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South Sudan president directs state governors to receive SPLM-IO advance team

Sudan Tribune - Sat, 19/12/2015 - 07:03

December 18, 2015 (JUBA) - South Sudanese president Salva Kiir has finally agreed to receive all the 609 members of the advance team of the armed opposition faction of the Sudan People's Liberation Movement (SPLM-IO) under the leadership of former vice-president, Riek Machar, and directed all the state governors and chief administrators in the country to enlighten the citizens about the peace agreement and the coming of the advance team as well as to prepare for their reception in the national capital, Juba and in the states.

South Sudanese president Salva Kiir (L) exchanges signed documents with rebel leader Riek Machar in the northern Tanzanian town of Arusha on 21 January 2015 (AFP)

The change of mind came days after the chairman of the Joint Monitoring and Evaluation Commission (JMEC), Festus Mogae, former president of Botswana, served the two warring parties with timetable for the implementation of the first phase of the peace agreement signed in August to end 21 months of civil war.

Mogae in the timetable scheduled for the return of all the 609 members of the SPLM-IO advance team, dividing them into three groups, with the first group of 150 to be led by the chief negotiator, Taban Deng Gai, followed by another group of 150 and the last group of 309, all to return to Juba within a period of two weeks.

Information and broadcasting minister, Michael Makuei Lueth, who was vocal about objection to the return of the more than 600 cadres of SPLM-IO, however on Friday said president Kiir agreed to receive all the members of the advance team in show of commitment to the full implementation of the peace agreement.

“The president of the republic in the meeting of Wednesday with the state governors and senior members of the SPLM [Sudan People's Liberation Movement] affirmed commitment of the government to implement the agreement on the resolution of the conflict in the republic of South Sudan. He asked the governors and members of parliament to enlighten the citizens in their constituencies and states and to also prepare and receive members of the advance team of the SPLM-IO once they are in the country,” Lueth told reporters on Friday.

The government's spokesperson said Juba had been ready to receive the advance team of the opposition from the time the two parties completed security arrangement workshop at the venue of the talks in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, and agreed to move to the country for implementation of the agreement.

“The government has been ready to receive the advance team of the SPLM-IO since November. They were supposed to participate in the first meeting convened by Joint Monitoring and Evaluation Commission but they decided not to come and instead the list of advance team which keeps changing every day,” said Lueth.

He said the delay in the coming of the advance team of the SPLM-IO had nothing to do with the government.

“They are the ones who know why they are not coming so that we come and start with the implementation of the agreement here. We have concluded negotiations already. What is left is the implementation,” he added.

The minister blamed the delay in the return on the lack of readiness by the SPLM-IO. He did not however come up again with the demand previously put forward by the government that they only wanted 30 members of the advance team instead of the over 600.

Opposition leader's spokesman, James Gatdet Dak, when contacted on Friday confirmed that the leadership of SPLM-IO received information through IGAD indicating the government had agreed to the return of the whole team to Juba and states.

“Yes, our leadership received through IGAD a verbal no-objection response from the government to receive the whole team of 609. We however still wait for a written document from the leadership of the government stating their acceptance to receive the team,” he told Sudan Tribune on Friday.

He however said the East African regional bloc, IGAD, which has been facilitating the travel of the team, was yet to put some final touches on the logistical and procedural arrangements, including travel documents and clearance of visas for the members from Pagak, the SPLM-IO headquarters.

He could not confirm the date on which the first group will travel to Juba, but added “this can happen on Sunday or early next week.”

(ST)

Categories: Africa

South Sudan finance minister downplays calls on him to resign over foreign exchange rate

Sudan Tribune - Sat, 19/12/2015 - 07:03

December 18, 2015 (JUBA) - South Sudanese finance minister has downplayed calls on him to resign from his position after announcing reforms to float exchange rate as part of attempts to fix the struggling war induced economy in the country.

David Deng Athorbei (ST File Photo)

Minister David Deng Athorbei in an announcement he made on Tuesday together with the governor of the Bank of South Sudan, Cornelio Koryom Mayik, stressed that the new reforms would benefit the country in the long run, but admitted short term shocks that will affect low income citizens.

“What is important now is not what others are saying, including those calling for resignation. What is important is to enlighten our people about the benefits which will come from the implementation of these reforms to the country,” Athorbei told Sudan Tribune in an exclusive interview on Friday.

Athorbei argued that the reform would harmonise the foreign exchange rate in the market, despite higher rate, and allow everybody to access hard currency without preferential treatment.

The reform has abandoned a fixed foreign exchange rate in favour of floating foreign exchange, allowing market forces of demand and supply to determine the value of South Sudanese pound against foreign currencies.

After the announcement local and foreign banks in the country immediately increased the exchange rate to 20 South Sudanese pounds per a dollar and the fuel price suddenly skyrocketed to 22 South Sudanese pounds per litre, tripling the price.

The decision to further devalue the local South Sudanese currency through floating exchange has received mixed reactions, with many ordinary people and critics of the government describing it as “inappropriate and untimely.”

Adigo Onyoti, leader of the opposition Sudan People's Liberation Movement for Democratic Change (SPLM-DC) in the national legislative assembly argued that the reform could lead to more suffering of the people.

“I don't really know how this decision will benefit the people. I don't know how it will work. They are talking of long run but will the people who will die as a result of this decision wait,” asked a furiously looking Anyoti when asked what he thought of the decision on Friday.

“People will die and if they die then who they (those in government) think will benefit. So for them it means people must die so that it becomes beneficial. I have never before [heard] about a policy which advocates death of the people first. I have never heard even from prominent thinkers who have discovered and came out with many theories that they have such a theory,” added Anyoti.

The opposition leader in parliament told reporters that minister of finance and economic planning, Athorbei, and the governor of central bank of South Sudan, Mayik, have failed the people and so they either resign from their positions or should be removed by a presidential order.

“You have thousands of people who are not working. They are going to be affected by this. Thousands of people have low income. Our people are going to suffer more because of the lack of studying,” he said.

However, some economists and experts supported the move to float the exchange rate, saying South Sudan was unable to sustain the fixed rate due to lack of US dollars, leaving them with no option but to float it.

(ST)

Categories: Africa

Sudan's gov't and SPLM-N agree to hold new informal meetings soon

Sudan Tribune - Sat, 19/12/2015 - 07:02

December 18, 2015 (KHARTOUM) - The Sudanese government and the rebel Sudan People's Liberation Movement-North (SPLM-N) wrapped up a three-day informal meeting and agreed to resume discussions soon.

Presidential assistant Ibrahim Mahmoud and SPLM-N SG in a private discussion at the venue of peace talks on November 22, 2015 (ST Photo)

Last November the two warring parties in the Blue Nile and South Kordofan failed to reach cessation of hostilities and humanitarian access agreements, as the five-day talks showed that important gaps persist in the positions of the two sides.

In a bid to bridges the gaps, the African Union High Implementation Panel (AUHIP) organized a three-day round of informal talks between the two sides from 16 to 18 December where the two sides debated on how to overcome their differences.

In a statement extended to Sudan Tribune, the spokesperson of the SPLM-N negotiating team Mubarak Ardol said the two sides were not able to reach an agreement on the main outstanding issues.

“However they laid out their positions on those issues openly and seriously and agreed to hold a second informal meeting at the earliest time for further deep discussions and allow each side to consult with its allies in order to achieve comprehensive peace,” he said

According to the statement, SPLM-N chief negotiator Yasir Arman said in statements following the meetings that this round of talks was characterized by openness and transparency, pointing to the issues and the manner by which the talks were conducted.

He underlined the need to achieve several goals including the comprehensive peace, participation of all political and armed groups in the dialogue and provision of food, peace and freedoms.

The statement further said the talks were marked by the discussion of the national issues besides issues pertaining to the Two Areas, adding the two sides discussed the comprehensive peace and the participation of all parties in the dialogue besides the security and political arrangements in the Two Areas.

Ardol noted the informal round of talks underscored the importance to end the war in the Two Areas and Darfur simultaneously and to allow the participation of all parties in the dialogue in order to achieve national consensus besides addressing the issues pertaining to the Two Areas and arriving at a national agenda to unify the Sudanese people.

The government delegation didn't yet issue any statement about the three-day meeting, but sources close to the meeting said the presidential assistant Ibrahim Mahmoud repeated the same positions announced last November.

The African Union mediators propose to government and rebel groups to sign a cessation of hostilities agreement and to reach a deal over the humanitarian access to the needy in the war zones.

The two agreement are part of confidence building measures, the AUHIP intend to implement paving the way for the participation of the rebel groups and holdout opposition groups in the national dialogue conference.

The Sudanese army has been fighting SPLM-N rebels in Blue Nile and South Kordofan since 2011.

(ST)

Categories: Africa

Lakes state governor sacks three county commissioners

Sudan Tribune - Sat, 19/12/2015 - 07:01

December 18, 2015 (RUMBEK) - The caretaker governor of South Sudan's Lakes state Matur Chut Dhuol has sacked the commissioner of Cueibet county, Isaac Mayom Malek, Rumbek East county's Martin Matian Ayuon and George Kuac Dhieu of Yirol West.

Lakes state governor Maj-Gen Matur Chut Dhuol (ST)

Dhoul, in a decree issued Wednesday, also empowered the executives directors of the three counties to immediately act until new appointments were made.

The decree came into effect on 6 December, but no reason provided for Dhuol's decision.

Malek was Lakes state's longest serving commissioner since 2010 while his Yirol West and Rumbek East county counterparts were both appointed in 2014.

(ST)

Categories: Africa

Eritrea labels UN Panel ‘witch-hunt' against nation

Sudan Tribune - Sat, 19/12/2015 - 07:00

By Tesfa-Alem Tekle

December 18, 2015 (ADDIS ABABA) – The Eritrean government has referred to the Commission of Inquiry on Eritrea (COIE) as unwarranted political witch-hunt against the Red Sea nation.

Eritrean president, Isias Afewerki (AFP Photo)

Asmara's reaction comes after the “Commission of Inquiry on Eritrea” has recently issued invitations to “interested individuals, groups and organizations” to submit alleged human rights violations, “including where these violations may amount to crimes against humanity perpetrated in Eritrea since its independence.”

But the Eritrean reacted negatively charging that the action by the commission of inquiry was instead serving a political agenda against the government.

“This act constitutes yet another campaign of unwarranted witch-hunting of Eritrea by an entity which has clearly opted to instrumentalize human rights to serve political agendas,” the Eritrean government said in a statement extended to Sudan Tribune on Thursday.

The CoIE is tasked by the Human Rights Council to investigate alleged violations of human rights in Eritrea. The Commission's mandate has been extended for one year to June 2016.

Recent reports by the commission revealed gross human rights violations in the East African nation including some violations which may amount to crimes against humanity.

The latest statement issued by the Eritrean government accused the CoIE of being afflicted by political bias and a litany of procedural flaws in the manner that it carried out its “investigative mission” from the outset.

The UN inquiry has held the regime in Asmara responsible for systematic, widespread and serious human rights violations that have created a climate of fear.

The accusations by the commission including possible crimes against humanity could subject Eritrean political and military officials to indictment at the International Criminal Court (ICC).

Angered by the commission's report issued in June, Eritrea has elucidated parts of the reports it said were flawed.

Among the major anomaly Eritrea argued was the resolutions by the commission it said were adopted in an under-handed manner to serve overriding political agendas of certain countries.

It stressed the resolutions were mainly tabled and co-sponsored by Somalia and Djibouti.

Asmara said “Somalia and Djibouti were prodded to do so to give an African semblance to an exercise that was in reality led behind by certain powers.”

The three-member commission is chaired by Mike Smith (Australia), with Victor Dankwa (Ghana), and Ms. Sheila B. Keetharuth (Mauritius), who also serves as the UN Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Eritrea.

The statement further went on to accuse the Special Rapporteur on Eritrea of having a personal history of “biased and subversive involvement” in the affairs of a sovereign nation.

“She was hand-picked for the job in spite of her compromised political stance and obvious conflict of interest” the statement said, adding “she was appointed to the COI; an explicable act bound to corrode the neutrality, objectivity and credibility of that new fact-finding body.”

The reclusive Eritrea nation has given deaf-ears to a number of requests by the UN commission of inquiry to visit Eritrea forcing the panel to collect information from asylum seekers.

The last COI's report was based on a year-long process that involved 550 interviews and 160 written submissions. Eritrea however argues the process lacks rigorous validation for its veracity.

Referred by right groups as Africa's North Korea, a east African nation, Eritrea, is amongst the world's worst oppressive nations.

Currently there are an estimated up to 10,000 political prisoners languishing in the country's “notorious” prison facilities. Most are reportedly in prison without any charges.

According to UN report, Eritrean government is using a “rule by fear” policy to maintain grip on power.

“It is not law that rules Eritreans, but fear,” said Sheila Keetharuth, the UN's special rapporteur on human rights in Eritrea.

“Rule by fear - fear of indefinite conscription, of arbitrary and incommunicado detention, of torture and other human rights violations must end,” she said.

The government systematically silences anyone who is suspected of intentions or attempts to question or dares to criticize government policy.

President Isaias Afwerki has been in rule since the country gained independence from Ethiopia in 1993.

There is neither any functioning opposition party in Eritrea nor has ever been an election since independence as the tiny East African nation remains turned into one party state.

(ST)

Categories: Africa

The conundrum of the SPLM-IO advance team to Juba

Sudan Tribune - Sat, 19/12/2015 - 06:42

By Steve Paterno

Thus far, the implementation of the compromised South Sudan's peace deal is at standstill. Most benchmarks for the implementation are not met or rather simply ignored. Many hurdles stand on the way, and among which, problems associated with the coming of SPLM-io advance team to Juba. Rumors of arrival of this team are running amok over the last few weeks as proposed dates for their coming keep shifting. Disagreement among the parties involved and logistical hindrance seem to be real issues behind this saga.

The government continues to stress that for the process to move smoothly, only specified figure of individuals who are assigned designated task from the io need to be sent to Juba in order. This is so as to ease the management of their logistic as well as their security and wellbeing. The whole point behind this insistence is that there are still outstanding issues, which are required to be thrashed out to pave way for the formation of a transitional government. The members of io in their parts are fiercely fighting each other over as to who should not be left out from the list of those to be repatriated to Juba. Meanwhile, the mediators are coerced to comply with the demands of members of io who keep steeping up and insist that their names are included among the list of those to be repatriated. That is why their number keeps on increasing by the day.

Nevertheless, what are really happening in io camp is saddening to say the least. And those are actually the much more contributing factors in the implementation process.

First of all, the io is virtually disorganized, without any semblance of structures or command center. Their members are scattered all over, with some juggling from one hotel to another, and moving from different to another. Others are shouting their guts out from the comfort of their living rooms in Diaspora. And also there are those wandering in the bushes of South Sudan. In order for them to assemble in one point is a logistical nightmare.

Secondly, it is reported that those who are residing in Pagak compare their livelihood to” hell on earth.” Pagak, a mere village is completely devoid of any basic amenities that can make life suitable. Those individuals who once thrived on living on hotels paid by government are now sharing their tiny tents with encroaching snakes, deadly scorpions, and uninvited insects. To think of a shower is to imagine of a luxury. Food is so scarce that they ought to be stolen from relief agencies. The suffering is real. For these individuals, coming to Juba and with the prospect of getting accommodated in hotels is a real bailout and a means of rehabilitation of livelihood, not an opportunity to implement the peace agreement. This is actually the real reason behind the huge number of the team. This could also explain the infighting among the io as all want the bailout and rehabilitation from enduring what they describe as “hell on earth.”
Thirdly, the so-called io advance team is predominantly composed of civilians, mostly from the Diaspora. In another words, the Diaspora civilians hijack the show, since, the fighting commanders are sidelined. Such deliberate exclusion of fighting commanders from participation will further down the road implicate the implementation process and can even have a repercussion of a national scope.

These, compounded with other factors are real impediment for the implementation of the peace process. The repatriation of io members must be a gradual process that takes a life of its own. The process must take place in accordance to the agreements the parties agree on.

Steve Paterno is the author of The Rev. Fr. Saturnino Lohure, A Romain Catholic Priest Turned Rebel. He can be reached at stevepaterno@yahoo.com

Categories: Africa

UN Security Council calls for stepped up mediation efforts in conflict-torn Burundi

UN News Centre - Africa - Sat, 19/12/2015 - 06:00
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Vote 'allows Kagame to extend term'

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AU agrees Burundi peacekeeping mission

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Categories: Africa

UN Seeks Hefty 20 Billion Dollars for Humanitarian Needs in 2016

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - Fri, 18/12/2015 - 21:19

By Thalif Deen
UNITED NATIONS, Dec 18 2015 (IPS)

The world’s refugee crisis – triggered mostly by conflicts and persecutions – will continue to be one of the biggest problems facing the United Nations next year.

With almost a million people having crossed the Mediterranean as refugees and migrants so far, 2015 is likely to exceed all previous records for global forced displacement, the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) warned in a new report released Friday.

But 2016 could be even worse — if the Syrian conflict continues unabated and new political trouble spots arise, primarily in the Middle East and Africa.

“As we enter 2016, the world needs to aim for a new global compact on human mobility. Demonizing and scapegoating these people based on their religion, ethnicity or country of origin has no place in the 21st century,” says Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon.

The United Nations is appealing for a staggering 20 billion dollars in funds to meet next year’s humanitarian needs — five times the level a decade ago.

But donors have been exceedingly generous, says Ban, “but we will likely enter 2016 with a funding gap of more than 10 billion dollars — the largest ever. “

The increased funds will be needed largely to feed, shelter and provide medical care to millions of refugees fleeing conflict zones, including Syria, Iraq, Libya and Afghanistan.

But the devastating conflict in Syria, now into its fifth year, has been described as “the main driver of this sea of humanity on the move.”

According to the UN, about 60 million people are now homeless as a result of armed conflict, instability and persecution, and more than 125 million people will need humanitarian assistance in 2016.

The 20 billion dollar target for 2016 seems phenomenal in comparison to the UN’s regular budget of 5.57 billion dollars for 2016-2017 and its peacekeeping budget totaling 8.2 billion dollars for 2015-2016.

Since the crisis is expected to continue into 2016, the World Humanitarian Summit meeting in May 2016 in Istanbul is expected to be “a critical moment to address systemic funding problems, and agree on concrete steps to better prepare for and respond to crises.”

The UNHCR study, titled ‘Mid-Year Trends 2015’, says the global refugee total, which a year ago was 19.5 million, had as of mid-2015 passed the 20 million threshold (20.2 million) for the first time since 1992.

Asylum applications were meanwhile up 78 per cent (993,600) over the same period in 2014. And the numbers of internally displaced people (IDPs) jumped by around 2.0 million to an estimated 34 million.

A consequence of more refugees being stuck in exile is that pressures on countries hosting them are growing too – something which unmanaged can increase resentment and abet politicization of refugees, the study said.

Despite such risks, the first half of 2015 was also marked by extraordinary generosity: on an absolute basis, and counting refugees who fall under UNHCR’s mandate (Palestinians are under the mandate of the UN Works and Relief Agency or UNRWA), Turkey is the world’s biggest hosting country with 1.84 million refugees on its territory, as of 30 June.

Lebanon meanwhile hosts more refugees compared to its population size than any other country, with 209 refugees per 1,000 inhabitants.

And Ethiopia pays most in relation to the size of its economy with 469 refugees for every dollar of GDP (per capita, at PPP), according to UNHCR.

Overall, the lion’s share of the global responsibility for hosting refugees continues to be carried by countries immediately bordering zones of conflict, many of them in the developing world.

Europe’s influx of people arriving by boat via the Mediterranean is only partly reflected in the report, mainly as arrivals there have escalated in the second half of 2015 and outside the period covered by the report.

Nonetheless, in the first six months of 2015, Germany was the world’s biggest recipient of new asylum claims – 159,000, close to the entire total for all of 2014. The second largest recipient was the Russian Federation with 100,000 claims, mainly people fleeing the conflict in Ukraine, according to the report.

Speaking at a high-level event marking the 10th anniversary of the UN’s Central Emergency Response Fund (CERF), the secretary-general said the fund was a breakthrough in providing fast and predictable funding for early action at times of global crisis.

Over the past decade, the Fund has been an essential component of the UN’s humanitarian response – and it has enhanced the credibility of the United Nations, he added.

Among the CERF’s key strengths is its flexibility and speed. CERF resources are not earmarked for specific countries or crises, but can be deployed quickly wherever needs are greatest.

“Whether a crisis is sudden or protracted; whether it is in the news or not, CERF funds are allocated only on the basis of need,” Ban noted.

Within 11 hours of the earthquake in Haiti, trucks were unloading life-saving aid. And within 48 hours of Nepal’s recent earthquake, people were receiving timely life-saving assistance.

Since 2011, Ban said, the CERF has allocated more than 200 million dollars to humanitarian efforts in Syria and neighbouring countries. “And the CERF continues to deliver in the face of new challenges.”

Currently, the Fund is one of the earliest and largest supporters of early response in countries such as Ethiopia, Malawi and Honduras that are being affected by the El Niño phenomenon, which is one of the strongest in decades.

The world has changed radically over the past decade. But despite the generosity of donors, the gap between humanitarian needs and the resources available to meet them is growing every year, the secretary-general declared.

The writer can be contacted at thalifdeen@aol.com

Categories: Africa

Some 90 per cent of voters in Central African Republic favour new constitution – UN mission reports

UN News Centre - Africa - Fri, 18/12/2015 - 20:56
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Categories: Africa

VIDEO: Funerals held for Ethiopian protesters

BBC Africa - Fri, 18/12/2015 - 19:09
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Categories: Africa

Coffee Rust Aggravates Poverty in Rural El Salvador

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - Fri, 18/12/2015 - 18:39

Ilsy Membreño separates green and red coffee beans, part of the tasks involved in the harvest on the Montebelo farm in El Salvador. The drop in production caused by coffee leaf rust has driven wages down to just three dollars a day. Credit: Edgardo Ayala/IPS

By Edgardo Ayala
EL CONGO, El Salvador , Dec 18 2015 (IPS)

Sitting in front of a pile of coffee beans that she has just picked, Ilsy Membreño separates the green cherries from the ripe red ones with a worried look on her face, lamenting the bad harvest on the farm where she works in western El Salvador and the low daily wages she is earning.

As it spread through this country and the rest of Central America, the fungus (Hemileia vastatrix) that causes coffee leaf rust infected the farm where she works.

“There is less coffee to pick, and in the end there is less money for us,” lamented Membreño, one of 30 people working in the harvest on the Montebelo farm in the municipality of El Congo in the western Salvadoran department (province) of Santa Ana.

The parasitic fungus feeds off the leaves of the plants, infecting them with yellow and brown spots. The leaves fall off and the beans are unable to mature.

Coffee production generates some 150,000 direct jobs and 500,000 indirect jobs, according to the report “Coffee Cultivation in El Salvador 2013”, drawn up by the governmental Salvadoran Coffee Council (CSC). Between 1995 and 2012, coffee represented 7.5 percent of the country’s total exports.

The fungus threatens to further impoverish El Salvador’s rural areas, where 36 percent of households already live in poverty, according to the government’s Multiple-Purpose Households Survey 2013.

Membreño told IPS that before the coffee leaf rust outbreak ravaged the farm, she picked two quintals (92 kilos) a day, earning around eight dollars a day during the three-month harvest.“The disease caught us with our pants down.” -- Julio Grande

“But now I don’t even manage to pick one quintal, and I earn just three dollars a day,” she said with resignation.

The other day labourers who talked to IPS described a similar situation when we visited the privately-owned farm, which is 116 manzanas (a manzana is equivalent to 0.7 hectare) in size.

Climate change has also hurt the coffee crop, with lengthy droughts in the rainy season and heavy rains in the dry season.

“The rain has knocked the coffee beans off, and we lose time picking them up,” said Sonia Hernández, a mother of three who is also working on the Montebelo farm, told IPS.

Official figures published on the CSC web site show that output plunged from 1.7 million quintals in the 2012-2013 harvest to just 700,000 in the 2013-2014 harvest, due to the coffee leaf rust outbreak.

In the period in question, the total payments to temporary harvest workers dropped from 21.6 million dollars to 8.7 million dollars.

Production rallied somewhat during the 2014-2015 harvest, to 925,000 quintals. The CSC’s forecast for the 2015-2016 harvest is 998,000 quintals – still below the output obtained prior to the outbreak.

“Without a harvest, these poor people don’t have work,” Manuel Morán, the foreman, told IPS.

Montebelo is in the Apaneca-Lamatepec mountains, where conditions are perfect for coffee cultivation. But neither corn nor beans, the staples of the Salvadoran diet, are grown in the area.

And without land to grow subsistence crops or money to buy food, the people in this rural community face threats to their food security.

“We don’t have anywhere to plant corn or beans, we depend on our work on this farm for a living,” said Membreño.

There are approximately 19,500 coffee growers in the country, 86 percent of whom are small farmers with less than 10 manzanas of land, who represent 21 percent of the total national output, according to the CSC.

“Outside of harvest time, we gather firewood, that’s how we support ourselves, because there isn’t anything else here,” said Membreño, who has an eight-year-old son. Her husband works in the same activities.

Coffee leaf rust, found in El Salvador since the late 1970s, began to spread rapidly in 2012. But the devastating effects were not felt until 2013, and caught coffee growers as well as the government off guard.

“The disease caught us with our pants down,” Julio Grande, a researcher at the governmental National Centre of Agricultural and Forest Technology (CENTA), told IPS.

In one area of the Montebelo farm, he is studying the biology of the parasite and the epidemiology of the disease, while testing fungicides.

The idea is integral treatment of the disease, simultaneously focusing on fertilisation of the plant, pruning, and the use of fungicides, he said.

These three elements together can bring good results, he added.

In fact, in the areas where he used fungicides, the coffee bushes are relatively healthy, and out of danger.

“The fungicides work, but if the other aspects of the equation are neglected, the effect is limited,” he added.

Renewing coffee plantations is an effective technique, because the older the plants, the more vulnerable they are to the fungus, the researcher added. El Salvador’s coffee trees are considered old – over 30 years old.

Besides technical assistance, fungicides and other inputs, the government distributed around eight million coffee rust-resistant plants to 4,200 farmers, to begin a process of renewal of their fields, Adán Hernández, manager of Centa’s coffee division, told IPS.

And on their own, farmers have planted another eight million, he added.

But large-scale renovation would require heavy government investment, to buy from private nurseries the 300 million seedlings needed to plant the 217,000 manzanas of coffee bushes in the country. And at any rate, there are not enough seeds available to do that.

Meanwhile, sitting next to the pile of coffee cherries, Ilsy Membreño has just one thing on her mind: how to get by on three dollars a day.

Edited by Verónica Firme/Translated by Stephanie Wildes

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Choco Pie: A Bite of Freedom

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - Fri, 18/12/2015 - 13:47

By Dacia Pajé and Margherita Rossi
Dec 18 2015 (IPS)

How could a chocolate snack challenge a regime? Surprisingly, in North Korea, it can.

On the 30th of July 2014, a group of 200 people gathered in Paju, a small South Korean city situated at the borders with North Korea. South Koreans, along with North Koreans defectors, grouped to send to the other side 50 oversized balloons, filled with boxes of Choco Pie, a well-known South Korean snack.

The North Korean totalitarianism banned the snack as a symbol of the American capitalism strongly fought in any way by the North Korean dictatorship.

As reported by Sokeel Park in The Guardian, Choco Pies have always played an important role in the Korean Hallyu (the Korean Wave of pop culture), one of the most effective soft power tools used by South Korea to spread its culture all around the world. North Korean dictator, Kim Jong-un, saw it as a potential contaminator and an enemy for his regime. After banning it, he decided to create a domestic competitor of it as well. On one hand, taking this commercial measure created an alternative to the consumers. On the other hand, stopping the so-called sweet revolution, he again took away the choice from the citizens.

The Cold War between the two Koreas has started long ago, after WWII, which provoked the breakup of lots of families as well as a strengthening the regime. The outlawing of the Choco Pie is just an example of what it is going on inside the country. It is just a hint of how human rights are not respected at all. This apparently absurd privation shows also how North Korean people have no voice in their own country as well as outside it.

In North Korea, we cannot even talk about censorship of means of communication, because everything belongs to the dictator and it is controlled from the beginning by the political headquarter.

Have you ever thought about the fact that we are shown only images about the regime ceremonies?

When we watch the society celebrating the oligarchic government acting like robots, do we perceive them as regular human beings? And still, they are.

The Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (the official title of North Korea) is actually a huge bubble of violence, in which no one can neither enter nor escape. The country has closed its commercial doors in order to preserve itself and to cut off its population form the occidental world.

“Democracy grows from within, and external actors can only support it.” That is what we can read among the four key recommendations resulting from the International Round Table on Democracy, Peace and Security: The Role of the United Nations, in 2010. However, it is difficult to make this principle reality if we are in a non-existent society with non-existent rights. It is hard to believe that North Korean people by themselves could stand the systematic violence committed by the oligarchic group of soldiers who keep the country as a social prison.

If they refuse everything coming from the outside world, why should we turn our back on them? They deserve the right to bite a pie freely, don’t they?

(End)

Categories: Africa

Africa in pictures: 12-17 December 2015

BBC Africa - Fri, 18/12/2015 - 12:31
Robo-cops on parade, funny funerals and breaking stones
Categories: Africa

Alaa Arsheed: A Refugee’s Sweet Sound of Success

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - Fri, 18/12/2015 - 12:12

Alaa Arsheed, Syrian refugee and violinist, and Gian Pietro Masa, experimental electronic musician, during their live peromance at the inauguration of Fornasetti's Calendarium exhibition. Credit: Fornasetti / IPS

By Francesco Farnè and Valentina Gasbarri
ROME, Dec 18 2015 (IPS)

“In Beirut I was like a bird in a cage, I felt like a prisoner. Today, I have the chance to let my dreams come true, make a living with my music, realizing my dad’s project: open a new Alpha – my family’s cultural center, destroyed during the war- to share Syrian culture and help my people in Europe,” Alaa Arsheed, a Syrian refugee, told IPS.

Alaa, 29-year old and an accomplished violinist has become living proof of the positive effects migration can have on host countries, especially in countries like Italy where structural problems related both to the financial and migration crises have changed the course of present political history.

In the past century Italy has gone through mass emigration, internal migration and mass immigration. According to ISTAT (Italian National Institute of Statistics) almost 4 million non-EU migrants live in the country in 2015. The flimsy boats filled with human cargo and often sink in in the Mediterranean leaving many adrift in the cold sea, and some perish.

About 3 per cent of the world’s refugees arrive in Italy says the Report on International Protection in Italy 2015, released by The National Association of Italian Municipalities (ANCI) , Caritas Italiana, Cittalia, Migrantes Fundation and the The SPRAR project (Protection System for Refugees and Asylum Seekers), in partnership with the Ministry of Interior and The Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR). The report says by the end of 2014 there were 33 on-going wars, 13 crisis situations and 16 UN missions. The humanitarian crises in the Middle-East pushed nearly 19.5 million refugees to flee their home country, 38,2 million were internally displaced people (IDPs) from war and persecution and 1.8 million were asylum seekers. As a consequence, the number of migrants reached 59.5 milion people.

According to the last figures from the Italian Ministry of Interior, in 2015 about 120,000 migrants arrived in Italy. The vast majority of people are refugees and migrants from Syria, followed by Afghanis, Pakistanis and Iraqis. The countries of origin for people crossing from Libya include Eritrea, Gambia, Mali, Nigeria, Somalia and Sudan. 2,900 migrants have lost their lives in the Mediterranean during their dangerous journey.

Alaa Arsheed says he was drawn by the magnetism of Italy and Italian people while he was looking for a better life and a place where he could have the “right of having rights.” He describes how music, and art in general, helped him overcome many of the difficulties he faced since he left Syria and why he is convinced that Italy is such an inspiring place where he loves to live. An Italian friend of his, Marta, a painter, put him in contact with Barnaba Fornasetti. Barnaba is the son of the internationally renowned Italian designer Piero Fornasetti, and CEO of the Fornasetti Design company. Barnaba, like his father, is an artist and also a skilled DJ.

Audience attending the live music perfomance at the inauguration of Fornasetti’s Calendarium exhibition. Credit: Fornasetti / IPS

When Barnaba met Alaa, he immediately recognized talent and saw the potential for an artistic collaboration. He invited Alaa to play his violin during the inauguration of his exhibit in Milan. It was an artistic collaboration as the experimental electronic musician Gian Pietro Masa and Alaa, played together in a long session, coordinated by musician and composer Roberto Coppolecchia.

“Art can be a powerful tool for integration, and music, in particular, it is a language that speaks directly to your inner soul, no matter what your religion, nationality, political affiliation, sex or age is,” said Alaa.

“I was born in As-Suwayda, in the Daraa province in southern Syria, where the so called ‘Arab spring’ started in February 2011,” said Alaa. His family owned an art café called Alpha which was the only free cultural space where artists could gather in the city. Alpha’s motto was “Art for All,” he said and then quoted Article 27 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights: “Everyone has the right to freely participate in the cultural life of the community, to enjoy the arts and to share in scientific advancement and its benefits.”

Since its foundation, more than 140 art exhibitions, music, and literary events took place in Alpha, bypassing government censorship. “That was our way to protest, peaceful, based on art and free from religious and political influences. Once, we revisited Voltaire’s quotations in a visual art exhibit,” he said.

Late in 2011, Alaa, like many other Syrians, was forced to leave his country in the face of the civil war. He was able to bring just his violin and a few things with him. He moved to Beirut, where he lived teaching and playing music. Six months ago, he had a meeting that changed his life forever. While teaching violin to Palestinian refugees in a camp, he met Italian actor and UNHCR ambassador Alessandro Gassman, while he was in Lebanon filming a documentary about “art in times of war” called “Torn – Strappati.”

Alaa was involved in the making of this documentary, which was presented at the 72nd Venice International Film Festival, and he features playing his violin. For him, this instrument has become the symbol of how music can heal the pain of a generation of young Syrians.

His talent, and the visibility that Gassman and UNHCR gave to his him, the Fabrica Communication Research Group offered Alaa a music scholarship in Treviso, a city located in the North-East of Italy. “In Italy I found an inspiring, friendly atmosphere and I was also able to realize one of my professional dreams: publish my first album, sham, which means “Damascus” in the Aramaic language,” he said.

Eventually, he asked for asylum in Europe and today he lives in Italy. “I miss my family and my hometown,” and he said he still plays music with his brothers and sister who play the violin, viola and cello, via Skype. They want to play together as a string quartet in Italy someday.

Alaa is now working on a project, in partnership with Fabrica, that he says will make his parents happy and proud of him. As Alpha was destroyed during the war, he would like to rebuild this cultural space in Europe where it would be a landmark for plenty of refugees with the aim of preserving and spreading Syrian culture, as he said, “Art is stronger than everything.”

(End)


From the left: Gian Pietro Masa, Alaa Arsheed, Barnaba Fornasetti, CEO, Fornasetti design company, and IPS Director General Farhana Haque Rahman at the inauguration of Fornasetti’s Calendarium exhibition. Credit: Fornasetti / IPS

Categories: Africa

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