Showing posts with label Microfinance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Microfinance. Show all posts

Sunday, September 05, 2021

The International Day of Charity 5th September - Global Solidarity to Eradicate Poverty



















PHOTO: ©Sadek Ahmed


From the website of the United Nations:


Global Solidarity to Eradicate Poverty


Charity, like the notions of volunteerism and philanthropy, provides real social bonding and contributes to the creation of inclusive and more resilient societies. 


Charity can alleviate the worst effects of humanitarian crises, supplement public services in health care, education, housing and child protection. It assists the advancement of culture, science, sports, and the protection of cultural and natural heritage. It also promotes the rights of the marginalised and underprivileged and spreads the message of humanity in conflict situations.


In the 2030 Agenda on Sustainable Development adopted in September 2015, the United Nations recognises that eradicating poverty in all its forms and dimensions, including extreme poverty, is the greatest global challenge and an indispensable requirement for sustainable development. 


The Agenda also calls for a spirit of strengthened global solidarity, focused in particular on the needs of the poorest and most vulnerable. It also acknowledges the role of the diverse private sector, ranging from micro-enterprises to cooperatives to multinationals, and that of civil society organizations and philanthropic organizations in the implementation of the new Agenda.


The 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) set forth in the Agenda can be grouped into six critical areas: people, planet, prosperity, peace, and partnership. They have the potential to transform our lives and our planet by providing the framework needed for philanthropic institutions to enable all people to contribute to the betterment of our world.


Background


The International Day of Charity was established with the objective of sensitising and mobilising people, NGOs, and stakeholders all around the world to to help others through volunteer and philanthropic activities.


The date of 5 September was chosen in order to commemorate the anniversary of the passing away of Mother Teresa of Calcutta, who received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1979 "for work undertaken in the struggle to overcome poverty and distress, which also constitute a threat to peace."




















Mother Teresa, the renowned nun and missionary, was born Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu in 1910. In 1928 she went to India, where she devoted herself to helping the destitute. In 1948 she became an Indian citizen and founded the order of Missionaries of Charity in Kolkota (Calcutta) in 1950, which became noted for its work among the poor and the dying in that city.


For over 45 years she ministered to the poor, sick, orphaned and dying, while guiding the Missionaries of Charity’s expansion, first in India and then in other countries, including hospices and homes for the poorest and homeless. Mother Teresa’s work has been recognized and acclaimed throughout the world and she has received a number of awards and distinctions, including the Nobel Peace Prize. Mother Teresa died on September 5th 1997, at 87 years of age.


In recognition of the role of charity in alleviating humanitarian crises and human suffering within and among nations, as well as of the efforts of charitable organisations and individuals, including the work of Mother Teresa, the General Assembly of the United Nations in its resolution A/RES/67/105 designated the 5th of September, the anniversary of the death of Mother Teresa, as the International Day of Charity.


Resources

View Original: https://www.un.org/en/observances/charity-day

Sunday, August 22, 2010

S. Sudan Rhino City photo - Bileel area and southern areas of Nyala selected to be the alternative IDP camps instead of Kalma camp, S. Darfur

SOMEONE once said 17 years is the average life of a refugee camp. Not sure if it is true. Kalma camp in South Darfur, western Sudan, is already at least 6 years old. Plans are underway for it to be relocated within South Darfur to Bileel area and southern areas of Nyala to create two new camps, each housing 25,000 - 30,000 IDPs, provided with all basic services. The area of each residence will be 150 - 200 square meters.

How great it would be if the IDPs were given land rights to their new residences, and the IDPs and world-class volunteer Sudanese architects, village planners, environmentalists, historians and psychologists were consulted on the design of new camps in Sudan.

Imagine them pooling their skills and knowledge to create beautifully simple arty traditional African villages with access to solar power, microfinancing, education, training, employment and sports facilities. It need not involve a lot of money. People pulling together with decent leadership can work wonders. Think of the children of Sudan and those born in Kalma camp. For all we know, SLM and JEM rebel group leaders, who care only about their own skins, might continue on the warpath (a lucrative way of life for them) for the next 20 years.

See interesting Rhino City photo below, plus a news roundup, and a report saying UNAMID and the local South Darfur government have agreed to work together to construct a security trench which will span Nyala town’s perimeter. Note that the trench, measuring 2 meters deep and 2 meters wide, will span approximately 40 kilometers long and is expected to be completed within 4 to 5 weeks.

I say, imagine if they filled the trench with water, it could be a moat for security, a swimming pool for children and a watering hole for thirsty trees, birds and animals. An oasis. Dream on.

This photo reminds me of a 1960's aerial shot of Las Vegas, Nevada, USA, before it became a city. Surely the Sudanese can find a way to turn their deserts and hot sunny weather to their advantage. Everyone loves Sudan.



Photo: "This is Kalma Camp. Believe it or not these kids are lucky, Kalma Camp is near the airport, close to Nyala, the closest thing I've seen to a modern city in Darfur and it has lots of access to aid organizations". (Photo and caption from bbs.keyhole.com by bit Cartographer/Google Earth)
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South Darfur Plans to Build Construct Two IDPs Camps
Report from Sudan Vision Daily
Sunday, 22 August 2010
(Nyala - smc) - SOUTH Darfur government directed the Engineering Department in the State to start the preliminary survey in Bilail area and the southern areas of Nyala selected to be the alternative IDPs camp instead of Kalma camp.

South Darfur Deputy Governor, Dr. Abdul Karim told (smc) that Kalma IDPs camp will be transferred to the new site in agreement with UNAMID, UN, NGOs and the IDPS themselves.

He said that Kalma IDPs camp became one of the security threats, expressing their intension to construct two big camps with 25 – 30 thousands IDPS capacity provided with all basic services adding the area of each residence will be 150 – 200 square meters.

He pointed out that the machineries of the work were directed to the new sites to start implementation, adding that all the NGOs working in the humanitarian activities in the State visited the new sites and expressed satisfaction with.

He said that the government shouldered all the construction expenses, affirming the IDPs movement to the new sites will not start unless the construction work is completed.

It is to be noted that Kalma IDPs camp witnessed in the recent days violations from armed groups which brought arms to the camp a matter that agitated chaos inside the camp.
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Darfur/UNAMID Daily Media Brief - Monday, 16 August 2010
Report from United Nations – African Union Mission in Darfur (UNAMID)
El Fasher (Darfur), W. Sudan - via APO 16 August 2010:
Security situation update
THE situation in Kalma Internally Displaced Persons (IDP) camp in South Darfur remains tense. Intensified patrols by UNAMID forces have led to a significant decrease in cases of gunfire overnight. UNAMID Deputy Joint Special Representative Mohamed Yonis, Force Commander Patrick Nyamvumba and Acting Police Commissioner Adeyemi Ogunjemilusi today travelled to Nyala to confer with state authorities concerning recent developments.

The majority of Kalma’s sectors have reported improvements in security, with IDPs returning to their homes and resuming normal activities.

UNAMID, Government dig security trench around Nyala
Responding to the increase in incidence of kidnappings and carjackings in Nyala, South Darfur, targeting the international community in particular, UNAMID and the local government have agreed to work together to construct a security trench which will span the town’s perimeter.

UNAMID’s Chinese Engineering Company began work on Sunday on the Mission’s half of the trench. The measure is designed to reduce the high incidence of criminality by regulating travel to and from the town. While limiting entry and exit through small roads, the town will remain fully accessible through major roads and highways.

The trench, measuring 2 meters deep and 2 meters wide, will span approximately 40 kilometers long and is expected to be completed within 4 to 5 weeks. Local authorities will provide 24 hour protection for UNAMID equipment and personnel until the project’s completion.

UNAMID patrols
UNAMID military forces conducted 87 patrols including routine, short-range, long-range, night and humanitarian escort patrols covering 69 villages and IDP camps.

UNAMID police advisors conducted 164 patrols in villages and IDP camps.
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Southern Sudan's Rhino City



Photo source: New Sudan Vision
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UPDATE Tuesday, 24 August 2010
Two more photos and captions, with thanks to Alan Boswell's blog post published 17 August 2010. Alan Boswell is an American freelance journalist currently based in Juba, South Sudan.

The “Rhino City” location in relation to Juba’s current layout:



Wau, South Sudan’s second-largest city, is set to turn into this awkwardly elongated beast:


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South Sudan Builds Juba’s Rhino City In PR Wars
Report from Anorak.co.uk
Friday, 20 August 2010
IN southern Sudan, the blueprints are unveiled for regional cities shaped as animals and fruits.

At a cost of $10bn (£6.4bn) Juba will be designed in the shape of a rhinoceros. Wau will become a giraffe. Yambio will be shaped like a pineapple.

Juba is the capital of the region – plans are to make if the capital of the new state of South Sudan. Guess where the office of the regional president will be situated. At the back? Somewhere down between the legs? No, it’s where the rhinoceros’s eye should be.

Over in Wau, the sewage treatment plant is appropriately placed under the giraffe’s tail.

All good stuff. But cities have a habit to sprawl and the rhino might well develop a tumour or just spread until it resembles Lagos, which from space resembles a dog squatting on a huge toilet…

The plans were unveiled by the Undersecretary for Housing and Physical Planning, Daniel Wani. The plan is earmarked to cost over £10bn. Southern Sudan’s total annual budget this year is less than $2 billion.

He says:
“Juba, as an example, is a slum city. So our plan is to create a nuclear city outside Juba,” he said. “We have been given land 15 kilometers west of Juba by the state, and we met the community, they are excited to give us this land. We call it Rhino City. And equally also we have been given land in the other nine capitals.”
The thing soon starts to look like a PR stunt to draw interest to a region bereft of funds and ravaged by a civil war that ended in 2005…
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News from The New York Times' Blogrunner

Headlines Around the Web

What's This?
REUTERS

AUGUST 16, 2010

US: Barclays to pay $298 million in

sanctions case

AFP

AUGUST 16, 2010

Darfur expels five aid workers

SUDAN WATCH

AUGUST 16, 2010

Sudan: New strategy - South Darfur

State sets a plan for illegal arms

collection - IDPs in Kalma camp not

allowed to practice military activities

SPERO NEWS - RELIGIOUS NEWS

AUGUST 14, 2010

Darfur: probe underway into

abduction of two UN-African Union

peacekeepers

HARRY'S PLACE

AUGUST 14, 2010

Girifna braves repression to

struggle for democracy in Sudan

More at Blogrunner »

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News from SRS - Sudan Radio Service:

Sunday, August 01, 2010

MicroSave-Africa - USAID sponsors southern Sudan’s First Microfinance Conference

HISTORIC stuff.

Quotes of the Day
"Microfinance is dynamic and SUMI will adapt to change as it grows. I envision that SUMI, in the future, will be a bank." -Edward Lokule, Sudan Microfinance Institution (SUMI) Managing Director (Source: see report below)

"SUMI is striving to ensure that 50 percent of all lending goes to women." -USAID (Source: see report below)
IN just seven years since microfinance services began in southern Sudan, there are now an estimated 45,000 active loan recipients, borrowing between approximately 200 Sudanese pounds (about $80) and more than 400 Sudanese pounds (about $160) to launch or expand their businesses.

In 2003, when USAID helped establish the Sudan Microfinance Institution (SUMI), there were no financial services of any kind in southern Sudan, a region the size of France.

MicroSave-Africa began operations in October 1998 as an initiative to promote savings services for poor people in Africa. It was started by United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and UK Department for International Development (DFID) as a result of the African Conference on ‘Savings in the Context of Microfinance’ held in February 1998.

Through four major activities, MicroSave-Africa seeks to build the capacity of MFIs to provide secure, high quality savings services to poor people. These activities are Research, Curriculum Development, Training, and Dissemination.

The Goal of MicroSave-Africa is stated as:
To promote secure, high-quality savings services for poor people.

Financial information is unavailable for Finance Sudan, which is a joint venture between Micro-Africa Limited, a regionally managed for-profit organization established in 2000 that provides financial services in East and Central Africa, and American Refugee Committee (ARC), an international nonprofit that provides humanitarian assistance to refugee communities.

Further details here below.

USAID Sponsors Southern Sudan’s First Microfinance Conference
Copy of a monthly update from U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) - July, 2010 - excerpts:
On July 20 and 21 in Juba, USAID sponsored the First Southern Sudan Microfinance Conference. Organized in partnership with the Government of Southern Sudan (GOSS), the Microfinance Association of Southern Sudan, and the Southern Sudan Microfinance Development Facility, the conference provided a forum for 115 international, regional, and southern Sudanese technical experts and microfinance practitioners to exchange views about the state of microfinance in southern Sudan and develop a strategy to build the sector, which is still in its infancy.

In 2003, when USAID helped establish the Sudan Microfinance Institution (SUMI), there were no financial services of any kind in southern Sudan, a region the size of France.

In the seven years since then, SUMI has disbursed more than $2.7 million in loans to 10,000 clients—half of them women—empowering entrepreneurs to launch and expand businesses such as tea houses, bakeries, restaurants, and retail shops throughout southern Sudan. SUMI has expanded to six branches in four states—Central Equatoria, Western Equatoria, Lakes, and Western Bahr el Ghazal. Two international microfinance institutions—Finance Sudan and BRAC—are also now operating in southern Sudan, in locations including Wau, Malakal, Aweil, and Juba.

Numerous local start-up organizations are also emerging as demand continues for more access to financial services. There are now an estimated 45,000 active micro-loan borrowers in southern Sudan, borrowing between approximately 200 Sudanese pounds (about $80) and more than 400 Sudanese pounds (about $160).

The U.S. Consul General in Juba, Ambassador Barrie Walkley, told conference participants that “the microfinance sector has the potential to transform millions of lives.”

GOSS Minister of Commerce and Industry Stephen Dhieu thanked USAID for “taking a proactive approach to the expansion of financial services in southern Sudan.”

To build on its efforts, USAID last year launched a three-year project to strengthen southern Sudan’s microfinance sector with technical assistance and lending capital with the goal of expanding services to new areas and ultimately increasing employment opportunities and household incomes. The project, Generating Economic Development through Microfinance in Southern Sudan (GEMSS), is being implemented by AED in partnership with ACDI/VOCA.

The conference was part of USAID’s efforts to strengthen the sector. Participants discussed the challenges they face in dealing with southern Sudan’s poor infrastructure and low levels of financial literacy among both customers and staff, but recognized the need for advocacy, staff training, and increasing the overall population’s financial literacy. Conference speakers challenged the industry to grow by focusing on the basics, increasing the capacity of MFI staff, and responding to client demand for services.

Local market research and client feedback will be essential in developing a microfinance environment in southern Sudan that meets specific local needs.

As MicroSave Africa Director David Cracknell explained, “The smallest adjustment to a loan product can sometimes transform a product utilized by a few hundred borrowers to one that benefits thousands, and the only way we can change is to listen to our clients.”

MicroSave Africa is currently in the process of developing such products for Finance Sudan.

Other conference participants included David Baguma, executive director of the Association of Microfinance Institutions of Uganda; Lene Hansen, an international microfinance expert; and World Bank Country Manager Laurence Clarke.

The conference was an important step in the evolution of southern Sudan’s microfinance sector because it was the first time that government representatives, international donors, and microfinance experts and practitioners came together for frank discussions about their needs, challenges and potential solutions—an event that conference master of ceremonies Lemi Lokosang of USAID/Sudan’s economic growth team noted in his closing remarks was “making history” in southern Sudan. [...]

In addition to Finance Sudan, USAID also supports the Sudan Microfinance Institution [SUMI] and Ananda Marga Universal Relief Team through the GEMSS program. With increased organizational capacity and efficacy, these institutions have been able to open new branches, bringing opportunities to populations that previously never had access to credit facilities. Finance Sudan alone projects it will increase its client base from 1,152 to 6,000 by the end of 2010. Together, the three MFIs have made loans to more than 8,600 southern Sudanese entrepreneurs thus far. [...]
Click here to read USAID's monthly report in full at www.usaid.gov
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MICROCAPITAL BRIEF: Southern Sudan Holds Microfinance Conference with Sponsorship from United States Agency for International Development (USAID)
Copy of a report from MicroCapital.org by Conner Brannen
Tuesday, 27 July 2010 - excerpt:
Microfinance institutions (MFIs) operating in Southern Sudan, include several international MFIs – Finance Sudan, Equity Bank and BRAC – and one Sudanese – Sudan Microfinance Institution (SUMI). There are also several smaller start-up institutions.
According to the Microfinance Information Exchange (MIX) market, as of 2008, BRAC Southern Sudan reported USD 8.3 million in total assets, a gross loan portfolio of USD 1.8 million, USD 412,000 in deposits and 10,400 active borrowers.
As of 2008, SUMI reported USD 1.5 million in total assets, a gross loan portfolio of USD 1.1 million and 8,500 active borrowers.
As of 2009, Equity Bank reported USD 1.27 billion in total assets, a gross loan portfolio of USD 818 million and 716,000 active borrowers including operations in Uganda and Kenya.
No Breakdown specific to Southern Sudan is Available. Financial information is unavailable for Finance Sudan, which is a joint venture between Micro-Africa Limited, a regionally managed for-profit organization established in 2000 that provides financial services in East and Central Africa, and American Refugee Committee (ARC), an international nonprofit that provides humanitarian assistance to refugee communities. [...]
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Sudan – Generating Economic Development through Microfinance in Southern Sudan (GEMSS)
INCREASING ACCESS TO FINANCIAL SERVICES FOR POOR ENTREPRENEURS AND HOUSEHOLDS
Copy of a report (undated) from the website of www.acdivoca.org:
ACDI/VOCA has won a $10.4 million subaward from the USAID-funded Generating Economic Development through Microfinance in Southern Sudan (GEMSS) FIELD Leaders With Associates (LWA) Program. AED is the prime implementer of the FIELD LWA, which will work to increase access to financial services in Southern Sudan for poor entrepreneurs and households.

Southern Sudan is in the process of rebuilding after a protracted civil war. Under the agreement with the Republic of Sudan, Southern Sudan is largely autonomous now and has the chance to vote for full independence in 2011. Currently in Southern Sudan, there are three microfinance institutions, a microfinance association and a newly established currency. Nonetheless, the financial sector is still hampered by low technical and managerial capacity, insufficient resources and inadequate physical or legal infrastructure.

Strengthening the sector to meet underserved client demand will allow the microfinance sector to play an important role in rebuilding the region, helping microenterprises to grow and meet Southern Sudanese expectations for concrete benefits to peace.

For more information, contact Seth McDonagh at smcdonagh@acdivoca.org.
Updated: 1/09
Note from Sudan Watch Ed:
According to its About page, "ACDI/VOCA is a private, nonprofit organization that promotes broad-based economic growth and the development of civil society in emerging democracies and developing countries. Offering a comprehensive range of technical assistance services, ACDI/VOCA addresses the most pressing and intractable development problems"

Also, note the following excerpt from one of the above reports: "To build on its efforts, USAID last year launched a three-year project to strengthen southern Sudan’s microfinance sector with technical assistance and lending capital with the goal of expanding services to new areas and ultimately increasing employment opportunities and household incomes. The project, Generating Economic Development through Microfinance in Southern Sudan (GEMSS), is being implemented by AED in partnership with ACDI/VOCA."
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Building a Microfinance Institution from Scratch
Copy of a report (undated) from the website of USAID:
Sudan Microfinance Institution (SUMI)

Photo: SUMI is striving to ensure that 50 percent of all lending goes to women. (Photo and caption: USAID)

Sudan Microfinance Institution's objective is to offer financial services on a self-sustaining yet efficient basis to microentrepreneurs living in southern Sudan, with emphasis on the agriculture sector, women, returned refugees, and internally displaced persons.

Rose Anite is a 26-year-old woman who sells dried fish at the open market in Yei. She began her business in 2000 with the equivalent of $75. She buys the fish twice a month in Uganda near the river Nile at a place called Panyamur, but the trip takes about seven days due to poor roads and infrastructure.

Given the lack of infrastructure, few businesses, no legal or regulatory framework, and a culture of heavy dependence on relief aid brought on by a quarter century of war, few thought a microfinance institution could be developed. When the operations and logistics manager first assessed the potential of South Sudan for such an initiative, he reported hearing, "The Sudanese will run away with your money." Despite initial skepticism, however, a successful microfinance institution, governed by a local board of directors, has been built from scratch.

Created with USAID support in 2003, the Sudan Microfinance Institution (SUMI) is performing above international standards and growing. Through solidarity groups and salary loans in three southern Sudan branches, the total value of loans disbursed by February 2005 was close to a half million dollars to more than 1,600 clients, above the targets set in their business plan. SUMI's repayment rate is over 98 percent with a portfolio-at-risk rate of less than 6 percent.

Rose joined SUMI so that she could increase her capital. She has taken a loan equivalent to $100, which allows her to now buy in larger bulk and thus increases the profitability of each buying trip to Uganda. Like the other four members of her borrower group, Rose is servicing her loan on time and looks forward to paying it off so that she can access a larger loan next time.
Further Reading

MicroSave
Visit MicroSave website at http://www.microsave.org/
Follow MicroSave on Twitter at http://twitter.com/MicroSave

World Bank
Excerpt from Worldbank.org re MicroSave-Africa - A CGAP/UNDP/DFID Initiative:
MicroSave-Africa began operations in October 1998 as an initiative to promote savings services for poor people in Africa. It was started by UNDP and DFID as a result of the African Conference on ‘Savings in the Context of Microfinance’ held in February 1998. Through four major activities, MicroSave-Africa seeks to build the capacity of MFIs to provide secure, high quality savings services to poor people. These activities are Research, Curriculum Development, Training, and Dissemination. The Goal of MicroSave-Africa is stated as:
To promote secure, high-quality savings services for poor people.
American Refugee Committee (ARC) Southern Sudan
Excerpts from ARC's About page at www.arcrelief.org:
Head Office: Juba

Where ARC Works in Sudan: Juba, Kajo Keji, Malakal, Nimule, and Yei in southern Sudan

People We Serve: 600,000 Returning Sudanese Refugees and IDPs

Since independence, southern Sudan has known little but civil war. The most recent conflict began in 1983 and mired the region in extreme poverty and suffering. Hundreds of thousands of civilians died from violence, hunger and disease as a result of the conflict, and millions more were forced from their homes.

The Comprehensive Peace Agreement was finally signed in January 2005. The task now facing the government of southern Sudan and the international community is the reconstruction of the country and the reintegration of hundreds of thousands of returning refugees and internally displaced people. In 2011, southern Sudan will vote on whether they want to remain part of Sudan or become an independent country.

ARC will continue to provide services in southern Sudan and work to build the capacity of the government and local community organizations to serve the local population.

Operational Since: 1994
ARC began operations in Kajo Keji County in southern Sudan in 1994, providing health services to people displaced by the war. Operations have since grown dramatically, and ARC now operates an integrated program of health care, water and sanitation, and microenterprise development for war-affected residents and returning refugees.

Milestones:
In September 2006, Finance Sudan, an ARC microfinance institution, began operations. It is one of only two such institutions currently operating in the region. Finance Sudan has given small loans to hundreds of entrepreneurs, more than half of them women.

Since 2006, ARC has been implementing a major, long-term initiative to expand comprehensive reproductive health care services in southern Sudan (as well as in Darfur). We’re addressing emergency obstetrics, family planning, sexually transmitted infections, HIV/AIDS, and the clinical management of rape.

Current Needs:
ARC has recently initiated the Through Our Eyes project in southern Sudan. The project uses hands-on video and community participation to get people talking about gender-based violence and how to prevent it.

Participants produce video dramas and documentaries on such issues as rape, wife-beating, sexually-transmitted infections and forced marriage. The videos are then shown at community forums, which spark discussions about how to solve the problems. The goal of Through Our Eyes is to amplify the voices of change from within communities.

Related Reading

Jan 18, 2005 - "ARC and Rock For Democracy Partner to Raise Funds for Darfur" - "Concert For Darfur gives ARC a great opportunity to publicize our vital work with the thousands of people of the Sudan displaced by the brutal civil war," said Hugh Parmer, ARC's president. "And all of the money raised will fund our relief programs, ultimately saving many lives."

Aug 9, 2005 - "ARC Receives $2.8 Million from U.S. Government to Continue Life-Saving Work in Darfur" - The US Agency for International Development’s (USAID) Office of Foreign Disaster Assistance recently awarded the American Refugee Committee International (ARC) $2,797,000 to continue providing health care, water and sanitation training programs for internally-displaced persons (IDP) and war-affected populations in Darfur, Sudan. ARC has been working in Darfur since 2003, collaborating with USAID and UNHCR to assist local people.

ARC's Through Our Eyes

Photo: ARC's Participatory Video Communications Project to prevent gender-based violence (Photo credit: ARC's Through Our Eyes)
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Lack of infrastructure hinders growth of micro finance institutions in S. Sudan
22 July 2010 - (Juba) – A lack of infrastructure in southern Sudan is preventing micro financing organizations from reaching rural areas in the region.

Members of the Southern Sudan Micro-finance Association are appealing to the Government of Southern Sudan to improve roads so that funds can reach the needy populations.
Full story at SRS - Sudan Radio Service.
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Food prices rise In Rumbek, S. Sudan
22 July 2010 - (Rumbek) – The prices of essential food commodities in Rumbek have risen due to heavy taxation by the custom authorities.

Speaking to SRS from Rumbek on Wednesday, one of the traders, Abui Noel, said that they are charged at every roadblock when transporting goods.
Full story at SRS - Sudan Radio Service.
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Islamic Bank to help develop S. Sudan
27 July 2010 - (Juba) - The Islamic Development Bank has expressed readiness to assist in the development of southern Sudan before the forthcoming referendum.

On Monday, a delegation from the Islamic Development Bank met GOSS Vice President Riek Machar.

The vice president of the Islamic Development Bank operation office, Sidebe Birama addressed reporters after the meeting.

Doctor Riek Machar said that he will present the issue before the council of ministers to decide on the Islamic Bank proposal.
Full story at SRS - Sudan Radio Service.
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Government to pay southern pensioners
27 July 2010 - (Khartoum) – The federal government has pledged to pay the arrears of pensioners from southern Sudan whose dues have not been paid during the war up to the 31st of December 2005.
Full story at SRS - Sudan Radio Service.
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South Sudan denies allegations of excessive sugar consumption
28 July 2010 - (Juba) – The GOSS Ministry of Commerce and Industry has disputed claims by the press in Khartoum that most of Sudan’s sugar is consumed in southern Sudan, soaring sugar prices in the north.

The report states that the Southern Sudan Beverage Brewery Limited uses a huge amount of sugar.


Stephen Dhieu spoke to SRS in Juba on Wednesday. He said the brewery gets its raw materials from South Africa.

The report also said that about one million tons of sugar has been exported to southern Sudan since the signing of the CPA, an allegation Dhieu refutes.
Full story at SRS - Sudan Radio Service.
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No Taxes For Food Items In Southern Sudan, Says GOSS
29 July 2010 - (Juba) – The Government of Southern Sudan has passed a resolution waiving taxes on all imported food items.

Southern Sudan imports over eighty percent of its products from neighboring countries such as Uganda, Kenya, in addition to those coming from northern Sudan.

The directors from the GOSS ministry of commerce and industry added that since 2005, southern Sudan has offered a free market zone which accommodates more foreign investors than local investors.
Full story at SRS - Sudan Radio Service.
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UK Donates Funds To Ensure Food Seurity In South
28 July 2010 report from SRS - Sudan Radio Service:
(Juba) - The government of the United Kingdom has donated 30 million US dollars to World Food Program to avert looming starvation in Sudan.

Addressing the press on Tuesday in Juba, the World Food Program deputy coordinator for South Sudan Alghassim Rhasin Wurie said the donation has come at a critical time of hunger in the country.

[Alghassim Rhasin]: “The funding we have received from the UK government is 30 million US dollars. It will feed 5.3 people in the whole of Sudan for one month. It is a very big contribution now critical for south Sudan. People now without any food aid, they would not harvest any crops. So with this contribution, we are now going to make sure those who are affected by food security will receive timely food rations. In south Sudan, we see there is food insecurity everywhere but the key areas are; Northern Bahr El Ghazal, Lakes and Eastern Equatoria. These three areas are heavily food insecure. So most of this food donation will immediately go to these areas which are food insecure.”

Rhasin also said that the main cause of hunger in Sudan and mainly in the south is drought, hiked food prices and insecurity in some areas.
More news from SRS - Sudan Radio Service:

Thursday - 29 July 2010