28 April, 2011

SOME 180 NATIONS AND TERRITORIES TAKE PART IN UN-BACKED IMMUNIZATION DRIVE


SOME 180 NATIONS AND TERRITORIES TAKE PART IN UN-BACKED IMMUNIZATION DRIVE

Some 180 countries and territories are for the first time carrying out simultaneous United Nations-backed immunization campaigns this week, targeting diseases such as influenza, measles, polio and tetanus.

The <"http://www.who.int/features/2011/immunization_week/en/index.html">Immunization Week, which began on Saturday, is taking place across the five UN World Health Organization (WHO) regions of Africa, the Americas, Eastern Mediterranean, Europe and the Western Pacific.

"I believe Immunization Week will have a significant impact on emphasizing the need to remain vigilant against vaccine-preventable diseases – even those that we do not see within our communities," <"http://www.who.int/immunization/newsroom/newsstory_immunization_week_180_countries/en/index.html">said WHO Director-General Margaret Chan.

Over the course of the week, outreach teams will visit communities with limited access to regular health services such as those living in remote areas, urban fringes and internally displaced people to administer vaccines.

Vaccinations will be provided to protect against diseases such as diphtheria, hepatitis B, influenza, measles, mumps, maternal and neonatal tetanus, polio, rubella, whooping cough and yellow fever.

Other activities include training sessions and workshops for health workers, as well as round-table discussions with political decision-makers, medical professionals, parents, and caregivers.

Dr. Chan noted that even with all the positive cooperation, innovation and collaboration that exist, "we are at risk of losing many of the gains that have been made and forgoing the additional benefits that are within reach."

The recent outbreaks of measles, pertussis and polio in different parts of the world have highlighted the work that remains to be done, she said.

Last week WHO urged European countries to work more closely together to combat measles – which is entirely preventable – after a surge in the number of cases across the continent since the start of the year.

At least 6,500 cases have been reported already, with significant outbreaks observed in 30 countries, including Belgium, France, Serbia, Turkey, the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia and Spain.


SENIOR UN OFFICIAL STRESSES KYRGYZSTAN’S KEY ROLE IN REGIONAL ANTI-DRUG EFFORTS


SENIOR UN OFFICIAL STRESSES KYRGYZSTAN'S KEY ROLE IN REGIONAL ANTI-DRUG EFFORTS

The United Nations anti-drug chief today <"http://www.unis.unvienna.org/unis/pressrels/2011/unisnar1105.html">highlighted the key role of Kyrgyzstan in countering illicit drug trafficking, as he met with officials in the Central Asian nation to discuss a range of issues, including drug treatment services and prison management.

Yury Fedotov, Executive Director of the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), pledged that his agency would continue to assist Kyrgyzstan, particularly with the re-established State Service on Drug Control and in building the country's capacity to combat drug trafficking.

"The formation of this agency is critical in combating the interconnected ills of drug trafficking and organized crime," Mr. Fedotov said on the sidelines of his meeting with Vitaly Orozaliev, Chairperson of the State Service on Drug Control.

"UNODC is proud to be able to work with authorities in assisting the people of Kyrgyzstan and the wider region in reducing the threat of illicit drugs and we look forward to expanding our existing partnership."

He noted that, given its proximity to Afghanistan, the country has a key role in tackling the movement of drugs produced in Afghanistan to Europe, Russia and China.

While in the capital, Bishkek, Mr. Fedotov met with President Roza Otunbayeva and Prime Minister Almazbek Atambaev, as well as the Speaker of Parliament, Akhmatbek Keldibekov, and the Foreign Minister, Ruslan Kazakbaev.

They discussed UNODC's expanding partnership with Kyrgyzstan, which has come to include mutual legal assistance, enhancing cross-border cooperation, combating transnational organized crime, effectively promoting drug dependence treatment, responding to HIV and AIDS as it relates to both drug users and in prison settings, and countering human trafficking.

As part of the visit, Mr. Fedotov visited a pre-trial detention centre in Bishkek to discuss issues of prison management, which forms part of a €3 million European Union-funded project to support comprehensive prison reform activities in Kyrgyzstan.

"UNODC is committed to working with the Kyrgyz Government to improve the quality of prisons in the country, and to help the Government implement rule of law and criminal justice reforms," the Executive Director pledged.


Somaliland is the best democratic country in the Horn of Africa( an article)


 Somaliland is the best democratic country in the Horn of Africa:

 

Reported: Abdi Abdillahi Hassan, Chairman of Horn of Africa (HODO Life Line)
 
Somaliland's second presidential election was held on 26th June 2010, which

International observers confirmed it was fair and free election, complying international standards. Somaliland adopted multi-party systems on 31st May 2001 when Somaliland citizens voted and approved the new constitution of the country. Somaliland previously held t local government and Parliamentary elections on December 2002 and September 2005 respectively.

Somaliland is moderate Muslim country that made significant progress to their democratisation process. Although there were many challenges, the transitional period to transform to pluralism political system went through with a very smooth and peaceful process.  Before that time Somaliland political arena was dominated by clan-based system. It was a huge achievement that Somaliland adopted democracy without or little assistance from the international community. The three candidates of political parties UDUB (The previous ruling party, and two major opposition parties UCID, and KULMIYE (the current ruling parties) took part in this election. 

After one month of busy elections campaign launched by the three main parties, the outcome of the election result indicated that The Opposition party KULMIYE won the election and fortunately UDUB ruling party accepted the outcome after National elections commissions announced it. 

How democratic are Somaliland's neighbours?

 

South and Central Somalia:

In so called the Somali Transitional Federal Government (TFG) is the current Internationally recognised government of Somalia. The transitional federal charter was adopted in November 2004 by so called Transitional Federal Parliament.  The central government promised to restore law and order in the Central and South Somalia.  The transitional Charter outlines a five-year mandate leading toward the establishment of a new constitution and a transition to a representative government after national elections. It seemed that TFG is not ready to hold national election based on International standards due to unsafe and unstable
environment.
 

 The TFG recently attempt to restore central government to Somalia after the 1991 collapse of the formed president Siad Barre. After fall of Siad Barre Somalia was devastated by civil war, lawlessnessand chaos.  Except Somaliland republic which announced to separate the rest of Somalia and gained its independence in 1991 after collapsed of the Somali central government.  The Autonomous Punland also managed relative peace and they have their own government and parliament elected by clan based political system.

 

 

 The TFG faced challenges from Islamic radical groups for Al-Shabaab and Hizbul Islam (two main rebels fighting against the transitional government.  Although the current TFG is backed by international community and African forced stationed in Mogadishu to support weak TFG government. The government is only controlled a village from North Mogadishu where they controlled the airport and sea port. About 7,500 Ugandan and Burundi soldiers make up the African Union peacekeeping force supporting the Somali transitional government.
 The current government was elected as clan related political culture. The TFG is criticised that it operated undemocratic, being ineffective and corrupt regime.   
 
Ethiopia:

 

The Ethiopian Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia adopted the constitution in December 1994 which allows the multiparty system. The first elections for Ethiopia's first popularly chosen national parliament and regional legislatures were held in May 1995.

 

The previous election was held in May 2005. This election was caused demonstrations and political unrest which led to the deaths of 200 protesters and injury of 763 others, mostly in the capital Addis ababa and more than 10,000 people were detained by security forces following the election, most released in 2006. This election was condemned by opposition groups and International observers; it was declared that it was lower than national election standers.

 

The last presidential election in Ethiopia held in May 2010, the ruling party won the election the country's electoral board said the ruling Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF) and allied parties had won 534 seats out of 536 declared, the poll fell short of some international standards and the general election drew condemnation from national and international observers. 

 

Eritrea:

 

Eritrea is an authoritarian state, run by the People's Front Democracy and justice. Other political groups are not allowed to organise, although the non-implemented Constitution of 1997 provides for the existence of multi-party politics. The National Assembly has 150 seats, of which 75 are occupied by the PFDJ. National elections have been periodically scheduled and cancelled; none have ever been held in the country. Independent local sources of political information on Eritrean domestic politics are scarce; in September 2001 the government closed down all of the nation's privately owned print  media and outspoken critics of the government have been arrested and held without trial, according to various international observers, including Human rights Watch and Amnesty International. 

Kenya

We are also aware the Kenyan elections which ended Riots erupted in Kenya after Kibaki
was declared re-elected as President. Certain opposition supporters, angered by alleged electoral manipulation by President Kibaki, allegedly incited civil unrest. The unrest involved ethnic violence between members of different tribes, particularly between the Kikuyu and the Luo. Eventually, a power-sharing agreement, according to which Kibaki would remain President and Odinga would gain the new post of Prime Minister, was reached in late February 2008, and a coalition government, with an equal number of ministers for the PNU and the ODM, was named in April.

Djibouti:
 
The democratisation process in Djibouti is very poor and is one of the worst in Horn of Africa, although Djibouti government is allied with Western governments and regarded itself as democratic nation adopted multi-party systems in early 1992, it dominated 
 a single political party system which is president's party (People's Rally for Progress),
 the current system is unfair and unbalance and even Djibouti has no national election
 commission which monitoring the election. The opposition party has no members in the parliament, the opposition groups are very weak and most of them live in abroad because they are not feeling safe to remain in the country, they are not even criticised publicly in the government. 

Sudan:

In Sudan the presidential election was held in April 2010, the current president Omar 
Al bashir declared himself to win 68% the first multi-party system in 24 years ruling 
one single party ( Mr Bashir and his National Congress Party). The EU and the Carter
 Centre said the polls were below international standards. The five key democracy indicators of elected process are pluralism, functioning of
Government, political participation, political culture and civil liberties. 

 Conclusion:

According to Somaliland's recent democratisation performance, comparing to the rest of Africa, particularly in Somaliland neighbours, it is doing very well. According to economist intelligent unit 2009, the index assesses the democratic status of 167 countries in world. The index pointed out that the most democratic country in the world is Sweden. The most democratic country in Africa is Mauritius. While there are no single full democratic or flawed or imperfect democratic countries in the horn of Africa. Unfortunately Somaliland is facto stated and does not gained international recognition was not included in the index. 

According to the index the most Horn of African countries including Ethiopia and Kenya scored hybrid regimes and totalitarian regimes which scored below the standard 4-5. Both Ethiopia and Kenya appeared to establish better elections process and pluralism because they allow some form of political pluralism and conduct elections, however the elections are often neither free nor fair. The Horn of Africa regimes are not only authoritarian and undemocratic nations but they are the poorest in this planet. It also appeared that their political culture has had impact on their economic and social development.

It seemed that the most democratic countries are most developed countries in the universal, while the most authoritarian regimes are poorest and less developed nations. 
 America and other western countries forced Iraq ,Afghanistan and Libia to adopt the multi-party system and cost them billions of dollars to help their democracy. They sent thousands of soldiers to maintain peace and stability which cost them human casualties while they also support the current Somali transitional government which is fighting against religious extremist Alshabab and Hizbol Islam. These armed groups deny rights of Somaliland citizens which adopted in their home-made democratic system which accomplishes international standards. The Horn of African citizens should come up with new vision and being assertive and have their say and demand their political leaders to adopt democratic political culture to achieve democratic transformation in the horn of African countries as there are a lot of obstacles and concerns as we mentioned above. 

Recommendations:

I suggest the other Horn of Africa leaders should follow Somaliland's positive examples on how they adopted the democratic system and how they become self-sufficient and self-reliant, as well as how they manage to resolve their problems with peaceful and civilised manner. Finally I would like to call here the international community to review their policy and try to reward the Somaliland achievement s which they established a peaceful environment, respected human rights, adopted multi party system and create responsible and accountable government. 

I have to also acknowledge that there are still room for improvements, despite all the achievements. Somaliland's peace and democracy can be harmed with apparent lack of international diplomatic recognition, which will block Somaliland to access the international institutions like UN, AU, EU, USA, World Bank, IMF and to establish bilateral agreements. 
 
Above all, Somaliland is situated in very sensitive region, dominated by famine, political unrest, civil wars, pirates and religious extremism, but appears to be beacon of Horn of African and new model of African model which adopted pluralism political culture and example for self-help and self-reliance. Somaliland continue to face challenges from pirates, sectarian war and regional unrest, and is difficulties to cope with the current pressure and they are in need of economic assistance from international community. 


 Historical background:   


 Somaliland was a British Protectorate for 86 years and got its independence in 26th June 1960. Known as British Somaliland It was an internationally recognised sovereign state until 1st July 1960. Shortly after receiving independence from Britain, it united with the South of Somalia, known as Italian Somaliland and colonised by Italy until its merger with Somaliland to form the Somali Democratic Republic. The drive behind the Republic was based on vision of united greater Somalia.

 

When its second president Abdulrashid Ali Sharmarke (1967-1969) was assassinated by his own bodyguards in Laas Aanod City, the vision of unity started to fall apart. A bloodless coup-de-tat on 21st of October 1969 ensued resulting in army General Mohamed Siyaad Barre becoming president. Barre wasted no time in establishing an authoritarian regime, starting off his first year by giving unlimited powers to the military. The population of Northern Somalia (Somaliland) were denied the same provisions in welfare and aid.

 

 Barre, who describes himself as a Socialist, created uneven distribution of resources across Somalia, leading to vast inequalities apparent between North-South with regards to education, health and development. This, together with a number of other factors resulted in the birth of the Somali National Movement (SNM) a political military liberation movement (April 1981). In 1988 Bare awarded the Houd region to Ethiopia in-exchange for the Ethiopian government to expel the Somali National Movement (SNM) from the Houd and reserve the area.  In 1988 there occurred a clash between the government forces and SNM soldiers. The SNM fighters captured most of the northern regions of Somalia (now known as Somaliland).

 The government took revenge by indiscriminately killing civilians. They killed thousands of innocent people. They destroyed homes, livelihoods and took claim of the properties. More than half a million people fled Somalia, and crossed the border to  neighbouring countries, with those unable to flee displaced and helpless, becoming  refugees in their now completely destroyed regions.

 

 The Somaliland people continued to suffer as victims of brutality, as crimes against humanity were being perpetrated by Somalia's military regime under the authority of the Somali Government. Internationally condemned, many Human Rights' organizations, and western states documented the war crimes and genocide acts committed against the people of Somaliland. 

There are internationally documented mass graves across Somaliland, particularly in the big cities, such as Hargeisa, Berbera, Erigavo and other Somaliland towns and villages. Unfortunately, the International community failed so far to bring those war criminals to justice. Mona Rishmawi, a Palestinian lawyer who also works for the Independent International Commission of Jurists (ICJ), was speaking to reporters after returning from a visit to the Horn of Africa. 

 

 "The story of the massacres has to be told because it is a horrible story", she said. Adding "People have to understand that systematic killing of civilians, even in a situation of chaos and civil war, when hundreds of people are rounded up and massacred, is just not acceptable" .Rishmawi recommended an effort to set-up an international criminal court in Somalia stating: "It is very important for the integrity of the U.N. human rights system that we deal with such events".Still in efforts to establish an enquiry,  Rishmawi commented on progress, noting that discussions would start soon on setting up an international criminal court.  

 

Abdi Abdillahi Hassan,

Chairman of Horn Of Africa Development Organisation (HODO Life Line)

 

ON GOLDEN ANNIVERSARY, BAN LAUDS PAKISTAN’S CONTRIBUTION TO UN PEACEKEEPING



ON GOLDEN ANNIVERSARY, BAN LAUDS PAKISTAN'S CONTRIBUTION TO UN PEACEKEEPING

As Pakistan celebrates 50 years of participation in United Nations peacekeeping, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon hailed the dedication of the troops, police and civilian personnel who play a crucial role in helping people around the world recover from war.

"Peacekeeping is a credit to us thanks to the fine work of our troop-contributing countries – Pakistan a leader among them," Mr. Ban said last night in <"http://www.un.org/apps/sg/sgstats.asp?nid=5225">remarks at the opening of a photo exhibition celebrating 50 years of Pakistan's participation in UN peacekeeping.

He noted that Pakistan's contribution has been consistent ever since the first Pakistani peacekeeper served in the Congo 50 years ago. Pakistanis have served in 38 missions worldwide.  They are involved now in nine of the UN's most dangerous operations, with large contingents in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), Sudan, Côte d'Ivoire and Liberia.

"The numbers tell only part of the story. The other part is played out in the lives of people recovering from war," Mr. Ban told the gathering, held at Pakistan's Mission to the UN.

>From the women who are treated by female members of Pakistan's medical unit to children who play football on fields constructed by Pakistani troops, the services rendered by brave Pakistani troops, police and civilian personnel deserve profound gratitude, said the Secretary-General.

At the same time, "this great contribution comes at a great cost," Mr. Ban added, noting that 122 Pakistani military, police and civilian personnel have lost their lives while serving the Organization.

"They are sons and daughters of Pakistan … but they are also members of the United Nations family. We mourn their deaths. We remember their lives. And we vow to carry forward their valiant work for peace."

UN HONOURS VICTIMS OF CHERNOBYL NUCLEAR ACCIDENT, STRESSES NEED TO HELP REGION


UN HONOURS VICTIMS OF CHERNOBYL NUCLEAR ACCIDENT, STRESSES NEED TO HELP REGION

The United Nations marked the 25th anniversary of Chernobyl today by honouring the victims of the worst nuclear accident in history and stressing the need to do more to help communities in the affected areas of Belarus, Russia and Ukraine.

More than 300,000 people were displaced and roughly six million were affected by the accident that took place at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant on 26 April 1986, which contaminated a swathe of territory half the size of Italy.

"The Chernobyl anniversary is an occasion both to remember the human cost of the disaster and to take stock of the many problems that still linger," Ambassador Maria Rubiales de Chamorro of Nicaragua, the Acting President of the General Assembly, said at a special <"http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs//2011/ga11077.doc.htm">commemorative meeting held by the 192-member body.

"But it is also a time to look ahead and seek solutions that hold promise for the affected communities and renew our commitment to a safer future," she added, noting that the affected communities require assistance in areas such as investments and socio-economic development.

Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said that the anniversary is a time to remember the heroism of the firefighters and other emergency workers, as well as the plight of millions of people who were uprooted from the contaminated regions and those still living in the affected areas.

"Their sacrifices must never be forgotten; their suffering must never go unaddressed," he said in a <"http://www.un.org/apps/news/infocus/sgspeeches/statments_full.asp?statID=1160">statement to mark the anniversary.

He told the meeting of the Assembly that Chernobyl "cast a radioactive cloud across Europe and a shadow around the world," but it also highlighted international solidarity.

"Chernobyl was not a problem for Ukraine, Belarus or Russia alone. Chernobyl was our problem – a shared challenge for the world," said Mr. Ban, who last week became the first UN Secretary-General to visit the site of the disaster.

He added that the anniversary, as well as the accident at Japan's Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant last month, calls for reflection and robust global debate on how to achieve the peaceful uses of nuclear energy and maximum safety.

Mr. Ban has outlined a five-step plan to enhance nuclear safety, beginning with "a top to bottom review" of current nuclear safety standards, both at the national and international levels. The plan also strengthening the work of the UN International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), putting a sharper focus on the nexus between natural disasters and nuclear safety, undertaking a cost-benefit analysis of nuclear energy, and building a stronger connection between nuclear safety and nuclear security.

"With the memory of Chernobyl and, now, the disaster in Fukushima, we must widen our lens," Mr. Ban wrote in an <"http://www.un.org/sg/articleFull.asp?TID=122&Type=Op-Ed">opinion piece published in the <i>International Herald Tribune</i>. "Henceforth, we must treat the issue of nuclear safety as seriously as we do nuclear weapons."

In a <"http://www.un.org/apps/news/infocus/sgspeeches/statments_full.asp?statID=1159">message to the opening of a photo exhibition in New York on the occasion of the anniversary, Mr. Ban pledged his determination to keep nuclear safety at the top of the international agenda.

"By working to ensure that nuclear power is used peacefully and safely, we can honour the memory of Chernobyl's victims and its lost heroes."

SRI LANKA: UN RIGHTS CHIEF URGES FURTHER INVESTIGATIONS INTO REPORTS OF WAR CRIMES



SRI LANKA: UN RIGHTS CHIEF URGES FURTHER INVESTIGATIONS INTO REPORTS OF WAR CRIMES

The United Nations human rights chief today urged further investigations into the conduct of the final stages of the conflict in Sri Lanka after a UN panel into those events found there were credible reports that both Government forces and Tamil rebels had committed war crimes.

Navi Pillay, the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, said she hoped that the "disturbing new information" in the <"http://www.un.org/News/dh/infocus/Sri_Lanka/POE_Report_Full.pdf">report of the three-member panel – which was released yesterday by Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon – "will shock the conscience of the international community into finally taking serious action.

"As the report itself says, addressing violations of international humanitarian or human rights law is not a matter of choice or policy; it is a duty under domestic and international law," Ms. Pillay said, according to a <"http://www.ohchr.org/en/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=10962&LangID=E">press release issued by her office in Geneva.

The panel was set up to advise Mr. Ban on accountability issues relating to the final stages of the conflict, which ended in May 2009 when Government forces declared victory over the rebel Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).

Thousands of people died during the conflict, which raged on and off for three decades, and the fighting ended with large numbers of internally displaced persons (IDPs), especially in the country's north.

The panel found credible allegations of serious violations committed by the Government, including killing of civilians through widespread shelling and the denial of humanitarian assistance.

The credible allegations regarding the LTTE concerned numerous serious violations, including using civilians as a human buffer and killing civilians attempting to flee LTTE control.

The panel's first recommendation is that the Sri Lankan Government should respond to the serious allegations by initiating an effective accountability process beginning with genuine investigations.

"The eyewitness accounts and credible information contained in this report demand a full, impartial, independent and transparent investigation," Ms. Pillay said. "Unless there is a sea change in the Government's response, which has so far been one of total denial and blanket impunity, a full-fledged international inquiry will clearly be needed."

The High Commissioner noted that the panel found that the Lessons Learned and Reconciliation Commission convened by the Sri Lankan Government was deeply flawed and did not satisfy the joint commitment of President Mahinda Rajapaksa and Mr. Ban for an accountability process.

She urged the Government to implement a series of measures suggested by the panel, including: repealing the Emergency Regulations and modifying provisions of the Prevention of Terrorism Act; resolving outstanding cases of disappearances; and ensuring due process for the remaining LTTE detainees.

Ms. Pillay stressed that in the long term, "justice will be essential if there is to be true reconciliation after this terrible and divisive conflict."

She added that she remains very concerned about the protection of witnesses and civil society activists, including journalists, in Sri Lanka, especially in the wake of "calls from certain elements for reprisals in light of the panel's report."

Mr. Ban <"http://www.un.org/apps/sg/sgstats.asp?nid=5222">announced yesterday that he is carefully reviewing the report's conclusions and recommendations.

The panel members were Marzuki Darusman of Indonesia (chair), Yasmin Sooka of South Africa and Steven Ratner of the United States. They began their work in September 

BAN WELCOMES EXTENSION OF UN BODY DEALING WITH WEAPONS OF MASS DESTRUCTION


BAN WELCOMES EXTENSION OF UN BODY DEALING WITH WEAPONS OF MASS DESTRUCTION

Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon today welcomed the 10-year extension of a committee tasked with monitoring a United Nations resolution seeking to prevent the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction.

"Concerted international cooperation and action remains vital to the prevention of proliferation of nuclear, chemical and biological weapons and their means of delivery to terrorists and other non-State actors," a statement issued by Mr. Ban's spokesperson stated.

Last week the Security Council extended until 25 April 2021 the mandate of the committee established pursuant to resolution 1540 (2004), which imposes binding obligations on all States to establish controls preventing the proliferation of nuclear, chemical and biological weapons, and their means of delivery.

In addition to monitoring the resolution, the so-called 1540 Committee encourages greater international cooperation on issues related to the non-proliferation of weapons of mass destruction to promote universal adherence to existing non-proliferation treaties.

Last week's resolution also requested the Secretary-General to establish a group of up to eight experts to assist the committee.

"The Secretary-General will continue to give priority to disarmament and non-proliferation issues and is ready to work actively with the Security Council to promote international efforts to achieve the objectives of resolution 1540 (2004)," today's statement added.

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27 April, 2011

Welcome Jimce Barkhadle” or Good Friday

Jimce Barkhadle........By  Ahmed H Nur

Welcome Jimce Barkhadle" or Good Friday or Pascua or Paques or Påske (pronounced: pooske) or Eostre and many other names of the occasion. The following is not about the Christian tradition of celebrating the resurrection of Jesus Christ. It is about a little startling discovery I made this morning! I felt stupid as I realized the connection. Stupid because I knew well of the events, each in its way, but never saw the link. The revelation came to me from a conversation between a mother and a daughter in the back seat of my car. It is early Wednesday morning, the 20th.of April 2011. There is little traffic on the roads as many had already travelled out of the city to the mountains or elsewhere. In Easter Holidays, Norwegians traditionally follow the receding snow and go to the mountains for skiing and relaxation. Recently, many choose travel to the sun in the South. Skjærtorsdag (Thursday before Good Friday) marks the beginning of a week-long holiday-break.

My wife and I were driving my mum-in-law to an early appointment with her doctor. There, in the calm of the misty morning, cruising on Ring 3, the women in my company struck this conversation. It started off with whether the senior mother called home (Hargeisa) lately. "Yes", the response came and added that most of the family members in Hargeisa were already in Aw Barkhadle, awaiting the "Jimce Barkhadle". "It falls on the coming Friday as you know", she continued.  Aw Barkhadle is a little village, about 30 km to the East of Hargeisa, on the Hargeisa – Berbera Road. And Jimce Barkhadle is an annual religious festival which takes place in the village. The origin of the festival and why it is arranged in this particular place has most definitely some historical connotations but this is long lost and forgotten.

Flashback:

I all of a sudden realized that "Jimce Barkhade" which is so passionately celebrated in Somaliland, is the same as the Christian Easter. Not only do the observed dates coincide, the meaning of the "day" and the manifestitations of the celebration are also the same. Modern-day Easter is known as the moveable feast since it falls on different dates each year. In The West, Easter is celebrated on the first Sunday following the full moon after the vernal equinox on March 21. Easter is therefore observed anywhere between March 22 and April 25 every year and this coincides perfectly with the Jimce Barkhadle observations in Somaliland. Good Friday, which is the Friday before Easter Eve, fully corresponds to Jimce Barkhadle, meaningwise. Barkhadle means the Good One, the Virtuous, the Righteous or the Pious.

During the Jimce Barkhadle Festival people, especially the young, used to paint a white Cross on their foreheads. This reflects the remains of the Christian traditions. Perhaps even pagan traditions before Christianity and Islam. In modern-day, Somali context, Jimce Barkhadle is believed to be an Islamic religious celebration. Popular believe has that partaking in 2 Jimce Barkhadle Festivals would amount to one Hajj Visit. I do not know how the occasion is celebrated these days, but in the past, this used to be a great fun festival, especially for the young people. There used to be a bounty of food and mesmerizing religious chanting under every tree. The small hills on both sides of the Doox echoed the beat of the drums – The Noor Qani as we called them. There was the corner for infertile women to sit on "Miracle Stones". This costed the women one shilling per sitting. Some of the stone-owners charged more, promising quicker results or the firstborn to be a boy. The infertility healing is an important relationship between our Jimce barkhadle and the believed originions of the Easter. Read about the origins of the Easter on the internet. There were many other "Barako" experiences, whether in this world or in the other, as the learned sheikhs used to say. For the kids, it was an occasion for running away from home. Staying up late with no parent supervision, playing in the Doox the whole day and sleeping in the open was fun, I remember.

Two central figures

Jimce Barkhadle has two central historical men: Sheikh Yusuf Al-Kawnayn and Bucur Bacayr. The former is said to have been a good guy (a Moslem) who saved the people from the evil rule of the latter. While the existence of these men is very strong in Somaliland folk believes, I found no written literature on these mythological figures. If you know something about them, or know about a resource of reliable literature, please share!

Ahmed H Nur
e-mail: ahnur@online.no

Warqad ku socota Madaxweynaha Somaliland,mudane Axmed Maxamed Maxamuud (Siilaanyo)

Taariikh: April 25 , 2011

 Ku: Madaxweynaha Jamhuuriyadda Somaliland

Ku: Wasiirka Arrimaha Gudaha Somaliland

Ku: Wasiirka Cadaaladda Somaliland

Ku: Xeer Ilaaliyaha Guud ee Qaranka

Ku: Maxkamadda Racfaanka Hargeysa

Ujeedo: Cadaalad darrada uu u xidhan yahay, Mujaahdi Qawrax Muusa Xuseen

 Madaxweyne , marka hore waxaad naga guddoontaa salaan sharaf , qadarrin iyo maamuusbba m udan,waxaanan Allaha weyn kaaga baryaynaa,  inaad caafimaad ku waarto, xilka aad umadda u h aysana  Rabbi kugu asturo , caddaaladna aad  dalka iyo dadkaba ku hoggaamiso.

Madaxweyne , waxaan kula socod siinaynaa,  sida ku cad qoraalka  aan Ref # kiisa  hoos ku sheegi doonno,in  Maxakamadda Rafcaanka ee Hargeysa ,ay soo saartay Bishii March 3,2011,  in xoriyadii sa loo soo celiyo, Mujaahid Qawrax Muusa Xuseen . Waxaase dhacday , inuu  in  ka badan 150 maa lmood , uu caddaalad darro  Xabsiga magaalada Gabiley ugu xidhan yahay.

 Ref: Maxkammada Rafcaanka Gobolka Hargeysa

       MRH/124/2011/ ee ku taariikhaysan Date:03/03/2011

       Ku: Xafiiska Xeer Illaalinta Guud ee Gobolka Hargeysa
     
    Madaxweyne,waxaan ku xasuusinaynaa ballan qaadayaddii aad shacabka Somaliland u  qaaday, in ay ka mid ahayd ," Inaan muwaadin Somaliland u dhashay ,aan xoriyadiisa laga qaadin karin,haddii fal danbiyeed lagu haystana , in sida ugu  dhakhsaha badan Maxkamadda loo hor geeyo."

Madaxweyne ,waxaan si sharaf leh kaaga codsanaynyaa, in muwaadinkaasi caddaald helo , oo xor iyadiisii  sida ugu dhakhsaha badan ,  aad  ugu soo celiso.

 Madaxweyne aad baad u mahadsan tahay.

 Muwaadiniinta codsiga diraya:

1. Eng.Mohamed Ali Muse
2. Eng.Adan Yusuf Alin
3. Eng.Abdikarim Mohamed Awale
4. Eng.Jiriil Ali Akli
5. Eng. Ciise Yaasiin Cawaale
5. Eng. Cabdisamed Nuux Cuteh
6. Eng. Cisman Xasan Caalin
7. Eng. Farxan sheekh
8. Eng. Yusuf Sheekh
9. Dr. Mohamed Hassan Alin
10.Dr  Maxamed Yusuf
11.Dr. Cisman Sheekh
12.Dr. Hussein Mohomed
13.Dr. Samsam Maxamed
14.Dr. Mahdi Jaamac
15.Dr. Isahaq mohamed Essa
16.Dr Mahdi Cali
17.Dr. Maxamed Cisman
18.Dr. Cabdirisaaq Cabdillahi
19.Dr Abdi Muhumed Bedde
20.Dr Xasan Maxamed
21.Dr Axmed Jaamac
22.Cabdirisaaq Cali Muse (Shiine)
23. Axmednassir Cali Muse
24.Cali Muse Cilmi
25.Maxamed Cumar Nuur
26.Hassan Mohamoudh
27.Abdirahman Ibrahim Bouh
28.Siciid Xaaji Cabdi
29.Cabdillahi Xaaji Cabdi
30.Rashiid Xaaji Cabdi
31.Abiib Aw Axmed
32.Maxamed Aw Axmed
33.Cabdixakim Cumar Nuur
34.Abdi Sh.Muhumed Younis
35.Mohamed Essa Nijar
36.Saleebaan Abdi mohamed
37.Maxamuud Muse
38.Farhan Abdi Alin
39.Mohamed Aw jama Mumin
40.Mohamoud Bedda
41.Daauud Muse
42.Maxamuud Muse
43.Cabdi Muse
44.28.Jama Abdi Habane
45.Abdillahi Abdi Habane
46.Amran Ahmed Hussein
47.Amina aw jama Mumin
48.Hassan Musa Ali
49.Saado Cabdi Kooshin
50.Guleed abdirahman Ibrahim
51.Abdi Omer Warsame
52.Eng.Cisman Muumin
53.Maxamed Adan
54.Mustafe Adan
55.Dr Maxamed Yusuf
56.Daauud Axmed
57.Fadhiya Ciise Obsiiyeh
58.Jaamac Cabdi
59.Cumar Cabdi
60.Mukhtar Cabdi
61.Ibrahim Cabdi
62.Axmed Adan
63.Yaasiin Muxumed
62.Axmed-Keyse Muxumed
63.Fatxiya Muxumed
 


25 April, 2011

Autism and the Somali Community: What You Need to Know

Autism and the Somali Community: What You Need to Know

By now, most of you have heard about this disorder commonly referred to as Autism. This is a disorder most of us were unfamiliar with before migrating to the West. Yet it has affected many of our children. Most of us know children or families who've been afflicted with this disorder. This article will be focusing on what the signs and symptoms are, as well as the services currently available for children living with Autism.

What is Autism?

Autism spectrum disorders are a range of disorders which manifest in three ways: impaired social interaction, problems with communication and abnormal behaviors (e.g., repetitive behavior). The most common is Autism, which will be focused on in this article.

Why Somalis should be concerned

Recently, the Center for Disease Control raised the number of children in the US with Autism, from 1 in 150, to 1 in 110. This is a staggering jump in a country with a population of 315 million. Unfortunately, since many Somalis are recent immigrants, research has been very limited in this field. Despite this, there have been some media reports; the NY Times profiled Minnesota Somalis twice last year, regarding a possible cluster of Autism in Minneapolis Somali community. In April 2009, the Minnesota Department of Health confirmed the fears of Somali families: Somali children were found to be represented in Autism education programs 2 to 7 times greater than non-Somali students. Researchers in Minneapolis and neighboring St. Cloud are presently trying to determine what the true prevalence of Autism is amongst Somalis in Minnesota. Amongst Ohio Somalis, no formal studies have been commissioned as of yet.

Signs and Symptoms

Little or no eye contact
For infants, no babbling or pointing to different things
No single words by 16 months, or 2-word phrases by 2 years of age
No response to one's name or simple directions
Lining up of toys and other rigid, repetitive behavior
Child may have had language/social skills at one time, but lost those skills
Echolalia: the child will repeat words, phrases or sentences which you say several times. Children may also repeat lines from TV shows or movies several times.

Most of us have heard Somali people say the following: if the child's not talking, don't worry! The child will grow out of it. I've heard this first hand from Somali mothers of children with Autism. While this may be true for a few children, late talking is one of the symptoms of Autism. If you recognize these signs/symptoms in your children, you should contact your family doctor right away. Your family doctor will refer you to professionals trained in diagnosing Autism (developmental doctors, psychologists etc). If a diagnosis is made, your doctor will write you referrals for services, depending on the age of the child.

What treatments are available?

Typically for young children (0-3), services are administered through early intervention where the child will have access to occupational therapists, speech therapists, and other professionals.

Once a child reaches the age of 3, there are special needs preschools and kindergartens designed to provide intensive services. Once a child is school aged, an assessment will be completed to see if the child qualifies for what is called an Individualized Education Plan (IEP). The symptoms of children with Autism vary from case to case; some children display average language skills, while others will be severely delayed. Children with more moderate to severe Autism are usually provided an IEP. The creation of an IEP leads to greater accommodations made for the student in the classroom and additional services which may include occupational therapy, ABA therapy, and speech therapy.

Early intervention is key!

Research has shown that outcomes are best for children who receive an early diagnosis, and start receiving treatment early. The earlier a child is assessed (and treated), the better.

What you can do

Contact the departments of health and education in your own city, and encourage them to commission studies looking into the autism prevalence in the Somali community. The key to the positive response of the local and state government in Minnesota was due in large part to the advocacy of Somali parents with children with Autism. More studies need to be done to assess the prevalence of Autism. Once researchers and health professionals better understand the numbers, treatment options will become more customized to the Somali population.

Become more involved in your children's schools and hospitals. Engagement with the greater community will provide Somalis with a greater voice wherever they may be.

Spread this information to all of your family members.

US, EU promise aid to Libya; protests roil Syria; violence sweeps Nigeria

US, EU promise aid to Libya; protests roil Syria; violence sweeps Nigeria


Libya: Neither Muammar Gaddafi nor Libya's beleaguered rebel forces gained much ground this week. In western Libya, Gaddafi's forces continue to indiscriminately shell the city of Misurata; countless civilians have been killed, and the besieged city teeters on the brink of a humanitarian crisis. Two foreign journalists were killed in Misurata on Wednesday night. In the east, meanwhile, rebels are holding their ground near the city of Adjabiya.

The European Union and the United Kingdom announced plans this week to send "military advisers" to help the rebels, and the United States plans to send $25 million worth of surplus equipment - vehicles, radios and the like - to Benghazi. The Libyan governent warned that Western support for the rebels would only drag out the conflict.

Nigeria: President Goodluck Jonathan was re-elected this week with more than 59 per cent of the vote, and his victory promptly touched off unrest across the country's northern areas. More than 200 people have been killed and countless others injured during days of rioting, much of it in Kaduna state, where protesters burned photos of the incumbent president and set churches on fire. Nigeria is largely divided between a Christian south and a Muslim north; Jonathan is a Christian.

Syria: The Syrian cabinet on Tuesday approved a bill to end the country's decades-old emergency law, but anti-government protests have continued across the country, with some of the largest in the central city of Homs. Thousands of people gathered in the city's Clock Square this week; dozens were killed when security forces opened fire on them. Smaller protests were also reported in Baniyas, in northern city; in Aleppo; and at the medical college in Damascus.

The uses and abuses of 'happiness

The uses and abuses of 'happiness'


The launch of Action for Happiness last week generated yet more debate about the meaning and value of happiness. On top of the Office of National Statistics' (ONS) 'national debate' on how to define and measure 'national wellbeing', one can scarcely open a newspaper nowadays without discovering more political, scientific or pseudo-scientific pronouncements about what does or doesn't make us happy. In a nation as stubbornly curmudgeonly as Britain, it is no surprise to find that the cynics seem equally delighted to have discovered so much Californian chirpiness to grumble about, right here in their own backyard. It is all very strange.

There is no reason to dismiss any of this as a flash in the pan. In fact, I see every reason to believe that happiness measurements and policies will be a feature of British society for considerable time to come, potentially with transformative implications, possibly - though not necessarily - manifest in a happier, better society. For those interested in the history of ideas and history of science, this emerging field is fascinating to watch. But taking a longer term historical view also reveals quite how muddled the happiness 'movement' currently is. One question that needs to be asked is – do the happiness proponents and their public spokespersons know what they're doing?

There are at least four ways in which the term 'happiness' can be used to augment public policy debate. No doubt these overlap in certain ways, but confusions and conflations between them are doing considerable harm to the quality of public debate in this area, which impacts upon the credibility of bodies such as Action for Happiness.

The first is philosophical, and harks back to Aristotle. A good life, Aristotle argued, is a virtuous and happy life. It is one that fulfils us as human beings, marking us out from other animals. Aristotelians are not necessarily averse to engaging in technical, economic debates, as Amartya Sen's wonderfully expansive intellectual career has demonstrated. But nor is the ethical concept of happiness – something that surely concerns all of us – collapsible into statistical, economic or psychological questions of what is measurable or what precise actions will 'deliver' a pleasant chemical hit to the brain. 

The second is statistical, and can be traced back to the social indicators movement that emerged in the early 1970s, and prospers via the work of The New Economics Foundation, statistical agencies such as the ONS, and measurement enquiries such as the French 'Stiglitz commission' and the OECD's 'Global Project on Measuring the Progress of Societies'. Interest in social indicators is often represented as hostility to GDP measurement or economic growth, as if 'Gross National Happiness' were offered as a replacement for GDP. This is a gross misunderstanding of the work of Stiglitz and others, who argue for multiple indicators, and not simply the replacement of one by another.

But of course the tradition of social statistics is much older than either social indicators or GDP, dating back to the French Revolution and early efforts to develop representations of 'society'. Techniques for doing so grew over the course of the 19th century, thanks to the work of Adolphe Quetelet and his followers, often driven by quasi-eugenicist concerns with the normal distribution of human biological traits such as height, and building on the mathematics of probability. The critical importance of social statistics to our sense of who we are as a society and a nation is too often forgotten. For example, it was only because statisticians had already fixated on suicide as a worthwhile object of investigation and international comparison during the 1870s and '80s that Emile Durkheim was able to writeSuicide, one of the foundational texts of sociology. The 'national wellbeing' statistics that will soon be emerging from the ONS could, in time, have a profound effect on how 'Britain' is imagined, criticised and governed.

Thirdly, there is the economics of subjective wellbeing, which looks to become particularly influential in health policy. This field, that only really took off in the mid-1990s, uses survey data on how people feel about their lives to understand how different life changes – unemployment, ill-health, divorce – affect them and to what extent. Values can then be put on different outcomes in order to compare them. Thanks to the work of Andrew Oswald, Daniel Kahneman and Paul Dolan, this is a field of economics that is nearing a level of maturity where it can be used to evaluate public spending decisions, and to help reorient policy priorities. Already it has helped to alert the Department of Work and Pensions to the psychological dimensions of work and unemployment. 

Uses for all this new data, and new associated techniques of evaluation, are expanding very rapidly at the moment. The longer-term implications remain to be seen. But one thing that can be said in defence of this new confluence of economics and psychology is that it is, for the most part, driven by a concern to alleviate avoidable unhappiness. Highlighting those tangible injuries and obstacles to which we fail to adapt mentally, which cause us persistent unhappiness (such as unemployment), is an abiding goal of this field.

And finally there is the positive psychology movement. This is perhaps the most controversial, the most 'un-British' strand of the happiness project. Building on the 'positive mental health' movement of the 1960s, positive psychology has sought to expand the professional vocation of psychologists, psychiatrists and therapists beyond a preoccupation with illness and deviance, to promote optimisation, optimism and flourishing. It involves tips, training and enthusiasm for 'talking cures', whether or not one feels the 'need' for them, which lend it the air of a mission.

To delineate these four traditions as separate may look to the uninitiated (or uninterested) like the narcissism of small differences. But just consider what happens when they are confused or conflated. 

At a recent ONS event on measuring 'national wellbeing' at London School of Economics, Paul Dolan claimed that 2,400-year-old Aristotelian ethical questions regarding the nature of a good and happy life were now finally answerable using statistical, survey and neuro-scientific techniques. It was provocative and attention-grabbing, but it wasn't smart. Who, after all, would even want to be a human being, if fundamental questions of virtue and fulfilment were amenable to econometric modelling? Dolan is at the forefront of an exciting new field of health and psychological economics; it just hasn't got a great deal to do with Aristotle.

Then look at how Action for Happiness has presented itself. We are told to do things for each other, 'notice' the world around us, participate in social events. These touchy-feely tips and preaching smack of positive psychology, and get on people's nerves. Is there an ethical issue regarding the socialisation and exchange of goods in our capitalist, increasingly privatised economy? Certainly there is. Is there amedical and economic issue regarding levels of depression and anxiety in our individualised, atomised aged? Certainty there is. But neither of these requires optimisation, optimism or the abandonment of irony.

If there is one phenomenon that all four of these traditions seek a purchase on – and are right to do so – it is depression. Is depression an ethical, a medical, a statistical or a psychological phenomenon? It is of course all of these, and Richard Layard and others should be applauded for granting it a greater public and policy profile. But depression is also a viciously slippery object, which defies clear-cut definition. Sadly, as the French sociologist Alain Ehrenberg has argued, it is most accurately defined as anything that can be treated with anti-depressants. If combating acute mental suffering is the preoccupation of happiness advocates, they should say so, and the word 'happiness' slide out of view altogether.

In time, I suspect that the British public and media will learn to value happiness statistics, as produced by the ONS. I suspect that our policy-makers will learn how to use Dolan-style happiness economics in new, smart and transformative ways. I am sure that Aristotelian questions will still be asked in another 2,400 years, in the unlikely event that there are human beings alive to ask them. But I rather hope that the positive psychology movement slinks back to the Californian sunshine in search of more amenable audiences
.


Syrian troops sweep into Deraa and Douma

Syrian troops sweep into Deraa and Douma
Reports of shooting and heavy armour on the streets as Syrian soldiers join crackdown against anti-government protests.
Last Modified: 25 Apr 2011 06:12
Footage posted on YouTube appears to show Syrian troops in Deraa but Al Jazeera cannot verify its veracity

At least five people were killed when thousands of troops backed by heavy armour swept into the volatile town of Deraa in southern Syria, witnesses said.

"We saw with our own eyes, they were in a car that was riddled with bullets," a witness told the AFP news agency on Monday, adding that he was on a roof and could hear intense gunfire reverberating across the town.

"The minarets of the mosques are appealing for help. The security forces are entering houses. There is a curfew and they fire on those who leave their homes. They even shot at water tanks on roofs to deprive people of water."

Thousands of soldiers swept into the town in the early hours of Monday, with tanks taking up positions in the town centre and snipers deploying on rooftops, witnesses said. 

"Bodies are lying in the streets and we can't recover them," one activist said, explaining that they have little idea of the total number of casualties.

 

Footage aired by an opposition news organisation on Monday, transmitted via satellite, appeared to show Syrian military firing at unseen targets with sniper rifles. Al Jazeera is unable to verify the veracity of the footage.

Security forces loyal to Bashar al-Assad, the country's president, also stormed the large Damascus suburb of Douma early on Monday, shooting at unarmed civilians and arresting residents, rights campaigners said.

"There are injured people. Scores have been arrested. The security are repeating the same pattern in all the centres of the democratic uprising. They want to put down the revolution using the utmost brutality," the unidentified rights campaigner told the Reuters news agency, from Damascus.

Al Jazeera's Rula Amin, reporting from Damascus, said that the events on Monday marked a change in methods by security forces.

Up until now, she said, security forces have cracked down in reaction to protests. But the flood of troops into Douma and Deraa came in the absence of any demonstrations. 

"Today, we're seeing a different tactic with security forces sweeping the towns," she said, noting reports of house-to-house searches, arrests and random shooting coming from both towns. 

Communications were cut off and, for the first time, the military has become directly involved in quelling the uprising, much to the disappointment of opposition activists.

"They were hoping the army would not get involved," Amin reported. "They feel this is only the beginning of a very serious crackdown."

Yet one activist told Al Jazeera the some army officers have defected to fight with the people of Deraa against the regime.

Douma has been the site of many large protests since the uprising against Assad began in Syria earlier in the year.

The current protests against the regime started in Deraa where dozens of Syrians have been killed in the violent repression of demonstrations by the security forces.

Thousands of residents of Deraa province buried several victims of the repression after prayers on Sunday.

A demonstration followed, but the security forces did not intervene, an activist said. Asking to remain anonymous, he said the protesters brandished Syrian flags and placards calling for "suppression of Article 8 of the constitution" on the supremacy of the Baath Party.

Most shops stayed closed in a sign of mourning.

The fighting on Monday came after the killing of civilians by security forces in the coastal town of Jableh the previous day.  

At least 13 people had been killed in Jableh, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said on Monday.

At least 352 people have been killed in Syria since protests began on March 15, according to figures compiled by AFP.

And Wissam Tarif, executive director of INSAN, a Syrian human rights group, said that according to the organisation's most recent count on Friday there were 221 "forcefully disappeared people" in Syria.

'Barrier of fear'

Meanwhile, Syrian intellectuals expressed their outrage over the violence, with a declaration on Monday signed by 102 writers and exiles from all the country's main sects.

Monday's declaration called on Syrian intellectuals "who have not broken the barrier of fear to make a clear stand.


"We condemn the violent, oppressive practices of the Syrian regime against the protesters and mourn the martyrs of the uprising." 

Signatories included Alawite figures such as former political prisoner Loay Hussein; female writers Samar Yazbek and Hala Mohammad; Souad Jarrous, correspondent for the pan-Arab daily al-Sharq al-Awsat; writer and former political prisoner Yassin al-Haj Saleh and filmmaker Mohammad Ali al-Attassi. 

Mansour al-Ali, a prominent Alawite figure from the city of Homs, was arrested in his home city after he spoke out against the shooting of protesters, an activist in Homs said.

Source:
Al Jazeera and agencies

UN CALLS FOR INTENSIFIED EFFORTS TO REACH GOAL OF NO MORE DEATHS FROM MALARIA


UN CALLS FOR INTENSIFIED EFFORTS TO REACH GOAL OF NO MORE DEATHS FROM MALARIA

The world must dramatically step up its existing efforts to conquer malaria if it is to reach the goal of near zero deaths from the disease – which, despite being preventable and curable, currently kills almost 800,000 people every year – by 2015, the United Nations warns today.

Ahead of <"http://www.who.int/malaria/en/">World Malaria Day, which is officially observed on Monday, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said the goal will not be met unless there is "an extraordinary intensification" in two key areas.

"First, scaling up the life-saving and cost-effective interventions that have already produced such dramatic results," he said in a message marking the Day. "We need to ensure universal coverage for all people at risk.

"Second, providing timely testing for all persons suspected of having malaria, and effective treatment for those confirmed to have the disease."

Mr. Ban stressed that these efforts, even if implemented, will not be sufficient to defeat the mosquito-borne disease.

"Parasite resistance to our best anti-malarial medicines is a major threat. We must respond by implementing our global plan to overcome such resistance."

Malaria is a leading killer of children under the age of five, especially in sub-Saharan Africa, where a child dies every 45 seconds on average from the disease. In total, around 781,000 people are estimated to die every year, and in some countries it accounts for one in five of all childhood deaths.

The economic costs from malaria are also high. Malaria-related illnesses and mortality cost $12 billion each year in Africa alone, and shave as much as 1.3 per cent off the gross domestic product (GDP) of the worst affected countries.

Mr. Ban said that all donors and international partners need to increase their investments in both research activities and existing programmes to defeat the disease.

"Let us also build up human capacity in malaria-endemic countries; our continued success depends on the hard work and dedication of these unsung heroes. And let us recognize that a world free of the burden of malaria will be a safer and healthier world for all."

But he also noted that "there is much to celebrate" in recent years in the battle against malaria, particularly thanks to the distribution of long-lasting insecticide-treated mosquito nets and increased indoor residual spraying with safe and effective insecticides.

"Together with improved testing and treatment, these measures have saved nearly 750,000 lives over the past decade."

On Monday, Deputy Secretary-General Asha-Rose Migiro and the Secretary-General's Special Envoy for Malaria Ray Chambers will attend a round-table event in New York, while a photographic exhibition entitled "Champions to End Malaria" will open at UN Headquarters.

New Interview: Donald Rumsfeld Reflects on Wars in Iraq and Afghanistan

New Interview: Donald Rumsfeld Reflects on Wars in Iraq and Afghanistan


The new Uncommon Knowledge video from our friends at the Hoover Institution is now available.

This week's video features Donald Rumsfeld, Secretary of Defense under both Gerald Ford and George W. Bush and author of the recent bestselling memoir Known and Unknown. He explains the formation of America's national defense strategy post 9/11 and reflects on the wars he oversaw in Afghanistan and Iraq. He also discusses US military tradition and the role of America abroad, both as a nation builder and protector of freedom.Click the Link under:

How will American foreign policy change in the coming years?
Watch to find out what Donald Rumsfeld thinks!

Ali Samatar's Case....Former Somali Prime Minister in US Court

ALEXANDRIA, Va. — A judge ruled Friday (April 1, 2011) that a former Somali prime

minister who has been living quietly in the U.S. for the last 14 years
can be questioned under oath in a federal lawsuit alleging he oversaw
war crimes and other abuses against his own people more than a quarter
century ago.
 
U.S. District Judge Leonie Brinkema denied a motion to dismiss the
suit against Mohamed Ali Samantar, who was Somalia's defense minister,
and later prime minister, in the 1980s under the regime of dictator
Siad Barre.
 
The suit against Samantar, who now lives in Fairfax, was first filed
in 2004, alleging that he oversaw abuses committed as part of the
government's campaign of repression against the Isaaq clan in the
northern part of the country.
 
The case has languished in the courts for nearly seven years. Brinkema
dismissed the case in 2007, ruling that Samantar was entitled to
immunity. But the U.S.
Supreme Court reinstated the case. And earlier this year the State
Department, in a rare move, recommended to the judge that Samantar
should not receive
immunity, in large part because there is no longer a recognized
central government in Somalia that can request immunity on Samantar's
behalf.
 
Following Brinkema's ruling on Friday allowing the case to proceed,
Samantar's accusers will for the first time be able to question him in
a deposition about alleged abuses, including killings and torture,
against the Isaaq clan.
 
"This is a great day for justice," said Natasha Fain, a lawyer with
the San Francisco-based Center for Justice and Accountability, which
is representing the
plaintiffs. "For all this time the defendant has been saying he
shouldn't even have to answer his accusers in court."
 
One of the plaintiffs, Aziz M. Deria of Bellevue, Wash., who alleges
that his father and other family members were killed by forces under
Samantar's direction, flew across the country to attend Friday's
hearing. He has traveled to Somalia several times to document abuses
that occurred there.
 
"I really want this guy to answer our questions," said Deria, who
acknowledged that efforts to hold Samantar accountable for his actions
are not universally well received among the Somali community. "Back
home, authority figures are considered above the law."
 
Joseph Peter Drennan, Samantar's lawyer, argued Friday that the case
should be tossed out for several reasons, including an expiration of
the statute of limitations. He also said the courts should not wade
into what he argues is essentially a political dispute.
 
Samantar has denied any wrongdoing and did not attend Friday's
hearing, though many of his family members did.

Sources: The Associated Press
 
For complete case history click the link below:

http://www.cja.org/article.php?list=type&type=85
--


AS MEASLES CASES RISE ACROSS EUROPE, UN AGENCY CALLS FOR GREATER COOPERATION


AS MEASLES CASES RISE ACROSS EUROPE, UN AGENCY CALLS FOR GREATER COOPERATION

The United Nations health agency is urging European countries to work more closely together to combat measles – which is entirely preventable – after a surge in the number of cases across the continent since the start of the year.

At least 6,500 cases have been reported already, the World Health Organization (WHO) reported yesterday, with significant outbreaks observed in 30 countries, including Belgium, France, Serbia, Turkey, the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia and Spain.

WHO said the outbreaks could worsen in the days ahead as many people travel during the Easter holidays.

"With shared borders and considerable population movement, countries share health threats. There is a need to create strong partnerships to prevent and control diseases, such as measles, in our region," said Zsuzsanna Jakab, the agency's regional director for Europe.

European Immunization Week, being held for the seventh consecutive year, kicks off on Saturday in 50 countries across Europe, the largest number since the initiative began.

Ms. Jakab said the week offered the opportunity for "countries to come together and collaborate on joint planning of preventive measures and effective responses to the common threats we face from vaccine-preventable diseases. Only through this kind of collaboration can we achieve the goals of boosting vaccination coverage and eliminating measles and rubella by 2015."

Highly contagious, measles remains one of the world's biggest causes of death among young children, an estimated 164,000 people dying from the virus in 2008.

The disease can be prevented through a safe and effective vaccine, and immunization campaigns worldwide have helped millions of children in high-risk areas. The number of deaths from measles slumped by an estimated 78 per cent between 2000 and 2008.

Ethiopia confiscates Somali trucks crossing border

Ethiopia confiscates Somali trucks crossing border
SomalilandPress
In late last month, Ethiopian customs supported by a military batallion seized 64 Somali trucks carrying livestock to Somaliland in Galgadud region. The forces immediately sealed the border between the Somali region and Somalia on several crossing ...

BAHRAIN: UN OFFICIAL URGES PROBE AFTER MEDIA PROFESSIONALS DIE IN DETENTION


BAHRAIN: UN OFFICIAL URGES PROBE AFTER MEDIA PROFESSIONALS DIE IN DETENTION

A senior United Nations official today called for an investigation into the deaths of two media professionals in Bahrain who died earlier this month while held in detention.

Karim Fakhrawi, the co-founder of the country's only independent newspaper Al-Wasat, died in custody on 12 April, one week after he was arrested.

The non-governmental group Reporters without Borders (RSF) quotes the authorities as saying that Mr. Fakhrawi died of kidney failure, but this has been contested by his family, who claims he had been in good health at the time of his arrest.

Online writer Zakariya Rashid Hassan died in detention on 9 April, according to RSF. He had been arrested a week earlier allegedly on charges of inciting hatred, disseminating false news, promoting sectarianism and calling for the regime's overthrow.

His family has reportedly rejected the official claim that he died as a result of complications from sickle cell anaemia.

"The circumstances surrounding their deaths are indeed troubling and I urge the authorities of Bahrain to carry out a thorough investigation into these incidents," <"http://www.unesco.org/new/en/media-services/single-view/news/director_general_calls_for_investigation_into_deaths_in_detention_of_media_professionals_in_bahrain/">said Irina Bokova, the Director-General of the UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO).

"Karim Fakhrawi and Zakariya Rashid Hassan defended the development of a free and pluralistic media, which UNESCO also champions as one of the guarantees for good governance and the respect of human and civic rights," she added in a news release.

Senior UN officials have voiced concern over the recent violence in Bahrain, where the Government has cracked down on protests similar to those witnessed in other countries in the Middle East and North Africa.

The suppression of the right to freedom of expression was a major concern cited by the UN human rights office last month, as well as the reported arrests of political activists, human rights defenders and medical professionals.

ACTION ALERT! U.K Vote Yes to ALTERNATIVE VOTE AV!


Vote "YES!" to AV

 

 

Why an AV referendum?

 

Recognising the need to "clean up" politics after the MP expenses scandal, the Liberal Democrats promised in their election manifesto for the 2010 general election that they would introduce an electoral system based on proportional representation (PR).  PR is an electoral method that matches as closely as possible the vote share won by parties in an election to their share of seats in the House of Commons.

 

As part of the agreement reached by the Coalition before taking office was the holding of a referendum on May 5th to change the UK's electoral system from "First Past the Post" (FPTP) to the "Alternative Vote" (AV).

 

AV is not a system of proportional representation but it does offer a significant opportunity to change the way we do politics by ensuring that candidates selected to represent constituencies are voted in by a majority (50% + 1) and not a plurality (greatest number) of votes.

 

How does AV work?

 

 

  1. AV works by registering the preferences of voters for a candidate in rank order – that means, first preference, second preference, third preference etc
  2. The first preferences of voters are then totalled and the candidate who reaches the 50% threshold of first order preferences wins the seat
  3. If a candidate doesn't reach the 50% threshold, the ballots of the candidate who gained the least number of first order preferences is eliminated and the second order preferences of those voters are allocated to the remaining candidates.
  4. If a candidate reaches the 50% threshold at the second round, he/she is declared the winner. If not, the contest goes to a third round with the candidate at the bottom of the table eliminated and the second order preferences allocated to the remaining candidates
  5. The "rounds" continue until a candidate reaches the 50% threshold, each time eliminating the candidate with the least number of votes and reallocating their ballots on second order preferences.

  

Why you should vote "YES to AV"

 

  1. AV is a fairer system than the current electoral method of FPTP. It will end the distorting effect of FPTP where parties can win a majority of seats on a minority of votes. See for example, the table below which breaks down the party share of the vote and its share of seats in parliament based on the 2010 and 2005 general election results:

 

 

2010 general election

Seats won

% share of seats

% share of vote

Cons

307

47.2

36.48

Lab

258

39.7

28.99

Lib Dem

57

8.8

23.03

 

 

 

 

2005 general election

Seats won

% share of seats

% share of vote

Lab

355

55

35.2

Cons

198

30.74

32.4

Lib Dem

62

9.6

22.0

 

 

  1. AV is more democratic – under AV every vote counts because candidates have to reach a 50% threshold in order to win a seat. It will end the practice of "wasted votes" in "safe seats" where votes cast for candidates other than the "safe candidate" do not count for anything, even if the "safe candidate" enjoys less than 50% of the popular vote
  2. AV is more representative because MPs need to gain up to 50% of the vote in a constituency in order to be awarded the responsibility and privilege of representing it.
  3. AV will invigorate MP- Constituent links by making MPs more accountable to their electorate in all seats. MPs will be forced to work hard every electoral cycle to gain 50% of the votes needed to win an election, rather than aim simply to win a plurality (more votes than the next wo/man and very often less than 50%)
  4. AV will marginalise extremist parties and deny them electoral representation. This is because candidates have to win at least 50% of the vote share in a constituency in order to win the seat. Extremist parties like the BNP do well under the present "winner takes all" system of FPTP but they will find it much harder, if not impossible, to win seats under AV. That is why the BNP are opposed to electoral change.

  

What difference does it make?

 

The AV referendum is the single most important change that has been proposed to the way we do politics in the UK. It is an opportunity to endorse a change that will send a signal to politicians that we as voters want elections and their outcomes to be fairer, more representative and more democratic.

 

At a time of declining voter participation in elections with more than a third of voters not turning out to vote (voter turnout in 2010 was 65.1% and in 2005 it was 61.4%), the AV referendum is an opportunity to reinvigorate political participation and representative democracy by proving to voters that their votes count.

 

ENGAGE urges you to vote "YES! to AV" on May 5th and to say YES! to:

 

  • fairer election outcomes based on majority rule;
  • marginalisation of extremist parties; and
  • building strong local communities with stronger MP – constituent links