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Archive for June 29th, 2011

The violence in Southern Kordofan has displaced more than 70,000 people

Posted by African Press International on June 29, 2011

SUDAN: Southern Kordofan briefing

The violence in Southern Kordofan has displaced more than 70,000 people

JUBA, 23 June 2011 (IRIN) – More than 73,000 people have fled fighting in the Northern oil state of Southern Kordofan after heavy fighting broke out on 5 June. Fighting has been intense between the Northern army (the Sudan Armed Forces -SAF) and former members of the ex-rebel Sudan People’s Liberation Army (SPLA).

What is happening?

Heavy fighting started in the state capital Kadugli. SAF have launched multiple aerial bombardments in the Nuba Mountain area of Southern Kordofan. Civil society groups and eyewitnesses report the killings of civilians and house-to-house searches in Kadugli and surrounding villages. Religious leaders accuse government forces of “ethnic cleansing”, accusations Khartoum rejects.

Eyewitnesses who fled Kadugli described people shot in the street, mass arrests and the looting and burning of buildings, including aid agency offices and church buildings. They claim they were targeted for their ethnicity.

Humanitarian agencies are still unable to freely access the civilian population, despite improvements in the security situation, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said in a 21 June update.

Information from inside the Nuba Mountains is limited, with mobile telephone coverage reportedly cut in many areas.

The Enough Project campaign group say satellite photographs show a build-up of SAF troops and military vehicles in the area. Meanwhile airspace over Southern Kordofan has been severely restricted.

The US ambassador to the UN, Susan Rice, says SAF have threatened to shoot down aircraft flying without its permission.

Why did the fighting start?

Southern Kordofan was a key battleground during Sudan’s 1983-2005 civil war. Many in the Nuba Mountains sided with the then rebel SPLA, which has now become the official army of the south. Now they find themselves on the wrong side of the border from former comrades as the South prepares to separate, and have resisted surrendering weapons to forces they see as hostile.

South Sudan is due to become independent on 9 July, and Khartoum has said it will not tolerate the existence of two armies within its borders. The SPLA says it has no forces in the North, and that it is not responsible for its former members in the state.

Khartoum says fighting began after it tried to disarm SPLA forces in Kadugli. However, eyewitnesses say that it was a pre-planned operation by the SAF and aligned militia. Nuba activists are clear it is not a North-South conflict: rather they say it is a battle to protect basic rights and their way of life.

Fighters there are well armed and have a long experience of guerilla war.

Who are the Nuba?

The Nuba are a mix of over 50 different peoples, mainly settled farmers, who live in the scattered upland areas. They include Christians, Muslims and followers of traditional beliefs. In ethnic terms, the Nuba usually identify more closely with the “African” southerners than their northern Arab neighbours. The highlands have provided refuge for centuries, including to groups fleeing slave raids.

The wider region of Southern Kordofan is a volatile mix of different rival Arab and African groups, where old enmities from the war are exacerbated by pressure on grazing land.


Photo: OCHA Sudan
Conflict and displacement in Southern Kordofan (See larger version of map)

As many as 40,000 Nuba soldiers are estimated to remain inside the SPLA. However, most of these are thought to be deployed inside the south.

Who are the leaders?

Opposition forces inside the Nuba are led by former deputy governor Abdulaziz Al-Hilu, an experienced soldier and guerrilla commander. Hilu is number two in the Northern branch of the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement (SPLM), the south’s ruling party. He pulled out of the gubernatorial election in May alleging vote-rigging by the North’s ruling National Congress Party (NCP).

That vote was won by Ahmed Haroun, an NCP stalwart who is wanted by the International Criminal Court on charges of war crimes committed in Sudan’s western Darfur region. He has demanded Hilu be arrested.

Khartoum alleges these opposition forces are being backed by Juba, allegations rejected by the South.

That is likely to increase tensions between the soon to be separate nations.

What are the Nuba’s grievances?

Many in the Nuba feel as though they have been abandoned by former comrades in the South, alongside whom they fought during the civil war.

The 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement set up referenda for the South to vote on its independence, and another vote for the contested area of Abyei, to choose whether it is part of North or South.

However, Southern Kordofan, as well as the Northern border state of Blue Nile, were given “Popular Consultations”, a loosely defined process to ask the people what they wanted for the future.

Many feel that it did not provide a mechanism to guarantee the rights they had fought for, and since the fighting broke out, Haroun has suspended the process.

What is the international community doing?

Peacekeepers from the UN Mission to Sudan (UNMIS) have been criticized for a lack of response to the outbreak of fighting. Officials, however, have said they are doing the best they can in a tough situation. Aid workers and UN humanitarian agencies are struggling to get access to the trouble spots. However, the World Food Programme and partners have delivered some 185 tons of food to 34,500 people in the state as of 19 June.

The fighting has also sparked international condemnation. “The treatment of civilians in Southern Kordofan, including the reported human rights abuses and targeting of people along ethnic lines, is reprehensible,” said Valerie Amos, UN under-secretary for humanitarian affairs, on 21 June.

US President Barack Obama has urged an immediate ceasefire. “The situation in Southern Kordofan is dire, with deeply disturbing reports of attacks based on ethnicity,” Obama said on 22 June. Without a ceasefire, “the roadmap for better relations with the government of Sudan cannot be carried forward, which will only deepen Sudan’s isolation in the international community,” Obama warned.

Will that pressure work?

Sudanese President Omar al Bashir may be many things, but he is also determined. He has already shrugged off an arrest warrant on genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes charges in the western Darfur region. Threats of further sanctions may do little to scare him, although Khartoum is keen to engage Western powers to secure relief on up to US$38 billion of debt.

But losing the South is a major loss of face for Northern leaders, and they are keen to bolster their position with a show of force. Time is short. Even if a deal is struck now, fighting also has a long-term impact, aid workers warn.

The mass displacement of people fleeing fighting will impact agricultural production, with the harvest period due in a few months time. That could lead to potential major food shortages later in the year.

str/cb source www.irinnews.org

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Sudan Armed Forces (SAF) and militia allies in South Kordofan have threatened to shoot down UN humanitarian aircraft in the region

Posted by African Press International on June 29, 2011

After so many years of work on Sudan, I thought myself fully braced for the worst the National Islamic Front/National Congress Party regime might do.  As so often before, I was wrong. The litany of egregious violations of international humanitarian and human rights law over the past five weeks is simply overwhelming—in South Kordofan,in Abyei, but in other areas along the North/South border as well. 

Just in the past two weeks, the regime’s Sudan Armed Forces (SAF) and militia allies in South Kordofan have threatened to shoot down UN humanitarian aircraft in the region; shot, tortured, and arrested national members of the UN peacekeeping mission in Sudan (UNMIS) in Kadugli, capital of South Kordofan; denied freedom of movement to UNMIS personnel in nearly all locations; deployed intelligence officers in Kadugli,disguised as Red Crescent workers, to compel the removal of displaced civilians who had taken refuge at the UNMIS headquarters in Kadugli; denied UN and nongovernmental relief organizations use of the Kadugli airport, thus creating a vast and growing humanitarian crisis; engaged in house-to-house searches for Nuba civilians, arresting or summarily executing all thought to have “southern sympathies”; and engaged in what Amnesty International has called  “indiscriminate attacks, bombing fromhigh altitudes with imprecise bombs in areas which include civilians.”  These bombing attacks have extended to territories inSouth Sudan.
 
The SAF has also, in violation ofinternational law, laid anti-personnel land mines in areas around Kadugli tocontrol movement in and out of the town, and Military Intelligence has set upnumerous checkpoints that are used to arrest Nuba civilians and restrict UNmovements.  Reports of mass graves and the use of chemical weapons against civilians are as yet unconfirmed, but continue to emerge with increasing insistence from those on the ground and in the region.  As a recent and compelling article by Dan Morrison in Foreign Policy reminds us, the useof chemical weapons was part of the genocide in the Nuba Mountains during the1990s.  Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) has also documented Khartoum’s use of chemical weapons against civilians in the South:
 
“The increase of the bombings on the civilian population andcivilian targets in 1999 was accompanied by the use of cluster bombs and weapons containing chemical products. On 23 July 1999, the towns of Lainya and Loka (Yei County) were bombed with chemical products. At the time of this bombing, the usual subsequent results (i.e. shrapnel, destruction to the immediate environment, impact, etc.) did not take place. [Rather], the aftermath of this bombing resulted in a nauseating, thick cloud of smoke, and later symptoms such as children and adults vomiting blood and pregnant women having miscarriages were reported.”
 
“These symptoms of the victims leave no doubt as to the nature of the weapons used. Two field staff of the World Food Program (WFP) who went backto Lainya, three days after the bombing, had to be evacuated on the 27th ofJuly. They were suffering of nausea, vomiting, eye and skin burns, loss ofbalance and headaches.” (“Living under aerial bombardments: Report of an investigation in the Province of Equatoria, Southern Sudan,” February2000)
 
MSF rightly “deplored” the factthat no nation demanded an investigation by the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons—not one government in the world communitymade set in motion an investigati on. This tells us all too much about the international response to current atrocity crimes in Sudan, committed by the same regime that has used chemical weapons inthe Nuba and in South Sudan.
 
[See also my lengthy archive/report on bombing in South Sudan, Darfur,
and South Kordofan over the past twelve years: www.sudanbombing.org]
 
Elsewhere SAF attacks have beenrecorded in every state in the South that borders North Sudan.  It has repeatedly bombed the Jau area of Pariang
County in Unity State, creating thousands of newly displaced civilians;
it has fired artillery at the civilians and UN personnel in the town of Agok, to which so many fled following the May20 invasion of Abyei; it has massed forces in the remote region where (northern) South Kordofan and White Nile State meet (southern) Upper Nile State (Upper Nile, with Unity, is the great oil production region in South Sudan); it has organized and supported potent militias that have as their sole objective destabilizing the South as much as possible before and after the July 9 independence of the Republic of South Sudan; it has attempted to move troops south of the River Kiir, which separates the forces of the SAF and SudanPeople’s Liberation Army (SPLA); it has shelled Banton Bridge, the major routefrom Abyei to Warrab State (and thus essential
for any potential returns).  And on June 26 the regime allowed its Misseriya Arab militia allies to attack a train carrying people returning to their homeland in the South; the attack killed at least one and wounded four according to an UNMIS spokeswoman.  Such an attack could not have occurred unless countenanced by the SAF or Military Intelligence.
 
This list is not complete, but it isauthoritative, based on numerous
newswire dispatches, human rights reports, many scores of accounts from
Nuba who have escaped to the South, and internal UN internal documents
that have been reported by several news organizations. And astonishingly, in the midst of a news blackout throughout South Kordofan and a shutdown of cellular phone service—with only very limitedInternet access—there are many reports, even photographs that have made their way out of the Nuba Mountains and are compelling in their brutal details.  The credibility of a number of sources has been authoritatively confirmed.
 
But without a humanitarian presence,and without accounts from the
now-paralyzed UNMIS, information about Khartoum’sactions in South Kordofan will rapidly diminish, rendering a vast and accelerating humanitarian crisis invisible.  For now, the US and its allies, as well as all Security Council members who wish to know what is occurring, have access to more than enough intelligence to make informed assessments.
 
It is difficult to focus on a single atrocity crime amidst such massive violence and abuse, but I believe the most telling violation of international law was Khartoum’s use of security personnel in Kadugli, disguised as Red Crescent workers, to compel the movement of displaced civilians who had taken shelter within the UNMIS protective perimeter.  Some 7,000 Nuba civilians (estimates vary) gathered within the protective custody of the UN following Khartoum’s initial military onslaught and ethnically targeted killings (June 5).  But Associated Press reports (June 23) on actions taken by Khartoum on June 20:
 
“Sudanese intelligence agents posed as Red Crescent workers and ordered refugees to leave a UN-protected camp in a region where Sudan’s Arab military has been targeting a black ethnic minority, according to an internal UN report obtained Thursday [June 23]. The report said agents from the National Security Service donned Red Crescent aprons at a camp in Kadugli, South Kordofan and told the refugees to go to a stadium for an address by the governor and for humanitarian aid. The refugees were threatened with forced removal from the camp if they did not comply.
 
“The report…does not say what happened to the camp residents after their forced removal on Monday. The report did not say These actions violate international humanitarian law on so many counts it requires ananalysis unto itself.  But the brutal cynicism that pervades the intelligence and security services in Khartoum, the contempt for the lives of African Sudanese civilians, and the utter disregard for the UN—which learned only indirectly where these people had been taken—seem astounding, though not so astounding, evidently, as to generate a meaningful response. 

Despite this public report there was no direct response from any international actor of consequence, including the UN Undersecretary for Humanitarian Affairs, Valerie Amos.  Small wonder that Khartoum believes it may do what it wants with impunity. 
 
And this leaves us to draw the most ominous conclusions about the fate of the hundreds (or thousands) who were led to Kadugli Stadium: their has not been reported because UNMIS is now completely restricted in movement.
 Only on June 28 (eight days later) did the UN make its concerns—and its ignorance—known:
 
“The United Nations has voiced concern at the fate of 7,000 Sudanese civilians last seen being forcedby authorities to leave the protection of a UN compound in the tenseborder region between the North and South. A UN spokeswoman says the global body has asked north Sudan authorities for access to the civilians who are believed to have been taken to the nearby town of Kadugli in South Kordofan province last week. Spokeswoman Corinne Momal-Vanian told reporters in Geneva on Tuesday that so far authorities have denied the request.” (Associated Press, June 28; emphasis added)
 
Indeed, the SAF has over the past two weeks made clear its intention to end freedom of movement for UNMIS, despite the guarantees of the “Status of Forces Agreement” Khartoum signed in 2005. UNMIS patrols have been told by SAF officers that their mission is over, and only SAF-supervised administrative movements may take place. To make sure that UNMIS got this message, another utterly shocking episode is reported by The New York Times (June 21):
 
“Sudan’s forces detained four United Nations peacekeepers and subjected them to ‘a mock firing squad,’the organization said Monday [June 20, 2011], calling the intimidation part ofa strategy to make it nearly impossible for aid agencies and monitors to workin the region.”
 
And in its strategy Khartoum has almost completely succeeded.  The humanitarian situation continues to deteriorate rapidly; hundreds of thousands are now cut off from relief aid; and the total displaced population may be greater than 400,000. 

But again no international voice was raised to report this extraordinary detention, thereby encouraging further intimidation of UNMIS by SAF and security officers, even as military observation is critical: SAF continues to pour large quantities of weapons, armor, ammunition, and troops into Kadugli and Dilling; military checkpoints continue to target Nuba ivilians; atrocities of the most brutal sort continue to be reported in and around Kadugli; and aerial attacks on the Nuba Mountains are unrelenting. Just two days ago sixteen people, including eight women and children, were killed during a bombing attack on three Nuba villages near Kurchi.
 
Nor is UNMIS encouraged to be vigorous in challenging Khartoum’s restrictions on their guaranteed freedom of movement. In fact, the UN peacekeepers are deliberately being threatened with military assault: SAF artillery and aircraft have attacked extremely close to UNMISbases in several locations. 

On June 17 the SAF launched an intensiveartillery attack on the town of Agok, where so many of the more than 110,000 refugees from Abyei have fled; some shells fell as close as 200 meters from the UN compound.  Again on June 17, SAF attack aircraft bombed near Kadugli,with some bombs coming less that a kilometer away from UN headquarters. The same was true on June 14, when SAF bombing runs came extremely close to the UN compound in Kauda.  Photographs of the attack, which targeted the airstrip critical for humanitarian transport, show just how near to UN personnel is clear: intimidation.  For sooner or later, as the UN well knows, one of the bombs or shells will land on acompound.  The SAF is simply incapable of targeting with sufficient precision so close to UN sites.  In short, the goal is to force withdrawal.
 
For Khartoum’s largest ambition is tocontrol the civilian populations in South Kordofan and Abyei without the interference of either UNMIS or a humanitarian presence.  The Ethiopian brigade to be deployed to Abyei was
authorized by the UN Security Council only on June 27; and despite its robust protection mandate, there are grave doubts about its ability to reverse the ethnic clearances that have already occurred or to create sufficient securityfor the Ngok Dinka who fled the region to be able to return to their lands and homes.

Troublingly, the mission has no human rights mandate, as is typical for UN peacekeeping missions—a clear concession to Khartoum (and Beijing). UN Deputy High Commissioner for Human Rights Kyung-wha Kang, who has recently returned from Abyei, declared in Khartoum that there “was ‘utter devastation’ in the territory and called for a thorough human rights investigation both there and in South Kordofan.”  In South Kordofan, Amnesty International rightly finds that civilians are being “coerced toreturn by the Sudanese authorities to places where their lives and safety couldbe at risk.”  But all evidence suggests that the appropriate phrase is not “could be at risk” but “face the clear and imminent threat of ethnically targeted destruction, much of which is already inevidence.”
 
Terrifying accounts have come from relief workers, a few necessarily anonymous diplomatic sources, and of course the Nuba people themselves:
“Yusef” from Kadugli told Agence France-Presse that he had been informed
bya member of the notorious Popular Defense Forces (PDF) that they had been provided with plenty of weapons and ammunition, and a standing order: “He said that they had clear instructions: ‘just sweep away the rubbish. If you see a Nuba, just clean it up.’ He told me he saw two trucks of people with their hands tied and blindfolded, driving out to where diggers were making holes for graves on the edge of town.” Nuba are being executed in gruesome ways at the hands of the SAF and militia groups, often by having their throats slit. A church source reports that Nuba are being hunted “like animals” by helicopter gunships.  These
African peoples, trapped by geography in North Sudan, are haunted by their terrible history and are right to be fearful. As one aid worker has predicted, “if the ground offensive commences, ‘absolute carnage’… could ensue.”  This ground offensive could come at anytime.
 
There can be no plea of ignorance about the nature of realities on the ground, such as Obama’s special envoy Princeton Lyman has attempted to make.  Indeed, an American government official told the New York Times last week that,”This is going to spread like wildfire,” adding that, without mediation, “you’re going to have massive destruction and death in central Sudan, and no one seems able to do anything about it.” “No one seems able to do anything about it”?  Able? … or willing? 
 
To be sure, the emphasis by the Obama administration has been on its “inability”; and in any event, a negotiated solution is certainly the only long-term answer to the present crisis and the viability of Nuba life.  News from Addis Ababa today (June 28) indicates a “framework agreement” will be signed, preparing the way for negotiations between Khartoum and Juba on the future of South Kordofan and southern Blue Nile.  But there is good reason to believe that this decision by Khartoum is just for diplomatic appearances, and will change nothing on the ground. Thabo Mbeki, who announced the”agreement,” has a well-deserved reputation for over selling his diplomatic achievements.
 
And if the agreement fails—as all the regime’s agreements with Sudanese parties in the past have failed (think Abyei,for example)—does anyone really doubt that there is a go wielded in compelling Khartoum to halt its military actions and obstruction of humanitarian relief, especially if the Obama administration convinces our European allies join the effort?  The Northern economy is in desperate shape, and the NIF/NCP regime extremely vulnerable in what will be avery difficult economic future.
 
There is also military leverage. 
 
A No Fly Zone has been called for by many, including many Nuba, as
Khartoum’s military aircraft continue to pound away at civilian and
humanitarian targets. The Enough Project has called for deployment to
South Sudan of an unspecified “medium-range surface-to-air missile system.” But as I have argued previously, a NFZ is completely impracticable without the devotion of in ordinate resources.  A missile battery in South Sudan might eventually be of use, but not for the Nuba Mountains now.  The third generation of Patriot Missile, for example, is an amazing military engineering achievement; but its range is only about ten miles, and its radar extends only about 60 miles.  These distances are completely inadequate for coverage of South Kordofan from South Sudan. 
 
But with real political will, the Obama administration could threaten to destroy on the ground those military aircraft implicated in attacks on civilians or humanitarians (a dwindling population).  This would minimize the chances for casualties and collateral damage.  But the administration could not merely threaten: it must be prepared to follow up, starting with the destruction of the most expensive and terrifying weapon in Khartoum’s air force, its MiG-29s (there areabout 20, each costing roughly $30 million for complete outfitting and maintenance). 

Such destruction would create a de facto NFZ.  As it is, these supersonic aircraft arecontinually upon the people of the Nuba before they can be heard, dropping their ordnance and screaming away with a sound that is utterly terrifying.  The demands that should be made of Khartoum are clear: halt these aerial attacks on civilians, allow humanitarian access—or watch yourair force be destroyed seriatim by cruise missiles or drone attack planes.
 
An overextended and war-weary America might persuade Obama that the
politics of this military effort are too costly.  This seems the overwhelmingly likely decision, given comments by Secretary of State Clinton and Obama’s special envoy Lyman.  If so, Obama needs to be prepared to live with voices such as that of Andudu Adam el Nail, the Episcopal bishop of Kadugli andthe Nuba Mountains: “Once again we are facing the nightmare of genocide ofour people in a final attempt to erase our culture and society from the face ofthe earth.”  Given the genocidal jihadof the 1990s, this nightmare seems all too real.  A correspondent for Time reported last week an interview with a relief worker who had escaped to Juba, South Sudan: “You can see itin all their eyes. They are scared. They see this as a fight for survival.”  Is President Obama really prepared to see the Nuba people lose this fight?
_____________________________
By Eric Reeves, Smith College, Northampton, MA  01063

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Many farmers in Egypt are now siphoning untreated sewage onto their farms to keep their crops growing

Posted by African Press International on June 29, 2011

EGYPT: Sewage-fed vegetable plots pose health risk

Because of water scarcity, many farmers in Egypt are now siphoning untreated sewage onto their farms to keep their crops growing (file photo)

SHARQIA, 23 June 2011 (IRIN) – Faced with a shortage of water for irrigation, Ahmed Osman, a farmer in his late thirties, opted to divert local sewage water to irrigate his two-hectare vegetable plot in the heart of Egypt’s Nile Delta governorate of Sharkia.

“Without water, any water, our plants will die, and we will go begging,” he said. “There can be no agriculture without water.”

He is not alone. Other farmers in his village, Kafr Saqr, are doing the same.

“Villagers around this country have to use untreated sewage to irrigate their land because Nile water is becoming so scarce; the nation’s sewage treatment plants do not function properly, and irrigation canals are not dug everywhere,” said Maghawri Shehata, a leading water expert and former president of Monofiya University. “Egypt needs to take action to stop this or it will be in for major catastrophes in the future.”

Given its rapidly rising population, Egypt is fast becoming water poor, and this is taking its toll on agriculture. As a result more and more farmers are now using pumps to siphon thousands of cubic metres of untreated sewage onto their farms to keep the crops growing.

The sewage-dependent vegetables and fruits end up in markets as far away as Cairo and as near as Kafr Saqr. Health experts say the practice is dangerous.

Health risks

“Untreated sewage is full of harmful matter,” said Mahmud Amr, a toxicology expert. “Using it in irrigating vegetables and fruits could result in serious health hazards.”

A 2009 study of the waterways and canals in the Nile Delta, conducted by the State Ministry for Environmental Affairs, found concentrations of harmful materials in these waterways and canals exceeded permissible limits.

“Organic matter concentration (biochemical oxygen demand) exceeded the permissible limit (6mg/l) at all canals,” said the report, which was included in Egypt’s 2009 State of the Environment Report.

The study found that average ammonia concentrations at most monitoring points in Delta canals exceeded permissible limits. It also found an E. coli bacterial count exceeding safe limits (1,000 cells per 100 ml) as prescribed by the World Health Organization.

According to medical experts, there could be a link between the rise in the number of kidney failure, liver cancer and respiratory disease cases in Egypt and the use of unclean water for irrigating vegetable and fruit farms.

In 2009, a report presented to the Egyptian parliament warned against irrigating plants with untreated sewage.

Sewage can be adapted for agricultural use if properly treated, said Khalid Al Qadi, an environmental expert and professor at Helwan University . “The problem is that sewage treatment in this regard is very costly.”

Osman, meanwhile, dismisses talk of the danger of using untreated sewage: “Some people like to talk only. What else can people like me do while clean water is a dream?”

Sharing the Nile

The River Nile is the world’s longest river and serves nine African countries.

Over the years, Egypt’s allotted share of 55.5 billion cubic metres has proven insufficient to meet the needs of a growing population now numbering about 85 million – three times more than it was when Egypt and Sudan signed an agreement on sharing the Nile’s water in 1959. Currently, agriculture is responsible for 70 percent of water consumption in the country.

“There is a clear water deficit of between 10 and 15 billion cubic metres here,” said water expert Shehata. “This shortage is expected to grow even more in line with population growth.”

A symptom of water’s political significance was seen with the July 2010 protest by 600 people from the southern governorate of Minya, who came to the Irrigation Ministry in Cairo to display their anger at the lack of it.

The problem is likely to get worse because upstream Nile Basin countries like Ethiopia and Uganda, which also have rapidly growing populations are pushing for a greater share of the water to satisfy their own needs.

In 2010, six upstream countries met in Uganda and signed a new water-sharing agreement. Egypt and Sudan did not sign, and called instead for fresh talks involving all riparian states. In the last few months, the new Egyptian government has sent emissaries to various Nile Basin countries to pursue the issue.

ae/eo/cb source www.irinnews.org

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Breastfeeding babies is vital, say experts

Posted by African Press International on June 29, 2011

LAOS: NGOs flay Nestlé’s infant formula strategy

Photo: UNICEF
Breastfeeding babies is vital, say experts

BANGKOK, 23 June 2011 (IRIN) – International NGOs in Laos have stepped up their criticism of what they describe as Nestlé’s unethical marketing of infant formula.

“Some of the marketing strategy presents formula as better than breastfeeding,” Laurence Gray, World Vision’s Asia-Pacific advocacy director, told IRIN. “It doesn’t take into account the circumstances needed to prepare the formula.”

A month ago, 19 leading Laos-based international NGOs, including Save the Children, Oxfam, CARE International, Plan International and World Vision, announced plans to boycott Nestlé’s 2012 competition for a prize of almost half a million US dollars for outstanding innovation in water, nutrition, or rural development projects.

Both the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) and the World Health Organization (WHO) advocate exclusive breastfeeding for children up to six months of age – and continued breastfeeding and complementary feeding until age two.

However, infant formula is not considered unsafe in developed countries.

“When mothers cannot breastfeed, infant formula is the only product recognized by the WHO as a safe and nutritious breast-milk substitute,” Ferhat Soygenis, senior corporate affairs manager and a spokesman for Nestlé, told IRIN.

But in developing countries, formula is frequently prepared in unhygienic circumstances with unsafe water and misunderstood instructions.

“In poor nations, formula-fed infants are four to six times more likely to die of infectious disease than breastfed babies,” said Gray. “The problem is not with the formula, but with the preparation,” he added.

Open letter

In an open letter to the company on 24 May, the organizations taking part in the boycott outlined how the company had violated the 1981 International Code of Marketing of Breast-Milk Substitutes.

“We won’t be applying for your prize money, Nestlé. Your marketing of formula milk still jeopardizes the health of infants and children in Laos,” begins the letter.

The letter is the latest development in an ongoing battle between Nestlé and child health groups that began in 1977 and is waged across the villages and markets of developing countries such as Pakistan, Bangladesh, and now Laos.

“Nestlé has mastered the art of marketing formula products with many forms of deceptive advertising in Laos and countries throughout the world,” said the letter’s co-author Leila Srour, who works in Laos with Health Frontiers.

Srour accuses Nestlé of making unsubstantiated claims about its infant formula’s ability to make babies smarter, stronger and taller, which undermine breastfeeding.

The low-to-medium income groups specifically targeted by Nestlé do not speak English or Thai, and product labels and instructions are not translated into local languages, according to Srour.

Nestlé representatives are also being charged with visiting hospitals and providing incentives, such as gifts and trips, to doctors and nurses, to promote formula usage.


Photo: Harish Muhthi/SELNA
Breastfeeding in remote Pongsali Province

According to Soygenis, Nestlé is “currently investigating each allegation in the letter” and promises immediate corrective action if non-compliance with the code or national legislation is found.

“There are no incentives offered to health workers for promoting Nestlé products, no pictures of babies on packs; there are product labels which state that breast milk is best for babies, and preparation instructions which are presented graphically,” Soygenis maintained; a response that received a strong rebuke from Srour.

“If Nestlé thinks that paying for flights to Thailand to attend conferences is not a big incentive for health care workers with very low salaries, I don’t know what they’re thinking,” she said.

Deceptive marketing?

The issue of perceived deceptive marketing remains the most troublesome, said Srour.

NGOs have strongly protested its anthropomorphized Bear Brand logo, which until recently featured a baby bear held in the breastfeeding position by a mother bear.

“The Bear Brand logo is responsible for the deaths and developmental delay of many Lao children mistakenly fed inappropriate products as breast-milk substitutes,” she said, citing earlier instances in which coffee creamer containing the same bear logo had been fed to children.

Following a wave of negative publicity Nestlé removed the bear from its infant formula, but it remains on its follow-up formulas for young children.

Meanwhile, Nestlé insists they adhere to local and international regulations in product marketing.

“In the 152 countries with high infant mortality and malnutrition rates as described by UNICEF, we apply the respective national laws and/or the WHO Code, whichever is stricter,” Soygenis said.

And because Laos national legislation covers infant products and complementary foods for use until two years of age, Nestlé considers it to be stricter, he added.

ms/dm/cb source www.irinnews.org

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