My Heart Is Africa:

A Flying Adventure

by Scott Griffin

Thomas Allen,

270 pages, $26.95
Scott Griffin, 1956 Sedbergh graduate, has launched his book
MY HEART IS AFRICA

Mar 29, 2006 Military News for Canadians from MILNEWS 2 stories

UN Extends SUD Mission - UNMIS Page - UN Wants AU to Speed Up Handover

Fmr LBR Warlord Headed for Justice - More

Work for Mercs in KEN

Int'l Tribunal Ready to Try First COD War Criminal Some Nasty Lads There

Punch Up Between GNB, SEN Separatists

Investigation of Alleged Brit Rapes in KEN Almost Wrapped Up

Tuesday Mar 14, 2006 CAMEROON Bird flu has appeared in Cameroon. The deadly H5N1 strain was found in a duck on a farm close to the northern town of Maroua near the border with Nigeria. Africa's first case of bird flu was found in Nigeria last month. Since then, it's also appeared in Niger and Egypt. Health officials fear that bird flu is spreading undetected in Africa because countries lack facilities to track it.

Tuesday Mar 14, 2006 rci Uganda is barring a Canadian journalist from re-entering the country. Blake Lambert reports on Africa for several major news organizations, including the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. He'd been living in Uganda for three years. Uganda's government calls him an unwanted person who consistently misrepresented the situation in Uganda. Mr. Lambert describes himself as an even-handed reporter and says that the charges are ridiculous. Ugandan authorities have also put pressure on local journalists. Journalists are forbidden to comment on the forthcoming criminal trial of the leading opposition leader, Kizza Besigye.

Monday Mar 13, 2006 ts Out of Africa
Turn to almost any page in Scott Griffin's memoir? which chronicles the author's two-year journey from Toronto to Africa and back in his single-engine Cessna 180, and his adventures as a member of the Flying Doctors Service aid organization ? and the reader is granted a rare perspective: from 10,000 feet.

Monday Mar 13, 2006 Africa's first space satellite will be launched within three months. The satellite will have valuable communications functions. It will reduce Africa's dependence on European and American telecommunications, particularly Internet services, providing Internet connections at lower fees. The satellite costs about 200 million American dollars. Most of the cost is being paid by Libya and Nigeria. A director at the United Nations International Telecommunication Union, Hamadoun Toure, says that Africa has 13 per cent of the world's population, but represents less than one per cent of the Internet market. The I-T-U estimates that about 400-thousand African villages have no access to telecommunications at all.

Tuesday Mar 7, 2006 arc East Africa Must Get Drought Aid in Days – UN EL WAK - Aid for victims of a drought across east Africa will run out in April unless help arrives in the next 10 days, a top official of the UN food agency said on Saturday

Saturday Mar 4, 2006 tech

Join the Geekcorps

Photos: Life in the Geekcorps
Think your tech skills are underappreciated? Geekcorps wants you to take them to Zambia or Kenya for a month. Check out this gallery of Geekcorps volunteers in action.

>>Related story: Geekcorps - A Peace Corps for techies

Tuesday Jan 17, 2006

And that Liberia has sworn-in the first elected African woman leader ? Brava Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf!

2005

Tuesday Dec 27, 2005 rci The European Commission adopted plans Monday to grant $197 million in humanitarian aid next year to 10 African countries. Relief agencies working with the EU's executive arm will use the money to help people affected by natural disasters, strife and other crises. The countries receiving the money are Burundi, Chad, Comoros, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Ivory Coast, Liberia, Madagascar, Sudan, Tanzania and Uganda.

Monday Dec 26, 2005 Wed1242 Malawi
Once again we are reminded that events in distant lands are subject to many interpretations and even eyewitnesses may not have a full picture. A case in point is Malawi where it is reported that a devastating famine is underway, brought on by erratic rains and an Aids epidemic that is destroying the agricultural work force. One Wednesday Nighter has just returned from that country and saw no signs of acute famine in the cities he visited, although noting that the southern part of the country has suffered severe droughts, and that the previous government pursued a misguided agricultural policy resulting in farmers ceasing to grow anything.

However, the World Food Program has said 2.9 million people in Malawi, are reported to be in need of urgent assistance "to be provided by the WFP because of the low agricultural production caused by drought, chronicle poverty and socio-economic collapse caused by wide spread HIV/AIDS disease.'' www.turkishpress.com There is a benign leadership which is under attack by the opposition seeking to dislodge it, so the situation remains fluid.

Monday Dec 5, 2005 rci African leaders have made a call on the international community to extend better trade terms to Africa. The call came during the France-Africa summit that was held this weekend in the capital of Mali, Bamako. For the first time, all of Africa's 53 states attended. Mali's president, Amadou Toumani Toure, told delegates that trade ties should be based on what he called "equity and justice." He said that Africa's agriculture was being prevented from achieving its potential because farmers in other countries received subsidies from their governments. French farmers are among the biggest beneficiaries of European Union subsidies. France's president, Jacques Chirac, said that African farmers deserved a fair reward for their produce, but warned against what he called "a hasty and generalized liberalization of agriculturual trade." On Saturday, Mr. Chirac urged action to end poverty in Africa and to stop human trafficking. more wn France

More hungry in Africa than in '90s
A FAO report released today says more people are underfed in Africa now than in the 1990s and malnutrition kills 6 million children each

Wednesday Nov 16, 2005 ts Familiar tale in Africa politics
Despite charges of corruption and human rights abuses, the man who has ruled Burkina Faso with an iron fist since 1987 appears headed for a third term in office, writes Karen Palmer.

from Wed1237 Africa & media coverage

Mention of the op-ed piece led the conversation to the paucity of good coverage of Africa in our media. CBC cringes at the thought of a documentary supported in whole or in part by CIDA, yet how else can CIDA get the message across? Stephen Lewis' Massey Lectures on Africa and AIDS were powerful beyond expectation, but it would seem that instead of building on these broadcasts, CBC is behaving as though the "Africa budget" had been used up. Is this due to journalists' long-standing opposition to Government money? And how ludicrous, when CBC IS the government, and the Government's money IS ours! We can hardly count on the print media, which has retrenched its foreign bureaus to a point that is embarrassing.

Thursday Nov 10, 2005 nyt Lobbyist Sought $9 Million to Set Bush Meeting
By PHILIP SHENON
The fee was to arrange a meeting between President Bush and the president of a small West African nation, documents show.

Thursday Nov 10, 2005 cbc




Stephen Lewis



AIDS IN AFRICA
How are you Siama? A multimedia presentation

Saturday Aug 13, 2005 ts African child hunger on rise, report warns
Africa needs a major infusion of cash if it is to meet U.N. targets for reducing hunger over the next two decades, a report says.

Saturday Aug 13, 2005 ts Virtual medicine
Computer databases are cutting costs and proving a valuable diagnostic tool in impoverished nations. They manage drugs, enhance treatments, and reveal trends. Rachel Ross explains.

Tuesday Jul 26, 2005 Truth Telling on Zimbabwe
Africa's most prestigious leaders must challenge Robert Mugabe publicly about his dictatorial regime and the killing of his own people.

25 July, 2005 it Aid funds finally flow for Niger
Finally, donations of food and funding to help 2.5 million people facing a food crisis in Niger beginning to arrive. The UN relief chief says graphic images of starving children have shocked the international community into response. ... more funds have been received for Niger in the last ten days than over the last ten months. However, the body has still only received a fifth of the total $30.7m (£17.6m) it has appealed for.

Sunday Jul 17, 2005 rci Scientists have made a breakthrough that may help Africa and the rest of the developing world. An international team of scientists says it has genetically-sequenced three parasites that kill hundreds of thousands of people in the Third World every year. African sleeping sickness, Chagas disease and Leishmaniasis are responsible for 150,000 deaths a year. African sleeping sickness reduces victims to a zombie-like state. Chagas disease damages the hearts and other internal organs of millions of Latin Americans, while Leishmaniasis, causes fever, a swollen spleen and disfiguring lesions. The scientists say they have discovered a "common core" of genes among the three diseases that could be used to develop new drugs or vaccines against them.

Friday Jul 15, 2005 bbc
G8 debt deal under threat at IMF
Even before the ink has dried on proposals to relieve poor countries' debts to international lenders, the deal agreed by the G8 at Gleneagles is under threat.

A number of European governments are apparently having second thoughts about proposals for debt relief which formed a key part of the help world leaders offered to Africa at last week's summit. .

Tuesday Apr 5, 2005
Climate Change in Africa
Africa has contributed less than any other region to the greenhouse gas emissions that are widely held responsible for global warming. But the continent is also the most vulnerable to the consequences. As the G8 leaders meet in Scotland to discuss both climate change and Africa's development, see www.scidev.net/ms/climate_africa for a collection of news and feature articles that describe some of the complex links between the two issues.

African poverty is a complex and multi-faceted issue; the solution must reflect that. It may not lend itself to a catchy protest slogan, but it’s the truth.
MediaScout would love nothing more than to believe the coverage of the G8 and Live 8 events marks a new era in international reportage, where Africa is seen not as a monolithic construct but as a cornucopia of peoples and states with unique problems and challenges. True, many of the themes transcend borders and language—AIDS, corruption and poverty, to name but a few—but each manifests itself in a different way depending upon the history and situation in the various locales. “End poverty now” and “Save Africa” may make for catchy placards and wristbands, but the Big Six, and indeed the rest of the Western world’s media, must go deeper. If true reform is to come to Africa, Western aid must flow through channels of understanding. It’s easy to criticize Paul Martin and George W. Bush for not adhering to the 0.7 percent principle, but is a catch-all solution for the continent really the best approach?
Joe Boughner Maisonneuve MediaScout July 4, 2005

Tuesday Apr 5, 2005
AFRICA: Climate change becoming a matter of life and death
The dramatic impact of climate change in Africa Experts say climate change is set to take a particularly harmful toll throughout Africa, where reliance on agriculture for survival and a dearth of technological innovation put millions of people at risk. Citing the melting ice caps of Mount Kilimanjaro, Africa's highest peak, this IRIN report looks at the dramatic impact global warming is likely to have on the continent's farmers and others

Bujumbura night clubs a return link

Tuesday Apr 5, 2005 bbc
Blair sets 5 May as election date
British Prime Minister Tony Blair has pledged to make global climate change and alleviating poverty in Africa the focus of Britain's presidency of both the G8 and European Union this year.

February 10, 2005 UN New York, Senior United Nations officials sitting on the Commission for Africa launched by British Prime Minister Tony Blair will push for "a radical report" focusing on the Millennium Development Goal (MDG) that calls for increased assistance to developing countries, the head of the UN Human Settlements Programme (UN-HABITAT) said today.

Saturday, 5 February, 2005, bbc African treaty to protect forest
Leaders of seven African nations have signed a joint treaty to protect their continent's massive rainforest - second only to that found in the Amazon basin.
They were joined by international officials as well as French President Jacques Chirac in the Congolese capital,



Global health Foundation Jan 27th 2005

Friday Nov 26, 2004 Canada's foreign affairs minister, Pierre Pettigrew, has saluted the Dar-es-Salaam Declaration, in which 11 African heads of state last Saturday last Saturday committed themselves to working for peace in the Great Lakes region. Mr. Pettigrew's own statement says that Canada remains committed to helping the people of the region recover socially and economically from the wars that have ravaged the region. Canada co-presides along with The Netherlands the Friends of the Great Lakes grouping. The grouping created last year comprises 28 nations and 10 non-governmental organizations. Its mandate is to provide political, financial and technical support.

Jan 15th 2004 ec Making Africa smile
From The Economist print edition
Bad leadership has crippled Africa. But there are, at last, signs of recovery
“BLASPHEMOUS” was how the information minister described an article in the Zimbabwe Independent complaining about President Robert Mugabe's habit of commandeering commercial passenger jets for his own use. It was a revealing choice of adjective. Mr Mugabe's henchmen do not really think their leader divine, but they often suggest that he is infallibly righteous, and that those who defy him should be smitten. The Independent's blaspheming scribes were perhaps lucky to be released on bail this week.

2003

Africa2003.asp