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20/02/2010

Mandela's life achievement overshadowed.

By, Uwe Paschen.

This 20th anniversary of Nelson Mandela’s release from prison and the end of Apartheid that followed are overshadowed by South Africa’s ailments. This event of immense historical significance not only for South Africa but also for humanity over all is being celebrated almost unnoticed out side of Africa.

Nelson Mandela, who is today 91 years old, was freed in 1990 after spending 27 years in a South African prison and went on to lead South Africa through the final stretch of a peaceful transition from apartheid to democracy.

The celebration to commemorate this event was held on Thursday of this week.

Mandela's persona, charisma and statesmanship are the reasons that things went so well in this transition from Apartheid to a free and democratic South Africa has it is today.

However, this anniversary is overshadowed by South Africa’s overwhelming problems such as its Aids/HIV crisis, since it is the country with the largest number of HIV infections in the world. The country’s Department of Health estimates that 18.3% of adults (15–49 years) were living with HIV in 2006. More than half (55%) of all South Africans infected with HIV reside in the KwaZulu-Natal and Gauteng provinces. HIV/AIDS has a tremendous impact on all sectors of the South Africa's economy; this includes microeconomic andmacroeconomic perspectives.

Even though South Africa is rich with mineral resources. Being the world's largest producer and exporter of gold and platinum and also exporting a significant amount of coal and other raw materials, making it one of the world wealthiest countries in Natural resources, it still has to deal with an overwhelming poverty. Official figures suggest around 25% of South Africans are unemployed. 50% of all households are being classified as poor, 27% as extremely poor and 21% living with less then one dollar per day. A study from the Centre for Social and Development Studies, at the University of Natal, shows that 45% of the population is rural, however, the rural areas contain 72% of the total population who are poor. The poverty rate for rural areas is 71%. This Poverty is not confined to any one race group, but is highest among blacks with 61% being Black Africans and 38% of mixed race are poor, compared with 5% of Indians and 1% of Whites. Three children in five live in poor households and many of those children are exposed to public and domestic violence, malnutrition, and inconsistent parenting and schooling. Woman headed households with Children are most vulnerable to poverty in South Africa making up 60% of all poverty.

South Africa also counts the highest degree of inequality in the World today. Examining the income shares of deciles of households brings this extreme of inequality to light. Using this approach, the poorest 40% of households account for only 11% of total income, while the richest 10% of households, equivalent to only 7% of the population, accrue over 40% of total income.

Poverty and Aids are not all that plagues South Africa today. Corruption is another malaise the country has to deal with.

This being reflected in the corruption trial of Jackie Selebi, the country’s former chief of police and one-time Interpol boss, wish is to resume next month, or the head of Armscor, the state defence-procurement company, who was recently sacked for dishonesty. Further, there is the managing director of the freight-rail division of Trans- net, the state transport company, who is fighting his suspension for an alleged serious breach of procurement regulations and the list goes on.

There are also such political troubles as the AbaThembu clan in the Eastern Cape province, of witch former President Nelson Mandela is a part of, this clan intends to recuse itself as part of South Africa and form its own independent state by next year.

Finally, South Africa is confronted with a massive exodus, counting over 800,000 qualified South African such as Doctors, Engineer, Accountants, Nurses, Teachers and other professions that have left the country since 1995, causing now an alarming shortage of skilled labour in the country, the primary cause for this exodus among all groups seems to be fear of crimes.

Wich leads us to yet another growing problem South Africa has to deal with, In 2006 alone, official figures show that there were some 18,500 murders, over 20,000 attempted murders, 55,000 reported rapes and 120,000 violent robberies.

South Africa does certainly have more then its fair chair of troubles to deal with. Never the less the country would probably be in far worth shape had it not been for Mandela’s leadership and influence that still today caries a lot of weight and this not only in South Africa but more so through out the African continent and even the World.

In the spirit of Nelson Mandela, “Let us commit ourselves to building a better future for all South Africans, black and white," said Zuma, South Africa’s current President, in a public speech given to the occasion of Mandela’s release from prison 20 years ago.

With out Mandela the nation-building and inter-racial reconciliation that South Africa underwent would not have been possible, nor would it have been as peaceful a transition as it ended up being. Sadly, today’s troubles do cast an unjust shadow over Mandela’s titanic achievements for all South African.

South Africa is just emerging from a recession and is still struggling with over 50 million unemployed and the scars Apartheid left behind have not yet healed either, at least not completely.

http://www.economist.com/world/middleeast-africa/displaystory.cfm?story_id=15464513

http://www.news24.com/Content/SouthAfrica/Politics/1057/7dd9c815e43648b4b58290eccd2ac045/24-12-2009-09-03/Clan_wants_independent_state

http://southafrica-pig.blogspot.com/2009/02/flight-from-south-africa-middle-class.html

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/5412892.stm

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/02/11/nelson-mandela-anniversar_n_457963.html

The Curfew has been lifted, only a day after Niger's coup.

By, Uwe Paschen.

The coup is over, the curfew has been lifted, Niger has a new government, a military government that is. Its new President is Squadron chief Salou Djibo. This is not the first coup that Niger had to endure and maybe it wont be the last either.

However, unlike other coups, this one had minimal causalities, only 10 people are reported to have died so far. All but three Ministers have been released and went home.

It is said that the remaining prisoners would be freed in a couple of days. Col Goukoye Abdul Karimou, earlier told the press that President Mamadou Tandja was "safe and well".

His faith is uncertain though, the options are numerous, from exile, to a trial, no one can say at this point.

However, Niger is not in the habit of executing its Presidents as a rule, it is most likely that Tandja will either be send into exile or empoisoned has Hamani Diori was, whose administration was rife with corruption, and unable to implement the much-needed reforms to ease the widespread famine brought on by the Sahelian drought of the early 1970s.

On 15 April 1974, Lieutenant colonel Seyni Kountché led the military coup that ended Diori's rule and made Kountche President of Niger. Hamani Diori was imprisoned for six years. After his release in 1980, he remained under house arrest until 1987.

After his release from house arrest, he moved to Morocco, where he died on 23 April 1989 at the age of 72.

Tandja who has now been removed from power by force, ruled Niger has Diori did, suspending democratic rights and ruling by decree. He plunged Niger into famine are disarray; all the wile oppressing all those that opposed him.

Mohamed Ibn Chambas, the outgoing president of the regional bloc, saw Mr Tandja as a threat to West African democracy and submitted evidence against Niger that led the European Union to discontinue aid to Niamey.

Niger may very well see a rapid restoration of its democratic system, for one there seems to be no opposition to the coup with in the population at large. Further, all seems to be back to normal only a day after the coup wish suggest that no one seemed to be fearful nor in disaccord with the Military coup leaders.

On the other hand, many in Niger long for another Lieutenant Colonel Seyni Kountché who surprised many through out Africa and Europe for his dedication to the Country of Niger and its entire citizen. All though he was a Dictator, he was the one that in1984 established the commission that drafted a pre-constitutional document, termed a 'national charter'. This lead to the Constitution Wish Tandja suspended last summer and that in part gave cause for this latest coup that was executed yesterday.

Wile Niger is struggling to bring justice, equality and democracy to all Citizen, the stock market in New-York seems to worry solely about the Uranium mining operation, especially since Niger is today the World third largest producer and exporter of Uranium and by 2012 is projected to become the world largest Uranium producer.

There are those in Niger that wish there was no Uranium at all, especially the Tuareg seem to feel that way.

BBC News Video. : http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/8524610.stm

Read more about Niger.:

http://my.nowpublic.com/world/coup-niger-after-year-demonstrations-and-opposition

http://my.nowpublic.com/world/thousand-protesting-tandjas-hold-power-niger

http://my.nowpublic.com/world/niger-crisis-escalating-after-eu-suspends-all-aid-country

http://my.nowpublic.com/world/civil-war-unfolding-niger-update-3

http://my.nowpublic.com/world/un-hostage-released-west-africa

http://my.nowpublic.com/world/niger-government-may-be-involved-un-r-fowlers-disappearance

http://my.nowpublic.com/world/niger-war-what-beneath-desert

http://my.nowpublic.com/world/10-poorest-countries-planet

http://my.nowpublic.com/world/india-signs-new-pact-niger-over-uranium-mining

http://my.nowpublic.com/world/democracy-under-fire-within-niger-demonstration

http://my.nowpublic.com/world/world-bank-praising-niger-government

http://my.nowpublic.com/world/niger-state-revenue-26-and-poverty-32

http://my.nowpublic.com/world/elections-approaching-niger-press-being-jailed

http://my.nowpublic.com/world/chinas-cnpc-now-building-mega-refineries-niger-and-chad

http://my.nowpublic.com/world/niger-freedom-press-only-illusion

http://my.nowpublic.com/environment/desertification-part-ii-history-sahara-desert-attem

http://my.nowpublic.com/world/tuareg-hope-mali-despair-niger

http://my.nowpublic.com/world/uranium-next-energy-crisis-may-cripple-western-nations

http://my.nowpublic.com/world/niger-army-admits-civilian-death-however-not-genocide-bbc-news

http://my.nowpublic.com/culture/new-book-publication-history-mixed-families-niger

http://my.nowpublic.com/world/end-tuaregs-niger-chad-mali-and-cameroon-algeria

http://my.nowpublic.com/world/discrimination-turning-genocide-niger

The cost of pollution, not only a matter of dollars. Lives too

By, Uwe Paschen.

A study conducted by the London-based consultancy Trucost, which is due to be published this summer, found that the combined damage of only the world's 3000 biggest companies was worth US $2.2 trillion in 2008 alone. This is a figure bigger than the national economies of all but seven countries in the world for that year.

Would those companies have to pay for the damage they cause, they would have to disburse the equivalent of one third of their profits to do so.

The report on the economics of climate change by Sir Nicholas Stern is trying to put an accurate price tag on the damage inflicted unto the environment and find suggestion to prevent it as well. Wile the report, led by economist Pavan Sukhdev, suggest the abolition of all subsidies to harmful industries like agriculture, energy and transport, all the wile asking for tougher laws and higher taxes on polluting industries to stop the trend and enforce the much needed changes.

This of course may have some serious consequences and will affect not only on the customers and the companies profits, more so it will affect labour laws and pension plans all the same, as the UN-backed Principles for Responsible Investment report does suggest.

Centuries of mismanagement and abuse seem to come back to hunt us now with a revenge and a very high price tag as well. Failing to act will not only increase the sub sequential price tag to fix it. But, any further delay would make the task exponentially harder to achieve, allowing to reverse or rather limit the damage and the disaster that will come along with it, whose price tag can not even be estimated for it is simply to high to fathom.

Sukhdev told the annual Earthwatch Oxford lecture last week.

"The world's extinction crisis continues in 2010, the United Nations International Year of Biodiversity. As humans, we have the power to protect nature or destroy it. As this lecture will demonstrate, we must urgently explore all the ways in which we can preserve and protect life on earth. After all, biodiversity is crucial to providing us all with health, food, fuel, wealth and the vital services on which our lives depend."

Ceres, an investors and environmentalist lobby group with over 80 funds and assets exceeding eight trillion dollar US, Is estimating that those environmental changes that are desperately needed will cost North America alone over 20,000 jobs and over one billion dollar a year just to agricultural companies due to water shortages in California and other areas.

Our pollution is not only starting to cost us dearly, in addition, the price keeps increasing the longer we wait to act with some serious intentions and methods. Sadly, the price tag in human lives keeps on increasing as well with each day we waste. This not only in numbers of jobs being lost or in reduction in pension plans or health care programs, but in real lives that will be inevitably sacrifices and lost. The numbers will exceed the hundreds of millions worldwide and maybe even worth. Much could still be saved and avoided would we have changed by now, sadly we have not rely tried so far.

http://www.earthwatch.org/europe/newsroom/news_events/news-5-sukhdev.html