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Posts Tagged ‘HIV/AIDS’

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.

Hate ain’t sexy

Wednesday, October 5th, 2005

Daniel Dearnley

prejudice1Sexuality prejudice —what is it, why does it happen, and how can we stop it?

A 16 year-old Tennessee boy, Zach, recently came out’; he told his parents he was gay. Naturally, his parents only wanted to help their child in any way they could. They sent him to a Christian fundamentalist refuge programme’ to try to counsel him out of his homosexuality. He is still there, being treated as though homosexuality is a mental illness.

As unfair as it seems, it’s not the worst that could happen. American man Matthew Shepard was beaten up one night in 1998 and left tied to a fence to die because he was gay.

When AIDS victims in the U.S. died, a very dedicated Fred Phelps would picket their funerals with placards bearing slogans like God hates fags’.

When things like this happen, prejudice is the problem.

prejudice2Where does it come from?
This prejudice can stem from many causes. A lot of people attribute it to ignorance and lack of understanding. It could also be fear: because they’re gay, they must be checking me out and have AIDS. This shows the influence of misinformation; for example, that all gay men have AIDS, whereas, in reality, the biggest form of transmission of HIV is heterosexual sex.

This may also threaten or make people question their own sense of sexual identity. It could just be that some people need someone to bully, and people with a different sexuality or gender identity are seen as easy targets.

Maybe people fixate not on sexuality, but on sexual practices they see as icky, such as anal sex, even though when you think about it any type of sex, homosexual or hetrosexual, is kinda gross.

Sometimes the prejudice can be exacerbated by religious intolerance; people use religious texts to justify their prejudice and persuade others of their views — although there are also many religious people who oppose all prejudice.

What does it look like?
This kind of prejudice can cause anyone who doesn’t fit in a heterosexual box to feel ashamed, excluded and hurt. It can have an intense affect on their self-esteem and thought processes. Gay, lesbian, questioning and transgender people can be constantly teased and bullied, making it very difficult for them to come to terms with their own identity. They can be hurt by stereotypes, or diminished by assumptions and misinformation, like only gay men have HIV’. They are often victims of hate crime.

Homosexuality is illegal in more than 80 countries (and was illegal in New Zealand until 1986). Even where it is legal, homosexuals are still often denied rights such as marriage or guaranteed equal opportunities in employment.

But the good news is Civil Union Bills or legislation allowing gay marriage have been passed in several countries including, New Zealand, Canada and Spain.

And in some countries and cultures, diverse sexualities and gender identities are accepted — like the fa’afine in Samoa, or in Thailand some people believe God created three genders, not two.

TAKE ACTION!

All this low self-esteem, hate crime and discrimination can be a bit of a downer. And I know this sounds cheesy, but prejudice ultimately affects everyone, because we are excluding and alienating people who could be well worth knowing.

  • Challenge your own prejudices: everyone has prejudiced thoughts, so don’t feel guilty, just recognize that you have them and work to think and act differently.
  • Get to know people from groups who are discriminated against. It will help with understanding and not being scared.
  • School yourself up with the Prejudice Institute’s factsheet.
  • Write letters to Editors or to politicians — make sure they know it’s something you care about.
  • Link up with other people or organisations to organise pro-diversity, anti-prejudice events or groups
  • Call it when you see it.

LEARN MORE

Zach’s protest site

Rainbow Youth for some other young gay, lesbian and transgender stories about coming out.

Understanding Prejudice — this is a great website for getting your head around prejudice.

Oxfam International Youth Parliament- check out some of the cool things other young people are doing around the world — disproving the stereotypes.

Illustrator Martin Wilkinson

This article was written as part of the 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.

Globalisation — what are the negative impacts?

Tuesday, August 9th, 2005

Andrew Colgan

What is Globalisation?
Globalisation is the buzz word on everybody’s lips in the 21st century. But what does it mean? It basically means the world is getting smaller in just about every sense, except for geographically. Exchange is becoming more rapid, travel more feasible, communication faster and more accessible, advertising and media more widespread and movement of money more free-flowing.

Globalisation’s winners and losers
But globalisation is causing huge problems. Those who appear to be in control of the process (transnational corporations (TNCs), multilateral institutions and governments of wealthy industrialised nations) don’t seem to have the interests of everybody in mind. Consequently, economic and financial globalisation is happening at a rate disproportionate to all other developments. Economists and world leaders speak in terms of revenue, exchange, capital movement, structural adjustment and interest. Such concepts as emotion, cultural identity equality, environmental protection and social benefit seem to be foreign and are left out of the equation.

Some problems caused by Globalisation

The resulting problems are huge, and hit women, children and those on the periphery (especially in poorer countries) the hardest. These problems include:

  • Exploitation in employment — as well as appalling wages and working conditions, in many cases women and children are abducted and forced to work in oppressive factories or as sex workers.
  • The rise of the HIV / AIDS pandemic, displacement and longer working hours resulting in the orphaning and abandonment of children.
  • Neglect of the sick, illiterate, disabled and elderly as governments’ priorities shift towards economic growth and servicing of public debt.

The role of International institutions
The fate of many poorer or “developing” nations lies in the hands of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the World Bank and the World Trade Organisation (WTO). Claims that Structural Adjustment Programs (SAPs) are in the best interest of those poorer nations, and not simply for the benefit of the wealthy creditors of these International Financial Institutions (IFIs), are dubious at best. The liberalisation of trade by the WTO has meant a removal of tariffs. Now only governments which can afford to pay subsidies can protect their producers. The complexity of international trade often makes it difficult to understand how huge disparities come about. Some excellent examples are given in a Christian Aid video called “Nuts”.

The problems with Transnational Corporations
Transnational corporations (TNCs) are quietly gaining dangerously unaccountable political power in both rich and poor countries. For example:

  • Finland is home of the mobile phone company Nokia. This company is so big that it accounts for 2/3 of the stock exchange, 1/5 of all exports, a significant proportion of the country’s tax revenue and employs over 22,00 Finns. By threatening to remove production to another country, Nokia effectively holds the Finnish government to ransom and so has a great influence in its political decision making.
  • Wal-mart is a huge American department store. Its clothing range is produced in factories in Bangladesh, taking advantage of the fact that there are no minimum wage laws there. Wal-mart is 55 times the size of the entire Bangladesh economy. By threatening to remove production to another impoverished (and therefore cheap) country, it has negotiated a deal with the government so it no longer pays a single cent of taxes.

The widening gap between the rich and poor
Despite extensive plundering of the world’s natural resources, this wealth has been shared less and less equally and extreme poverty remains. The gap between rich and poor is growing on a local and an international level:

  • The richest 20% of the world’s population enjoy 86% of its resources while the poorest 20% must survive with a little over 1%.
  • The 225 richest people in the world have the equivalent income to the poorest 2.25 billion.
  • The world’s 3 richest people have fortunes equivalent to the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of the world’s poorest 36 countries.
  • 200 million children never start school (3/4 of these are girls). The amount needed to send these children to school each year is less than the amount spent on cosmetics in the USA and less than half the amount spent on ice-cream in Europe.


The Homogenisation of a Global Youth Culture

The growth of advertising and the entertainment media is contributing to the rising of a homogenous global youth culture. In New Zealand it is now estimated that we see on average over 3000 advertisements every day. Young people are made to feel insecure through “image advertising” and then told consumption is the answer to their insecurities. The result is a rise in individualism and a lack of compassion and care for others. People are encouraged to care more about money and image than family and community. Perhaps this plays a part in the high youth suicide rate in New Zealand. The other adverse effect of this global youth culture is that we are seeing people all around lose their unique cultural identities in pursuit of a branded western culture. In many ways, diversity is fighting a losing battle against globalisation.

LEARN MORE

Try googling any of these subjects and you’ll find heaps of articles and discussion — but here’s a selection to start you off…

Sweatshops
Corporation Watch — exposing sweatshops
Article in A World Connected
The feminist perspective

Child labour
Human Rights Watch
UNICEF

Trafficking
Human Rights Watch
United Nations

HIV and AIDS — stats, info, aid agencies etc
Young People and AIDS
UN Report (June 2005) on the impact on young people

International Financial Institutions (IFIs)

Watching the IFIs
US Network for Economic Justice

Debt
Jubilee Debt Campaign
Article in Global Issues on Debt

Corporations
Corporation Watch — holding corporations accountable
Corporate Watch

TAKE ACTION!

  • Read an article on this by the same author, Andrew Colgan : Youth Response to Globalisation

Why are we living in a state of Global Injustice?

Tuesday, August 9th, 2005

Geoff Cooper

Ever get the feeling that the more you find out about your world, the less you wish you knew? Is it simply that the human race is incompetent at managing the planet and people? Or perhaps that our attempts at global euphoria have just gone badly astray?

Injustices have existed since the beginning of time, and this is often used to justify a certain level of it in our modern world. But just how much are we willing to accept?

  • 1.2 billion people live without access to safe drinking water while the 3 richest people in the world earn the equivalent of the combined Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of the 37 poorest countries
  • every 10 seconds someone in the world dies from HIV/AIDS
  • it is estimated that around 300,000 children around the world are exploited as child soldiers

The figures are endless, and after a while it is easy to become immune to their impact. But before we agree to put these down to inevitability, lets look at where we spend our resources that could overcome such problems:

  • the U.S spends $8bn/year on cosmetics
  • basic education for all children would cost $6bn/year
  • the cost of eradicating poverty is 1% of global income
  • Europeans spend $11bn/year on ice cream
  • while clean water and safe sewers for all would cost $9bn/year

With statistics such as these we can logically prove that these problems are very much a human construction. To believe that they are an inevitable part of society represents a lack of understanding of the ideology behind such phenomena.

The Ideological and Institutional Bases of Global Injustice
When we trace the causes of poverty, it is not uncommon to end up on the doorsteps of the institutions that make the rules of international trade - in particular the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the World Bank and the World Trade Organisation (WTO). It seems whenever leaders of these institutions meet, there are mass protests. Seattle, Washington, Prague, Geneva are just a few examples of the protests that have arisen over the past 20 years at such conferences. There is a common belief that these organisations are to blame for much of the poverty we see in developing countries It is one of the great ironies of world institutions that the World Bank actually claims to be alleviating mass poverty (check out what the World Bank claims it does.).

So what is it that these institutions are doing wrong? With the best academic scholars the world has to offer at their side it is hard to imagine that they are incompetent at their job. Rather, we must recognise what fundamental rationale exists behind the array of questionable decisions that they continue to put into global effect.

What these institutions honestly believe is that what is good for business and large corporations will be good for everybody… eventually. Extending this rationale, it becomes clear that when the rules of trade are written, they should be written in the interests of these corporations. If the conditions are good enough for these corporations, we will eventually all reap the benefits. If discrepancies exist between reality and what the Neoliberal institutions claim to be working towards (essentially a stable society), their excuse is simply that more time is needed for the copious benefits to be actually realised. But just how long must we wait before we can formally conclude that this system will never work in consideration of the world’s poor?

LEARN MORE

American Christian Organisation seeking justice for the world’s hungry people BREAD
Guide to Free Trade history, theory and ideology
Neoliberalism explained
The Impact of the WTO

TAKE ACTION!

Make Poverty History
Bono’s organisation (lead singer of U2)
NZ initiative by World Vision to get involved in