Ghana Gyan, Mensah and Muntari Excited by Black Stars-England Friendly

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Mensah, Gyan and Muntari of Ghana Black Stars

Ghana midfielder Sulley Muntari says he and team-mates John Mensah and Asamoah Gyan are excited by the friendly against England at Wembley on 29 March.

The Sunderland trio are in the Black Stars squad for the encounter, which will be played before a sell-out crowd including 20,000 Ghana supporters.

“We want to play, it’s at Wembley, against one of the best nations in the world,” Muntari told BBC Newcastle.

“No one wants to miss big games and important games like this one.”

Muntari added: “We’ve been looking forward to this game for a long time, and even the people in Ghana are looking forward to us playing England, we’re just looking forward to the day.

“We want to win, but we want to play good football and entertain the fans.

“England always have a strong team, they always play good football, we don’t care who plays and we just want to make our country proud.”

Sunderland handed Muntari a return to the Premier League after a a two-and-a-half year absence when they agreed a loan deal with European champions Inter Milan in January.

The 26-year-old won the FA Cup with Portsmouth prior to his £12.7m move to the Italian giants, and was a Scudetto and Champions League winner at the Giuseppe Meazza prior to his move to the Stadium of Light.

“It was easy to settle in, because there are fantastic people here, the guys are great always,” Muntari added.

“The manager has been good to me, the Premier League is not new to me, I love English football and I am pleased to be here.”

African Movie Academy Awards (AMAA) Nominations 2011

The African Movie Academy Awards (AMAA) hosted the 2011 AMAA Awards Nominations this year  Night in Nairobi, Kenya.

Below are a few of the starts present?

Do you feel the elegance?

Joke Silva: If you think you're looking at a 20-something, go get something to drink. Amazing. The long bat-sleeved chiffon dress with a waist cinching corset belt is the perfect thing for Mama Joke
Rita Dominic looked fantastic in a floor-length red dress. And check the long locks swept to the side, oh, gurl.

 

Jackie Appiah: What a perfect representation of why I love African women? Check the curls and the shoulder
Mike Ezuruonye (left) and Majid Michel (right). Mike got it right in his black suit paired with a striped shirt and Majid is the real thing in the black suit paired with a white shirt

Africa: Experts Seek WHO Nod for Postpartum Haemorrhage Drug

UN Integrated Regional Information Networks (IRIN) -March 17, 2011

Dakar (Senegal) — A drug many health experts say can drastically cut postpartum haemorrhage – the leading cause of maternal deaths in the developing world – will be in the spotlight this month during the World Health Organization’s (WHO) biennial review of its model list of essential medicines.

Health groups are urging WHO to include misoprostol for the prevention and management of postpartum haemorrhage (PPH), or excessive bleeding following childbirth. WHO in 2009 denied misoprostol for prevention of PPH but proponents hope new evidence presented for the 21-25 March WHO meeting in the Ghanaian capital Accra will bring a change.

An advantage of misoprostol for treating PPH in developing countries is that it is stable at room temperature and can be administered in tablet form, experts say. The primary drugs for PPH – oxytocin and ergometrine – need refrigeration and are injected. While oxytocin is cheaper, misoprostol is more cost-effective in many settings because of these other features, say health experts in their application to WHO.

Such drugs – called oxytocics – cause the uterus to contract, speed up delivery of the placenta and lessen blood loss.

“It is simply pragmatic – I am 100 percent in support of including misoprostol among our means for preventing or treating PPH until we get a better option,” Lawal Oyeneyin, chief medical director at Mother and Child Hospital, Akure, Ondo State, Nigeria, told IRIN. He is among several who submitted letters of support.

PPH causes about a quarter of maternal deaths worldwide, according to WHO; Oyeneyin said it is “without a doubt” the most common cause of maternal death in Ondo State. “Why exclude misoprostol when the benefits outweigh the risks?”

Médecins Sans Frontières also wrote in support of the drug. “Oral misoprostol is a useful alternative for injectable oxytocics when they are not available or ineffective,” said MSF international medical coordinator Myriam Henkens.

The essential medicines list (EML) is a guide for national and institutional essential medicines, according to WHO. While governments are not bound to follow it, the model list heavily influences national health ministries, experts say.

In rejecting the drug last time, WHO said some adverse effects were not well understood; the agency says further study is needed into safety and efficacy. It recommends the use of misoprostol in settings where it is not possible to use oxytocin or another injectable uterotonic, but it was not put on the list because trials had not proven efficacy; shivering and fever can occur, and “there is an unresolved concern of a possible increase in the risk of maternal mortality”.

Five years ago Nigeria became the first country to include misoprostol for PPH among its essential medicines. Some governments find it difficult to do so because it is not on WHO’s list, Oyeneyin said.

Listing misoprostol for PPH prevention “will break down this barrier”, proponents say in letters to WHO.

Anthony Smith, emeritus professor of clinical pharmacology at Calvary Mater Hospital in New South Wales, has done several consultancies with WHO, particularly in the Pacific Islands.

“While oxytocin and ergometrine appear to be modestly superior to misoprostol in clinical trials, misoprostol is efficacious in its own right and is stable under hot conditions. Until such time as dependable storage exists for oxytocin and ergometrine, misoprostol will provide acceptable treatment for the prevention and treatment of PPH in these remote, hot locations,” he said.

If we were ever to remove this drug from communities there would be riots

Misoprostol is a generic product and has several manufacturers. It was developed in the 1980s and approved in the US for prevention of gastric ulcers but has been used since in obstetrics and gynaecology. It is used in combination with mifepristone to terminate a pregnancy. Some health workers warn about misuse.

Getting misoprostol on the EML would be a step forward but just one step, according to proponents. They say the drug should be in the hands of community health workers and pregnant women, not uniquely at medical facilities. While having more women give birth in properly equipped clinics with skilled medical staff is the ideal for mother and infant health, experts say, this remains far from the reality for most women in rural sub-Saharan Africa and Asia.

“Where I work [in Kaduna and Zaria states] more than 90 percent of births take place at home; in Nigeria about two-thirds,” said Clara Ejembi, from the department of community medicine at Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria State. In some cases home delivery is preferred – either because of custom or the quality of health facilities.

Nigeria is now revising guidelines on misoprostol to add advice on community use. Ghana, Senegal and Tanzania are also studying community access to misoprostol. The US Agency for International Development (USAID), which calls misoprostol “a highly promising technology that may be used by trained health workers working outside facilities and even in remote areas”, is testing and introducing misoprostol in Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Nepal and Senegal.

However, WHO has expressed concern about advanced community distribution of misoprostol. Matthews Mathai of WHO’s Making Pregnancy Safer programme told IRIN: “There is evidence that incorrect dosing can lead to excessive and violent contractions of the uterus leading to foetal distress, foetal death and uterine rupture.”

Nigerian doctor Oyeneyin said the incorrect usage concern should not rule out access. “Opponents are worried about the safety profile of misoprostol. But the safety issue can be addressed through training.

“When you have a problem you should use all ammunition available to tackle it – in this case, that’s oxytocin, ergometrine and misoprostol,” he said. “It’s ironic that the first two are on the model list of essential medicines while misoprostol is not. Of the three, misoprostol is most likely to be applicable in communities.”

Godfrey Mbaruku, deputy director of Ifakara Health Institute in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, said misoprostol must not be seen as a panacea, as PPH is not the only complication that can arise. “The idea is not to encourage women to deliver at home,” he told IRIN. “But this allows them to have the drug on hand in case of PPH during a home delivery.”

In northern Nigeria where home births prevail, research has shown that distributing misoprostol in the communities is a viable approach, Ejembi said. “Among community leaders acceptance is very high; people are ready to use this and advocate it. WHO people should come and let me take them around to the communities so they can hear the people’s voices.”

She said women in the communities where she works recognize the value of misoprostol. “If we were ever to remove this drug from communities there would be riots.”

Before Egypt and Libya, There was Ivory Coast

Libya (left), Ivory Coast (right)

Foreign Policy Hypocrisy of Our Generation

Over the past two months, the world has keenly being following the political events in Egypt and Libya. Television screen at homes, schools, workplaces and major airport had one item on the waiting list: when the Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak would make his next statement and what would be the response of the US President Barack Obama. Facebook and Twitter were and are still floating in traffic like hell. Journalists who were hitherto unknown are now household names because of their coverage of the North African revolution. Some journalists were happily beaten up just to cover the news and they still enjoy it. Some risked their very lives just get their stories out.

The situation in Egypt and Libya ‘needed’ to be covered; the two countries play strategic roles in the US and European countries’ foreign policies. Both countries hold sweet big oil in their bosoms and the West likes that milk. Egypt does not directly make a momentous contribution to the global oil supply but it hosts the Suez Canal which is a major boulevard for oil transport to the US and other western countries. It’s also an excellent vacationer destination for the most westerners who periodically need to take a break. Libya, on the other hand, is a big player in the global oil market. The country is a swollen with pride for being a member of the OPEC and is the world’s 17th largest oil producer, the third-largest producer in Africa and holds the continent’s largest crude oil treasury. About 85% of Libya’s oil is exported to Europe. The penalty of the crisis in the two countries need not be recounted. In the US, regular fuel is now nearly $4 per gallon. Doesn’t this explain why twitter, Facebook, CNN, MSNBC and BBC are on Libya 24/7?

Another country, on the same continent, which is on the threshold of civil war and perhaps genocide, is the Ivory Coast. In fact the situation in the Ivory Coast started several months before there was a single protest in Tunisia, Egypt and Libya. How much on Ivory Coast can we find on Facebook feeds? How much is atwitter? When was the last time you heard somebody call the US too weak for not calling on Laurent Gbagbo to hand over to the constitutionally elected president? In fact, how many even know who that man is?

Two weeks ago, six women were killed in the Ivory Coast by forces supporting the incumbent tyrant Laurent Gbagbo, while on a peaceful demonstration. How much coverage did the western media bestow to that story? Actually, have you heard it? How many American reporters have questioned the President of the US or his Press Secretary where US stands on the Ivory Coast crisis?

Well, the truth is unlike Egypt and Libya, the Ivory Coast has not yet had a dream of producing oil for their local consumption, how much less to export to Europe or North America. The nation has no strategic importance to either the US or UK. Genocide in Ivory Coast will not result in one cent increase in fuel price. Will it? Ivory Coast is by far the world’s leading producer of cocoa beans, and that where your chocolate comes from. The Ivory Coast crisis may lead to some increase in the price of chocolate, but don’t we celebrate Valentine Day only once a year?

Why does the Ivory Coast deserve less than Egypt and Libya. The silence demonstrated by the World’s powers towards the Ivory Crisis is deafening, and even embarrassing.

Thanks for reading?

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They Asked Me if I Preferred to Die or be Raped. I told them, ‘Rape Me Then’

Women at the Mugunga III camp for the forcibly displaced in North Kivu province, Democratic Republic of the Congo.

MUGUNGA III CAMP, Democratic Republic of the Congo, March 16 (UNHCR) – Marie* was first raped three years ago during a raid on her village that left her husband and 10 children dead – she was about 70 years old at the time.

In January, the Congolese grandmother was raped again by armed men when she left the shelter of Mugunga III – a hilltop camp for some 2,000 of the most vulnerable displaced people in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo – to search for a teenage girl who had gone missing while foraging for firewood in the forest.

“I told them I was a poor old woman and that I was not interested in politics. They then asked me if I preferred to die or be raped. I told them, ‘Rape me then,'” Marie, struggling with her emotions, recalled of the second incident.

“There were six of them. When one finished, another took his place. They hit me and broke my knee. Other women were also there in the forest and, after being raped, the men pushed pieces of wood inside them and the women died,” she told UNHCR. “I was lucky, they did not kill me.”

Many other women in the DRC’s volatile North Kivu province have suffered similar abuse and family loss and they feel that the outside world is doing too little to help them or to tackle the widespread problem of sexual and gender-based violence in this neglected corner of Africa. Last year, some 15,000 cases of sexual violence were reported in the DRC, mainly in eastern provinces.

“There are many visitors, many delegations, who come to listen to survivors of sexual violence, but we never see results from these visits,” said Jeanne, another forcibly displaced woman at Mugunga III.

She was among a group of 20 women at the camp, many of whom have lost everything, who asked UNHCR visitors in late February to tell the world their stories and to solicit help. “We are touched to see that people think about us,” said another victim, Thérèse, “but we also need help to get over our problems and sustain our families despite all our internal suffering since being raped.”

Women and girls in the Mugunga camps are particularly vulnerable if they have to go out and collect firewood, mostly in the Virunga National Park. They risk sexual assault, but things would be far worse for their menfolk.

“We are scared to go to the forest, but we have no choice,” said Sabine. “We have tried sending our husbands, but if they go they get killed, so we prefer going by ourselves. In the best case, we only get beaten, but often we are raped.”

Marie was not looking for firewood when she was attacked, but she was searching for a 15-year-old girl who had been sent to bring back the precious resource, which is used for cooking or to sell for a small sum.

The 74-year-old was a rich woman before she was forced to flee her home in North Kivu’s Nyabondo district in 2008. “I had more than 100 cows and 40 pigs and goats. I had a house on a hill, a guest house with six bedrooms and a sewing machine,” she recounted. “Everything was stolen.”

Her husband was forced to watch as she was raped, before he was killed. Marie was also shot in the legs and still has to use a crutch to get around. In Mugunga III, she lives in a small hut with six of her grandchildren and the three children of a neighbour who died, including the girl who went missing in Virunga.

“I had heard that girls were kept as sex slaves in Virunga Park,” Marie said, explaining why she went to look in vain for the girl. She said she has felt sick ever since the rape ordeal. “It hurts when I move. It hurts when I walk. It hurts when I breathe . . . I have to go to hospital, but I cannot afford it.”

Aside from such health problems, victims of sexual and gender-based violence also face ostracism from their community, lack of sympathy, mental trauma and problems earning a living and supporting their family.

The women in Mugunga III who approached UNHCR for help, also want support for socio-economic and income-generation projects to help female victims of sexual violence. They want their husbands and sons to be sensitized to the problem. “I talk to my son when rapists are sent to jail. I tell him that if this happens to him one day, I would never visit him in prison,” said Thérèse.

Meanwhile, UNHCR has swiftly responded to one of the requests from Mugunga III by launching a project to provide about 500 women with fuel efficient stoves so that they no longer have to forage in the forest for firewood. They will also be taught to make fuel briquettes from sawdust and paper. The project will benefit all households in the camp.

* Name changed for protection reasons

By Celine Schmitt in Mugunga III Camp, Democratic Republic of the Congo

UNHCR, The UN Refugee Agency

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Bulgarian Football Star Stoitchkov in Burkina Faso To Beat Hunger

16 March 2011, Rome – Bulgarian football star Hristo Stoitchkov has spoken out in support of the EU and FAO’s efforts to rebuild the livelihoods of people affected by the 2010 food crisis in the Sahel during a two-day visit to Burkina Faso.With a delegation of the Association of European Professional Football Leagues (EPFL), led by its Chairman Sir David Richards, the former European Footballer of the Year Stoitchkov visited several EU-funded FAO projects during two days in Burkina Faso that have helped thousands of families, hit by drought and torrential rains, return to farming.

Having found out first hand about the Sahel-crisis of 2010, which particularly affected rural populations dependent on agriculture for subsistence, Stoitchkov said: “It is vital to enable people hit by disaster to feed themselves again.”

Comparing his time with FC Barcelona’s ‘Dream Team’ in the 1990s, one of the most successful periods of the Spanish football club, to his present activities with EPFL supporting FAO and the EU in the fight against hunger, he added: “A good team wins. Together we can beat hunger.”

Hunger unacceptable

“European football is taking on the responsibility that goes with its ever more prominent role in society,” said Sir David Richards, who is also Chairman of the English Premier League. “We want to contribute to alleviating the plight of nearly one billion people who go to bed hungry every day.”

Representing the 30 largest European professional football leagues and almost 950 clubs, EPFL teamed up with FAO in 2008 launching a “Professional Football Against Hunger” campaign. Recently, they welcomed the world’s biggest humanitarian donor, the European Union – Humanitarian Aid (EU), as a new partner to raise awareness about the unacceptable level of hunger among European citizens.

EU Commissioner for International Cooperation, Humanitarian Aid and Crisis Response, Kristalina Georgieva, urged “We need to do more and we must act quickly if we want to avoid adults and children dying from starvation.” Commissioner Georgieva further added: “In times of economic crisis and a growing number of catastrophes, good coordination among different humanitarian actors is not only desirable; it is indispensible. It is indeed the best -and the cheapest- way to respect the commitment the world leaders have taken to end hunger.”

Help people feed themselves

When disaster strikes, the EU works with FAO to help rural communities return to farming so that they can feed themselves again. Currently, FAO is operating 27 emergency projects in Africa, Asia, Europe, the Middle-East and Latin-America with EU-funding, for a total budget of €37 million.

In Burkina Faso, FAO received around € 1.8 million from the EU that it used to provide livestock and animal feed, as well as support to urban gardening and training, reaching some 80,000 people.

“To ensure the continued support to people in need, it is crucial to communicate on what is being done to help them,” said Annika Söder, FAO’s Assistant-Director General for Communication and External Relations. “Football enables us to inform a wide European audience on the humanitarian programmes involved.”

Meanwhile, in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso’s capital, Hristo Stoitchkov enjoyed a game of football with school children. “Football gives hope,” he said. “As a kid, I also lived with hunger. As long as you play, you don’t think about it.”

FAO Media Center

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Mokoena Omission Could Signal End of Bafana Bafana Career

Aaron Mokoena

JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) – South Africa have dropped captain Aaron Mokoena for next week’s African Nations Cup qualifier against holders Egypt, signalling the potential end of his long international career.

The centre back, who won the first of his 107 caps 12 years ago, was omitted Tuesday when coach Pitso Mosimane named his squad for the match in Johannesburg on March 26.

Mosimane refused to discuss Mokoena’s omission at a news conference, telling reporters only “it is time to move forward.”

Mokoena had been called up last month for a friendly win over Kenya but was left on the bench for the match.

At the time, Mosimane said he wanted to use the game to try out a new defensive combination and accused reporters of making too much out of Mokoena being left among the unused substitutes.

The 30-year-old missed a November friendly against the United States when Mosimane said he was giving Mokoena a break.

Steven Pienaar has been named as captain in Mokoena’s place for the key qualifier where South Africa are seeking to extend their lead over Egypt at the head of the group.

Writing by Mark Gleeson in Cape Town

Fresh Influx of Tunisian Boat people Reaches Italy in Past 24 Hours, UN reports

15 March 2011 – Twenty-two boats carrying more than 1,600 persons, nearly all young Tunisian males, have landed on the small Italian island of Lampedusa in the past 24 hours, bringing the number of Tunisians reaching Italy since mid-January to just over 10,000, the United Nations refugee agency reported today.

“The outflow from Tunisia is unrelated to the ongoing crisis in Libya,” UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) spokesperson Melissa Fleming told a news briefing in Geneva, referring to the fighting under way between forces loyal to Libyan leader Colonel Muammar Al-Qadhafi and opponents seeking his ouster.

“From our interactions with Tunisians arriving in Italy over past weeks, we believe that most are seeking employment and better economic opportunities, rather than international protection.”

Departures are taking place from various locations along the Tunisian coastline and UNHCR staff on Lampedusa and are trying to help the Italian authorities deal with the situation.

UN staff and partners in Tunisia, the scene of a popular uprising that drove out long-time president Zine El Abidine Ben Ali in January, report that some villages appear largely empty of their young male population, with only women, children and elderly people remaining.

“This type of outflow is not atypical of countries in transition, and we are well aware of the many demands on the Tunisian authorities at present,” Ms. Fleming said.

“Solutions to this type of flow need to be found in dialogue between the concerned governments, including arrangements for the orderly and dignified return of persons who are found not to be in need of international protection, and the establishment of opportunities for labour migration which can meet the needs of countries on both sides of the Mediterranean.”