Total Pageviews

Monday, 24 November 2008

Madonna 'grateful' for workload


Madonna has said she is grateful her workload is distracting her from her divorce from film-maker Guy Ritchie.

"I'm sad about my personal life, but I feel very blessed and very lucky that I have the opportunity to do what I do in my professional life," she told AP.

She added: "It would be horrible if I was just thinking about getting a divorce and had nothing to do."

Madonna, 50, and Ritchie, 40, divorced in London last Friday after eight years of marriage.

Tour and movie

She is currently touring the US with her Sticky & Sweet concert, and has also produced a documentary I Am Because We Are, which is being released in cinemas on 1 December.

The film looks at the fight against Aids in Malawi, the home of her adopted son David Banda.

It has been reported that Madonna and Ritchie did not demand a financial settlement from each other. Madonna is thought to be worth some £300m, while Ritchie is believed to have £30m in assets.

The couple are also reported to have agreed to share custody of their two boys, eight-year-old Rocco, and three-year-old David, while Madonna's daughter from an earlier relationship, 12-year-old Lourdes, will stay with her.

Elections Get Ugly For Women

Malawi’s primary elections are getting ugly for women candidates. Shoving, derogatory songs and being pelted with stones are just some of the intimidating tactics aimed at discouraging women from contesting the primary elections that will select candidates for the parliamentary polls in May 2009.

Gertrude Nya Mkandawire, one of the strongest members of parliament (MP) for the ruling Democratic People’s Party (DPP), recently withdrew from the primaries in her Mzimba Solora constituency, in the north, where she was running against 10 men.

"I can’t take it anymore," Nya Mkandawire told IPS. "I have faced different kinds of intimidation from fellow contenders, who are all men."

Angry crowds sang demeaning songs and shoved her around at rallies. "They have been destroying my campaign materials, including flags and posters, in the night to discourage me from contesting," she added.

The last straw came when DPP committee members and primary delegates demanded money.

"They said I can only win the elections after I pay them some money and I didn’t find this proper," she told IPS.

The culture of handouts is common here during elections. Politicians distribute money, food and blankets to their constituents, claiming it is their way of sharing wealth.

Gender activist Veronica Njikho says the practice of freebies disadvantages women politicians because men already have an established financial capacity that women do not.

"Only 23 percent of women have an equal say as their partners in economic matters at home and they do not have the same financial muscle as their male counterparts when it comes to politics," Njikho said.

Women drop out

Njikho is a champion of the 50/50 Campaign, led by government and 42 civil society groups, to boost women’s participation in politics and decision-making positions.

The Campaign has condemned the intimidation and harassment of women candidates. Violence is marring some rallies for men candidates as well.

"There is a lot of political violence being reported from all corners of Malawi and this is discouraging a lot of women from participating in the elections," said Njikho.

The gender expert explained that most women do not want to be associated with or be victims of abuse: "Naturally, women are not violent people."

An unprecedented 425 women wanted to run for parliament at the onset of the 50/50 Campaign but only 200 persevered. "The rest dropped from the race mainly due to the harassment and intimidation," Njikho told IPS.

She fears that the growing reports of intimidation during the primaries will prompt more women to abandon politics.

The Campaign seeks to see women win at least half of the 193 seats in the national assembly, in keeping with the Southern African Development Community Protocol on Gender, signed in August, which mandates a 50 percent representation of women in government by 2015.

Malawi scores below the Sub-Saharan average of female representation in parliament, with women accounting for 14 per cent of its national assembly.

The biggest challenge for the Campaign, said Njikho, is the uneven political playing field. Men hold the top political positions, they support their fellow men and resist women candidates.

Leaders fail women

Lilian Patel, an MP and chair of the Malawi Parliamentary Women Caucus, blamed party leaders for these problems. Just like the DPP, the other main political parties -- the United Democratic Front (UDF) and the Malawi Congress Party (MCP) -- are headed by men.

"All political parties in the country have failed to put up deliberate efforts to ensure that women are propped up," said Patel, a UDF member.

On Nov. 13, a primary election in the lake district of Nkhatabay ended with a stampede, when DPP supporters started throwing stones after a dispute over eligible voters. Three women were contesting these primaries.

Meanwhile, Nya Mkandawire is not giving up on politics. She is considering running as an independent candidate or joining another party.

To discourage this choice, the DPP came up with a trick, she explained. DPP candidates collecting the nomination forms for the primaries had to sign a declaration that, in the event of losing, they would support the winners, and not run as independents or join other parties.

"The declaration would have been fair if the elections were fair but, in this case, we have to look for other alternatives if we have to stay in politics," said Nya Mkandawire.

Dodging stones and insults is not an alternative she will consider. Respect and safety for all women candidates, that is what she wants.

Malawi’s Joy FM appeals to court reinstate licence

Malawi’s Joy FM radio, a station owned by former president Bakili Muluzi, has appealed to the Supreme Court following the second revocation of its broadcasting licence last week, APA learnt here Monday.

The Malawi Communications and Regulatory Authority (MACRA) revoked the radio’s licence over Muluzi’s ownership, which MACRA said was against the law.

According to the law, framed by Muluzi’s government when he was in power, politicians are not permitted to own broadcasting houses.

But Joy FM’s lawyer Ralph Kasambara said on Monday that he would like the court to reverse a decision it made last week lifting an injunction the radio placed on MACRA stopping it from revoking the licence.

The move should be effected so that the radio should be return to the on air while the court proceedings between MACRA and Joy are taking place, he said.

"We are yet to hear a date to be set by the Supreme Court and on Thursday the court will hear the station’s application for a stay order on ruling of vacation of an application," he said.

He added that the application to lift the injunction was heard before another judge and not the one who granted the injunction.

The practice is that the judge who hears an ex-parte should be the one to hear an inter-parte application. In this matter, there were different judges," he noted

The station is still off the air following last week’s ruling in favour of MACRA to revoke Joy FM’s licence.

Malawi BB Africa representative loses to Angola

Malawi’s representative to South Africa’s reality TV show, Big Brother Africa 3, Hazel Warren, narrowly lost to her fellow house mate Ricco Venancio from Angola after a tie broken by a percentage calculation.

The Angola took home US$100,000 for winning the three-month contest which had kept its fans gripped till the finale Sunday night in Johannesburg. Hazel took consolation prizes of a laptop, digital camera and a cellular phone.

This was the first time in the Big Brother Africa reality show that votes of the finalists reached a such dead-end after the voting countries were equally divided, and the calculation had to turn to the actual number of voters to get the overall percentage.

According to Multi-Choice Malawi Marketing Manager Titania Katenga Kaunda said despite a loss Hazel portrayed the image of a real African woman.

"She received support from African countries because of the behavior she showed while in the house," she said.

She added that Malawians were also happy that the Hazel was the only lady left in the house after all others were “evicted”.

Apart from Malawi and Angola, Ghana, Botswana, Namibia, Tanzania, Kenya, Tanzania, Zimbabwe, Zambia, South Africa and Nigeria had representatives in the house.

Hazel’s loss made front page headlines in two of Malawi’s mainly dailies of the The Nation and The Daily Times.

"Hazel!" simply said The Nation in bold letter across the entire pade and the Times responded with "Hard Luck!" as its deadline.

Malawi ratifies global ban on nuclear blasts

VIENNA, Austria: Malawi has become the 147th nation to ratify a global ban on nuclear explosions.

The Vienna-based organization that administers the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty says the African nation ratified the pact Friday after signing it in October 1996.

The organization's chief, Tibor Toth, said Monday that he welcomed Malawi's ratification.

The treaty has been signed by 180 countries but will not enter into force until 44 states that participated in a 1996 disarmament conference, and had nuclear power or research reactors at the time, both sign and ratify it. To date, only 35 have done so.

The holdouts are China, Egypt, India, Indonesia, Iran, Israel, North Korea, Pakistan and the U.S.

Couple tees up shipment to new Malawi hospital

Sonia and Merv Michalyshen are travelling to the African nation of Malawi to make dreams come true.

They are volunteers with International Hope Canada, a Winnipeg-based volunteer organization that collects and sends redundant but usable medical supplies to developing countries. The retired couple has spent much of 2008 arranging for a 40-foot shipping container full of medical supplies to be shipped to the extremely poor nation. The supplies will be used to help Katete Hospital, a new medical facility that deals with HIV, AIDS-related illnesses and a high infant mortality rate.

Several years ago while volunteering in Malawi, Sonia, a retired nurse, and Merv, a teacher, met Sister Florence Msowoya. Earlier this year, the nun and charge nurse wrote to the couple with a simple plea for help. She's getting more than she asked for.

The huge shipping container, packed by volunteers and shipped earlier this month, contains more than 1,100 items, including an operating-room table, hospital beds, wheelchairs and more than 800 boxes of medical supplies.

Though International Hope usually partners with other organizations to cover the cost of the supplies they ship, the Michalyshens made Project Malawi their personal mission. Hitting up friends, family members, businesses and fellow parishioners at their church, they raised the $17,000 it cost to send the huge container overseas. In mid-January, Sonia and Merv will travel to Malawi to personally accept delivery of the container and help set up the hospital with its contents.

"It's just exciting to think that these people are going to open up this container and everything that comes off there, they don't have," said Sonia, who helped found International Hope Canada.

The last thing they packed into the container was a huge International Hope Canada sign, Merv said.

"When the doors open, that's the first thing they'll see and we're going to make sure that Sister Florence is going to be the first one," he said. "I want to see Sister Florence's face when we open up that container."

The supplies shipped to Malawi, which were donated by hospitals and medical-care facilities, are outdated in Canada but extremely valuable and much needed in Malawi.

Church puts its back into sending packs to Malawi

A CHURCH has been collecting school backpacks to send to children in Malawi.

Bishop Brian Smith helped to check the backpacks collected by members of St Mary's Episcopal Church at Dalmahoy, as part of the national Mary's Meals campaign.

Last year the charity provided money to build a school kitchen at Dole Primary School in Malawi, where local volunteers can cook meals for all of the children.

This year the group will be sending over the backpacks, which contain basic school materials, clothes and other items.

The Reverend Deryck Collingwood, rector of St Mary's, said: "Last year St Mary's gave sufficient funds to feed the school's 650 pupils. Many of these would have missed out on education, because they had to work in the fields or earn money to buy food.

"Many are AIDS orphans and all are very poor. Often the backpack will be the only present they have ever received."

Malawi’s Joy FM appeals to court reinstate licence

Malawi’s Joy FM radio, a station owned by former president Bakili Muluzi, has appealed to the Supreme Court following the second revocation of its broadcasting licence last week, APA learnt here Monday.

The Malawi Communications and Regulatory Authority (MACRA) revoked the radio’s licence over Muluzi’s ownership, which MACRA said was against the law.

According to the law, framed by Muluzi’s government when he was in power, politicians are not permitted to own broadcasting houses.

But Joy FM’s lawyer Ralph Kasambara said on Monday that he would like the court to reverse a decision it made last week lifting an injunction the radio placed on MACRA stopping it from revoking the licence.

The move should be effected so that the radio should be return to the on air while the court proceedings between MACRA and Joy are taking place, he said.

"We are yet to hear a date to be set by the Supreme Court and on Thursday the court will hear the station’s application for a stay order on ruling of vacation of an application," he said.

He added that the application to lift the injunction was heard before another judge and not the one who granted the injunction.

The practice is that the judge who hears an ex-parte should be the one to hear an inter-parte application. In this matter, there were different judges," he noted

The station is still off the air following last week’s ruling in favour of MACRA to revoke Joy FM’s licence.