Thursday, 29 October 2009
Things to take note for Geography
Things to take note for Social Studies
Wednesday, 21 October 2009
Keep marine ecosystems afloat: UN
Saturday, 17 October 2009
Squatters clog city's waterways
Plans to relocate them to provinces have failed; focus is now on resettling them in city
By Alastair McIndoe, Philippines Correspondent A resident wading near his flooded home in the town of Santa Cruz, Laguna province. -- PHOTO: AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE A WIDE canal running along the E. Rodriguez squatter settlement in Manila's Pasay district is so clogged with garbage that its fetid waters are carpeted with plastic bags, empty food cartons and rotting vegetables. Around 600 families are jammed into the warren of shanties there. Space is so precious that shacks on the edge of the embankment are precariously perched on stilts in the water. There are just a handful of toilets in E. Rodriguez. Solid human waste is thrown in plastic bags into the river; residents call them 'flying saucers'. 'The authorities tried many times to relocate them to areas outside Manila, but they don't want to move,' said Mr Bernard Pierquin, a Frenchman who has lived in this community for nearly 20 years and runs the Alouette Foundation education project for slum children. 'Nobody should be forced to live in these conditions, but they see even fewer job opportunities away from here.' As the clean-up continues in the wake of the devastating flooding caused by tropical storm Ketsana last month, squatter settlements such as E. Rodriguez are now a key issue in the debate on managing future floods, after garbage-choked drainage systems badly aggravated the disaster. Decades of unbridled urban development and population growth in Manila have forced the poor in this city of 14 million to settle on the margins. Today, the banks of waterways are congested with squatters living in flimsy housing, vulnerable to flooding and jeopardising flood-control defences. The Metropolitan Manila Development Authority (MMDA), which oversees the 16 cities that make up the capital region, estimates that 70,000 families - some 350,000 people - live in these high-risk areas. That is about a seventh of Manila's total squatter population. Many moved here from impoverished rural areas where wages are well below the meagre earnings of tricycle-taxi drivers, factory workers and pavement vendors, typical jobs of the urban poor. The authorities have tried for years to move the squatters to relocation sites in nearby provinces. 'They have had very little success,' admitted MMDA chairman Bayani Fernando. He pointed out that relocated families complain of a lack of jobs in their new housing settlements - and often drift back to the capital looking for work. So the controversial policy is being dropped in favour of inner-city relocations in medium-rise housing for rent on unused government land. Social housing schemes have already been launched in the capital, although on a very modest basis. In particular, Taguig City's Family Townhomes Project, a no-frills, mid-rise scheme, has caught the attention of mayors looking for models for cheap mass housing. The new thinking on squatters is now the official policy of an inter-agency council on informal settlers set up by President Gloria Arroyo earlier this year. 'But it can't be done overnight,' said Mr Fernando, who chairs the group. Right now, cash incentives are being offered to flood victims living along waterways to settle in the provinces. Nobody is suggesting that the impact of squatters living along the capital's drainage systems was solely responsible for the severity of the flooding. Experts say the toll from 10 days of back-to-back storms that pummelled the northern Philippines - 773 dead and damage estimated at 23 billion pesos (S$692 million) - was linked to climate change and environmental factors as well as botched urban planning. But with the prospect of more frequent and more severe storms, calls are mounting for the authorities to make the resettlement of squatters living alongside Manila's waterways a priority. According to the Asian Development Bank, the capital region produces 6,000 tonnes of garbage daily, but only 70 per cent is collected and taken to landfills. The rest is thrown into waterways or dumped in open areas. For 60 families displaced by the flooding in a makeshift camp in Bagong Silang, part of a squatter area in Manila's Quezon City, moving into a government housing block such as Taguig's Family Townhomes Project would be heaven-sent. The residents now live in huts made of chipboard and rust-pocked sheets of corrugated iron on a muddy vacant lot. Incredibly, given the dire conditions, their shelters are clean and tidy inside. 'Of course, we want to be relocated, but not to the provinces; it is too difficult to find work there,' said Ms Evelyn Abines, who came with her family to the big city five years ago from a small town on the southern island of Mindanao. 'But we are open to any relocation in the city.' amcindoe@yahoo.com |
1 in 6 people in the world goes hungry
UN report stresses need for countries to boost agriculture
Tuesday, 13 October 2009
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Thursday, 8 October 2009
Wednesday, 7 October 2009
400,000 newborns die in India each year: Report
India accounts for a fifth of all newborn deaths worldwide, according to the major report published by charity group Save the Children to launch a global campaign to reduce infant mortality.
Nearly two million children aged below five die every year in India - one every 15 seconds - the highest number anywhere in the world, research has shown.
Government initiatives in India to provide basic health care to all have not changed the grim reality for the nation's babies, said Mr Thomas Chandy, head of Save the Children in India.
'Although the schemes are there and the intention and allocation of resources are there, in many places, they are not reaching out to people,' he added.
'Every child, no matter where or to whom they are born, has an equal right and deserves an equal chance to survive. And every one of us has a moral responsibility to act and act now.'
The report, gathered from research in 14 countries, calculated that globally two million children die each year within 24 hours of birth.
India's child mortality statistics are particularly stark, with 72 deaths per 1,000 live births in 2007, higher than in neighbouring countries such as Bangladesh. Bangladesh lowered its child mortality rate from 151 in 1990 to 61 in 2007.
Major causes of death in the first years of life include malnutrition, pneumonia and diarrhoea - afflictions that are cheap and easy to cure.
'I've had four children, but I lost my second child when he was just two days old,' Ms Mewa, a 25-year-old mother who has tuberculosis and lives in Ajmer in Rajasthan, told Save the Children.
'I don't know why my son passed away. He wasn't even ill. I guess if I could know one thing, I'd like to know what treatments there are that I could use for my children. That's all.'
Low-cost solutions could reduce neonatal mortality by up to 70 per cent, but public reluctance to fund increased health costs has stopped the Indian government from taking action, the report's authors concluded.
'Change is indeed possible. If people understood how affordable and feasible it is to prevent children dying, they would be shocked,' said Mr Chandy.
India has clocked a decade of rapid economic growth that has allowed it to boost spending on poor and rural communities, but Save the Children said most of such programmes have not benefited those who are most in need.
More than half of all Indian women give birth without the help of skilled health-care professionals, leading to infections and complications. In far-flung areas, doctors and hospitals are rare and villagers often put the health of their children in the hands of poorly trained substitutes.
Mr Chandy said poverty was only one factor in the high number of newborn deaths. 'Some local cultural practices are not helping,' he said, citing tribal groups that refuse to breastfeed their babies after birth.
About US$40 billion (S$57 billion) could significantly reduce child deaths worldwide through improved home care, breastfeeding and immunisation, according to the Giving Every Child the Chance to Survive report.
Archbishop Desmond Tutu backed the call for action, decrying the 'sad reality that young children, especially in developing countries, continue to die from preventable diseases, while governments spend large amounts of money on weapons of mass destruction'.
The report added that India was set to miss its Millennium Development goal of reducing under-five mortality by two-thirds by 2015 - but pointed out that other countries such as Nepal, Peru and the Philippines were on target.
'Clearly a lot needs to be done,' Indian Health Secretary Sujata Rao told the Indian Express after the report was released. 'We have to use the existing resources and focus on specific states.'More than 15,000 people were surveyed for the research data, which was collected in August and last month from countries ranging from India to Britain, Italy, China and Kenya.
AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE
Tuesday, 6 October 2009
Norway is best place to live in; S'pore is at 23rd
BANGKOK: Norway has retained its status as the world's most desirable country in which to live, according to United Nations data released yesterday which ranks sub-Saharan African states afflicted by war and HIV/Aids as the least attractive places.
Data collected prior to the global economic crisis showed people in Norway, Australia and Iceland had the best living standards, while Niger, Afghanistan and Sierra Leone scored worst in terms of human development.Several Asian countries were ranked in the 'very high human development' category. Japan, staying in 10th, was the only Asian country in the top 10. Singapore ranked 23rd, swopping places with Hong Kong at 24th. South Korea and Brunei came in at 26th and 30th respectively, retaining their previous positions.
China made the biggest strides in improving the well-being of its citizens, moving up seven places on the list to rank as the 92nd most developed country.
The United States dropped one spot to 13th.
The United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) index was compiled using 2007 data on gross domestic product (GDP) per capita, education, and life expectancy, and showed marked differences between the developed and developing world. It was published as part of the UN's Human Development Report (HDR) 2009.
Singapore ranked highly in terms of life expectancy at birth and GDP per capita, coming in respectively at 13th and seventh place among all the nations with available data.
In 2007, a newborn could be expected to live up to 80.2 years and the probability of not surviving up to the age of 40 was 1.6per cent, the second lowest among all countries.
Singapore's 2007 GDP per capita stood at US$49,704 (S$70,143), after adjusting for purchasing power. Adult literacy was 94.4 per cent.
The UNDP, which has published the index annually since 1990, said human development had improved globally by 15 per cent since 1980, with China, Iran and Nepal the biggest climbers in the chart.
But it also noted that progress has been much more significant in education and health than on the income front.
'The persistent inequality in the distribution of world incomes should continue to be a source of concern for policy makers and international institutions,' said HDR author Jeni Klugman in the report.
The report also called on governments worldwide to look at changes to their immigration policies with a view to offering a 'new deal' to migrant workers whose skills can help spur economic recovery.
'This is not the time for anti-immigrant protectionism but for reforms which promote longer-term gains. Convincing the public of this will take courage,' said Dr Klugman.
Singapore ranked No. 10 in terms of the share of immigrants as part of total population, at 35 per cent. The emigration rate was 6.3 per cent, with 51.2 per cent of emigrants moving to another Asian country.
AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE, REUTERS
Most desirable countries to live in
1. Norway
2. Australia
3. Iceland
4. Canada
5. Ireland
6. Netherlands
7. Sweden
8. France
9. Switzerland
10. Japan
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23. Singapore
Least desirable countries to live in
173. Guinea Bissau
174. Burundi
175. Chad
176. Democratic Republic of the Congo
177. Burkina Faso
178. Mali
179. Central African Republic
180. Sierra Leone
181. Afghanistan
182. Niger