Saturday, 9 March 2013

Poverty and child hunger in America

 by Farooq Kperogi
As I was writing my column for this week on economic inequalities in the United States, I came across this intriguing BBC story about poverty and child hunger in the United States and couldn’t help but share it with my readers.  In more ways than I could have done, it graphically illustrates America’s paradox of want amid plenty. What follows is the abridged version of BBC’s Duncan Walkers’ “The children going hungry in America,” which was published on March 6, 2013. The full version can be found here: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-21636723#story_continues_2.
Child poverty in the US has reached record levels, with almost 17 million children now affected. A growing number are also going hungry on a daily basis.
Food is never far from the thoughts of 10-year-old Kaylie Haywood and her older brother Tyler, 12. At a food bank in Stockton, Iowa, they are arguing with their mother over the 15 items they are allowed to take with them. There is little money to go shopping for extras.
Apple sauce is in, canned vegetables, tinned spaghetti, meatballs and ravioli might be.
But when Kaylie asks for ground beef, she is overruled as their motel room does not have a fridge to keep things fresh - just a sink filled with crushed ice. There’s nowhere to cook, either.
It’s not the first time that the family has struggled to get hold of the food they would like - or enough of it.
“We don’t get three meals a day like breakfast, lunch and then dinner,” says Kaylie. “When I feel hungry I feel sad and droopy.”
Kaylie and Tyler live with their mother Barbara, who used to work in a factory. After losing her job, she was entitled to unemployment benefit and food stamps - this comes to $1,480 (about N234,000) a month.
But they were no longer able afford to live in their house, which along with bills cost $1326 (about N210,000) a month, leaving little for food or petrol.
Kaylie supplemented their income by collecting cans along the railway track near their old home - earning between two and five cents per can.
Tyler also helped out: “For mowing other people’s lawns, I got $10 [about N1600) and I put in six of it for the gas, and gave the rest to my mum for some food.”
Instead of shopping at the mall, Kaylie’s clothes come from the Salvation Army shop where, to her embarrassment, 60-cent shirts are allowed, but those costing $2 are “too much”.
Rent on the motel room is around $700 (about N110,000) a month, but trying to balance the budget has meant sacrifices.
Tyler says there are good days and bad days: “Sometimes when we have cereal we don’t have milk - we have to eat it dry. Sometimes we don’t have cereal and we have milk. Sometimes when there’s a cooking show on I get a little more hungry - I want to vanish into the screen and start eating the food.”
The family are among the 47 million Americans now thought to depend on food banks. One in five children receives food aid.
In the area where Kaylie and Tyler live, one provider - River Bend Foodbank - has seen the numbers needing help rise sharply.
“It’s changed dramatically since the recession. We’re up about 30% to 40% in terms of the number of people coming forward,” says Caren Laughlin, who has worked with food banks for 30 years.
“That’s not only because so many people have lost their jobs, it’s also because the jobs that are replacing them are low paying. You cannot feed a family.”
Although Kaylie, Tyler and Barbara’s motel room is away from the children’s friends and very cramped for three people, the move has made their lives easier in some ways.
The children’s father is not around and, although her grandmother lives nearby and helps out when she can, her mother has found it difficult to cope.
“I’ve never seen it this bad. To get jobs it’s very hard,” says Barbara.
She is training to become a hairdresser, but does not hold much hope for the future.
“I seen a doctor... for depression. She put me on some anti depressants and Xanax for my panic attacks. I don’t even know if I can find a job when I get out of school. Or if it will ever get any better.”
In February, President Barack Obama used his State of the Union address to promise a rise in the minimum wage, to $9 (about N1440) an hour.
“This single step would raise the incomes of millions of working families. It could mean the difference between groceries or the food bank; rent or eviction; scraping by or finally getting ahead,” he said.
But families like Barbara’s, where parents have suddenly lost their jobs and children are going hungry, continue to concern food banks.
The problems are reflected across America, says the nationwide charity Feeding America, which operates 200 food banks and feeds 37 million people each year, including 14 million children.
It says that, in total, nearly 17 million US children live in homes where getting enough healthy food is not something they can count on.
For some families, cheap and easy to prepare food can mean unhealthy choices like pizza - increasing the likelihood of obesity and health problems later in life.
In many areas schools take part in a “backpack” programme, set up to deliver food parcels to the most vulnerable on a Friday - so that they have enough to eat over the weekend.
In eastern Iowa and western Illinois, the River Bend Foodbank now helps 1,500 children in 30 schools through one such scheme.
“Kids can focus better and pay attention better,” says Mrs Laughlin. “If you’re worried about what you’re going to eat when you get home that’s what you’re going to be thinking about - not what’s on the blackboard.”
WeeklyTrust

Boko Haram: Afenifere, ACF disagree on Jonathan’s refusal to grant amnesty

By

jonathan arrival in bornoThe pan-Yoruba group, Afenifere, has commended President Goodluck Jonathan’s decision of refusing to grant amnesty to the Islamic sect, Boko Haram.
A chieftain of the group, Ayo Adebanjo, said that the President’s stand on the matter was commendable.
He was reacting to the call by the Sultan of Sokoto, Alhaji Sa’ad Abubakar lll, that the Federal Government should grant “total amnesty” to all the armed groups operating in Nigeria, including Boko Haram.
The Sultan gave the advise in Kaduna at the annual meeting of the Central Council of the organisation.
DailyPost had reported that the President , during his official visit to Yobe State on Thursday, said he was not ready and willing to grant amnesty to ghosts.
Adebanjo said, “What the President said made sense; how can you grant amnesty to people who you don’t know, people who don’t have a face? What the President said was common sense. They have not come forward to state what they are fighting for.”
He said, it was wrong for anyone to compare the Boko Haram elements with Niger Delta militants, who enjoyed amnesty.
Another Afenifere leader, Pa Reuben Fasoranti, said there was no way the Federal Government would grant amnesty to faceless criminals.
He said, “President Jonathan’s position is most acceptable and commendable. There is no way government could negotiate with faceless criminals.
“It had happened in other countries and it fizzled out. These criminals cannot sustain their lawlessness for too long. They will soon be tired and fizzle out of existence.”
Meanwhile, the Arewa Consultative Forum said it supports the Sultan’s request.
It said that the suggestion was a way of encouraging the sect leaders to come out for dialogue and negotiation.
Its National Publicity Secretary, Anthony Sani said, “When you ask ACF to react to the Sultan’s suggestion for general amnesty and the President’s saying that there cannot be a dialogue and amnesty for a faceless group, I wonder what you want me to say.
“I do not think the Sultan meant amnesty without conditions. And because the leaders of Boko Haram may be afraid to show themselves for a dialogue, the Sultan may be suggesting an offer of amnesty in the hope of encouraging them to come out for the dialogue without fear for their lives.
“That is to say, the Sultan may be saying in his own way that the government needs to go beyond rhetoric and do something practical in order to make the leaders of the sect show their faces.
“Mr. President may be right when he said the government could not have a dialogue with a faceless group. Yet, he cannot say it is not the responsibility of the government to find a way of bringing leaders of the sect into the negotiation table, however difficult.”
DailyPost

We Must Make Nigeria Stronger And United – Former President, Shagari


In a move  to ensure unity and progress of the country, former President Shehu Shagari has called on Nigerians to work towards moving Nigeria forward.
photoThe nation’s statesmen spoke in Shagari town on Friday when Minister of Health, Prof. Onyebuchi Chukwu paid him a courtesy visit.
President Shagari observed that Nigeria, which is a great nation that provides leadership to other sister African countries, must be made stronger and its people united.
“We must all work towards making the nation a strong and united country irrespective of our diverse religious, ethnic and cultural differences,” he said.
Shagari commended Governor Aliyu Wamakko for transforming the state in all sectors. “We are happy and we must show appreciation for upgrading the Shagari Primary Healthcare to the status of a general hospital.”
On his part, the Minister said that Shagari, “apart from being a father and a revered leader in Nigeria, is also humble, incorruptible and disciplined. These are some of the lessons we must all learn from leaders like him for Nigeria to develop further,” he added.
Earlier, Governor Wamakko told the former President that the Minister’s visit was aimed at “showing respect to him as a leader who was still contributing meaningfully to national development.”
Naij.com

Middle Belt Youth Forum condemns call for amnesty for Boko Haram


The Middle Belt Youth Forum has noted with keen interest, the series of unfortunate utterances, campaigns and propaganda by some notable Northern leaders, including traditional and religious leaders who have continued to insist that members of the murderous islamic sect called Boko Haram be granted amnesty by the federal government.
One of such is the recent call by the Sultan of Sokoto, Alhaji Abubakar Sa,ad III. At the opening ceremony of the annual general meeting of the JNI in Kaduna, the Sultan was widely reported by the media to have urged President Goodluck Jonathan to “immediately grant amnesty to all members of Boko Haram…” as a pre-condition for peace in Nigeria.
We view this call by the Sultan as very unfortunate, outrageous and particularly insensitive to the plight and sensibilities of the numerous families of the victims of Boko haram’s atrocities; where thousands of innocent, defenseless and law-abiding people have been maimed or brutally massacred with utmost barbarism, and their homes, businesses and places of worship destroyed by the Islamic terrorist sect with impunity.
For the avoidance of doubt we wish to categorically state the following:
1. That we are not in anyway surprised by the Sultan’s call for amnesty. Judging from the consistent pressure mounted on President Goodluck Jonathan by some Northern cabal to either frustrate any attempt to label boko haram as a terrorist organization, or to force government to negotiate with them, compensate them or grant them outright amnesty. These agitations has always given us a clue as to who the sponsors of these terror groups are, otherwise how could anyone begin to call for ” immediate amnesty” for a group that has maimed and killed thousands of people, particularly Middle Belters and southerners resident in the North and doing their legitimate businesses for no just cause, with property worth billions of naira destroyed.
If it is true that the sultan actually demanded for immediate amnesty for the Boko Haram Islamic sect as was widely reported in the media, then it is now clear that the chicken has now come home to roost.
2. That the Sultan and other notable Northern leaders have continued to claim that Boko haram insurgency is a result of poverty and injustice is unacceptable excuse. The question here is, who is perpetrating the injustice? And against who? In any case, if at all there is injustice anywhere, then it is Boko haram and their sponsors that are unjustly killing and maiming innocent and defenseless people, destroying their homes, businesses and bombing them in their places of worship.
Again, talking about poverty, who made the North poor if we may ask? Is it president Goodluck Jonathan, southerners or Christians? Truth is, none of these! Sadly to note however, that the poverty in the North is caused by the Northerners themselves! If Northern leaders where truly passionate and committed to the cause and development of the North, poverty in the region would have been a thing of the past.
On the contrary however, since independence, the North has held more unto Power than the south, yet the region has remained poorer and less developed compared to the South.
Also, the startling revelations by Senator Ita Enang on the floor of the Senate during the debate on the PIB Bill exposed the insensitivity, hypocrisy and irresponsibility of Northern Leaders. Is it not a shame to discover that Northerners have cornered a whooping 83% of the oil wells of this country, yet no programs, scholarships or other efforts that are put in place to improve on the plight of the Northern masses. Except Gen. T.Y. Danjuma who has put in place a foundation for charity and has been involved in the development of education in Nigeria. It is sad to note that instead of applying their ill-gotten wealth to develop the North these selfish, thieving Northern leaders stash their wealth abroad and come back to apportion blames, blackmail government, brainwash and incite the poor masses whom they have left illiterate and in abject poverty to begin to kill and maim perceived enemies.
3. The Sultan must know that the North has been gravely wounded by the activities of these Islamic extremists, people are still counting their dead and treating their wounds. Time is running out and all the conspiracy theories will soon fail. The present North has got irreparable cracks that may be impossible to mend. It will be difficult for the middle belt to trust the core North any again. We call on the Sultan to expend his energy and use his exalted office to champion the cause of peace, justice and equity and fair play for all, irrespective region or religion.
4. We wish to commend Mr. President for rejecting amnesty for the faceless Boko Haram Islamic terror group and urged him to be firm and decisive in bringing an end to the murderous activities of the group.
The President must not give in to pressures or blackmail by some people including the sultan of sokoto and some Northern governors who have always explicitly or implicitly expressed sympathy or outright support for this group that has killed well over 5000 people in the last three years.
Lastly, it is our resolve to continue to sound it loud and clear that Nigeria remains a secular state with diverse cultures, tribes and religions that can only peacefully coexist through mutual respect and upholding the constitution of the land. We will resist any attempt by any group or individuals to do anything to the contrary. Enough of the impunity! Enough of the rascality! Enough of the conspiracy! Enough is enough.
Signed:
Hon. Jonathan Asake
National Youth Leader, Middle Belt Youth Forum.
DailyPost

Nani’s Red Card Was Correct, Referee Insists


Cuneyt-Cakir-130305-NaniRedCard-AI-300The referee who controversially sent-off Manchester United winger Nani in their 2-1 defeat to Real Madrid on Tuesday, has stood firm by his decision saying he made the right call.
Cuneyt Cakir showed the Portuguese international the red card for a foul on Alvaro Arbeloa 11 minutes into the second-half with United 1-0 up on the night and leading 2-1 on aggregate.
However, two goals in 13 minutes after the incident changed the tide decisively in Madrid’s favour and left United boss Sir Alex Ferguson and many of his players fuming at the final whistle.
“I feel fine and don’t doubt my decisions,” the Turkish official told Spanish sports daily AS.
“The red card shown to Nani was correct. The world will recognise the truth with time.”
The official who said he has received even more harsh criticisms in the past over his decisions on the field of play, said, “I can do so again. I try to do my job correctly and I am doing well. I need to continue like this. I do my job perfectly.”
InformationNigeria

New Pope Survey Finds U.S. Catholics Think Church Is Out Of Touch, Must Change Course


New Pope Survey
Pope Benedict XVI attends his final general audience in St. Peter's Square on February 27, 2013 at the Vatican. In a new Quinnipiac University survey, a majority American Catholics say they approved of Benedict, but want a new direction for the church under its next leader. (Photo by Franco Origlia/Getty Images)
As Catholic cardinals gather at the Vatican to set priorities for the church and elect a new pope, a recent Quinnipiac University survey indicates that a slim majority of American Catholics say their church is moving in the right direction yet out of touch with its members.
“Looking at all adult Catholics ... we see a conflicted group," said Peter Brown, assistant director of the Quinnipiac University Polling Institute. "A slim majority say the church is moving in the right direction while slim majorities say church leaders are out of touch with their views and the next pope should change directions."
The survey, released Friday, found that 52 percent of Catholics said the church is moving in the right direction, but 52 percent also said it was out of touch with American Catholics. Fifty-five percent said the next pope should move the church in new directions. At the same time, the poll found that 58 percent of American Catholics hold a favorable view of Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI, who stepped down at the end of February, and that 16 percent saw him "very favorably."
Majorities of Catholic Americans believe the church needs to change its stance on several controversial issues, including its ban on contraception (64 percent), marriage among priests (62 percent) and the ordination of women (62 percent), the survey found.
In addition to those issues, cardinals are likely to examine how the church should address sex abuse by clergy, increasing secularization and changing views on sexuality and same-sex marriage in many nations.
As controversy continues to surrounded newly uncovered cases of sexual abuse by priests, 81 percent of U.S. Catholics told Quinnipiac that the next pope needs to do more to combat sexual abuse. That result is five points lower than the percentage of respondents who gave a similar answer in 2005, before Benedict became pope.
Brown also noted that Catholic voters are the leading demographic in support of same-sex marriage, despite the church's strong stance against it. In the survey, about 54 percent of Catholic voters said they supported same-sex marriage, compared to 47 percent of the broader American population.
At least two Americans, Cardinal Timothy Dolan of New York and Cardinal Sean O'Malley of Boston, are rumored to be distant candidates for the papacy, but under half of Catholics surveyed (42 percent) said they wanted an American pope. (An earlier HuffPost/YouGov poll also found that 24 percent of U.S. Catholics want an American pope.) At the same time, less than a third (29 percent) said they desired a pope from "a developing region like South America or Asia." Forty-four percent of respondents said they did not want a pope from those areas.
The poll of Catholics, conducted between February 27 and March 4, surveyed 497 people. The margin of error was 4.4 percent. The broader question about same-sex marriage was asked of 1,944 registered voters with a margin of error of 2.2 percent.
As the cardinals inch closer to the conclave, the closed-door set of votes to determine the new pope, Quinnipiac is the latest of several organizations to survey Catholics about the church.
A survey released Wednesday by the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life found that American Catholics see sex abuse by clergy as the church's biggest problem, as did another survey released the same day from The New York Times and CBS News.
A recent Washington Post/ABC poll found that just over half of Americans and almost two in three American Catholics approved of Benedict's performance. Those figures are lower than approval ratings for his predecessor, John Paul II. News organizations surveyed Americans in 2004 and found that 67 percent approved of John Paul II then, including 87 percent of American Catholics.
HuffingtonPost

Traders accuse government of burning Ketu Market


Disaster struck Thursday night, as fire razed down the entire Ifelodun Plank Market located at Ketu, Lagos. No life was, however, lost. The fire was said to have started hours after the market had closed for the day. The fire, which started about 9pm, was said to have spread quickly throughout the market, threatening surrounding residential buildings. This happened before the fire servicepersonnel got to the scene. It is not clear as to what could have caused the outbreak. According to an eyewitness and a resident who identified himself as Ganiu Banire: “The fire started at about9pm. We tried to help out, but the market was under lock and key.
Even when the firefighters arrived, they had to forcefully break down the door as the security men mysteriously disappeared. The fire raged till about 5am when it was contained by the firefighters.” Meanwhile, the chairman of Ifelodun Plank Market Association, Alhaji Aliyu Bello, lamented that the mystery behind the fire could be traced to an age-long tussle between the traders and the local government. “The fire started around 9.30pm. We rushed down here but it was so much that the fire service could not gain entry to the area on time. The way it escalated makes the fire suspicious. I am not surprised that this happened because there has been a tussle on the ownership of the land between the local government and we the traders for some years now.”
Weeping profusely, one of the shop owners, who identified himself as Salami, lamented thathe was still recovering from a similar disaster that happened two years ago. “I lost everythingin 2010 and government did nothing to help us. I had no choice but to borrow from the bank to continue my business and I’m yet to offset my bill. The local government has tried severally to take control of this market but we refused. They have succeeded because they are aware that most of us do nothave Certificates of Occupany. I am finished,” he sobbed. On what could have caused the fire, Salami alleged that it would not be put beyond the government, saying that government must have conspired with the securitymen to set the market on fire. “They were supposed to be around, but on this very day, they were nowhere to be found. It was planned.”
Narrating his ordeal, Ismail Aliu, who sells building materials at the market, said: “I was at home when I received a call that the market was on fire. I thought it was a part of the market that was on fire, but when I got here, I found out that it affected all theshops and there was no way we could get our goods out becausethe place was under lock and key.” Also accusing government,the Chief Imam of Ifelodun Central Mosque, said Agboyi Ketu LCDA is a suspect in this matter. According to him, the local government had approached the traders, informing them of its intention tore-model the market, but the traders refused. “Now they haveburnt down the market so that they will do it by force and sell the market,” he said.
The mosque was also burnt. He, however, maintained that the traders would resist governmenttake-over of the market. Anotherresident, who identified himself as Peter Agbor, also blamed the government for the inferno. “Why is it that in Lagos State any that market gets burnt, whatwe see next is the government taking over the market? It is a question we should ask ourselves? People are suffering. Iknow some people that have more than eight shops here. What is their fate now? I repeat, why is it that markets in Lagos State get burnt and the next thing we see is the government taking over the market and start selling per-square metre at N200,000 like what happened in Tejuosho market? The question is, is this not planned, because when the fire broke out, the security men were nowhere to be found?”
Meanwhile, the Commissioner for Special Duties, Dr Wale Ahmed, who visited the scene, said that the site would be cordoned off to prevent collateral damage or secondary problem and prevent people from endangering their lives. DrWale, who stated this while addressing the marketers, also promised that government would return the land to those who can produce documents of rightful ownership. “There is no discussion on demolition or anything at the moment. The main concern is to put out the fire. It would be cordoned off, fumigated, graded and levelled. What would happen to the site isnot an issue for now; we are justconcerned about putting the sitein order for now. “We have instituted a lot of regime of fire safety but sometimes, no matterwhat precaution we put in place,accidents still happen.
We still don’t know what caused this fire. That would be revealed in the investigation we would carry out,” he promised. Directorof Lagos State Fire Service, Mr. Rasak Fadipe, told reporters thatit was their timely intervention that prevented the fire from spreading to residential buildings. “We got there few minutes after the fire started and you know the rate at which planks burn. When we arrived there, we discovered that the fire was seriously raging. I immediately dispatched two vehicles, which they told me were not enough. I then sent another three to help out. “I had to bring vehicles from other stations to complement the efforts of the ones that were on ground. The challenge we met here made it impossible for our men to reduce the extent of damage. My men were manhandled by people who werestruggling that their own axis beattended to first. It was the timely intervention of our men that stopped the fire from spreading to residential buildings.” It could be recalled that the market witnessed a nasty fire outbreak in August 2010.
 BusinessNews