Thursday, 22 October 2009

My Blog Has Now Moved

I have now moved on to a new Blogging Platform

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Monday, 28 September 2009

Have your say at Copenhagen ...









The Christian Muslim Forum and MADE in Europe are holding the Christian-Muslim Youth Forum on Climate Change (CMYF) on Thursday 15 October 2009 at Lambeth Palace in London hosted by the Archbishop of Canterbury, our Founding Patron. The CMYF is your chance to tell those in power what they should be doing about climate change.

You can start right now on this website - so get blogging! The key issues being discussed at the Copenhagen summit are:

  • Mitigation
  • Adaptation
  • Technology Transfer
  • Funding

Tell us what you want to say about climate change and what you believe we should be doing to tackle it. Join the discussion on the four key issues and share your thoughts on the relationship between Christianity, Islam and climate change.

Having taken part in the online discussion, 40 young Christians and Muslims aged 18-25 will meet at Lambeth Palace on the 15 October 2009 for the Christian-Muslim Youth Forum on Climate Change. They will spend the day discussing climate change with Muslim and Christian scholars and scientists and produce a statement to deliver to the UK negotiators for the UN Summit in Copenhagen in December. The Forum will be hosted and chaired by the Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr. Rowan Williams.

So if you are a British Christian or Muslim aged 18-25, register now to attend the CMYF by filling in this form and telling us why climate change matters to you. As well as attending the CMYF on the 15 October, the two people with the best answers will win the following:

  • Tickets to Copenhagen for the weekend of the UN Climate Change Summit from 11 -14 December 2009 where you will join other campaigners from around the world in a mass march and other activities
  • Tickets to the UK Youth Climate Coalition (UKYCC) Powershift Event on 9 -12 October 2009 for 4 days of speakers and workshops to learn more about climate change and what you can do about it
  • Opportunity to run a workshop on Youth, Faith & Climate Change at Faith Regen Foundation's Faith & Climate Change Conference on 27 - 29 October 2009 as well as tickets to attend the whole conference. Special highlights of the conference include Rt. Hon Ed Milliband, Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change as keynote speaker and the results of grassroots discussions on climate change from 10 countries around the world.

Saturday, 19 September 2009

8 years on and I want it back..

It has now been eight years since the World Trade Centre attacks completely reshaped the world that we are living in today. I remember it as if it was yesterday, and although I was thousands of miles away, I was very much at home with the people of New York watching the news screens with disbelief. Then a few years later, it was a lot closer to home when London was attacked on the very Tube lines I travel on every day. Sept 11th was a turning point for many, and for me. It wasn’t only the flights that were hijacked; my faith, my religion and everything I believed in was also hijacked. How is it that these monsters have taken a religion with such beautiful values and transformed it into this hub of evil?

I marked the eighth anniversary of the attacks by remembering the lives that have been lost and reaffirming why I became a Faiths Act Fellow. I work with people of other faiths because I have something to learn from them; we have mutual understanding and we take our shared values towards positive social justice. I do this because I’m taking Islam back from terrorism and back from extremism. This is my faith and it is a beautiful faith, and it has no room for these misguided ideologies.

Friday, 4 September 2009

Malaria coming to an End - Article on the fight from Tanzania

TANZANIA: Health officials confident of beating malaria

DAR ES SALAM, 3 September 2009 (IRIN) - Health officials in Tanzania are
confident they are on track to eradicate malaria deaths by 2015, even if
significant challenges stand in the way of the target.

The National Malaria Control Programme (NMCP) says malaria is a leading
killer in the East African country, infecting about 18 million people
annually.

The disease is responsible for between 60,000 and 80,000 deaths each year -
at least nine deaths every hour - mainly pregnant women and children under
five.

Official records also show that 30-40 percent of attendance at health
centres and hospitals are related to malaria cases, burdening overstretched
facilities.

Malaria, according to the National Planning Commission (NPC) costs the
country an estimated loss that is equivalent to 3.4 percent of gross
domestic product.

Alex Mwita, a senior NMCP official, said initiatives being implemented
under the Roll Back Malaria programme, such as insecticide-treated bed nets
and indoor residual spraying (IRS), had helped reduce malaria cases, along
with deaths of children under five and infants (younger than one).

"Under-five deaths have dropped to 91 per 1,000 live births in 2008, down
from 147 in 1999," Mwita said, presenting a paper in Dar es Salaam
recently.

He said that although the decline could not be attributed to the fall in
malaria cases alone, research showed a decline in prevalence of the disease
had a big impact on childhood and maternal mortality.

"Since intervention initiatives have proven to work, we are now scaling up
distribution of insecticide-treated bed nets, indoor spraying and
behavioural change communication," Mwita said.

Bed nets

Tanzania's President Jakaya Kikwete told the World Health Organization
(WHO) Director-General Margaret Chan, who visited Tanzania recently, that
his government was committed to attaining universal bed net coverage by
December 2010 and eliminating malaria by 2015.

Kikwete told Chan there were plans to distribute 14 million mosquito bed
nets within the next 16 months to cover all households. The move
complements the current programme where all children under five are due to
receive bed nets free of charge. NMCP said in its latest report that so far
30 percent of children under five had nets.

The UN Special Envoy for Malaria, Raymond Chambers, told a news conference
that the Global Fund for AIDS, Malaria and Tuberculosis had approved a
grant of US$110 million to Tanzania to support the procurement of 14
million bed nets.

"We are impressed by Tanzania's initiatives and political commitment shown
by the country's leadership. It is our hope that malaria will be eliminated
within the next seven years as planned," he said.

Chambers, however, said the challenge was to make all 40 million Tanzanians
sleep under the insecticide-treated bed nets. "There must be an aggressive
campaign by politicians and the media on the need to use the bed nets for
the intended purpose instead of fishing," said Chambers, who accompanied
the WHO chief on her visit to Tanzania.

"I know there is a lack of adequate resources, health personnel and
infrastructure. I am, however, convinced that you don't have a shortage of
political will," Chan said.

Treatment costs

David Mwakyusa, Tanzania's Health Minister, said since 2006, the country
had used Artemisinin-based combination therapy (ACT) as a first-line
treatment for uncomplicated malaria and the drug had shown great success.

The minister, however, expressed concern over the cost of the medicine in
pharmacies and private outlets, where a dose is up to 15,000 shillings
(about $11).

He said that in public facilities a drug called ALU is prescribed and
prices are affordable at between 300 shillings and 1,000 shillings (about
20 cents and 80 cents).

"We are working on a programme that will enable ACT to be available in all
public and private facilities at affordable prices," he said.

Drug resistance

Mwakyusa said his ministry was following up reports of malaria parasites'
resistance to ACT along the Cambodia-Thailand border
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=83648 earlier this year.

Chan blamed doctors and patients. She said there were cases where patients
did not use the whole dose and in others, doctors under-prescribed the
medicines.

"If patients use only half a dose, there is the likelihood for the
parasites to mutate and develop resistance to drugs administered," she
said. "We must be very careful in handling and administration of
medicines," she added.

Financial crisis

Despite the confidence expressed by government officials, the NMPC is
worried that the global financial crisis might undermine the country's
efforts to wipe out malaria by 2015.

"When you have financial problems in countries like the United States,
which contribute heavily to the Global Fund and other anti-malaria
programmes, you cannot rule out adverse effects on our initiatives," Mwita
said.

"Eradication of malaria by 2015 is possible, but I can assure you it is a
tall order," he added.

Zanzibar success

In semi-autonomous Zanzibar, authorities said they were on target to
eliminate malaria by 2015.

"We have been recording admirable success in combating malaria in the
islands through multiple interventions. We have managed to reduce the
prevalence from 41 percent in 2001 to 0.4 percent this year," Zanzibar
Malaria Control Programme (ZMCP) manager, Abdullah Suleiman, told Chan.

However, he said, sustaining these achievements remained the biggest
challenge for Zanzibar, and availability of funds was critical in
sustaining the anti-malaria programme.

Tuesday, 25 August 2009

A Story

Imagine starting off feeling flushed. The fever gets worse; it doesn’t go away, you feel weak, you lose your appetite, so weak you can’t even move.

Then imagine falling unconscious, and then waking up in a hospital surrounded by other sick people and strangers and you don’t know what’s happened. You’re miles from home, and for the next two weeks you’ll not be able to see your friends or your family, you won’t be able to go to school, play on your video games or watch your favourite TV shows.

And then imagine your nearest hospital is 3 hours away from where you live and your only transport is a bicycle. Imagine this is all because of one mosquito which bit you while you were sleeping, something that could have been avoided but wasn’t because your family couldn’t afford a bed net.

This is the reality faced by millions of young people, the same age as you, across sub-Saharan Africa and many other parts of the world.

Let me tell you about a young person I met in a town called Ifakara in Tanzania. His name is Antony, a dedicated Chelsea football supporter who loves nothing more than to impersonate his hero Drogba on the pitch. Antony lives 2 hours away from the hospital and had what is diagnosed as severe malaria. One afternoon he was found unconscious having fallen ill from it. When I met him in the hospital we asked him if he has a bed net. To that he replied “no, where I live we don’t have mosquitoes.” When I heard this I was shocked and surprised, and asked him how does he think he got malaria if he lived in an area such as this. He said he didn’t know.

Monday, 24 August 2009

Women are the key.

This is an important extract I took from an article entitled The Women’s Crusade

WHY DO MICROFINANCE organizations usually focus their assistance on women? And why does everyone benefit when women enter the work force and bring home regular pay checks? One reason involves the dirty little secret of global poverty: some of the most wretched suffering is caused not just by low incomes but also by unwise spending by the poor — especially by men. Surprisingly frequently, we’ve come across a mother mourning a child who has just died of malaria for want of a $5 mosquito bed net; the mother says that the family couldn’t afford a bed net and she means it, but then we find the father at a nearby bar. He goes three evenings a week to the bar, spending $5 each week.

Sunday, 23 August 2009

My Personal Struggle

Islam for me is a beautiful religion and way of life and one of the strongest values that I draw from Islam is compassion. This value is what inspires me the most and I take this value with me in all that I do.

I work to alleviate poverty and Islam is what inspires me to do this. Allah says in the Quran in Chapter 5 verse 32, ‘He who saves a single life, it is as if he has saved all of mankind.’ This is a very important verse for me in that God is telling us in all His wisdom the value of saving a single life and that is not a Muslim life but A LIFE regardless of race, gender or religion. To save the life of a Christian, Jew, Hindu or Sikh is just as important as saving a Muslim life.

Being around my Faiths Act Fellow colleagues and friends we learn from each other’s common values and compassion is one value that is consistently and continually one that we share and arises in our discussions.

Every morning while in Tanzania the Fellows wake up before breakfast and have a brief morning reflection where we take turns leading the reflection and learn from each other and what in our faith inspires us to be on the road that we have chosen to travel along.

Pritpal my friend from Leeds in the UK is a Sikh girl and when it was her turn to lead the reflection she said one thing that really stuck out for me. She told us that “we are like birds, one wing is prayer and the other wing is service. It is only with both wings we can fly successfully”

When I discussed this with my good friend Amy we both agreed that often we as aid workers sometimes lean too much towards service and not enough towards prayer. I for one am extremely guilty for this and in many ways am writing this blog post as a reminder to myself to pray, take time out and remember why we do what we do and then to thank God for what we have and for what we have to give.

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