Monday, January 15, 2007

one story among several similar injustices...


Angola ‘made thousands homeless’


According to Amnesty, homes have been demolished
repeatedly in one district since September 2004 to make room for new
public and private housing.

It says none of the affected residents has received compensation.

Neither have they been offered adequate alternative accommodation, the human rights group says.

‘Extreme violence’

Amnesty International’s report claims that nearly all
the forced evictions involved excessive use of force by the Angolan
authorities.


AFRICAN EVICTIONS
3m+ evicted since 2000
At least 6,000 Angolan families evicted since 2001
Source: Amnesty International


It also says that many forced evictions in the last two years have been
carried out apparently at the request of the Catholic church.

This is because 2,000 families had been living on land where the church intends to build a sanctuary.

Last month the aid agency Christian Aid reported that
over the last two years the Angolan government and private security
companies had been using extreme violence against squatters during slum
clearance operations in Luanda.

===

Making way for Angola’s middle class

Luanda is home to five million people, about a
quarter of the country’s entire population, with most living in
“musseques” or slums.

One of those used to be Lucas Kaxingadoes, who has lived
in Bairro Cambamba on the southern outskirts of Luanda for several
years and where some families occupied the land 30 years ago.

His family began by farming the land and built houses with whatever materials they could find.

But they also took manual jobs in the city, saving what they could and eventually building houses made of concrete.

Lucas, however, doesn’t have a house any longer.

His home, like many others, was cleared to make way for new property to house the country’s burgeoning middle class.


Advert for Luanda Sul homes
Billboards advertise the controversial new homes being built

Lucas says policemen came and destroyed his home and
those of his neighbours in an effort to clear the land to make way for
new developments.

Maria Francisco, who has also been left without shelter,
tells a similar tale about the police: “During December they came
several times. They were aggressive.”

There are plans to use the land where Lucas and Maria live to build the next phase of a project called Luanda Sul.

Already thousands of homes have been built as part of this initiative on land surrounding Bairro Cambamba.

They are very expensive looking. They’re surrounded by
high walls and fences, they all have car ports, there are big satellite
dishes on many of them and the roads are all paved.

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How’d I find out about this story? I keep tabs on several news feeds using Google’s Reader

Incase you don’t know much about Angola, read about it on Wikipedia.

Wednesday, November 15, 2006

SOS Children's Villages - USA - Very Nice! “Borat” Screening Brings Aid for Orphaned Children in Kazahkstan

Very Nice! “Borat” Screening Brings Aid for Orphaned Children in Kazahkstan

11/14/06 SOS Children’s Villages – USA announced today that some moviegoers are taking Borat - or Kazahkstan - seriously. They are raising funds for the orphaned and abandoned children of SOS Childrens' Villages Kazakstan. One young man simply stood outside a movie theater and raised $1700 for SOS Kazahkstan after a showing of the Borat movie.

“It's great to turn a comedy into something good for children. Children are orphaned in Kazahkstan for the same reasons they are in other developing countries: extreme poverty, disease and social conditions that destroy family ties,” says Heather Paul, CEO of SOS-USA.

“We are thrilled that the screening of this movie inspired these donors. Let's hope that a few more Borat fans want to raise money for Kazahkstan's children. We are now launching new programs to prevent child abandonment and improve the lives of more than 900 children and families in Astana and Temirtau, Kazahkstan. These funds are a great start towards establishing programs that support at-risk families, including HIV/AIDS prevention education and care program.”

About SOS Children's Villages - USASOS Children’s Villages was founded in 1949 to provide families for orphaned and abandoned children. Today there are over 450 villages in 132 countries around the world. The mission of SOS is to build families for children in need, help them shape their own futures and share in the development of their communities.

To learn more, visit www.sos-usa.org.

CONTACT:
Jennifer Tabbal
202-470-5175
jtabbal@sos-usa.org

Monday, October 02, 2006

West Turkey cafe grenade attack injures 15: sources | International News | Reuters.com


IZMIR, Turkey (Reuters) - At least 15 people were injured on Monday evening when unknown assailants threw two grenades into a cafe in Izmir, Turkey's third largest city, hospital sources and police said.

The injured were rushed to three hospitals, where sources told Reuters a total of 15 people had been admitted suffering injuries from the blast. A police official said he could confirm seven people had been injured. There were no reports of deaths.

"Two grenades were thrown into the cafe and exploded, but the attack has no political links," Izmir police chief Huseyin Capkin told reporters. He did not give details.

The explosion comes a day after the separatist Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) began a unilateral ceasefire in its 22-year conflict with the Turkish state.

Ankara blames the PKK for the deaths of more than 30,000 people since the group launched its armed struggle for an independent Kurdish homeland in southeast Turkey.

Armed forces chief General Yasar Buyukanit said earlier that only warring states could declare a ceasefire and that the PKK, considered a terrorist organization by the United States, Europe and Turkey, should unconditionally lay down its arms and deliver itself to Turkish justice.

Far-left and Islamist groups have also carried out bomb attacks in Turkey in the past.

Wednesday, July 12, 2006

Top Ugandan LRA rebels snubb talks

In a recent interview broadcast on the BBC, Mr Kony denied the LRA had carried out atrocities, particularly against children.

Thousands have died in the two-decade conflict between rebels and the government, and some two million have been forced to flee their homes.

Snippet from the BBC article... I really wonder what was going through Joseph Kony's mind when he said that.

Thursday, June 15, 2006

Invisible Children - Global Night Commute

Global Night Commute - It's Just the Beginning Check Out the Video

We have been called idealists, but our ideals are becoming realities. The images you are about to see do not lie.

On April 29th, 2006, in more than 130 cities, roughly 80,000 people joined thousands of Northern Ugandan night commuters and slept outside. Young, old, all races, all religions – demanded that the world take notice to a war that remained unseen for over 20 years.

If you were there, you were a part of something historical. If you weren’t, keep watching; the Global Night Commute was just the beginning of a much larger movement.

Please continue to burn high res photos to a CD and send to our office (attn: GNC art book) to possibly be included in the highly anticipated GNC art book, available for sale soon online. This beautiful book will detail the makings of the revolution that is invisible children’s Global Night Commute (for more details- see our website).

Thank you for fighting for justice for people you may never meet – knowing they deserve the same freedoms as you. Pass this video on, and continue to ask family, friends, neighbors, teachers, journalists, and politicians to help us out, take Northern Uganda off the backburner, and end a war.

This is just the beginning.
Hold on.