brad brace contemporary culture scrapbook

April 4, 2007

Nicaragua Sandinistas to fight former foes’ hunger

Filed under: global islands,nicaragua — admin @ 5:20 am

Nicaragua’s Sandinista government will hand out seeds and farm animals to fight hunger the Caribbean coast, including among Miskito Indians who fought the leftists’ first government in the 1980s.

Agriculture Minister Ariel Bucardo said the project would help 75,000 malnourished families, starting in the extremely poor Rio Coco region, close to the border with Honduras.

“It is incredible the level of poverty in this region,” Bucardo told reporters. He said an average of 17 people died of hunger-related diseases in the region each month.

Rio Coco, an often waterlogged zone recently blighted by crop-destroying plagues of rats, is largely populated by the Miskito and Mayagna ethnic groups.

The Miskitos, traditionally turtle fishermen, aligned with U.S.-financed “Contra” rebels to fight the revolutionary government of Sandinista leader Daniel Ortega in the 1980s.

Thousands of Miskitos were forcibly relocated by the first Sandinista government.

Under the new program, which Bucardo said would last five years and cost about $150 million, families will be given farm animals, seeds and tools.

Ortega was voted out of office in 1990 but made a comeback after winning elections last year. He has promised reconciliation with wartime enemies and says he will reduce poverty.

Nicaragua is the second-poorest country in the Americas, after Haiti.

April 1, 2007

Prized Black Bengal Goats of Bangladesh

Filed under: bangladesh,global islands — admin @ 6:20 am

Among the world´s poorest countries, Bangladesh is home to one of the richest treasures – prized black bengal goats. The dwarf-size animals are the source of meat, milk, and leather for families – and a big part of the national economy. But changing patterns of land use are threatening the animals´ future.

“Our fallow lands for grazing goats are reducing day by day,” says Dr. M. O. Faruque of the country´s Department of Animal Breeding & Genetics at Bangladesh Agricultural University. “It´s because of our growing human population and the need to plant cereal crops.”

Research supported by the IAEA and Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) is helping Bangadesh plan and protect the goats´ future. Working with other countries in the Asian region, scientists are looking to learn more about black bengal goats and other livetock. A specific aim is to build up the capacity of national agricultural research systems to conduct research in livestock genetics and breeding using modern methods of molecular science.

“The goat is perhaps the most misunderstood and neglected, but nevertheless important species of livestock in the Third World countries,” notes Prof. Md. Ruhul Amin, a colleague at the university. “They play an important role in our country’s economy.”

Bangladesh scientists are working with other experts to help goat herders and farmers adapt to the changing environment. About 80% of the country´s people live in the countryside, and raising goats and other livestock is a key part of their livelihood.

“Goats have typically been raised as scavengers, but now the traditional rearing system in Bangladesh is under threat,” says Dr. Faruque. New approaches to rearing and managing the herds are needed, he says. One government priority is to train tens of thousands of farmers on better ways to raise black bengal goats.

No one knows exactly how many goats graze in Bangladesh – some estimates run as high as 30 million. Together they provide about 30 thousand tons of meat and 20 million square feet of hides and skins, besides milk and other products families depend upon.

“Meat and skin obtained from the Black Bengal are of excellent quality and fetch high prices, even in the local market,” says Prof. Ruhul Amin.

The FAO/IAEA-supported research, launched in 2004 to run over two phases, is analyzing more that 100 sheep and goat breeds by applying nuclear and molecular tools for DNA analysis. Together, the breeds represent the most important livestock species in the Asian region, numbering nearly one billion animals.

Villagers die in Bangladesh storms

Filed under: bangladesh,global islands — admin @ 6:14 am

At least 10 people died and more than 200 were injured as tropical storms swept through southern Bangladesh, according to reports.

Several thousand villagers were left homeless following the downpours.

The storms levelled hundreds of houses in Bhola district, 65 miles south of the country’s capital of Dhaka, the United News of Bangladesh reported, quoting a local government official.

Rescuers recovered 10 bodies buried under the debris of collapsed houses, and dozens of injured were taken to a hospital, local television station ATN Bangla said.

The storms knocked down trees and electricity lines, plunging the affected areas into darkness and hampering rescue work.

Several thousand people were left homeless in dozens of farming villages, the TV station said.

Seasonal storms are common in Bangladesh, a tropical delta nation of 140 million people.

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