Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Child soldiers

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You'd think that maybe the numbers had eased themselves away of the child soldiers that exist out there, but they haven't. In 2007, Africa had the largest number of child soldiers reported, and of 2004, there was 100,000, so one can only imagine how big the number is today. The countries that are most affected by this epidemic are :Algeria, Angola, Burundi, Congo-Brazzaville, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Liberia, Rwanda, Sierra Leone, Sudan and Uganda. The problem with using these poor children is they are unaware of the consequences, due to a lack of immaturity, so they think it is a game. Which most rebel commanders say are good for them, because then the children are fearles, but with little or no training, these front line stories, become quick-minute tragedies.

Girls are also said to be victims in this horrendous situation, for example: " In Algeria, a young woman from one of the villages where massacres had taken place said that all of the killers were boys under 17. Some boys who looked to be around 12 decapitated a 15-year-old girl and played ‘catch’ with the head. "

Not only do these children handle guns and weaponry that should not be handled by little hands, they are also exposed to the world of drugs and alcohol.

These children are abducted from their families and through abuse and extensive mental and physical abuse are forced into a life to support the ongoing war for which they either have to be a victim on the losing side or avictim on the "winning" side. And not that there is a winning side at all, but they are forced into a life that is "kill or be killed."



I found a really great article on Toy soldiers written by a CNN journalist that I want everyone to take a look at. I think you will find it really powerful =]
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http://www.cnn.com/2007/WORLD/africa/02/12/child.soldiers/index.html
Stolen kids turned into terrifying killers
POSTED: 3:00 p.m. EST, February 12, 2007
Story Highlights• There are more than 250,000 child soldiers fighting around the world
• Children are often brainwashed and drugged before they are forced to fight
• Their vulnerability can allow warlords to make them into coldblooded killers
• Child advocates see some signs of progress, but a long way to go

By Ann O'Neill
CNN

Adjust font size:
(CNN) -- Warlords are forcing children in conflicts around the world to become killing machines -- nothing more than what one child advocate calls "cannon fodder."

Some children are kidnapped from their schools or their beds, some are recruited after seeing their parents slaughtered, some may even choose to join the militias as their best hope for survival in war-torn countries from Colombia, and across Africa and the Middle East, to south Asia.

Once recruited, many are brainwashed, trained, given drugs and then sent into battle with orders to kill.

There is no escape for what the United Nations and human rights groups estimate are 250,000 child soldiers today. These children, some as young as 8, become fighters, sex slaves, spies and even human shields.

Sometimes their guns are taller than they are. But the child soldiers can be frighteningly cold and effective, according to CNN Africa correspondent Jeff Koinange. (Audio Slide Show: Koinange describes coming face to face with gun-wielding children)

He said they take macho noms de guerre like "Col. Rambo" and "Brig. Chop Them Up."

"The saddest part is we, as adults, had to address them as such," he added. "Otherwise you just never knew what would happen." (Read: Koinange recalls how child soldiers killed his friend)

The children's very vulnerability makes them attractive to the men leading militias, according to Jo Becker, who has interviewed former child soldiers in Sri Lanka, Nepal, Uganda and Myanmar for Human Rights Watch.

They are easy to manipulate and will do the unspeakable without question or protest, partly because their morals and value systems are not yet fully formed, she said. In some cultures, child soldiers -- 40 percent of whom can be girls -- are considered expendable "cannon fodder," she said.

Ordered not to cry
The journey from boy or girl to killing machine follows a horrifying route of indoctrination, including being forced to execute friends and family, international organizations report.

One girl, Angela, 12, told Human Rights Watch she was told to shoot a friend when she joined Colombia's FARC guerrillas. (Watch children drilled for war in the mud )

"I closed my eyes and fired the gun, but I didn't hit her. So I shot again," she said. "I had to bury her and put dirt on top of her. The commander said, 'You'll have to do this many more times, and you'll have to learn not to cry.' "

An indictment against Congolese warlord Thomas Lubanga Dyilo asserts that one of his commanders threatened to shoot a 13-year-old girl unless she tied the testicles of a prisoner with wire. She complied and the captive died.

In Myanmar -- formerly known as Burma -- a boy who was 11 when he was recruited to the national army, had to watch as older soldiers gunned down mothers and then killed their babies. "They swung them by their legs and smashed them against a rock. I saw it," Kim Muang Than told Human Rights Watch.

Changing times
Officials with the United Nations, UNICEF and human rights groups said they are seeing promising signs, 20 years after the United Nations first addressed the issue. (Watch children flee the horror of militia kidnappers )

Child soldiers were on the agenda for a U.N. Security Council working committee Friday. The committee discussed how rebel groups in Nepal and Sri Lanka use children to fight. Action against militias in the Ivory Coast and the Democratic Republic of Congo was also considered.

Last week, 58 countries and nongovernmental agencies signed a treaty to do more to free current and potential child soldiers from peril. And, on January 29, the International Criminal Court forged ahead with its first war crimes prosecution, targeting Lubanga on charges of recruiting child soldiers The act was declared a war crime when the ICC was established in 2002.

"In the past there haven't been consequences against the commanders," said Becker, of Human Rights Watch. "This sends a signal to the groups that the world is paying attention now, you can be jailed for life and your assets can be frozen."

"I think we've come a long way," said Radhika Coomaraswamy, the United Nations' envoy for children and armed conflict. "Ten years ago this was an invisible issue."

Since last summer, groups in Burundi, Ivory Coast, Myanmar, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Sudan and Somalia have been referred to the U.N. Security Council for possible sanctions.

But there are many, many more. Child soldiers have been used in the past decade in more than 30 countries, according to the United Nations, Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch, which said young fighters were active in at least 19 countries last year. (Map: Where children are forced to fight)

Coomaraswamy sees the Middle East, Sudan's Darfur and eastern Chad as the new trouble spots. (Read about Iraq's child soldiers)

There are also concerns in Asia, with Human Rights Watch posting reports in January alleging violations by Maoist forces in Nepal and an offshoot of the Tamil Tigers rebel group in Sri Lanka.

"We're no longer just pointing fingers at rebel groups or government armies," said Human Rights Watch's Becker. "Now we're holding individual commanders accountable for their crimes."

U.N. envoy Coomaraswamy is taking an optimistic long view. "I think this is a little bit like the campaign against slavery in the late 19th century," she said. "There's such an abhorrence of it on an international level."

But much remains to be done, she cautioned. Funds must be found and steps taken to restore some sense of normal life for children numbed and hardened by their war experiences. In many cases, she said, their families don't want them and they are shunned by villagers.

Abandoned, they find little to eat, have nothing to do and scant hope for the future, Coomaraswamy said.

Without intervention, they could grow up to become a lost generation of migrant professional killers.

Johnny Mad Dog

I think that even reading such a powerful book, I couldn't begin to put myself in someone else's place that has went through those things.

The thing that stuck in my mind the most was the family that had to go on after all of the strive.

Losing my father would be the hardest thing for me, I don't know what I would do with myself, and in this story, there is this girl who not only has to move on so quickly from her father's death, but pull together her mother who is now permanently handicap, and younger brother who is left in devastation.

The strength that it must take to have to mourn the death of someone who was your main provider, and the next, run for your own life, its too immense of a feeling. I find myself relating to her because I too do a lot of things with my father, my father is chief of our fire department, and I joined as soon as I could, and we have spent a lot of time side by side working on things.


I don't know how I could piece my life together when I'd have to leave it all behind, and play father. I just couldn't even imagine.

Thursday, November 13, 2008

Water Sanitation in Africa, or lack there of



Image and video hosting by TinyPicBundaa Joseph
Child's work

Bundaa Joseph, 10, Kampala village, Tanzania
I have no school. I would like to go but I am the only child at home so if I go to school there will be no one to help my parents.

I have to fetch the water. I use the water here for drinking, bathing and washing my clothes. My parents always get sick with diarrhoea - I don't know why - but they have to go to hospital. I'm not happy using this water. Some people use it like a toilet.


(WaterAid/Jane Scobie)
(http://images.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://news.bbc.co.uk/nol/shared/spl/hi/picture_gallery/05/africa_getting_water_in_africa/img/3.jpg&imgrefurl=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/shared/spl/hi/picture_gallery/05/africa_getting_water_in_africa/html/3.stm&usg=__gKEn0pZgHLJdpW5M72y95zs29-8=&h=300&w=300&sz=20&hl=en&start=2&sig2=C5OujvPZ11SjfwFeM2GlLA&tbnid=IR2p4nQ-UOWtJM:&tbnh=116&tbnw=116&ei=nXccSemiJ6X8NOrQhd0J&prev=/images%3Fq%3DWater%2Bin%2BAfrica%26gbv%3D2%26hl%3Den%26safe%3Doff)

Water problems are the biggest in South Africa, the strain has even lead into violence across borders and even domestic. In Côte D'Ivoire where government problems led to an unpaid water bill and the cause later was the increase risk of water-born diseases such as cholera. Only 22 percent to 34 percent of the population in at least eight sub-Saharan countries are able to have access to safe water.
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According to the Council on Foreign Relations:

"What is the role of agriculture in water stress?
Agricultural development has the potential to improve African economies but requires extensive water supplies. These statistics from the Water Systems Analysis Group at the Institute for the Study of Earth, Oceans, and Space at the University of New Hampshire reveal the urgent need for sustainable agricultural development:

About 64 percent of Africans rely on water that is limited and highly variable;

Croplands inhabit the driest regions of Africa where some 40 percent of the irrigated land is unsustainable;

Roughly 25 percent of Africa's population suffers from water stress;

Nearly 13 percent of the population in Africa experiences drought-related stress once each generation."

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96 percent of Agriculture in Africa is rain fed which causes a big dilemma. With the resource of water being low and with the little resource of that polluted with germs, the state of Africa is in what is called "Water Stress."
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Over 80 of Africa's river and lak basins are shared by two or more countires and those countries heavily depend on those resources, threatening the native livelihood.
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According to the Living Waters Pamphlet:

"Almost half of the population (778 million in 1997) suffers from one of
the six major water-related diseases. Lack of risk preparedness and
mitigation is also a factor: in Mozambique over 1 million people were
displaced by the floods of 1999/2000 and an unknown number killed.
Every day, 650 people die from diarrhoea in Africa, mainly children
under five years of age. More than 10,000 people contracted cholera
during outbreaks in South Africa in 2001."

Africa is home to about 13% (800 million
people) of the world population and accounts
for about 2% of world economic output.
• About 29% of the population lives in West Africa, 27% in
East Africa, 18% in North Africa, 17% in Southern Africa,
and 10% in Central Africa. North Africa is the most urbanised
region in Africa, while East Africa is the least urbanised.
• Overall, the agricultural and mining sectors employ the largest
numbers of Africans. Around two-thirds of Southern Africa’s
population is dependent on agriculture for employment.
• Vast desert and densely forested regions are nearly uninhabited, while
population density is very high in places like Nigeria, the Nile River valley,
and the Great Lakes region. Two of the largest cities in the world – Cairo
and Lagos – are in Africa.
• Estimates of the number of languages range from 700 to 3,000. Major
languages, in terms of the number of speakers, include Afrikaans, Akan,
Amharic, Arabic, English, French, Fufulde, Hausa, Igbo, Malagasy,
Oromo, Portuguese, Rwanda, Shona, Somali, Sotho, Swahili, Xhosa,
Yoruba and Zulu.
Source: US Department of Energy http://www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/cabs/africa.html




Image and video hosting by TinyPicBundaa Joseph
Child's work

Bundaa Joseph, 10, Kampala village, Tanzania
I have no school. I would like to go but I am the only child at home so if I go to school there will be no one to help my parents.

I have to fetch the water. I use the water here for drinking, bathing and washing my clothes. My parents always get sick with diarrhoea - I don't know why - but they have to go to hospital. I'm not happy using this water. Some people use it like a toilet.


(WaterAid/Jane Scobie)
(http://images.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://news.bbc.co.uk/nol/shared/spl/hi/picture_gallery/05/africa_getting_water_in_africa/img/3.jpg&imgrefurl=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/shared/spl/hi/picture_gallery/05/africa_getting_water_in_africa/html/3.stm&usg=__gKEn0pZgHLJdpW5M72y95zs29-8=&h=300&w=300&sz=20&hl=en&start=2&sig2=C5OujvPZ11SjfwFeM2GlLA&tbnid=IR2p4nQ-UOWtJM:&tbnh=116&tbnw=116&ei=nXccSemiJ6X8NOrQhd0J&prev=/images%3Fq%3DWater%2Bin%2BAfrica%26gbv%3D2%26hl%3Den%26safe%3Doff)

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

The Bleeding Stone

I was very intrigued by the term "jinn" which was mentioned frequently in the book.
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"Jinn" .. which is an arabic term, part of Islam. Which makes me wonder if this is the religion of the character in the book. The religion is quite unclear and there is mention of many within it. But I pull back from that thought because the muslims who come to take the waddan meat are not easily represented by the main character. So I'm not sure what to think, even though the character is more open to help them then the christians. But the christians are referred to as foreigners, so it might just be that the muslims are natives.

Nonetheless, the "ancestors" that the bedioun chooses to speak to, is an Islamic term:
(http://www.geocities.com/mutmainaa/belief/jinn.html)
"The Jinn are beings created with free will, living on earth in a world parallel to mankind. The Arabic word Jinn is from the verb 'Janna' which means to hide or conceal. Thus, they are physically invisible from man as their description suggests. This invisibility is one of the reasons why some people have denied their existence. However, (as will be seen) the affect which the world of the Jinn has upon our world, is enough to refute this modern denial of one of Allah's creation. The origins of the Jinn can be traced from the Qur'an and the Sunnah. Allah says:

"Indeed We created man from dried clay of black smooth mud. And We created the Jinn before that from the smokeless flame of fire"
[Surah Al-Hijr 15:26-27]

Thus the Jinn were created before man. As for their physical origin, then the Prophet (salAllahu alayhi wasalam) has confirmed the above verse when he said: "The Angels were created from light and the Jinn from smokeless fire" [1]. It is this description of the Jinn which tells us so much about them. Because they were created from fire, their nature has generally been fiery and thus their relationship with man has been built upon this. Like humans, they too are required to worship Allah and follow Islam. Their purpose in life is exactly the same as ours, as Allah says:

"I did not create the Jinn and mankind except to worship Me"
[Surah Ad-Dhariyat, 51:56]"



Even though Jinns can be muslim or non-muslim, I feel there is a significance to the religion itself.

But Jinns are referred to as devils.

Does the bedioun worship the devil? or does it answer to it to keep the land that he protects happy?

In my research it says that Jinns can take on any form such as human, plant, animal, etc.

Cont. issues in Africa

In light of the topic of journalist abuse, I found a sight that reports on stories of abuse of journalist in Africa today.


http://cpj.org/africa/

Story one:
In Ethiopia, managing editor, Aregaqi, of the Reporter was releaed from the hospital when three men attacked him as he left his office by striking him in the head repeatedly with a stone until he fell unconscious. This attack was directed to anonymous threats received in connection of investiagtive reports accusing people close to Saudi-Ethiopian billionaire Sheikh Mohammed Hussein al-Amoudi had mismanaged his investments.

Story two:"Editor-in-Chief Tsion Girima of the private weekly Enbilta is being held in Kality prison, outside the capital, Addis Ababa, pending sentencing on Tuesday"

Girima misspelled a judges name in her paper, and instead of running a correction, she spelled the name correctly in her next edition, now Girima will serve up to one year in prison for that mistake.


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Story three: “Chief” Ebrima Manneh was arrested and brought to prison...
"Though he was never charged with a crime, Chief’s arrest stemmed from his decision to republish a BBC story critical of President Yahya Jammeh’s democratic credentials on the eve of an African Union summit in Banjul. Editors at our pro-government paper overruled Chief’s decision, pulling the printed copies that carried the story and withholding them from distribution."

A reporter from the paper even went undercover to investigate Manneh's arrest. This reporter said many of the sources that he went to were afraid to speak about the disappearance, for they may be the next victim.

The reporter testified on the Chief's behave, and was relocated from his dying father to help the chief.

But the chief was never released, leaving behind wedding arrangements and bright future.



This is something to take into consideration, being a journalist in the USA, I feel secure that my government protects to a degree my freedom of speech. In Africa, the government silences it.

Thursday, November 6, 2008

So you call us bias, but you do not know what we go through

Sometimes it feels good to open a book and be able to relate to a character in the majorest/minorest level.

I felt close to Lomba, because I too am a journalist and a writer.

I remember when I told my family that I was going to be a journalist and my family just kept fearing for my life saying "Don't go to Iraq!"

And I understood the immediate dangers that lie under the field of some of the most hated people in society.

Reading this book, I see the potential and the power that someone within the business can create, and the consequence one can face when trying to do what they believe is right.

I hope this leaves a reminder to those who call the media biased. Yeah, it is, and that is why I became a journalist, to combine my two passions: writing.. and being nosey.

There are people like Lomba who are suffering in prison, locked away in solitude, beaten down for owning even a pencil and paper, sleeping on lice-ridden cots, eating food that only animals would call cuisine.

Not able to know what day it is, and the days become irrelevant because freedom becomes just a whisper,anger welling up inside as you take beating after beating..... only because you were covering event.


That's why I became a journalist, because instead of staring at the TV saying, "thats bias" or "they're not telling us everything." I got up and decided to change it. Someday I hope to do news justice and uncover stories to the world that has become blind to such corruption.


Maybe I could be a Lomba?

Who knows.

Monday, November 3, 2008

The cost of oil, literally.

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It's astonishing to think how much oil has affected Africa without benefiting the country at all.

The Africans seemed to not be interested in the use of it, and yet it is be sucked from the veins of the land and leaving mother earth dry. And those who fight to protect their intellect, to find themselves benefiting from a ruthless trade, are coming up short, and turned away.Not only that, but it has destroyed the land and the spirit of the people who call it home.

Where is home when greed and corruption become your needy neighbor?
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"This is our land," a dark and round-faced young man named Judé piped up. "We've seen no benefit from it. We lost our land and have received nothing for it. At first they said they were going to build hospitals and dispensaries here. But they've done none of that." Exxon, Chief Tamro explained, had offered the village its choice of five options: a school, a well, a granary, one kilometer of paved road, or a marketplace. The villagers chose the school, understanding that it would house six grades, but ExxonMobil built them a two-room schoolhouse instead. "Let me ask you something, sir." The chief tried to contain his frustration. "If I take something from you, should I then come and dictate the terms of my compensation to you for the loss? Surely it is for me to apologize and ask you what I can do to make it up to you."

Oil industries within Africa have five countries that dominate the oil game, Egypt, Libya, Algeria, Angola and Nigeria. They produce 83-87% of the continents oil. And althought they are not the only countries dominated by this (there are 52)they take the lead. The oil industries within Africa confirmed 73-77 billion barrels of oil make up 7 percent of the entire global total.



AFRICAN OPEC MEMBERS PRODUCTION mb/d--Last Updated on Oct.16-2008


2006
2007
1Q08
2Q08
3Q08
Jul 08
Aug 08
Sep 08
Sep/Aug

Algeria
1.37
1.36
1.40
1.40
1.41
1.40
1.41
1.41
0.00

Angola
1.39
1.66
1.87
1.90
1.85
1.90
1.87
1.77
-0.10

Libya
1.70
1.71
1.75
1.73
1.69
1.69
1.67
1.72
0.05

Nigeria
2.23
2.13
2.04
1.86
1.95
1.92
1.95
2.00
0.05

(According to the African Oil Journal)



And seeing as I'm just a naive consumer and never really checking the labels on what I purchase, by reading the article I was unaware that we tapped into more African sources than in Saudi Arabia. Everytime I go home, or go to see my friends, with each drop of oil I pump into my '95 Bonneville, I'm supporting destroying somebody else's home.



How do we stop it?