Fungus-tainted corn a factor in Africa HIV spread?

(Reuters Health) – A new study raises the question of whether corn contaminated with a fungus-derived toxin is helping to facilitate the transmission of HIV in sub-Saharan Africa.

Health

The toxins, called fumonisins, are produced by a particular type of fungus that can grow in corn after the plant is damaged by pests such as the cornstalk borer.

Fumonisins may be harmful to human health, with some studies linking consumption of the toxins to an increased rate of cancer of the esophagus, the tube that connects the throat to the stomach.

In the new study, published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, researchers looked at whether there may be a relationship between HIV transmission in sub-Saharan Africa and general consumption of foods prone to contamination with fumonisins or other fungus- produced toxins (known as mycotoxins).

Using data from the World Health Organization and the Food and Agriculture Organization, the researchers found that as sub-Saharan countries’ per-person corn consumption rose, so did HIV transmission rates.

In countries with a relatively higher percentage of Muslims — a factor linked to lower HIV rates — those with high per-capita corn consumption had an estimated HIV infection rate of 291 per 100,000 people in one year. In contrast, the rate in those with low corn consumption was 74 per 100,000 people.

Meanwhile, in countries with both fewer Muslims than average and higher-than-average corn consumption, there were 435 HIV cases per 100,000 people.

The researchers also found that higher per-capita corn consumption correlated with a higher rate of esophageal cancer. Since fumonisin toxins have been linked to that cancer, the finding serves as an indicator that populations with high corn consumption were exposed to higher levels of the toxin.

What all of this means is not yet clear. This appears to be the first study to find an association between corn consumption and HIV transmission rates in sub-Saharan Africa, lead researcher Dr. Jonathan H. Williams, of the University of Georgia in Griffin, told Reuters Health in an email.

The findings, he and his colleagues say, must be considered preliminary and need to be backed up by further research.

It is biologically plausible that high fumonisin intake could make a person more vulnerable to HIV infection. According to Williams, research suggests that the toxin makes certain tissues more vulnerable to infections by viruses.

A number of factors have been identified as key in sub-Saharan Africa’s HIV transmission rates; male circumcision, for example, has been shown to lower heterosexual transmission, while having multiple concurrent sex partners or other sexually transmitted infections increases the risk.

The current findings raise the possibility that food safety — in particular, the issue of fumonisin-contaminated corn — is an additional factor.

Based on their statistical model, Williams and his colleagues estimate that if the “maize (corn) factor” were eliminated in sub-Saharan Africa, HIV transmissions could be cut by as much as 58 percent.

Contamination might be prevented, for instance, by planting corn varieties genetically modified to be resistant to pests. It may also be possible to remove contaminants, Williams said, through certain milling technologies or by soaking the grain in water; fumonisin is water-soluble, so “steeping” the grain or meal, then discarding the liquid may remove the toxin.

In a region where an estimated 1.7 million people become infected with HIV annually, that would mean more than 1 million infections averted each year, the researchers note.

All of that, however, remains speculation until further research is done confirming the link between contaminated corn and HIV.

SOURCE: link.reuters.com/bad29k American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, online May 19, 2010.

Malaria control to overcome disease spread as climate warms

London, May 20 (ANI): Opposing a widespread assumption, two University of Florida researchers have found that global warming is unlikely to expand the range of malaria because of malaria control, development and other factors that are at work to corral the disease.

Scientists and public policy makers have been concerned that warming temperatures would create conditions that would either push malaria into new areas or make it worse in existing ones.

But the team of six scientists, including David Smith and Andy Tatem, analysed a historical contraction of the geographic range and general reduction in the intensity of malaria — a contraction that occurred over a century during which the globe warmed.

They determined that if the future trends are like past ones, the contraction is likely to continue under the most likely warming scenarios.

“If we continue to fund malaria control, we can certainly be prepared to counteract the risk that warming could expand the global distribution of malaria,” Nature quoted Smith as saying.

The team, part of the Wellcome Trust’s multinational Malaria Atlas Project, noted that malaria control efforts over the past century have shrunk the prevalence of the disease from most of the world to a region including Sub-Saharan Africa, Southeast Asia and South America, with the bulk of fatalities confined to Africa.

This has occurred despite a global temperature rise of about 1 degree Fahrenheit, on average, during the same period.

“The globe warmed over the past century, but the range of malaria contracted substantially. Warming isn’t the only factor that affects malaria,” said Tatem.

The reasons why malaria has shrunk are varied and in some countries mysterious, but they usually include mosquito control efforts, better access to health care, urbanization and economic development.

“There is no one tale that seems to determine the story globally. If we had to choose one thing, we would guess economic development, but that’s kind of a cop out” because the specific mechanisms may still remain unclear, and controlling malaria might also help to kick-start development, said Tatem.

In any case, current malaria control efforts such as insecticide-treated bed nets, modern low-cost diagnostic kits and new anti-malarial drugs, have proved remarkably effective, with more and more countries achieving control or outright elimination.

Unless current control efforts were to suddenly stop, they are likely to counteract the spread of mosquitoes or other malaria-spreading effects from anticipated temperature increases, said Smith.

Simon Hay, an author of the paper, noted that modern malaria control efforts “reduce transmission massively and counteract the much smaller effects of rising temperatures.”

“Malaria remains a huge public health problem, and the international community has an unprecedented opportunity to relieve this burden with existing interventions. Any failure in meeting this challenge will be very difficult to attribute to climate change,” he said.

The study was published in the journal Nature. (ANI)

Fly gut bacteria may help fight sleeping sickness

Washington, May 11 (ANI): Scientists in France have discovered a new bacterial species in the gut of the fly that transmits African sleeping sickness. They say that the bacteria could be engineered to kill the parasite that causes the disease.

According to researchers from IRD, the French Research Institute for Development in Montpellier, France, the study could lead to new approaches to control this fatal infection that is becoming resistant to drug therapy.

As part of the research, the authors isolated the novel bacterium from the midgut of the tsete fly that also harbours the protozoan Trypanosoma brucei gambiense (Tbg), responsible for Human African Trypanosomiasis, known as sleeping sickness.

The new bacterium was named Serratia glossinae after genomic analysis showed it was closely genetically linked to other bacteria in the Serratia genus.

Interestingly one of the species in this genus is able to kill another trypanosome that causes Chagas” disease in South America.

This has prompted the group to hypothesise that the Serratia group of bacteria has the potential to be exploited to treat trypanosomiasis.

More than 60 million people are exposed to African sleeping sickness in Sub-Saharan Africa. The causative agent, Tbg, can be transmitted through the bites of infected flies that feed on human blood.

The parasite multiplies in the blood of infected individuals and may eventually invade the brain. Infections by Tbg are often asymptomatic for months or years and can remain undetected until patients are in advanced stages of the disease. Without treatment, these infections are fatal.

The research could contribute to new treatment strategies that are desperately needed to fight African sleeping sickness. Current drugs are expensive and are not always effective due to increasing resistance of Tbg.

“Our work could lead to an alternative vector-based approach that exploits selected strains of bacteria naturally present in the fly”s gut to either kill the parasite, or prevent it from establishing itself in the gut,” said Dr Anne Geiger, lead author of the study.

The study has been published in the International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology. (ANI)

Venom website hopes cut snake bite deaths

London, May 5 (ANI): A website has been launched by the World Health Organisation which it hopes will help cut the estimated 100,000 deaths caused annually by poisonous snakes.

The UN health agency said that the site has a database of approved anti-venoms to treat the 2.5 million people who suffer venomous bites each year.

According to WHO, many anti-venoms are inappropriate and have led to a loss of confidence among doctors and patients, reports The Scotsman.

“The regions that are most in need are sub-Saharan Africa, South Asia and South-east Asia,” said Ana Padilla, a snake venom expert at WHO.

WHO”s co-ordinator for medicine safety, Dr Lembit Rago, said if the proper anti-venom is administered in time many deaths and serious consequences from snake bites can be prevented. (ANI)

Racist mafia ran African ””slave”” gangs in southern Italy

Rome, Apr.27 (ANI): Mafia handlers in southern Italy treated their African farm workers a little better than slaves, sparking off widespread riots, a police investigation into the violence four months ago has found.

According to The Telegraph, the clashes that took place between black agricultural labourers and groups of white Italians in the town of Rosarno over a period of four months, were fuelled by years of exploitation of the immigrants, rather than racial tensions.

Police arrested more than 30 people and seized farms and other property worth nine million pounds at the culmination of an investigation into the violence in the southern region of Calabria in January, in which 53 people were injured.

Most of those arrested, on charges of mafia association and labour law violations, were Italians suspected of having links to organized crime.

The farm workers, who were mostly from sub-Saharan Africa, received no more than 25 euros (22 pounds) for working up to 14 hour days in the orchards and market gardens that surround the town, located on the toe of Italy””s boot-shaped peninsula.

After arriving in Italy from Africa, often without the proper papers, the immigrants were exploited by local mafia gangs, who hired them out to farmers.

The labourers had to pay between six and 10 euros of their daily wages to their “agents”.

If they tried to go to the authorities, they were threatened with violence, police said.

In the wake of the violence, hundreds of African men were evacuated from the area under police escort and taken to migrant centers, but many have since drifted back to their old jobs. (ANI)

850,000 people die every year from malaria: UNICEF

New York, April 24 — About 850,000 people die each year from a mosquito bite – with nearly 90 per cent of all malaria deaths in sub-Saharan Africa, the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) said Friday. Ahead of World Malaria Day Sunday, Unicef Executive Director Ann Veneman said there were only 250 days left to meet the challenge set by UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon for all endemic countries to ensure universal coverage of malaria control interventions. Unicef said there has been a significant increase in insecticide-treated bed net coverage in several African countries, with distribution campaigns reaching those most in danger of contracting malaria – the poor and rural populations.

“The fight against malaria can be won and now the world must unite to ensure that no one dies from a mosquito bite,” Veneman said.

Antibiotic treatment could act as ‘lifeline’ for HIV patients

London, Mar 29 (ANI): Providing antibiotics to some newly diagnosed HIV patients could save tens of thousands of patients, but researchers are missing this opportunity, say researchers.

According to a major study in The Lancet, the simple, cheap, drug treatment halved mortality.

The World Health Organization already endorses the treatment, but specialists say many people are not given the drug.

In the battle against HIV, the researchers have long been focussing on antiretroviral drugs, which can greatly extend life.

However, many patients are at greatest risk in the first weeks after diagnosis, with a variety of infections ready to take advantage of their weakened immune systems.

Studies have estimated that as many as a quarter of people who enter antiretroviral drug treatment programmes in sub-Saharan Africa will die in the first year.

But the addition of co-trimoxazole, an inexpensive antibiotic, to the long-term treatment plan of those with the worst affected immune systems appears to prevent many of such deaths.

The Lancet study, carried out among 3,179 Ugandan patients, suggested a fall of 59 percent over the first 12 weeks, and 44 percent between 12 and 72 weeks.

Its authors, from the Medical Research Council Clinical Trials Unit and Imperial College in London, and centres in Uganda and Zimbabwe, have said that the antibiotic is not available in many places.

They say their findings reinforce the need for swifter action by those responsible for drug treatment programmes.

According to professor Charles Gilks, who led the study, any arguments over the effectiveness of the antibiotics were now “well and truly answered”.

“Tens of thousands of lives can be saved by more universal use of the drug, costing just a few pence a day,” the BBC quoted him as saying.

In addition to preventing bacterial infections in HIV patients, the drug had a welcome benefit – it cut the incidence of malaria by a quarter. (ANI)

India, China become leading nations to move urban population out of slums

Mumbai, Mar. 19 (ANI): With India and China lifting more and more of their urban population out of slum-like conditions every year, 227 million people across the world have moved out of urban slums over the past decade, according to a UN-Habitat report on the state of the world”s cities.

China”s urban population living in slums fell from 37.3 percent in 2000 to 28.2 percent today; in India, nearly 60 million were lifted from slum conditions over the same time.

The authors of the report credit China”s economic reforms and pro-growth and urbanization policies, and India”s efforts to provide microcredit, tenure, and basic services in slums.

“For the first time we are moving toward … accommodating of the poor and of the slums,” The Christian Science Monitor quoted Amita Bhide, an associate professor at the Centre for Urban Planning and Governance at the Tata Institute of Social Sciences in Mumbai, as saying.

Estimates of the percentage of people who live in slums in Mumbai range from 49 to 60 percent, she said.

“There is, I feel, some sort of acceptance that slums are a very big constituency, so most slums have at least a basic level of services. Most Mumbai slums have access to safe water and some forms of access road. But when it comes to sanitation, the level of services is very poor,” she added.

While half the world”s population now lives in cities, the number of people living in slums has still grown, adding 55 million over the past decade to reach 827.6 million this year

The largest slum population worldwide is in sub-Saharan Africa, at nearly 200 million (61.7 percent of its urban population). That”s followed by southern Asia, at 190 million (35 percent).

The UN defines a slum as lacking at least one of the following:

1. Durable housing that protects against extreme climate conditions
2. No more than three people sharing a room
3. Easy access to safe water
4. Access to a sanitary toilet
5. Secure tenure (ANI)

Obama gives Nobel prize money to charity

US president Barack Obama will give his $US1.4 million ($1.5m) Nobel Peace Prize award money to 10 charities, including groups working on Haiti relief and supporting military families.

Four months after the US leader received the prestigious honour in Oslo, the White House said Mr Obama would split the prize money between several charitable organisations.

A quarter of a million dollars will go to Fisher House, a non-government organisation that provides housing for the families of US soldiers being treated at military hospitals.

Another $US200,000 will be given to the Clinton-Bush Haiti Fund, a charity set up after Haiti’s devastating January 12 quake and administered by former presidents Bill Clinton and George W. Bush.

A large portion of the award money will go to support the education of underprivileged and minority students, with gifts of $US125,000 going to four groups that help students from African-American, Hispanic, American-Indian and Appalachian communities.

Two other groups that provide scholarships and educational assistance will also each get $US125,000 gifts.

Two charities that work overseas – AfriCare, which works primarily in sub-Saharan Africa, and the Central Asia Institute, which focuses on education in Pakistan and Afghanistan – will each receive $US100,000.

-AFP

HIV/Aids has become leading cause of death in women, warns UN

London, Mar 5 (ANI): A UN programme on HIV/Aids has warned that HIV is fast becoming the leading cause of death and disease among women of reproductive age worldwide.

UNAids launched a five-year action plan at the start a 10-day conference in New York, addressing the gender issues which put women at risk.

And one of the key issues it said is that 70 percent of women worldwide have been forced to have unprotected sex.

UNAids says such violence against women should not be tolerated.

“By robbing them of their dignity, we are losing the opportunity to tap half the potential of mankind to achieve the Millennium Development Goals,” the BBC quoted Executive Director Michel Sidibe as saying.

“Women and girls are not victims, they are the driving force that brings about social transformation,” he stated.

The agency also says that experiencing violence hampers women”s ability to negotiate safe sex.

It warns that, nearly 30 years from the beginning of the epidemic, HIV services do not respond to the specific needs of women and girls.

Women, it says, continue to be disproportionately affected by HIV/Aids.

In sub-Saharan Africa, 60 percent of those living with HIV are women and in Southern Africa, for example, young women are about three times as likely to be infected with HIV than young men of the same age.

The programme, which will include improving data collection and analysis of how the epidemic affects women, and ensuring the issue of violence against women is integrated into HIV prevention programmes, will be rolled out in countries including Liberia. (ANI)

Failure to cut CO2 emissions spells global health catastrophe

Washington, September 16 (ANI): A team of scientists has warned that failure to agree radical cuts in carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions at the UN climate change conference in Copenhagen this December spells a global health catastrophe.

According to Lord Michael Jay and Professor Michael Marmot, the scientific evidence that global temperatures are rising and that man is responsible has been widely accepted since the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s report in 2007.

There is now equally wide consensus that human beings need to act now to prevent irreversible climate change.

Jay and Marmot said that what’s good for the climate is good for health.

For example, a low carbon economy will mean less pollution. A low carbon diet (especially eating less meat) and more exercise will mean less cancer, obesity, diabetes, and heart disease.

This is an opportunity too to advance health equity, which is increasingly seen as necessary for a healthy and happy society, according to the scientists.

They point out that the threat to health is especially evident in poorest countries, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa, where poverty and lack of resources, infrastructure, and often governance, greatly increase their vulnerability to the effects of climate change.

“If we take climate change seriously, it will require major changes to the way we live, reducing the gap between carbon rich and carbon poor within and between countries,” said Jay and Marmot.

They said that a successful outcome at Copenhagen is vital for our future as a species and for our civilization.

Failure to agree radical reductions in emissions spells a global health catastrophe, which is why health professionals must put their case forcefully now and after Copenhagen, they concluded.

Doctors’ leaders across the world are also calling on politicians to heed the health effects of climate change when they meet in Copenhagen.

They warn that “there is a real danger that politicians will be indecisive, especially in such turbulent economic times as these.”

Doctors are still seen as respected and independent, largely trusted by their patients and the societies in which they practise.

As such, doctors should demand that their politicians listen to the clear facts that have been identified in relation to climate change and act now to implement strategies that will benefit health of communities worldwide. (ANI)

Satellite images of night time lights offer better GDP Growth measurements

Washington, September 6 (ANI): Three Brown University economists have come up with a unique way for measuring economic growth in developing countries-using images of night time lights as seen from outer space.

In a National Bureau of Economic Research working paper, J. Vernon Henderson, Adam Storeygard, and David N. Weil point out that measurements of economic growth often fall short for developing countries, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa, and are rarely calculated at all for cities throughout the world.

They say that it is possible to improve GDP estimates for such areas by using satellite images of night time lights.

The authors cite the Penn World Tables, one of the standard compilations of data on income, which rank countries with grades A through D by the quality of their GDP and price data.

They say that nearly all sub-Saharan African countries get a grade of C or D, which is interpreted as roughly 30 or 40 percent margin of error.

They also say that several countries-including Iraq, Myanmar, Somalia, and Liberia-do not appear in the table.

To improve these estimates, the three economists suggest combining measured income data with the changes observed in a country’s “night lights” as seen from outer space.

They use U.S. Air Force weather satellite picture composites to look at the changes that have occurred in a region’s light density over a 10-year period.

“Consumption of nearly all goods in the evening requires lights. As income rises, so does light usage per person, in both consumption activities and many investment activities,” they write.

Upon applying the novel method to countries with low-quality national income data, the researchers observed that their estimates were significantly different.

According to them, lights in the Democratic Republic of Congo suggested a 2.4-percent annual growth rate in GDP, while official estimates suggested a negative 2.6-percent growth over the same time period.

At the other end, Myanmar has an official growth rate of 8.6 percent a year, but the lights data imply only a 3.4-percent annual growth rate.

Henderson, Storeygard, and Weil say that they do not envision the lights density data as a replacement for official numbers.

They, however, insist that using the lights density in addition to existing data from agencies like the World Bank can lead to a better indicator of how these economies really are performing.

“Our hope is that people start using this, either when they don’t have actual data on economic growth … or when the numbers are pretty bad. This is just a way to get better estimates,” said Henderson, a professor of Economics. (ANI)

Unique acacia tree could nourish soils in Africa

Washington, August 25 (ANI): In a new research, scientists have said that a type of acacia tree with an unusual growth habit, which is unlike virtually all other trees, holds particular promise for farmers in Africa as a free source of nitrogen for their soils that could last generations.

With its nitrogen-fixing qualities, the tall, long-lived acacia tree, Faidherbia albida could limit the use of fertilizers; provide fodder for livestock, wood for construction and fuel wood, and medicine through its bark, as well as windbreaks and erosion control to farmers across sub-Saharan Africa.

According to scientists, the tree illustrates the benefits of growing trees on farms and is adapted to an incredibly wide array of climates and soils from the deserts to the humid tropics.

“Growing the right tree in the right place on farms in sub-Saharan Africa-and worldwide- has the potential to slow climate change, feed more people, and protect the environment,” said Dennis Garrity, Director General of the World Agroforestry Centre.

“This tree, as a source of free, organic nitrogen, is an example of that. There are many other examples of solutions to African farming that exist here already,” he added.

The Faidherbia acacia tree has the quality of “reverse leaf phenology,” which drives the tree to go dormant and shed its nitrogen-rich leaves during the early rainy season – when seeds are being planted and need the nitrogen – and then to re-grow its leaves when the dry season begins and crops are dormant.

This makes it highly compatible with food crops because it does not compete with them for light-only the bare branches of the tree’s canopy spread overhead while crops grow to maturity.

Their leaves and pods provide a crucial source of fodder in the dry season for livestock when other plants have dried up.

The unique acacia tree is a frequent component of farming systems of Senegal, Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger, Chad, Sudan, and Ethiopia, and in parts of northern Ghana, northern Nigeria, and northern Cameroon.

The tree is growing on over 4.8 million hectares of land in Niger. Half a million farmers in Malawi and in the southern highlands of Tanzania grow the tree on their maize fields.

In Malawi, maize yields were increased up to 280 percent in the zone under the tree canopy compared with the zone outside the tree canopy.

In Zambia, recent unpublished observations showed that unfertilized maize yields in the vicinity of the Faidherbia trees averaged 4.1 tonnes per hectare, compared to 1.3 tonnes nearby but beyond the tree canopy. (ANI)

Obama not to visit father’s undemocratic Kenya

Washington, July 4 (ANI): US President Barack Obama’s first trip to Sub-Saharan Africa won’t include a stop in his father’s Kenyan homeland because the violence-plagued country’s leaders “do not seem to be moving into a permanent reconciliation that would allow the country to move forward.”

Obama will make a stop in Ghana next week at the end of a trip to Russia and Italy.

In an interview with allafrica.com, President Obama said he chose to visit Ghana because the country “has now undergone a couple of successful elections in which power was transferred peacefully.”

Fox News quoted Obama, as saying that he intends to highlight the idea that “countries that are governed well, that are stable, where leadership recognizes that they are accountable to the people, have a track record of producing results for the people.”

Obama went on to say “there is a practical, pragmatic consequence to political instability and corruption when it comes to whether people can feed their families and educate their children.”

The United States’ first African-American president has only invited two African leaders to the White House so far: Tanzanian President Jakaya Kikwete and Zimbabwe’s opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai.

Experts disagree about whether Obama should be engaging more leaders.

Dr. Jendayi Frazer, former assistant secretary of state for African affairs in the George W. Bush administration, it’s a “mistake to only engage with the good leaders” in Africa.

She says President Obama’s decision to visit Russia despite its flaws and to consider talks with Iran suggest he may meet with a broad range of African leaders.

Other experts say President Obama is right to follow former President Bush’s success in making sure U.S. aid to Africa isn’t siphoned off by corrupt officials, with a focus on democratic reforms.

President Obama says he’d like his legacy in Africa to be putting the continent on a trajectory to be integrated into the global economy. He says he’d like the U.S. to be “an effective partner…in building the kinds of institutions, political, civil, economic, that allowed for improving standards of living and greater security for the people of Africa.” (ANI)

UN: Africa’s growth to slow to 2 per cent, development threatened

UN: Africa's growth to slow to 2 per cent, development threatenedGeneva – Growth in Africa will decline to 2 per cent this year, a joint report released Thursday said, warning of a more severe economic scenario than previously expected.

The report, by the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (ECA) and the African Union, said 2008 saw economic growth sag to 5.1 per cent from 6 per cent the previous year.

The slowdown will be driven by a drop in both foreign and domestic demand for African goods and a decline in direct foreign investments into the continent.

Remittances from abroad are also dropping, further impacting the poor in Africa reliant on these cash flows.

The economic news comes on the heels of a World Health Organization report which said progress was behind schedule on reaching the Millennium Development Goals.

Achieving the targets by 2015 was meant to help improve the lives of people around the world, but this might be hampered by a lack of funds.

“The global economic down turn is slowing progress towards achieving the MDGs,” warned the ECA’s Economic Report on Africa 2009.

To recover and come out stronger, Africa will need to have better regional economic cooperation. The overwhelming majority of Africa’s trade is external, with less than 10 per cent taking place between African nations.

Furthermore, in line with similar UN recommendations, the ECA report says it is vital for Africa to improve its agricultural sector. This would also help ensure food security in the continent, which is a net food importer.

Boosting the agricultural sector would achieve the best results if it was linked to other sectors and desperately needed improvements to infrastructure.

The International Monetary Fund has predicted a growth rate of 3.2 per cent for North Africa and a smaller 1.6 per cent rate for Sub- Saharan Africa.

Globally, growth will likely be a negative 1.3 per cent this year, with a moderate recovery expected in 2010. Developed nations will likely need even longer to reach positive growth. (dpa)

UN: Every 30 seconds, a child dies of malaria

New York – Every 30 seconds, somewhere in the world, a child dies of malaria, and ending the scourge of the preventable disease is a major development priority, the United Nations Childrens Fund said Friday.

Despite substantial progress in the fight against malaria, especially the increased distribution of insecticide-treated nets, the disease still kills an estimated 1 million people every year, UNICEF said on the eve of World Malaria Day on Saturday.

About 90 per cent of all malaria deaths occur in sub-Saharan Africa, mainly among children under five. About 50 million pregnant women are exposed to malaria each year, which contributes to nearly 20 per cent of low birth weight babies, as well as stillbirths and maternal deaths.

Malaria control is among the eight Millennium Development Goals, a set of targets that countries are striving to achieve by 2015. However, the report cautioned that the widening global financial crisis has raised concerns about consistent international funding for health programmes, including malaria.

“We are, for the first time in history, poised to make malaria a rare cause of death and disability,” said Ann Veneman, Unicef executive director. “Scaling-up effective interventions has led to declines in malaria cases and deaths at health facilities in many countries, including Eritrea, Rwanda, Zambia and Madagascar.”

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has set a deadline of 31 December, 2010, for all malaria-endemic countries to ensure universal distribution of malaria medication and treated mosquito nets. (dpa)

RPT-FEATURE African beer keeps head as other markets go flat

Continent offers expansion prospects despite slowdown

* Growth still set to outstrip other regions

* Brewers substitute local ingredients for imported barley

By Alistair Thomson and Joe Bavier

DAKAR/KINSHASA, April 17 (Reuters) – As the sun sets over the Congo River, drinkers trickle into Kinshasa’s “Staff Franc Congolais” bar, testament to the resilience of Africa’s thirst for beer even in difficult places and tough times.

“I get by. The Congolese drink every day. It’s a distraction — there’s no world crisis as far as beer is concerned,” says a co-owner, known as “Franc Congolais” after the local currency.

He adopted the nickname when rebels seized the vast country, formerly Zaire, in 1997 and changed its name back to the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Its many violent upheavals habitually involve looting, although residents say breweries are mostly left untouched.

“If I can sell 120 bottles at 200 francs ($0.25) profit each in a day, that’s enough for me,” Franc Congolais said.

Big brewers operating in Africa may be slower to dismiss the threat from the global economic crisis that has caused economic havoc in the Democratic Republic of Congo and elsewhere.

Some brewers report a slowdown in sales growth, but they say Africa nevertheless offers rich expansion prospects compared with elsewhere, and even reduced growth on the continent will outstrip that of other regions this year.

“For sure we’re seeing an impact, but still Africa is in growth, is providing more growth than many other parts of the world, and that’s the environment where we’re operating,” said Nick Blazquez, Diageo’s managing director for Africa.

The International Monetary Fund has cut its 2009 economic growth forecast for sub-Saharan Africa to 2.2 percent from 5.1 percent six months ago, although that is still well ahead of the 3-percent-plus contraction expected in advanced economies.

Lower commodity export revenues and a slowdown in remittance income from workers overseas are squeezing disposable incomes and currency fluctuations are hurting some breweries, which mostly rely heavily on imported materials.

East African Breweries, Kenya’s leading brewery which is majority-owned by Diageo, is cutting jobs after pre-tax profit growth slowed to 5 percent in the six months to Dec. 31 from 22 percent a year earlier, mainly as a result of high input costs.

HOLDING UP

With beer sales holding up better than in most regions, investments in new capacity in Africa, including those that have been on the cards for years, have taken on new importance.

“We are putting money into Africa based on the assumption there will be growth,” Mark Bowman, Africa managing director of the world’s number two brewer, SABMiller, told Reuters in Johannesburg.

The company is building four new plants in Africa, including Sudan’s sole industrial brewery, and increasing capacity at existing plants to cater for double-digit volume growth across its beer and associated soft drinks businesses.

Nile Breweries, SABMiller’s subsidiary in Uganda, will lose some of its export trade to the new brewery in southern Sudan, but is in the process of doubling its output over several years.

“We haven’t seen any slackening in demand for our local products,” Nile’s Managing Director Nick Jenkinson said in his office, away from the deafening racket of the brewery in Jinja, 80 km (50 miles) from Uganda’s capital, Kampala.

“The situation now is that we can’t supply all the demand in the market,” he said.

Competition for market share is intense. Dutch brewer Heineken and Diageo are building South Africa’s first major non-SABMiller brewery, hoping to boost market share for their high-end Amstel, Heineken and Guinness brands. SABMiller is cutting costs in its home market in preparation.

The global brewers are also in competition across a range of west and central African markets, sometimes in partnership with each other or with the French drinks group Castel, which has a large market share in much of francophone Africa.

Africa is credited with producing some of the earliest brewers in ancient times and Guinness was first shipped to Sierra Leone in the early 19th century. Yet the continent merits barely a footnote in most world beer guides.

Despite Africa’s importance to some brewers — SABMiller makes almost one-third of its profits there and the continent hosts four of the top 10 markets for Diageo’s flagship Guinness stout — per capita beer consumption of 9.5 litres a year is the lowest of any region except the mostly Muslim Middle East.

GROWTH POTENTIAL

In March, investment bank Renaissance Capital issued a “buy” recommendation on Diageo’s Guinness Nigeria subsidiary and Heineken’s Nigerian Breweries, noting the capacity for growth in Africa’s most populous country.

“Across the cycle, we see significant opportunities in the Nigerian beer market given relatively low beer per capita consumption of 9.3 litres vs the average of 56 litres across other emerging markets. This is why it is attractive to global brewers,” it said.

Higher consumption of nearer 60 litres per year in wealthier African countries such as South Africa and Gabon demonstrates the potential for growth as average incomes in Africa rise.

Brewers are also moving into the low-cost end of the market, hoping to pick up some of an informal alcohol market which SABMiller reckons could be worth $3 billion a year.

Innovations include substituting local barley, sorghum and cassava for imported barley to make European-style lager more cheaply, as well as more traditional cloudy brews to compete with local artisanal brews at 30 percent or more below the $1 average price of a lager, SABMiller said.

“Most poor Africans are drinking alcohol, but informally made … the potential for growth in Africa is greater than anywhere else in the world,” said Jenkinson, whose Jinja brewery produces a clear lager called Eagle, made with sorghum.

“In Africa, beer is a very price sensitive commodity.”

In Congo, Franc Congolais’s business partner Pepin Mambote ruefully agrees.

The collapse in prices for the country’s metals exports has driven down the value of the Congolese franc, forcing up the cost of beer made from imported ingredients and pushing more consumers towards artisanal drinks — and out of his bar.

“Before, people would throw punches just to have a seat. Now look — there is an empty chair over there. I’m telling you, times are tough,” he said.

“If you are a beer drinker, the beer isn’t expensive. It’s life that’s expensive.” (Additional reporting by Rebecca Harrison in Johannesburg, Jack Kimball in Jinja, Uganda; Editing by David Clarke and Andrew Dobbie)

African beer keeps head as other markets go flat

DAKAR/KINSHASA (Reuters) – As the sun sets over the Congo River, drinkers trickle into Kinshasa’s “Staff Franc Congolais” bar, testament to the resilience of Africa’s thirst for beer even in difficult places and tough times.

“I get by. The Congolese drink every day. It’s a distraction — there’s no world crisis as far as beer is concerned,” says a co-owner, known as “Franc Congolais” after the local currency.

He adopted the nickname when rebels seized the vast country, formerly Zaire, in 1997 and changed its name back to the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Its many violent upheavals habitually involve looting, although residents say breweries are mostly left untouched.

“If I can sell 120 bottles at 200 francs ($0.25) profit each in a day, that’s enough for me,” Franc Congolais said.

Big brewers operating in Africa may be slower to dismiss the threat from the global economic crisis that has caused economic havoc in the Democratic Republic of Congo and elsewhere.

Some brewers report a slowdown in sales growth, but they say Africa nevertheless offers rich expansion prospects compared with elsewhere, and even reduced growth on the continent will outstrip that of other regions this year.

“For sure we’re seeing an impact, but still Africa is in growth, is providing more growth than many other parts of the world, and that’s the environment where we’re operating,” said Nick Blazquez, Diageo’s managing director for Africa.

The International Monetary Fund has cut its 2009 economic growth forecast for sub-Saharan Africa to 2.2 percent from 5.1 percent six months ago, although that is still well ahead of the 3-percent-plus contraction expected in advanced economies.

Lower commodity export revenues and a slowdown in remittance income from workers overseas are squeezing disposable incomes and currency fluctuations are hurting some breweries, which mostly rely heavily on imported materials.

East African Breweries, Kenya’s leading brewery which is majority-owned by Diageo, is cutting jobs after pre-tax profit growth slowed to 5 percent in the six months to December 31 from 22 percent a year earlier, mainly as a result of high input costs.

HOLDING UP

With beer sales holding up better than in most regions, investments in new capacity in Africa, including those that have been on the cards for years, have taken on new importance.

“We are putting money into Africa based on the assumption there will be growth,” Mark Bowman, Africa managing director of the world’s number two brewer, SABMiller, told Reuters in Johannesburg.

The company is building four new plants in Africa, including Sudan’s sole industrial brewery, and increasing capacity at existing plants to cater for double-digit volume growth across its beer and associated soft drinks businesses.

Nile Breweries, SABMiller’s subsidiary in Uganda, will lose some of its export trade to the new brewery in southern Sudan, but is in the process of doubling its output over several years.

“We haven’t seen any slackening in demand for our local products,” Nile’s Managing Director Nick Jenkinson said in his office, away from the deafening racket of the brewery in Jinja, 80 km (50 miles) from Uganda’s capital, Kampala.

“The situation now is that we can’t supply all the demand in the market,” he said.

Competition for market share is intense. Dutch brewer Heineken and Diageo are building South Africa’s first major non-SABMiller brewery, hoping to boost market share for their high-end Amstel, Heineken and Guinness brands. SABMiller is cutting costs in its home market in preparation.

The global brewers are also in competition across a range of west and central African markets, sometimes in partnership with each other or with the French drinks group Castel, which has a large market share in much of francophone Africa.

Africa is credited with producing some of the earliest brewers in ancient times and Guinness was first shipped to Sierra Leone in the early 19th century. Yet the continent merits barely a footnote in most world beer guides.

Despite Africa’s importance to some brewers — SABMiller makes almost one-third of its profits there and the continent hosts four of the top 10 markets for Diageo’s flagship Guinness stout — per capita beer consumption of 9.5 liters a year is the lowest of any region except the mostly Muslim Middle East.

GROWTH POTENTIAL

In March, investment bank Renaissance Capital issued a “buy” recommendation on Diageo’s Guinness Nigeria subsidiary and Heineken’s Nigerian Breweries, noting the capacity for growth in Africa’s most populous country.

“Across the cycle, we see significant opportunities in the Nigerian beer market given relatively low beer per capita consumption of 9.3 liters vs the average of 56 liters across other emerging markets. This is why it is attractive to global brewers,” it said.

Higher consumption of nearer 60 liters per year in wealthier African countries such as South Africa and Gabon demonstrates the potential for growth as average incomes in Africa rise.

Brewers are also moving into the low-cost end of the market, hoping to pick up some of an informal alcohol market which SABMiller reckons could be worth $3 billion a year.

Innovations include substituting local barley, sorghum and cassava for imported barley to make European-style lager more cheaply, as well as more traditional cloudy brews to compete with local artisanal brews at 30 percent or more below the $1 average price of a lager, SABMiller said.

“Most poor Africans are drinking alcohol, but informally made … the potential for growth in Africa is greater than anywhere else in the world,” said Jenkinson, whose Jinja brewery produces a clear lager called Eagle, made with sorghum.

“In Africa, beer is a very price sensitive commodity.”

In Congo, Franc Congolais’s business partner Pepin Mambote ruefully agrees.

The collapse in prices for the country’s metals exports has driven down the value of the Congolese franc, forcing up the cost of beer made from imported ingredients and pushing more consumers toward artisanal drinks — and out of his bar.

“Before, people would throw punches just to have a seat. Now look — there is an empty chair over there. I’m telling you, times are tough,” he said.

“If you are a beer drinker, the beer isn’t expensive. It’s life that’s expensive.”

(Additional reporting by Rebecca Harrison in Johannesburg, Jack Kimball in Jinja, Uganda; Editing by David Clarke and Andrew Dobbie)

Morocco blames Algiers for W.Sahara “truce breach”

RABAT (Reuters) – Morocco blamed Algeria on Saturday for a “serious and blatant” violation by the Polisario Front of an 18-year-long ceasefire in the disputed Western Sahara and urged the United Nations to intervene.

Some 1,400 supporters of the Algeria-backed Polisario Front independence movement, including foreigners, crossed the border from Algeria into a closed military zone where they uprooted barbed wire and fired shots in the air, the Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

It accused Algeria and the Polisario of trying to scuttle efforts to forge a peaceful solution to the conflict before a U.N. Security Council meeting on the dispute later this month.

Rabat and the Polisario Front have often accused one another of breaching the U.N.-supervised military truce.

But diplomats believe it is the first time in many years that Rabat has linked Algiers directly to an alleged violation.

They feared this would strain links between Algeria and Morocco, both of whose cooperation is seen by Western powers as crucial to the fight against al Qeada in north and sub-Saharan Africa and against illegal migration.

“…this action, which was initiated and carried out from Algerian territory, confirms the direct responsibility of this country in its preparation and implementation,” the Moroccan ministry said.

“This incident is (in line with) repeated attempts by Algeria and Polisario aimed at scuttling U.N. efforts to relaunch the dynamic of negotiations,” it added.

The ministry called on the United Nations to “assume responsibility and take the required actions.”

The dispute over Western Sahara, which is rich in phosphates and fish and may have offshore oil, has poisoned ties between Morocco and Algeria and blocked badly needed economic cooperation and growth in north Africa.

U.N.-brokered mediation has so far failed to break a deadlock over whether the territory should be an autonomous region of Morocco, as Rabat proposes, or have a referendum on independence, as Polisario wants.

Officials in Algiers and Polisario spokespeople were not immediately available to comment.

Morocco’s foreign ministry said an unspecified number of Polisario members and supporters were wounded when they stepped into a minefield and triggered a mine explosion.

The Algerian daily el Khabar said Saturday that at least three people were hurt and some 200 foreigners took part in the protest to back Polisario’s demand for an independent state.

Political sources in Rabat said one of those wounded was a Polisario member one of whose legs was severed by the explosion near Mahbes, one of the battlefields where Polisario guerrillas and Moroccan troops clashed in the 1980s.

(Reporting by Lamine Ghanmi; editing by Tim Pearce)

Pope calls for stepped-up evangelization of Africa

Luanda – Pope Benedict XVI on Saturday called for the further evangelization of the African continent on the second day of his first visit to Angola.

Five hundred years after Catholic missionaries began converting people in present-day Angola to Christianity – the first country in sub-Saharan Africa to be evangelized – many people still lacked direction and feared unholy spirits and powers, he told a mass attended by local bishops and priests in Luanda’s Sao Paulo church.

The pope said it was the church’s task to give people “every opportunity to achieve eternal life.”

Africa is the continent where the Catholic Church is growing fastest, according to Vatican figures.

Around 55 per cent of people in the oil-rich former Portuguese colony of Angola, which emerged from a devastating 27-civil war in 2002, are Catholic.

Angola’s is also a very young population, with over half of the population under 18 years. Benedict was due to meet later with the youth at an outdoor ceremony in Dos Coquieros sports stadium.

The festive mood that surrounded Benedict’s arrival in the country Friday was marred by a later commotion during his courtesy visit with President Eduardo dos Santos.

The foreign media were barred from the meeting.

Vatican spokesman Federico Lombardi said he would be seeking an explanation from the Angolan ambassador to the Holy See.

Benedict arrived in Angola from Cameroon, where the start of his first Africa trip as pontiff was overshadowed by his controversial remarks about the role of condoms in HIV/AIDS prevention.

He said condom use was not the answer to preventing the spread of the pandemic in Africa and could actually aggravate the situation – a position blasted by the health fraternity as damaging to their efforts to contain the spread of infections. (dpa)