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Full Coverage: Africa

August 2005

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2004
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31.08.2005 Britain's Department for International Development is accused of spending UK aid money on a public relations campaign to pursue a privatisation agenda in Sierra Leone.
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From: World Development Movement
Related topics/regions: [Sierra Leone] [United Kingdom] [Aid]
LearningChannel.org: opinion illustration (human rights)
31.08.2005 International legal rights groups have called on Angola to reform its press and defamation laws and comply with a recent UN Human Rights Committee ruling that found the government violated an international human rights treaty when it jailed a journalist for criticising the president.
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Related topics/regions: [Central Africa] [Angola]
Image: LearningChannel.org: opinion illustration (human rights)
31.08.2005 Nigerian techies are developing the Solo, a computer that can withstand the dust, heat, and unreliable power supply common in their part of the world, and hoping the tropicalised PCs can connect greatly underserved Nigerians in rural areas with the rest of the country and the world.
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From: Association for Progressive Communications
Related topics/regions: [Nigeria] [Development] [Capacity building] [ICT] [Internet]
30.08.2005 Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi has described as "garbage" a European Union election report that raised doubts over the fairness of the country's recent general election.
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From: United Nations' Integrated Regional Information Network
Related topics/regions: [Ethiopia] [Europe] [Democracy]
30.08.2005 A senior United Nations official has accused US President George Bush of "doing damage to Africa" by cutting funding for condoms, a move which may jeopardise the successful fight against HIV and Aids in Uganda.
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From: Guardian Unlimited
Related topics/regions: [United States] [Uganda] [Aid] [AIDS]
30.08.2005 The Botswana government's attorney has dismissed foreign financial support for the Bushmen - with whom the administration is locked in a land dispute - as "Europeans telling us what to do and what not to do...but we really don't care, and we resent their involvement in our affairs."
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From: Survival International
Related topics/regions: [Botswana] [Indigenous rights]
30.08.2005 Five years ago the idea of digital television in Africa would have seemed absurd. Now two countries have announced their intention to offer digital television. Senegal seems to have been first into the game, launching a pilot at the end of last year with 200 trial subscribers.
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Related topics/regions: [Mauritius] [Senegal] [ICT]
30.08.2005 The crisis-weary African continent, which has two of the world's longest rivers -- the 6,400-kilometre Nile River and the 4,370-kilometre Congo River -- is suffering from a virtual economic paradox: a shortage of water amidst potentially plentiful supplies.
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From: Inter Press Service (IPS)
Related topics/regions: [Water/sanitation]
30.08.2005 The biggest thetha SANGONeT information communication technology (ICT) discussion forum with Civil Society Organisations of South Africa have started in Cape Town with an opportunity for the general public to learn about the World Summit on Information Society (WSIS).
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Related topics/regions: [Southern Africa] [South Africa] [Information & media] [ICT] [Civil society]
Boy helps sort maize in Malawi
30.08.2005 The UK government was on Sunday blasted by development agencies for blowing £700,000 of a £3m relief project meant for Malawi—a country plagued by drought, HIV/AIDS, and a disastrous economy—on hotel bills and meals for U.S. consultants.
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From: Guardian Unlimited
Related topics/regions: [Malawi] [United Kingdom] [United States] [Development] [Aid] [Poverty]
Image: Boy helps sort maize in Malawi © The UNESCO Courier
29.08.2005 WASHINGTON, D.C., Aug 29 (OneWorld) - The Ugandan government said Monday it had condoms aplenty even as a top United Nations envoy and U.S.-based activists charged that a U.S. emphasis on promoting abstinence was jeopardizing the East African country's previously successful efforts to fight HIV/AIDS.
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From: OneWorld US
Related topics/regions: [United States] [Uganda] [Aid] [AIDS] [Gender] [Geopolitics] [Governance] [MDGs]
29.08.2005 A study conducted by the South African Institute for Distance Education (SAIDE) with support from the Royal Netherlands Embassy, demonstrates that that one of the reasons why information and communication technology (ICT) projects in schools do not succeed is that principals are often not properly informed about what ICTs can or cannot do.
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Related topics/regions: [Southern Africa] [Education] [ICT]
29.08.2005 The Seychelles President, Mr James Alix Michel, made an announcement at a recent public consultative meeting for an overall development.

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Related topics/regions: [Seychelles] [Education] [ICT]
29.08.2005 The first phase of Electronic Schools' (e-Schools) program of New Partnership for African Development (NEPAD) initiated in sixteen African countries.

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Related topics/regions: [Education] [ICT]
29.08.2005 Uganda's anti-condom campaign coupled with the U.S. government shifting global AIDS funding from prevention to abstinence-only programs, are causing acute shortages of condoms in the country, and endangering Uganda's previously successful prevention efforts, says the Center for Health and Gender Equity.
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From: Center for Health and Gender Equity
Related topics/regions: [Uganda] [United States] [Aid] [AIDS] [Geopolitics] [Governance]
Beatrice, 17, had been held captive by the LRA for three years. She escaped and was reunited with her mother at World Vision's Children of War Rehabilitation Center in northern Uganda.
29.08.2005 Six years ago in Northern Uganda, Sarah (not her real name), was abducted by the Lord’s Resistance Army, a rebel group that forcibly uses children as soldiers, and in the case of girls, sex slaves. Now over 70 children, including Sarah and her five year old daughter, have been reunited with their families through World Vision’s rehabilitation program.
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From: World Vision United States
Related topics/regions: [Uganda] [Children] [Labour] [Human rights] [War and peace]
Image: Beatrice, 17, had been held captive by the LRA for three years. She escaped and was reunited with her mother at World Vision's Children of War Rehabilitation Center in northern Uganda. © World Vision United States
26.08.2005 The 2005 annual PICTA meeting will take place in Addis Ababa, Ethopia from 7 - 8 September at the UNECA headquarters.
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Related topics/regions: [Ethiopia]
Razor's Edge - The Controversy of Female Genital Mutilation
26.08.2005
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Related topics/regions: [Sierra Leone] [Health] [Gender] [Religion] [Culture]
Image: Razor's Edge - The Controversy of Female Genital Mutilation
26.08.2005 Africa has become the world’s fastest-growing cellphone market. From 1999 through 2004, the number of mobile subscribers in Africa jumped to 76.8 million, from 7.5 million, an average annual increase of 58 per cent.
more...
Related topics/regions: [ICT]
26.08.2005 Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni has called for an investigation after the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria suspended all its grants to Uganda due to "evidence of serious mismanagement" of funds.
more...
From: United Nations' Integrated Regional Information Network
Related topics/regions: [Uganda] [Aid] [AIDS]
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