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Hundreds of thousands of young Sudanese to go to school for first time thanks to UN aid

sudan map

sudan map3 April – In a massive campaign to double the number of children in school as part of peace dividend, hundreds of thousands of children will go to school for the first time in Southern Sudan. The massive United Nations-backed campaign targets a system ruined by two decades of civil war where only 22 per cent of an estimated 2.2 million youngsters are enrolled in primary school.

UNICEF says their campaign aims to more than double the number of children in primary school during the course of the school year, which starts today; deliver over 3.8 million textbooks and teachers’ guides and basic school supplies for up to 1.6 million children, including 6 million exercise books and 1.6 million pencil sharpeners.

Over 1,500 new classrooms are being constructed and accelerated training is underway for teachers and classroom facilitators.

Peace Plan Back on Track in Ivory Coast

The Independent Online in Cape Town, South Africa reports:

The five main rival leaders in Ivory Coast have got their country’s peace process back on track by agreeing to launch a disarmament programme and a census leading to elections by the end of October, African Union head Denis Sassou Nguesso said after talks here at the weekend. (full coverage)

World Bank Cancels Debt of 17 of the World’s Poorest Countries

african children sudan-pubdomain

african children sudan-pubdomain

The World Bank approved details to implement the 2005 debt relief initiative, which will cancel the debt of some of the world’s poorest countries starting on July 1, 2006, at the start of the Bank’s fiscal year. Full Debt Cancellation of more than $37 billion will be provided over the next 40 years.

“This is a historic agreement combining increased financing with debt relief, which will help poor countries meet the Millennium Development Goals” said Paul Wolfowitz, President of the World Bank. “I am particularly pleased that the Bank’s shareholders have agreed on a funding package that will help to preserve the International Development Association’s (IDA) role as a cornerstone in development finance for the poor countries of the world.”

At the July 2005 G8 Summit in Gleneagles, Scotland, G8 leaders pledged to cancel the debt of the world’s most indebted countries, most of which are located in Africa. They were urged on by a series of televised rock concerts and internet organizing by One, a new movement starring rockers Bono and Bob Geldorf.

Debt cancellation will be provided by the IDA, the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund and the African Development Fund to countries that have graduated from the Enhanced Heavily Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC) Initiative.

Initially, 17 HIPC countries will be eligible for 100 percent debt cancellation: Benin, Bolivia, Burkina Faso, Ethiopia, Ghana, Guyana, Honduras, Madagascar, Mali, Mozambique, Nicaragua, Niger, Rwanda, Senegal, Tanzania, Uganda and Zambia. Mauritania has completed the HIPC program, but will qualify for relief after implementing key public expenditure management reforms. The remaining HIPC countries will be eligible for debt cancellation once they have completed the requirements of the HIPC Initiative.

Donors have agreed to a financing package that calls for additional donor contributions over time to ensure delivery of fresh resources for poverty reduction. Compensatory financing over the duration of the cancelled loans will be based on strong indicative pledges already made, and donors are undertaking the necessary steps in their home countries to provide their financing commitments.

“IDA deputies have agreed to financing that exceeds the threshold we initially set for funding debt relief,” continued Wolfowitz. “The deal reflects what has been under discussion all along: that there will be firmer commitments for most countries over the near term and more qualified long-term commitments, especially for the last 30 years. The long-term commitments simply reflect the reality of parliamentary and legislative procedures in most countries.”

Amur Tiger Cubs Born in Southeast Siberia for First Time in Over 100 Years

amur tiger cub tracks, photo by wwf

amur tiger cub tracks, photo by wwfVLADIVOSTOK — The first birth of Amur tiger cubs in over a century has been reported in southeast Siberia, according to World Wildlife Fund.

Scientists who travelled to the Amur Region and the Amurskaya province to check the reports, found traces of cubs they said were about six months old and their mother in the snow-covered taiga.

The fact that tiger cubs have been spotted in this area is seen as welcome news by conservationists because tigers have been lost through poaching and habitat loss in many critical areas and former ranges.

HP Leads in PC Recycling

From Business Week comes an article about the movement in statehouses from Maine to Washington to rid local dumps of toxic old computers and televisions. The lead, chromium, and mercury inside could leach into local groundwater. Hewlett-Packard Co. has been in the forefront of the recycling movement and has strategized to benefit from it:

In 2005, HP recycled more than 70,000 tons of product, the equivalent of about 10% of company sales and a 15% increase from the year before. And it collected more than 2.5 million units (in excess of 25,000 tons) of hardware to be refurbished for resale or donation. (read more)

Oslo’s Sewage Heats Its Homes

The Oslo energy company this week premiered a network of hot water pipes that feed thousands of radiators and taps around the city powered by the heat from raw sewage beneath the city. This process requires electricity, but two-thirds of the energy comes from the waste from people’s flushed toilets. Read the Reuters story here.

G is for General Announcements

Happy Monday!

We have constantly improved our site since its launch on March 14, thanks especially to PassionSpire for the needed web services and technical expertise:

  • The Archive of more than 600 stories published from 1997-2003 is being moved here. It will be broken down for browsing by category and each three year period. You can also use our search engine to find old stories. Only the Earth and Inspiration sections have been moved so far.
  • A blog is being set up for me to do announcements (like this) and ramblings (like that). It is called “G is for blog”.
  • Coming soon a calendar… Submit your dates and events for publishing
  • I finished posting “TWENTY MUSLIM INVENTIONS that Shaped Our World”. If you haven’t read them, you gotta check it out. One of the things GNN-i strives for is to break stereotypes. It doesn’t get anymore compelling than this, especially for us westerners: Islamic science and cultural was WAY ahead of Europe in so many ways in earlier centuries.

I hope you have been enjoying the features like “On this day in history”, and the “Inspiration Point” included for your morning coffee break. I would like some feedback, especially for the daily history item. Do you like it? Or does it take too much space away from news? What are your other comments about the content so far? I try honor your time by publishing only what is most compelling… Until next blog post … geri

Child’s school doesn’t offer the course you want? Enroll Online, attend from home

computer keyboard and mouseDoes your child want to take a course in Latin, Marine Science or Contemporary Irish Literature — but your local school doesn’t offer it? The popularity of online coursework is catching on. Florida and Utah are leading the way in the US with tens of thousands of students enrolled in online courses for children in grades K-12.

There are other reasons for schooling online: medical or discipline challenges keeping kids away from school, the desire for a more flexible schedule, more one-on-one time with the teacher (albeit virtually) than you’d get with 40 students in a classroom, and of course, home-schooled kids augmenting their studies. The Christian Science Monitor reports — online, of course.

Pakistan Tackles Child Labor Horrors

The International Labour Organisation and Pakistan’s Ministry of Labour have launched a program they say is aimed at eliminating the dangerous and degrading practice of  ‘rag picking’ that occupies thousands of poor children rummaging through landfills. It offers welfare and social programs that offer alternatives like schooling, the arts, and sports.
Among the benefits poposed by the project:

  • 1,400 child labourers ages 5-17 would receive education in the Rawalpindi district.
  • 1,000 children ages 5-14 would be provided education in more than 30 non-formal educational centres
  • 400 children ages 15-17 would be provided basic literacy and health and safety counselling in 16 literacy centres.
  • A community-based ‘child monitoring system’ will be developed to prevent rag picking and ensure the availability of a trained adult work force.

Pakistan’s Daily Times covers the details.

Crackdown on Pollution in Scotland

The environment minister in Scotland announced new sewage pollution guidelines for 80 lochs and rivers, a 20-fold increase in the number of protected waterways in Scotland.
(read more from the Scotsman)

Also, read about several green campaigns in Scotland: St. Andrews becoming the first ‘carbon neutral’ university; proposals for a revolution in building standards; and their goal of becoming the greenest nation in the UK. (Registration is required, but free, for these stories at Scotsman.com)

I’ve Been Conned… That’s the Good News!

golf-ball-cup

golf-ball-cupRoberto De Vincenzo, the great Argentine golfer, once won a tournament with a large sum of money as the purse.

A woman approached him, asking for money, saying her child was seriously ill, near death, and she could not pay the doctor’s bill. Touched by her plight, De Vincenzo gave her the money he’d just won in the tournament.

The next week, an official with the golf association told him: “I have news for you. That woman has no sick baby. She’s not even married. She fleeced you, my friend.”

“You mean, there is no baby who is dying?” said deVincenzo.

“That’s right,” said the official.

“That’s the best news I’ve heard all week,” he replied.

(Reprinted by permission. Copyright c 1994, The Best of Bits and Pieces, Arthur F. Lenehan, editor)

Tide Turning for Sustainable Seafood

With growing worries about dwindling supplies of fish, negative effects on the ocean and coastal environments, and concerns about pesticides, sustainable seafood practices are gaining momentum in the United States. But there are challenges to overcome before the certification of large-scale fisheries becomes common practice for the Marine Stewardship Council. However, like many other businesses, enviro-friendly practices are leading to health businesses as well as profits.
Sustainable Seafood story

China Pledges $600M to Cambodia for Building Projects

China has promised $600 million in aid and loans to Cambodia. Half the aid is for a hydro-electric project, and some is earmarked for bridges and new government offices.
(full report)

April is National Poetry Month

snail1.jpg
artwork of snails The Academy of American Poets established National Poetry Month in 1996. Their website is in celebration mode and lists 30 ways
to engage yourself in poetry this April.

Submit Your Good News Poem

In celebration of poetry month,
the Good News Network invites you to
submit your short poem to share with our readers.
(Just use the Submit link in the left menu.)

Oil Prices Spark Alternative Energy Renaissance

Going Green, a special report by CNBC features corporations that are finding new ways to save money with alternative energy. Three separate stories indicate the driving motivation behind the companies going green is their bottom line:

The potential savings are huge. Industrial use accounts for about a third of energy consumed in the U.S., according to Energy Dept. estimates. And by cutting back on just 20 percent of that consumption, American businesses could save close to $19 billion a year, according to the National Association of Manufacturers.

And, about 30 percent of those savings can be achieved with no capital investment!

In the Deep Seas Fish are Booming, Study Says

Bat Star (Asterina miniata)

Bat Star (Asterina miniata)A sweeping view by camera of the ocean floor, and research by David Bailey at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in La Jolla, California, reveals that sea stars (starfish), sea cucumbers, sand dollars, and sea urchins have been flourishing. Their abundance is increasing the food supply for other fish and triggering an increase in deep-sea populations, said Bailey.

Maryland Adopts Historic Global Warming Law Mandating Pollution Reduction at Power Plants

ANNAPOLIS, Md., March 31 — In a major victory against global warming, the Maryland General Assembly gave final approval Friday to the strongest power-plant cleanup bill ever passed by a legislative body in America.

In addition to dramatically reducing nitrogen, sulfur and mercury pollution, the Maryland Healthy Air Act requires that the state join the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI), a consortium of eastern states committed to mandatory CO2 reductions from power plants.

No state in America has Passed Legislation that Reduces all four Power Plant Pollutants in such an Aggressive way.

After a two-year campaign led by the Chesapeake Climate Action Network and a coalition of other environmental, faith, and health groups, the so-called 4-pollutant bill passed by veto-proof majorities in both Maryland houses. Aides to Republican governor Robert Ehrlich say the governor does not intend to veto the bill.

New Vaccine Prevents Cervical Cancer

A new vaccine will prevent hundreds of deaths from cervical cancer each year in the UK, the BBC reports today. After receiving the vaccine injection, women are protected for four years.

Two Lost Worlds Give Us Hope – by David Suzuki

orchid

February 15, 2006 — Two lost worlds were in the news last week. One was discovered halfway around the world, but the other is right here in Canada.

The first was a never-before examined patch of tropical rain forest deep in the heart of New Guinea. It’s likely one of the most biologically diverse areas on Earth, and it shows how little we really know about life on this planet.

An international team of scientists recently returned from the Foja Mountains of New Guinea having discovered 40 extremely rare mammals, including the golden-mantled tree kangaroo, which was thought to have been hunted to near extinction.

They also discovered four new butterfly species, a new bird species, 20 new frog species and many previously unknown plant species. Having never encountered humans, some of the creatures were so unafraid of people that researchers could simply pick them up off the ground.

“In a tropical rain forest, every second or third insect you pick up is probably unknown to science”

That places such as this still exist is cause for hope. With well over 6 billion people on the planet and an insatiable appetite for resources, pristine places are becoming increasingly rare and species are disappearing at an alarming rate. Yet scientists have only studied a small percentage of life on Earth. Researchers estimate that there are literally millions of species out there that we have never examined and have no clue what they do in an ecosystem. As Oxford entomologist George McGavin points out: in a tropical rain forest, every second or third insect you pick up is probably unknown to science.

The other lost world in the news last week is also a remote and incredibly diverse rainforest — but this one is in Canada. British Columbia’s north and central coast, known as the Great Bear Rainforest, is unique; it is special and it contains creatures found nowhere else in the world. Most people know about the Kermode bears that live on this coast. They’re a white version of the black bear, found only in this area. And their differences extend to more than just fur colour: researchers are finding that they behave differently too.

A new agreement will protect Great Bear for future generations

Wolves of the Great Bear are also different — smaller, more agile and specially adapted to forage for the bounty of sea life found along the shore. Then there are the salmon, which researchers have found are vital to the health of the forests and many land-dwelling creatures. Hundreds of unique runs of salmon find their way back to the Great Bear every year to spawn.

The Great Bear Rainforest made international news last week because the B.C. government, along with First Nations, environmental groups and the forest industry, have drafted a plan to protect a portion of it. That’s good news for science and good news for the people who depend on the health of this ecosystem for their livelihoods.

The story is only partially complete, however, as discussions are still underway as to what kind of logging will take place in the parts of the Great Bear outside the protected areas. This is critical because unprotected areas make up more than 70 percent of the land base and contain the majority of salmon streams and much of the best wildlife habitat.

Scientists have only just begun to understand this magnificent region and all the life within it. The recent agreement, if combined with truly sustainable logging practices outside the protected areas, could keep this ecosystem functioning, allow economic activities such as tourism and logging to co-exist and give scientists a chance to understand more about Canada’s own lost world.

It’s an opportunity we would be foolish to pass up.

Visit the David Suzuki Foundation

Catholics and Pentecostals Unite for the First Time in U.S.

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playing organ in church

NEW YORK (ENI) — After nearly five years of discussions and planning, a new group for all the major Christian traditions in the United States, including Roman Catholics as well as Evangelical and Pentecostal denominations, has been formally launched.

Christian Churches Together in the USA (CCT), calling itself “the most inclusive fellowship of Christian churches and traditions” in the United States, was inaugurated on March 28. It marks the first time that bodies representing the five major Christian traditions in the United States — Evangelical and Pentecostal, Protestant, predominantly racial/ethnic churches, Orthodox, and Roman Catholic — have come together at a national level.

“We finally found the courage to confront our obvious and longstanding divisions and to build a new expression of unity, rooted in the Spirit, that will strengthen our mission in the world,” the Rev. Wesley Granberg-Michaelson, general secretary of the Reformed Church in America and interim CCT moderator, said in a statement.

The creation of CCT is the first time that the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops has joined such a church association.

Thirty-four churches and church organizations are formal participants in the new grouping, while eight others, which are considering participation, remain observers.

The launch had been delayed in mid-2005 after concerns were raised by leaders of predominantly black churches as to whether another national ecumenical body was needed in the United States alongside the U.S. National Council of Churches (NCC). They also questioned whether the new grouping would address concerns important to their members, such as racial and economic justice.

The statement announcing the launch of the new grouping noted that overcoming poverty was “central to the mission of the church and essential to our unity in Christ,” and that participants had committed themselves to work together to address the causes of poverty.

Granberg-Michaelson made clear that membership now includes representation from the five major church groupings in the United States, including the historic black churches. Christian Churches Together is not seen, at least for now, as supplanting the NCC. The Catholic Church, the largest denomination in the United States, does not belong to the NCC nor do many evangelical or Pentecostal groups.

CTT, however, includes participation by a variety of groupings. They include several Orthodox churches; Protestant groups as the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA) and the Episcopal (Anglican) Church; and bodies such as the Salvation Army, Open Bible Churches, International Pentecostal Holiness Church and the humanitarian organization World Vision.

Ecumenical News International (ENI)