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Mauritania and Egypt Attend Hunger Forum
General
Tuesday, 04 December 2007
Alliance to End Hunger Leads U.S. Delegation to First Near East Forum Against Hunger

Former Congresswoman Eva Clayton, Honorary Chair of The Alliance to End Hunger and Max Finberg, Director of the Alliance, will lead a delegation of interfaith anti-hunger leaders from the United States to attend the Near East Regional Forum on Hunger from December 4-5 in Amman, Jordan. The forum is organized by the Jordanian National Alliance for Combating Hunger and Enhancing Food Security (JAAH), under the auspices of Her Royal Highness Princess Basma bent Talal.

"This gathering is a powerful demonstration of the universal desire to ensure that no one suffers from hunger," said Finberg. "I commend our Jordanian hosts for bringing us all together around the same table to focus on this issue. It is only by working together, across different faiths, countries and sectors, that we will be able to overcome hunger in this region and around the world."

National Alliances focus a nation's efforts to alleviate hunger by coordinating across private, government, charitable and religious sectors. Currently, Alliances exist in 23 countries.

The Near East regional forum regional will: 

·         Facilitate dialogue between governments and representatives of civil society and the private sector in the Near East region;

·         Provide the opportunity for representatives of current National Alliances to exchange experiences and advice;

·         Commit participants to forming additional National Alliances in the Near East region.

Representatives of Syria, Egypt, Iraq, Morocco, Lebanon, Palestine and Mauritania will participate in the forum. Additional participants from the UN Food and Agricultural Organization, World Food Program, the International Alliance Against Hunger and other National Alliances will share their experiences.

Jordan was the first country in the Near East to create and develop a National Alliance. Jordan continues to be a concerned and active leader in building the will to end hunger in the Middle East. The U.S. Alliance to End Hunger has engaged in a partnership with the JAAH and plans to sign a formal working agreement at the forum. "It is appropriate to gather in the Fertile Crescent, to remind us that we have the means to feed the world, but lack the political will to do so," said Finberg.

 
Contact: Emily Nohner (202-464-8127). The Alliance to End Hunger engages diverse institutions in generating the public will and political support to end hunger at home and abroad. The Alliance builds innovative partnerships among our members; political commitment to urge our leaders to act; and global connections with groups working to end hunger worldwide. www.alliancetoendhunger.org

 
Expulsion of Missionaries in Eritrea
General
Tuesday, 27 November 2007
Caught between violence in Ethiopia and Somalia and simmering turmoil in Sudan, Eritrea makes few headlines in the Horn of Africa. But the repressive government in Eritrea ought to sound international alarms - indeed it has for 14 Comboni Missionaries who were recently expelled from the country due to their inability to renew residency permits.

According to Catholic News, the missionaries "told Vatican Radio that they were given two official explanations for being expelled: their refusal to serve in the military and the fact that foreign employees of nongovernmental organizations can stay in the country a maximum of two years. The Combonis said the real reason was the government's desire to control the Catholic Church like it controls every other sphere of life in Eritrea."

Click here to read the full story on CatholicNews.com.
 
EU-Africa Summit: Where Are Human Rights?
General
Monday, 12 November 2007
Prime minister Gordon Brown of England refused to attend the Euro-African summit in Lisbon last weekend because President Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe would be in attendance. Recognizing the grave human rights abuses committed by Mugabe's regime, Mr. Brown wanted nothing to do with a summit that invited such leaders to the party. Omar al-Bashir, President of Sudan and leader of the genocide in Darfur, was also present. At the summit itself, a Sudanese Bishop announced the need for human rights and human dignity before economic development - a concept that encourages Africa's trading partners to think twice about the human face behind financial aid and trade.

In fact, a central theme of the summit was "democracy and human rights," alongside "peace and security," "infrastructure and development," "trade," "migration and energy," and "climate change." But perhaps one of the biggest reasons for convening the meeting was not to discuss human rights in Africa, but to boost Europe's presence on the African trading scene. Over the past several years, Europe has been feeling that, for once, it is missing out on Africa. China's growing influence and position as primary trading partner have put Europe behind on acquisition of African resources.

Read more...
 
Hostilities Costing Africa's Sustainable Survival
General
Tuesday, 30 October 2007

Debt, diseases and war are three major issues affecting the continent of Africa. Development is what is needed and yet hostilities across theThe effects of war in northern Uganda. continent between 1990 and 2005 have cost Africa's economies approximately $284 billion, roughly equivalent to the amount of foreign aid given to the continent. This is all according to a report released Thursday, October 11, 2007, by the British group Oxfam International in collaboration with International Action Network on Small Arms and Saferworld.

The report, titled "Africa's Missing Billions," calculated the overall effects of conflict on Gross Domestic Product (GDP). It was published just as diplomats from around the world arrived at the United Nations to discuss an Arms Trade Treaty, which many believe will help to stabilize Africa’s wars and thus its economies.

Some experts are arguing that this $284 billion could have been directed toward fighting HIV/AIDS, malaria, and other diseases, as well as promoting education and creating stronger economies on the continent; yet, as the report indicates, it has been used to fuel wars.
Read more...
 
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