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Journalists for Human Rights

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Entries from September 2007

The African Green Revolution:Can it unlock the door to peace

September 19th, 2007 · No Comments

Earlier this month policy makers, government officials, NGOs, farmers, entrepreneurs and business leaders gathered in Olso, Norway to plan a revolution – a Green one. Now in its second year, the African Green Revolution Conference has become the forum to discuss increasing agricultural productivity on the Continent; a plan, which many believe could hold the key to ending poverty.

Although championed by many throughout the international community, the African Green Revolution, which aims to use existing science and technology to transform agriculture into a vehicle for economic growth, is controversial. A growing number of researchers fear that the current plan for the Green Revolution could lead to the loss of African food sovereignty and potentially, an erosion of genetic wealth. The debate is just beginning.

Lauren Vopni Reports:

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Aegis Students Rwanda: Launching a new program

September 19th, 2007 · No Comments

August 14, 2007 marked the launch of Aegis Students Rwanda at the Kigali Genocide Memorial Centre by screening the film ‘Shooting Dogs. Aegis Students’ campaigns, already active across the UK, works to raise awareness about genocide by empowering students to speak out against it, forming the grassroots support for Aegis Trust, the leading NGO which campaigns to prevent genocide worldwide.

The broadcast of this radio documentary also marked the launch of a new CFM series, ‘Denia Yetu: Stay in touch with your world,’ 10 minute reportages that will focus on social, political, and economic issues as well as stories of lifestyle and culture in Rwanda and the East African Community.

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Abortion in Ghana: The Law and Effects on Women

September 17th, 2007 · No Comments

Despite the existence of a law prohibiting abortion, women, many of them young women, are not deterred from choosing to terminate their pregnancies.

In Ghana, illegal abortion is one of the leading causes of maternal death.

Afia Akyere spoke with a woman who not only survived an abortion but is also living with the stigma.

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Government Press Conferences: Much Ado About Nothing

September 14th, 2007 · No Comments

Ghana’s NPP government loves to boast about their good governance policies and hard work to serve the nation.  But any commitment to the betterment of Ghana, judging from press conferences is skin deep. Lots of talk and no accountability. Even the Tourism Ministry could not get itself to print a simple flyer outlining the programs set to celebrate World Tourism Day.  Instead, the deputy minister kept on dodging the questions and complaining about people defecating in the streets of Accra.  Having had my share of listening to this kind of rhetoric, I decided to prepare a tongue in cheek report about the deputy minister for the humourous show on Citi FM BELIEVE IT OR NOT. Here is what I came up with.

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Study calls for support and acceptance of teachers living wi

September 14th, 2007 · No Comments

By: Benjamin Henaku (Producer: Darrell Harvey)
Most teachers in the country don’t know their HIV status. That’s according to research released today by the Ghana National Association of Teachers and the Teachers and Educational Workers Union. The study found that barely a quarter of the 680 teachers surveyed have been tested. And those who have test positive face job loss and discrimination in the workplace. The report’s authors say that could means bad news for Ghana’s education system desperate for teachers. They recommend more be done to encourage voluntary testing and counselling in the workplace, and provide support for teachers living with HIV.   Ben Henaku reports.
Air date: August 23, 2007
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International Day for the Remembrance of the Slave Trade

September 3rd, 2007 · No Comments

By Seth Kwame Boateng with files from Kevin Hill

A report about the International Day for the Remembrance of the Slave Trade and Its Abolition, recognized by UNESCO.

(Air date: August 23) SKYY FM

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Olympic Dream for Darfur

September 2nd, 2007 · No Comments

On August 15, a symbolic Olympic torch was lit at the Ecole Technique Officielle in Kicukiro, Kigali as Darfur advocates united to call for an end to all genocides.

Rwanda is the second stop for the ‘Olympic Dream for Darfur’ campaign, in a six-country tour, that began in Darfur on August 9, exactly one year before the 2008 summer Olympics in Beijing. Due to China’s economic interests in Sudan, the organization argues that leaders in Beijing are in a unique position to persuade the Sudanese government to end the atrocities in Darfur and they hope their campaign will pursuade the Chinese to get involved.

American actress and UN Goodwill Ambassador for UNICEF, Mia Farrow, was among the Darfur advocates in Kigali for the event and shared her thoughts about what genocide survivors can share with the international community in an interview with Contact FM.

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Talking instead of trashing the mentally ill

September 2nd, 2007 · No Comments

By Abena Amoah Gyamfi with files from Trish Estabrooks

Kwadwo is like many mentally ill people on the streets in Kumasi. His clothes are dark, his hair matted, his toenails overgrown. He talks to himself and asks people for money when they walk by.

Most people avoid him. He’s difficult to ignore though. He sits in a heap of clothes, paper, his own feces and urine. He says he’s a lawyer, writing about the world and is ready to issue licenses for a variety of services to anyone who needs an official letter or permission from a lawyer to rent a bike, join a club.

Ask anyone who lives or works in Adum, Kumasi and they’ll tell you about him. They won’t know his name or where he’s from or why he sits, sleeps and eats by the cement wall everyday, but rather that he’s there.

Kwadwo lives around the corner from the Kumasi Metropolitan Assembly. If he yelled loud enough city officials sitting in their offices with the windows open could probably hear him. In many ways he couldn’t be farther away from city officials.

In preparation for the African Cup of Nations KMA is carrying out what they call “decongestion exercises” activities to rid the streets of clutter, trash and rubbish. In many people’s eyes Kwadwo is all of these.

In an effort to better understand some of Kumasi’s mentally ill and the causes of mental illness Luv/Nhyira news reporter, Abena Amoah Gyamfi, prepared this report.

Psychiatrists say mental patients are more decent on our street than sound people who litter them

Have you ever spotted a half or completely naked mentally ill person on the streets or at a corner? What was your initial reaction? Did you wonder what may have gone wrong with him or her?

Some people attribute madness to witchcraft, while others think it is punishment for wrongs committed by individuals or even their ancestors. Generally the public sees the mentally ill as trash.

In the following report Abena Amoah Gyamfi of Nhyira FM tells the real story behind the mentally ill on Ghanaian streets.

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Commercial drivers angry at new system of roaming police

September 2nd, 2007 · No Comments

By Nii Akrofi Smart Abbey (Producer: Darrell Harvey)   Some commercial drivers in Accra are angry with the new system of police checkpoints popping up around the city. Metal police barriers are giving way to what drivers call snap check points – police who stand at the side of the road and randomly stop cars as they pass. The drivers say they are dangerous, especially at night… and are little more than another revenue collection point for dashes to the police. But officials of the police administration say the increased police presence is to check the recent upsurge in violent crime. Nii Akrofi Smart-Abbey has been touring the streets of Accra and files this report. Air date: August 20 2007

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