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DEVELOPMENT-SWAZILAND: Water - "Just a Matter of Delivery"?
By James Hall
MBABANE - The main religious ceremony of the Swazi people is the "Incwala" or ‘Festival of the First Fruits’, held in late December. Dressed in traditional attire, tens of thousands of Swazi men and women dance and chant prayers to their ancestors. They seek good rains that will ensure abundant crops.
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ENVIRONMENT-LATAM: Ethical Development to Cool Off the Planet
By Fabiana Frayssinet
BELO HORIZONTE, Brazil - Brazilian Environment Minister Marina Silva suggested an ethically and politically sustainable development model at a conference in this southeastern Brazilian city that has brought together national and international authorities and experts, business leaders and researchers to discuss solutions to fight climate change in the region.
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ENVIRONMENT: Scramble for Resources Driving Sudan Conflicts
By Mithre J. Sandrasagra
UNITED NATIONS - A U.N. Environment Programme (UNEP) report released here this week emphasises strong linkages between environmental stresses and the ongoing conflict in Sudan.
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Q&A: "The Involvement of the Government Is Still Mixed"
Interview with Amadou Wassouni
COTONOU - Some cause for optimism, but several reasons for concern...That's the message from Amadou Wassouni as regards efforts to address desertification in Cameroon.
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ENVIRONMENT: Parliaments Said to be "Weak" in Fighting Desertification
By Evelyn Matsamura Kiapi
MADRID - Legislatures have been taken to task over their track record in addressing desertification, this at the eighth session of the Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification (COP8), currently underway in the Spanish capital, Madrid.
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ENVIRONMENT: Warming May Trigger Agricultural Collapse
By Abid Aslam
WASHINGTON - India could lose up to 40 percent of its agricultural output because of global warming even as it becomes the world's most populous country, warns a new study.
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ENVIRONMENT-COTE D'IVOIRE: Soya By Way of War
By Aly Ouattara and Michée Boko
KORHOGO, Northern Côte d'Ivoire - When the failed coup of September 2002 led to a prolonged period of isolation for northern Côte d'Ivoire, farmers in this rebel-held region counted the cost.
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ENVIRONMENT: Sands Running Out for UN Desertification Treaty
By Tito Drago
MADRID - Concrete, firm and effective steps need to be taken by governments at the Eighth Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification, inaugurated in Spain’s capital Monday by the prince and princess of Asturias.
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HEALTH-GHANA: Boreholes That Proved a Lifeline Have Come at a Cost
By Francis Kokutse
ACCRA - Ask people to list the causes of tooth discolouration and they may mention tobacco chewing, or one too many cups of coffee a day. Pose the question in Ghana's northern Nayorigo village, however, and someone might answer: desertification.
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ARGENTINA: From Wetlands to Desert, But No One Listening Upstream
By Marcela Valente
BUENOS AIRES - The western portion of the Argentine province of La Pampa was a veritable oasis 50 years ago, with natural vegetation, thriving crops and abundant livestock. But the arbitrary management of the Atuel river upstream in the neighbouring province of Mendoza has transformed what were once wetlands and fertile farmland into a desert.
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BURUNDI: Population Growth and Poor Farming Methods Weigh on the Land
By Jérôme Bigirimana
BUJUMBURA - In Busoni, northern Burundi, the Mbarushimana clan is receiving a hard lesson in the limits of natural resources. Three sons, and other relatives, are trying to survive on land inherited from their father, amidst doubts that the small property is up to the task of supporting them.
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Q&A: A Hope "To Link the Efforts of all the Actors" in Fighting Desertification
Interview with Mohamed Yahya Lafdal
COTONOU - Desertification poses a severe threat in the West African state of Mauritania, and Mohamed Yahya Lafdal is on the front lines of fighting the scourge.
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ENVIRONMENT-COTE D'IVOIRE: Acacias Come to the Service of Mangroves
By Fulgence Zamblé and Michée Boko
ABIDJAN - Mangroves, it could be said, have perfected the art of multi-tasking. Found along tropical coastlines, these trees and shrubs may prevent soil erosion, while their roots create breeding places for various marine species. So, when a particular mangrove forest is shown to have been reduced by two thirds in less than 20 years, there is major cause for concern.
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Desertification could force some 60 million to migrate from sub-Saharan Africa to Northern Africa and Europe by 2020. More than 250 million people worldwide directly suffer the effects of desertification, and another 1.2 billion in 110 countries are threatened by this degradation of otherwise arable and habitable land -- caused by climate change and by unsustainable land-use practices like overgrazing, deforestation and burning. IPS offers insights into a phenomenon that is undermining development in Africa and around the world, and which requires the immediate attention of the international community and local peoples alike.

Farming the Future
African Journalists Award Reporting Desertification
Desertification Workshop Report - Nairobi 2006
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AFRICA MUST BE HEARD ON CLIMATE CHANGE
by Wangari Maathai
While in wealthy countries the looming climate crisis is a matter of concern, in Africa, which has hardly contributed to climate change, it is a matter of life and death, writes Wangari Maathai, the 2004 Nobel Peace Laureate, member of Kenya's Parliament and the founder of the Green Belt Movement.
DESERTIFICATION: A THREAT TO THE LIVELIHOODS OF MILLIONS OF THE WORLD'S POOREST PEOPLE
by Hama Arba Diallo
As stated by former Secretary-General of the United Nations Kofi Annan, "Desertification is one of the world's most alarming processes of environmental degradation." Although being a very "silent" problem, it affects one third of the earth's surface, putting at risk 1.2 billion people in more than 100 countries around the world. It is crucial to recognise that it is not simply an environmental problem, but has immense economic and social consequences, writes Hama Arba Diallo, executive secretary of the UN Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD).