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June 8, 2008 - June 14, 2008

June 13, 2008

Many Children in Congo have no choice

A school scholarship is the key to breaking the cycle of poverty.  UNICEF's School Fee Abolition Initiative assisted 500 children to go back to school.

Children were working in the dangerous Ruashi mines.

Congo Helping Hands provides school scholarships to assist rural poor children.  Girls are targeted to keep them in school.  A $15 annual scholarship keeps them in school.  

UNICEF - Child protection from violence, exploitation and abuse - World Day against Child Labour highlights the right of every child to an education
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By Amy Bennett NEW YORK, USA, 12 June 2008 -- The UN International Labour Organization has designated today the World Day against Child Labour. Observed annually, it is a day to raise awareness about the cycle of poverty that results when children must work and therefore miss out on educational opportunities.

When children have no choice --
At the Ruashi mining site in Katanga province, Democratic Republic of the Congo, one local woman returned day after day, working side-by-side with her son.

“I like the job because it helps me to survive,” she said. “I do not like to see my children working here, but we don’t have a choice now. We hope when we get much more money, the children can get out.”

A youth protection worker at the site, Chrisante Kyondwa, explained: “The mining environment presents a lot of danger and risks for children. There are children who begin work at 8 and finish at 3 p.m. It is a difficult job that has a huge impact on the child’s health.”

Effects of school fee abolition -- UNICEF has assisted 500 children so far from the Ruashi mines to go back to school. There are no longer any child labourers in these particular mines.

PRAYER:

Dear Heavenly Father, help these children break the cycle of poverty.  Protect them while they work in dangerous places and under harsh conditions.  AMEN.

allAfrica.com: South Africa: Rural Community to Learn New Skills (Page 1 of 1)

Here's model for rural Congo.  Service Center in the rural areas to bring government services and educational opportunities and learning.

Internet services is provided via mobile phones.


allAfrica.com: South Africa: Rural Community to Learn New Skills (Page 1 of 1)
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The 100th Thusong Service Centre, which was officially opened by President Thabo Mbeki on Saturday, will not only serve as a centre for government services but of new opportunities for the local residents.

The Thusong Service Centre, situated in the remote Inhlazuka area near Richmond, is aimed at providing the local community access to national and provincial government services, such as ID document and social grants applications.

However, residents both young and old will also have the opportunity to learn computer literacy skills which could open up further opportunities for them in the future.

Centre Manager Musa Ndlovu told BuaNews that a high premium was placed on the introduction of information and communications technologies at this centre.

"My aim is to help everyone in the area, from all age groups, become computer literate," said Mr Ndlovu, adding that to achieve this there needed to be a supply of electricity and phone lines for Internet in Nhlazuka homes. He reasons that anyone who knows how to use a mobile phone can use a computer, including senior learners.

Suspected Ebola fever kills three in Equateur Province

Three people in Congo have died from an Ebola-like haemorrhagic fever.  These cases are up in northern Congo's Equateur Province.

Is it Ebola?  The Center for Disease Control has not officially said it is another Ebola outbreak.

Congolese health authorities are doing a good job.  Health authorities recorded the first death on May 29.  That's quick action.  During the last outbreak in 2007, the first death occurred in June but the outbreak was not recognized until late August.  Dozens of people were died by the time health authorities were mobilized. 

IRIN Africa | Great Lakes | DRC | DRC: Suspected haemorrhagic fever kills three in Equateur Province | Health & Nutrition | News Item
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KINSHASA, 13 June 2008 (IRIN) - Three people in the Democratic Republic of Congo's Equateur Province have died from what is suspected to be haemorrhagic fever, according to medical sources.

Samples collected in Boende, 300km east of Bandaka, have been sent to the Centre for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta in the USA, to determine whether or not the disease is viral.

According to its spokesman, Eugene Kabambi, the UN's World Health Organization has sent a team of experts to Boende together with government doctors.

"The third death, that of a child, was reported on Wednesday" 11 June, said Jacques Mokange, the province's medical inspector.

June 12, 2008

Your Flying Choices are limited

In the Congo, your choices are limited.  You can charter a plane from a reliable agency like Mission Aviation Fellowship (MAF).  It is much more costly.  Or you try to drive which would be take weeks just to go 400 miles and it would be equally dangerous.  So you basically have no choice but to pray, hope, and roll the dice.

Overall, travel is extremely difficult and unsafe in Congo and other African countries.  Car accidents are a leading cause of deaths for expats.

Why It Matters : Danger in African Skies
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This sorry record has led to the European Union including 74 African airlines on its 91-strong global blacklist of planes barred from EU air space. In the Democratic Republic of Congo, where the country's vast size and severely-limited road network makes it heavily dependent on air cargo, all 54 of the country's airlines are banned. With 20 crashes since 1996, including a Hewa Bora Airways DC-9 that killed 40 people, including 37 on the ground when it overran the runway in the east Congolese city of Goma on April 15, the D.R.C. has the worst safety record in sub-Saharan Africa.


PRAYER:

Dear Heavenly Father, Give the air traveler courage, Help the African government to value human life, and Instill in African airlines the need for maintenance and replacement.  AMEN.

June 11, 2008

Water key to ending poverty and hunger in Africa, UN report says

Water is not only crucial to a healthy life but it is key factor to ending poverty and hunger in sub-Saharan Africa.  Most of Congo is shows a low to moderate "potential for poverty reduction."

From a very good new water site, "Circle of Blue" (visit this link for a good map on water and poverty in sub-Saharan Africa):

http://www.circleofblue.org/waternews/world/water-key-to-ending-poverty-and- hunger-in-africa-un-report-says/#more-413

Water key to ending poverty and hunger in Africa, UN report says

May 16, 2008


by C.T. Pope Circle of Blue

Almost two-thirds of sub-Saharan Africa's rural poor could benefit from investment in water, a new UN report finds.

The jointly commissioned report, Water and the Rural Poor, was presented by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) and International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) at the Sixteenth Annual UN Commission on Sustainable Development (CSD-16) on Monday.

"Insecure access to water for consumption and productive uses is a major constraint on poverty reduction in rural areas of sub-Saharan Africa (SSA)," the report found.

With almost half of Africa's population suffering from water related diseases, the new assessment highlighted the potential for low-tech, highly localized, solutions to have a major impact the livelihoods of the rural poor.

Only 3 percent of sub-Saharan Africa's land is under irrigation systems - elsewhere, crop production relies almost entirely on seasonal rainfall. Harvest rates rise and fall with unpredictable rain patterns.

Subsistence farmers, who account for nearly 80 percent of the agricultural activity in sub-Saharan Africa, are often the most vulnerable to seasonal variation in rainfall. The long-term impacts of such unpredictability make it impossible for these rural farmers to break from subsistence to small-scale production, thus reinforcing the cycle of poverty.

The report underlined the needs of these non-market oriented producers. "For millions of smallholder farmers, fishers and herders in SSA, water is one of the most important production assets, and securing access to and control and management of water is key to enhancing their livelihoods," the UN report said.

Beyond the subsistence farmer, the FAO and IFAD suggested solutions for each economic farm class in the region - including, large-scale commercial farms, small market oriented farms, subsistence farms, and the highly vulnerable "survival" farms.

Each of these markets suffers from a variety of factors, including at the upper end, a lack of reliable fertilization options and irrigation systems; at the middle, a lack of healthy seeds and access credit; and at the lower ends, a loss of work from AIDS related issues and waterborne disease.

Stressing these "context-specific" solutions, the report divided sub-Saharan Africa into 13 livelihood zones - based on land-type, major crops grown, and the prevailing economic situation of the areas. Each of the 13 zones faces unique problems for which localized solutions are best suited.

Modeling their suggestions on existing success stories in Africa, the report offered real-world examples to better inform policy makers and investors. It recognized the heterogeneous nature the water issues facing the region.

The report came as part of the CSD-16's focus on agriculture, drought and desertification; Africa; and water and sanitation. And, while the FAO stressed that water management alone would not solve the poverty and hunger crisis in Africa, it emphasized the potential for well-targeted water interventions to significantly improve the livelihoods of Africa's rural poor.

Photo: C.T. Pope / Circle of Blue Map: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO)/International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD),
2008

Links:

Joint Report: Water and the Rural Poor

Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO)

International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD)

UN Commission on Sustainable Development (CSD-16)

June 10, 2008

Land Disputes Complicate Refugee Return to Eastern Congo

Yet another showstopper for the peace process in the Wild, Wild East Congo.

Land disputes make it difficult for 400,000 Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) to return to their homes.  The IDPs fled due to fighting and threats from armed rebel groups operating in South Kivu.

allAfrica.com: Congo-Kinshasa: Land Disputes Complicate Refugee Return to Eastern DR Congo, UN Says (Page 1 of 1)
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UN News Service (New York) 9 June 2008 Posted to the web 10 June 2008

The United Nations refugee agency is helping to promote dialogue to ward off disputes over land in the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) province of South Kivu, one of the largest issues facing refugees returning to the region.

Land is at the root of many quarrels between Congolese returnees and those who never left the DRC, as well as between refugees and internally displaced persons (IDPs), according to the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNCHR) today.

To ease the reintegration process for those returning to South Kivu - a province which borders Rwanda and Uganda and has seen relative stability - UNHCR, together with its partners, has been working to encourage mediation.

PRAYER:

Dear Heavenly Father, give the authorities the wisdom and offer the people the understanding to settle their land disputes.  Peace to all.  AMEN.

June 09, 2008

UN Proposes Political Pressure to End Armed Conflicts

This week, violence flared up again when rebels killed innocence internally displaced persons (IDPs).  For the time being, the UN proposes to use political pressure to end the insurgency.  President Kabila agreed with the proposal.

The UN may be offering the last invitation for all the armed groups to end all violence.  These are the same groups that signed the peace agreement in January.

VOA News - UN Proposes Political Pressure to End Armed Conflicts in DRC.

Democratic Republic of Congo President Joseph Kabila has reportedly welcomed a proposal by the United Nations Mission in the country to use political pressure to end insurgency from armed groups in the country. The U.N. proposal would involve the cooperation of all armed groups in the country to ensure peace and security in the restive North Kivu province. It also appealed to the Security Council to approve new military equipment to help ensure peace and stability in the country.

“The new approach, which was proposed by the U.N. Security Council emphasizes more on political pressure for the time being. It means this is going to involve all the armed groups, which signed this deal in January to get involved and really to go on until the end of the process so that peace can be restored. If this is not respected the U.N. Security Council said that it is going to use force and the ICC (International Criminal Court) international justice pressure would be used. These are the two other solutions or two other ways the Security Council would use to solve the problem if the different leaders of armed groups don’t get on the opportunity to be involved in the political solution,” Kohora (VOA correspondent in the Congo) pointed out.

PRAYER:

Dear Heavenly Father, bring peace to eastern Congo.  AMEN.

June 08, 2008

Muhammad Yunus Discusses new Social Business Companies

Dr. Muhammad Yunus, founder of the Grameen Bank and winner of the 2006 Nobel Peace Prize, gave the Commencement address for MIT's 142nd Commencement held June 6, 2008.

Grameen Bank and Dr. Yunus have started many business to benefit and provide needed services to the poor.  Grameen phone and Grameen energy were started from idea generated Grameen Bank customers.  Dr. Yunus discussed his new Social Businesses with Grameen Danone, Grameen Credit Agricole Microfinance Foundation, and Grameen Intel.

More importantly, they discussed the launch of a social business to produce insectide treated mosquito nets.  

The Grameen Bank concept would work well in Congo to give the poor a chance to get out of poverty. 


Commencement address by Muhammad Yunus - MIT News Office
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We have signed a joint-venture agreement with Intel Corporation, to create a social business company called Grameen-Intel to bring information technology-based services to the poor in healthcare, marketing, education and remittances.

We also signed a social business joint venture agreement with Saudi German Hospital Group to set up a series of hospitals in Bangladesh.

Many more companies from around the world are showing interest in such social business joint ventures. A leading shoe company wants to create a social business to make sure that nobody goes without shoes. One leading pharmaceutical company wishes to set up a joint venture social business company to produce nutritional supplements appropriate for Bangladeshi pregnant mothers and young women, at the cheapest possible price.

We are also in discussion to launch a social business company to produce chemically treated mosquito-nets to protect people in Bangladesh and Africa from malaria and other mosquito-borne diseases.

PRAYER:

Dear Loving God, thank you for the people like Dr. Yunus and the programs that they develop to help the poor live better.  AMEN.

Microfinance Program Expands Into Congo

allAfrica.com: Africa: IFC Microfinance Program Expands (Page 1 of 1).

International Finance Corporation (Washington, DC)

PRESS RELEASE 5 June 2008 Posted to the web 5 June 2008 Cape Town

IFC, a member of the World Bank Group, today announced that it will help launch Advans Banque Congo, a new microfinance institution in the Democratic Republic of Congo. The transaction is the latest in IFC's microfinance strategy for Africa, under which IFC plans to support loans to more than 400,000 small entrepreneurs in Africa's poorest regions in the next five years.

"Microfinance institutions provide valuable support to entrepreneurs and small businesses in developing countries. They also play a key role in improving financial infrastructure," said Claude Falgon, Manager of Advans.  "Working with IFC will enable uus to reach underserved people, helping create jobs and reduce poverty."

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