Monday, March 2, 2015

COMING UP!>>Ep.34: Towards a more Equitable Gender Participation in Peace & Security with UNSCR1325



34th Edition:
Towards a more Equitable Gender Participation in Peace & Security with UNSCR1325


This year, the AU is paying particular attention to women by celebrating their empowerment under the theme “Year of Women’s Empowerment and Development towards Africa’s Agenda 2063”.
October 2015 will be exactly fifteen years since the landmark resolution UNSCR1325 was adopted.

UNSCR 1325 is considered a “landmark resolution” because it was the first time in the history of the United Nations that member-states decided to link the maintenance of peace and security to the situation of women and girls.

UNSCR 1325 is based on three key pillars — which are participation in peace processes, mainstreaming a gender perspective into all conflict prevention activities and strategies, and the protection of women in war and peace

Truth be told, the adoption of the UNSCR 1325 and its follow up resolutions 1888, 1890 and 1960 on women, peace and security calls on governments, states and international organizations to promote the participation of women in negotiations, governance and leadership positions in security sector institutions.

We want to use the 34th edition of the Show to kick-start conversations around 1325 in a month that is particularly important for the celebration of women (it will not have escaped your attention that 8 March is International Women’s Day).  Located in the larger global context of 20 years of the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action -- a historic roadmap signed by 189 governments 20 years ago that sets the agenda for realizing women’s rights – one begins to understand why we need to start the ball rolling on filling the deficits on gender as quickly as we can.

One critical and obvious way for this show is through advocacy of 1325. Last week, I spoke to the issue of a newly-established network in which Radio XYZ/Africa in Focus show sits on the steering committee. It is important to have communicators at the centre of this all-important discussion, as Mrs.Appiah-Pinkrah suggested last week, to make the reach of one’s messaging wider. Enter AIF, and other media to help do that.

It is for this reason we are having a conversation today with the implementers (Ministry of Defence/Ministry of Gender & Social Protection); facilitators (WPSI/KAIPTC); and a rep of the National Peace Council.

This is our first step in helping demystify 1325.

Join us if you can at 1pm on 3 March, 2015.

Guiding questions
  • Why is a Communications network on UNSCR1325 necessary?
  • Have the National Peace Council been able to bridge the gender-gap/divide in their composition?
  • How will some of the implementers of 1325 (Ministries of Gender/Defence) help the media communicate the importance of 1325?
  • What, if any activities, are the Network, and WPSI of KAIPTC doing to sensitise Ghanaians around 1325?
Guests in the studio:
Ø  Mrs.Catherine Appiah-Pinkrah, Director, Ministry of Defence
Ø  Mz.Margaret Alexander-Reheboth, Head of Women, Peace & Security Institute (WPSI), KAIPTC


On the line:
·         Mz. Malonin Asibi , Programme Officer, Ministry of Gender, Social Protection @14h10
·         George Amoh, Director in charge of Conflict Resolution and Management, National Peace Council, Ghana @14h30

·         Kobby Blay, #EbolaWatch, @13h30

NEWS: West Africa: New railway network aims to boost inter-regional trade


West Africa: New railway network aims to boost inter-regional trade thumbnail
On the dual carriageway linking the main airport to downtown Niamey, the capital of Niger, workers are busy digging trenches in the middle of the island separating the lanes, and laying tracks where rows of lampposts once stood. They are racing against the clock to build a thousand-kilometre stretch of a regional network that will connect Niamey to the West African seaport of Cotonou, Benin. The project is expected to be completed by the end of 2015.  (Photo: Workers lay rails at a train station outside Niamey, Niger.  Photoby Ado Youssouf)

“We’ve waited so long for the train to arrive,” quipped Nigerien president Mohamadou Issoufou as he ushered his counterparts from Benin and Togo into a brand-new carriage on a muggy day in April 2014. The symbolic ride lasted for only a few minutes. “History is in the making,” said President Issoufou.

Building a railroad network along the West African coast from Abidjan in Côte d’Ivoire to Lomé in Togo has been talked about for years. The network is expected to boost trade among Benin, Burkina Faso, Côte d’Ivoire, Niger and Togo. After several delays, the project is now firmly back on track following the decision by the exclusively francophone Conseil de l’Entente (Council of Accord), the oldest West African subregional cooperation forum, to start construction. Niger and Benin started working on their stretch of the project in April, to be followed by Burkina Faso and Togo shortly thereafter.

Surface transport slow 

Landlocked Niger depends on its neighbours’ seaports and road infrastructure to move its exports and imports. Much of its international trade is conducted through Cotonou and Lomé seaports.

Until recently, road transit across the region has been unreliable. The situation, however, is improving gradually as international trade corridors are being rehabilitated and many police checkpoints that were slowing down traffic and being used to solicit bribes have been removed. Yet even in those improved conditions, a private car could take up to 18 hours to travel the 1,050-km trip from Niamey to Cotonou. For freight transport, travel times are even longer; drivers could spend up to three or four days on the road.

A 2011 study of infrastructure within the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) region found that road freight across the West African region moves at an average of 1.6 km per hour, almost double the average velocity in southern Africa. The study, which was done by the World Bank’s Africa Infrastructure Country Diagnostic (AICD), a project that examines physical infrastructure in Africa, also found surface transport to be more expensive than in the rest of Africa and other developing countries. It costs US$0.08 per kilometre to move one tonne of freight, twice the average cost in the rest of the developing world.

The projected regional railroad network is expected to speed up transit times for freight and reduce the prices of consumer goods for landlocked Sahelian countries such as Burkina Faso and Niger because most imported goods will be shipped by train. Those countries are also expecting the regional railroad network to boost their exports of natural resources.

Network to speed up transit time

Niger’s mineral resources contribute a very small amount to its gross domestic product (GDP), although they represent more than three-quarters of its total exports. According to Oxfam International, a UK-based charity, Niger’s uranium exports, which constituted 71% of the country’s total exports in 2010, contributed a paltry 5.8% to its GDP.

Over the next decade, however, the government hopes to quadruple the revenue from uranium. Authorities recognize that reducing production costs is key to maximising profits and tax advantages. This will entail shifting to moving uranium ore to the Cotonou seaport by rail wagons, rather than trucking it over the 2,000 km from the  Northern Agadez region.

A 2013 study by Conseil de l’Entente projects mineral exports for the entire region will rise from 109,200 tonnes per year over the 2012–2020 period to 3.4 million tonnes per year over the 2020–2030 period. Since shipping goods to and receiving them from Niger and Nigeria accounts for 90% of the Cotonou seaport’s activities, Benin stands to gain from improved transportation infrastructure.

Not everybody in Niamey is convinced that building the transport network should be a priority. Representatives from civil society organizations went on the airwaves in May 2014 to voice their opposition to the project, arguing that Niger should spend its resources on guaranteeing food security and lifting its people out of poverty. The country is ranked last on the latest UN Development Programme Human Development Index. The government, however, has the support of the coalition of opposition parties.

“We are convinced that a rail network is very important for a landlocked country like ours. But rushing it over the first 140 km…is very surprising,” said Seini Oumarou, the leader of the coalition.

Niger’s general elections are scheduled to be held in early 2016. Mr. Oumarou suspects authorities of being influenced by “political expediency,” as President Issoufou has vowed to ride the train to the events commemorating Nigerien independence on 18 December.

Exploring innovative financing

The new tracks being laid from Niamey will connect to an existing sub-network in neighbouring Benin. That segment is part of a bigger West African rail track project that will loop back to Abidjan with the addition of a coastal rail line running through Cotonou (Benin), Badagry (Nigeria), Lomé (Togo) and Accra (Ghana).

Experts estimate that the Niger-Benin section will cost $1.6 billion, a sum that has long deterred investors. Governments have now started exploring innovative financing alternatives. Because of the economic potential of these projects and Africa’s expected growth over the coming years, regional authorities are eager to let private investors take control of the “strategic infrastructure” for as long as necessary to recoup their initial investments and make profits. They are inviting the private sector to invest under build, operate and transfer (BOT) arrangements. Under such an arrangement, private companies build and initially operate the infrastructure, then hand over operations and ownership to the government.

Bolloré Africa Logistics (BAL), the French company that has been awarded the Niger-Benin contract, currently operates public service concessions in Côte d’Ivoire and Burkina Faso through a subsidiary, the Société Internationale de Transport Africain par Rail.
Once the coastal rail line is completed, the whole network will be 3,000 km with 1,200 km of new track, in addition to the existing 1,800, which are to be rehabilitated. Other countries in the region are looking at similar BOT arrangements. Leaders from Benin, Côte d’Ivoire, Ghana, Nigeria, and Togo recently called on both BAL and Pan-African Minerals, a UK-based mining company, to finance the coastal rail line linking Côte d’Ivoire to Nigeria. The projected cost for this rail project is about $58.9 billion.

Since 2009, ECOWAS has been pushing for interconnection of the rail networks that exist in 11 of its 15 member states. But unlike in Southern Africa, where intra-regional rail networks are well developed and integrated, in West Africa the rail systems are mostly fragmented and operate on three different rail gauges (widths). Most francophone countries’ rails are 1,000 mm wide, but Ghanaian and Nigerian rails are 1,067 mm wide, while Guinea and Liberia use the standard 1,435 mm width. The coastal rail line project carries hope for the entire region, in part because its completion would demonstrate that once-insurmountable technical challenges can be overcome.

By: Franck Kuwonu, courtesy of Africa Renewal
- See more at: http://www.sierraexpressmedia.com/?p=73068#sthash.ZV3GjKza.dpuf

LISTEN NOW!>> -- 24 February Edition: Ep.33 -- Pan-African Film & Media: Towards an African Personality?

Africa in Focus -- 24 February Edition: Pan-African Film & Media: Towards an African Personality? by Emmanuel K Bensah Jr on Mixcloud

Thursday, February 26, 2015

#ECOWAS@40Podcast -- Ep.6: #StopBokoHaram, #SouthSudanEncore, #ECOWASGenderPolicy, #ECOWASEnergy

Ecowas@40Podcast – 24 February, 2015

Welcome to the 6th edition of the Ecowas@40Podcast, where we give you insights into all that is ECOWAS.

The ECOWAS@40Podcast is divided into four parts. We start off with an overview of what stories are trending under ECOWAS/West Africa/the AU. We then move on to what ECOWAS and/or AU accounts are tweeting. Third, we give listeners an ECOWAS Fact; and, finally, “What’s my ECOWAS Beef?” where I offer candid views on a trending topic. In today’s edition, we are looking at events the Show is involved in one may have missed.

First -- the issue of #SouthSudan has grown from a headache to a migraine. What has now become a source of infamy – that AU Commission of Inquiry on South Sudan report that was never disclosed to the public is seriously denting the image of the continental organisation (as if it didn’t have enough headaches, what with #MugabeFalls! and all!). The country has been trending for all the wrong reasons. Let’s take a look at what some of the tweets that have attracted the highest RTs.



On Libya, where the story is quickly developing, let’s take a look at this tweet from CCTV Africa, which tweets:





We move from North Africa right here to the ECOWAS sub-region, where the issue of #BokoHaram is yet to go away. No surprises, then, why there are more tweets this week as the stories of the fight to ouster the militant Islamic group continues in dramatic detail.













Finally, under this section, we take a look at what has been trending on “Africa”, and “west Africa”:







3.     ECOWAS FACT
ECOWAS has a Programme on Gender Mainstreaming in Energy Access (ECOW-GEN), which is a flagship programme of the ECOWAS Centre for Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency (ECREEE) addressing barriers to the equal participation of women and men in expanding energy access in West Africa.

ECOW-GEN was established against the background that women’s potential, in the ECOWAS region, as producers and suppliers of energy services is under-utilized and that empowering women and men to make significant contributions to the implementation of the regional policies on renewable energy and energy efficiency is necessary for the achievement of the Sustainable Energy for All (SE4ALL) goals in West Africa.

Thus, to ensure that women, as much as men, contribute to, and benefit from, clean energy development ECOW-GEN implements activities directed at strengthening women economically by improving energy access for income generating activities and, more importantly, empowering women as active actors in the sustainable energy sector.
Launched in 2013, the programme started its pilot phase working on the four Members States of the Mano River Union (MRU) – Cote d’Ivoire, Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone.

2. Closely related to this is the news that the African Development Bank (AfDB), the ECOWAS Centre for Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency (ECREEE), and the United States-based National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) have formed a partnership centered on linking gender and energy access.

The three have jointly organised an inception workshop to launch a project about developing an ECOWAS Policy for Gender Mainstreaming in Energy Access and its Implementation Strategy. The workshop will be held TODAY Tuesday, February 24, 2015, at the Bank’s headquarters in Abidjan, Côte d’Ivoire. “AfDB’s role is grounded in its Energy Policy, which advocates for ‘universal access to energy,’ said Geraldine Fraser-Moleketi, AfDB’s Special Envoy on Gender.

Participants include Côte d’Ivoire’s Minister for Family, Women and Children, AfDB’s Special Envoy on Gender, the ECOWAS Commissioner for Social Affairs and Gender, and the Executive Director of ECREEE. Representatives from the respective Ministries of Energy of the ECOWAS member states, partner institutions of ECREEE and other stakeholders will also be present.

The project aims at establishing a regional policy and its implementation strategy that will support the region’s energy efficiency and renewable energy policies. It will also enhance the Sustainable Energy for All’s (SE4ALL) initiative of achieving the goals of universal access to modern energy services..
The ECOWAS Policy for Gender Mainstreaming in Energy Access, the first of its kind globally, aims at addressing barriers that hinder the participation of women in energy access. It will ensure that women make both intellectual and business-wise contributions to ending the region’s energy crises. Women comprise up 50 percent of the region’s population and 43 percent of the ECOWAS labour force.

4.     Past Events

Ghana has two new networks that “Africa in Focus” Show/ Radio XYZ is a part of. They are the West Africa Drug Policy Network; and the WPSI Communications Network on UNSCR1325 (that promotes gender participation in peace and security).

The West Africa Drug Policy Network is backed by the Senegal-based West Africa Commission on Drugs, and was established in Accra following a two-day civil society meeting that sought to explore ways in which CSOs can play critical roles in drug policy in the sub-region.

The WPSI Communications Network on UNSCR1325 was established after a two-day follow-up Media strategy meeting, which was held under the auspices of the Women Peace & Security Institute of KAIPTC here in Accra.

The "Africa in Focus Show"/Radio XYZ is to date one of the first programmes/radio stations in Accra to currently serve on the steering committee of the Communications Network. Please find below the composition of the Committee:


a. Women, Peace and Security Institute of Kofi Annan International Peacekeeping Training Centre
b. FOSDA
c. West Africa Network on Peace-building
d. Ghana's Security Services Communications' people
e. Media (Finder newspaper; Africa in Focus Show - Radio XYZ 93.1FM; Gloria Anderson, GBC; Eunice Minkah, Women in Parliament )

ENDs

#PODCAST>>Episode 33: Pan-African Film & Media: Towards an African Personality, or a Conversation with Pascal Aka; JOT Agyeman; and Elijah Iposu

EPISODE #33
Research & Co-ordination: E.K.Bensah Jr
Executive Producer: E.K.Bensah Jr

"Dear friends,

We used the thirty-third edition of the Africa in Focus show to take a look at Pan-African Film, and Media.


We spoke to one of the upcoming Ghanaian film directors Pascal Aka, who returned to Ghana four years ago, and is bringing his Canada-trained film-making to bring quality to bear on Ghanaian film--as evidenced by his plaudits for the 2014 film "Double Cross". He urges those within the movie industry to consider the international context, and start writing stories that transcend the local context.

Aka believes we need our Ghanaian film industry to move beyond what he believes are essentially glorified "Akan dramas".
ETV Ghana's JOT Agyemang, a former actor himself, is a seasoned script-writer, having written scripts for Yvonne Okoro; and half-way through a script about the overthrow of Nkrumah (a project that has taken him some two years to write). But JOT is also someone who has turned down a lot of Ghanaian film scripts on account of poor quality. 

He believes so-called nomenclature of "Ghallywood"; and "Nollywood" are unnecessary, as it is divorced from the reality of quality film. Kumawood, in his view, is not film, but "concert party ofn video", though it serves a purpose.

Finally, Homebase TV Ghana's Elijah Iposu, a producer and director, encourages Ghanaians and Nigerians to get back to what our fathers in Nkrumah did by bringing together both Ghanaian and Nigerian film-makers to learn from each other to take Pan-African film to even greater heights, especially at a time Nollywood films are making international waves. 

He encourages Ghanaian film-makers to reduce the "raw" content of their films, so that we can make good movies for Africa, and make money for producers. Even more importantly, we need, in his view, to get to the stage where we can tell a witchcraft story, like Harry Potter, and go beyond ridicule of some of the Kumawood renditions of the same theme!

On the 49th commemoration of Dr.Nkrumah, we had a particularly-entertaining conversation that brought reflections on cinematography; film; media; production; and direction; and infused it with a Pan-African feel.

Please find below a link to the podcast of the full edition of 24 February edition of "Africa in Focus": 
https://www.dropbox.com/s/27ruhvpwjgnk27p/AFRICA%20IN%20FOCUS%20%2024-02-15.mp3?dl=0


We look forward to comments!

In solidarity!"
Emmanuel""
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