Sunday, November 22, 2009   03:27 GMT    
Subscribe to our free newsletter

more newsletters >>

 - Africa
 - Asia-Pacific
     Afghanistan
     Iran
 - Caribbean
      Haiti
 - Europe
      Union in Diversity
 - Latin America
 - Mideast &
   Mediterranean
      Iraq
      Israel/Palestine
 - North America
      Neo-Cons
      Bush's Legacy
Agencia de Noticias Inter Press Service
Agencia de Noticias Inter Press Service
Subscribe
Agencia de Noticias Inter Press Service
Agencia de Noticias Inter Press Service
 - Development
      MDGs
      City Voices
      Corruption
 - Civil Society
 - Globalisation
 - Environment
      Energy Crunch
      Climate Change
      Tierramérica
 - Human Rights
 - Health
      HIV/AIDS
 - Indigenous Peoples
 - Economy & Trade
 - Labour
 - Population
     Reproductive Rights
     Migration&Refugees
 - Arts &
          Entertainment
 - Education
 - In Focus
Languages
   ENGLISH
   ESPAÑOL
   FRANÇAIS
   ARABIC
   DEUTSCH
   ITALIANO
   JAPANESE
   NEDERLANDS
   PORTUGUÊS
   SUOMI
   SVENSKA
   SWAHILI
   TÜRKÇE
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency

See picture details
ENVIRONMENT: 'Capital Shapes the Creation of Waste'
Kristin Palitza interviews BOBBY PEEK, director of South African environmental justice NGO groundWork
DURBAN - The South African government has been heavily criticised by environmental justice NGO groundWork for failing to produce accurate data on the production of waste in the country.
MORE >>
 

See picture details
Q&A: Does SADC require a regional parliament?
Moses Magadza interviews KASUKA MUTUKWA, general secretary of the SADC Parliamentary Forum
Windhoek - The Southern African Development Community (SADC) Parliamentary Forum has set its sights on becoming a regional parliament with law-making powers. The body was established in 1997 to create a platform for the region's legislators to share knowledge and experiences in governance.
MORE >>
 

MEDIA-GHANA: Unusual Bedfellows Push for Change
By Francis Kokutse
ACCRA - There has been a clamour to tighten up oversight and regulation of Ghana’s broadcasters from unusual bedfellows - the state-sponsored National Media Commission (NMC) and the Ghana Journalists" Association (GJA). The bodies have, in separate initiatives, slammed attempts to "privatise" the state-owned Ghana Broadcasting Corporation (GBC) and have railed against the practices of commercial radio stations.
MORE >>
 

GUINEA-BISSAU: Live By the Sword...
By Mario de Queiroz
LISBON - Violence was a trademark of João Bernardo Vieira’s life: he survived a coup, four attempts on his life and 13 years fighting the Portuguese colonial army in Guinea-Bissau. But the legend died at the hands of the corruption and violence he himself fed.
MORE >>
 

See picture details
WATER-NAMIBIA: 'Decentralisation': Code for Recovering Costs From the Poor
By Servaas van den Bosch
KAVANGO, Namibia - What if a well-intended programme to democratise water management is really a poverty trap? This is a question a soon to be published study on Namibian rural water supply poses to decision makers.
MORE >>
 

See picture details
WATER-NAMIBIA: Policy to Create a Water Scarcity?
By Servaas van den Bosch
KAVANGO, Namibia - Several 20 litre buckets of water are crammed inside the small enclosure around the only tap in Epingiro, a small gathering of kraals in the Kavango woodlands in northern Namibia.
MORE >>
 

BOTSWANA: Media Laws Stir Dissent Within Ruling Party
By Sello Motseta
GABORONE - There is growing dissent in the ruling Botswana Democratic Party (BDP) over laws that enable the government to regulate the media. Member of parliament, Keletso Rakhudu, broke ranks with his party by publicly criticising the Media Practitioner’s Act as an "assault" on the "fundamentals" and "undermining" free and independent media. He claims a number of his colleagues shared his dismay but were fearful of speaking out.
MORE >>
 

UGANDA: In Search of Peace and Justice
By Joshua Kyalimpa
KAMPALA - Alice Anywar lives in the Pagak resettlement camp in Gulu and at 39 is a multiple victim of the over 20 year-old Lords Resistance Army (LRA) insurgency in northern Uganda. The rebels first attacked her home in Kilak village in 1987 killing both her parents and abducting her 12-year old brother. In 2002 they murdered her husband whom she had met in a refugee camp.
MORE >>
 

BOTSWANA: High Profile Trial Could Open Can of Worms
By Ephraim Nsingo
GABORONE - The high profile trial of former Debswana Managing Director, Louis Goodwill Nchindo, could open a can of worms about the shady activities of senior government officials in Botswana, officially Africa's least corrupt country.
MORE >>
 

POLITICS: Two Kenyas, Two Dreams: Which Do We Want?
By Joyce Mulama
NAIROBI - Kenya's civil society has rebuffed efforts by its embattled government to restore its tattered image in the wake of waning public confidence in the state. Their major grievance is that the country's problems, including high level graft, are the result of a culture of impunity that has engulfed the nation's top officials and politicians.
MORE >>
 

See picture details
Q&A: How to Break the Cycle of ‘‘Endless Philanthropy''
Stephanie Nieuwoudt interviews RAMON DAUBON
CAPE TOWN - Dr Ramon E Daubon not only believes in democratising development but takes umbrage at the ‘‘cult of tangible results'' in development assistance.
MORE >>
 

ZAMBIA: Corruption in Water Sector Makes Clean Water A Pipedream
By Danstan Kaunda
LUSAKA - In his address to the National Assembly on Jan. 30, Zambia's finance and national planning minister, Situmbeko Musokotwene, allocated additional resources to the water sector, with the specific aim of preventing the spread of waterborne diseases. But Zambians have heard such promises before.
MORE >>
 

POLITICS-SOUTH AFRICA: 'Media Must Adopt Its Own Agenda'
Nazeem Dramat interviews WILLIAM BIRD, media observer
JOHANNESBURG - Electioneering in South Africa is in full swing. Party posters emblazon lampposts and the media has been lapping up the weekly rallies and manifesto launches as parties set out to woo voters. As in previous elections, the focus has been on party political events.
MORE >>
 

ECONOMY-SOUTH AFRICA: 'We Need Interventions'
By Nazeem Dramat
JOHANNESBURG - The markets will be hanging on Trevor Manuel's every word when South Africa's minister of finance delivers his thirteenth Budget Speech on February 11. Expectation is even greater among poor communities, the unemployed and workers as the world's longest serving finance minister signals his government's economic plans in the face of the global economic crisis.

MORE >>
 

See picture details
POVERTY: Cash Transfers Transform Lives of Malawi’s Poor
By Pilirani Semu-Banda
LILONGWE - Malawi has taken major strides towards reducing poverty and hunger in the country. Government’s cash transfer scheme has managed to reach many of those usually unable to access grants due to lengthy and complicated bureaucratic processes and assessments.
MORE >>
 

ZAMBIA-POLITICS: Grumbling Over Constitutional Review
By Kelvin Kachingwe
LUSAKA - Two years into its work, the Zambia's National Constitutional Conference (NCC) is finding it difficult to get wide public acceptance.
MORE >>
 

See picture details
MEDIA-SOUTH AFRICA: Battle Over Future of Public Broadcaster
By Stephanie Nieuwoudt
CAPE TOWN - A powerful coalition of civic organisations is calling for a complete overhaul of the legal framework of the South African Broadcasting Corporation (SABC) to force it to fulfil its public broadcasting mandate.
MORE >>
 

EDUCATION-ZAMBIA: Communities Doing it For Themselves
By Danstan Kaunda
LUSAKA - "My mother has no job and she cannot afford the cost of educating me and my sister at the government school," says 12-year-old Muyunda Nyamba. But the little boy is one of 37,000 children from Zambia's poorest neighbourhoods beginning the new school year calendar at community-run schools.
MORE >>
 

See picture details
EAST AFRICA: Increasing Women's Participation in Government
By Joyce Mulama
NAIROBI - Kenya’s poor record of improving percentage of women in decision making positions has come under scrutiny, but its neighbours are doing significantly better.
MORE >>
 

 

<< Back

Next >>

RSS News Feeds RSS/XML
Make as home Make IPS News your homepage!
Free Newsletters Free Email Newsletters
IPS Mobile IPS Mobile
Text Only Text Only

News in RSS Active citizens are committed to social change because they know that it is achievable. Yet, for most Africans, a shift towards elected government in recent decades has yet to translate into an effective voice in decision-making. Now, the Strengthening Citizen Demand for Good Governance using evidence based approaches - funded by DFID's Governance and Transparency Fund - seeks to raise their voices. Through its partnership with the Overseas Development Institute (ODI) and CIVICUS,, IPS reporters across the continent will seek to define the extent and limits of state capability, government accountability and the responsiveness of leaders to the needs of citizens.

Media in Africa
News in RSS
Trading Up
  By Catherine Ashton
CUBA: OBAMA EXTINGUISHES THE HOPES HE RAISED
  By Leonardo Padura Fuentes
NEOLIBERALISM: A SURVIVOR BY DEFAULT
  By Walden Bello
HUMAN EXISTENCE IS AT REAL AND IMMINENT RISK
  By Maurice Strong
BRAZIL: SHOWING THE WORLD HOW TO END HUNGER
  By Andrew MacMillan
MORE >>
CIVICUS

Gender and Media Diversity Centre

ODI
IPS is not responsible for the content of external sites