Friday, 20 April 2012

Financial Players Equipped with Writing Skills, Presentation Techniques

More than forty officials in the financial sector of the English-speaking West Africa are being armed with report writing skills and presentation techniques in an eight-day course organised by the West African Institute for Financial and Economic Management (WAIFEM), at the Paradise Suites Hotel in Kololi.

WAIFEM was established in July 1996 by the Central Banks of five West African countries: Gambia, Sierra Leone, Nigeria, Ghana, and Liberia; but commenced operations in early 1997, with the mandate to strengthen sustainable capacity for debt, financial sector and macroeconomic management in these countries.

Hailing the importance of the course, The Gambia’s central bank governor Amadou Colley says: “Effective communication does not only enable individuals, corporate bodies and communities to express their identity, but it is also the indispensable means for any meaningful collaboration.”

Whilst modern business organisations require constant and large amount of internal and external communication, the course has been designated to empower players in the sector with the capacity to use communication as a powerful tool for job effectiveness.

“Without effective communication and the team effort it engenders, it would be difficult to execute important projects successfully and within agreed timeframes,” Governor Colley noted.

Data gathered and analysed but not effectively communicated and utilised for decision-making “are worthless”, he said, adding that it is equally important for managers to sharpen their communication techniques to enable them pass information convincing to the appropriate level of decision making.

According to Hon. Colley, successful report writing requires professionalism, in-depth knowledge of the subject discussed, concentration, and exceptional writing skills.
From left: Prof. Akpan H. Ekpo, Governor Amadou Kolley and Ousman Sowe, a top official of WAIFEM

1WAIFEM Director-General Prof. Akpan H. Ekpo, in his remarks on the occasion, said: “Presently, over 10,700 officials have benefited from our programmes since inception [in 1997].”
Those vested with the responsibility of internal and external communication, he reaffirmed, must master the communication process to help enhance their job effectiveness.

“This course is organised for the relevant officials to be equipped with cutting-edge communication competence,” he added.

The course is designed to cover grammar and style in writing; guidelines and formats for preparing financial and economic reports; legal issues in report writing; computer applications in report writing; techniques and skills of report presentation, among others.

US INCREASES VISA FEES TO RECOVER ADMINISTRATIVE CHALLENGES

With effect from 13 April 2012, the United States has adjusted visa processing fees for most non-immigration visa applications and Border Crossing Cards.
A release from the US Embassy in Banjul states: “The Department is required to recover, as far as possible, the cost of processing visas through the collection of application fees. For a number of reasons, the current fees no longer cover the actual cost of processing non-immigrant visas.”

Before this change was effected, visa fee for tourist, business, transit, crew member, journalist, student, Border Crossing Cards for person under fifteen and older, and exchange visit, was D4,200 (US$140 at $1=D30) but the change has increased it by 2% to D4,800 (US$160).

At a time the world is grappling with financial difficulties, and developing countries like The Gambia are managing to keep their heads above water, the move by the US – a developed country – could be seen as a pain in the neck for visa applicants to the US.

In The Gambia more than three-third of the population live on less than US$1½ a day; thus any attempt by a developed country to increase the cost of its service could be regarded as deterring.

The US embassy, whose new ambassador is yet to take office to replace Pamela Ann White, who may be moved to the Caribbean state of Haiti, states: “The non-immigrant visa fee increase will support the addition and expansion of overseas facilities, as well as additional staffing required to meet visa demand.

“Although most categories of non-immigrant visa processing fees will increase, the fee for E visas (Treaty-traders and treaty-investors) and K visas (for fiancĂ© (e) of US citizens) will decrease.”
US out-going Ambassador, Pamela Ann White

However, the American diplomatic mission has effected minor changes on Immigrant visa processing fee, citing reallocation of costs associated with immigrant visas.

The fee for ‘Immediate Relative and Family Preference Applications, which was about D9,900 (US$330), has now been reduced to D6,900 (US$230); ‘Employment-Based Applications’, which was D21,600 (US$720), is now D12,150 (US$405); ‘Other Immigrant Visa Applications’, which used to be D9,150 (US$305), is now D6,600 (US$220); ‘Diversity Visa Programme’, which was D13, 200 (US$440), has now been reduced to the previous status of the ‘family preference’ visa fee; and the ‘Determining Returning Resident Status’, which was US$380, has been brought down to US$275.
All these changes have been published in the US Federal Register.

Every year hundreds of Gambian undergraduates and graduates attempt to travel to the US to either study or reunite with families, but only few succeed to get a visa to the States.

Cognizant of the fact that the African continent is suffering from brain-drain, consuls and embassies that issue visas and travel permits have become wary of the people they give visa.

In The Gambia, three-third of the country’s graduates now live and work abroad, making it the second country in Africa in terms of percentage to suffer the brain-drain syndrome after Cape Verde.

However, in response to this, government has instituted policies and programmes to help young people, especially those intending to take the clandestine journey to Europe.

Among the programmes instituted is the GAMJOB youth employment strategy, which has brought respite to many young people, as the scheme continues to offer them technical education, self-employment mechanisms, and entrepreneurial assistance.

Thursday, 12 April 2012

BUSINESS MOVING IN SNAIL PACE IN RURAL GAMBIA AS AGRICULTURAL PRODUCE FALL SHORT

In a recent visit to the provinces through the country’s length and breadt Amat JENG made discoveries on business trend and developments that have not been well covered by the country’s mainstream media. Here is his report.

In a country where majority of the population keep their heads just above water through the survival means of the hoe, any deficit in rainfall would always be disastrous to more than 60% of the population that rely on agriculture as a means of survival.

Unlike the halcyon days, nowadays business has taken a downward swing, says Alieu Secka, a prominent businessman who lives in the provincial town of Bansang, Central River Region.
journalist and blogger Amat Jeng, editor and publisher of this blog

As a business centre, Bansang is burgeoning into a major business hub for the people of Cassamance, who have found solace living in dilapidated infrastructures in that part of the country, such as the hospital, the market, and other public centres in the town.

However, as the prospect of business remains dim in the countryside, owing to poor agricultural records and “lack of knowledge in business culture”, Mr Secka is optimistic about the good future of the town.

“I settled here some decades ago, but how business used to move and how it is moving now, are quite the opposite,” Mr Secka explained.
In those days, agriculture was booming and people of the region including those in Cassamance were well-off, especially in this time [January - April] of the year, when harvest has come to an end.”
hawkers like these two women suffered many a time from the Senegalese customs

Over the past years, residents have been passing the night without electricity. Recently, however, the lights have come back somewhat epileptically in the mountainous town. A radio station has been established that occasionally gives voice to farmers and young people.

Despite these budding developments, there are still some industrious businesswomen that are unpleased with the modus operandi set in train in that part of the country by the National Water and Electricity Company (NAWEC).

“When the light comes at 6pm, by 2am it’s gone again until 9am; from this hour it will stay until 2pm,” explains Nenneh Faye, a vendor of locally made ice cream.
She lamented the fact that rural Gambia is not enjoying the dividends of development in the country, citing poor linking roads, low access to electricity, and unavailability of a vibrant market, among others.
Bansang market

Whilst the price of bissap (Moringa for English) – a commodity used for making the cream – is skyrocketing, Nenneh is left in a catch 22 situation, because increasing the price of her product would let vendors curtail their buying power of what she produces; therefore, she is obliged to leave her charges unchanged – which is another quandary for her.

Whilst most of the moringa come from neighbouring Cassamance, some of the people in that region are unhappy because there is no fixed price or regulations in the commodity market.

“There is no stipulated and agreed price for the kilo [of a moringa]; people now and then sell at prices that suit them,” says Maimuna Sarr, an entrepreneur from Saradou in neighbouring Cassamance.

“This situation is not encouraging at all. Moreover, after we have sold our commodities, we find it uneasy to cross to our villages with the little goods we buy from The Gambia, as the Senegalese customs police continue to intercept and seize our goods [because it is from The Gambia].”
The action of the Senegalese authorities has raised some pertinent questions among the educated youth cohort in the Cassamance region.

“Upon my return from [Cheikh Anta Diop] university, I heard of what is going on in the region; I decided to ask: ‘Is Senegal respecting the Agreements the two countries have made in Banjul’?” asks Ebrima Leigh, who met with MarketPlace in Saradou.

The seizing of goods from The Gambia at the border by Senegalese customs officers, has rendered many businesspeople conducting trade across the Gambia-Senegal border bankrupt in recent years, they say.

Salif Diallo, a resident of Saradou, explains his ordeal owing to such acts: “I was heading for the weekly ‘lumo’ in Yero Foulla when I met them one morning in the year 2009. All the goods that were in my horse-cart were taken away. The worth of what was taken is to the region of twelve thousand Gambian dalasi – an amount I could not still recover.”

MarketPlace also caught up with women in the far north of the Upper River Region who did cry out against the poor linking road between Basse and Koina.
“Some of our fragile or perishable goods like tomatoes diminish in value by the time we arrive at the Basse market,” says Hajja Kumba Gumaneh, who lives in Dingiring, a bigger wealthy village off the road to Koina.

She explained further: “Some people who live not far away prefer carrying their stuffs on their heads to using the scrap vehicles that pile up on the bumpy roads every day.”

Basse, where life has continued to be lived without adequate electricity and good roads for the past decades, shows no sign of real development.
commodity prices, moreover, are becoming exorbitant in the country’s second capital city, and the cost of small and mid-size apartments has become prohibitive for the middle-class citizens, most of whom are severely hit by unemployment.

Whatever government policies are applied to address the present status quo, rural Gambia is crying out for infrastructural and socio-economic development.

Gambia’s Soil Offers Fresh Impetus

Whilst the country entirely depends on foreign market for Irish potato, the trend seems to be taking a different direction as an industrious young man has intervened in its cultivation to make a paradigm shift in the production of the crop.

Young Thomas Kargbo, a Sierra Leonean national now living in the Gambia has crafted new techniques by using the Lamin Women Horticultural Garden Centre (Borehole) to prove that the importation of Irish potato can be brought to a stop.
His innovative techniques do not only stop at this: Kargbo’s garden produces crops such as onions, carrots, cucumbers, and sweet potatoes that are highly needed in the country’s local markets.
potatoes eaten in Gambia are exported
The unique thing about Thomas’s farming productivity is the production of Irish potato in a part of the country that has hardly experienced such cultivation, making him the second person after M.A. Kharafi Farm – a farming merchant in Kafuta - to embark on production of the crop in The Gambia.

“We have various crops being cultivated here such as onions, cabbages, sweet potatoes, sweet pepper, cucumbers, and other crops,” Thomas explained.
“And right now I have introduced a new crop in the garden, which is Irish potato. This was never cultivated here. I have made a try and it has come out very well; the fruit of my labour went beyond my expectation, because I tried it thinking it will not do well, but to my surprise, God did very well for me. With just 40 kg of the seed I planted I have been able to get 500 kg from it; so it is a very big surprise to me; I therefore thank God for that.”
Thomas’s story worth thousand applauds, for the fact that a Norwegian tried and failed to produce the same product in the same land some twelve years ago.
His garden is 0.03 hectares of land allocated to him by women of the garden centre, who gave their right hand to Thomas, after a retired agriculturalist, Haruna Manneh offered to supervise the young man.

To many, Thomas’s venture is a miracle, as he puts it: “It was in fact a big surprise to the people in the garden when they saw how the crop was blossoming up to its harvest today. This is something they had not seen before on the garden; thus, it has been a big surprise to them. Whenever they come to the garden some would come and see and even touch it for them to believe that ‘yes this truly is Irish potato’.”

Explaining the modus operandi, he said: “Because [some of] this crop takes hundred days before it is fully ready for harvesting. At the 85th day you should stop applying fertilizer and chemical; you continue to give only water for the rest of the 15 days to complete the 100 days.”

Thomas continued: “This crop would go for about three months ten days. I am harvesting right now in April. And after harvesting I have to wait till the next planting season, because this is a crop you cannot plant in the raining season. We start planting around October and go on to the cold season, because this is a crop that needs cold weather and atmosphere: that is why we start it immediately after the raining season. By early January we start to harvest; and we can plant again around December to be able to harvest around this time in April before the rains set in.”

Kargbo is a certified marketer, who worked with M.A. Kharafi - a massive producer of Irish potato and other market crops in The Gambia - as a storekeeper for about two years before setting off on his own.
Over this period he was able to learn the skill through the company’s engineer brought in from abroad to produce the crop.

“The engineer the company brought into this country to produce the potato crop became my best friend,” the young farmer explained. “I really gained favour from him; so time to time I would ask him certain questions as regards the crop and he would answer me outright. That’s how I learned the skill.

“And when I was about to embark on my first try, I went there of late and saw the crop germinating by itself. I thought in my mind that if I put this under the soil and give it water as I used to see it being done on the farm, something might come out of it; so I bought 40 kg of seeds from the company which I used to plant.”
In this time of crop failure in The Gambia, that has formally been declared by the Government of The Gambia, Mr Kargbo has been able to add onto the produce of the land with such a highly needed foodstuff.

Agriculture is the economic foundation of many sub-Saharan countries, employing more than 60 per cent of the region’s workforce and accounting for some 30 per cent of gross domestic product. Africa, therefore, needs increased productivity in its agriculture and higher incomes in its rural areas and communities. And this is what Kargbo aims to contribute to not only in The Gambia but also other parts of Africa.

Wednesday, 21 March 2012

Media Revolution: GAMBIANS PAY HIGHEST PRICE FOR ELECTRICITY IN THE ...

Media Revolution: GAMBIANS PAY HIGHEST PRICE FOR ELECTRICITY IN THE ...: European Union (EU) programme manager Sylvain Lequere has said the rate at which Gambians continue to pay electricity in The Gambia is among...

GAMBIANS PAY HIGHEST PRICE FOR ELECTRICITY IN THE WORLD – EU

European Union (EU) programme manager Sylvain Lequere has said the rate at which Gambians continue to pay electricity in The Gambia is among the highest in the world.

“Gambians pay one of highest price for electricity in the world, thus limiting again the access to energy for the population,” he said.

Representing EU Charge d’Affaires Mrs Agnes Guillaud at the launching of a renewable energy project funded by Global Environment Fund (GEF) and United Nations
Industrial Development Organisation (UNIDO) held recently, Mr Lequere continued his testaments on the poor electricity rate and power supply systems, saying the country’s energy system is currently dealing with major constraints such as ageing power plants, inefficient transmission and distribution system. Another constrain, he noted is the high dependence to fuel and “legal frameworks that are unfavourable to private investments”.

The consequences of these constraints have gravely resulted in low access to electricity for majority of Gambians. Only 35% of the country’s 1.8 million have access to power, of which only 6% is for the up-country.
“This is also limiting the development of the privates sector in the country,” he noted.
hike in oil price may lead to further electricity cost improvement in Gambia

For the minister of Petroleum Teneng Mba Jaiteh, the energy situation in the country is characterised by high dependence on biomass fuels, limited access to modern energy services and unsustainable dependence on imported fossil fuel.

“Almost all of the Gambia’s modern energy service requirements are met from imported fossil-based energy sources, which is not only affecting the country’s foreign exchange reserve, thus making the country vulnerable to fluctuations in world oil prices, but it also results in the emission of greenhouse gases,” she said.
despite the cost of power, many households run 24hr without light

She noted government’s commitment to reduce the country’s dependence on imported energy sources and help fight against climate change.

Whilst she hailed the conceptualisation of the launched project, minister Jaiteh said the move seeks to support enterprises in the rural areas of the country, thereby “improving rural incomes and reducing poverty”.

“The project will also create the necessary market environment by developing the appropriate legal and regulatory framework that will ensure full participation of the private sector in the renewable energy sub-sector,” she added.
She unveiled government’s intention to redefine the country’s energy supply system on a more sustainable path. “The government stands ready to champion the global campaign as we firmly believe that renewable energy is the energy for the future,” she pointed out.

The project is expected to generate multiple benefits to different players and stakeholders within the country and at the global environmental level.

GAMBIA BRACES UP FOR SEVERE FAMINE

At least thirteen million people are projected to go hungry in West Africa in the coming months and Gambia will severely be affected after a poor harvest characterised by erratic rainfall gripped Sub-Saharan Africa.

Already the West African country has set in train mechanisms that would counter contingency liabilities of the crisis by preparing a report that identifies food, seed and farm inputs deficit for the upcoming 2012 cropping season – a measure that would likely reduce the degree of the coming famine.

Government intends to start in earnest a seed multiplication program for the main food and cash crops, and provide general relief food distributions to the entire farming population particularly those in the hardest hit regions and districts.

The country says it is difficult for the government to make provisions for the magnitude of the impending crisis if the international community and NGOs do not intervene to salvage the situation; thus making it possible for thousands lives to live by less than three meals a day.

“While food stocks in some of the major markets/areas are still at an acceptable level, price increases are progressively becoming a severe strain on the incomes of poor households and hence their access to food,” an impeccable source explains.
Already the average market price of agricultural commodities is taking an upward swing. As at the second week of March the kilo of Maize and Sorghum in Banjul stands at D18 whilst Millet and local rice hang at D15.78 and D24.5 respectively.

“The resources urgently needed to realize [... a hunger free nation] is well beyond what the national capability can guarantee and thus our resort to ask for external help from our friends and development partners [becomes necessary],” the agriculture ministry says.

The West African country needs foreign assistance with funds amounting to about six hundred and ninety million Gambian Dalasi (US$23) to save its 1.8 million people, three quarter of which live under the breadline.

The magnitude of the crisis, which will seemingly be felt by poor communities in rural Gambia, has already started to show its ugly face local communities: hoarding is fast becoming the order of the day, whilst many people have begun to look for new avenues to eke out a living.

These local communities, who are dependent on rainfall, are made more vulnerable by below normal and poorly distributed rainfall, which indicated a reduction in total crop production of more than 70%.

However, while the rural population anticipates the coming famine and are beginning to run helter-skelter to keep their heads above water, the government on the other hand is mobilising all available emergency funds for immediate action to assist the most affected.
POOR WEATHER RUINS FARMERS' HOPE, AFTER CATTLE DEATH INCREASES

“I have two options as a farmer: to sell my sheep and go to the city to find a job before the raining season starts, or sell one of my cows and buy enough provisions and stay with the family,” Muahamed Baldeh, a resident of Sare Fally in the Central River Region (CRR) told this reporter during a telephone conversation.
Baldeh, whose wife prefers him to stay put in the provinces, says even if he should go, the issue of selling the goat or the cow in the long run is inevitable.

“This is because I cannot amass enough to cater for the entire family,” he says.
Some of the people who have realised bumper harvest in millet have already started hoarding their produce for rainy days. “They do not want to go to the market and sell their commodities at this time of the year; they want to wait until when commodities of that type become rare and expensive, then they kill us with an very expensive price.”

The poor harvest impacts is made worst by skyrocketing global food prices, which is severely affecting under-privileged farming communities.
“This poor harvest is also exacerbated by the soaring world food prices, which in turn have resulted in the rapid depletion of household incomes,” a release from the agriculture ministry states.

Thursday, 15 March 2012

Council hears from Commission of Inquiry on Libya in follow-up to its 15th special session

The Human Rights Council held its interactive dialogue with the Commission of Inquiry on Libya on 9th March 2012.

Philippe Kirsch, Chairperson of the Commission of Inquiry opened the dialogue with his presentation of the Commission’s report. Mr Kirsch confirmed in his opening statement that the human rights violations perpetrated by Qadhafi forces amounted to war crimes and crimes against humanity. In addition, he stated that the Thuwar (anti-Qadhafi forces) had also committed serious human rights violations that constituted war crimes and breaches of international human rights law were continuing.
He confirmed that NATO had taken extensive precautions in its operations to ensure civilians were not endangered. However, there were limited civilian casualties, and the Commission of Inquiry had been unable to conclude whether all necessary precautions had been taken to protect civilians. During the interactive dialogue Cuba, Venezuela and the Russian Federation strongly condemned the NATO intervention, suggesting that it was in fact a campaign to ‘overthrow the regime’.

The Commission of Inquiry recognised the challenges that lie ahead for the new Libyan government in rebuilding its infrastructure after 40 years of serious human rights violations. Mr Kirsch emphasised that the interim Government must concentrate on restoring the judicial system and hold those to account, irrespective of the perpetrator, for human rights violations committed. In addition, Mr Kirsch highlighted to the Council the considerable support that the transitional government will need from the international community and the United Nations.

Speaking as the concerned country, the Deputy Minister of Justice for Libya said that the Libyan authorities had 'worked around the clock' to support the Commission of Inquiry and had responded positively to the requests of the Commission. However, he hinted that there had not been enough time to study the final report, commenting that the report is very long and only available in English. In addition, he pointed to failings in the report such as a failure to 'shed light on the attacks of those that committed the most heinous crimes on the Libyan people' and that 'placing the acts of the executioner on an even footing with the reactions of the victims was not logical'.

He also emphasised that the root cause behind disputes between the people of Misrata and Tawerghar had not been explained in the report and said that the old regime 'had tricked them into hating each other'. In his concluding statement, Mr Kirsch responded to Libya's concerns that the report was placing ‘victim’ actions on an equal footing with the crimes of the ousted regime by explaining that this report was a supplement to an earlier report that had dealt more fully with the actions of the Qadhafi regime.

He went on to say that the Government of Libya will hold every person accountable for their crimes, that the Government condemns acts of revenge and that it is committed to fair and effective justice.

Key issues that were raised time and again during the interactive dialogue were those of accountability and restoring a functioning judiciary. Participating States were keen to see a commitment to hold all perpetrators to account for human rights violations committed, to see the interim Government bring an end to continued human rights violations and to see an end to arbitrary detention by bringing all detainees under a central governmental control.[1]

The involvement of NATO came under fire with strong condemnation by Cuba, Venezuela and the Russian Federation. In its condemnation, Cuba accused NATO of ‘criminal aggression’ and stated that the real motivation was to gain control of the oil and water reserves in Libya. Venezuela accused NATO action of leading to the deaths of thousands of people in Libya and suggested that the main goal was that of the ‘assassination’ of Muammar Qadhafi. The Russian Federation criticised the Commission of Inquiry for not investigating further the deaths of Muammar Qadhafi and Mutasssim Qadhafi. In addition, the delegation accused NATO of supporting a campaign to overthrow the regime. In contrast, the United Kingdom, Canada and the USA welcomed the Commission of Inquiry’s conclusions that NATO had conducted a highly precise campaign with a determination to avoid civilian casualties. Others, including Malaysia, Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International called for further investigations into the deaths of civilians.

States generally acknowledged the enormous challenges ahead and extended support to the Libyan government. States such as Indonesia, UK, Czech Republic and the European Union asked how the international community could effectively give assistance to Libya. Responding, Mr Kirsch stated that there is much Libya could do by itself, however external assistance would be useful in the reconstruction of the judicial system and that governmental ministers of Libya were requesting assistance with training in various areas. He added that once the government decided on the support it requires, the whole of the UN system would be available to enter into a dialogue.

Saturday, 10 March 2012

GAMBIA DECLARES 2011-2012 FARMING SEASON A FAILURE

After a poor harvest characterised by erratic rainfall gripped Sub-Saharan Africa, the government of The Gambia through the minister of Agriculture has declared 2011-2012 farming season a failure resulting from severe crop failures and a corresponding soaring of food prices.

A media release from the Ministry, signed by the Permanent Secretary Ada Gaye, have it that: “The post-harvest assessment of the 2011 farming season, which was characterised by below normal and poorly distributed rainfall, indicated a reduction in total crop production of more than 70%” -- a serious cause for alarm.
In a more alarming note, the release describes the harvest a “very poor”, describing the little that was harvested from rice, groundnuts, millets, maize and sorghum as “unsatisfactory”, and could barely guarantee self-provisioning of 2 months”. In an average year, self-provisioning is put at 4-6 months, which means the ‘famine season’ is expected to start early compare to previous seasons.

This release could be seen as a document that resonates a news MarketPlace reported two weeks ago, in which a potential food crisis in the region was portrayed. The report has it that several countries would be affected more severely this year and that up to 11 million people would be affected in the West Africa region, if UN’s early warning systems are ignored.

However, in response to this severe emerging crisis, the government of The Gambia is mobilising all available emergency funds for immediate action to assist the most affected, and calls on the international community and NGOs to assist in addressing current needs and preventing further deterioration of the situation.
The release adds that the poor harvest impacts is made worst by skyrocketing global food prices, which is severely affecting under-privileged farming communities.

“This poor harvest is also exacerbated by the soaring world food prices, which in turn have resulted in the rapid depletion of household incomes. While food stocks in some of the major markets/areas are still at an acceptable level, price increases are progressively becoming a severe strain on the incomes of poor households and hence their access to food,” it reads.
In response to this emerging crisis, according to the release, the government of The Gambia is mobilising all available emergency funds for immediate action to assist the most affected, and calls on the international community and NGOs to assist in addressing current needs and preventing further deterioration of the situation.

Furthering reading, the release unveils that responsible authorities have prepared a report identifying food, seed and farm inputs deficit for the upcoming 2012 cropping season.

“Government intends to start in earnest a seed multiplication program for the main food and cash crops, and provide general relief food distributions to the entire farming population particularly those in the hardest hit regions and districts,” the release highlights.

Immediately response from the International community has been solicited, as national response would not satisfy the potential crisis that is about to unveil in the West African country.

“The resources urgently needed to realize the above is well beyond what the national capability can guarantee and thus our resort to ask for external help from our friends and development partners.”

The National Seeds requirement is put at 25, 000 Metric Ton (MT) valued at three hundred million Gambian dalasi (US$10 Million); fertilizer requirement is estimated at 37, 500 MT valued at two hundred and forty million Gambian dalasi (US$8 Million); and Food Relief is estimated at 40, 000 MT valued at one hundred and fifty million dalasi (US$5 Million).

“Excellencies, the current situation poses a serious threat to both food security and nutrition security which in turn will negatively impact the Gambia’s socio-economic development considering our serious resource constraint to address them. Accordingly, we join our sister affected Sahelian countries in declaring the 2011-2012 cropping season, one of severe crop failure,” the release reads.

Monday, 5 March 2012

Human Rights Council opens its 19th session with focus on the situation in Syria

The escalating situation in Syria and the international community’s timid response dominated the opening of the Human Rights Council’s (the Council’s) March session in Geneva on 27 February. At the end of its first meeting, the Council decided by consensus to hold an further ‘urgent debate’ on the situation in Syria on 28 February, despite signs of dismay by the Russian Federation and Cuba.

The situation in Syria was one of the key preoccupations during the address of the President of the General Assembly (PGA), Mr Nassir Abdulaziz Al-Nasser, who pointed to the concerns expressed by ‘an overwhelming number’ of States in the General Assembly in respect to the ongoing killings and human rights violations in the country. Several other high-level speakers echoed these concerns during the first meeting of this session of the Council, including the President of the Federal Council of Switzerland, the Vice-President of Colombia, the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Uruguay, the Minister of State and Foreign Affairs of Qatar, the Minister of State at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office of the United Kingdom, and the President of the Inter-Parliamentary Union.
The Council’s decision to hold an urgent debate on the situation in Syria was questioned by the Russian Federation and Cuba. They both took the floor to state that they would not object to the meeting, but expressed hopes that the debate would be ‘objective.’ The Russian Federation added that any written document resulting from the debate would be ‘counter-productive’ as a means of resolving the crisis in Syria. Cuba stressed that the debate should not be used as a pretext to endorse military action in the region, stressing the need to respect the sovereignty of States.

The PGA in turn praised the Council for the ‘effective’ efforts it had made in the case of Syria, pointing to the three special sessions that the Council has held on the State to date. However, he also encouraged the Council to consider ‘creative approaches’ for dealing with situations of conflict or opposing views, such as mediation. The High Commissioner for Human Rights, Ms Navaneetham Pillay, also noted the Council's increasing responsiveness to violations of human rights on the ground. She added, however, that the Council must improve its follow-up to recommendations it makes to States and develop ways of ensuring that States cooperate with the Council and comply with those recommendations.

A number of other notable themes were raised during the debate. The High Commissioner pointed to the greater involvement of the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) in monitoring the human rights situation on the ground. She particularly emphasised the role of human rights defenders in supplying field presences with the information needed to react quickly to developing situations. Unfortunately, as she went on to relate, many of these individuals continue to suffer reprisals and intimidation on the basis of their engagement with the UN, and she called for increased efforts to protect those who seek to expose human rights violations.

The High Commissioner drew the Council's attention to the report it is due to consider at this session on discriminatory laws and practices and acts of violence against individuals based on their sexual orientation and gender identity. She praised the Council's readiness to discuss all human rights issues, even those that may be controversial. The Council will hold a panel discussion on sexual orientation, gender identity, and human rights on 7 March.