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U.S.-AFRICA: 'Mutual Partnership and Mutual Respect'
Analysis by Terna Gyuse and Francis Kokutse
CAPE TOWN and ACCRA - "We must start from the simple premise that Africa's future is up to Africans," U.S. president Barack Obama told Ghana's parliament. And the keys to that future, as outlined in his speech, include democratic elections, accountability, good governance and strong institutions.
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RIGHTS: No Safe Haven for Ugandan Girls
By Wambi Michael
KAMPALA - A year ago, a mother in Kashari County took the law into her own hands and castrated a man she caught raping her seven-year-old daughter.
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ENVIRONMENT-TANZANIA: Villagers Fearful After Mine Water Discharged Into River
By Terna Gyuse*
CAPE TOWN - Water from a storage pond at Barrick Gold's North Mara mine in Tanzania is seeping through containing walls, leading local villagers to fear their water sources are contaminated.
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BOTSWANA: Deep Divisions Remain Over Media Law
By Ephraim Nsingo
GABORONE - While the international theme for World Press Freedom Day was "Fostering Dialogue, Mutual Understanding and Reconciliation", the Botswana government and the media seemed to take the opposite route - taking turns to snub each other’s calls for dialogue.
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RIGHTS-ZIMBABWE: Journalists Spurn Govt Summit on Press Freedom
By Busani Bafana
BULAWAYO - Media organisations this week dug in their heels over boycotting a national media conference in the resort town of Kariba. State-owned media reported that the much-postponed conference finally opened on May 8, with information minister Webster Shamu lamenting the deep divisions within the media fraternity in Zimbabwe.
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RIGHTS-SIERRA LEONE: Child Miners: Legacy of Conflict
By Lansana Fofana
FREETOWN - Since the end of the civil war seven years ago, the Sierra Leonean authorities and child welfare agencies have been battling to remove children from the diamond-mining fields, a trend which began at the height of the conflict, when children were abducted by rebel forces and coerced to work in the mines.
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ZIMBABWE: Urban Residents Left Behind by Dollarisation
By Ignatius Banda
BULAWAYO - Cash-strapped residents of Bulawayo, Zimbabwe's second city are digging in their heels and refusing to pay utility bills despite the municipality teetering on the brink of bankruptcy. At the heart of the dispute are dismal service delivery and the conundrum of using multiple currencies in an economy that boasts world record inflation.
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POLITICS-SOUTH AFRICA: ANC Scores Another Victory: Now Deliver, Voters Say
By Davison Makanga
CAPE TOWN - As results of South Africa's fourth democratic elections held on Apr. 22 come in, the ruling African National Congress (ANC) is poised to return to power in the 400 seat National Assembly. The party is also on course to emerge as the governing party in all but one of the nine provinces. The main opposition party, the Democratic Alliance, is likely to take the Western Cape.
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SOUTH AFRICA: Thousands of Traders Might Lose Jobs as Market Turns into Mall
By Kristin Palitza
DURBAN - Hundreds of traders at the Early Morning market in Durban fear the municipality’s plans to turn the area into an upscale shopping mall that will cost them their livelihoods. The redevelopment is one of many currently underway in South Africa’s urban centres to upgrade city infrastructure for the 2010 Soccer World Cup.
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FINANCE: Guns 'n Nurses in Namibia's Budget
By Servaas van den Bosch
WINDHOEK - Tax relief for lower income groups in Namibia should not conceal that the 2009/10 budget falls short in addressing structural problems in the economy, civil society organisations have charged.
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ZAMBIA: Media Resists Calls for State Regulation
By Kelvin Kachingwe
LUSAKA - After almost a decade of fighting for self-regulation, the Zambian media may finally have its wishes entrenched with constitutional protection.
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RIGHTS-SOUTH AFRICA: Women Farmworkers Threaten Election Boycott
By Davison Makanga
CAPE TOWN - Women from South Africa's three Cape provinces have marched to parliament in Cape Town to denounce the country's "slow and unbalanced" land redistribution programme. The protesters said if they are not given greater access to land, they will not vote in the country's Apr. 22 general elections.
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MINING-AFRICA: Help Yourself, There's Plenty
By Joyce Mulama
NAIROBI - The African continent is rich in natural resources; but the terms under which multinational companies exploit these resources mean that governments - and Africa’s people - enjoy only a tiny fraction of the benefits.
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Q&A: ‘‘Arms Deal Scandal Threatens Democracy in South Africa’’
Stephanie Nieuwoudt interviews PATRICIA DE LILLE, whistle-blower
CAPE TOWN - South Africa’s ruling African National Congress (ANC) vilified politician and former anti-apartheid trade unionist Patricia de Lille when she made allegations about graft in the country’s notorious multi-billion dollar deal with British, French, Italian, German and Swedish arms manufacturers back in 1999.
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NAMIBIA: Food Security Hangs in the Balance
By Servaas van den Bosch
WINDHOEK - Don't talk about food prices in Namibia. Wedged between costly imports from South Africa and failing projects to achieve food security, Namibians are upset, and hungry.
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ECONOMY: Namibia Gets BIG on Poverty
By Servaas van den Bosch
WINDHOEK - There was no mention of a special grant to tackle poverty in the Namibian national budget speech delivered on Mar. 19, much to the disappointment of campaigners for a Basic Income Grant (BIG) for all citizens.
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SIERRA LEONE: Radio Stations Banned for Inciting Violence
By Lansana Fofana
FREETOWN - Sierra Leone's vice president, Samuel Sam-Sumana, on Mar. 13 ordered an indefinite ban on radio stations owned by the ruling All Peoples Congress (APC) and its main rival, the Sierra Leone Peoples Party (SLPP).
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RIGHTS-SOUTH AFRICA: Election Campaign Silent on Violence Against Women
Stephanie Nieuwoudt interviews LISA VETTEN, gender rights activist
CAPE TOWN - With its emphasis on gender equality, the South African constitution is regarded as a great example for many other developing countries. Yet, despite laws intended to protect the rights of women like the Sexual Abuse Act and the Domestic Violence Act, women in the country still suffer indignities at the hands of police and in court.
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ENVIRONMENT-NAMIBIA: Ten Dollars for a 200-Year-Old Tree
By Servaas van den Bosch
Mile 20, NAMIBIA - Despite the investment of millions of donor dollars, the permit system in Namibia’s Community Forests has failed dismally, say biodiversity experts. Illegal logging in the inland Kavango is more alive than ever.
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News in RSS Active citizens are committed to social change because they know that it is achievable. Yet, for most Africans, a shift towards elected government in recent decades has yet to translate into an effective voice in decision-making. Now, the Strengthening Citizen Demand for Good Governance using evidence based approaches - funded by DFID's Governance and Transparency Fund - seeks to raise their voices. Through its partnership with the Overseas Development Institute (ODI) and CIVICUS,, IPS reporters across the continent will seek to define the extent and limits of state capability, government accountability and the responsiveness of leaders to the needs of citizens.

Media in Africa
News in RSS
Trading Up
  By Catherine Ashton
CUBA: OBAMA EXTINGUISHES THE HOPES HE RAISED
  By Leonardo Padura Fuentes
NEOLIBERALISM: A SURVIVOR BY DEFAULT
  By Walden Bello
HUMAN EXISTENCE IS AT REAL AND IMMINENT RISK
  By Maurice Strong
BRAZIL: SHOWING THE WORLD HOW TO END HUNGER
  By Andrew MacMillan
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CIVICUS

Gender and Media Diversity Centre

ODI
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