Category Archives: Yona Fares Maro

Egypt: Free Blogger Held in Maspero Case

from Yona Maro

(New York) – Egypt’s military prosecutor should immediately release an award-winning blogger charged in connection with the demonstration by Christian Copts on October 9, 2011, which turned deadly, Human Rights Watch said today. Alaa Abdel Fattah was detained and later charged with incitement and theft of a military weapon, even though the prosecutor had presented no evidence to support the charges. His detention came as military prosecutors started questioning activists and priests about their alleged involvement in publicly encouraging Copts to demonstrate on that day.

During the protest in the Maspero area, military vehicles ran over demonstrators and the military used excessive force to disperse protesters, resulting in the deaths of 27 civilians and one military officer. A November 2 report by the National Council for Human Rights, Egypt’s government-appointed human rights commission, said members of the military were responsible for killing demonstrators. Investigations related to this demonstration remain solely in the hands of military prosecutors, who have called in activists and priests for questioning but have refused to reveal any information about whether they are investigating any military officers for their roles in killing Coptic protesters.

“Instead of identifying which members of the military were driving the military vehicles that crushed 13 Coptic protesters, the military prosecutor is going after the activists who organized the march,” said Sarah Leah Whitson, Middle East and North Africa director at Human Rights Watch. “Abdel Fattah’s detention is a blatant effort to target one of the most vocal critics of the military. The prosecutor’s acts further entrench military impunity by failing to build public confidence that there will be a transparent investigation of those responsible for the deaths.”

On October 30 Abdel Fattah and Bahaa Saber, another political activist, appeared before the military prosecutor in response to an official summons. Prosecutors questioned them about their political affiliations and involvement in the protests at Maspero, but the two men refused to answer, saying they did not recognize the military’s authority to try civilians before military courts.

Abdel Fattah’s father, Ahmed Saif al-Islam, who is also serving as one of his defense lawyers, told Human Rights Watch that he and the team of defense lawyers contended during the interrogation that the military court was not competent to question civilians with regard to the Maspero violence because the military itself was party to the violence and the head of the military police was responsible for the deaths of protesters.

In response, the military prosecutor ordered Abdel Fattah’s detention for 15 days. The prosecutor released Saber pending further investigation.

On November 3 the head of the military justice system released a statement saying the military prosecutor had charged Abdel Fattah with “theft of a military weapon, the destruction of military property, incitement to the assault of military officers, illegally demonstrating and use of force against members of the armed forces.” At no point in the proceedings has the prosecutor presented any evidence against Abdel Fattah. Given the absence of evidence, Human Rights Watch believes it is highly likely that the charges were trumped up and are politically motivated, related to Abdel Fattah’s activism. On November 3 his lawyers filed an appeal against his detention, which the prosecutor rejected and on November 14, the prosecutor renewed Abdel Fattah’s detention for a further 15 days.

Abdel Fattah is an award-winning blogger and activist who has been one of the most vocal critics of abuses by the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF), the interim governing authority in Egypt. Abdel Fattah has written regular columns in the independent daily Al Shorouk and appeared on private satellite TV stations such as ON TV. The Mubarak government imprisoned him in 2006 for 45 days for participating in protests calling for judicial independence. The Egyptian daily Al Shorouk and The Guardian published a letter written by Abdel Fattah on November 1 in which he wrote, “I never expected to repeat the experience of five years ago: after a revolution that deposed the tyrant, I go back to his jails?”

“The military government has no business prosecuting Abdel Fattah, or any other civilian, in a military court, much less in a case involving the military’s own unlawful violence against protesters,” Whitson said. “These charges presented without evidence against one of the country’s best known activists are further reflection of the military’s desire to silence its critics.”

Investigation of Protest Organizers on Charges of Incitement

Military prosecutors have summoned at least seven people – five activists and two priests – to question them about allegations that they incited the demonstration and attacked the military, based on an October 17 police report by the Interior Ministry’s criminal investigations department. The report claimed to identify 12 individuals and seven political activist groups, including the April 6 Youth Movement, the Maspero Youth Movement, and Copts Without Chains, as responsible for inciting the events at Maspero.

Based on this report, military prosecutors opened an investigation, case number 855 of 2011, at the East Cairo Military Criminal Court, and started summoning people for questioning. Defense lawyers who saw the report during the interrogation of their clients told Human Rights Watch that it contained a list of generalized charges against all 12 people named without providing any evidence or even narrating specific facts to link any of the accused to the charges. The charges include illegally demonstrating in front of the TV building to harm public order, inciting to violence against the armed forces, inciting and participating in the destruction of military property and vehicles, and membership in an organization that seeks to harm public order.

“The military is relying on Mubarak’s old playbook, charging activists with absurdly vague offenses such as ‘illegally demonstrating,’” Whitson said. “These laws have no place in an Egypt that respects the rights of its citizens to organize, assemble, and protest.”

Those listed in the Interior Ministry’s report as prime suspects in the incitement investigation are:

Mina Daniel, activist, shot dead on October 9 during the Maspero protest
Ramy Kamel, member of the Maspero Youth Union, interrogated on October 27
Hany Geziri, has not received a summons yet
Joseph Nasrallah, lives in the United States
Father Filopeter Gamil Aziz, interrogated on October 26
Father Mitias Nasr, interrogated on October 20
Sherif Ramzy Aziz, member of Copts without Chains, interrogated on October 26
Ibram Louis, member of the April 6 Youth Movement and of Copts without Chains, interrogated on Oct 27
Sarwat Kamal
Sabry Zachary
Bahaa Saber, activist, interrogated on October 30
Alaa Abdel Fattah, blogger and activist, interrogated on October 30

Daniel was shot dead with a live bullet during the violence at Maspero. The autopsy stated that a bullet had entered the top of his back and exited through his stomach in the front, indicating that it must have been fired from a height. His sister Mary Daniel spoke at a news conference on November 3 organized by the campaign group No To Military Trials, saying, “I was stunned, didn’t know whether to laugh or cry when I heard [that he was a suspect], after they killed him they now want to ruin his reputation. They may have silenced Mina but there will be a hundred Minas who come after him.”

Said Fawzy, defense lawyer for Ramzy, a member of Copts without Chains, and Louis, a member of Copts without Chains and the April 6 Youth Movement, told Human Rights Watch that the military had questioned them on the basis of their memberships in those activist groups. Hany Ramsis, defense lawyer for Kamel, an active member of the Maspero Youth Union, told Human Rights Watch that the military prosecutor had asked Kamel about his involvement in the group and the October 9 demonstration.

The April 6 Youth Movement leader, Mohamed Adel, who is serving in the army as a conscript, was summoned to the military prosecutor on October 27 on allegations of having incited the Maspero protest. His lawyer Gamal Eid told Human Rights Watch that the charges against him were dropped when his presiding officer confirmed that Adel had not left the military base that day.

Two priests, Father Mitias Nasr and Father Filopeter Gamil Aziz, were among those the prosecutor summoned for questioning about incitement allegations, on October 20 and 26 respectively. Mitias told Human Rights Watch that he had thought the prosecutor was summoning him to take his testimony about a complaint Mitias had submitted against Gen. Ibrahim El Maty, deputy head of the military police, accusing military police officers of attacking peaceful protesters on October 6. The military prosecutor interrogated Aziz, priest of the Virgin and Maryohanna Church in Giza, on allegations of incitement and abusing religion to cause sectarian violence and the destruction of military property and assaulting members of the military.

No Transparency About Whether Military Officers Being Investigated

The civilian Office of the Public Prosecutor has referred all complaints filed by the families of victims killed or injured at Maspero to the military prosecutor, who is exercising sole jurisdiction over the Maspero investigation. Military prosecutors are investigating 31 people, mostly Copts, arrested on the evening of October 9 and charged with assaulting military officers.

Prosecutors are refusing to tell the lawyers whether anyone is being investigated for the killing of protesters through live gunfire and crushing by military vehicles. A human rights lawyer, Taher Abul Nasr, confirmed to Human Rights Watch that lawyers representing victims have been unable to view any of the prosecutor’s reports to determine whether prosecutors are interviewing any military officers driving the armored personnel carriers (APC) or otherwise deployed that evening.

Said Fayez, the lawyer for the Daniel family, told Human Rights Watch that despite the fact that he is representing one of the victims, he has not been able to obtain any information about whether military prosecutors are interrogating any military officers for their role in the violence and therefore whether there is any genuine investigation of military responsibility. Fayez said that the Office of the Public Prosecutor sent all the complaints submitted by the families of victims to the military prosecutors under one case number.

Vivian Magdy, who was with her fiancé, Michael Mus’ad, when he was crushed by an APC on the evening of October 9, said at a news conference organized by the No To Military Trials Groupon November 2 that she went to the military prosecutor to give her testimony but the prosecutor only asked her about whether she saw “thugs” attacking the military.

“The military justice system is not going to bring justice for Michael’s killing,” she said. “Only civilians can do this. The time for silence is over, this massacre cannot happen again, it can’t happen again.”

Egypt’s military has tried at least 12,000 people before military courts this year. Despite the military’s vague promises to limit the use of military courts, there are at least four ongoing investigations before the military prosecutor, including the cases of the 28 Copts arrested on the night of Maspero and charged with assaulting military officers. Human Rights Watch has previously set out thereasons that only a civilian judicial body can conduct an independent and impartial investigation into the events at Maspero, since the military is directly implicated in the violence at the demonstration.

Military Responsibility for the Maspero Massacre

From its first reactions in response to the violence at Maspero, the military has blamed external forces for the deaths. In an October 12 news conference, Gen. Adel Emara blamed “foreign elements” and “incitement and threats by political personalities and religious men to gather in front of the TV building at Maspero” for the violence. He went on to say that, “There has not been a case of rolling over people with vehicles,” and instead that the people controlling the armored military vehicles at the demonstration were “trying to avoid running into protesters, not rolling over them.”

Human Rights Watchinterviewed 20 participants in the demonstration who consistently said that between 6 and 7 p.m. on October 9, at least two APCs were driven recklessly through crowds of demonstrators, in some cases appearing to pursue the demonstrators intentionally. The evidence overwhelmingly suggested that the protest of thousands of Copts had been peaceful until the point that the APCs were driven through the crowds, and that the military’s subsequent response to violence by some of the demonstrators was disproportionate. The large, heavy vehicles crushed and killed at least 10 demonstrators, as autopsies later showed.

On November 2 the National Council for Human Rights (NCHR), Egypt’s national human rights commission, released the report of its fact-finding committee on Maspero. It concluded that three APCs “moved one after another, at great speed along the Corniche toward the October Bridge … the movement of the first two APCs in the midst of demonstrators was fast and circular, they changed their direction from the October bridge to the opposite direction toward Maspero. As a result of the extreme speed at which the first and second APCs were driving, they ran over a number of demonstrators, killing at least 12.” The NCHR said that the military had violated the right to life but was less categorical on whether the military had used live ammunition, saying that some statements confirmed they had but others had said they had only used sound bullets and that the military had denied the use of live gunfire.

The report also stated that the group had little faith in a government fact-finding committee. On October 10 the cabinet established a six-member government fact-finding committee headed by Assistant Justice Minister Amr Marwan to “investigate the causes of the Maspero events, the instigators and all those responsible… in addition to investigating the truth of what happened in the village of Marinab, including reviewing the results of the investigations conducted by the public prosecution.”

The committee has thus far visited Marinab on October 12 to investigate the destruction of the church there, one of the reasons for the October 9 demonstration, but has yet to make public its findings and it does not formally have the power to question any members of the military or to access any of the investigations conducted by military prosecutors. An earlier Justice Ministry-led fact-finding committee set up to investigate the excessive use of force by the military in breaking up a demonstration in Tahrir square on April 9 has yet to make public any of its findings.

In the draft principles on military justice adopted by the United Nations Human Rights Commission, principle no. 9 states: “In all circumstances, the jurisdiction of military courts should be set aside in favor of the jurisdiction of the ordinary courts to conduct inquiries into serious human rights violations such as extrajudicial executions, enforced disappearances and torture, and to prosecute and try persons accused of such crimes.” In the European Court of Human Rights Case Al-Skeini and others v UK, the court found that:
For an investigation into alleged unlawful killing by State agents to be effective, it is necessary for the persons responsible for and carrying out the investigation to be independent from those implicated in the events… a prompt response by the authorities in investigating a use of lethal force may generally be regarded as essential in maintaining public confidence in their adherence to the rule of law and in preventing any appearance of collusion in or tolerance of unlawful acts. For the same reasons, there must be a sufficient element of public scrutiny of the investigation or its results to secure accountability in practice as well as in theory.


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DRC: Letter to DRC President Joseph Kabila From Civil Society Representatives in LRA-affected areas of the Democratic Republic of Congo, Central African Republic and South Sudan

From: Yona F Maro

20 civil society groups in northern Congo, Central African Republic,
and South Sudan write to President Joseph Kabila , calling his
attention to the ongoing atrocities committed by the Lord’s Resistance
Army (LRA) in Haut and Bas Uele districts of northern Congo, and the
neighboring regions of CAR and South Sudan.

This is not a letter from Human Rights Watch, but we believe it is
particularly powerful.

Dear President Joseph Kabila,

We, the civil society representatives of Haut and Bas Uele districts
in northern Democratic Republic of Congo, Western Equatoria State in
South Sudan, and Mbomou and Haut Mbomou prefectures of the Central
African Republic, write to call your attention to the ongoing
atrocities committed by the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) in Haut and
Bas Uele districts of northern Congo, and the neighboring regions of
CAR and South Sudan.

In northern Congo, we have traversed an incredibly difficult period
since 2008, losing many innocent lives and being forced to flee from
our homes time and again. In total, the LRA has killed more than 2,400
civilians and abducted at least 3,400 others since September 2008.
Most of the victims were Congolese, and the attacks continue. Most
recently, the LRA has attacked the area around Bangadi, in Haut Uele
district, numerous times in the past several weeks, killing and
abducting civilians each time.

As we prepare for presidential and parliamentary elections in Congo,
we urge you to work together with United Nations peacekeepers and
other regional partners to help ensure that voters in northern Congo
are protected on election day and can safely access voting centers,
without the fear of an LRA attack.

We also urge you to recognize the LRA threat publicly and to cooperate
meaningfully with regional and international partners working to end
the LRA problem and protect civilians in our region.

We feel that our own governments have abandoned and forgotten us, and
it only discourages us further when we hear statements from our
elected leaders that the LRA is no longer a threat. In Congo, we were
particularly disheartened when we heard on the radio senior government
and military leaders denying the existence of the LRA – while at the
same time, those of us who live in LRA areas continue to suffer from
the LRA’s attacks.

We urge you to cease politicizing the LRA story and to stop denying
the group’s existence in Congo. Our sole interest is peace. Today, the
LRA is a regional problem and we must search for a regional solution.
Protecting populations in this remote area where the borders of all
three of our countries meet is possible only if the Congolese
government and military acknowledge the LRA threat, engage fully to
end the problem, and cooperate with other partners.

We are also greatly discouraged when soldiers of our own national
armies resort to killing, raping, and looting civilians, and are a
threat to the populations they’re supposed to protect. These abuses
must not be tolerated and those responsible for abuses should be held
to account. At the same time, we have noticed that our soldiers lack
communications equipment, transportation and ammunition. When the LRA
attacks, our soldiers are often forced to flee along with the
population.We urge you to ensure that the Congolese army deploys only
well-trained, well-equipped, and disciplined forces and commanding
officers to protect civilians in the LRA-affected areas.

We welcomed the announcement by the United States government to send
100 well-equipped military advisors to counter the Lord’s Resistance
Army (LRA) menace and help protect civilians, and we hope you will
work with them to ensure a more effective response to the LRA problem.

We can only truly rejoice when the LRA threat is over and when we hear
that Joseph Kony is no longer terrorizing our region. We have suffered
too much and we are tired of living in total insecurity – afraid to go
to our fields to farm and unsure when or where the rebels may surface
again. We don’t know whether our children who were abducted by the LRA
will ever come back home.

Your Excellency, please do what you can to end to these LRA atrocities
and to protect Congolese men, women, and children living in Haut and
Bas Uele districts. Our communities are traumatized, and we have never
before in our region experienced such levels of fear, loss, and
suffering. We want to end the LRA problem so we can finally return to
our normal lives.

Yours sincerely,

1. Association africaine de défense des droits de l’homme
(ASADHO), Kinshasa, RDC
2. Association des victimes de la LRA, Obo, RCA
3. Association Zereda, Obo, RCA
4. Commission Diocésaine pour la Justice et la Paix (CDJP),
Dungu, Haut Uélé, RDC
5. Commission Diocésaine pour la Justice et la Paix (CDJP),
Duru, Haut Uélé, RDC
6. Commission Diocésaine pour la Justice et la Paix (CDJP),
Ngilima, Haut Uélé, RDC
7. Commission Paroissiale pour la Justice et la Paix (CPJP),
Bangadi, RDC
8. Communauté des Églises Évangéliques en Centrafrique (CEEC),
Zemio, RCA
9. ECS Nzara Diocese, Yambio, South Sudan
10. Justice and Peace Commission, Catholic Diocese of Tombura-
Yambio, South Sudan
11. Société civile d’Ango (SOCIDA), Bas Uélé, RDC
12. Société civile de Doruma, Haut Uélé, RDC
13. Société civile de Faradje, Haut Uélé, RDC
14. Société civile de la Chefferie Mopoy (SOCICOMO), Banda, Bas
Uélé, RDC
15. Société civile de Poko (SOCIPO), Bas Uélé, RDC
16. Solidarité et Assistance Intégrale aux Personnes Démunies
(SAIPED), Dungu, RDC
17. Traumatisme blessure du Cœur, Zemio, RCA
18. Union des Jeunes de Doruma pour le Loisirs (UJDL), Doruma,
Haut Uélé, RDC
19. Union of Journalists of South Sudan, Yambio, South Sudan
20. Unity Is Strength, Yambio, South Sudan


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Africa in 50 years’ time: The road towards inclusive growth

from Yona Maro

Given that Africa’s independence began about 50 years ago, for the next 50 years this document assesses the economic and human development prospects in Africa. It identi?es the drivers of change and their likely consequences over the next half century, and proposes policy choices that will enable Africa to ful?l its potential in the years ahead.

Recent evidence shows that economic growth in Africa is generally strong, fueled in large measure by business enabling policy reforms, more favorable commodity prices and a marked improvement in peace and security, notably in the west and south-central sub-regions. Robust growth in the ?rst decade of this century helped to diminish the depth of poverty.
http://www.afdb.org/fileadmin/uploads/afdb/Documents/Publications/Africa%20in%2050%20Years%20Time.pdf


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Global Financial Safety Nets

from Yona Maro

As problems in the eurozone threaten to spread more widely through the global economy, in the run-up to the Cannes G20 Summit international policy-makers are actively considering strengthening support measures for countries affected.

Beyond the EU Heads of State agreements of 27 October 2011, both the International Monetary Fund and regional financing arrangements (especially in Europe and Asia) have a big role to play in avoiding fears that existing mechanisms are inadequately resourced and too inflexible to deal with another systemic crisis.

Consideration needs to be given to substantially augmenting the IMF’s fire-power (including allowing it to borrow from the markets), improving cooperation between the IMF and regional arrangements, and setting up a multilateral system of central bank swap arrangements.

More flexible ways for countries to access the IMF’s new borrowing facilities could be achieved through automatic pre-qualification processes, and making clear the scale of resources available.

It will not be easy to get agreement to these reforms, but the cost of not having effective mechanisms in place to deal with systemic crises in future would be enormous.

http://www.chathamhouse.org/sites/default/files/public/Research/International%20Economics/1011bp_pickford.pdf
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World: The Informal Economy

from Yona Maro

Could the informal economy be the route to deliver the big sustainable development ideals such as the Green Economy, Millennium Development Goals and Poverty Reduction Strategies, given that its share is rapidly increasing and that the poor mostly operate here? In some developing countries, the share of the informal economy is greater than that of the formal economy. Government planners, donors and NGOs could use the informal or the formal economy to help lift up the well being of the poor and address global challenges such as climate change, but choosing one over the other could lead to most efforts missing the mark. Planning food security, agricultural development, climate adaptation, low-carbon development, and housing requires a careful consideration of the current and future role of the informal economy. In attempting to answer questions about whether or not the informal economy is an impediment to development, whether it should be eliminated or promoted, we realize that the informal economy is not fully understood, is not clearly separated from the formal economy, is difficult to measure and does not necessarily imply illegality. These are among the 10 key messages that this paper raises for development professionals operating in any sector, in developed and developing countries.
http://pubs.iied.org/pdfs/15515IIED.pdf


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World: Groundwater for emergency situations: A methodological guide

from Yona Maro

The aim of this document is to identify emergency groundwater resources bodies resistant to natural and man-made disasters that could replace damaged public and domestic drinking water supplies. This methodological guide provides a layout on groundwater risk assessment and management in areas affected by flood, drought, earthquakes, volcanoes, landslides, tsunamis and storms. It also outlines the importance of disaster risk reduction in water governance policy as well as the governance policy framework in which groundwater as an emergency resource may be integrated into overall emergency management and service provision.
http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0019/001921/192182e.pdf


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The Impact of Education Across Sectors: Democracy

from Yona Maro

This policy brief summarizes the ways in which investments in democratic institutions and in education are mutually supportive. For example, well-functioning democratic institutions require an educated citizenry. Educated citizens are supportive of democratic ideals and institutions, and they play active roles in civic life and public decision making. Democratic regimes invest in education, and investments in better quality universal primary education lead to equitable growth.
http://www.aed.org/Publications/loader.cfm?url=/commonspot/security/getfile.cfm&pageid=41404

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Africa: Investing in drought preparedness

from Yona Maro

This fact sheet presents the disaster risk reduction programmes, with a specific focus on drought, established by the European Commission in the Horn of Africa. These projects seek to build resilience in communities that are particularly vulnerable to drought, so they can cope better when rains fail. The fact sheet includes a case study on Moyale, Northern Kenya.
http://ec.europa.eu/echo/files/aid/dipecho/factsheet_DRR.pdf

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The politics of trade: The role of research in trade policy and negotiation

from Yona Maro

Drawing on internal political contexts and external influences on the policy process, this book illustrates the growing relevance of research in increasingly contested settings designed to support a particular cause.

The rising era of post-paradigmatic wars in the field of international trade has narrowed ideological differences making policy more porous to independent research. But whose ideas matter? When? And how do actors make them matter? Why are some of the ideas that circulate in the research–policy arenas picked up and acted on, while others are ignored and disappear?’ Is demand-driven research most likely to effectively influence policy?

The episodes of trade policy change and negotiations included in this volume show the growing relevance of commissioned research in increasingly contested settings designed from the beginning to support a particular cause-research not as independent truth waiting to be “hooked,” but as instrumental and supportive to policy decisions taken on other grounds.
http://idl-bnc.idrc.ca/dspace/bitstream/10625/38551/1/128151.pdf


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Is China challenging traditional donors’ development policy?

from Yona Maro

A significant difference between China and ‘traditional donors’ appears in terms of the norm of non-interference and no political conditions. Chinese aid policies do not adopt the language of ‘good governance’ or ‘failing vs. effective states’, and in fact utilise the backlash against these (excessive) policy prescriptions by continually highlighting China’s own policy of ‘non-interference’ in other countries’ internal affairs. This is the element that Western donors are most critical of and that China (and many recipient governments) highlight to create a distinction between China and other donors. Of course, as China’s engagement intensifies there is an increasing disjuncture between its rhetoric and practice – particularly when commercial and foreign policy objectives diverge. The Chinese insist that the difference is that they don’t impose or require policy changes: “we’re not trying to change the structures of recipient countries”.

Western donors are also concerned that China may be undermining the aid effectiveness agenda and accepted ‘best practice’. Because many DAC donors themselves don’t necessarily follow the recommendations, one could argue that they are already weak and that China is no different in that regard – although it might slow down the process of adoption if other donors are disinclined to reform their practices if this means giving China a comparative advantage. Not being a DAC member, China is not required to be ‘measured’ against regime rules and expectations, nor has it agreed to be subjected to DAC reviews or comparisons.
http://www.whydev.org/is-china-challenging-traditional-donors-development-policy/

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World: Media and global health: From information to action

from Yona Maro

Global development assistance for health has grown 375% since 1990, reaching $26.87 billion in 2010. Yet progress towards the Millennium Development Goals has been uneven and most of are off-target to reach 2015 deadlines. Focusing on the information ecology around people and their health needs is a critical component. Public health policy and health-related attitudes and behavior are greatly influenced by local media coverage. Internews evidence shows that media development interventions can contribute to policy changes and accountability and can mobilize communities towards better health outcomes.

Development investments in the media have traditionally relied on paid messaging and serialized dramas to convey health information. Social and Behavior Change Communication (SBCC) approaches use media as a conduit, rather than a partner, underwriting PSAs and other targeted health advertising. The visibility and impact of these approaches is short-lived and dependent on sponsorship.
http://www.internews.org/pubs/health/IN_HealthFlyer-2011-10.pdf

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Engaging media in communicating research on sexual and reproductive health and rights in sub-Saharan Africa

from Yona Maro

Given their ability to disseminate information in a broad, timely, and accessible manner, the mass media constitute an important source of information for the general public and policymakers. As information providers, the mass media inform, educate, entertain, persuade, socialize, and market commercial products, among other roles.

The African Population and Health Research Center’s media strategy evolved over the years, moving beyond conventional ways of communicating research through the media via news releases and newspaper stories, to varying approaches that sought to inspire and build the capacity of journalists to do evidence-based reporting of reproductive health issues. Experiences and reflections, and the experiences of others reviewed in this paper, indicate that a sustained mix of strategies that motivate, strengthen capacity of, and build relationships between journalists and researchers can be effective in enhancing quality and quantity of media coverage of research.
http://www.health-policy-systems.com/content/pdf/1478-4505-9-S1-S7.pdf


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Libya – International Stabilisation Response Team (ISRT)

from Yona Maro

The purpose of this report is to capture the ISRT’s fact-finding and analysis for rapid use by Libyan leaders and organisations and the international community. The International Stabilisation Response Team (ISRT), Libya was following a side meeting of the second Contact Group on Libya held in May 2011. The Contact Group recognised that it is for the people of determine their own solution to the current crisis and to articulate their own a peaceful future Libya. The NTC is widely accepted by the people in liberated areas as the caretaker authority. Sustaining this will be critically dependent on continued progress of the uprisings, extensive dialogue with the population controlled areas and increasing the NTC’s reach across Libya.
http://www.dfid.gov.uk/Documents/publications1/libya-isrt-June2011.pdf


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World: HIV prevention cost-effectiveness: A systematic review

From: Yona Maro

The authors note that interstudy and intercountry comparisons are complicated by different baseline scenarios and that the provision of realistic cost-effectiveness results is constrained by limited information on effectiveness and a failure to take into account interaction effects between multiple interventions (e.g., prevention and treatment strategies). They also highlight that the exclusion of cost-effectiveness analysis in studies finding no effect can lead to biased cost-effectiveness estimates. Future research should focus on areas in which evidence is insufficient or unavailable, such as the cost-effectiveness of surveillance, abstinence, school-based education, universal precautions, prevention among HIV-positive individuals, structural interventions and research in particular populations and settings (e.g., vulnerable groups and concentrated epidemics).

http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2458/9/S1/S5


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World: Development Co-operation Report 2011

From: Yona Maro

This special edition of the Development Co-operation Report to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the Development Assistance Committee (DAC), prefaced by United States Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, features contributions from noted actors in development who have helped in their various capacities to shape thinking on the important issues and needs that face us today. Presenting their contributions, DAC Chair J. Brian Atwood highlights the role the DAC has played over the past 50 years and signals its continuing relevance in meeting the challenges ahead.

The book opens with chapters by former World Bank President James Wolfensohn, UNDP Administrator Helen Clark and African Development Bank President Donald Kaberuka, reflecting on lessons learned over the past 50 years of development co-operation.
Michelle Bachelet, Executive Director of UN Women, Hernando de Soto, President of the Institute for Liberty and Democracy, Sadako Ogata, President of the Japan International Co-operation Agency, and R.K. Pachauri, Chair of the International Panel on Climate Change, provide insights on the challenges of gender equality, empowerment, inclusive development and climate change, respectively.

Former DAC Chair Richard Manning and former Director General of the French Development Agency Jean-Michel Severino look ahead to future challenges for official development assistance.

The annex on the profiles and efforts of DAC member countries has been expanded to include data that has never been included in this report before, on core versus non-core flows, aid untying, ODA in support of gender equality, flows targeted to meet the Rio Conventions and humanitarian aid.

The special 50th anniversary statistical annex (www.oecd.org/dac/stats/dcrannex) takes a look at trends in development flows over the past 50 years, highlighting, among others things, ODA compared to other flows; ODA as a percent of gross national income (GNI) per capita; distribution of ODA by donor, region, type of country and sector; and aid quality indicators.

http://www.oecd.org/document/62/0,3746,en_2649_33721_42195902_1_1_1_1,00.html


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World: Food security and climate change: Challenges to 2050 and beyond

from Yona Maro

The brief highlights results from a recent IFPRI study on risks and opportunities for farmers according to a variety of climate and food security scenarios. It outlines four climate scenarios with three income and population growth projections on developed countries, developing countries and the 40 low-income developing countries. It describes four policy conclusions on the need to: raise poor people’s incomes; invest in agricultural productivity improvements etc.

http://www.ifpri.org/sites/default/files/publications/ib66.pdf


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Africa: Growth, Colonization, and Institutional Development. In and Out of Africa

from Yona Maro

This essay investigates the determinants of the growth performance of Africa. It starts by illustrating a broader research agenda which accounts not only for basic economic and demographic factors, but also for the role of history and institutional development. After reporting results from standard growth regressions, the author analyzes the role of Africa’s peculiar history, which has been marked by its colonization experience. Next the author discusses the potential growth impact of state fragility, a concept which reflects multiple facets of the dysfunctions that plague the continent. The last topic addressed in this essay is the influence, in and out of Africa, of the slave trades. The essay ends with critical conclusions and suggestions for further research.
http://www.recent.unimore.it/wp/recent-wp64.pdf


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Intellectual Property Rights and South- North Formation of Global Innovation Networks

from Yona Maro

With the rise of the knowledge economy, delivering sound innovation policies requires a thoroughunderstanding of how knowledge is produced and diffused. This paper takes a step to analyze a new form of globalization, the so-called system of Global Innovation Networks (GINs), to shed light on how the protection of intellectual property rights (IPRs) influences their creation and development. The authors focus on the role of IPR protection in fostering international innovative activities in emerging economies (South), such as China and India, and more generally, how IPRs affect the development of GINs between newly industrialized countries and OECD countries. Using both survey-based firm-level and country-level global data, it was found IPRs to be an important determinant of participation in GINS from a Southern perspective. It was found that IPR protection at home and its harmonization across county pairs foster South-North formation of GINs. The authors also find that a stringent regime in the destination country discourages foreign international innovative activities that originate in NICs.
http://www.recent.unimore.it/wp/recent-wp69.pdf


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World: Convergence in Information and Communication Technology: Strategic and Regulatory Considerations

from Yona Maro

This compilation of two works published in recent years, proposes that countries have much to gain if they understand and recognize the emerging forces of convergence and if they create the appropriate conditions for it to flourish. Although convergence may increase the complexity of market structures, it will nevertheless help extend access to a broader range of affordable ICT services, support innovation, and open new, unforeseen opportunities. Indeed, some of these benefits are already being realized in the developing world. The publication goes into detail on the definition of convergence, its typology, its implications for policymakers, and ends with a discussion of the regulatory framework that has emerged in response to multi-play services.
http://siteresources.worldbank.org/EXTINFORMATIONANDCOMMUNICATIONANDTECHNOLOGIES/Resources/Convergence_in_ICT.pdf

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Use social media to strengthen health systems

from Yona Maro

How can health scientists in developing countries build networks and share the knowledge needed to make strategic progress towards strengthening health systems? The positive, innovative uses of social media are not without drawbacks. They are open to abuse, as in the case of using Twitter to circumvent the traditional regulatory frameworks that aim to control direct-to-consumer advertising by pharmaceutical companies. The fledgling patchwork of electronic and mobile health is on the cusp of becoming an integrated global solution, either through a series of unifying enterprise architectures (blueprints for information technology management in organisations), or through the adoption of internationally accepted interoperability standards that enable diverse systems to work together.

To date there are 104 mentions of Twitter on PubMed, the primary research database for healthcare sciences. These range from using Twitter for monitoring outbreaks of H1N1 ‘swine flu’ or for promoting sexual health, to helping senior healthcare professionals provide feedback for students.
http://www.scidev.net/en/health/opinions/use-social-media-to-strengthen-health-systems.html

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