Sociolingo’s Africa

News, images, comment on Africa

Archive for the 'Niger' Category


African anthropology: Niger calls for regional joking kinship week in Africa

Posted by sociolingo on April 26, 2008

Source: APA
Niger calls for regional joking kinship week in Africa

APA-Niamey (Niger) Niger intends to launch a regional joking kinship week involving all African countries which have this social phenomenon, Niger culture minister, Oumarou Hadary, announced Thursday evening.

Speaking at the integration night of Niger communities which closed the first national joking kinship week (18-24 April), Hadary said Niger would “endeavour for a better participation of other sub regional countries in order to establish an African joking kinship week whose capital will be Niamey,” he underlined.

Read the full article

Posted in AFRICA, AFRICAN ANTHROPOLOGY, AFRICAN COUNTRIES, CULTURE, Niger | No Comments »

15 Niger: African troupes to attend « Emergences » festival in Niamey

Posted by sociolingo on April 19, 2008

Source: APA

15 African troupes to attend « Emergences » festival in Niamey

APA-Niamey (Niger) Niamey will from April 28 to May 4, host the second theatre festival dubbed “Emergences”, to be attended by 15 professional companies and troops from western and central African countries, the Director of the festival, Niger national Alfred Dogbé, told APA.

“Emergences” has billed about forty theatre representations in cultural and artistic centres, in prisons and schools in five districts of the Niger capital city.

“The festival is not only limited to theatre shows. It is also a framework of exchange, because art professionals will hold ten workshops on initiation to arts for youths and cultural associations in Niamey”, the Dogbé said.

He said the festival constitutes a training and improvement framework for theatre practitioners through professional internships in sound and light production, in interpretation, dramatic art and cultural journalism.

The training will be undertaken by about sixty artists, technicians and communication specialists.

He said “Emergences 2008″ will be a moment for sharing of information and reflexion on the theatre activity as well as on cultural innovation in Niger.

Participants will come from Benin, Burkina-Faso, Cameroon, Congo, Cote-d’Ivoire, Guinea, Togo and Niger.

DS/od/ovh/tjm/APA 2008-04-07

Posted in AFRICA, AFRICAN COUNTRIES, African festivals, CULTURE, Niger | No Comments »

Joking kinship week kicks off in Niger capital

Posted by sociolingo on April 18, 2008

Source: APA

Joking kinship week kicks off in Niger capital

APA-Niamey (Niger) The first national joking kinship week which will be marked by several activities began Friday afternoon at the traditional games arena of Niamey and will end on 24 April.

Conference-debates, shows and sporting events will mark the first edition of this week dedicated to a very widespread practice in Niger where the joking kinship is a factor of social cohesion between all ethnic and linguistic strata.

“It is practiced in all regions of the country. It is generally done after the Tabaski feast (Eid El-Adha); we can even say that the popularity of joking kinship comes just after Islam in Niger,” psychologist and lecturer at the university of Niamey, Adamou Barke told APA.

Many Nigerien researchers state that it is difficult to give exactly the time in which the joking kinship began in the country.

Some say it started in the end of the 19th century, whereas others believe that the joking kinship started when the Sahara was still a space of merging peoples and a crossroads of exchanges.

“The joking cousinship relations are often based on a mythical fact, sometimes on a historical fact,” the historian Boube Gado, former director of the social sciences research institute of the University of Niamey, explained.

An integration phenomenon between the ethnic and linguistic groups expressing themselves by amusing mocks, provocations and other acts, the joking kinship is a statutory value where each one becomes the cousin of the other.

Apart from its playful feature, “the joking kinship also plays an important role in the consolidation of fraternal bonds and in the prevention and the resolution of intercommunity conflicts,” said the psychologist Barke, also member of a scientific committee studying this issue in Niger.

The one week event intends “to formalise a secular practice, the core of unity and harmony between the various communities which share the Nigerien space,” culture minister Oumarou Hadary said at the opening.

A multi-linguistic country with 9 spoken languages for as many ethnolinguistic groups, Niger gives a great importance to this practice which develops the intercommunity relations.

The closing of the national joking kinship week will coincide with the commemoration, on 24 April, of the 13th anniversary of the peace agreements signed between the government and the rebel factions of the Nineties.

DS/mn/ad/tjm/APA 2008-04-18

Posted in AFRICA, AFRICAN ANTHROPOLOGY, AFRICAN COUNTRIES, CULTURE, Niger | No Comments »

Niger: Niamey varsity lecturers get 350 laptops

Posted by sociolingo on April 12, 2008

Source: APA

Niamey varsity lecturers get 350 laptops

APA-Niamey (Niger) The Prime Minister of Niger Seyni Oumarou on Friday handed over 350 laptops to the Niamey-based Abdou Moumouni University officials as part of implementing the “one lecturer-cum-researcher one computer” initiative, APA observed.

Handing the tools to the university, Oumarou said this falls within the framework of the “reviving higher education and research action in Niger.”

“The point of business to help our university better integrate into the Bachelor-Masters-Doctorate system, but also enable it to adapt to the challenges of development and globalization,” he added.

Oumarou said his government is committed to facilitating Internet connection in schools, university institutes and faculties, urging Niger’s researchers to “conduct greater brainstorming on how to develop higher education, including distance learning.”

The granting of a laptop to each teacher and researcher also aims to “develop a tool that will assist in updating knowledge,” said Professor Alassane Yénikoye, the Vice-Chancellor of the Niamey University.

The next challenge, he said, is to “to set up internet connection in each office, laboratory and even amphitheatre of the University”.

Created in the early 1970s, Niamey’s only university hosts some 8,443 students in five faculties and a number of colleges.

DS/OD/pos/daj/APA

Posted in AFRICA, AFRICAN COUNTRIES, AFRICAN EDUCATION, African ICT and education, African higher education, EDUCATION, Niger | No Comments »

IRIN film: Hungry For Help - Food Crisis in Niger - August 2005

Posted by sociolingo on April 1, 2008

Source: IRIN

Hungry For Help: Food Crisis in Niger - August 2005

In late 2004 Aid Agencies began warning that the people of Niger were facing serious food insecurity as a consequence of drought and last year’s locust invasion. But the warnings fell on deaf ears and by July 2005 dramatic pictures of the unfolding emergency began to play out in the world’s media. But Niger’s problems, as with much of Sub-Saharan Africa, are the consequences of poor infrastructure and lack of development. Rather than food aid, what the people of Niger really need is development aid. View Transcript

 [English] [Français]    [English] [Français]    [Duration: 15:36]

Posted in AFRICA, AFRICAN COUNTRIES, AFRICAN ENVIRONMENT, AFRICAN POLITICS, African crises, African food security, African free resources, ENVIRONMENT, Niger, POLITICS | No Comments »

ANALYSIS-Food inflation is minefield for African governments

Posted by sociolingo on March 18, 2008

Source: AlertNet

ANALYSIS-Food inflation is minefield for African governments
18 Mar 2008 10:15:56 GMT
Source: Reuters

By Alistair Thomson DAKAR, March 18 (Reuters) - African governments, which often face catastrophic droughts, floods and crop failures, are now confronting spiralling inflation and creeping deficits as they seek to contain popular anger over rising food prices. Surging food prices due to global supply concerns and heady world futures markets pose a particular risk to poor economies, especially in Africa, where food makes up a disproportionately large part of household spending and imports. Violent protests in Cameroon and Burkina Faso last month prompted both governments to suspend customs duties on basic food imports — a measure matched by arid Niger, where food shortages in 2005 triggered a massive international aid effort.

Read the full article

Posted in AFRICA, AFRICAN COUNTRIES, AFRICAN ECONOMICS, AFRICAN ENVIRONMENT, African agriculture, African desertification, African economy, African food security, Burkina Faso, ECONOMICS, ENVIRONMENT, Niger | No Comments »

New DVD: Fulani - Art and Life of a Nomadic People

Posted by sociolingo on February 24, 2008

Christopher Roy announces the release of two new videos (DVDs) of the Fulani
people. The first, titled “Fulani: Art and Life of a Nomadic People” (84
minutes) focuses on the Jelgobe and Gowabe Fulani who live in northern
Burkina Faso and Mali. There are segments on Fulani architecture, the
interior of the home, furniture and equipment, making mats, milking cows and
making butter, the market, mosque, a wedding, and music.

The second, titled “Birds of the Wilderness: The Beauty Competition of the
Wodaabe People of Niger
,” (62 minutes) focuses on the Wodaabe Fulani, who
each year stage several beautiful and spectacular dances in which young men
paint their faces red or yellow. There are lengthy sequences of Wodaabe
camp life, the sacred woman’s table, drawing water, a feast, braiding
hairstyles, a young men’s initiation (which I don’t think has ever been
filmed before), and a young man named Omar applying his red makeup and
costume of white beads, cloth and ostrich feathers. There are long
sequences of the Ruume dance of welcome and the Geerewal war dance, when the
young men are judged based on beauty and charm by the young women of the
competing clan.

Both DVDs can be ordered from either:

Art and Life in Africa (http://www.uiowa.edu/~africart/List_of_DVDs/Index.html ) or

African Art Videos ( http://www.africanartvideo.com/ ).

“Fulani: Art and life of a Nomadic People” is http://www.createspace.com/243089

“Birds of the Wilderness” is http://www.createspace.com/243866

Each video is $24.95.

Posted in AFRICA, AFRICAN ANTHROPOLOGY, AFRICAN CULTURE, AFRICAN LIFE, African Peoples, African ethnography, African people groups, Burkina Faso, CULTURE, LIFE, Mali, Niger | No Comments »

Niger: Reporters Without Borders Annual Report 2008

Posted by sociolingo on February 18, 2008

Source: Reporters Without Borders

Niger - Annual Report 2008

Area : 1 267 000 km2.
Population : 13 737 000.
Language : French.
Head of state : Mamadou Tandja.

Five journalists, three of them foreigners, were imprisoned in 2007 for reporting on or interviewing Touareg rebels, who, from February onwards began attacking military posts in the north of the country. The government cannot bear to be contradicted by the press over a rebellion which it views as nothing more than a case of people “cutting off the roads”.

A hitherto unknown armed Touareg group, The Niger Justice Movement (MNJ), on 3 February 2007 attacked an army barracks in Iférouane, in the Air mountains, killing three soldiers. A few days later, the rebel group claimed responsibility for the bloody assault in the name of the MNJ, demanding greater rights for the Touareg and a larger share of the wealth. This murderous episode had a lasting effect on the fragile edifice on which President Mamadou Tandja had sought to lead his country to general elections scheduled for 2010. But it also considerably angered the Niger authorities who were stunned to see increased attacks in this uranium-mining region, and who sealed off the area militarily to silence journalists, foreign or Nigerian, who took too close an interest in the crisis.

Read more

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

Niger: Two previously unknown types of meat-eating dinosaur identified

Posted by sociolingo on February 14, 2008

Source: BBC NEWS

New meat-eating dinos identified

Eocarcharia dinops had teeth shaped like blades

Two previously unknown types of meat-eating dinosaur have been identified from fossils unearthed in the Sahara desert in Niger. The new carnivore fossils have been described by a researcher from the University of Bristol working with palaeontologists from the US.

One of the dinosaurs probably scavenged its prey like a hyena, the other probably hunted live animals.

Details appear in the journal Acta Palaeontologica Polonica.

Read the rest of the article

Posted in AFRICA, AFRICAN COUNTRIES, African palaeontology, Niger | 1 Comment »

Niger blames desert rebels for mine death in capital- 9/1/08

Posted by sociolingo on January 9, 2008

Source: Reuters Alertnet

09 Jan 2008 15:08:11 GMT

<!– 09 Jan 2008 15:08:11 GMT ## for search indexer, do not remove –>

Source: Reuters


By Abdoulaye Massalatchi NIAMEY, Jan 9 (Reuters)

Niger’s government on Wednesday accused Tuareg-led rebels of laying landmines in the capital Niamey which killed a local radio director, the first such attack in the city since the uprising began almost a year ago. The security forces defused a second device early on Wednesday, hours after private radio director Abdou Mahaman Jeannot was killed when his Toyota car drove over a mine in a residential suburb on the western edge of the city. The government blamed Tuareg rebels who launched an uprising last February to demand greater autonomy for their homelands in the barren, uranium-rich north. The insurgents have mainly targeted army patrols and remote garrisons in the Sahara.

More 

Posted in AFRICA, AFRICAN COUNTRIES, AFRICAN POLITICS, African conflicts, Niger, POLITICS | No Comments »

Niger: Electricity Cuts

Posted by sociolingo on January 8, 2008

Source: African Press Agency

Niger–Electricity-Cuts  Twelve hours power cuts per day in Niger from Wednesday

APA-Niamey (Niger) The main cities of western Niger, including Niamey the capital, will be in the dark for lack of power at least 12 hours per day for one month starting from 9 January, sources said here Tuesday.

The measure is due to the rehabilitation work on the Birni’Kebbi - Niamey line, Niger electricity company (NIGELEC) sources said.

Niamey , Dosso, Tillabery, Birni’ Gaoure, Kollo and Say will suffer a 12-hour blackout per day for one month, from 6a.m. to 6 p.m., according to the NIGELEC engineering department.

The Birni Kebbi - Niamey line is being rehabilitated to increase the line’s current transit capacity of 40 Megawatts to 80 Megawatts.

NIGELEC, which supplies the country except the northern cities, gets supplies from the Kendji dam through NEPA, the Nigerian electricity company.

Posted in AFRICA, AFRICAN COUNTRIES, AFRICAN ENVIRONMENT, ENVIRONMENT, Niger | No Comments »

Teacher Shortages, Teacher Contracts and their Impact on Education in Africa

Posted by sociolingo on January 5, 2008

Source: ISN Publishing

Teacher Shortages, Teacher Contracts and their Impact on Education in Africa

Teacher Shortages, Teacher Contracts and their Impact on Education in Africa Author(s): Jean Bourdon, Markus Frölich, Katharina Michaelowa
Publisher(s): Center for Comparative and International Studies (CIS), Zurich, Switzerland
Date of publication: 4 May 2007
Issue number: 28
Format: PDF
Pages: 67
URL: www.cis.ethz.ch
Series: CIS Working Papers
Description: This paper addresses the policy of Niger, Togo and Mali to recruit large numbers of teachers using fixed-term contracts instead of civil servant positions, analyzing the impact on educational quality by estimating non-parametrically the quantile treatment effects. The paper explores the link between incentives, teacher contracts and working conditions, introduces the available data and presents the evaluation of the impact of the contract teacher program on educational quality.

General note: © 2007 Center for Comparative and International Studies (CIS)
Download:

Posted in ACADEMIC, AFRICA, AFRICAN COUNTRIES, AFRICAN EDUCATION, African papers reports, African teachers, EDUCATION, Mali, Niger, Togo | No Comments »

NIGER: Botched birth survivors battle fistula

Posted by sociolingo on December 21, 2007

This is the final story in a three-part series on maternal mortality and child marriage in Niger . Please be aware that the following account is quite harrowing. However, I do feel it is important for stories like this to be heard, so read it if you can bear it.

Source: IRIN NEWS

NIGER: Botched birth survivors battle fistula

NIAMEY, 21 December (IRIN) - Niger is one of the most dangerous places in the world to give birth.

Thirty women lolling on mats outside a non-governmental organisation (NGO) recovery clinic in Niamey might well wish they had not been so lucky to survive.

They are alive, but, having endured an agonising labour lasting two or three days and finally having had their dead children cut out of them, they have been left with fistula, a tearing of the tissue that develops when blood supply to the tissues of the vagina and bladder and/or rectum is cut off during prolonged obstructed labour.

When the tissue dies a hole forms through which urine and faeces pass uncontrollably.

Fistula is the ultimate symbol of childbirth gone wrong because of poor health care access and the high prevalence of men marrying under-age girls in Niger.

Ostracised

Many of the women here have been ostracised by their families and communities, and even been banned from using public transport because of their smell.

Unaware that their problem can sometimes be fixed with surgery, or their symptoms at least alleviated with something as simple as cotton underwear with plastic and an absorptive sponge sown inside, they have endured months or years hiding in shame.

According to the World Health Organization, two million girls and women around the world live with fistula, almost all of them in developing countries.

The NGO the Fistula Foundation, estimates 100,000 new cases appear every year worldwide, but only 6,500 women are treated annually, due to lack of money and doctors.

In Niger, the operation costs upwards of 1 million CFA francs (US$2,100). There are just four surgeons in the country capable of performing the complicated and highly specialised surgery.

Neglect

The problem is so neglected by Niger’s authorities that no nationwide data exists on the number of women affected there, even though Niger is believed by activists to have one of the highest rates of fistula in the world.

Salamatou Traoré, who in 1998 set up Dimol, which means “dignity” in the local Peulh language, one of the few organisations in Niger which helps girls and women with fistula, estimates that hundreds more women with fistula are living untreated in isolated parts of Niger.

“Fistula is a problem that mostly affects women in rural areas where the women have no access to health services, where ignorance and tradition prevails over common sense,” Traoré said.

At the Dimol recovery centre for women with fistula in Niamey, 60 percent of the girls and women there got their fistula while attempting to give birth too young.

Just letting girls finish school before marrying them off would help avoid the bulk of the early marriage-related fistula cases, Traoré said.

“Even by 16 they are developed enough to give birth if they want to.”

Education

Ninety percent of the 380 women Dimol has treated for fistulas never finished school, and cannot read or write.

Many of the other cases were caused by an obstructed labour which could have been prevented had the woman been given adequate and timely medical attention.

Less than 20 percent of women in Niger will give birth in the presence of a qualified medical official, according to the UN Population Fund (UNFPA).

Some women’s bodies simply collapsed after they gave birth to more than 12 children in their lifetime. The average number of births per mother in Niger is 7.1.

Educating women about their right to choose and the importance of proper healthcare during pregnancy would be another useful step to combating the problem, Traoré said.

But more important for her is educating men. “The problems these girls have were not caused by them - it’s not them who wanted to get married, it’s the men,” she said.

Changing visions

Dimol is also working to give women a more empowered vision of their future: “We’re also trying to make women be instilled with the realisation that they can have a different vision of themselves and to know what they can do to achieve their own goals,” Traoré said.

Many of the young girls at the Dimol centre, some still wearing jewellery and decorative tattoos from their wedding days, will never recover from their fistula ordeal.

Not all fistula cases can be repaired, and the psychological scars from the experience might well last a lifetime.

“After the fight to repair the physical damage more needs to be done to help these women get back into society,” Traoré said. “They have often been beaten, excluded and severely traumatised. Often they cannot go back to their families.”

What the longer-term psychological effects of fistula might be are not known. Dimol lacks the funds to provide any kind of psychotherapy for the women, and Traoré says that this aspect of the organisation’s work is sorely lacking.

“There’s no way we can afford to do it,” she said.

Posted in AFRICA, AFRICAN COUNTRIES, AFRICAN HEALTH, AFRICAN LIFE, African family planning, African girls, African reproductive health, African women, HEALTH, LIFE, Niger | 1 Comment »

NIGER: Where childhood ends on the marriage bed

Posted by sociolingo on December 20, 2007

Please be aware that the following account is quite harrowing. However, I do feel it is important for stories like this to be heard, so read it if you can bear it.

Source: IRIN NEWS

NIGER: Where childhood ends on the marriage bed

NIAMEY, 19 December (IRIN) - Fifteen-year-old Hadjo Garbo’s child-like features belie a history more tragic and life-altering than many adults four times her age will have experienced.

Two years ago this petite girl, who likes to fiddle with her elaborately braided hair and once dreamed of being a housewife, was married to one of the older men in her village in the Dosso region of southwest Niger. She was just 13 years old.

The marriage was consummated, and by 14 she was pregnant with her first child. But before her 15th birthday she had lost the baby - and her husband.

Garbo’s anatomy proved unready for the task of delivering a baby and after an excruciating three-day labour, the unborn foetus was cut out of her, stillborn.

The horrific labour left the girl with what gynaecologists call an obstetric fistula, a tearing of the tissue that develops when blood supply to the tissues of the vagina and bladder and/or rectum is cut off during prolonged obstructed labour. The condition mostly affects child victims of underage marriage.

Garbo was ostracised by her husband and his family, and forced to secrete herself away from the prying eyes and laughter of her former school friends.

Not paedophilia

In many Western and Muslim countries what happened to Garbo would be called paedophilia and the male attacker would be arrested and imprisoned.

In Niger that word is only applied to men who have sex with girls outside of marriage, said Idrissa Djibrilla, head of the Niger branch of Defence for Children International (DCI), a non-governmental organisation (NGO).

“Here we only talk about paedophilia when sex happens outside marriage,” Djibrilla said.

“If we look at it from the biological, physiological point of view, it’s clear that at nine, 10, 11 or 12 years old a girl simply is not ready for sex and child bearing. That’s the reality, but it is hard to make our communities understand.”

The effects can be long-lasting and extend beyond physical health, human rights workers and psychologists who have studied child brides say.

Forced sexual intercourse, denial of freedom and domestic violence are “frequently” found in child marriages, the long-term effects of which are poorly understood, according to a confidential NGO study shown to IRIN.

Eventually, the girls are likely to be abandoned when their polygamous husbands take another young bride. In Niger, women have little or no rights after a divorce. http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=75720

Widespread problem

Garbo’s case is not an isolated one in Niger. The problem affects all the regions of Niger, Djibrilla said. At least a third of girls in Niger are married by the age of 15, and 75 percent before the age of 18, according to the UN Population Fund (UNFPA).

In reality, activists say 13 is a common age for marriage, and some girls are married off as young as nine or 10. They will be forced to have sex even before their first period.

Negotiations in Niger over the Family Code (Code de la Personne et de la Famille) - a piece of domestic legislation which would have defined the legal relationship between husbands and wives and children and parents, and included a legal minimum age for marriage and sexual intercourse - collapsed in 2006.

According to Alice Kang, a University of Wisconsin researcher who studied the process, the Family Code was “vilified and abandoned” after mainstream Islamist associations lobbied against it.

“Women’s NGOs [in Niger] sometimes compete with each other and therefore do not always get along together. the influence of religious leaders on politics is, more often than not, indirect. and the Family Code was an extremely contentious issue to the point of being a taboo subject in certain circles,” she wrote in a report after conducting research in Niger in 2006.

Reticence

Diadié Boureima, deputy representative of UNFPA in Niger, said Niger’s government is “a bit reticent” about tackling early marriage “because of the religious reaction” and said if things are going to change “the `marabout’ (religious leaders) will have to be involved.”

“If there was a law against paedophilia it would be applied here,R