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  News from Jun 26, 2008
  2008/06/26

New Vision (Kampala)

25 June 2008
Posted to the web 26 June 2008

Gerald Tenywa
Kampala

THE United Nations Development Programme has earmarked $3.8m (sh6b) for funding two initiatives aimed at promoting the sustainable use of land in pastoral areas.

This was stated by Stephen Muwaya, the lead expert on the implementation of the UN Convention to combat desertification.

"It will help us involve farmers and cattle herders to invest in soil conservation, tree planting and bee-keeping," he said.

"The intervention will also help curtail loss of soil fertility and help restore degraded areas."

He said the inaugural project would start in three months and last three years. The project will also ensure that sustainable land management is integrated into the development plans of districts.

Muwaya explained that the second project, funded by the Global Environment Facility and implemented by the UN, would address charcoal burning and land tenure sytems.

For the full article, please visit: http://allafrica.com/stories/200806260114.html \\

Posted at 26 Jun @ 9:43 AM by Lauren Berry | 0 comments
Last changed: Jun 26, 2008 09:59 by Lauren Berry
Labels: senegal, cannabis, cashews, timber, blog, land, tenure

ZIGUINCHOR, 25 June 2008 (IRIN) - Civilians are growing increasingly desperate to return to their villages in Casamance, but with violent incidents continuing and the peace process "still at a stalemate" according to peace negotiators, some see little reason for hope.

"The peace process has not progressed in a long time - indeed I'd say now it's going backwards rather than forwards," said Landing Diedhiou, president of local non-governmental organisation APRAN-SDP which has long served as an intermediary between the Senegalese government and rebels with the Movement of Democratic Forces of Casamance (MFDC).

The southern region of Casamance has been in a low-level conflict situation for 25 years, making it Africa's longest-running civilian war and leaving upwards of 60,000 people displaced, with up to 10,000 of these refugees in The Gambia and Guinea-Bissau.

Rebels with the MFDC initially were fighting for an independent Casamance, though their demands have since shifted. A government-MFDC peace accord has not held, and while violence abated towards the end of 2007 there was a rise in violent attacks, lootings, killings and injuries from landmines in 2008. 

For the full article, please visit http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=78944
 

Posted at 26 Jun @ 9:59 AM by Lauren Berry | 0 comments

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