Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Zuma says warrant against Gaddafi undermines the AU

An interesting article from the Guardian & Mail. It's interesting they mention the AU have been working to try to diffuse the situation in Libya... this fact seems to have gone relatively unreported. Whether this is because of a lack of progress or some other reason remains to be seen.

President Jacob Zuma is disappointed with the decision taken by the International Criminal Court (ICC) to issue a warrant of arrest for Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi on Monday, South African Broadcasting Corporation (SABC) radio news reported.

"President Zuma is extremely disappointed and concerned by the issuing of warrant by the ICC against Colonel Gaddafi," presidential spokesperson Zizi Kodwa told the SABC.

"It's quite unfortunate that the ICC could take such a decision while the African Union (AU), through its ad hoc committee, has done so much and, I think, the progress so far signals that there's a commitment now from both the side of the Libyan authority led by Colonel Gaddafi and the TNC [transitional national council]."

He said the issuing of the warrant undermined the work done by the AU committee.

The ICC issued arrest warrants for Gaddafi, his son Saif al-Islam Gaddafi and military intelligence chief Abdullah al-Senussi for crimes against humanity on Monday.

Zuma, who is on the committee, hosted the AU ad hoc high level committee on Libya in Pretoria on Sunday to discuss the implementation of the AU roadmap on Libya.

The African leaders said Gaddafi had agreed to stay out of negotiations on ending Libya's four-month political crisis.

The committee, which is chaired by the President of Mauritania, Mohamed Ould Abdel Azizhas, held interactions with the Libyan parties on three occasions, including with Gaddafi and the TNC leadership in Tripoli and Benghazi in April.

Other members are heads of state of the Republic of Congo, Mali, Uganda and South Africa, as well as the chairperson of the AU Commission.

Friday, June 24, 2011

We've been reading...

The future's bright, the future's ... Africa
Telegraph --
The CEO of Orange, Stéphane Richard is a man who speaks his mind and doesn’t mind how he speaks. As former French Minister for the Economy, Industry and Employment, recipient of the prestigious Legion of Honour and one-time adviser to a certain Dominique Strauss-Khan, the 49-year-old Richard knows how to get his audience’s attention. At a reporters’ lunch during the French Open tennis at Roland-Garros he described eventual winner Rafael Nadal as ‘vulgar’ and was equally forthright when describing recent meetings with Presidents Obama and Sarkozy. Lost in translation maybe, but while Richard made these remarks with a twinkle in his eye, his subsequent comment that he will visit every African country where Orange does business ‘within two years’ was delivered with more serious intent...

Britain: Give us back our money
Daily Nation -- Britain is demanding a refund of Sh7 billion aid to Kenya’s free education programme following revelations of massive corruption. “The UK Government will push the Government of Kenya hard for return of the UK’s share of lost funds,” the Department for International Development (DFID) said in a statement. During an interview in Nairobi, DFID deputy head Mike Harrison said the money once repaid will be ploughed back to fund education in Kenya but through non-State channels. “We are insisting that besides the government instituting radical reforms in the Ministry of Education, our proportion of the pool fund must be returned,” Mr Harrison said...

Senegal president in U-turn after protests

Guardian -- Senegal's president has agreed to cancel a proposed change to the constitution that would have paved the way for his son to take power, amid massive street protests that marked the biggest challenge to his 11-year rule and threatened to derail a country known as one of the most stable in the region. Anger boiled over Thursday as thousands of protesters attempted to rush the gates of parliament, where lawmakers were meeting to debate the law. Clouds of teargas enveloped the square, as police fought back the demonstrators with gas, rubber bullets and fire hoses. The demonstrations quickly spread from central Dakar to the suburbs and on to three major towns in the interior. There were also protests abroad in Paris and Montreal. The controversial amendment would have created the post of vice-president, a departure from Senegal's European-style government, which has a president and a prime minister...

What if everything were just a game?
BBC --
One more step, and a tiny creature will cross the bridge and get to safety. Just one more step - but letters do not match, the fragile structure blows up and the brown mole falls into a digital abyss. But as Juha Valtamo, a 21-year-old Finnish student, correctly types the next word that appears on the screen of his laptop, another mole happily reaches the destination. Digitalkoot may sound like a typical online game - but there is more to it than just building bridges and saving moles. Every time players complete a level, they help with a real-life task - digitising huge archives of Finland's National Library. Developed by Finnish start-up business Microtask, Digitalkoot - which means digital volunteers in Finnish - combines two very hot trends in today's business world: gamification and crowdsourcing. Words that players need to type come from millions of pages of newspapers, magazines and journals, digitised by optical character recognition...

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Teen Perspective: Changing the world

Here's a post written by 13 year old Isabel Fox. It appeared as a guest post on her mother's blog. It's a great read affirming the fact that anyone - young or old - who aspires to make a difference in the world, can.

People are constantly saying, “I can’t change the world. I’m only one person.” Well for me there has always been more to that saying, “I can’t change the world. I am only one teenager; one kid.” For a period of time I honesty felt this way. I felt that there was no way I could ever change the world. Then I started a class at DREAMS Center for Arts Education; though I signed up for a theatre class little did I know that it would end up affecting my life in such a way. At the start of the class the instructor (Ron Dortch) asked each student what they wanted to be when they grew up. I stood up and told him, “I want to be an activist”. Instead of staring at me incredulously or laughing; he looked at me and told me, “Then you will be an activist.” Those words gave me the strength and encouragement I needed to know that can I be an activist; that I can be an activist now; I don’t have to wait until I am older.

At the same time my mom began working with ONE. This gave me numerous opportunities to use my voice. I can sign petitions, I can go to government meetings, and I can even write letters to my senators and representatives. I went with my Mom to work at ONE table’s and spread the word about ONE because it is truly making a difference.

Near the end of my time with Brother Ron he asked us to do a faith project. I wrote a monologue and to end this post I would like to insert a section of that monologue.

I believe in a lot of things. I believe that peace is more rewarding than war. I believe that love can conquer hate. I believe that we will one day be able to work together and end global poverty and the spread of AIDS. I believe that everyone has a voice that needs to be heard. I believe that education is the tool to the future. I believe that I CAN make a difference in the world.

My faith is simple, I want to live each and everyday to the fullest and not care what other people think. I want to make an impact on the world today. I want to prove that anyone anywhere in any day and age can do anything they put their mind to.

Activist Now,
Isabel Fox

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Sustainable vs Effective Leadership

It's been a little while since I posted anything from the Lead Change Group blog on here, so I'm making up for that with this and the next post. They're both by Mike Henry, the founder of the Lead Change Group. This post is about Sustainable vs Effective Leadership; the previous was on Good vs Effective Leadership. I hope you find them useful!

A while back, I wrote a post titled Good Leadership vs. Effective Leadership about the difference between a good leader and an effective leader. The premise of that post was that an effective leader was one who got others to do what that leader wanted. A good leader was one who got others to achieve a positive goal. Good leadership goes beyond effective leadership by achieving a result where the benefit exceeds the cost.

In our modern culture, the Internet provides more options and more ability to influence. Therefore, it’s difficult to have a commonly shared definition of words like “good” and “positive.” Each person has always been free to define those words for themselves, but recently it seems opinions and definitions vary more and more. As someone who’s mission is to apply character-based leadership to make a positive difference, I often get asked to define “positive.”

Good vs Effective Leadership

It's been a little while since I posted anything from the Lead Change Group blog on here, so I'm going to make up for that by sharing two posts today. They're both by Mike Henry, the founder of the Lead Change Group. This post is about Good vs Effective Leadership; the next will be on Sustainable vs Effective Leadership. I hope you find them useful!

Let’s agree today that good leadership is not the same as effective leadership. Let’s agree that the word good is an evaluation of the end result rather than the leader’s actions. Did it achieve good purposes? Did it create value? (By value I mean benefit in excess of cost.) Did the benefit to all parties exceed the cost to all parties? Let’s agree that good leadership is that authority or influence that creates a good outcome. If the outcome is not generally good, it would be bad leadership. Using this model, “bad” becomes a big word. Any leadership that doesn’t create positive outcomes for the contributors and stakeholders can’t be good. As Jen stated in her comments, what Hitler did can’t be good. It can however be effective.

Effective Leadership
An Effective leader is someone who manages to get people to do what they want. It could be defined as one who exerts influence to get others to achieve the leader’s objectives regardless of the quality of the outcome. It will be effective if people allow themselves to be influenced. The outcomes can be good or bad.

Just Plain Ugly
In keeping with the movie, ineffective leadership is just plain Ugly. We won’t even try to clean it up. If you have to stoop to manipulating or threatening or bullying, that’s ugly leadership.

It seems from my connecting with people all over the world through Twitter and the Lead Change Group on LinkedIn, as well as the interest that has been shown in starting local leadership groups like Authentic Leadership Cincinnati or Lead Change Tulsa, that a growing number of people agree that our world needs an infusion of good leadership: effective leadership that brings about net-positive outcomes. The only way to do that is to contribute more than you consume. Let the revolution continue in your life and sphere of influence today!

SENet: Student Entrepreneurs Network

SENet (Student Entrepreneurs Network) exists to discover and develop young entrepreneurs from school and beyond. They aim to change students' mindset to become job creators consistently and effectively promoting entrepreneurship in all high schools, tertiary and professional institutions in Ghana and Africa as a whole. SENet is affiliated with The African Network Of Entrepreneurs (TANOE).

If you're a budding entrepreneur or simply have an interest and want to know what it's all about, I encourage you to check out their website for more information. Alternatively, you can see them in action during their Student's Summit of Entrepreneurial Ideas which takes place on Friday 12th August at Zenith College.

Monday, June 20, 2011

Michelle Obama's Southern Africa Trip to Focus on Youth Leadership

According to the White House, Michelle Obama will set off on a week long trip to South Africa and Botswana tomorrow. Amongst other things, she will be focusing on youth leadership. If you're on Twitter, I encourage you to use the hashtag #YoungAfrica to join the conversation, get the latest updates of her trip and more. You can also get more information via Facebook on the US Bureau of African Affairs page.

Here's what Michelle had to say about the trip:



You can read more from James Butty of Voice of America after the jump (
click here to read original article).

Mini Seminar: Gender & Development

Feels like a very long time since we last had a Mini Seminar. On Friday (17th June) Professor Ampofo led our session on Gender & Development. As you can probably imagine, it was a highly interactive seminar with lots of debate.

We were accompanied by Ofowaah Boateng of Databank Reasearch and Michael Opare-Darkwah from Databank Legal and Compliance Office. They were on hand to offer support to Professor Ampofo and answer any questions.

We started off by stating exactly what is meant by gender and development, and why when it is mentioned, people often (incorrectly) think it concerns only women's issues.

We discussed factors that create gender inequality across a range of different situations; religious views, society's expectations, roles within the home, etc. It was interesting how the views from males often differed from females... Joseph in particular said a few things that turned out to be controversial!

All in all it was a highly informative session that was enjoyed immensely by all. We'd like to say a big thank you to Professor Ampofo, Ofowaah and Michael for taking time out to attend the session.

Pictures of the seminar are up on our Facebook page, click here to check them out.

Friday, June 17, 2011

Mini Seminar later today!

To quickly remind you, we’ll be having a Mini Seminar this Friday (17th June); Dr. Akosua Ampofo will be speaking on Gender & Development. Professor Ampofo is the Director of the Institute of African Studies at the University of Ghana. The seminar will take place in our usual classroom (3D) but will start at 3.30pm instead of 3.

Another quick thing – I’ve recently created a YLMP fan page on Facebook and would like to close our group page. With a minimum of 25 likes (which we should be able to get easily), I will be able to secure the ‘facebook.com/ylmp’ URL (which would be fantastic!!) The transition has been pretty slow going so far though; I’d really appreciate it if you could help out by giving the page a like at www.facebook.com/pages/Databank-Foundation-Young-Leaders-Mentorship-Programme/217964914881526. Please encourage your mentees, friends, family and colleagues to do the same!

Thursday, June 16, 2011

We've been reading...

**Click on titles to read the whole article

Use cellphones to share Africa resource wealth
Reuters -- Mobile phone banking should be used to direct some of Africa's oil and mineral wealth straight to the population, reducing the role of corrupt governments and tackling poverty, according to a senior World Bank official. The continent is riding a commodities boom driven by high minerals and oil prices and analysts expect the trend to continue. But graft and bad governance means revenues have been squandered and resource-rich countries have consistently failed to deliver basic services to their people. "Imagine your country finds a valuable commodity and before it goes into the national budget, and people fear it will be wasted, it could be sent directly to people," said Marcelo Giugale, the World Bank's head of Poverty Reduction and Economic Management in Africa...

Tapping the Wealth of African SMEs: Standard Bank’s Example
AfriBiz --
Small and medium enterprises (SMEs) in Africa have been largely neglected in the past. Most industry analysts and experts agree that there is strong evidence of funding targeted at large corporations, and the micro finance industry has grown rapidly in the past few years; however, financing to the SME sector shows a yawning gap. In the South African economy for example, an economy more structured and better regulated than most African economies, SMEs are said to contribute to 40% of GDP and 40% of employment opportunities – providing the greatest contribution among types of businesses. However, even with this impressive potential, funding to SMEs in South Africa, though well above the African average, is still well behind the trends in other economies of the world...

The Responsibility of Intellectuals

Noam Chomsky --
Twenty years ago, Dwight Macdonald published a series of articles in Politics on the responsibility of peoples and, specifically, the responsibility of intellectuals. I read them as an undergraduate, in the years just after the war, and had occasion to read them again a few months ago. They seem to me to have lost none of their power or persuasiveness. Macdonald is concerned with the question of war guilt. He asks the question: To what extent were the German or Japanese people responsible for the atrocities committed by their governments? And, quite properly, he turns the question back to us: To what extent are the British or American people responsible for the vicious terror bombings of civilians, perfected as a technique of warfare by the Western democracies and reaching their culmination in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, surely among the most unspeakable crimes in history...

The future of funding: Development aid as an investment
Huffington Post -- There is an intriguing dynamic developing in our nation's capital among the three major influences that could end up changing the future of American aid to developing countries. One is Congresswoman Kay Granger from Ft. Worth, TX. Another is Rajiv Shah, Administrator of the US Agency for International Development (USAID). And then there is the Chicago Council on Global Affairs that has assumed the role of arbiter of the quality of the U.S. government's leadership in global agricultural development. Each of them has the power to exert enormous influence over the gristmill through which government funding is pulverized into short and long term support. Congresswoman Granger set the table recently at a luncheon when she praised Bill Gates and his foundation as a model for serving the world's poorest. "Foreign aid must be viewed as an investment, not an expense," she said. "Where money is wasted, it should be stopped. Where funding is ineffective, it should be redirected...

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Doodle4Google in Ghana

I'm reblogging this post from the Google Africa blog. It was written by Estelle Akofio-Sowah, the head of Google Ghana and Africa Leadership Initiative fellow. I'm encouraged by the work Google does to encourage creativity among the youth and by the fact that they go the extra mile to showcase it. Most of all, I'm glad that the Ghanaian public is getting behind their youth and supporting them in projects such as these.

At Google we work hard to bring the Internet closer to our users. We also love to encourage and celebrate the creativity of young people. Doodle4Google is a great way to achieve this. This year, over 700 submissions from over 50 schools were an amazing display of the imagination of young people in Ghana about what Ghana represents to them.

We hope that today (Wednesday 15th June), when we feature the winning Doodle from the 9 - 11 year old category, and tomorrow (Thursday 16th June), featuring the winning Doodle from the 12 - 14 year old category on google.com.gh, Ghanaians will enjoy these amazing doodles that creatively capture what is special and unique about Ghana in the eyes of our youth.

On June 11th, Marvels Mini Golf course in Dzorwulu, Accra was the venue for hosting the 80 top-performing doodlers in this years Doodle4Google “My Ghana” competition. The kids arrived with a great sense of excitement and anticipation in advance of the announcement of this year’s winners. They had loads of fun with new friends, learning origami and mini golf skills with the team from the Kokrobitey Institute. Our special guest Kwaku Sintim Misa (KSM) shared inspiring words on the importance of education and dreaming big, whilst a performance from “2 Puff”, got everyone dancing with their fun dance moves.



The high quality of all the doodles submitted made choosing our winners no easy task! With a great big African drum roll, we unveiled the winning Doodles by Nil Carreras Del Peso from the French School and Nana Abena Asabea Ametepe from Golden Age School.

Nil, aged 11, named his doodle “Traditional Ghana”, a blend of Ghana’s rich culture, from our Gye Nyame symbol, coconut trees, beads, village huts and flag. Nana who is 12, named her doodle “Home Sweet Home”, a popular saying in Ghana used on shops, buses, and on what used to be a popular means of public transportation, our “tro-tros”. Her doodle is an amazing watercolour painting capturing a traditional village scene with two women carrying water pots on their heads.

The winners also received a Kindle loaded with great books including “Voice in the Forest” by Efua T. Sutherland and “The Days” by Ama Ata-Aidoo and a laptop respectively. In addition, the schools of both winners received a USD 2,000 technology grant.

For all of us at Google, this year’s competition has been an incredible insight into the creative minds of young people. We hope you enjoy their doodles as much as we have! Congratulations again to Nil and Nana Abena!

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

U.S. colleges accused of African "land grabs"

There have been many news articles in the last few weeks about 'land grabs' from affluent and organisations in the West. (Here's one I found particularly appalling in the Economist.) Here, CBS News exposes some US colleges who have allegedly joined the bandwagon:

The questionable, unchecked, speculative practices of large financial institutions that sent the world into a near-calamitous economic recession recently are being repeated in Africa through land-grabbing deals, The Oakland Institute, a California-based think tank, said in a recent report.

Hedge funds are partaking in "largely unregulated land purchases" throughout the continent that essentially amount to "the conversion of African small farms and forests into a natural-asset-based, high-return investment strategy" and are often nothing more than "land grabs," the report states.

Additionally, several American universities, including Harvard, Vanderbilt, Spellman, and Iowa universities, are also taking part in or providing funds for the practice that "is resulting in the displacement of small farmers, environmental devastation, water loss and further political instability such as the food riots that preceded the Tunisian and Egyptian revolutions," the reports states.

While the report does not claim the deals break any laws per se, it does strongly insinuate the local population does not reap anything near the promised benefits, whereas the mostly foreign investors in some cases can expect to get up to 25 percent returns.

Mobile templates have gone live!

Great news for everyone who checks the blog on the go - mobile templates have gone live!! I'm a bit late with the news actually, the update came on the 8th of June. Unfortunately (and perhaps predictably) though, Symbian seems to have been bypassed. You can still access the mobile site: http://ylmp.blogspot.com/?m=1.

I apologise for the inconvenience to all fellow Nokia heads, I'll let you know as soon as anything changes.

Thursday, June 9, 2011

Advances in mobile health technology

This is part of a post by Meghan O'Hearn on the ONE blog. Read it in full here.

According to a new report from the UN Foundation and mHealth Alliance, there are now more than five billion wireless subscribers in the world. More than 70 percent of them reside in low- and middle- income countries. From using mobile phones to coordinating emergency health relief efforts to reminding patients to take their medicine, mHealth offers some serious potential for creative health care improvements in all corners of the world.

The report, titled New Horizons for Health through Mobile Technologies, said 83 percent of the 112 participating member states reported the presence of at least one mHealth initiative in their country. Of these, three-quarters reported four or more types of mHealth initiatives including health call centers, emergency toll-free telephone services, and mobile telemedicine.

These mHealth programs have helped some achieve impressive goals on the ground. The Ghana Medical Association, for example, launched the Mobile Doctors Network in Africa in 2008 to wirelessly connect an estimated 2,000 physicians in Ghana with free mobile-to-mobile voice and text services. The project has been tremendously successful in helping serve Ghana’s 24 million people as well as facilitate prompt emergency response communication.

And in 2007, the Bangladesh Ministry of Health began broadcasting SMS text messages to the country’s estimated 55 million mobile telephone numbers to increase awareness about health campaigns, particularly childhood vaccination initiatives. This project’s success has prompted several other health-related SMS services, including a pregnancy advice system for mothers.

Although lack of infrastructure, operating costs and knowledge about mHealth are significant barriers to implementation, particularly in rural Africa, progress is real. Only 10 percent of the African population had mobile phone coverage in 1999. By 2008, mobile phone coverage climbed to 60 percent of the population. By 2012, most villages in Africa will have coverage, with only Guinea Bissau, Ethiopia, Mali and Somalia staggering behind. Given unprecedented growth rates, the sky’s the limit with mobile technologies in the global health care arena.

Thursday, June 2, 2011

6 Tips to set effective goals

In the video below, Jesse Stoner gives six steps to set effective goals that will get you where you want to go. She is a business consultant who runs a blog particularly for those who want to make a contribution as a leader.




You can find a text version of this presentation on her blog.

We need more good news stories on development

Here's an article from the Guardian by Jonathan Glennie.

Earlier this week I went to one of the Living Proof roadshows organised by ONE, the campaign group set up by Bono and Bob Geldof. Like the previous one I attended, at which Bill and Melinda Gates spoke, the message was simple: things are getting better, the development project is working, and aid is a key element in that picture.

The objective of the meetings is to persuade a sceptical public to support more aid. One of the centrepieces of the evening was a video in which people on the street were asked how much aid they thought the UK gave and how much difference they thought it was making. Predictably, the public tends to think the UK gives a lot more than it does, and that much is wasted.

Public awareness is an admirable and necessary goal, with the caveat that we have to be realistic about our ambitions in development education. Most people don't really have time to show much interest in the goings on of foreign countries, let alone delve deeply into the statistics. So we needn't beat ourselves up too badly about the fact that few people seem to care or know much about this sector – it is just like most other sectors in that regard, with some people very committed but most fairly ignorant.

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Coming of the Drums: Behind the scenes

While we eagerly wait for the DVD of the Coming of the Drums, I thought I'd post a few behind the scenes pictures. They were taking at various stages during rehearsals (click on each photo to enlarge; more after the jump). Enjoy!

Also, click here and here to check out more photos on our new Facebook page! And don't forget to like us!