
Photo: Manoocher Deghati/IRIN |
| The daughter of a former LRA abductee stands in front of a mural at the World Vision rehabilitation centre in Gulu District, northern Uganda. Many of the LRA's alleged victims would prefer internal justice to prevail |
KAMPALA, 21 February 2008 (IRIN) - An agreement to prosecute alleged war criminals in Uganda rather than in the International Criminal Court (ICC) has fuelled hopes for an imminent end to the long-running civil war, even if one leading rights group has condemned the deal.
Delegates from the Ugandan government and the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) agreed on 19 February that a special division of the country’s high court be set up to try war crimes committed during the 21-year-old conflict. |
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Photo: David Swanson/IRIN |
| Do you give discounts? |
ROME, 19 February 2008 (IRIN) - As global food prices continue to soar to new highs despite a record world harvest last season, governments in poor countries have begun exploring export bans, subsidies and price controls, among other measures to help the poor cope.
High food prices have been triggered by a host of factors, including dwindling stocks and a continuing strong demand for cereals, according to the latest Crop Prospects and Food Situation report by the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO). News of a possible global recession and adverse weather in parts of Africa and Asia has also affected prices. |
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Photo: UNICEF Madagascar |
| With wind speeds of up to 210 km per hour, Ivan tears across Madagascar |
JOHANNESBURG, 18 February 2008 (IRIN) - Tropical cyclone "Ivan" made its way across the Indian Ocean and slammed into Madagascar's northeastern coast on Sunday, 18 February. The exact extent of the destruction is not yet known, but government and aid agencies fear the worst as the storm makes its way through some of the island's most heavily populated areas.
According to Dia Styvanley Soa, spokeswoman for the National Office for Natural Disasters Preparedness (BNGRC), "Nine people were crushed under the rubble of a hotel," and have been presumed dead, at least two other people were reported dead and thousands more have been affected. |
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Photo: James Hall/IRIN |
| Once fertile land turned barren - climate change the culprit say experts |
JOHANNESBURG, 16 February 2008 (IRIN) - Swaziland's increasing vulnerability to a seemingly endless string of manmade and natural disasters has prompted a new approach to improving the speed and effectiveness of the response.
"We are really suffering. We are trying everything we can but we need help - it [disaster] seems permanent," Dr Ben Nsibandze, Chairman of the National Disaster Management Authority, told IRIN.
After a devastating drought hit all four of the country's regions last year, withering up to 80 percent of crops in some areas, 2008 started with extremely heavy rains, hailstorms and wildfires.
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Photo: Vincent Mayanja/IRIN |
| Hundreds of Ugandans have left the camps to start a new life but many more are concerned that if the peace process fails, their lives will be at risk again |
KAMPALA, 15 February 2008 (IRIN) - Renewed military action against the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) would be an option if peace talks between the insurgency and the Ugandan government did not lead to an agreement by the end of February, a spokesman for the state delegation said.
"The February 29 deadline is still on and I can tell you in no uncertain terms that [the] government has no plans of renewing or announcing other deadlines," Captain Chris Magezi told IRIN on 13 February. "After the expiry of the deadline, the government will have an array of options, including the military option," he said.
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Photo: Elizabeth Dickinson/IRIN |
| Only a river separates N’djamena from Kousseri, Cameroon, where thousands fled last week’s violence |
KOUSSERI, 14 February 2008 (IRIN) - Fighting ended in Chad’s capital N'djamena almost a week ago but many of the tens of thousands of Chadians who sought refuge across the River Chari in northern Cameroon say they are not planning to return for now.
“We are afraid to go back,” 20-year-old N'djamena resident Patrice Djerane who is camping out near the dusty border town of Kousseri, told IRIN. He went there with his mother while his father remains in N'djamena keeping the family abreast of conditions there. “We’ll go back when peace comes. Until then, we’ll wait.” |
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