions and policy options on how we can move the anti-corruption drive ahead in Africa."<br />
<br />
The conference, jointly organized by UNECA and the Council for the Development of Social Science Research in Africa is (CODESRIA), an independent pan-African research organization, is one of the key events marking the Commission's 50th anniversary.<br />
<br />
"The problem of corruption remains intractable in many African countries, and it is widely acknowledged that there is a need for more innovative, creative and strategic approaches to deal with it," UNECA said in a news release.<br />
<br />
The Commission is currently at the forefront of the regional anti-corruption agenda and has adopted a holistic approach that includes engaging major stakeholders, such as the judiciary, national anti-corruption institutions, parliament and the pan-African body of national anti-corruption institutions in Africa. <br />
<br />
In 2006 and 2007 UNECA conducted a study on "Deepening Judiciary Effectiveness in Combating Corruption" and convened two ad hoc expert meetings on its findings. The report on the study and its related expert meetings will soon be published and widely disseminated. <br />
<br />
The Commission is currently undertaking a study assessing the efficiency and impact of national anti-corruption institutions in Africa." In February it will convene an ad hoc expert group meeting of heads of national anti-corruption institutions to present the findings of that study. <br />
<br />
In addition, UNECA will shortly undertake training workshops for civil society organizations on monitoring and reporting corruption, the first of which will convene on 11-12 November in Kampala, Uganda.<br />
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					<pubDate>Wed, 15 Oct 2008 16:08:00 EDT</pubDate> 
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                <item> 
                    <title>IMF Calls for Focus on Food, Energy Crisis</title> 
                    <link>http://ekwuruke.tigblog.org/post/504273</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[IMF Managing Director Dominique has called for special attention on food and energy on high food and energy prices in developing economies. <br />
<br />
He said that the call became imperative, saying "as we deal with the financial crisis the world should not forget the other crisis facing developing economies, which are the problem of high food and energy prices". <br />
<br />
He said: "We are in a big crisis, but don't forget the other ones (food and energy crises)." <br />
<br />
The managing director spoke yesterday at a meeting of the International Monetary and Financial Committee on the sidelines of the 2008 World Bank/IMF Annual General Meetings in Washington DC. The committee is the policy-setting body representing the IMF's 185 member countries. <br />
<br />
Strauss-Kahn urged donor countries not to abandon promises of aid to the developing world because of the financial crisis otherwise many of the worlds poorest would starve or suffer from malnutrition. <br />
<br />
Also speaking, Robert Zoellick, President of the World Bank Group, noted that in the face of the current downturn, the developed countries are not expected to help 28ccountriesreeling from twin shocks of rising food and fuel prices. <br />
<br />
Zoellick stated: "For the poor, the costs of the crisis could be lifelong." <br />
<br />
NAN reports that the IMF and the World Bank are holding annual meetings amid increasing strains in the global financial system caused by the spreading credit crisis triggered by the U.S. subprime meltdown. <br />
<br />
Developing countries fear the financial crunch could affect them severely.<br />
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					<pubDate>Wed, 15 Oct 2008 16:02:00 EDT</pubDate> 
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                <item> 
                    <title>A day in the life of hyperinflation</title> 
                    <link>http://ekwuruke.tigblog.org/post/504149</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[Tendai Moyo, 28, living in the Zimbabwean capital, Harare, goes into a shop in the downtown area and heads for a shelf where, a day ago, she saw a feeding bottle she wanted to buy for her three-month-old son.<br />
<br />
She picks it up and goes to the till, convinced she can afford this luxury for her child, but the cashier nonchalantly tells her the price has more than doubled, and the new price is more than the cash she has on her.<br />
<br />
Moyo, a cleaner and one of the few people with a job in a country with an unemployment rate of more than 80 percent, storms out and joins a long queue at a nearby bank to see if she can withdraw more money.<br />
<br />
After three hours, having withdrawn the maximum daily limit of Z$50,000 (US$) and added it to the $Z100,000 (US$) given to her by her husband, a driver for a commercial bank, she returns to the shop. She again picks up the feeding bottle, but is then told by the cashier that in her absence the price has gone up and she is now $Z30,000 short.<br />
<br />
Moyo is no longer on maternity leave and had hoped to use the bottle for her son's formula because she cannot breastfeed him regularly.<br />
<br />
"This price madness is frustrating, and it makes you hopeless because it seems it will never come to an end. I just don't understand why and how prices keep on increasing at such a rate," Moyo told IRIN. "I have given up and will have to use a cup instead of the bottle that is ideal for my son."<br />
<br />
Navigating the official annual inflation rate of 231 million percent is as perplexing to the customers as it is to the vendors. "We spend more time changing price tags than serving customers. The branch manager visits the shop floor at least two times a day with a new list of prices for the commodities that are still in stock," the cashier at the shop, who declined to be identified, told IRIN.<br />
<br />
"In fact, these days he spends more time in meetings with other managers than supervising us, and I suspect that it is at these meetings that changes to the prices are made." As inflation spirals, business has rapidly tapered off. Most customers walk into the shop, examine the price tags, shake their heads and walk out.<br />
<br />
He said shoppers were sometimes annoyed, or made derisory remarks like: "You will have to buy these items yourselves before they rot, because we will never come back here!"<br />
<br />
Three prices for one item<br />
<br />
<br />
At another shop a few streets away, transactions in foreign currency have become accepted after the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe (RBZ) recently allowed them.<br />
<br />
A three-tier pricing system is used: some commodities are sold for foreign currency, others - mostly small and perishable goods - are sold for local currency, and another set of prices - marked up by more than a 1,000 percent - are for those paying by credit card.<br />
<br />
"Never in my life have I seen one shop selling the same product using three different prices. It boggles the mind, and I cannot understand why the value of one item changes from one shelf to another," said Samuel Godzongi, an informal trader who left his job as an auto-electrician because the salary became meaningless.<br />
<br />
Even the cost of commodities priced in foreign currency changed routinely. "It seems this is the only country in the world where goods bought in foreign currency are eaten up by inflation so fast," he said. "Besides, the prices are way ahead here as compared to neighbouring countries, and to me there is no justification for it."<br />
<br />
He told IRIN that consumers had no option but to go without basic items, because "there just is no way in which you can buy them, unless you were to resort to robbery."<br />
<br />
"What is even more painful is that no matter how much money you have in the bank, the daily withdrawal limits make it impossible for you to buy the items that you need. No matter how fast the central bank introduces higher denominations for the local currency, it cannot keep pace with the speed with which prices are galloping."<br />
<br />
Innocent Makwiramiti, a Harare-based economist and former chief executive of the Zimbabwe National Chamber of Commerce (ZNCC), said licensing shops to sell in foreign currency was contributing to inflation.<br />
<br />
Inflation and politics<br />
<br />
<br />
"It should be remembered that black market [parallel market] rates of foreign currency are going up every day, if not several times a day. As a result, for goods sold in local currency, the prices go up as well in direct response, and retailers tend to use the foreign currency mark-ups to increase the prices of goods sold in cash," Makwiramiti told IRIN.<br />
<br />
He said prices were also responding to the political climate, and the deadlock in talks since a power-sharing deal between President Robert Mugabe's ZANU-PF and Morgan Tsvangirai's Movement for Democratic Change was signed on 15 September.<br />
<br />
"After news that a political deal had been signed, parallel market rates fell and prices were beginning to respond. However, when it became clear that political parties had reached a deadlock, prices began to shoot up again, this time more steeply than ever before. It is mostly speculative," Makwiramiti said.<br />
<br />
"With prices of basic commodities such as food now unaffordable to the majority, average workers have turned into beggars, going to restaurants during lunch time to ask for leftovers from the few who are still able to afford it."<br />
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					<pubDate>Wed, 15 Oct 2008 13:13:00 EDT</pubDate> 
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                    <title>Govt will do everything to resolve Niger Delta problems - President Yar'Adua</title> 
                    <link>http://ekwuruke.tigblog.org/post/503231</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua has said that “we shall do anything as an Administration within available resources and the imperfect constitutional provisions within which we are constrained to operate” to solve the problems in the Niger Delta.<br />
<br />
The President said this while receiving a delegation of South-south leaders in the State House on Tuesday October 14,. 2008.<br />
<br />
Responding to the request for certain constitutional amendments in the bid to tackle the Niger Delta challenge, the President made it clear that while he “appreciated the issues raised and supported constitutional amendments, such must be undertaken as provided by the constitution” and should not become another excuse for allowing the problem to fester.<br />
<br />
According to President Yar’Adua, with the creation of the Niger Delta Ministry, his administration was now poised to begin the implementation of its agenda for infrastructural development, cleaning the environment and youth empowerment in the Niger Delta.<br />
<br />
While acknowledging that the 1999 Constitution may not be a perfect document and that its amendment was necessary, the president said it is not a preoccupation of his administration to engineer another elaborate effort at constitutional review. He added that “to tie our efforts in the Niger Delta to constitutional amendments would be a distraction at this point.”<br />
<br />
Referring to the Niger Delta crisis as “a national problem,” the president urged those canvassing constitutional amendments to go through the National Assembly. “While I have no objections to your feelings about constitutional amendment I strongly believe we have to follow the procedures”. He added that “building a just, prosperous and equitable society is not an easy thing,” as it “requires patience, efforts and perseverance.” <br />
<br />
President Yar’Adua who thanked the South-South Leaders for “frankly airing their views” and for their sacrifices to bringing peace not only to the Niger Delta but to the nation, assured them that his doors would “always be open to listen to advice and opinions that will help us find a lasting solution to national problems like that of Niger Delta.”<br />
<br />
The leader of the 11-member delegation, Justice Adolphus Karibi Whyte, explained that they had come to present the resolutions of the Vanguard-organised South-South Legislative Retreat on Constitutional Review held in August 2008, to the Federal Government, commended the establishment of the Ministry of Niger Delta. <br />
<br />
Part of the resolutions included amending the current Constitution to restore “true federalism.”<br />
<br />
The delegation included Vanguard Publisher, Mr. Sam Amuka; Chief Edwin Clark, Mr. Ledum Mittee, Chief John Oyegun and Sen. Felix Ibru while Vice- President Goodluck Jonathan, the Ministers of Petroleum, Transportation and Science and Technology, and the NDDC Managing Director, Mr Timi Alaibe, also attended. <br />
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					<pubDate>Tue, 14 Oct 2008 15:07:00 EDT</pubDate> 
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                    <title>I fell like Fabrigas and Walcot</title> 
                    <link>http://ekwuruke.tigblog.org/post/503225</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[Sometimes in ones life, he/she fells like oneself and sometimes like the other.<br />
<br />
This part of my life must not sleep as it comes in contact with success.<br />
<br />
I felt like Fabrigas against AC Milan today and felt like Theo Walcot against Coatia on Wednesday, when we completed a health programme.<br />
<br />
I was meant to understand that in our world there is no us and them...and in this world, silence is death. ]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Tue, 14 Oct 2008 15:02:00 EDT</pubDate> 
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                    <title>Multilateral System Needs Fundamental Overhaul, Zoellick Says</title> 
                    <link>http://ekwuruke.tigblog.org/post/503197</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[The way the world tries to solve its economic problems needs to be rethought amid today's global crisis, including turning the Group of Seven into a Steering Group that empowers rising economic states, said World Bank Group President Robert B. Zoellick.<br />
<br />
Referring to the upcoming U.S. election, Zoellick said the new president will have to move beyond "the firefight of financial stabilization" to address the "economic aftermath". Whoever wins the White House should work with others in modernizing the multilateral system as there needs to be a greater shared responsibility for the health and effective functioning of today's global economy.<br />
<br />
"The G-7 is not working. We need a better group for a different time," Zoellick said in a speech to the Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington D.C. "For financial and economic cooperation, we should consider a new Steering Group including Brazil, China, India, Mexico, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, and the current G-7."<br />
<br />
Speaking ahead of the Annual Meetings of the World Bank Group, Zoellick said the new Steering Group should be more than just replacing the G7 with a fixed-number G14, as this would be using old world methods to remake the new. The Steering Group should evolve to fit changing circumstances, including new emerging powers, while serving as a network for frequent interaction. "We need a Facebook for multilateral economic diplomacy," Zoellick said.<br />
<br />
Warning about the effects of the financial crisis, Zoellick said: "The events of September could be a tipping point for many developing countries. A drop in exports, as well as capital inflow, will trigger a falloff in investments. Deceleration of growth and deteriorating financing conditions, combined with monetary tightening, will trigger business failures and possibly banking emergencies. Some countries will slip toward balance of payments crises. As is always the case, the most poor are the most defenseless."<br />
<br />
The former U.S. diplomat, trade negotiator and financial executive, said economic multilateralism needed to be redefined beyond its traditional focus on finance and trade. Energy, climate change, and stabilizing fragile and post-conflict states were economic issues and not just part of the global dialogue on security and the environment.<br />
<br />
Zoellick said the New Multilateralism must give an equal value to development as to international finance otherwise the world would remain an unstable place. But the aid system was not working well enough and it needed to move much more quickly and effectively to help those who were most vulnerable when crisis hits. The World Bank Group also needs reform. Zoellick announced the creation of a High Level Commission under the leadership of former Mexican President Ernesto Zedillo to consider modernizing the governance of the World Bank Group.<br />
<br />
Turning to multilateral trade talks, Zoellick said the Doha round "has hit the rocks" and countries should therefore consider trade facilitation as another way of cutting the costs of trade. "There are opportunities to cut costs of trade far in excess of those imposed by tariffs and other trade barriers," he said.<br />
<br />
Describing world energy markets as "a mess", Zoellick called for a "global bargain" between energy producers and consumers. Both sides could share plans for expanding supplies, improving efficiency and lessening demand; assisting with energy for the poor; and considering how these policies related to carbon production and climate change policies.<br />
<br />
"There could be a common interest in managing a price range that reconciles interests while transitioning toward lower carbon growth strategies, a broader portfolio of supplies, and greater international security," Zoellick said.<br />
<br />
Zoellick said the World Bank Group is developing an Energy for the Poor initiative with a number of donors to help the poorest countries meet energy needs in efficient and sustainable ways.]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Tue, 14 Oct 2008 14:16:00 EDT</pubDate> 
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                    <title>South Korea Pledges to Continue Assisting Zimbabwe</title> 
                    <link>http://ekwuruke.tigblog.org/post/503193</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[South Korea has pledged to provide Zimbabwe with development and humanitarian aid. Speaking at a reception to mark the 60th anniversary of the national foundation day of the Republic of Korea in Harare on Thursday the country's Ambassador Mr Jae-hack OH said his country would also provide training programmes to Government officials and private sector. <br />
<br />
"Korea is committed to do its part to share with Zimbabwe its economic development experience and will provide Zimbabwe with humanitarian aid and training programmes. <br />
<br />
"Since the establishment of diplomatic ties in 1994, the Republic of Korea and Zimbabwe have continued to cultivate a friendly and co-operative relationship not only for bilateral matters but also at international fora," he said. <br />
<br />
He said the cultural co-operation between the two countries has increased in recent years as more and more Korean dramas and movies were being introduced to Zimbabweans. <br />
<br />
Such cultural exchanges, he said, would contribute to mutual understanding between the two countries and enhance bilateral ties. <br />
<br />
Speaking at the same occasion the Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs Cde Rueben Marumahoko commended the friendship, mutual respect and co-operation between the two countries. <br />
<br />
"The past few years have been challenging for Zimbabwe but we are grateful to friends like the Republic of Korea that have stood with us in developmental projects in agriculture, energy, health and tourism sectors. <br />
<br />
"The co-operation and support that the Republic of Korea rendered Zimbabwe in its agricultural engineering, mechanisation and irrigation programme as well as in health delivery system deserve special mention," he said. <br />
<br />
He said Zimbabwe applauded Korea for the numerous human resource training courses offered under the Korea International Co-operation Agency in areas as public health, civil engineering, mining, agriculture and water resources development since 1994. <br />
<br />
Cde Marumahoko said over the past two years more than 80 Government officials have participated in KOICA sponsored training courses. He urged local independent media to embrace Zimbabwe's political dispensation saying that it was not necessary to divide the people. <br />
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					<pubDate>Tue, 14 Oct 2008 14:13:00 EDT</pubDate> 
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                    <title>Angola to Seek $6 Billion in Agriculture Investments by 2013</title> 
                    <link>http://ekwuruke.tigblog.org/post/503187</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA["Angola has set an ambitious target of luring agriculture investments of $6 billion (EUR4.3 billion) by 2013 making good use of its fertile land and rocketing food prices, the FT reports.<br />
<br />
The country, which has emerged from one of the longest civil conflicts in Africa, is now developing rapidly with its rich oil reserves and diamonds the focus of strong foreign interest. Still, negotiations with leading private agricultural giants have stumbled on hurdles including inadequate port infrastructure, bureaucracy, corruption concerns and land rights issues. Prior to the civil war, Angola, which boasts 35 million hectares of productive land, managed to meet local demand as well as international coffee, sisal, bananas and sugar demand. Now, it relies on imports for over half of its food supplies with a mere 10 percent of the arable land in cultivation. As part of efforts to achieve its goals and reduce dependence on oil, the country is now in talks with key farming investors from Brazil, Spain, Canada, the US, Argentina and Portugal, Joaquim Duarte Gomes from the farming ministry told the FT." [British Business Monitor (Bulgaria, 10/06)/Factiva]<br />
 <br />
FT further reports that " The $6 billion target by 2013 - compared with total non-oil foreign direct investment of $924 million last year - is ambitious. Business people in Luanda complain of graft and labyrinthine bureaucracy. It takes 119 days to set up a company, according to the World Bank, more than double the regional average.<br />
<br />
The agricultural investment drive faces controversy, after a warning from the United Nations of the risk of 'neo-colonialism' as food importers scramble to secure farmland overseas. Incidents of forced expropriations in diamond areas highlight the perils of a program that will seek to secure - for outside investors - vast tracts of land to which the state, tribal leaders and Angolans displaced in the war all claim rights." [The Financial Times (UK, 10/04)/Factiva]]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Tue, 14 Oct 2008 14:10:00 EDT</pubDate> 
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                    <title>The Chicago Council on Global Affairs Announces Gates Foundation Grant</title> 
                    <link>http://ekwuruke.tigblog.org/post/503189</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[The Chicago Council on Global Affairs Announces Grant from the Bill  Melinda Gates Foundation for Project on Global Agricultural Development <br />
 <br />
The Chicago Council on Global Affairs today announced it is undertaking an initiative to bring attention to the need for renewed U.S. leadership in long-term global agricultural development. The project is funded by a grant of nearly $1 million from the Bill  Melinda Gates Foundation.<br />
 <br />
The Global Agricultural Development Project will convene a bipartisan group of former government, business, and civic leaders, and experts in the fields of agricultural development, U.S. foreign policy, trade, and international economics to propose a series of recommendations that can help increase the productivity and incomes of small-holder farming families and advance global agricultural development as a major U.S. foreign aid priority. <br />
 <br />
Dan Glickman and Catherine Bertini will serve as co-chairs of the project. Mr. Glickman, currently chairman and chief executive officer of the Motion Picture Association of America, served as secretary of the U.S. Department of Agriculture from 1995 to 2001. During his 18-year tenure in the U.S. Congress, Glickman was a senior member of the House Committee on Agriculture. Ms. Bertini served as the executive director of the UN World Food Programme from 1992 to 2002, and is presently a professor of public administration at Syracuse University's Maxwell School and senior fellow of agricultural development for the Bill  Melinda Gates Foundation's Global Development Program. She also served as cochair of the 2006 Agriculture Task Force of The Chicago Council on Global Affairs.<br />
<br />
A project report and recommendations will be presented to the incoming administration and senior officials, key leaders in the new Congress, policy influencers, and U.S. and international media and opinion leaders in early 2009.]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Tue, 14 Oct 2008 14:10:00 EDT</pubDate> 
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                <item> 
                    <title>African Women to Benefit from New UN Gender Equality Project</title> 
                    <link>http://ekwuruke.tigblog.org/post/503185</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[Women in five African countries will gain new access to resources and services at the local level through gender-responsive planning, programming and budgeting under an $8 million, three-year United Nations programme announced this week. <br />
<br />
The Gender Equitable Local Development (GELD) programme brings together the UN Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM), the UN Development Fund (UNDP) and the UN Capital Development Fund (UNCDF) in a collective effort to build the capacity of local governments to mainstream a gender perspective in planning and budgeting and facilitate participation of women and community organizations in these processes.<br />
<br />
"This programme aims to achieve concrete improvement in women's local realities," UNIFEM Executive Director Inés Alberdi said of the initiative, which will be rolled out in local governments in Mozambique, Rwanda, Senegal, Sierra Leone and Tanzania.<br />
<br />
"It not only seeks to ensure local governments' accountability to secure women's equitable access to public services and productive assets, but also acknowledges women's agency in shaping decision-making around local plans and budgets."<br />
<br />
The programme confirms the commitment of UNCDF, UNIFEM and UNDP to work in the spirit of the "One UN" principles, which aim to achieve greater coherence and efficiency from the Organization's various agencies and bodies. <br />
<br />
"UNCDF, UNIFEM and UNDP have consolidated strengths and experience in supporting performance-based, gender-responsive planning and budgeting for local development, which can be drawn from various countries all over the world," UNCDF Deputy Executive Secretary Henriette Keijzers said.UNCDF, UNIFEM and UNDP have consolidated strengths and experience in supporting performance-based, gender-responsive planning and budgeting for local development, which can be drawn from various countries all over the world<br />
<br />
"These complementary perspectives are being brought together to generate empirical experience on gender-equitable local development that could be replicated and up-scaled," she added.<br />
]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Tue, 14 Oct 2008 14:05:00 EDT</pubDate> 
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                <item> 
                    <title>7 Point Agenda</title> 
                    <link>http://ekwuruke.tigblog.org/post/502233</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[Support the Seven Point Agenda for a better Nigeria.<br />
<br />
I live to support this agenda, not because it is new nor because it is comprehensive neither it is because it is the best, but because I think, at least Nigeria can be better for it.]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Mon, 13 Oct 2008 16:53:00 EDT</pubDate> 
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                <item> 
                    <title>Power and Roads for Africa: What the United States Can Do</title> 
                    <link>http://ekwuruke.tigblog.org/post/464741</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[This White House and the World Brief presents the key facts and recommendations drawn from chapters of The White House and the World: A Global Development Agenda for the Next U.S. President. <br />
 <br />
Why should the United States care about economic growth in Africa? Because it is the right thing to do and the smart thing to do. Helping to spur economic growth in Africa promotes our values, enhances our security, and helps create economic and political opportunities for the people of the continent. Public interest in Africa is higher than ever-witness consumer movements such as Product Red-and bipartisan political support recently renewed funding for the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR). Several new opportunities now exist for U.S. firms to compete and benefit from a win-win partnership with the region.<br />
<br />
To view CDG's brief in its entirety, please visit the following link: <br />
 <br />
http://www.cgdev.org/content/publications/detail/16557/ <br />
Japan Builds 500 Classrooms for Country<br />
Source: Allafrica.com<br />
Lagos, Aug 25 <br />
 <br />
 <br />
Japanese Government over the weekend in Abuja, disclosed plans to build additional 500 classrooms in the second phase of its Grant Aid Project for the basic education level in Nigeria.<br />
This is even as the federal government is prevailing on the Japanese government through Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) to increase the number of benefiting states so as to ensure that the efforts to get more children off the streets become a nationwide success. <br />
 <br />
Already, executive secretary of the Universal Basic Education Commission (UBEC), Dr. Ahmed Modibbo Muhammed, who received the Japanese team who came to ensure everything goes well in the second phase of the Grant Aid Project Japan had embarked upon in Nigeria, had proposed seven states, including Adamawa, Borno, Ebonyi, Gombe Kano, Katsina and Oyo to benefit from the project expected to be completed within three years. <br />
<br />
Regional director of Urban and Regional Development Division One of Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA), Mr. Maekawa Kenji, said the assistance from the JICA was to help Nigeria in the provision of infrastructure needed to accelerate the development of education at the basic level. <br />
<br />
Kenji who disclosed their intention, while on courtesy visit to the Universal Basic Education Commission (UBEC), noted that he and his team are on a feasibility study mission to Nigeria to determine where to site the classrooms, depending on the area of need engineers would be hired to do the construction. To ensure quality output of the project, he explained the Japanese government would be directly involved in the supervision of work, while local <br />
<br />
It could be recalled that the JICA had earlier provided a total of 498 classrooms at the cost of N1.8 billion across 70 schools in Niger , Kaduna and Plateau states. Mohammed expressed gratitude for the gesture, saying it boost the Federal Government move to tackle the numerous challenges in the education sector. He explained that he had already submitted a list of states for consideration, adding that the project should be scaled up to at least six instead of three states. <br />
<br />
On the proposal by the Japanese government that local firms may be contracted to execute the project under the supervision of foreign experts, the UBEC boss promised that Nigerians will not disappoint. He pointed out that the only problem that can arise from such arrangement will be if there is no proper supervision, adding that apart from encouraging Nigerian firms, such gesture will help build their expertise in such area as building classrooms with brick-blocks.  <br />
]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Wed, 27 Aug 2008 13:35:00 EDT</pubDate> 
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                <item> 
                    <title>Emergency Grants to Help People Most Affected by Global Food Crisis</title> 
                    <link>http://ekwuruke.tigblog.org/post/455801</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[The Bill  Melinda Gates Foundation today announced a $17.6 million package of grants to help people most affected by the global food crisis and support small-scale farmers in developing countries. The largest grant-$10 million to the World Food Programme (WFP)-will continue the organization's efforts to feed young children and pregnant and breastfeeding mothers in Niger, Cote D'Ivoire, and Burkina Faso, where malnutrition rates are staggering. Catholic Relief Services, Mercy Corps, and Oxfam America will also receive funds from the foundation's emergency relief initiative to respond to the food crisis. <br />
<br />
Rising food and fuel prices have put 950 million people worldwide at risk of hunger and malnutrition, according to the United Nations. Young children, whose early nutritional needs are critical to ensure long-term health, and women are at the greatest risk. Increases in farming costs, such as transportation and fertilizer, are adding to small farmers' burdens. <br />
<br />
 <br />
"The Gates donation will help us feed the hungry-especially young children, pregnant and lactating women-in this critical moment," said Thomas Yanga, WFP's regional director for West Africa. <br />
<br />
Grants to Catholic Relief Services, Mercy Corps, and Oxfam America total $7.6 million. These grants will support efforts that include providing food for those most in need; helping families earn money for food through employment opportunities or cash-for-work programs; and helping farmers continue and improve their production in times of crisis. <br />
<br />
While these grants address some of the most urgent consequences of the global food crisis, the foundation is also deeply committed to funding nutritional programs that promote lasting health and supporting long-term, sustainable efforts to help hundreds of millions of small farmers boost their productivity so they can feed their families and overcome poverty. <br />
<br />
"The current global food crisis requires immediate action to feed people most at risk," said Sylvia Mathews Burwell, president of the foundation's Global Development Program. "In the longer term, since agriculture and the needs of small-scale farmers in the developing world have been increasingly neglected in recent decades, we need a significant reinvestment in agricultural development-from donors and developing countries-that focuses on helping small farmers boost their yields and increase their incomes." <br />
<br />
Agricultural development is the largest initiative in the foundation's Global Development Program, which was launched in 2006. To date, the foundation has made more than $800 million in commitments in the sector with a focus on helping small-scale farmers in Africa and South Asia. The grants span the agricultural value chain-from seeds and soil to farm management and market access-so that millions of small farmers have the tools and opportunities to live healthy, productive lives. <br />
<br />
According to the World Bank, three-quarters of the 1.1 billion people who live on less than $1 a day live in rural areas and depend on agriculture for a living, yet the percentage of development assistance that went to agriculture fell from more than 16 percent in 1980, to less than 4 percent in 2004. In addition, agriculture accounts for only 4 percent of public spending in agriculture-based developing countries. The foundation believes with strong partnerships and a renewed commitment to agricultural development from all sectors, hundreds of millions of small farmers will be able to increase their productivity and incomes and lead healthy, productive lives. <br />
<br />
Today's announcement includes the following grants: <br />
<br />
Catholic Relief Services: $2.9 million <br />
<br />
- In Afghanistan, provide employment opportunities on community infrastructure and other projects; provide direct emergency assistance to households unable to participate in cash-for-work programs; and help small-scale farmers buy seeds, tools, and other farm necessities. <br />
<br />
- In Burkina Faso, provide food vouchers for urban families and help poor farm families increase production and sale of rice. <br />
<br />
- In Haiti, help small-scale farmers buy seeds, tools, and other farm necessities. <br />
<br />
Mercy Corps: $2.7 million <br />
<br />
- In the Central African Republic, provide employment opportunities on community infrastructure and other projects; help small-scale farmers buy seeds, tools, and other farm necessities; train farmers to improve their production techniques and marketing of agricultural products; and provide access to microfinance loans to fund food-production related enterprises. <br />
<br />
- In Nepal, provide employment opportunities on community infrastructure and other projects; provide access to microfinance loans to fund food-production related enterprises; and strengthen agriculture market chains for food and non-food crops. <br />
<br />
- In Niger, provide vouchers and training for farmers to improve production techniques and marketing of agricultural products; and support the health and supply of small livestock and poultry. <br />
<br />
- In Somalia, distribute seeds and farm tools; provide employment opportunities on community infrastructure and other projects; provide access to microfinance loans to fund food-production related enterprises; and support the health and supply of small livestock and poultry. <br />
<br />
- In Sri Lanka, help small-scale farmers buy seeds, tools, and other farm necessities; train farmers to improve their production techniques and marketing of agricultural products; and facilitate access to microfinance loans to fund food-production related enterprises. <br />
<br />
Oxfam America: $2 million <br />
<br />
- In Ethiopia, provide local jobs on community infrastructure projects including building irrigation systems; support programs that provide food to schoolchildren; take steps to improve agricultural production, including distributing seeds and supporting irrigation projects; develop a grain bank system; implement a drought early warning system that helps prepare farmers for potential drought or other disaster; and provide livestock to women and help all farmers care for their livestock. <br />
<br />
World Food Programme: $10 million <br />
<br />
- Help continue the maternal-child health program in Niger, Cote D'Ivoire and Burkina Faso. <br />
<br />
About the Bill  Melinda Gates Foundation <br />
<br />
Guided by the belief that every life has equal value, the Bill  Melinda Gates Foundation works to help all people lead healthy, productive lives. In developing countries, it focuses on improving people's health and giving them the chance to lift themselves out of hunger and extreme poverty. In the United States, it seeks to ensure that all people-especially those with the fewest resources-have access to the opportunities they need to succeed in school and life. Based in Seattle, the foundation is led by CEO Patty Stonesifer and Co-chair William H. Gates Sr., under the direction of Bill and Melinda Gates and Warren Buffett. For more information, visit www.gatesfoundation.org.<br />
 <br />
Govt Must Lift Aid Agency Restrictions to Avoid Humanitarian Crisis - Ban <br />
Source: UN News Service <br />
New York, Aug 14<br />
<br />
<br />
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has urged Zimbabwe to immediately lift the restrictions it has imposed on aid agencies since June, warning that not doing so could worsen the already dire humanitarian situation in the southern African nation. <br />
"I call on the Government of Zimbabwe to fully respect humanitarian principles and the impartiality and neutrality of voluntary and non-governmental organizations, allowing them to operate freely and with unrestricted access to those in need," Mr. Ban said in a statement issued today. <br />
<br />
The Secretary-General said he remains deeply concerned about the humanitarian situation in Zimbabwe where, despite requests made by the UN Country Team and other humanitarian partners, operations of voluntary and non-governmental organizations remain restricted. <br />
 <br />
He stressed that these groups have a vital role in the delivery of humanitarian aid, including much needed food assistance. <br />
Due to the inability of these agencies to operate, only 280,000 people of the 1.5 million in need of food assistance are being reached with distributions. <br />
<br />
"This ban must be lifted immediately so that aid organizations can carry out their relief work and avert a catastrophic humanitarian crisis," Mr. Ban stated. <br />
 <br />
Prior to the imposition of the ban, many Zimbabweans were already suffering from food shortages and rampant inflation, a situation made worse by the violence that plagued the country ahead of the June presidential run-off election.  <br />
UN Announces Program To Help Hunger Hot Spots<br />
Source: World Bank Press Reviews<br />
Washington, D.C., Aug 14<br />
 <br />
<br />
<br />
"A UN agency rolled out a $214 million program Tuesday to help 16 needy places hit hard by high prices for food and oil, amid a crisis already making it hard for aid groups to provide enough food for the world's hungry.<br />
 <br />
The World Food Program said almost 1 billion poor people around the world are struggling to survive amid the higher prices. The agency is trying to reach those in critical need of assistance in Africa, Asia and the Caribbean. ... The plan will provide assistance to groups such as pregnant women, undernourished children and people living in urban areas affected most by the food crisis. The Rome-based agency also hopes to cut transportation costs and help support farmers in countries where emergency food can be bought locally. ..." [The Wall Street Journal/Factiva]<br />
 <br />
AP adds however that "... 'the agency already faces 'obstacles' in procuring food, particularly when trying to buy supplies locally, spokeswoman Brenda Barton said. 'At the markets where we have been buying food, it has become just too expensive,' Barton told The Associated Press by telephone. And, she added, 'a lot of markets just don't have any food to buy.'<br />
 <br />
The price crisis is affecting many humanitarian groups. 'At a local level, food prices are increasing, and that, of course, impacts on our programs, making them more expensive,' said Chris Leather of the relief group Oxfam."<br />
<br />
 <br />
]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Fri, 15 Aug 2008 14:06:00 EDT</pubDate> 
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                <item> 
                    <title>The Forgotten Millennium Development Goal</title> 
                    <link>http://ekwuruke.tigblog.org/post/455805</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[Many of the world's leading figures in international trade have gathered in New Delhi, India, for a conference which the Director-General of the World Trade Organization (WTO) quipped is perfect timing and a "pre-engineered plot" on the part of the organisers. <br />
<br />
Referring to the failed Doha talks in Geneva last month, in which member countries of the WTO failed to reach an agreement on future trade negotiations, Pascal Lamy acknowledged that during these "turbulent times", at a moment when multilateralism and international co-operation are being challenged, more partnerships are needed as global problems, such as the current food crisis, require global responses. <br />
<br />
 <br />
It is this theme - Global Partnership for Development - which is the central focus of the conference being held on 12 and 13 August 2008 and organised by CUTS, a leading civil society organisation, in association with the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry, the Commonwealth Secretariat, the India Office of the World Bank, and the Department of Commerce, Government of India. <br />
<br />
At a "difficult juncture in international trade talks", Pradeep Mehta, who heads CUTS, described the meeting as a "historic opportunity" for those present to engage in whole-hearted and frank debate. <br />
<br />
"We owe it to the poor around the world," he said at the inaugural session, which included trade and finance ministers, trade negotiators, academics and representatives from businesses and civil society organisations. "The question is, can we do it?" <br />
<br />
The eighth Millennium Development Goal - Developing a Global Partnership for Development - the theme for the conference was described by Commonwealth Deputy Secretary-General Ransford Smith, as "the forgotten MDG" during his opening address. <br />
<br />
He emphasised its importance in seeking to hold both rich and poor countries accountable for advancing the MDGs. <br />
<br />
The two important targets under this MDG are to 'develop further an open, rule based predictable, non-discriminatory trading and financial system' and to 'address the special needs of the least developed countries, landlocked countries and small island states'. <br />
<br />
"In terms of these two targets it seems that very little progress has been made during the last seven years or so. The promise that the Doha Round held out in these two areas has not been realised," Mr Smith said. <br />
<br />
The global partnership indicated in this MDG, he added, is intended to promote poverty reduction and social and economic development. <br />
<br />
"This cannot be achieved if trade shocks or other adjustment measures affect vulnerable groups disproportionately and exacerbate poverty." <br />
<br />
Another Millennium Development Goal target noted by Mr Smith is that of halving the proportion of people who suffer from hunger. <br />
<br />
"It is imperative that the global development community responds effectively to the current food and fuel crises. A large number of other poor and small countries are seriously affected," said Mr Smith, adding that "it is clear that the architecture currently does not exist to provide effective support to these countries at the time when they need it most." <br />
]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Fri, 15 Aug 2008 14:06:00 EDT</pubDate> 
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