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Archive for the 'Mauritania' Category


Mauritania: farmers urged to grow food, cut imports

Posted by sociolingo on May 6, 2008

Source: AlertNet

ROSSO, Mauritania, May 6 (Reuters) - Mauritania’s president wants peasant farmers to cultivate more land and grow more food to reduce its overwhelming dependence on costly imports, and insists the Saharan country could one day be self-sufficient.

Launching Mauritania’s 2008/09 agricultural season on Monday in Rosso, on the fertile northern bank of the Senegal river, President Sidi Mohamed Ould Cheikh Abdallahi said farmers needed to raise output to cope with soaring world food prices.

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Posted in AFRICA, AFRICAN COUNTRIES, AFRICAN ENVIRONMENT, African agriculture, African food crisis, African food security, ENVIRONMENT, Mauritania | No Comments »

Over 300 artists attend nomad music festival in Mauritania

Posted by sociolingo on April 16, 2008

Source: APA

Over 300 artists attend nomad music festival in Mauritania

APA - Nouakchott (Mauritania) The 4th festival of nomad music opened Monday evening in Nouakchott with over 300 artists from Africa and Europe attending the occasion.

Mauritanian artist Ousmane Guangue when performing during the opening gala expressed honour of being home after representing his country in France, Belgium and several other countries.

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Posted in AFRICA, AFRICAN COUNTRIES, African music, Mauritania | No Comments »

Mauretania:Push on pupil numbers drives down quality

Posted by sociolingo on March 12, 2008

Source: IRIN NEWS

MAURITANIA:Push on pupil numbers drives down quality
NOUAKCHOTT, 10 March (IRIN) - Mauritania is on track to reach the Millennium Development Goal (MDG) of enrolling all children in primary school, but government officials told IRIN education quality has plummeted.
“We have children in the sixth class who cannot read or write,” said Abderrahmane Mohamed Sidina, director of national education in Gorgol region, southern Mauritania, which covers 317 schools.
“Our schools have no books, no materials, and few teachers. Schools are not [creating] an environment that is conducive to learning.”
Sidina blames the push to raise school attendance for the very large class sizes, inadequate teacher numbers and dilapidated equipment.
“Mauritania may well attain universal primary education but the quality is getting worse,” agreed Khadij Mohamed Salem, education project officer at the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) in Nouakchott. “You cannot lower quality. just for the sake of numbers.”
Mauritania’s government made universal primary education a priority in 1990 and according to the UN MDG November 2007 progress report, 72 percent of children are currently enrolled. Just over half of those children stay in school until grade five, the report said.
M’beida village school
In the primary school in M’beida village, 25km from Keidi in southern Mauritania, only one of the four classrooms has desks and chairs and there is next to no teaching equipment.
“UNICEF provided books and pens in November 2007, but we already need more, and we have no teaching guides” said Daba Hamadi, the school director.
The school has four teachers to instruct 255 children, with average class sizes of 60. “We are trying to hire more teachers but we cannot find them because they simply don’t exist,” Hamadi told IRIN. “I am starting to turn children away.”
Bilingual schools
In 2006 the government set up bilingual schools to try to break down the division between government schools which had French instruction and Koranic schools which taught in Arabic.
But because of lack of teacher training to accompany it, there are no bilingual teachers to work in them, said Salem.
In Hamadi’s school, which is supposedly bilingual, just one of the four teachers speaks French and Arabic.
Investment
“Inadequate investment over the years made it difficult for the education department to attract good teachers to the profession and train them properly,” Sidina told IRIN.
Hamadi earns US$250 a year after 20 years of service, and even that salary comes in irregularly, he complained.
The money that there was, was unequally distributed across districts, said Gorgol region’s education officer Sidina. “Funding was politically driven and unequal. We are trying to change this.”
However, investment appears to be going up. Education received 8.2 percent of the government’s 2005 budget, rising to 14 percent in 2007 and further rises to 20 percent are expected over the next few years, according to UNICEF.
US$1.2 million has already been set aside for 2008, Sidina said, to give teachers incentives of US$23 when they join the profession and a US$60 per year “chalk incentive” to reward performance.
“Our top three priorities for education in Mauritania are to improve quality, retain more students right through to grade five, and train teachers,” Sidina said, but urged patience among teachers and students. “We will not see instant results, it will take up to two years to see widespread change.”
It will be an uphill struggle, he said. “There is never enough money for education, to make all the improvements that we need, so the money will never go far enough.”

Posted in AFRICA, AFRICAN COUNTRIES, AFRICAN EDUCATION, EDUCATION, Mauritania | No Comments »

Mauritanian fashion designer wants to develop the trade in her country

Posted by sociolingo on February 23, 2008

Source: APA

Mauritanian fashion designer wants to develop the trade in her country

APA - Nouakchott (Mauritania) The purpose of the first night of Mauritanian fashion, recently organised in Nouakchott, was “to make the fashion in this country move as the public fashion shows are not recurrent,” the initiator of this cultural event, young fashion designer Salamata Oumar Ba, explained to APA Saturday in Nouakchott.

Asserting her ambition to show that one can benefit from the contributions of the two communities in Mauritania, this 25 year old black Mauritanian said she is searching for authentic Mauritanian fashion designers, in order to create with them an association to promote their activity.

Prize winner of the Leydi workshops of Dakar, run by famous Senegalese fashion designer Oumou Sy, the Mauritanian designer revealed that her dream is to create, in the near future, a training school for fashion trades in Nouakchott.

According to her, a fashion parade cannot only be likened to naked girls, but rather to clothes presented to the public in order to emphasize their quality.

“People must be accustomed to fashion parades since they are purely cultural demonstrations,” she pointed out, adding she learnt drawing at the national arts school of the University of Dakar.

Before organizing her show, Ba filed an authorization request at the Tevragh Zeina police station which covers the area to host the event while expecting a categorical rejection.

“I was pessimist because sometime ago, the famous Niger fashion designer, of Tuareg origin, Alpha Di was refused to host such an event,” she said.

Contrary to my expectation, the request was approved and the show authorised. Among the designs exposed in her workshop are a Mauritanian veil, a couple wearing Mauritanian veil, a man’s ensemble, an “off-the-shoulder dress,” an evening gown, and trousers.

The social side of things was not left out since a white dress embroidered with the AIDS letters in red, was exposed to contribute to sensitising against this pandemic.

On her personal security, the Mauritanian designer acknowledges she was concerned especially when the Israeli embassy in Nouakchott and an adjoining night club were attacked, the day before her show.

“I had already sent the invitations at the time of the attack of the embassy and I did not want to cancel the event,” she recalled, pleased that everything went on smoothly.

Ba is also against the negative orientation of clothing manners in a society known for being conservative.

“I help women to cover their body, not to expose it,” he said, saying the veil worn by Moorish women is “often transparent and internal clothes are seen, just like it slips easily by uncovering the head and the legs.”

MOO/of/ad/daj/APA 2008-02-23

Posted in AFRICA, AFRICAN COUNTRIES, African dress, CULTURE, Mauritania | No Comments »

Mauritania: Reporters Without Borders Annual Report 2008

Posted by sociolingo on February 18, 2008

Source: Reporters Without Borders

Mauritania - Annual Report 2008

Area : 1 025 520 km2.
Population : 3 044 000.
Languages : Arabic, French.
Head of State : Sidi Mohamed Ould Cheikh Abdallahi.

Freedom of press is alive and well in Mauritania, even if journalists in the capital Nouakchott face many complex challenges. The year 2007 was distinguished by a rare experience in Africa : balanced coverage of all political players during the presidential election campaign.

Mauritania has been through testing times since the 2005 coup, going through an agreed democratic transition, a constitutional referendum, municipal elections and fair and open legislative and presidential elections… and a return to civil liberties, including press freedom. Even though much work remains to be done for journalists in Nouakchott the situation is much better than it was.

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Posted in ACADEMIC, AFRICA, AFRICAN COUNTRIES, AFRICAN POLITICS, African journalism, African papers reports, Mauritania, POLITICS | No Comments »

Girls’ Education: The Role of Educational Policies in Mauritania and Guinea

Posted by sociolingo on December 31, 2007

Source: World Bank Africa Region Findings 171 November 2000

Girls’ Education: The Role of Educational Policies in
Mauritania and Guinea

Introduction

This article analyzes the role of educational policies as a success factor for girls’ education and focuses in two countries, Mauritania and Guinea, that have successfully addressed this issue. It also briefly mentions the current situation in Burkina Faso and Mali. The key objective of this research effort was to understand and explain the practices that help girl students to succeed in school, and the underlying circumstances. The research revealed that the problems and successes of girls’ schooling are part of a whole dynamic, in which sociocultural, school and institutional factors overlap and interact.

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Posted in AFRICA, AFRICAN COUNTRIES, AFRICAN EDUCATION, AFRICAN LIFE, African girls, African society, Burkina Faso, EDUCATION, Guinea, LIFE, Mali, Mauritania | No Comments »

MAURITANIA: Fistula - a medical and cultural problem

Posted by sociolingo on December 26, 2007

 See also the earlier post on Niger

Source: IRIN NEWS 

MAURITANIA: Fistula - a medical and cultural problem

NOUAKCHOTT, 25 December (IRIN) - Efforts to reduce cases of obstetric fistula in Mauritania have been slowed by local customs and beliefs.

“Fistula is seen as a punishment,” said Jacques Milliez, a gynaecologist who travels to Mauritania twice a year as part of a treatment programme. “Tradition dictates that a woman who experiences problems in childbirth is suspected of all manner of wrongdoing, such as adultery.”

The causes of fistula are also tied to tradition, with girls marrying and becoming pregnant at a young age, said Thierno Ousmane Coulibaly, the UN Population Fund’s (UNFPA) head of reproductive health in Mauritania. “These girls do not have a sufficiently developed pelvis to give birth.” He added, “It is difficult to fight these socio-cultural practices.”

With just 60 women treated in three years as part of a programme run by the government and the French NGO Equilibres et Populations, local health experts say they have a long way to go to increase awareness about how to prevent and treat the condition.

Obstetric fistula is a tear that develops when blood to the vagina, bladder or rectum is cut off during prolonged or obstructed labour. The tissue dies and a hole forms through which urine and faeces pass uncontrollably.

It is not known how many women in Mauritania suffer from fistula. The UNFPA says worldwide two million women have the condition.

“Operating on 20 women per year is just not enough,” said Mimi Mint Moulaye Cherif, former midwife and head of the national programme on reproductive health. “Our education and awareness efforts are not adequate.”

Physicians from Equilibres et Populations agree that more sustained efforts are needed. “We come only twice a year,” said urologist Ludovic Falandry. “It’s better than nothing but far from enough. What is needed are permanent health teams capable of performing these operations in each regional capital.”

Under the programme, French surgeons travel to Mauritania for short periods to treat women and provide medical equipment and training. Prior to their arrival, civil society members and government health staff go to villages to inform women they have the possibility of being treated.

Yet many women still do not come forward due to the shame associated with the condition.

UNFPA provides US$250,000 annually to help combat fistula in Mauritania. The funds go towards prevention, psychological support and helping sufferers reintegrate into society, Coulibaly said.

Posted in AFRICA, AFRICAN COUNTRIES, AFRICAN HEALTH, African reproductive health, HEALTH, Mauritania | No Comments »

MAURITANIA: The real beginning of the end of slavery?

Posted by sociolingo on December 8, 2007

Seen on IRIN NEWS

MAURITANIA: The real beginning of the end of slavery?

NOUAKCHOTT, 7 December (IRIN) - Four months after the passing of a law criminalising slavery in Mauritania, anti-slavery activists hope newly-announced funding for the reintegration of former slaves will address the many problems they continue to face in Mauritanian society.

“Quite obviously, we’re very pleased with the announcement,” said Biram Ould Dah Ould Abeid, member of the anti-slavery organisation SOS Esclaves, which has been leading the fight against slavery in Mauritania for years. “The government is sending slaves a strong signal and it is also proof that the authorities have heard our calls.”

When slavery was criminalised in August, human rights and anti-slavery organisations urged the government - as they had been doing for years - to adopt accompanying measures for the law to be effective.

Officially abolished in 1981, slavery continues to be practiced in all Mauritanian communities, mostly in rural areas, by upper-class lighter-skinned Moors (Berber Arabs) as well as black Africans. One estimate by the Open Society Justice Initiative places the number of slaves and former slaves at 20 percent of the population - or about 500,000 people - but the numbers are difficult to confirm.

On 23 November, Mauritanian Finance Minister Abderrahmane Ould Hamma Vezaz announced 19 million euros (US$27.8 million) for reintegration programmes for former slaves.

“This sum will be used in the framework of the fight against the repercussions of slavery and against poverty,” Ould Hamma Vezaz said. The sum has been allotted in the 2008 budget, which must be definitively adopted by parliament by the end of the year.

First conviction

Since Mauritania’s first democratically elected president came to power in March 2007, signs of progress have emerged on this issue.

“For the first time in the history of the country, a master was put in prison in mid-October for the crime of slavery against two young children,” Ould Dah Ould Abeid said, adding that the case was judged before the regional tribunal of Kiffa, in the Assaba region.

But he said the government must go further still. “From now on, slaves need a recasting of the administration and the justice system, so that the institutions have a multi-class and citizen image,” he said. “The courts still do not treat slavery cases as they should.”

Despite changes in the law, slaves continue to be bound by their masters and suffer discrimination.

Nowhere to go

At a house in the Riyad neighbourhood of Nouakchott, Hanna Mint Salem tells of fleeing her masters in the Trarza region. She is around 30, but looks 15 years older. She fled so abruptly she had to leave behind her two children, aged two and eight.

Today, a slave who tries to flee his master has nowhere to go. In the absence of welcome centres or reintegration infrastructure, they often find refuge with sympathisers of SOS Esclaves.

“I looked for help at the military brigade of R’Kiz, [a district of Trarza],” Mint Salem whispered. “They sent me to the president of the regional tribunal, who didn’t want to deal with me. So I went back to the brigade and they threatened to throw my husband in jail if we kept coming to talk to them about slavery.

“Today, I’m here. I don’t know where to go. But I no longer have faith in the justice system.”

Segregation

Algerian anthropologist Malek Chebel, author of the recently published book Slavery in the Land of Islam, says despite the government’s efforts, practices in Mauritania are stubborn and hard to eradicate. “Despite the denials, slavery remains a glaring reality,” he told IRIN.

In certain villages of Guidimakha in southern Mauritania on the border with Senegal, slaves are still buried in separate cemeteries. There are mosques for nobles and mosques for slaves. “Spatial segregation, even within residential neighbourhoods, remains extremely strong,” said Demba Marico, geography professor at the University of Nouakchott.

If not taboo, the subject remains highly sensitive, especially among black masters.

The land question

Following the adoption of the new law, freed slaves are slowly beginning to speak up and claim rights - but they continue to face resistance.

Messaoud Ould Meybi is a member of the Haratine caste, which includes slaves, freed slaves and the descendants of slaves. In Kiffa, capital of the Assaba region, he has been banned from his village, after he tried to exercise his rights and take possession of land he had been cultivating for years.

“The former master managed to turn everybody against me - the Moors as well as the Haratines. Today, I am alone and I am even told to watch out as I move around because bad things could happen to me.”

Many say the question of land is at the heart of Mauritania’s slavery problem.

“The cultivatable lands are monopolised by the former masters. And yet it’s us who farm them,” said Yeslim Ould Warmit, a Haratine farmer in the village of Leuceïba.

“Indeed for them: slaves we were born, slaves we will always be,” added Abdallahi Ould Mohamed Salem, another freed sleeve. “That will not change as long as the local administration backs the former masters.”

That is why anti-slavery activists say accompanying measures remain essential, despite adoption of the law.

“This land question is crucial,” said Mamadou Sarr, executive secretary of the forum of national human rights’ organisations in Mauritania. “Because today, no one is playing the game. Not the mayors, not the prefects, not even the governors. They still obey the big landowners.”

For Ould Dah Ould Abeid of SOS Esclaves, the 19 million euros granted by the government must be invested in two fundamental directions:

“There must be measures for the economic emancipation of the slaves. But the government must also inspire a cultural revolution to deconstruct social mentalities. Because the slaves themselves remain prisoners of this archaic conception of life, especially in the countryside.

“Everything cannot change from one day to the next. All this requires support,” he said. “And I hope this money will be used wisely.”

Posted in AFRICA, AFRICAN COUNTRIES, African slave trade, Mauritania | No Comments »