KABISSA-FAHAMU NEWSLETTER 25 * 5497 SUBSCRIBERS
KABISSA-FAHAMU NEWSLETTER 25 * 5497 SUBSCRIBERS
We are pleased to inform you that the Helsinki Committee in Poland and the Helsinki Foundation for Human Rights are organizing the 12th International Summer School on Human Rights.
Frontier Issues in Economic Thought - A series of books by G-DAE (Global Development & Environment Institute). Offers a concise, accessible introduction to innovative new work that is expanding the frontiers of economics. Each volume includes short 2-to 5-page summaries of over 70 key articles and book chapters.
Reviews data from Demographic and Health Surveys in 11 countries in the region. This compilation of data and analysis focuses on adolescents ages 15 to 19. The chart book examines the factors that are critical for young people's healthy transition to adulthood.
Transparency International, the world's first anti-corruption NGO is hosting an Anti-Corruption Film Festival, to run concurrently with the 10th International Anti-Corruption Film Festival, 06-08 October 2001 in Prague, Czech Republic.
The Southern & Eastern African Association for Farming Systems invites you to the 8th Regional SEAAFSR-E Conference: Challenges to the Farming Systems Approach: Past, Present and Future. ABSTRACTS BY 30 JUNE!
KABISSA-FAHAMU NEWSLETTER 24 * 4511 SUBSCRIBERS
KABISSA-FAHAMU NEWSLETTER 24 * 4511 SUBSCRIBERS
The Academic Council on Problems of African Countries and the Institute for African Studies, Russian Academy of Sciences, are convening the Ninth Conference of Africanists on the subject "Africa in the Context of North-South Relations" on May 21-23, 2002.
To create a forum and an enabling environment for the sharing of knowledge and expertise by private and public practitioners and researches in the criminal justice field focusing on modern criminal investigation, organized crime and human rights. The emphasis of this conference will be on global best practices, innovative investigative strategies and encouraging international co-operation and networking.
COSATU expresses its sincere and heart-felt condolences to the family and relatives of the fallen young Aids hero, Nkosi Johnson. The federation notes with regret that Nkosi’s premature death coincides with the International Children’s Day. It would like to regard his departure as a celebration to the bravery, dedication and unwavering commitment he exhibited in the struggle against the HIV/Aids pandemic.
The French do corruption in style. The day before Roland Dumas was sentenced for bolstering his bank accounts with about £1m of oil company Elf's largesse, a former interior minister was placed under investigation on suspicion of arms trafficking to Angola. The elder son of the late president François Mitterrand is also awaiting trial in the same "Angolagate" affair.
Ethiopian police have arrested several top officials and businessmen in the country's current crackdown campaign against corruption, said government officials Wednesday. Among the detained are former defense minister Siye Abraha and former head of the office of regional administration Bitew Belay, they said.
A benchmark for monitoring the conduct of Senators emerged yesterday with the submission to the Senate President, Anyim Pius Anyim, of a draft copy of a code of conduct and ethics to guide the conduct of senators in public affairs.
Research by NIPILAR and the Restorative Justice Centre. November 2000. Further details on downloading the file by email are on the RJC website.
This report documents human rights issues during the year 2000. It also reflects the activities undertaken during the year to promote human rights and to campaign against specific human rights abuses. In October 2000 Amnesty International launched a new campaign to mobilize people around the world in a collective effort to combat torture. As this report shows, the powers ranged against the human rights movement are formidable. However, so are the forces marshaled in support of human rights. The international human rights movement, is growing, diversifying and gaining strength. The outrage at injustice that led to the founding of Amnesty International 40 years ago continues to inspire and motivate millions of people determined to build a better world.
The International Secretariat of OMCT has been informed by the Observateurs des droits de l’Homme (CODHO), a member of OMCT, that Diyavanga Nkuyu, Mbumba Ilunga, Mwati Kabwe, Bosey Jean-Louis and Banga Djuna, 5 children condemned to death by the Military Court (COM, Cour d’Ordre Militaire), had their sentences commuted to life imprisonment. According to the same information, Nanasi Kisala was also condemned to death, but has not benefited from the presidential decision and is still awaiting execution.
As the Truth and Reconciliation Commission's Amnesty Committee was dissolved Thursday, by proclamation of South African President Thabo Mbeki, and the final TRC report is being prepared, AllAfrica's Charles Cobb asked John Allen, former Secretary of Communications for the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, and long-time Press Secretary to Archbishop Desmond Tutu, to reflect on the Commission's work.
Many of the contradictions of the mining industry, both the misery and the vast potential wealth, are evident in small-scale mining in Tanzania's Mererani hills. Beauty may be in the eye of the beholder, but its cost often remains out of sight. The difficult work and suffering that are commonplace in African mines are little considered by gem enthusiasts the world over.
The list of debtors at state-controlled Kenya Commercial Bank includes names of some of the country's top political and business elite. Among leading debtors causing the bank concern is a firm called Lima Limited, whose directors are listed as Cabinet Minister Nicholas Biwott and President Moi's son Gideon.
Libyan soldiers arrived at Mpoko International Airport in the Central African Republic (CAR) capital Bangui Wednesday morning on two Russian cargo planes, offloading equipment and light armoured vehicles to reinforce troops loyal to President Ange-Felix Patasse in their effort to quash a coup, sources in the city told IRIN on Thursday.
The Federal Government might have ordered stoppage of salary of the striking university lecturers who declared their trade dispute on April 2, 2001. Making this disclosure yesterday in Lagos was a member of ASUU negotiating team, Dr. Kayode Bamgbose of University of Agriculture, Abeokuta who briefed the zonal congress of the union on the development.
The 12-member UN Security Council mission which visited the Great Lakes region earlier this month said it was struck by the "complexity and intractability" of the situation in Burundi and its serious potential for large-scale violence. In a report on its mission from 15-26 May, the Security Council team detailed the discussions it had with the various sides in the Burundi conflict, stressing that it delivered a very strong message to all the players - namely that there could be no military solution to the conflict and peace should be found within the framework of the Arusha peace agreement, signed last August.
The Guardian's revelation that the Zimbabwean armed forces have warned South Africa's government of a potential coup against Robert Mugabe prompted questions of President Thabo Mbeki in parliament in Cape Town yesterday. Mr Mbeki skirted the direct issue raised by high-level sources in Pretoria, who told the Guardian that the Zimbabwean army had made secret approaches to Pretoria to express fears that widespread food shortages within months could prompt riots and other unrest, and a military coup.
World Press Trends is the primary and most authoritative source of data on the newspaper industry world-wide. The 2001 edition has been extended to include trends and statistics in 64 countries. The 237-page report presents a broad overview of the industry as well as detailed analyses of individual markets.
IT was natural that the death of a second Cabinet minister in a month should attract headline attention in the media, but ZBC’s coverage of the death of Defence Minister Moven Mahachi in yet another car accident, was excessive and repetitive. On average, 50% of the items in all its news bulletins (radio and TV) on Sunday (27/5) focused on Mahachi and included many repetitions of the same condolence messages without giving much detail of the accident or Mahachi’s record.
The United Nations World Summit on Sustainable Development scheduled to take place in Johannesburg, South Africa next September will cost more than 400 million rand, the equivalent of US$ 50 million, a joint meeting of Parliament's two environmental affairs committees heard on Tuesday.
The English words ‘poor’ and ‘poverty’ are treacherous and deceptive, writes Jeremy Seabrook. Covering a multitude of conditions, the words create a seamless continuity between ‘natural’ poverty and human-made poverty, an artificial link which the language seeks to pass off as though it were a natural phenomenon.
The major rebel group in eastern Congo continues to recruit children to wage war against the Congolese government, Human Rights Watch charged in a report released today. The report, "Reluctant Recruits: Children and Adults Forcibly Recruited for Military Service in North Kivu," details recruitment efforts since late 2000 by the Congolese Rally for Democracy-Goma (RCD-Goma) and the Rwandan army troops who support it. RCD-Goma has repeatedly pledged to demobilize its child soldiers, but has not fulfilled these promises, the report says.
COSATU intends to launch the strongest possible protest at the manner in which the Eskom Conversion Bill was passed by Parliament’s Public Enterprises Portfolio Committee last night, and the highly problematic content of the Bill. This is the culmination of a history of interaction with the Department of Public Enterprises on the Bill characterise by bad faith negotiations, duplicitous conduct, and broken agreements on the part of the Department. The Bill essentially seeks to corporatise Eskom, and lays the basis for future privatisation. COSATU believes that this will have negative effects on the delivery of affordable electricity to all our people.
In keeping up with the spirit and traditions of International Children’s Day, COSATU will tomorrow be celebrating with the children countrywide, and most importantly, engaging them in the crucial agendas in the general workplace activities. The federation’ eight regions countrywide together with its affiliated unions have organized picketing and various brainstorming, educational programmes set for the children of this country.
Grahamstown, South Africa. African journalists can enhance their understanding and reporting of environmental issues at this workshop offered by the Reuters Foundation. Past environmental journalism workshops have included practical seminars, training and field trips designed to increase journalists' awareness of environmental issues, including genetic modification, global warming and sustainable development. The workshops are designed to improve journalists' techniques for writing effective, informative stories with impact.
Applications for the Global Development Awards 2001 are now available on-line. The second annual awards competitions features cash prizes and travel expenses valued at more than $400,000. The 2001 Awards fall under three sections: (I) Research Award, (II) Research Medal, and (III)
Project Award. The finalists of each section will be invited to GDN2001 -Rio de Janeiro Conference this December with financial support by GDN.
The deadline for submitting applications and abstracts for both the Award and the Medals is June 30, 2001. Complete papers for the medals must be submitted by August 31, 2001.
The World Bank recently rescheduled a meeting to occur online in order to thwart street demonstrations. What does this mean for activists, who see the Web as a tool of the people?
News is one of the top reasons people go online. America Online's news director suggests what sites should do to build audiences and retain their integrity. Also: Will AOL's priorities destroy Time's journalism?
The owner of Karora Printers, Kalera Mhango, and the editor of Malawi's independent 'Dispatch' newspaper, Martines Namingah, have been charged with "publishing false information likely to cause public fear and alarm", an offence they both denied having committed, local media reported on Tuesday.
The ministry of Internal Affairs finally released the voluminous report of the Judicial Commission of Inquiry into corruption in the police force yesterday, more than one year after it received it from the Commission. Key among the many recommendations of the Commission, which was chaired by Lady Justice Julie Sebutinde, is that the Scotland Yard be brought in to investigate the three interdicted former senior officers in the Criminal Investigations Department (CID).
The corruption of governmental institutions threatens the common aspirations of all honest members of the international community. It threatens our common interests in promoting political and economic stability, upholding core democratic values, ending the reign of dictators, and creating a level playing field for lawful business activities.
Discussions on the rights of children, specially child soliders in the Democratic Republic of Congo have shown that if the government had paid more attention to education, re-intergration of these children into society would have been possible.
Abandoned children in Morocco get a new chance at life through an education programme that is the envy of all, writes Pierre Wolf.
Jointly sponsored by UNESCO and the Islamic Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (ISESCO). The purpose of the International Workshop is to bring together educators and representatives from other sectors, from international agencies and NGOs to exchange information, discuss experiences and to come up with a common strategic framework within which all stakeholders can take action to improve performance in Primary Education. The strategic framework will identify what steps and change processes are needed in the various dimensions of the primary education sub-system to make progress towards the goal of improving performance and, ultimately, providing learning that is more meaningful for children.
Zimbabwean Defense Minister and Member of Parliament Moven Mahachi was killed on Saturday, May 26 when his Land Rover struck an oncoming vehicle near Nyanga. The Minister was the respondent in a case brought against him by the losing MDC candidate for Makoni West, Mr. Elisha Makuwaza. Makuwaza alleged that Mahachi won the election due to violence and intimidation. Witnesses at the accident scene claim that an Alfasud turned into oncoming traffic in an attempt to overtake two cars. Minister Mahachi’s vehicle collided with the car and flipped three times, killing Mahachi instantly. The driver of the Alfasud and five passengers in Mahachi’s car all received minor injuries.
More than two weeks after President Bush announced a $200 million commitment from the U.S. to the United Nations Global Aids Fund, other UN member countries — seeming more interested in supporting their own initiatives and cautious of the fund's still-evolving mission — have yet to contribute any money of their own, the Boston Globe reports.
According to the American Association of Fundraising Counsel Trust for Philanthropy's new "Giving USA" estimates, U.S. charitable contributions in 2000 totaled $203.45 billion, an increase of 6.6 percent over the previous year.
Charitable contributions represented 2 percent of gross domestic product in 2000, a slight drop from the 28-year high of 2.1 percent achieved in 1999 and the same percentage as recorded in 1998.
It was with great dismay that we read over Mihai Zamfir’s recent article “Forum” in last week’s issue of Romania literara. Zamfir puts himself forward as a ‘neutral’ observer, seeking to weigh the positive and negative aspects of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, and the World Social Forum in Porto Alegre, Brazil, coming out in favour of the former. His dismissal of those who gathered in Porto Alegre is based upon their predisposition to violence and irrationality, and their failure to come up with a final document or communique (clearly untrue in light of the final communique which came out of Porto Alegre, translated into three languages--English, Spanish, and Portuguese--and signed by more than 170 organisations from around the world).
Stopping forced labour is the second Global Report issued under the International Labour Organization’s (ILO) new promotional tool, the follow- up to the 1998 ILO Declaration on Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work. The Report looks closely at the myriad forms of forced labour found in the world today and the various responses to them, with the aim of mobilizing greater support for their eradication. It closes by proposing a specific programme of action for discussion and approval by ILO constituents that strives for a holistic approach to eliminating this terrible practice.
A series of initiatives aimed at improving food safety and quality, following recent food safety incidents which have caused serious turmoil in the world food markets and raised concern among consumers, was announced today by the Assistant Director-General of the UN Food and Agriculture Organization, Hartwig de Haen. At the Committee on World Food Security currently meeting in Rome (28 May - 1 June 2001), Mr. de Haen said: "Food safety and quality have become subjects of increased concern for consumers, producers and policy makers all over the world."
Operation Prevail, the code name for the South African government's financial restructuring plan for the country's national parks, has now moved to the Kruger National Park, the crown jewel in South Africa's park system. Under the plan to resolve the park system's tight financial situation, some 663 positions are being made "redundant," at Kruger, Park Director David Mabunda told employees May 18. This will result in a 26 percent reduction in the park's payroll.
There's always something new, creative, and exciting in the wild world of biodiversity conservation. The Eco-Index includes scores of detailed project descriptions in its database, with more added every week and monthly updates via email.
The latest issue of Dot Org continues the exploration of email newsletters for nonprofit organizations.
In a country that is as short of cash as it is of enemies, plans to buy £4bn worth of defence equipment raised eyebrows from day one. Yesterday, the South African public's bemusement was prolonged a further two weeks when a hearing into corruption allegations surrounding the arms deal was adjourned until 11 June.
Shell has refused to publish the independent report it commissioned on its multimillion-pound community development programme in Nigeria, despite denying that the document is secret. Pressure on the oil giant was increased yesterday when Glenys Kinnock, the MEP and patron of the Ogoni Foundation, a human rights group, wrote to Shell demanding that it publish the independent report.
Openlaw is an experiment in crafting legal argument in an open forum. With your assistance, we will develop arguments, draft pleadings, and edit briefs in public, online. Non-lawyers and lawyers alike are invited to join the process by adding thoughts to the "brainstorm" outlines, drafting and commenting on drafts in progress, and suggesting reference sources. Building on the model of open source software, we are working from the hypothesis that an open development process best harnesses the distributed resources of the Internet community. By using the Internet, we hope to enable the public interest to speak as loudly as the interests of corporations. Openlaw is therefore a large project built through the coordinated effort of many small (and not so small) contributions.
Society today is increasingly about information. Accurate and timely information is the new wealth, empowering decision-making and enabling action across the full range of society. In the nonprofit sector, the ability to collect, store, analyze and distribute information is a key component of building and maintaining civil society. Technology has enormous power to advance nonprofit missions. However, we believe that the majority of both nonprofit leaders and grantmakers have yet to embrace this fact and act on it. Our goals in this position paper are to help grantmakers understand that shift in attitude and to provide tools they can use to evaluate the information management portion of funding requests.
Project managers who complete a survey for the Eco-Index are asked this important question: "Please advise colleagues who are interested in starting a project similar to yours: If you could start over, what two or three things might you do differently?" The best, most forthright answers to this question are illuminating and helpful to everyone working in conservation.
The European Union this week urged the pharmaceutical industry to adopt a pricing mechanism that would ensure poor countries could buy essential medicines at the lowest possible price. The move follows the UN Conference held in Brussels two weeks ago to adopt strategies for helping the world's poorest countries and an EU Action Programme targeted on major communicable diseases (HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria) adopted by the Council of Ministers on 14 May.
A Canadian mining company may lose its operating license to mine titanium if Kenyan members of parliament pass a motion seeking to establish whether it is operating according to international and local environmental standards. If passed, this would be yet another obstacle on the path of Tiomin Kenya Limited since it was awarded a license to mine titanium at the Kenyan Coast. Tiomin Kenya is a wholly owned local subsidiary of Canadian mining firm, Tiomin Resources Inc.
The rebel Rassemblement congolais pour la democratie (RCD-Goma) has issued an "ultimatum" to the Kinshasa government, warning that it will resume the war unless President Joseph Kabila "stops transferring the war to the east". According to an RCD statement, received by IRIN on Wednesday, the movement's secretary-general Ruberwa Azarias issued the warning at a press conference in Goma on Tuesday.
The South African government should not have handed a Tanzanian citizen, Khalfan Mohamed, to the United States for trial without assurances from the US that he would not be executed if found guilty. The May 28 ruling by the South African Constitutional Court was welcomed by the country's human rights lawyers and activists who objected to Mohamed's deportation to the US when he was originally arrested.
President Sam Nujoma has ordered a total ban on the purchase of The Namibian by the Government of the Republic of Namibia. This directive by the President has been issued hot on the heels of an earlier Cabinet decision to ban Government line ministries from advertising in the newspaper on grounds that it maintained an "anti-Government stance."
Delegates attending a conference in Namibia on establishing a permanent war-crimes court told IRIN on Tuesday that regional support for the initiative was growing. "Southern African nations were a driving force toward getting the International Criminal Court (ICC) treaty on paper," said Joanne Lee, one of the conference organisers. The ICC would, once created, be able to prosecute individuals for war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide.
There has been a wave of international optimism about the prospects for peace in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). On his first visit to Africa, United States Secretary of State Colin Powell declared himself "cautiously optimistic" about Congo's future. After an eight-nation African tour, the 12-strong United Nations team was also in a buoyant mood. In Uganda, the last stop on their 10 day trip last week, the UN envoys heaped praise on the country's president, Yoweri Museveni, for promising to pull most of his troops out of Congo within the next few weeks.
Their home page is sub-titled:"Communication Interventions for Sustainable Development". Here are some links from the "Books and Materials" section.
Sub-Saharan Africa's persistent food insecurity and vulnerability to famine reflects failures of understanding as much as failures of interventions. Food Security in Sub-Saharan Africa aims to contribute towards an improved understanding for more effective food security policy.
The Saturday after the 17th Annual Conference on Distance Teaching and Learning there will be a symposium on Strategies for International Humanitarian Organizations.
FUNDING AVAILABLE FOR CANDIDATES APPLYING FROM AFRICAN COUNTRIES. APPLICATION SHOULD BE SUBMITTED AS SOON AS POSSIBLE. Application form can be requested by e-mail or can be downloaded from:
First Bank Nigeria Plc, one of the oldest and largest banks in Nigeria recently announced a policy banning married couples from working in its employment. The Bank directed that it would retain only one partner out of a married couple working with it. Its reason was that the Bank was undergoing reorganisation and repositioning under a new management and there was a need for discipline and efficiency. First Bank Nigeria Plc announced that the affected persons would be adequately compensated.
Nigeria is traditionally a patriarchal society with an estimated population of 120 Million, with women making 49.5%. In spite of advances in education, women still lag behind in all areas of national development. Nigerian women face barriers to full enjoyment of their rights because of ethnicity, culture, religion or lack of education. The traditions in Nigeria can be characterised as a system of beliefs and practices which put women in a position of inferiority. This inferior status of women is protected in the name of tradition, culture and religion and have deprieved women of their rights as human beings.
Nigeria has a high unemployment rate and women's access to good corporate jobs remains very limited.
This policy pitted First Bank of Nigeria Plc against the Nigeria Labour Congress and Women NGOs who immediately began advocacy campaigns against the Bank.
Women's Rights Watch campaigned against the policy because in a patriarchal society where the man makes the decisions, the wife's career will invariably give way in order to sustain her husband's.
The First Nigeria Bank policy is a reversal of the few gains made in Nigeria for the economic empowerment of women. At present, women have inequal access to employment in Nigeria and the policy could be copied by other corporate organisations in Nigeria.
The policy infringes on women's fundamental human rights to marry and contravenes the UN Convention on Elimination Against All forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) to which Nigeria is a signatory. Article 11 of CEDAW prevents discrimination against women in employment and provides that States take appropriate measures to prohibit discrimination against women on the grounds of marriage - and dismissals on the basis of marital status.
The Nigerian Government has been very silent on the issue, but the NLC began a nation wide picketing against First Bank in protest of their anti-labour policies.
Happily First Bank Nigeria Plc on Wednesday the 30th of May, 2001 succumed to the pressure mounted on it by the NLC and NGOs and announce that it had reversed its policy against married couples. The bank in a memo dated 25th of May, 2001 and addressed to all heads of departments, branches, regional offices stated
"We are pleased to advise that management has revisited the issue and decided to allow married couples to remain in its employment"
Women's Rights Watch Nigeria (WRW) is of the view that corporate Nigeria is not gender sensitive! Women's Rights Watch is currently involved in a national gender sensitization campaign to lobby our national institutions - the Presidency, the National Assembly (Legislature) the Federal Ministry of Women Affairs, and the National Human Rights Commission to pass the UN CEDAW into Nigerian Law. Women's Rights Watch is circulating a petition and has collected signatures from 19 countries. They include Nigeria, Ghana, Kenya, Canada, Zimbabwe, United States of America, Romania, Sweden, Sri Lanka, Costa Rica, Noway, Australia, South Africa, Kyrgyzstan, Philippines, The Netherlands, United Kingdom, Thailand, Austria.
Please find below our petition. Send your messages of support to us at [email protected].
A course on Epidemology available on compact disks, updated in conjunction with Congress of Epidemiology 2001 in Toronto.
The educational fact sheets "The European Convention on Human Rights - Starting Points for teachers" are now available in both English and French on the Council of Europe website:
The Commission for Gender Equality has put the land restitution programme at the top of its agenda for the coming gender summit to be held in August.
The Ministry of Health (MOH) is now fully committed to ensuring that trainee nurses at all the midwifery and nurses training institutes become computer literate on completion of their study programmes.
The recent racial out-bursts by MMD national secretary Michael Sata are beneath the spirit of one Zambia one nation, Forum for Democracy and Development (FDD) chairman, Simon Zukas, has observed.
The line between affirmative action and racism is a narrow one, which has arguably been crossed by the Road Accident Fund's new policy to promote black professionals. As we show in this newspaper, the rule is quite simple: no whites can be used in the legal defence of the fund, unless formal permission is obtained.
Djibouti, a country where almost 100 percent of women are subjected to the illegal and harmful practice of genital mutilation, has mounted on a major program to combat the tradition. The government, several religious leaders and UN agencies are joining forces.
Women's Action for Development, which recently became a Namibian non-governmental organisation, has been supporting and facilitating the development of women in Namibia for a number of years. Mrs Veronica de Klerk, executive director, spoke in an interview, about where women were in Namibian society, where they are and where they are going.
A critical look at the advantages and disadvantages of Open Source Software. Should non-profits/ NGOs use open-source or not? This article also contains interesting links to other papers and online forums about open source, eg a previous Slashdot discussion. Recommended: the current discussion on this topic at the TechSoup web site. Follow the link below the article.
This project connects over 3.5 million students and teachers in 191 countries. The aim is skill-building and collaborative learning. The web site can be viewed in one of 6 languages, including Portugeuse and French. It features tools like instant translation, a world map generator, weather, chatrooms, ecards, moderated email and webmail and a searchable database of registered users.
The latest opportunities from OneWorld Volunteers www.oneworld.net/volunteers - the place on the internet for volunteering posts in sustainable development, environment and human rights. For all the latest news and information from the OneWorld network of organisations working for global justice worldwide visit www.oneworld.net.
Job Title:Regional Director, Africa -- ActionAid; Location:Harare; Closing Date for Applications: 15 July 2001; Contact Details:For further information on ActionAid and the Africa Director post, see www.actionaid.org CVs with covering letter and names of two referees should be emailed to [email protected] Ref. 0105-01
ActionAid is looking for a visionary individual to lead ActionAid in the Africa region and join our International Directors' team during a period of exciting change. This is a senior position in the organisation, reporting to the Chief Executive . A strong belief in social justice and positive civic action is essential.
Job Title: Bram Fischer Visiting Professorship in Human Rights; Location: Wits Law School, University of Witwatersand, Johannesburg, South Africa; Contact:Professor Skeen, Head School of Law, Tel (011) 717-8411. The Bram Fischer Visiting Professorship represents a major new endowment in the School of Law, University of Witwatersrand. Named for a leading human rights advocate, the Visiting Professorship is intended to advance a tradition of advocacy and scholarship in human rights that will ensure South Africa's vibrant constitutional democracy and influence students to regard human rights as an integral part of their practice of law.
To complement the online job-matching we do at Idealist, we recently launched a series of nonprofit career fairs where organizations and nonprofit job-seekers can meet face-to-face. The first cycle of fairs, in March and April of this year, drew 500 organizations and 4,200 job seekers in nine cities across the United States, and we are now opening the next cycle for registration.
REDRESS, the innovative and proactive human rights charity which assists torture survivors to obtain justice and reparation worldwide is now looking for experienced and committed individuals to fulfil a number of challenging posts, based in London. Closing date for all positions: 20th June 2001 Contact Details: Bill Dishington, Administration and IT Manager REDRESS, 6 Queen Square, London WC1N 3AR Tel : +44 (0)20 7278 9502; Fax : +44 (0)20 7278 9410
An overview of the latest developments in and applications of wireless technology, focusing on Wireless LAN and Bluetooth. Learn about connecting networks with small, cheap chips, bandwidth frequencies and no cables. Wireless is useful in urban areas only.
This week, the European Parliament published a report that finally offered official confirmation of the existence of Echelon: a shadowy worldwide electronic spying network set up by secret treaty in 1947. Echelon is a global spying network established by the US, UK, Canada, Australia and New Zealand and run by the US that uses supercomputers to intercept messages and store them according to key words. Originally, eavesdropping, or signals intelligence (Signit as it is known in the trade) was targeted at military and diplomatic communications, but it has now switched to industrial and commercial targets, to campaigning organisations such as Greenpeace and Amnesty International, and to private individuals.
The MEP's report was prompted by claims that Echelon has been used for industrial espionage, although it has failed to find conclusive proof for such allegations. But of equal concern is the threat Echelon poses to organisations and to individual privacy. There is clear evidence for the surveillance of individual communications for key words that are then analysed sometimes out of context and stored in the US National Security Agency(NSA) computer system. While the report concludes that Echelon's surveillance system is limited because it is based on monitoring satellite communications that account for a small proportion of global communications, states involved in Echelon and others also have access to radio and cable communications and are developing eavesdropping systems to cover email and the internet. In the UK, for example, the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act (2000) allows authorities to monitor traffic through black boxes placed with ISPs, and gives the police authority to seize encryption keys. Last week, the London based group Statewatch published leaked documents saying the 15 EU member states are lobbying the European Commission to require service providers to keep all phone, fax, email and internet data in case they are needed for criminal investigations. Echelon is not only the tip of the iceberg, it seems, but its outing by MEPs may be little more than sour grapes: in the dirty game of global espionage, everyone is at it.
The power of states to intercept the communications of organisations and individuals has serious implications. Privacy, as the MEP's report makes clear, is a fundamental human right. Yet, although this is a right that we expect governments to respect and protect, they in fact continually breach it. Moreover, surveillance is an activity for which states remain fundamentally unaccountable, since the nature of their activities are clandestine, leaving citizens powerless to monitor and limit those very activities that represent a breach of their privacy. Individuals and groups thus effectively have no redress if that information is inaccurate, or being used for distorted ends. There is also a worrying disparity between the rights of citizens within a territorial or state jurisdiction, and their vulnerability to the power of global surveillance. NSA, for example, is limited to holding information on US citizens for one year, but can hold information on foreigners forever. This disparity is highly convenient when such surveillance systems are avowedly international in nature.
In Africa, many states are western clients, and will have access to the information Echelon can provide on opposition parties, civil liberty groups and NGOs, while their citizens do not even have the privilege of the protection of adequate domestic privacy law. With perhaps up to 40% of Echelons activities devoted to economic& espionage, the system also provides participating countries with an enormous, unfair advantage, since most developing states cannot afford the expertise and equipment to protect the privacy and security of their own networks against such intrusions.
Above all, surveillance by the state and its partners highlights the hypocrisy of governments of those in power. Elected by, and accountable to citizens, states owe us an obligation to be transparent. In reality, citizens are routinely denied freedom of information, while putting up with large scale, arbitrary and unaccountable intrusions into their own private and collective - lives. The EU report recommends we routinely encrypt all our online communications. Perhaps. But if Duncan Campbell, the investigative journalist, is correct in arguing that the Anglo-Americans secretly plan a global electronic spy system for the 21st century capable of listening in to most of us most of the time, it may take far more than encrypting our emails to protect ourselves from such hypocrisy, let alone to root it out.
Further information:
The European Parliament Commission on Echelon:
EchelonWatch: http://www.echelonwatch.org/
Statewatch: http://www.statewatch.org/
Body of Secrets by James Bamford on NSA: http://www.salon.com/books/review/2001/04/25/nsa/
Duncan Campbell: http://www.gn.apc.org/duncan/
Campaign to close Menwith Hill, Yorkshire CND: http://www.gn.apc.org/cndyorks/mhs/
The newly established African Women's Development Fund (AWDF) is a fundraising and grant-making fund which aims to support the work of the African women's movement. The beneficiaries of the fund will be local, national and regional African women's organisations. The AWDF will raise money and make grants for the support of non-profit African women's organisations working for social justice, equity and peace. The beneficiaries of the fund will be African women's organisations working in the following areas: women's human rights; economic empowerment; political empowerment; feminist leadership development. The AWDF will also support programme work to strengthen existing initiatives in the areas of research, public policy debates and analyses, organisational development and capacity building.
Compelling stories from the Communications Initiative.
Garlic heals HIV infections in children; 20 years of AIDS: June 5, 1981-June 5, 2001; Measles cases increase by nearly 700 percent in Kano; UNICEF, northern states fight diseases.
The United Staff Union declares its support for the boycott of World Bank bonds, and pledges that the employee representative to the AFSCME pension board will oppose any purchase of World Bank bonds, until the World Bank respects labor rights, stops promoting privatization, cancels 100% of debts owed to it by impoverished countries, and stops destructive "structural adjustment" and similar policies,including those enumerated in this resolution.
In a paper released last March by the World Bank's Development Research Group, Bank economists David Dollar and Aart Kraay confront critics of World Bank/IMF policies with new empirical research on incomes in both developed and less developed countries. But the debate joined by Dollar and Kraay misses the most important problem entirely. Economic growth over the last twenty years, the period during which the policies advocated by the authors (and their institution) have been put into place, has been dramatically reduced. It may well be true, as Dr. Dollar argues, that "to ignore the importance of growth-enhancing policies is an injustice to the poor." But to assume that the World Bank and the IMF have brought "growth-enhancing policies" to their client countries goes against the overwhelming weight of the evidence over the last two decades.
A non governmental initiative to promote visual and eye health in Africa. One of the activities of this initiative is to disseminate optometry information to eye care staff through its newsletter in paper form. However, following
requests from eye care staff outside target region to have an access to this information we have made our newsletter online. For more information, visit our website.
USAID has provided support to JHU/PIP on behalf of the Population and Health Materials Working Group to expand RHGateway into a true multi function portal site for international reproductive health. The intended audiences include developing-country researchers and managers, research and academic organizations, health communicators, USAID CAs’ field offices, donor organizations, and RH Gateway participating organizations themselves.
Published earlier this year, this report from Oxfam "sets out the scale of the worldwide education crisis, identifies the causes, and sets out an agenda for reform." Divided into seven sections that examine data concerning education worldwide, the report discusses the critical connection between education and poverty globally, the progress made in achieving the goals set out at the 1990 UN conference -- Education for All, and the worldwide inequalities in education. The report also examines efforts at international cooperation on education, "partnerships for change," and presents a nine-page agenda for action. According to the report, the promises concerning education made at the 1990 UN conference have been "comprehensively broken," and, if current trends continue, none of the conference's quantitatively measurable goals for 2015 will be reached.
The Digital Freedom Network (DFN) promotes human rights around the world by developing new methods of activism with Internet technology and by pro-viding an online voice to those attacked simply for expressing themselves. With the use of Internet technology, DFN extends traditional methods of activism by applying the latest innovations to confront attacks on freedom of expression, privacy, and other forms of oppression.
The UN High Commissioner for Refugees said today it will cut its staff and aid programs because donors are not providing the money they promised. High Commissioner Ruud Lubbers said the organization has planned cuts to save $95 million this year. The agency said it expects to save from a long-planned winding down of operations in the Balkans and East Timor. Other programs that aid refugees once they have returned home may also be cut, the agency said.
Twelve-year-old Aids activist Nkosi Johnson, who challenged the government's Aids policies and united millions of South Africans in the fight against the disease, has died. Nkosi, who was born HIV-positive, died early this morning after collapsing at the end of December last year. Nkosi was taken home on January 4 after doctors said they could do nothing more for him.
A new batch of articles is now available on the Africultures English website. Check out the exclusive interview with Nobel Prize winner, Wole
Soyinka.
"President Muhammad Ibrahim Egal of Somaliland should immediately and unconditionally release former presidential candidate Suleiman Mohamed Adam,"Amnesty International reiterated today. Suleiman Mohamed Adam, 66, is considered by Amnesty International as a prisoner of conscience, detained solely on account of his non-violent opinions and for peacefully exercising his rights to freedom of expression and association.
NOVIB and December 18 invite all migrant organizations and others involved with migrant issues to participate at a first round table on the preparation of this year’s International Migrant’s Day in The Netherlands. Interested groups should contact Leila Rispens-Noel of NOVIB before June 10 at [email protected] (Tel.: 070-3421869, Fax: 070-3614461). Note that the first meeting will be held before July 10. Time and place are to be confirmed. All NGOs and governments are invited to inform December 18 about scheduled activities, events and campaigns and eventual plans. December 18 is looking for groups interested to act as national contact for France, Belgium, Switzerland and Canada. Interested groups in other countries are also welcome to contact December 18.
Global Eye is a website designed for children which aims to raise awareness and develop understanding of global issues. The summer issue is now on line and in the primary section there is a focus on refugees. This site will give children and teachers many ideas for projects and activities.
Amnesty International is concerned about the abduction of 60 children and two adults by UNITA and fear for their safety; unlawful killing. It calls for the immediate release of the children and the two adults abducted by UNITA; to publicize the plight of children as victims of armed conflict in Angola.
Recent peace overtures by Angolan President Jose Eduardo dos Santos and UNITA rebel leader Jonas Savimbi have been matched on the battlefield by heightened military action across the country in recent months. Reports of UNITA and Angolan Armed Forces (FAA) attacks, retaliations and offensives have been constant and regular.
Central African Republic (CAR) dissident leader Andre Kolingba told mutinous soldiers on Thursday to lay down their arms after Libya and Congolese rebels came to the aid of President Ange-Felix Patasse. "I have agreed to stop the hostilities from this evening," Kolingba, who is Patasse's immediate predecessor, told Radio France Internationale. "I ask the mutinous soldiers to return to their respective residences."
There was "relative calm mixed with latent tension" in Ndjamena and other towns in Chad on Friday following unrest related to the contested re-election of President Idriss Deby, according to a resident of the Chadian capital.