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Posts Tagged ‘aid’

The Quantity vs Quality Debate: A case study in Vanuatu

Wednesday, March 12th, 2008

By Miriam Wood
kids in Vanuatu in literacy classI recently spent a year working in a youth centre in Port Vila, Vanuatu for out of school youth. In Vanuatu most young people finish school before they reach secondary level as there is no government funding for public schools and the school fees push a huge number of them out of the formal education sector. This means throughout Vanuatu there is a generation of young people cheated of a formal education who are looking to fill the gap. Some are lucky and get to enroll in Rural Training Centres, where they learn things such as building or mechanics. Others get a job working on a copra boat. Some return to their villages and work in the family garden, maybe starting their own patch of kava, or yam for sale. But for those who have joined the urban drift, and are living in Port Vila, the choices are somewhat limited. As with most capital cities, the cost of living in Port Vila is high, food and transport are expensive, education and training courses have high fees and most young people are living within a large extended family with a vast list of chores.

Programmes for unemployed youth in Port Vila

The centre I worked in is funded by AusAid and NZAid, along with a number of smaller funders for specific projects. Courses are offered in sewing, nutrition, computers, literacy, music, dance, sports, photography and art. Young people pay 100vatu ($1.50 NZD) to become members and this allows them to attend any of the above classes for the full year. There are over 900 registered members. The youth centre also has a sexual health clinic attached to it and runs several compulsory workshops focusing on reproductive health family planning and STI’s as Vanuatu has the one of the highest rate of STI’s in the Pacific.

There are other centres delivering programmes for unemployed youth in Port Vila, run by Oxfam, Unicef, World Vision, Youth Challenge and church and youth groups. The most common element of all these different programmes is workshops, which are short-term or one-off training sessions, where young people are usually provided with a certificate of some kind. Some organisations use their funding to take young people to international conferences, some take groups to remote outer islands to work on community projects, some run events in town, but all run workshops for lifeskills, preparing job applications and leadership.
Danny in Vanuatu painting a Unicef logo

Is there a problem with workshops?
Recently I was forced to ask myself this question. I had organised a literacy teacher to come in and spend a morning with the youth tutors who run our children’s literacy class. Not being in the workshop mindset, we got right into it and started on the lesson. We were only ten minutes in when one young women raised her hand and asked “Do we get lunch provided?”
She was quite confused about what was happening. There had been no icebreaker game, no name-tags, no assurance that morning tea and lunch were going to be provided and I hadn’t specifically said “You will get a certificate at the end of this session”. I could see the thought racing through woman in workshop in Vanuatuher mind “This isn’t a workshop! I’m wasting my time!” Nevertheless she stayed, and despite not getting a certificate for spending two hours with a literacy teacher she feels like she learnt something important during that time. The question I was left asking myself was, are the youth centres putting emphasis on the wrong thing? What is more important, actual learning or a certificate that says you have learnt something?’ Is it worth providing so many lunches and bus fares, for young tutors to come and learn just a fraction of what is needed to become an effective teacher?

Is there another way?
Imagine all the youth agencies coming together, pooling resources and deciding to send a handful of young people through school, through university and set them up so they are able to support their family and break the cycle of poverty. What about focusing energies on vocational training, leading young people to real jobs, rather than providing watered down education The end of a sailing school held on Sakau Island, SW Malekulaopportunities, in the disguise of workshops on lifeskills.

I know there are benefits to reaching many young people as opposed to few — workshops on reproductive and sexual health are necessary because the young people are not learning this at school. I saw one or two kids actively use the free services at the clinic and take the condoms, and then watching another young teenage mum coming in with her new baby I thought “well maybe that workshop was effective if it stopped just one more teenage solo mum”. Workshops on budgeting are necessary, so that when the young people do get money, they use it effectively and workshops on lifeskills are useful because they can inspire young people into thinking about who they want to be and how they can get there. After completing a workshop a couple of youth members took some initiative and put their new skills to use and actually found jobs which have given them more training while earning money. This would not have happened had they not come to the initial workshop. But I am still left with the question, is it really the best use of millions of dollars in aid money annually?

It’s the “quality versus quantity” debate and it is raging hotly in development circles across the world. It is about making the most of aid money. After being directly involved this year, I think I have a greater understanding of both sides of the argument, but I will always be in two minds, purely because there are advantages on both sides. In Vanuatu, a vast range of services are being provided to young people, funded by aid money. I know they are all useful in some way, yet I still have that nagging question of ’what if?’ What if, instead of sending one youth to Australia for one week, we paid their school fees for a year? Whatever the answer I truly believe that education is the ticket out of poverty.

LEARN MORE & TAKE ACTION:

Vanuatu profile

Secretariat of the Pacific (SPC) — a Non-Government Organisation based in Fiji and New Caledonia which has heaps of info about Pacific issues, plus links to other sites.

Wan Smolbag Theatre works with communities through drama to provide a greater understanding of development issues in the South Pacific.

Buy some Good Books and help Oxfam support the Wan Smolbag Theatre.

Ugdana’s Invisible Children

Wednesday, November 8th, 2006

Hanna Butler

buvuunya kidsWhile I sit at a desk and swivel on an office chair, a little known phenomena has begun on the other side of the world where night is falling and children should be getting ready for bed. Instead, tens of thousands of Ugandan children begin what has now become termed as a “night commute”. Every night, children who live in dangerous rural areas where a militant rebel group have stronghold, walk up to 20km just to be able to sleep in the safety of the city. Fear of being abducted by rebels in their sleep, and being kept as soldiers or sex slaves, easily justifies a nightly marathon. And as thousands of eyes close to go to sleep, dreaming is not likely in a world where nightmares are a reality in more ways than one.

20 years ago, a self proclaimed prophet and spirit medium started a rebellion against the Ugandan government. The Lords Resistance Army (LRA) headed by Joseph Kony began a rebellion of terror without clear reasons or intentions and until recently never made a clear statement of its political aims. The current situation in Northern Uganda - of a cultish fanaticism, ruthless military might, complimented global attention or concern- has produced one of the most evil situations in the world.

Since 1987, 95% of the population has been displaced due to the LRA. 1000 people die every week from disease, the poor living conditions and violence. There are 300,000 child soldiers in the world, and 30,000 of these are in Uganda, and they make up 80% of the LRA. Imagine an unknown town destroyed by war and populated by children turned into killing machines and sex slaves. Recruits as young as 8 are subjected to a form of warfare involving more than just guns and bombs. The LRA have become known for their atrocious style of attack, and can be seen on the faces of the people of northern Uganda who now smile without lips, hear without ears and smell without noses. Children are taught to perform terrible atrocities — including killing their families and other children — or face death themselves. Forgetting the conflict however does not deny nor discredit what has happened. The facts are shocking, hard to believe and, what is even worse, these facts very rarely known.

In a competition where war, death, horror, and exploitation are the criteria for winning, the LRA can justifiably accept second place for their 20 year war without a reason in Northern Uganda. Last year 100 international experts launched a poll on which of the world’s “forgotten” emergencies they wanted the world to focus and act on. United Undersecretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator Jan Egeland stated, “I cannot find any other part of the world that is having an emergency on the scale of Uganda, that is getting such little international attention.” Adding that it is worse than Iraq’, and a moral outrage.

Last month the elusive Kony broke his silence and very unconvincingly blamed the atrocities of the last twenty years on groups trying to frame him, and the use of propaganda for creating his monster image. He explains that he was just trying to do as the voices had told him, and enforce the 10 commandments. Kony is now top of the International Criminal Courts warrant list and alone is wanted for 33 counts of war crimes and crimes against humanity.

I have a message to give you, while you sit on your office chair, from a 15-year-old girl who escaped from the Lord’s Resistance Army in Uganda, who now makes the nightly commute while you and I swivel on our chairs.

“I would like to give you a message. Please do your best to tell the world what is happening to us, the children. So that other children don’t have to pass through this violence.”

References:
Guluwalk site
Night Commuters in Northern Uganda by Rebecca Czarnecki

LEARN MORE

Movie: The Invisible Children and the media kit you can download
Lira: Uganda’s Child Soldiers
Wikipedia

    TAKE ACTION!

    • Watch the movie Uganda Rising - screening free at the Southern Cross, Abel Smith St, Wellington on November 13 and 20 2006
    • Join Hanna in Wellington 25 November 2006 in giving the message of this girl to New Zealand. GuluWalk is an international event that replicates the walks of the children in order to raise awareness and support for this crisis. Be that message of hope for the children of northern Uganda, and walk to tell their story. Northern Uganda is not the only place in the world where children live amongst war and poverty, it is unfortunately far too common, and more often that not we are in positions where there is not much that we can do. GuluWalk is an opportunity where you can “do more than just watch”.
    • For more info visit the GuluWalk site or email hanna@volunteer.org.nz

    What’s wrong with the G20’s neo-liberal agenda?

    Wednesday, November 8th, 2006

    Omar Hamed

    anti-capitalism signThe premier item on the G20’s agenda at it’s next meeting in Melbourne, in November 2006, is the reform of the World Bank and International Monetary Fund (IMF). The Fifty Years is Enough Network describe them as two US-controlled institutions that for the last fifty years have been,

    “imposing economic austerity policies in the countries of the so-called “Third World” or “global South.” Once Southern countries build up large external debts, as most have, they cannot get credit or cash anywhere else and are forced to go to these international institutions and accept whatever conditions are demanded of them. None of the countries has emerged from their debt problems; indeed most countries now have much higher levels of debt than when they first accepted IMF/World Bank “assistance.”(1)

    The IMF and World Bank have been under pressure from a number of different corners in recent years, including the Argentinean uprising (between 2001 and 2002), mass mobilisations across the planet against neo-liberalism, and campaigns for the rich nations and these international finance institutions to drop the debt’ that many developing nations owe them.

    The IMF is losing its grip over much of the developing world with Brazil, Argentina, Indonesia, Uruguay and Turkey seeking to pay back their loans as fast as possible, and high global commodity prices which have cut the IMF’s outstanding debt from over $70bn in 2003 to currently just over $20bn.(2) With the legitimacy of the Bretton Woods consensus under fire, and more and more nations refusing to take up its loans, the rich nations will be seeking a way to prolong the new world disorder they seek to build via the Washington consensus However, the iron grip of the IMF remains on many poor nations, such as Papua New Guinea, who are forced into “liberalising their economies and reducing social spending” by the IMF and World Bank. (3)
    hand holding dollars
    Barry Coates, the executive director of Oxfam New Zealand wrote that, “Because of its debts, Papua New Guinea has few resources to fund HIV/AIDS prevention, treatment and care… HIV infections are increasing by up to 50 percent per year and, if the epidemic follows the path of Zimbabwe, by 2020 the working age population in PNG will be 40 per cent smaller than it is today.”(4)

    Oxfam and the Make Poverty History coalition think that if debt relief was offered to all 62 developing countries that need full debt cancellation to meet the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) then progress will have been made. However, many of us who will hit the streets in Melbourne in December 2006 to protest against the G20 believe that the IMF and World Bank cannot be reformed, and that because of the stranglehold that the United States has over these institutions, the only way forward is to abolish both the World Bank and IMF, for developing nations to stop repaying their loans and for a new and fair institution to be set up to manage loans to nations.

    As Global Exchange points out, “voting power at the World Bank and IMF is determined by the level of a nation’s financial contribution. Therefore, the United States has roughly 17% of the vote, with the seven largest industrialized countries (G-7) holding a total of 45%.” (5)


    The WTO straightjacket’

    The G20’s agenda of neo-liberalism and privatisation has been accurately described as “capitalism with the gloves off”. The G20 is pursuing neo-liberal economic reforms across the world, particularly in vulnerable developing nations such as those in the Pacific. Australia, aided by New Zealand, is working towards a free trade area in the south Pacific, while the European Union is seeking to impose free trade agreements with its former colonies and could, with its economic power, very easily crush Pacific economies through its Economic Partnership Agreements’. Add into this the predatory behaviour of many of the G20 nations in the WTO and World Bank towards developing nations and you have a very disturbing picture painted of many of the G20 nations acting in an imperialist nature as each seeks to carve out its own slice of the world.

    The WTO aims to fit nations into a straightjacket of privatisation and deregulation which, in reality, will be dominated by corporate power and characterised by a loss of indigenous sovereignty and the “marginalisation and impoverishment of vulnerable sectors of populations”, as the nation-states involved move towards full compliance with the World Trade Organisation’s neo-liberal trade regime. (6)

    The recently averted accession to the WTO by Tonga demonstrates the disastrous consequences that joining the WTO has for developing nations. Oxfam New Zealand, in its report, Blood from a Stone, exposed the reality of Tonga’s accession. Tonga will be allowed tariffs at no more than 20%, resulting in tariff cuts that are expected to “affect Tonga’s ability to provide basic health care, education, water supply and other essential services for its people.” (7)

    “What can we do? We can re-invent civil disobedience in a million different ways. In other words, we can come up with a million ways of becoming a collective pain in the ass.” (Arundhati Roy)

    Neo-liberalism must be stopped. Subcomandante Marcos of the Mexican Zapatista movement said: “what the Right offers is to turn the world into one big mall where they can buy Indians here, women there…”
    police and protestors
    The only way to a humane and fair world where global poverty really is history is to mobilise people, especially young people and students, to struggle for a better world and against the corporate agenda that will be promoted at the G20. Our, and everyone else’s, future is not for sale. We will join forces to resist the rule of the market, the cutting of social spending, deregulation, privatisation and the global push to make us forget about that thing called “community”. (8)

    In December 2006, we will dance through the streets of Melbourne to oppose the G20 and the World Bank and IMF and the stooges of imperialism, like Paul Wolfowitz, that run them.

    “Against the single economic blueprint where the market rules, we represent diverse, people-centred alternatives. Against the monoculture of global capital, we demand a world where many worlds fit…
    Resisting together, our hope is reignited: hope because we have the power to reclaim memory from those who would impose oblivion, hope because we are more powerful than they can possibly imagine, hope because history is ours when we make it with our own hands.” (9)

    References:
    (1) Fifty Years is Enough, RESIST THE IMF & WORLD BANK! STOP CORPORATE GLOBALIZATION!
    (2) Gabriel Kolko, AN ECONOMY OF BUCCANEERS AND FANTASISTS
    (3) Oxfam’s Questions and Answers on Debt
    (4) Drop the Debt by Barry Coates
    (5) Global Exchange : World Bank / IMF Questions and Answers
    (6) Professor Jane Kelsey, A People’s Guide to PACER, Commissioned by the Pacific Network on Globalisation, Suva, August, 2004.
    (7) Oxfam International Briefing Note, Tonga: Blood from a Stone, December 15, 2005.
    (8) Elizabeth Martinez and Arnoldo Garcà­a, What is “Neo-Liberalism”? A Brief Definition, February 26th, 2000.
    (9) Notes from Nowhere, We are Everywhere, 2003, London.

    LEARN MORE

    Read Omar’s other article on the G20, and about why he plans to protest against the G20 in Melbourne, Get Up! Stand Up! Say No to the G20

    Websites:
    Global exchange
    Focus on the Global South
    Fifty Years is Enough
    Oxfam New Zealand
    Make Poverty History
    ARENA

    DVDs:
    The Fourth World War!
    The Take
    (both available to borrow from the Just Focus library)

    Books:
    No Logo” by Naomi Klien
    “Empty promises : the IMF, the Word Bank, and planned failures of global capitalism”

    TAKE ACTION!

    Natural disasters

    Wednesday, December 14th, 2005

    Eva Lawrence

    natural_photoWhen was the last time that you could pick up a paper or turn on the T.V. and not see images of yet another disaster to, more often that not, strike some poor area of the world?

    In the last twelve months we have seen the earthquake and following tsunami in South Asia (Indonesia, India, Sri Lanka, Thailand, Myanmar), the earthquake in South Asia (Pakistan, Kashmir, India & Afghanistan), droughts in Darfur, Northern Sudan as well as disasters with less casualties such as Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans, USA, and then there are all the ones we don’t hear about.

    So what’s up with them? Are they happening more often? Is this the end of the world, as predicted in the Hollywood block buster movie, The Day after Tomorrow? What can you do about what’s going on? Read on to find out.

    OK, let’s get the definition of a disaster out of the way.
    A natural disaster is when a natural hazard (such as an earthquake or hurricane) affects a vulnerable population. So, a tsunami in the middle of the ocean is a hazard, but when it crashes over land, killing people and destroying homes, it becomes a disaster.

    Why do more people die from natural disasters in poorer countries?
    Of every 100 people killed in a natural disaster, 96 live in the poorest countries of the world (Christian World Service).

    Talk about bad luck!
    bam iran girlThe fact is it is not a coincidence that poor people get hit with natural disasters. They are not more likely to experience an earthquake or hurricane, but because of poverty they are more vulnerable to the affects of the hazard. If a tsunami came crashing into Auckland, there would certainly be a huge mess and lots of deaths. But, most of the concrete buildings would stay strong and the government, army and civil defence would be in sorting stuff out ASAP.

    Well, what about the USA? That’s not a poor country. True, but notice that is was one of the poorest regions of the country and the people that were most affected were the poor black population, without transport who couldn’t get out.

    destroyed school FijiLong term effects
    A disaster doesn’t stop when the shaking stops or when the cameras move on to a new story. People continue to suffer the effects and rebuild their lives and communities for months or years to come. At this later stage there may be threats of as many or more deaths from secondary causes due to poor hygiene, lack of clean water, food and shelter.

    Reducing deaths from natural hazards is about time and money spent on prevention and building infrastructure to aid in recovery. It is also about reducing vulnerability to hazards through decreasing poverty.

    Are these disasters increasing?
    So are natural disasters increasing? There is some evidence that climate change is increasing weather-related hazards such as floods and hurricanes. While there is not an increase in the number of other hazards such as earthquakes, these more often become disasters due to the increasing world population and the number people living in poverty.

    In the western (wealthy) world, the number of deaths from disasters is decreasing but the amount of money spent on prevention and recovery is going up. To what does this mean? In rich countries, hazards cost money; in poor countries hazards cost lives.

    Media Coverage
    The media also makes it look like disasters are everywhere. Natural disasters get a lot of coverage in the media because they are dramatic. They are sudden, graphic and seemingly blameless. And dramatic images sell.

    And the more media coverage, the more money people donate to the cause. There was a huge out-pouring of sympathy and money in response to the tsunami — too much money in fact for many governments and aid agencies to cope with. In contrast, victims of the Pakistan earthquake have not received nearly enough aid and are in great danger as winter sets in.

    As tragic as the tsunami was and other natural disasters are, there are other ongoing human disasters with greater numbers of casualties that get a lot less coverage. Compare the stats in the following estimates:

    80 000 dead, 3.8 million homeless in the South Asia earthquake,
    300 000 dead or missing in the South Asia earthquake and tsunami,

    1 million people a year die from malaria
    3.1 million people died from AIDS related illness in 2004 (that’s like 10 tsunamis a year!)

    TAKE ACTION!

    So, what can YOU do?

    • Read media more critically and widely.
    • Donate money or time (such as working in a call centre) for a charity that you support.
    • Become involved in development work and campaigns against poverty to reduce the vulnerability of countries to disasters.
    • Consider donating money regularly rather than just when there is a disaster.
    • Look after your environment so that we don’t increase the incidence of hazards.
    • Create your own home emergency kit.

    LEARN MORE

    Dev-Zone

    Relief web

    Red Cross

    NZ Ministry of Civil Defence and Emergency Management

    Special thanks to Justin Kemp from Dev-Zone

    This article was originally published in Jet Magazine and is reproduced here with their permission. Photo’s courtesy of Save the Children NZ.

    First day in theatre

    Friday, October 14th, 2005

    I had my first day at the hospital - fairly bureaucratic as expected. But I think that with the schmarmy letter that I just tapped out it should mean that things are fine from here on. Apparently I needed separate letters from the powers that be to allow me admission into the ICU and theatres. But otherwise the ward provides many motorbike victims, they all have x -rays that you just look at and wince.
    dr.alex
    I have been in theatre all day today. There was this poor farmer who came in after stepping on a mine this morning while widening his paddock for his farm. Bloody American war leftover still active, 30-40 years on. Another guy had a broken femur that we fixed up. In Welly there just weren’t that many broken femurs - over here everyone rides around on their motorbikes and the crashes are a mess. Helmets are discouraged in the cities as they impede the vision at the peripheries. So that’s a good system huh?

    Currently the caesarean rate in Province hospital rumoured to be between is between 50 and 70%. Whenever I am in theatre there is a baby entering the world just a couple of metres away - they have two surgical cases going simultaneously in the theatres here. The personal space and touching laws are very different. There is no male-female touching in public - except when holding onto each other on a motorbike - the young couples motorbike a lot. There is plenty of girl on girl and man touch though. It is normal to walk with an arm around a friend when on the street. Also there is much thigh stroking when talking to each other or to emphasise a point. When I come back to NZ I will be drinking beer with ice and touching everyone all the time. I think I will have to have a diamante suit made while I am here to go with this new attitude.

    I spent the morning drinking iced coffee again with the doctors and then after a bit of a ward round (read,look at wounds and poke at legs) we just sat around and talked orthopaedics and then some political discussion. Apparently the senior consultants at the hospital have a salary of $70 US dollars a month (one million dong). Not a lot considering the ATM just let me get out 2 million.

    It’s my common mistake - people say ” How….are you?” to which I answer “I am fine today thank you. How is your day today?” This gets very confused looks. The Vietnamese don’t care how I am, what they really want to know before names etc. is how old I am. I have also been asked “how odd are you?” I decided not to tell them how odd I am because I need to stay here for another 3 weeks or so.

    Yesterday I spent most of the day in theatre doing some skin grafting. There is a burns ward managed by the orthopaedic doctors (it’s a plastics specialty in NZ - no plastics here though). There are a couple of guys with horrific electrical burns which are needing a lot of surgery. One of the guys has had to have the arm that touched the wire amputated and his feet are burnt pretty badly where the current left his body. It’s pretty similar to NZ as far as the jigsaw puzzle of skin grafting goes - shave it off here and fit it across the biggest area of exposed viable flesh.

    Why…?

    Thursday, August 11th, 2005

    A Poem by Kate Thompson

    WHY…

    Why can’t we see beyond a face, question mark
    Beyond a belief, or a race?
    Why can’t we truly understand,
    The power we hold in the palm of our hand?

    We have the power to recede,
    Those images which cause my heart to bleed.
    Helpless parents holding their dying young,
    How hopelessly their lives have begun.

    Their eyes forever only seeing pain,
    As tears flow like a winter’s rain.
    Why can’t we help break down their prison,
    And find the lost soul hiding within?

    So let’s not turn our heads to look away,
    Instead let’s help them survive another day.
    A day without suffering, a day without loss,
    Let them experience joy, whatever the cost.

    Reducing conflict and building peace

    Thursday, October 9th, 2003

    The Global Focus Youth Advisory Team: Amanda Edwards, Amina Lafraie, Erin Young, Lisa Woods, Yadana Saw & Paul Zoubkov

    Everybody needs to work together to achieve peace.

    Realise that you can do plenty!

    • While keeping an open mind, be sceptical of mainstream media.
    • Find out more about peace and conflict (if you can, use the internet!).
    • Talk to your friends and whanau about issues.
    • Organise an event or a campaign to raise awareness of war and the importance of peace building. It might be a concert, a public talk or a demonstration.
    • Shop sensibly — support fair trade companies that are not linked to war and conflict
    • Lobby the government and your local members of parliament. If you’re 18 you can vote or stand in elections.
    • Volunteer with an organisation like Amnesty International, support campaigns like Ban Landmines’, or join a global networks of concerned and active young people like takingitglobal.org.
    • Think about your own attitudes and practice principles of peace in your own life.
    • Remember, that journey of a thousand miles begins with a small step!

    CHECK OUT THESE WEBSITES

    Wire Tap
    Globalissues.org
    Youthactionnet.org

      A Case Study: From small beginnings

      Despite their country’s hefty military budget and compulsory military service, five young men in Paraguay decided to act and set up the Military Objection Movement.

      Within a few years over 25,000 fellow military objectors had flocked to their cause. By advocating for basic human rights and adequate spending on health, education and housing they have forced a number of positive changes in their country.

      What’s happening in New Zealand?
      NZAIDNgaHoe Tuputupu-mai-tawhiti

      NZAID is a government organisation committed to helping reduce conflict among our Pacific Island neighbours.

      It does this by promoting and strengthening the ability of Pacific Islands to govern themselves.
      Approximately 40 percent of NZAID’s assistance in the Pacific supports programmes in governance. Examples of current work include:

      • Funding projects to promote peace-building and conflict prevention
      • Allocation of aid funding for humanitarian and conflict resolution
      • Funding for domestic violence programmes, local police and support for women’s refuges
      • The development of legal and court systems.

      This article was written as part of Global Focus a collaborative project of Tearaway Magazine and the Global Education Centre. It was first published in Tearaway magazine and is reprinted here with their permission

      The Solomon Islands - a case study

      Wednesday, October 8th, 2003

      Amanda Edwards

      In 1998 ethnic tension erupted between the local inhabitants of Guadalcanal Island and the more recent arrivals from the neighbouring island of Malaita.

      The fighting resulted in many deaths and caused over 20,000 Malaitans to flee from Guadalcanal.

      Despite a peace accord in October 2000, violent confrontations have continued between these opposing factions.

      The situation remains grim. Crime and corruption have plagued the country, economic activity is at a standstill, and tribal tensions and land disputes have often exploded into armed conflict.
      Following requests from the local government, Australian and New Zealand police have been deployed to help with law and order.

      They will need to be mindful of local culture and customs, and focus on the longer-term solutions, such as education for peace, return of unfairly taken lands and restrictions to migration.

      After years of conflict and hardship a better future is on the horizon, but everybody needs to work together to achieve a total peace.

      This article was written as part of Global Focus a collaborative project of Tearaway Magazine and the Global Education Centre. It was first published in Tearaway magazine and is reprinted here with their permission

      A world divided

      Friday, August 29th, 2003

      Poverty

      Mike Lamont, Graham Smout, Ryan McCarthy, Jayne Jones, Matt Galloway, Tialda Veldman, Callum Gay, Rowan Smith, Yadana Saw and Paul Zoubkov

      The uneven spread of wealth is growing. As we spin further into the twenty-first century our world remains a divided place. For a lucky few there is plenty; for most there is none.

      The richest 20 percent of the world’s population now consume 86 percent of its resources. For the vast majority of people, however, even the most basic necessities of life — clean water, food, shelter — are scarce. And this uneven spread of wealth is growing. But poverty is not inevitable. It CAN be overcome.

      The question is, what are YOU prepared to do?

      What causes poverty?

      COLONISATION: This has caused loss of land and resources and left deep social and psychological scars.

      UNFAIR TRAIDE: Rich countries have protected their own economies while exploiting the economies and resources of poorer countries.

      INTERNATIONAL DEBT: Massive international debt owed by third world countries takes cash away from health, education and economic development.
      Often the original debt money was stolen by corrupt governments, or spent on useless projects without proper consultation or consent.
      Although the original amount may have been repaid many times over, the debt keeps growing because of high interest rates.

      WAR: Conflict destroys lives and livelihoods, homes and crops, roads and communications. It creates unemployment, scares away investment and demands huge military spending.

      INADEQUATE RESOURCES: Lack of food, water, education, healthcare, land, shelter, technology, start-up finance — all these can act as a cause of poverty.

      IMMORAL GOVERNMENTS: Some governments have no concern for citizens or their rights. Corruption, discrimination, brutality and unaccountability all contribute to the growth of poverty.

      ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS: The poor are much more likely to depend directly on the environment for sustenance or income. Natural disasters (such as earthquakes, floods and droughts) and man-made environmental problems (pollution, over-grazing, etc) have the greatest impact on those who are most in need.

      Did you know?
      Of the world’s 6 billion people, 4.4 billion live in developing or third world countries. Of these:

      • three-fifths lack basic sanitation
      • almost one third have no access to clean water
      • a quarter do not have adequate housing
      • a fifth have no access to modern health services
      • a fifth of children do not attend to the end of primary school
      • a fifth do not have adequate protein and energy from their food supplies

      OTAKE ACTION

      Ten ways YOU can fight poverty INFORM: By reading these pages, you are gathering information that will help you form an OPINION.

      OPINION: The whole world is based on everyone having one of these. Make sure yours is well informed. TALK to other people and share your knowledge.

      TALK: Share your ideas and concerns with other people — your friends, parents, teachers. Hearing what others say helps to EXPLORE an issue.

      EXPLORE: Exploring can be about testing what you know, or what others say. You may encounter problems, solutions and more questions — enough to make you want to CHANGE something.

      CHANGE: If the world needs fixing, start by changing yourself. You might stop buying certain products, food or clothes. Changing your habits is to CHALLENGE what you don’t like.

      CHALLEGE: It’s difficult to stand up and care about something, but if you’ve reached this point then encourage yourself to go further. Try to find SOLUTIONS to poverty. Don’t give up.

      SOLUTIONS: So far, everything you have done is a positive step that makes a difference. But what would solve some of the issues? You can be as imaginative as you like. Nothing is impossible. If you can see the connection to the issue you care about, keep up the pressure and ACTIVATE!

      ACTIVATE: Live the world you wish for every day. There may be lots of bad things in the world, but you don’t have to contribute. Have PRIDE in your actions and thoughts.

      PRIDE:
      Be proud of what you know and what you are doing. Others might find it scary or they might hassle you — just remember that doing good things is difficult and you are making a positive difference. If you are true to what you believe, then that will keep a SMILE on your face.

      SMILE:
      Because you are making this world better.

      If the world needs fixing, start by changing yourself.

      This article was written as part of Global Focus a collaborative project of Tearaway Magazine and the Global Education Centre. It was first published in Tearaway magazine and is reprinted here with their permission

      Illustrator: Gavin Mouldey