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Full Coverage: East Africa

June 2005

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2004
2005
2006
Rwanda’s Chief Prosecutor, Jean de Dieu Mucyo, Welcomed the Canadian Court Decision
30.06.2005 On grounds that he promoted hatred, genocide, and crimes against humanity, a Canadian court voted unanimously to expel Leon Mugesera, forcing him to stand trial in Rwanda. Jean de Dieu Mucyo, Rwanda's chief prosecutor, said the decision was a major step in efforts to deport others implicated in the genocide that killed nearly a million people.
more...
From: United Nations' Integrated Regional Information Network
Related topics/regions: [Canada] [Rwanda] [Human rights] [Justice and crime] [Law]
Image: Rwanda’s Chief Prosecutor, Jean de Dieu Mucyo, Welcomed the Canadian Court Decision © Amnesty International
29.06.2005 In most African societies, children are supposed to be seen not heard. On Friday, June 24, at Eroet Primary School grounds, Soroti district, Eastern Uganda, things were different. Children talked their hearts out as adults in various ranks sat and listened, often uncomfortably.
more...
From: Millennium Campaign
Related topics/regions: [Africa] [Uganda] [Education] [MDGs]
29.06.2005 Police in Zambia have threatened to charge radio host and commentator Anthony Mukwita with sedition after a June 10 broadcast on privately owned Radio Phoenix in which he read an anonymous fax criticizing the government.
from Committee to Protect Journalists
Related topics/regions: [Zambia] [Southern Africa] [Africa] [Freedom of expression] [Media]
29.06.2005 The government is under mounting pressure to permit more than 100 Zimbabwean failed asylum seekers to stay in the UK.
more...
From: Refugee Council
Related topics/regions: [Zimbabwe] [United Kingdom] [Refugees] [Human rights]
29.06.2005 Refugees in Uganda's capital, Kampala, numbering between 10,000 to 15,000, find themselves trapped by government policy. If they remain in the capital they receive no assistance or protection from the government. If they move to rural resettlement camps they will receive aid, but have less of a chance to find work and fend for themselves.
more...
From: Advocacy Project
Related topics/regions: [Uganda] [Refugees]
Action Against Hunger Completes a Nutritional Survey in the DRC
27.06.2005 On Friday, special representative Aldo Ajello said the EU may support military action against Rwandan Hutu rebels in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo if they refuse to disarm and return home. Despite a declaration in March, where the rebels agreed to end the war against Rwanda, they have shown no commitment to return freely.
more...
From: United Nations' Integrated Regional Information Network
Related topics/regions: [Europe] [Congo (Democratic Republic of)] [Rwanda] [Race Politics] [Geopolitics] [Arms & military] [Conflict resolution]
Image: Action Against Hunger Completes a Nutritional Survey in the DRC © Action Against Hunger-USA
27.06.2005 Six months after the tsunami's waves swept the coasts of South East Asia and East Africa, Lutheran World Relief provides a glimpse of how those who survived the deadly seaquake are piecing their lives back together, with the help of generous donations from around the world.
more...
From: Lutheran World Relief
Related topics/regions: [South East Asia] [Aid] [Emergency relief]
27.06.2005 Ninety-seven Zimbabwean asylum seekers are refusing food and water in protest over the UK government’s plans to send them home despite the potential dangers. The Church of England has also demanded a stop to ongoing deportations.
more...
From: Institute of Race Relations
Related topics/regions: [Zimbabwe] [Refugees] [Human rights]
24.06.2005 As an unprecedented coalition of civil society organisations appeals to the UN to investigate recent events in Zimbabwe, the outspoken Archbishop of Bulawayo has won an international humanitarian award. As well as criticising Robert Mugabe, Archbishop Pius Ncube has called on the British government to be more tolerant of asylum-seekers from Zimbabwe.
more...
From: Progressio
Related topics/regions: [Zimbabwe] [United Kingdom] [Refugees] [Human rights]
Wangari Maathai, Photo by Martin Rowe
24.06.2005 Wangari Maathai, founder of the famous Greenbelt Movement and African Nobel Laureate, lay her wisdom upon the U.S. NGO community recently. "Unless we manage resources more equitably, we won’t have peace. To do that there has to be democratic space," she told a Washington, D.C. gathering.
more...
From: OneWorld US
Related topics/regions: [Africa] [Kenya] [Development] [Poverty] [Environment] [Conservation] [Environmental activism] [Gender] [Activism] [Civil society] [Democracy] [Governance] [Conflict] [Peace]
Image: Wangari Maathai, Photo by Martin Rowe © Martin Rowe / Women Thrive Worldwide
Wangari Maathai, Photo by Martin Rowe
24.06.2005 WASHINGTON, D.C., Jun 24 (OneWorld) - Wangari Muta Maathai, 2004's Nobel Peace Prize winner and the first African woman bestowed the prestigious award, told representatives from non-governmental organizations here recently that a stronger commitment to environmental conservation can help build peace and greater prosperity in Africa.
more...
From: OneWorld US
Related topics/regions: [Africa] [Kenya] [Development] [Land] [Poverty] [Environment] [Conservation] [Environmental activism] [Gender] [Activism] [Civil society] [Democracy] [Conflict] [Peace]
Image: Wangari Maathai, Photo by Martin Rowe © Martin Rowe / Women Thrive Worldwide
24.06.2005 The conference will bring together people with extensive practical experience in Participatory GIS (PGIS) and community mapping in Developing Countries and First Nations.
more...
Related topics/regions: [Kenya] [ICT]
22.06.2005 Zimbabwe police have extended a demolition campaign targeting the homes and livelihoods of the urban poor to the vegetable gardens they rely on for food, saying the crops planted on vacant lots are damaging the environment.
more...
From: Daily Mail & Guardian
Related topics/regions: [Zimbabwe] [Southern Africa] [Africa] [Shelter & housing]
22.06.2005 Blindness in Ethiopia results from a wide range of natural and man-made factors, and is also linked to underdevelopment and armed conflict.
more...
Related topics/regions: [Africa] [Southern Africa] [Ethiopia] [Capacity building] [Health] [ICT]
17.06.2005 On 14 June 2005, Lusaka police questioned Anthony Mukwita, a Radio Phoenix "Let the People Talk" programme host, over a fax anonymously sent, which he had read on air during the 10 June edition of the programme. The fax accused the government of condoning corruption and warned that the country might slip into anarchy as a result.
more...
From: Media Institute of Southern Africa
Related topics/regions: [Africa] [Southern Africa] [Zambia] [Freedom of expression] [Media]
16.06.2005 Two community multimedia centres in Uganda supported by UNESCO won the best dramatic program and the best participatory programming on the UNICEF Children's Broadcasting Day Awards which had attracted entries from a number of both commercial and community radios.
more...
From: UNESCO - Communication, Information and Informatics Sector
Related topics/regions: [Uganda] [ICT] [Civil society]
16.06.2005 The argument that "there is a tsunami every day in Africa" has influenced The Hunter Foundation to redirect £1 million earmarked for tsunami relief to a project to help women and children in a camp for displaced persons in northern Uganda.
more...
From: UNICEF UK
Related topics/regions: [Uganda] [Children] [Aid]
Map of Somalia
13.06.2005 Somalia's Transitional Federal Government, which has been based in Nairobi, Kenya since it was formed eight months ago, finally began relocating to Mogadishu this week. Despite the failure of previous promises to return to its own capital, analysts are optimistic that this relocation will be carried out, citing the interim president's lead as a positive sign.
more...
From: United Nations' Integrated Regional Information Network
Related topics/regions: [Somalia] [Politics] [Peace] [Security]
Image: Map of Somalia © Médecins sans frontières
12.06.2005 Ethiopia is one of the 18 countries that will qualify for debt cancellation under the proposed G8 agreement. But its recent election has been a shambles as apparent gains for the opposition party are being suppressed. Amnesty is concerned about the fate of students arrested during demonstrations.
more...
From: Amnesty International UK
Related topics/regions: [Ethiopia] [Human rights] [Democracy]
07.06.2005 Who can begin to understand what is happening in Zimbabwe? Seemingly unconcerned that millions of people are struggling to find enough to eat, President Mugabe embarks on a "clear out" programme which has removed livelihoods and homes from countless urban poor.
more...
From: Institute for War and Peace Reporting
Related topics/regions: [Zimbabwe] [Poverty] [Human rights]
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