Archive for May, 2009

Prince Urges Action Over Climate

(BBC) Hesitation over tackling climate change could be catastrophic, Prince Charles has told global warming experts.

Speaking
at St James’ Palace, in London, the prince said: “It seems to me that
in many ways we already have some of the answers to hand.

“We
know about energy efficiency, renewable energy, and how to reduce
deforestation… but we seem strangely reluctant to apply them,” he
went on.

He said he hoped the scientists could influence a conference in Copenhagen.

It
is hoped nations can agree to a deal on cutting carbon emissions at the
climate change conference in the Danish capital in December. The prince
said he hoped it would be a “historic occasion”.

Last chance

The
symposium of more than 60 scientists, among them 20 Nobel Laureates, is
examining the latest developments about climate change.

On Thursday, they are expected to sign an agreed memorandum of their findings.

The prince told them: “I don’t know about your own experience, but
it seems to me that whilst there is now only a mercifully small, if
vociferous, number of people who do not accept the science of climate
change and who should know better, there are still a great many who
fail to recognised the real urgency of the situation.

“In so many ways we already are in the last chance saloon.”

“So,
somehow, global decision makers have to be persuaded that strong,
committed and co-ordinated action is needed now, not in 10 years’ time,
or even in five, but now.”(BBC)

Child Labour In Bangladesh

(BBC) As one of the world’s leading suppliers of ready made garments ,
Bangladesh frequently encounters hostile criticism over the use of
child labour in its textile industry.

Western retailers have
rushed to assure conscience-stricken consumers that steps are taken to
eradicate the practice, and in 2006 the Bangladeshi government passed a
new labour law.

It enshrines the rights of young workers to
receive a fixed salary, compensation in case of accident, proper
holidays and to have access to education.

But that law is only
designed to help children in the textile sector, so it does nothing to
ease the problem of child labour in one of the poorest countries in the
world.

Missed opportunities

The Bangladesh
constitution provides basic education free of charge to all children
aged between six and 10 – although some figures suggest that only 50%
are currently attending school.

Of those, only one in five continues with secondary education while just one in 25 will eventually proceed to higher education.

The reason for such low attendance is the poor financial circumstances of the most families.

Some reports indicate that in Bangladesh, one in 10 children has a job which takes up most of their waking hours.

Many suffer poor health as a result of hazardous conditions.

Child labour is not illegal in Bangladesh, although the law discourages children under the age of 14 from working in factories.

It
is not uncommon to walk past a building site and see youths as young as
11 carrying baskets of bricks or cement on their heads.

Mijan has yet to reach his 14th birthday, but he is proud to be doing heavy labour for 12 hours a day, six days a week.

“If I don’t take home 60 taka ($1) a day, someone in my family will go hungry,” he says.

Widespread abuse

For
girls, the work tends to be based in the home – an estimated two
million domestic workers are employed in the cities of Dhaka and
Chittagong alone.

These girls often begin working when they are
eight years old and can be subjected to violence and sexual abuse
without any formal jurisdiction to protect their wellbeing.

Over 300 deaths of young domestic workers were reported in the press between 2001 and 2008.

Officially,
child labour is forbidden in factories which make garments for export -
but many children are still drawn into the home-working garment
business.

Thirteen-year-old Mitu Akhtar says she started
working with a sewing machine when she was seven years old, and had to
give all the money that she earned to her parents.

She quit school when she was nine. “I’ve never had any time to play with my friends,” she explains.

Mitu is now being trained in a centre for former child labourers run by the Bangladesh Institute of Labour Studies (BILS).

She
is learning to read and write and is picking up the basics of how to
use a sewing machine safely and efficiently. She says her ambition is
to be a tailor.

Nazrul Khan, the president of BILS, say the
focus is on finding children from industrial regions of the country
whose parents have lost their jobs.

“We come to an agreement
with the family that, if we educate and train one of their children,
and support them to find employment, there will be no child labour in
that family,” he says.

Difficult choices

In a
primary school near a huge slum in Dhaka, pupils aged between six and
10 include the children of rickshaw drivers and women who break bricks
for a living.

“These children are so poor that many of them
have not had any food when they arrive in the morning and their clothes
are in terrible condition, like rags,” says headmistress Afroza Khanan.

Most of the pupils have to go to work as soon as they have finished
their lessons, in order to help their parents by selling cups of tea or
other odd jobs.

She is also deeply concerned about the children who do not go to school because they are working.

Sometimes
she virtually drags them into the classroom where they face books and
blackboards for the first time – and experience the discipline of
lessons.

“The sad reality is that these families depend on the children financially,” she laments.

“What
I would like to see is a programme to motivate parents to send their
children to school. The government could offer a small sum of money to
each student who attends,” she says.

“Mothers tell me that would make all the difference when it comes to deciding whether to send their kids to school,” she adds.

Bleak future

Some politicians support Afroza Khanan’s proposal but so far the government maintains it cannot afford it.

Even if such a scheme was introduced, it would be difficult to
determine how many families should receive the money and how it would
be paid.

The last time the government examined the issue, it concluded about four million children have full or part-time jobs.

The Bangladeshi Labour Institute believes the number is closer to eight million and is rising as the population grows.

“When
society has such a large population who are not educated, who are
aggrieved, not skilled, unhealthy and unhappy, it is a threat to social
stability and economic growth,” BILS president Nazrul Khan believes.

The fear is that the next generation of Bangladeshis will be forced
into work at an early age unless something breaks the cycle of poverty.

In a country where at least 40% of the population lives in poverty, child labour is often regarded as a necessity.

Despite the economic progress of the past 20 years, there is little to suggest that society’s attitude is changing.(Melik, James and Bartlett, Duncan)

However, if more children can receive an education it might provide future generations with an alternative.

Photo Caption Wanted

This photo was taken in Burkina Faso by scfish7 at one of our child development centers. He uploaded it to our Flickr group a while back.
Got a caption for it?

“Along the wall outside the Compassion project, many children watched and waited while the other children played and sang. With hundreds and thousands of [...]

Bringing the Aloha Spirit to Capitol Hill

As a Hawaii ONE member, I talk a lot about the Aloha Spirit— the Hawaiian tradition of affection, love, peace, compassion and mercy. One of the interpretations of the word aloha is the recognition of the spirit of others, and the notion that we all share the responsibility to care for that spirit.
In a [...]

Teach Africa Youth Forum

More than 1000 Los Angeles middle and high school students are expected to participate in the innovative Teach Africa™ Youth Forum on Saturday, May 30 at UCLA Royce Hall starting at 10:00 a.m.
Launched last June, Teach Africa™ is a multiphase program designed to provide educators with the background and tools needed to raise student interest [...]

Donors suspend funding to Zambia in response to corruption reports

The Swedish and Dutch governments announced today that they will suspend $33 million in aid to Zambia following reports about embezzlement in the Ministry of Health. Reports indicate the civil society was calling for the Ministry of Health to publish expenditures, but former President Mwanawasa cancelled the spending reports, which may have led some [...]

Professor Wangari Maathai on the radio

Professor Wangari Maathai spoke on the Today Programme this morning on BBC Radio 4. She founded the Green Belt Movement and is the only African woman to have won the Nobel Peace Prize. Maathai argues that good governance is absolutely essential for development: “I’ve come to the conviction, unless we fix governance, the rest [...]

Music, Open Source Technology, and Global Health

The IntraHealth Open Initiative is a collaborative endeavor bringing together global leaders in music, technology and public health to foster a new generation of African IT developers and health workers who participate and lead in creating solutions to the biggest health crises using open source technology.
To raise awareness for this work we recently released [...]

Steve

It might seem silly to you, but Steve agreed to an interview on one condition: He needed me to watch his shopping cart while he ran behind a building to relieve himself. I was honored. A homeless person’s shopping cart contains their entire world. Steve was saying he trusted me.
My honor was short-lived. Homelessness and [...]

Thousands still stranded after Cyclone Aila

Three days after Cyclone Aila swept through Bangladesh, relief organization World Vision says thousands of families remain marooned, sleeping outside and unable to return to their homes. The organization is also concerned about the threat of waterborne illnesses which can easily spread in areas with stagnant water or in dense populations without proper sanitation.

Steve Radelet: We’re asking the wrong question

On the Financial Times blog, Steve Radelet offers a response to the question “Is aid working?” Radelet takes to task Dambisa Moyo’s “extreme views” by suggesting the more important question is “Under what circumstances does aid work, and what can be done to make it more effective?”
Excerpts below, full post can be found here
[...]

Mo Ibrahim: Good governance will bolster African aid

In the Financial Times, Mo Ibrahim argues that while investment and good governance will ultimately solve Africa’s problems, “effective aid has an important role to play in the quest for sustainable economic growth and poverty reduction.” Ibrahim offers this assessment in light of the recent debate about aid in the wake of Dambisa Moyo’s [...]

What We?re Reading 5/29/09

Financial Times—Good governance will bolster African aid (opinion by Mo Ibrahim)
Mo Ibrahim adds his voice to the debate over foreign assistance in the Financial Times today, writing that “effective aid has an important role to play in the quest for sustainable economic growth and poverty reduction.” He adds, “The critical argument should not be about [...]

Refugees and internally displaced people

World Vision, other international aid agencies, local partners and the governments all must work to assist those displaced individuals in places like the DRC, Pakistan and Sri Lanka.

Fish and Eggs: Weapons Against the Global Food Crisis

A new day begins in the city of Siguatepeque, Honduras, and with it a routine process caarried out by two girls at a child development center egg farm. They change the chickens’ water and pick up the eggs.
“Hey, here is another one,” says Keila with enthusiasm while they search for more eggs and [...]

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