Nuclear Threat Draws WHO and Civil Society Closer

Gustavo Capdevila

GENEVA, May 5 2011 (IPS) – The global health agency and a network of non-governmental organisations opposed to nuclear proliferation have resumed their dialogue, prompted by concern over the effects of the nuclear catastrophe at Fukushima in Japan and the enduring consequences of the explosion at Chernobyl, in Ukraine.
Margaret Chan, the head of the World Health Organisation (WHO), met Wednesday with representatives of a group of NGOs who are harshly critical of the United Nations agency s policies on the health hazards of nuclear radiation.

The coalition, , presented Chan with demands for the adoption of measures for dealing with possible nuclear accidents like the Mar. 11 events at Fukushima and the Apr. 26, 1986 disaster in Chernobyl, in Ukraine, …

HEALTH: A Phone Call Could Provide HIV/AIDS Treatment

Isaiah Esipisu

NAIROBI, Jun 8 2011 (IPS) – Soon chatting to ones friends or family over a mobile phone could mean that an HIV positive person will receive sustainable antiretroviral treatment (ART) that could prolong their life. That is if civil society in Kenya has its way.
A medical expert at the Kakamega General Hospital opens a cabinet with antiretrovirals. Credit: Isaiah Esipisu/IPS

A medical expert at the Kakamega General Hospital opens a cabinet with antiretrovirals. Credit: Isaiah Esipisu/IPS

Civil society is currently trying to find sustainable w…

ICELAND: New Energy Stinks, And Worse

Lowana Veal

REYKJAVIK, Jun 19 2011 (IPS) – Public health authorities in Reykjavik have criticised plans for the expansion of the Hellisheidi geothermal power plant. They say that levels of the gas hydrogen sulphide could increase by 40 percent if a new geothermal field, Grauhnukur, is developed and nothing is done to ensure that the levels of the gas remain below maximum permitted levels.
The steam contains the problematic hydrogen sulphide. Credit: Lowana Veal/IPS.

The steam contains the problematic hydrogen sulphide. Credit: Lowana Veal/IPS.

The Hellisheidi plant is about 30 km east of Re…

Right to Water Still a Political Mirage

Thalif Deen

UNITED NATIONS, Jul 23 2011 (IPS) – When the international community commemorates the first anniversary of a historic General Assembly resolution recognising the right to water and sanitation as a basic human right, there will be no joyous celebrations in the corridors of the United Nations, come Jul. 28.
I think member states have been slow to react, complains a highly- disappointed Maude Barlow, national chairperson of the , one of Canada s largest citizens organisations promoting social and economic justice.

I know my own government has still not endorsed it, and still says incorrectly that the General Assembly resolution was not binding, Barlow told IPS.

The was adopted by the 192-member General Assembly on Jul. 28 last year, and two months …

GHANA: Struggle to Prevent Import of Counterfeit Drugs

Francis Kokutse

ACCRA, Aug 25 2011 (IPS) – Counterfeit medicines have flooded the market in Ghana and have even made their way into government hospitals as the country s drug regulator struggles to control the importation of drugs.
The president of the Pharmaceutical Society of Ghana, Alex Dodoo, said the country s Food and Drugs Board (FDB) is not a stringent regulator when it comes to the care and management of medicines in Ghana.

Dodoo said fake medicines have found their way into public hospitals as there have been instances where patients on effective antibiotics did not get well until there was a change in the brand of drug administered. This clearly showed that the first line of treatment used had been counterfeit drugs.

He says this has happened becaus…

GHANA: Woes for Disabled Persist Five Years After Act

Paul Carlucci and Jamila Akweley Okertchiri

Oct 6, Oct 6 2011 (IPS) – Emmanuel Joseph and George Amoah, two disabled Ghanaians, occupy different ends of the spectrum. The former lies on a piece of cardboard in Accra Central, his half-naked body twisted and mostly paralysed, the sun beating down on him while he waits to collect three dollars, the average proceeds of a day s begging.
Emmanuel Joseph lies on a piece of cardboard in Accra Central. Paralysed from the waist down, he comes here every morning at 7am to beg. Credit: Paul Carlucci/IP…</p></div></div><div id=

CARRIBEAN: Fresh Challenges Accompany Progress in AIDS Fight

Peter Richards

NASSAU, Bahamas, Nov 21 2011 (IPS) – Cracey Fernandes, the president of the Guyana Sex Work Coalition, does not hide the fact that he is homosexual.
Fernandes, who goes by the name Isabella , is also aware that despite efforts to decrease cases of people infected with HIV, the virus that causes the deadly acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), he belongs to the group men having sex with men (MSM), considered in the Caribbean among the high risk groups capable of spreading the virus.

I knew the road was not easy, he told a regional gathering here, recalling his time in prison on a murder-related charge when male sex workers were targeted for no reason at all .

Marcus Day, who heads the St. Lucia-based Caribbean Drug and Alcohol Research Inst…

SOUTH SUDAN: Still Counting the Dead in Inter-Ethnic Conflict

PIBOR, South Sudan , Jan 23 2012 (IPS) – In the ward of a partially destroyed clinic, Mangiro (who did not give his last name) sat on a bed next to his wounded nine-year-old daughter, Ngathin. The little girl is fortunate, she survived the recent inter-ethnic clashes in Pibor county that killed her mother and sisters.
Members of the Murle ethnic group wait to receive food aid after attacks from a rival tribe that the U.N. says affected at least 120,000 people. Credit: Jared Ferrie/IPS

Members of the Murle ethn…

Hospitals That Come Home

Ashfaq Yusufzai

PESHAWAR, Pakistan , Mar 4 2012 (IPS) – With no money to see a doctor, Gul Lakhta,50, had resigned himself to blindness when a mobile hospital drove into his village in the Bajaur Agency of the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA), on Pakistan s rugged border with Afghanistan.
At a mobile hospital camp Credit: Ashfaq Yusufzai/IPS

At a mobile hospital camp Credit: Ashfaq Yusufzai/IPS

They operated on me the same day. Now, my eyesight is excellent, says Lakhta, a beneficiary of the Mobile Hospital Programme (MHP) started by the government in 2003 to provide healthcare to people in the war-torn …

Fistula – Another Blight on the Child Bride

KARACHI, Pakistan, Apr 12 2012 (IPS) – It was personal experience that turned Gul Bano and her cleric husband, Ahmed Khan, into ambassadors against early marriage and its worst corollary – obstetric fistula which allows excretory matter to flow out through the birth canal.
Bano and her cleric husband campaigning against child marriage. Credit: Zofeen Ebrahim/IPS

Bano and her cleric husband campaigning against child marriage. Credit: Zofeen Ebrahim/IPS

As is the custom in the remote mountain village of Kohadast in the Khuzdar district of Balochistan province, Bano was married of…