Tuesday, April 10, 2012

VOA News: Africa: Malawi's New President Faces Obstacles to Improving Women’s Rights

VOA News: Africa
Africa Voice of America
Malawi's New President Faces Obstacles to Improving Women's Rights
Apr 11th 2012, 01:40

Malawi's new president originally rose to prominence as a women's rights advocate. But Shereen Essof, a regional coordinator for feminist group Just Associates in Southern Africa, says President Joyce Banda may not be able to continue the battle for gender equality in the same way as president.

She said Banda is facing a "political terrain [that] is very, very loaded."

The new president has been sworn in, Essof added "at a time when, in the region, there are a kind of corralling of very conservative forces that work against advancing rights for women."

For one, she explained, Malawi's leaders have been moving the country towards increased privatization, which means the government is no longer subsidizing a number of social services that were focused on helping women, such as improving access to healthcare, housing and water.

She said an evolution in religious attitudes is also affecting women in the southern African country.

"There's also a move of fundamentalism in the region, particularly Christian fundamentalism and more conservative articulations of gendered roles in regards to men and women and that plays out in very, very specific ways."

Essof said the women of Malawi currently suffer a number of inequalities - restrictions that range from how they can dress to their economic opportunities.

"Joyce Banda has definitely come out in different ways in support of women's rights and economic empowerment," Essof said. The new president once established the Joyce Banda Foundation for girls' education.

That kind of advocacy is important, Essof said, in a country where a majority of women in Malawi live in rural areas, where literacy rates are low

Essof said she hopes Banda will continue this work as president despite the challenges.

Among other pressing issues, Malawi's women need an advocate for their access to low-cost, high-quality HIV medications, she added.

Nearly 60 percent of the adults living with AIDS in Malawi are women.  Essof said their access to life-saving drugs is at risk, because "there have been cutbacks in the funding/support of ART."

Banda was sworn in late last week after the death of President Bingu wa Mutharika.

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VOA News: Asia: Clinton: 'Additional Provocations' May Follow N. Korea Missile Launch

VOA News: Asia
Asia Voice of America
Clinton: 'Additional Provocations' May Follow N. Korea Missile Launch
Apr 11th 2012, 01:28

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton says North Korea's planned missile launch may be the first of what could be additional threats to regional security.  There are growing concerns that North Korea may be planning another nuclear test.

Secretary Clinton says North Korea's planned long-range missile launch will put its neighbors at risk and undermine the credibility of new President Kim Jong Un.

"This new threat comes only weeks after North Korea agreed to a moratorium on nuclear and missile testing," said Clinton. "The speed of the turnaround raises questions about Pyongyang's seriousness in saying that it desires to improve relations with us and its neighbors."

In a speech at the U.S. Naval Academy, Secretary Clinton said North Korea's decision to launch a three-stage ballistic missile could be the first of Pyongyang's provocations.

"This launch will give credence to the view that North Korean leaders see improved relations with the outside world as a threat to the existence of their system," she said. "And recent history strongly suggests that additional provocations may follow."

South Korean intelligence photos, obtained by VOA, show what appear to be preparations for a third North Korean nuclear test.

State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland will not confirm that intelligence information, but says another nuclear test "would be equally bad if not worse" than the missile launch.

Secretary Clinton says Washington is working around the clock with allies in Tokyo and Seoul to sharpen their deterrence to North Korea.

"We will also work with Russia and with China.," said Clinton. "They both share a strong interest in stability on the Korean Peninsula, and will join us in sending a clear message to Pyongyang that true security will only come from living up to its commitments and obligations, first and foremost to their own people."

Talks among North Korea, the United States, China, Russia, South Korea and Japan broke down in 2009 when Pyongyang expelled international inspectors and carried out its second nuclear test.

Stemming North Korea's nuclear ambitions will be part of talks Wednesday and Thursday in Washington when Secretary Clinton hosts foreign ministers from the Group of Eight leading industrialized nations.

Media files:
Clinton_Iran_Talks1.jpg (image/jpeg, 0.1 MB)
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VOA News: USA: Crime and Illegal Guns in New York

VOA News: USA
USA Voice of America
Crime and Illegal Guns in New York
Apr 11th 2012, 00:55

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Most of the guns used to commit crime in New York City are illegal weapons, brought in from other states.  In recent months, such weapons have been used to shoot eight local police officers, one of them fatally.  Most recently, four officers were wounded on Sunday as they tried to rescue a woman taken hostage with a four-month-old baby.  New York officials are seeking federal help to stop the online sale of illegal firearms.

Honors for a New York City police officer, one of eight shot with an illegal weapon over the past four months. This public outpouring was for an officer, killed while responding to a robbery last December.  Mayor Michael Bloomberg accuses federal authorities of not enforcing existing laws that prevent gun sales to minors, individuals with psychiatric or drug problems and criminals.  

"The disgrace is, the federal government has left some loopholes where it's hard to enforce their own laws and they don't fund any of the enforcement," said Bloomberg.

New York State Attorney General Eric Schneiderman says nearly 90 per cent of the firearms used to commit crime in New York City are from out of state, and most are illegal.  Some of the illicit weapons are available online.  Late last year, undercover investigators conducted a sting on 10 web sites in 14 states where guns could be purchased without required background checks.  

Gun buyer: "No background checks, anything like that?"

Gun dealer
: "No, I'm just a private person."

Gun buyer: Oh, that's good, 'cause I probably couldn't pass one."

Gun dealer: "I probably couldn't either."

Many gun advocates say an armed citizenry prevents the establishment of tyrannical government, which they say is worse than the shooting of innocent people.  Larry Pratt is the executive director of Gun Owners of America.

"The bad things that happen with guns in the hands of private people is nothing compared to what happens when the government has a monopoly of firearms," said Pratt.

Mayor Bloomberg characterizes Pratt's argument as "dumb," noting that on average, 34 people are killed in the U.S. with illegal firearms every single day.  The mayor adds that since pro-gun organizations argue the government should not pass new gun laws, but should enforce those already on the books - he is challenging those groups to join the effort to enforce existing laws.  

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VOA News: Africa: Mali Political Parties Support Transitional Government

VOA News: Africa
Africa Voice of America
Mali Political Parties Support Transitional Government
Apr 11th 2012, 00:41

A prominent politician in Mali says a majority of political parties have agreed to support a transitional government tasked with organizing elections to restore constitutional rule.

Cheick Traore, leader of the African Convergence for Renewal (CARE) party and son of former President Moussa Traore, said Malians want a peaceful restoration of democracy in spite of the military overthrow of former President Amadou Toumani Toure.

"We will have to work with the transitional government because what we all want today is peace in this country. We also want the election to be organized so that we can have a new elected president," said Traore.

"I do believe that today, most of the parties will work with the new transitional government …and also eventually prepare to go to war against those [Tuareg rebels] who are trying to take part of Mali."

Speaker of parliament Dioncounda Traore is scheduled to be sworn in Thursday as interim president. Analysts say the move officially ends the brief power seizure by mutinous soldiers on March 22.

CARE leader Traore was one of the candidates vying for the presidency in the election originally set for later this month. That vote was derailed after former President Toure's ouster by soldiers frustrated at the handling of the Tuareg rebellion in the north.

Traore said Malians remain eager to vote to choose their own leaders in "a credibly organized election."

A recent agreement with the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) gives the coup leaders immunity after they hand over power to a transitional government. But Traore said there appears to be confusion whether the ECOWAS agreement means the military will have a role in organizing polls.

"People always try to misinterpret the article from this agreement. But the fact is that we will have a transitional government for 40 days with the president of the parliament then we will have a prime minister with the full power to lead the transition and organize the elections," said Traore.

He said the military will only be responsible for maintaining peace during the electoral process.

As part of the agreement, ECOWAS also pledged to help Mali fight the Tuareg rebels. Since the military coup, the rebels have seized much of the country's north and proclaimed an independent state they called "Azawad".

Traore underscored the need for a united Mali, but cautioned against foreign military intervention. He insists the national army, when well-equipped, is capable of ending the Tuareg rebellion. He said the Malian army has not been properly equipped for the last 20 years.

"This war is a war where we should [supply] arms to the fighters if not we will never be able to win it, and today what Mali needs more is equipment. I don't believe that ECOWAS should send its soldiers to Mali because they don't know the land to start with. Most of these soldiers are from the forest areas of Africa. [But] we are talking about the desert now," said Traore.

"The most important thing for ECOWAS to do is to train the Malian soldiers and to equip them. And nobody should fight for Mali. It's Malians who should fight for Mali."

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VOA News: Middle East: Syria’s Main Opposition Alliance Still Pins Hopes on Annan’s Peace Plan

VOA News: Middle East
Middle East Voice of America
Syria's Main Opposition Alliance Still Pins Hopes on Annan's Peace Plan
Apr 10th 2012, 23:47

Representatives of Syria's main opposition alliance say they are still willing to give a peace plan proposed by international envoy Kofi Annan a chance to work.  But they say they will explore other options if diplomatic efforts to end the Syrian crisis fail.

Representatives of the Syrian National Council say they are distressed, but not surprised, by what they say is the increased violence and brutality of Syria's government against civilians.  

They say the government sharply escalated its attacks against the civilian population in the week leading up to the April 10 deadline for Syrian forces to withdraw heavy weapons from towns and cities.  They say more than 1,000 people were killed in that period.  This figure cannot be independently verified.

But the opposition group says it is still willing to give the Annan peace plan a chance.  SNC spokeswoman Basma Kodmani says another important deadline is Thursday, April 12.  This is when the peace plan specifies the warring parties must cease all hostilities.  

"In spite of the difficulties that we are facing ... we think that the Annan mission can continue to work with the regime and with international powers to get a U.N. mission, a monitoring mission of observers, on the ground," Kodmani said.  

Tuesday in Moscow, Syria's Foreign Minister Walid al-Moallem said his government had begun to fulfill Mr. Annan's plan to end the violence.

Kodmani says if the Annan mission fails, no option should be dismissed.  She says the rebels' Free Syrian Army hopes the U.N. Security Council will pass a resolution with teeth.  She urges the council to invoke Chapter 7 of the U.N. Charter, which allows the Security Council to take military and non-military action to restore international peace and security.

"If this remains not accessible - that depends very much on the position of Russia and China.  We very much hope they will cooperate this time because every attempt at a solution that requires the cooperation of the regime is leading to hundreds and thousands more deaths," Kodmani said.  

In the meantime, the opposition spokeswoman says the Syrian National Council is still pinning its hopes on the Annan mission.  She says the mission has strong legitimacy and the support of all members of the Security Council, and should be given every chance to succeed.

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VOA News: Americas: Study: Centuries-Old Farming Methods Hold Key to Rainforest Conservation

VOA News: Americas
Americas Voice of America
Study: Centuries-Old Farming Methods Hold Key to Rainforest Conservation
Apr 10th 2012, 23:31

The Amazon region of South America, the largest tropical rainforest and river basin on Earth, is disappearing at a rate of around 800,000 hectares a year, but a new study finds one possible strategy for reversing this trend in ancient Amazonian farming methods.

Analysis of a 1,000-year-old ecological record in the Amazon provides a rare glimpse at early farming practices before European explorers began arriving in the Americas more than 500 years ago.

The study, published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, finds the ancient farming methods could slow the destruction of the Amazon rainforest.

The rapid expansion of agriculture and cattle ranching, road and dam construction, and illegal logging are the biggest drivers of this massive deforestation.  

Lead author Jose Iriarte, a paleoethnobotonist at the University of Exeter in England, focused on a coastal wetland savanna in present-day French Guyana, on South America's northeastern coast, where ancient farm beds and canals remain, unaltered, on the landscape.  In pre-colonial history, Iriarte says, this was a period when farmers "reclaimed these seasonally flooded savannas into raised-field agricultural landscapes."

A sediment core from the site provided the team with an unusually intact archive of how farmers farmed these fields. It shows pollen, plant species and charcoal before and after the European colonization in the late 15th and 16th centuries.

Geographer Mitchell Power, curator of the Natural History Museum at the University of Utah, studied charcoal in the core. He says while evidence shows that naturally-occurring fires began decreasing globally around 1500 - a period of documented climate cooling - that's not what they saw in the Amazonian record.

"When we went to the French Guyana site to try to understand the record, the most surprising thing to me was that it was the opposite trend.  Fire was very low and then after 1500, fire increased," he said. "That was contrary to what 90 percent of the rest of the records around the world are telling us."<!--IMAGE-LEFT-->

Iriarte says the farmers understood how fire could harm the land and agricultural production.

"We know that fire results in the loss of crucial nutrients for crops, [and that] fallows without fires are most effective in restoring soil organic matter and preserving soil structure," he said. "So we interpreted that they were limiting fires because it was better to grow crops in these raised field systems."

Iriarte says use of this fire-free method by the pre-Columbian farmers helped them transform the seasonally-flooded savanna into productive cropland.

"Raised fields provided better drainage, soil aeration, and also moisture retention during the dry season. These raised fields were constructed mainly with the muck from these seasonally flooded savannahs," he said. "So they are really fertile and they can be recycled every season."

Mitchell Power says this labor-intensive approach ended abruptly when as much as 95 percent of the indigenous population died from a variety of Old-World diseases brought by the European settlers.

"Once the Columbian encounter happens we don't see that type of agriculture any more," he said. "We start to see increased burning and a shift toward dry land farming. So people were then clearing forests and making their raised beds in the forests. And what we think is happening was a huge demographic collapse in this region."

Slash-and-burn agriculture - introduced to the Amazon not by the native farmers but by European colonizers - remains today a major threat to the rainforest. Experts say if such practices continue at the current rate, more than half of the Amazon's tropical rainforest could be gone by 2030.

Iriarte says pre-Columbian farming methods offer a tried-and-true alternative.

"It has the capability to help curb carbon emissions and at the same time provide food security for the more vulnerable and poorest rural populations of rural Amazonia," he said.

The authors say bringing back these labor-intensive but productive farming systems to serve today's - and tomorrow's - food needs will require extensive farmer re-training - and the political will of the region's governments. And they believe that if the Amazon's current stewards can reclaim the wisdom of their ancestors, the damage to the world's greatest rainforest can be slowed.

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VOA News: Economy: Health Care Expert Details Ways to Cut Costs

VOA News: Economy
Economy Voice of America
Health Care Expert Details Ways to Cut Costs
Apr 10th 2012, 23:50

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In late June, the U.S. Supreme Court is expected to rule on the constitutionality of a health care law that would require all Americans to buy health insurance, and for most companies to provide it to their employees.  Americans have been debating the health insurance issue for years, and in the meantime, the costs of medical treatment, as well as the cost of health insurance premiums, have been rising steadily.  At least one expert says part of the debate should be how to reduce costs without reducing the quality of care.

Americans expressed their views on health care in late March as the Supreme Court heard arguments on a law many call "Obamacare." Health care is so expensive that without insurance, many people could not afford it. But health insurance is also expensive. Close to 50 million Americans do not have insurance for health care.

Dr. Donald Berwick is an expert on health care issues who recently retired as the head of US government health programs for the elderly and the poor (Medicare and Medicaid). He's currently a senior fellow at the Center for American Progress, a policy research organization.

"I know that the best way to reduce costs is to improve quality, not to cut back on care," he said.

Dr. Berwick co-authored an article on that topic in the Journal of the American Medical Association. He says following proper procedures can reduce expensive mistakes, mistakes resulting from post-operative complications or dangerous reactions when a patient is given the wrong medicine.  Costs mount, too, when health care is not coordinated, for instance, when a patient sees both a primary care doctor and a specialist and neither knows what medicines or tests the other is prescribing.  

Dr. Berwick says unnecessary treatment also drives up costs.  "For example, getting antibiotics for a viral infection. That doesn't do any good at all, and yet we do it. We do it all the time," he said.

And then there's the bane of every doctor or nurse's job - filling out forms. "Lots of different players in health care add costs by requiring you to jump through hoops if you are a doctor or nurse filling out forms and things like that that don't add any value," said Dr. Berwick.

Dr. Berwick also points to the high cost of diagnostic procedures.  In the United States, MRIs and CT scans cost many times what they cost in other countries.

Researchers says the U.S. spends 17 per cent of its gross domestic product on health care. That number is expected to reach 20 per cent in the next 8 years. "If we don't work on waste and improvement of care as the fundamental agenda for reduction of cost we're headed over a cliff, bad things are going to happen," he said.

However, Dr. Berwick says if costs can be contained, money will available for procedures and medicines that work.  

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VOA News: Economy: Zimbabwe Agriculture Struggles to Meet Demand

VOA News: Economy
Economy Voice of America
Zimbabwe Agriculture Struggles to Meet Demand
Apr 10th 2012, 23:23

Zimbabwe was once southern Africa's breadbasket.

But today it is a basket case, where people depend on handouts for food.

For more than 10 consecutive years since President Robert Mugabe's government embarked on a land reform program targeting white farmers, Zimbabwe has had to import food to avert hunger as its new farmers cannot produce enough.

On Tuesday, Finance Minister Tendai Biti said the treasury had released $20 million to farmers to buy inputs - seeds, fertilizer and other farming materials.  At the same news conference, Minister of Agriculture Joseph Made said a third of the country's planted crop for the 2012 season was a write-off, since farmers did not have irrigation systems and were too poor to buy required inputs on time.

"It is clear if you bring inputs late in the season you cannot take advantage.  Cropping is a function of time," said Made.  "The season does not wait.  I hope in what we are doing are correcting the situation so that never again are the inputs are delayed…. The second point is that when we are talking of agriculture farmers suffer the vagaries of weather. That you cannot control. The best is to assist farmers by development of irrigation."

Zimbabwe had plenty of food until 2000.  Since then it has been a different story since President Mugabe's government launched its land reform program.  Almost all white commercial farmers were replaced by inexperienced farmers, mainly supporters of Mugabe's ZANU-PF party. It is these farmers that Made wants helped in erecting irrigation systems to water their crops.

The deposed white farmers had irrigation systems, but the new farmers mostly destroyed them when they took over the farms, often by force.

"There is a move towards market-related solutions towards agriculture, bearing in mind our incapacity as a state to look fully after our people," said Finance Minister Biti.  "This is a move we are making which reflected in this program we are launching today."

It remains to be seen if these untrained farmers are able to survive on their own without being assisted by the government, as has been the case since the land reform started.

Critics have said Zimbabwe's government should have trained the farmers before allocating them land to them.  Tuesday, when asked to reveal how farmers had performed and whether Zimbabwe needed to import food in 2012, Agriculture Minister Made said exact figures are still not available, but production will not be what was expected.

"I know you might be looking for [a] specific figure.  You have to wait a little bit.  That has to be briefed to [the] cabinet first. But of the 1.7 million hectares that were planted, 500,000 hectares will be a write off," said Made.

The $20 million in aid to farmers announced Tuesday is meant to increase size of the winter crop, especially wheat.  The southern African country requires 406,000 metric tons of wheat annually to meet local demands.  Made said the funding would result in wheat production increasing to 76,000 metric tons.

The United Nations estimates that at least 1.5 million people need food aid in Zimbabwe. With the latest revelations, the number of people who need food assistance is almost certain to increase.

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VOA News: USA: MSF Alarmed Over Plans to Cut US AIDS Program

VOA News: USA
USA Voice of America
MSF Alarmed Over Plans to Cut US AIDS Program
Apr 10th 2012, 23:22

Medical aid organization Doctors Without Borders is concerned that proposed budget cuts to a U.S. program for HIV treatment around the world threatens the progress being made against the pandemic in Africa.  

On World AIDS Day in December, U.S. President Barack Obama announced that the United States would aim to treat six million people infected with HIV around the world by the end of 2013 - two million more than the previous target.

The organization responsible for the outreach will be the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, better known by its acronym PEPFAR.

But while Mr. Obama has pledged to expand PEPFAR to include more people, his budget proposal for the fiscal year 2013 cuts more than a half-billion dollars from the program, about 13 percent of its current funding.

Doctors Without Borders, known by its French acronym MSF, has raised the alarm over the proposed cut, saying it will undermine the president's own goals.

Jennifer Cohn, the East Africa policy advisor for the MSF Access Campaign, said she is concerned that countries that receive PEPFAR support may begin scaling back their own treatment programs in anticipation of the cuts.

"In terms of the budget shortfall, I think many problematic things might occur as a result of that, including decreases in treatment, decreases in other sorts of support, and then, sort of a chilling effect on country guidelines themselves," said Cohn.

Budget figures outlined by MSF show some major reductions in Africa, including a nearly 50 percent cut in funding for Kenya and 82 percent for Ethiopia.

In a post on the official State Department blog in February, U.S. Global AIDS Coordinator Eric Goosby wrote that the administration is "freeing up resources by reducing programs in countries with a lower HIV prevalence," specifically mentioning Ethiopia.  He also said the program in Kenya had "matured" and that it was adjusting the country's funding to reflect a new focus on local implementation.

Proposed cuts not final

PEPFAR senior advisor Tom Walsh said all the budget figures being discussed are preliminary and that some of the country figures are certain to change.

Still, he emphasized that PEPFAR has made dramatic gains in efficiency, and that the budget requested for 2013 is the amount needed.

"Over the years, we've gotten the cost of treating an individual person per year with antiretroviral therapy down from about $1,100 in 2004 to $335 in 2011," said Walsh.. "That kind of dramatic gain in efficiency, in reaching more people with the resources available, is what Congress likes to see and we think we're going to make continued progress on that front."

The president's budget proposal needs the approval of the U.S. Congress. Walsh said PEPFAR has always received strong bipartisan support.

MSF is not only concerned about the budget numbers, but also with some of the program's accounting methods.

Cohn said the way PEPFAR counts the number of people receiving treatment can be misleading.

"What we're finding is actually that whereas PEPFAR is not necessarily directly supporting people on treatment in certain countries, they're actually counting those people toward the 6 million people they promise to put on treatment by 2013, so we find that concerning and somewhat disingenuous," said Cohn.

Cohn's concerns are highlighted in a U.S. report from earlier this year on PEPFAR's programming in Malawi.

In the document, PEPFAR outlines the support it provides in the country, such as funding staff for visits to treatment sites, training service partners and developing an electronic data system. Nowhere does it say the U.S. provides antiretroviral medication (ARVs) for patients.

But, in the "Recommendations" section of the document, the authors suggest that all HIV-infected adults receiving treatment in Malawi's national program should be reported as "directly supported" by the U.S. government.

Tom Walsh for PEPFAR could not confirm that this accounting practice is common, and said the methods vary based on the arrangements in each individual country.

He said the U.S. supports a variety of services, and treating HIV is about more than just providing drugs.

"ARVs are an important part of treatment, but also important is the infrastructure to deliver the drugs, support for the clinics, training for the health providers who do the work," said Walsh. "In every country there's a different combination of resources that it takes to deliver treatment."

Partnering against HIV/AIDS

The United States is increasing its reliance on partners in treatment programs, one of the biggest being the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria.

Walsh points out that responsibilities for HIV programs around the world are divided up between partner organizations.  So, PEPFAR may pay for training and infrastructure, while the Global Fund or the host government buys the medication.

Despite scaling back PEPFAR, President Obama's 2013 budget request includes an increase of $350 million for the Global Fund.

But that increase does not make up for PEPFAR's cuts.  If the budget is approved as is, the net decrease for AIDS funding would be about $213 million.

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VOA News: Economy: Obama Renews Call for Higher Taxes on Millionaires

VOA News: Economy
Economy Voice of America
Obama Renews Call for Higher Taxes on Millionaires
Apr 10th 2012, 22:22

U.S. President Barack Obama on Tuesday renewed his call for Congress to pass the so-called "Buffett Rule," which would raise income taxes on the wealthiest Americans. The president is highlighting his differences with leading Republican presidential hopeful Mitt Romney, in an appeal to middle class voters.

At a university in Florida, Obama said the growing financial divide between rich and middle class Americans needs to be addressed.

"What drags our entire economy down is when the benefits of economic growth and productivity go only to the few, which is what has been happening for over a decade now, and the gap between those at the very, very top and everybody else keeps growing wider and wider and wider and wider," said Obama.

The president again called on the Senate to pass what he calls the "Buffett Rule," named for billionaire investor Warren Buffett, who has said that he pays too little in taxes, while middle class Americans pay too much.

The Democratic-led Senate is expected to vote on the bill in the coming days, but analysts say the legislation likely will not pass the Republican-led House of Representatives.

Republicans say the Buffett Rule would raise taxes on small businesses and discourage job creation. They also say it would do very little to shrink the government's huge budget deficit.

Obama is proposing that people who earn at least $1 million a year should pay at least 30 percent of their income in taxes.

At Florida Atlantic University, the president also campaigned for other parts of his economic plan, including government projects for education and infrastructure.

"They have not been made as some grand scheme to redistribute wealth from one group to another. This is not some socialist dream.  They have been made by Democrats and Republicans for generations because they benefit all of us," he said.

A new Washington Post-ABC News public opinion poll shows that Obama leads likely Republican nominee Mitt Romney, 51 to 43 percent.  But more than half of the voters surveyed say they disapprove of the president's handling of the economy.

Obama is stressing middle class issues, to draw a contrast with the wealthy former Massachusetts governor.

Romney's path to the Republican Party nomination became clearer Tuesday, when his main rival, former Pennsylvania senator Rick Santorum, announced that he was suspending his campaign because his daughter suffers from a rare illness.

In addition to his speech at the university, the president attended three campaign fund-raising events in Florida.

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VOA News: USA: Obama Renews Call for Higher Taxes on Millionaires

VOA News: USA
USA Voice of America
Obama Renews Call for Higher Taxes on Millionaires
Apr 10th 2012, 21:56

U.S. President Barack Obama on Tuesday renewed his call for Congress to pass the so-called "Buffett Rule," which would raise income taxes on the wealthiest Americans. The president is highlighting his differences with leading Republican presidential hopeful Mitt Romney, in an appeal to middle class voters.

At a university in Florida, Obama said the growing financial divide between rich and middle class Americans needs to be addressed.

"What drags our entire economy down is when the benefits of economic growth and productivity go only to the few, which is what has been happening for over a decade now, and the gap between those at the very, very top and everybody else keeps growing wider and wider and wider and wider," said Obama.

The president again called on the Senate to pass what he calls the "Buffett Rule," named for billionaire investor Warren Buffett, who has said that he pays too little in taxes, while middle class Americans pay too much.

The Democratic-led Senate is expected to vote on the bill in the coming days, but analysts say the legislation likely will not pass the Republican-led House of Representatives.

Republicans say the Buffett Rule would raise taxes on small businesses and discourage job creation. They also say it would do very little to shrink the government's huge budget deficit.

Obama is proposing that people who earn at least $1 million a year should pay at least 30 percent of their income in taxes.

At Florida Atlantic University, the president also campaigned for other parts of his economic plan, including government projects for education and infrastructure.

"They have not been made as some grand scheme to redistribute wealth from one group to another. This is not some socialist dream.  They have been made by Democrats and Republicans for generations because they benefit all of us," he said.

A new Washington Post-ABC News public opinion poll shows that Obama leads likely Republican nominee Mitt Romney, 51 to 43 percent.  But more than half of the voters surveyed say they disapprove of the president's handling of the economy.

Obama is stressing middle class issues, to draw a contrast with the wealthy former Massachusetts governor.

Romney's path to the Republican Party nomination became clearer Tuesday, when his main rival, former Pennsylvania senator Rick Santorum, announced that he was suspending his campaign because his daughter suffers from a rare illness.

In addition to his speech at the university, the president attended three campaign fund-raising events in Florida.

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VOA News: USA: Rick Santorum Suspends US Presidential Campaign

VOA News: USA
USA Voice of America
Rick Santorum Suspends US Presidential Campaign
Apr 10th 2012, 19:23

U.S. presidential candidate Rick Santorum has announced he is suspending his campaign, but vowed to continue to support the Republican bid for the presidency.

Santorum made the announcement Tuesday in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, just a day after his daughter Bella was discharged from a hospital where she spent three days being treated for a rare genetic condition known as Trisomy 18. Santorum said her illness caused the family to think about his decision to leave the race. He said the family is looking forward to spending a lot more time with Bella in the future.

<!--IMAGE-RIGHT-->Santorum, a former U.S. senator from Pennsylvania, would have faced a tough primary contest in his home state with the frontrunner for the Republican nomination, Mitt Romney, later this month.

In a variation on his catchphrase, "game on," Santorum assured his supporters Tuesday that "the game is a long, long way from over." He said he plans to continue fighting to ensure that the United States is a "beacon of freedom" around the world.

Santorum was only a marginal candidate last year when a large slate of Republican contenders entered the race for the Republican nomination for the presidency. But his voter support grew as candidates dropped out, and in recent weeks, he had been second only to Romney in the four-person race, which also included former House speaker Newt Gingrich and U.S. Representative Ron Paul.

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VOA News: Africa: Zimbabwe Agriculture Struggles to Meet Demand

VOA News: Africa
Africa Voice of America
Zimbabwe Agriculture Struggles to Meet Demand
Apr 10th 2012, 18:48

Zimbabwe was once southern Africa's breadbasket.

But today it is a basket case, where people depend on handouts for food.

For more than 10 consecutive years since President Robert Mugabe's government embarked on a land reform program targeting white farmers, Zimbabwe has had to import food to avert hunger as its new farmers cannot produce enough.

On Tuesday, Finance Minister Tendai Biti said the treasury had released $20 million to farmers to buy inputs - seeds, fertilizer and other farming materials.  At the same news conference, Minister of Agriculture Joseph Made said a third of the country's planted crop for the 2012 season was a write-off, since farmers did not have irrigation systems and were too poor to buy required inputs on time.

"It is clear if you bring inputs late in the season you cannot take advantage.  Cropping is a function of time," said Made.  "The season does not wait.  I hope in what we are doing are correcting the situation so that never again are the inputs are delayed…. The second point is that when we are talking of agriculture farmers suffer the vagaries of weather. That you cannot control. The best is to assist farmers by development of irrigation."

Zimbabwe had plenty of food until 2000.  Since then it has been a different story since President Mugabe's government launched its land reform program.  Almost all white commercial farmers were replaced by inexperienced farmers, mainly supporters of Mugabe's ZANU-PF party. It is these farmers that Made wants helped in erecting irrigation systems to water their crops.

The deposed white farmers had irrigation systems, but the new farmers mostly destroyed them when they took over the farms, often by force.

"There is a move towards market-related solutions towards agriculture, bearing in mind our incapacity as a state to look fully after our people," said Finance Minister Biti.  "This is a move we are making which reflected in this program we are launching today."

It remains to be seen if these untrained farmers are able to survive on their own without being assisted by the government, as has been the case since the land reform started.

Critics have said Zimbabwe's government should have trained the farmers before allocating them land to them.  Tuesday, when asked to reveal how farmers had performed and whether Zimbabwe needed to import food in 2012, Agriculture Minister Made said exact figures are still not available, but production will not be what was expected.

"I know you might be looking for [a] specific figure.  You have to wait a little bit.  That has to be briefed to [the] cabinet first. But of the 1.7 million hectares that were planted, 500,000 hectares will be a write off," said Made.

The $20 million in aid to farmers announced Tuesday is meant to increase size of the winter crop, especially wheat.  The southern African country requires 406,000 metric tons of wheat annually to meet local demands.  Made said the funding would result in wheat production increasing to 76,000 metric tons.

The United Nations estimates that at least 1.5 million people need food aid in Zimbabwe. With the latest revelations, the number of people who need food assistance is almost certain to increase.

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VOA News: Africa: MSF Alarmed Over Plans to Cut US AIDS Program

VOA News: Africa
Africa Voice of America
MSF Alarmed Over Plans to Cut US AIDS Program
Apr 10th 2012, 18:38

Medical aid organization Doctors Without Borders is concerned that proposed budget cuts to a U.S. program for HIV treatment around the world threatens the progress being made against the pandemic in Africa.  

On World AIDS Day in December, U.S. President Barack Obama announced that the United States would aim to treat six million people infected with HIV around the world by the end of 2013 - two million more than the previous target.

The organization responsible for the outreach will be the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, better known by its acronym PEPFAR.

But while Mr. Obama has pledged to expand PEPFAR to include more people, his budget proposal for the fiscal year 2013 cuts more than a half-billion dollars from the program, about 13 percent of its current funding.

Doctors Without Borders, known by its French acronym MSF, has raised the alarm over the proposed cut, saying it will undermine the president's own goals.

Jennifer Cohn, the East Africa policy advisor for the MSF Access Campaign, said she is concerned that countries that receive PEPFAR support may begin scaling back their own treatment programs in anticipation of the cuts.

"In terms of the budget shortfall, I think many problematic things might occur as a result of that, including decreases in treatment, decreases in other sorts of support, and then, sort of a chilling effect on country guidelines themselves," said Cohn.

Budget figures outlined by MSF show some major reductions in Africa, including a nearly 50 percent cut in funding for Kenya and 82 percent for Ethiopia.

In a post on the official State Department blog in February, U.S. Global AIDS Coordinator Eric Goosby wrote that the administration is "freeing up resources by reducing programs in countries with a lower HIV prevalence," specifically mentioning Ethiopia.  He also said the program in Kenya had "matured" and that it was adjusting the country's funding to reflect a new focus on local implementation.

Proposed cuts not final

PEPFAR senior advisor Tom Walsh said all the budget figures being discussed are preliminary and that some of the country figures are certain to change.

Still, he emphasized that PEPFAR has made dramatic gains in efficiency, and that the budget requested for 2013 is the amount needed.

"Over the years, we've gotten the cost of treating an individual person per year with antiretroviral therapy down from about $1,100 in 2004 to $335 in 2011," said Walsh.. "That kind of dramatic gain in efficiency, in reaching more people with the resources available, is what Congress likes to see and we think we're going to make continued progress on that front."

The president's budget proposal needs the approval of the U.S. Congress. Walsh said PEPFAR has always received strong bipartisan support.

MSF is not only concerned about the budget numbers, but also with some of the program's accounting methods.

Cohn said the way PEPFAR counts the number of people receiving treatment can be misleading.

"What we're finding is actually that whereas PEPFAR is not necessarily directly supporting people on treatment in certain countries, they're actually counting those people toward the 6 million people they promise to put on treatment by 2013, so we find that concerning and somewhat disingenuous," said Cohn.

Cohn's concerns are highlighted in a U.S. report from earlier this year on PEPFAR's programming in Malawi.

In the document, PEPFAR outlines the support it provides in the country, such as funding staff for visits to treatment sites, training service partners and developing an electronic data system. Nowhere does it say the U.S. provides antiretroviral medication (ARVs) for patients.

But, in the "Recommendations" section of the document, the authors suggest that all HIV-infected adults receiving treatment in Malawi's national program should be reported as "directly supported" by the U.S. government.

Tom Walsh for PEPFAR could not confirm that this accounting practice is common, and said the methods vary based on the arrangements in each individual country.

He said the U.S. supports a variety of services, and treating HIV is about more than just providing drugs.

"ARVs are an important part of treatment, but also important is the infrastructure to deliver the drugs, support for the clinics, training for the health providers who do the work," said Walsh. "In every country there's a different combination of resources that it takes to deliver treatment."

Partnering against HIV/AIDS

The United States is increasing its reliance on partners in treatment programs, one of the biggest being the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria.

Walsh points out that responsibilities for HIV programs around the world are divided up between partner organizations.  So, PEPFAR may pay for training and infrastructure, while the Global Fund or the host government buys the medication.

Despite scaling back PEPFAR, President Obama's 2013 budget request includes an increase of $350 million for the Global Fund.

But that increase does not make up for PEPFAR's cuts.  If the budget is approved as is, the net decrease for AIDS funding would be about $213 million.

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