A Christian Science perspective.
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Jerusalem, Israel Arieh O’Sullivan – Israel’s Cabinet is expected to decide to build a massive detention facility to house some of the 10,000 African migrants who have flooded into the country.
The discussion is set for Sunday and the Prime Minister’s office said the facility was part of a multi-pronged effort to end the wave of Africans–some fleeing war, others in search of jobs–infiltrating into the country.
The session comes a week after Israel began construction of a formidable barrier along parts of the 250-kilometer-long (160-mile) border with the Egyptian Sinai and signals a firm attempt by the government to tread where no other Israeli government has done before in addressing the flood of Africans entering the country illegally.
“For the first time, we are working to formulate a comprehensive migration policy that will be anchored in Knesset legislation,” Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in a statement.
“The phenomenon of infiltrators into Israel endangers the Jewish and democratic character of the state of Israel and burdens its social welfare services, health system, law enforcement authorities and local councils,” Netanyahu said.
A statement from the Prime Minister’s office said the goal was to reduce the economic incentives for infiltrators to come to Israel and thus reduce the flow into the country.
But, with a short term internment followed by a chance to earn enormous wages by African standards, it isn’t clear if the goal is achievable.
Israel’s Interior Minister Eli Yishai, head of the ultra-Orthodox Shas party, was one of the major proponents of preventing non-Jews from illegally entering the country in order to save Israel from what he called a “natural disaster.”
Reacting to criticism of his fear-mongering policies, Yishai said last week that the reality in some parts of the country has become intolerable.
“I urge those who think I have horns to visit the poor neighborhoods of southern Tel Aviv, neighborhoods that have been swarmed by infiltrators and are collapsing, places where women, children and the elderly are afraid to go out at night … I’d like to send 30 or 40 infiltrators to their neighborhoods and hear what they have to say afterwards,” he said.
“I am more sensitive and more merciful than all those who speak against me,” Yishai added. “If we don’t practice a clear, tough and decisive policy, in 20 or 30 years, the country will be overrun by infiltrators harming the demographic character of the country.”
The exact number of Africa migrants is not known. Estimates put it at about 31,000 with over half coming from Eritrea, 30 percent from Sudan and the remainder from across the continent.
A statement from the Prime Minister’s office said the proposed center would be “open” and will provide inmates with basic needs such as lodging, food, drink and health care.
Once a decision was reached, it was expected be operational within six months. The camp would house those caught attempting to slip into the country and not for the tens of thousand already inside.
Last year, there was a sharp increase in the number of infiltrators, with further increases in recent months. In 2009, an average of approximately 300 infiltrators entered Israel every month. The monthly average for 2010 currently stands at approximately 1,200, with almost 1,300 in November so far, the prime minister’s office said.
But military commanders said they saw even larger numbers. Lt. Col. Nir Harpaz, commander of a battalion patrolling the border, told The Media Line his soldiers on the lookout for armed terrorists were putting themselves in danger when confronting the bands of infiltrators.
“You don’t open fire at these guys. You don’t shoot them. That is forbidden. It’s true that they are violating Israel’s sovereignty and crossing over but you aren’t going to be shooting at someone who is only coming to look for a job,” Harpaz said.
“The problem is that terrorists have tried to hitch a ride on these foreigners. They come in 20-30, two terrorists can be disguised in this group and then try to attack themselves on my soldiers,” Harpaz said. “They understand that if they are caught they will be put in a detention center where it will be crowded but after a month they will get released and then they’ll find a job. The government has to solve this.”
After a short detention, the illegal aliens, most of them fleeing forced conscription in Eritrea, or the war in Sudan, are dumped in the streets of Tel Aviv where they live in shelters or eke out a living doing menial labor. Refugees speak of harrowing journeys on their way to Israel. They pay about $2,000 to Bedouin guides to sneak them over the border.
Israel has already issued instructions to its Population, Immigration and Borders Authority (PIBA) to start cracking down on Israelis who hire the illegal migrants. PIBA officials have reportedly balked at carrying out the orders until a facility providing basic needs to the Africans was available.
According to the proposal, the establishment of the center will facilitate enforcement against those who employ infiltrators without work permits. Israel was also seeking ways to rid the country of the tens of thousands of illegal African workers, including talks with other countries who would agree to take them.
Yohannes Bayu, himself a recognized political refugee from Ethiopia, has set up the African Refugee Development Center to help the refugees. He urged the government to set up a proper procedure to decide who is a political refugee and who was just looking for work. He said the fence would not solve the issue.
“Even if there will be a fence out there and someone’s life is in danger outside of their borders Israel has to protect those people. Those who are asking for asylum are saying ‘save me. I am dying.’ Even if there is a wall there has to be a mechanism to let these people be saved. That is what international law says,” Bayu told The Media Line.
Attorney Anat Ben-Dor, director of the Refugee Rights Clinic at Tel Aviv University, said that because of its history, Israel is obligated to extend its hand to help the refugees.
“I think Israel as a Jewish country has a heritage and maybe some sort of a duty, derived straight from Jewish values to provide sanctuary to people who flee persecution. And I would like this country to fulfill its role as a Jewish and as a democratic state and be a safe haven to people who suffer persecution,” Ben-Dor told The Media Line.
The flood of Africans began as a trickle in 2005 and were mainly refugees fleeing the war in Darfur, Sudan. The previous prime minister, Ehud Olmert, agreed after years of indecision to grant political asylum to about 500 refugees. But the government has been stingy ever since with only a few individuals being given asylum status despite over 20,000 requests.
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Mogadishu, Somalia (AHN) – Al Shabaab, the al Qaeda-inspired terror group in the horn of Africa, called on Somali mothers to take part in what they described as a holy war against African Christians and the United Nations-backed government.
Al Shebaab Banadir region chairman Sheikh Ali Mohammed Hussein, held a meeting with Somali women in Mogadishu, telling them to participate the fighting by buying AK-47 rifles for their children. He said the combat is coming close to an end, spelling out that the militants were ready to uproot the African Union peacekeepers.
“At this time, Somali Mothers must help the Mujahedeen to facilitate deracinating and eliminating black infidels as soon as possible” Hussein stressed. “Old women should buy the different arms to their children to join to the holly fight against AMISOM forces and government troops in Mogadishu.”
It is not the first time al Shabaab has pushed civilians to buy arms for their ongoing struggle. In late September, three businessmen were arrested by an Islamic insurgent group in southern Somalia in connection with tobacco trading. Al Shabaab Gedo region chairman Sheikh Bishar Adam Hassan, said the businessmen were seized in Bardhere, while they were trying to smuggle tobacco in a car.
“The Islamic court of Al Shabaab in Gedo region sentenced these three businessmen to buy three AK-47 rifles with [ammunition] magazines,” Hassan told reporters.
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London, Great Britain, United Kingdom (AHN) – An article in The Lancet journal by a team of international researchers examines efforts to eradicate malaria worldwide over the past 150 years and outlines some of the remaining financial, technical and operational challenges that malaria-eliminating countries still face.
If not treated, malaria can quickly become a life-threatening disease.
The researchers found that some areas, including sub-Saharan Africa, might not have a chance of wiping out the disease, but Latin America might succeed. Researchers say that 32 of the 99 countries that have malaria are making progress toward eradicating it. In addition, the deadliest form of the disease, caused by the Plasmodium parasite, could be eliminated if transmission of the disease could be reduced by 90 percent of the 2007 rates of infection within 10 to 15 years.
Countries with better developed economies have the best chance of eliminating the disease, the article asserts. Those countries include the Dominican Republic, Saudi Arabia, Brazil and Iran, as well as Honduras, Djibouti and Botswana. However, poor countries in Asia and sub-Saharan Africa that have weak health care systems to begin with have a poorer chance of eradicating malaria, researchers found.
In 2008, an estimated 190 to 311 million people contracted malaria around the world and 708,000 to 1,003,000 people died. Most of the deaths were in sub-Saharan Africa among young children, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
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Mogadishu, Somalia (AHN) – As fighting continues in Mogadishu, a new influx of people who escaped the city’s deadly battles have reached the refugee camps of Elasha Biyaha and Lafoole just outside the capital city, where an estimated 2 million internally displaced Somalis live.
Lorries and minibuses loaded with furniture, utensils and children have been seen on the main roads heading out of Mogadishu after days of fighting and deadly artillery shelling in the residential neighborhoods.
Asha Abdi and her five children were taking refuge under a big tree at the Lafoole IDP camp near the town of Afgoye, about 19 miles southwest of Mogadishu.
“Fortunately, we reached here safe. But we left our belongings in home back of Mogadishu,” she told All Headline News.
Looking haggard and tired along with her five children, Abdi said her husband was killed by Ethiopian troops in 2007.
“We depend on our new neighbors’ help,” Abdi said, with tears gushing from her eyes. “We have nothing; we are calling on international relief agencies and rich, generous Somalis to assist us as soon as possible.”
Her call comes as the Al Queda-linked group Al Shabaab has banned more than 20 international aid agencies from operating southern and central Somalia.
Last month, Al Shabaab ordered three international aid agencies–World Vision, Adventist Development and Relief Agency and Diakonia–to stop serving in Somalia, claiming they are “actively propagating Christianity” in the Horn of Africa country. Other aid organizations were warned against undertaking their work.
However, Abdi is not alone in her plight. Almost 23,000 civilians have fled from the restive Somali capital since the escalation in violence broke out late August between Islamist fighters and Somali government forces backed by African Union peacekeepers, according the United Nations High Commissioner For Refugees.
Almost 2 million people have been at the Elasha camps for the past three years. They all fled after an Islamist-led insurgency against Ethiopia that started in 2007.
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A grant is money given to an individual or an organization that does not hold an obligation of repayment. In that respect, it differs from a loan. Grants cannot incur any debts or interest. This money can be given out by foundations and governments. Grants to individuals can be either scholarships or donations to non-profit organizations. Other grants include intergovernmental grants, which are used to correct fiscal imbalances between different levels of government. Many federations use these grants to correct imbalances between taxing and spending across different levels of government. Examples include the US, Australia and Kenya.
It is not uncommon for seeking a grant for research, post graduate work or developing a product. Today, there are many organizations that give grants for studying or other work.
How can one receive grants? An application has to be written at first. This application will list all the necessary details and the reasoned why the applicant is taking that particular grant. In the US, one can go the government’s grant website for more information and application details. In Canada, HRSDC provide a lot of details.
Student grants are the most common forms. In this form of funding, an extremely talented student is funded through his education by a government of a nation or other agencies. The grant is usually permanent meaning that the student need not return it. These sorts of grants are useful and have made many men into successful people in society.
Research oriented grants are usually awarded to brilliant scientists, post graduate students or any other professional looking for the all round improvement of something. These grants are usually given by Non governmental agencies.
In the United States Federal grants are economic aid issued by the government out of the general funds for many things including research of new technology, scientific advancement and helping states. The federal grants include categories. Project grants are awarded competitively. Project grants are the most common form of grant and a large number are found in education. As Federal Pell Grants), social services, the arts and.
In many countries, small businesses are given incentives to start through grants. Good amount of funding is provided to entrepreneurs to bring their ideas out into the open. One such country is the US. More than billions of dollars are spent every year promoting this kind of funding.
Today however, the United Nations organization, has started giving out a lot of grants. They give money for purposes starting from agricultural development to wiping out different viral and dangerous diseases and taking care of children. Most of the UN grants however are directed to places like Africa, Palestine and other war torn areas.
In the medieval times, Kings used to give grants. These grants were in the form of gifts like land, money, territories or animals. A lot of our ideas for grants originate from here. Even today in India although titles have been abolished, some state governments still grant gifts of land for good service to the nation.
Giving grants is very good as it encourages people to study and work. Poorly paid talent can rise to the top by utilizing funds given by government or an NGO. Not only is it useful in the education sector, but also for humanitarian purposes. Money spent properly can provide food and basic necessaries to a lot of people.
S. Stammberger is the editor of Scholarship and Grants. Find out everyhting about grants and scholarships.
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