World Commemorates Aids Day
Published on 2nd December 2008
Started on 1st December 1988, World
AIDS Day is about raising money, increasing awareness, fighting
prejudice and improving education. World AIDS Day is important in
reminding people that HIV has not gone away, and that there are many
things still to be done. According to UNAIDS estimates, there are now
33.2 million people living with HIV, including 2.5 million children.
During 2007 some 2.5 million people became newly infected with the
virus. Around half of all people who become infected with HIV do so
before they are 25 and are killed by AIDS before they are 35. Around
95% of people with HIV/AIDS live in developing nations. But HIV today
is a threat to men, women and children on all continents around the
world.
Kenyan Government Cut Maize Flour Price
Kenya's government has been urged to cut maize costs even more, after
announcing a drastic reduction in the price of the staple food as was
reported by BBC and other sections of the press. A 2-kg bag of maize
was selling at 120 shillings (£1; $1.50) last week - up from some 48
shillings last year. The authorities have agreed with millers a bag
should now sell for between 65 and 72 shillings. But a senior governing
coalition party member warned that the reductions were not enough. The
government has said low-income consumers will be able to buy packets of
government-branded flour at 52 shillings per packet under a new pricing
system, which is due to come into force over the next five to 10 days.
Prices have been slashed in response to public anxiety over the rising
cost of the food, amid shortages from post-election violence earlier
this year.
Nigeria President Proposes $24 billion 2009 Budget
Nigerian President Umaru Yar'Adua proposed a 2.87 trillion naira budget
for 2009 on Tuesday; a reduction of around 13 percent on approved
spending for this year but above what has actually been released.
According to Reuters, the 2009 draft budget, which can be amended by
legislators, assumed a crude oil benchmark price of $45, down from $59
in 2008. Oil production was forecast at 2.3 million barrels per day
next year, down from 2.45 million bpd in the 2008 budget.
Zimbabwe: Water Woes Persist
According to the HERALD, water woes persisted in Harare yesterday
as almost all the city's suburbs, industrial areas and the central
business district had no supplies. This forced businesses and
Government institutions to send workers back home by lunchtime while
others remained with critical staff only. Residents criss-crossed the
city in search of water while some Good Samaritans with boreholes at
their residences and institutions such as schools, sports clubs,
clinics and business came to the rescue of the residents by allowing
them to draw supplies from their premises. Some residents were also
observed collecting water from unprotected sources despite the cholera
outbreak that has claimed more than 390 lives since August.
Ghana: Election Focuses on Issues, Not Personalities
On Sunday, December 7, the people of Ghana will go to the polls to
elect a new President and National Assembly. This will be the second
transfer of power between presidents through the democratic process and
the fifth national election held since Ghana ended military rule in
1992. Meanwhile, in the past eight years, Ghana has become one of
Africa's success stories. Buoyed by good governance and stable economic
policies, the country has averaged annual growth of more than five
percent, invested in landmark programs in education and healthcare,
achieved a sovereign credit rating of B+ and seen double-digit
increases in inward and foreign direct investment. Added to this is the
promise of a significant source of new revenue through the recent
discovery of oil and gas offshore: the find is considered to be the
most significant in more than a decade, potentially rivaling Nigeria
and Angola's reserves.
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