Tag Archives: CAFOD

Good day sunshine: Powering up Darfur

By Mohamed Nureldin/Act Caritas

Hazel Williams is the humanitarian coordinator for Darfur of CAFOD (Caritas England and Wales). She recently paid a visit to some of the many camps that house people who have fled fighting in the region. Caritas works with the Act Alliance of Protestant and Orthodox aid agencies in a unique ecumenical cooperation, through the operations of Norwegian Church Aid, Sudanaid (a Caritas member) and the Sudan Council of Churches.

Solar power is making an extraordinary difference in camps in Darfur, Sudan, by providing much needed water to those living there.

As we enter Khamsadigay camp, which houses just under 20,000 people, we weave through narrow alleys between the temporary structures that people have slowly erected over the last eight or nine years. It’s a Friday morning, so the dusty burnt orange sand tracks are illuminated by groups of flowing white galabiyas – the traditional robes that Dafurian men wear for Friday prayers.

We are here to visit a solar powered water pump that provides 29 litres of water to each person living in the camp per day. It’s really quite amazing just how much water the camp has. They may suffer many challenges, but thanks to our local partner’s programme and the community’s commitment, water is definitely not one of them.

As we stand under the large solar panels, with the sun glaring down on us, one of my guides, from our partner Norwegian Church Aid (NCA), starts to explain how solar power has transformed the lives of those living within the camp. The provision of water only uses a very small amount of the power produced – and given how my skin is burning, I can well believe these panels are working overtime. Continue reading

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Filed under Climate change, Darfur, Emergencies

New homes for Haitians

Keys to a new home built after the January 2010 earthquake in Haiti. Credit: Ryan Worms/Caritas

Read in French and Spanish

By Ryan Worms

Almost two years on from the earthquake of 12 January 2010, more than 600,000 people are still displaced in camps. They live in extremely precarious conditions and their health security is at risk.

Three dioceses were particularly affected by the earthquake: Port-au-Prince, Jacmel and Anse-à-Veau/Miragoâne. In certain areas more than 90 percent of the houses were destroyed.

Duval is a village set in the hills above Port-au-Prince, one hour’s drive from the capital. Bernard and his family live in this area. His wife Marie Gerta St Hilaire recalls 12 January 2010: “When the ground started to shake I panicked. I asked my husband to come and help me, but he could barely stand up. When we were able to get back to our house, it wasn’t there anymore. Everything had been destroyed, and there was devastation everywhere. After a while, we moved into a shack with our children. It was very hard, and I didn’t know if we’d ever get out of it.”

There is renewed hope for Bernard and his family: the inauguration of their new house. It was built as part of a partnership between Caritas Haiti and Caritas Ecuador. In Duval, on this first Sunday of November, 31 other families received the keys of their new homes during a ceremony organised in the presence of the President of Caritas Ecuador, Msgr Julio Parrilla.
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Filed under Emergencies, Español, Français, Haiti quake

CAFOD response to Final G20 communique

CAFOD response to Final G20 communique

CAFOD’s lead economics analyst Christina Weller said:

The kindest interpretation of the results of the Cannes summit is that it’s a work in progress; a more realistic one is that when it came to critical global issues the richest nations on Earth decided to decide later.

The communiqué is short on substance, ideas and commitments – saved, in part, only by the ambitious agenda of the French presidency which meant some critical issues at least got an airing at the G20 table.

As a result the G20 discussed two important reports on innovative financing – the World Bank and International Monetary Fund report on climate finance and the Gates’ report on innovative finance, but the only real commitment is to return to them again later.

We are thankful that the door on these issues is still ajar, and perhaps pushed a little wider open, but it isn’t the firm commitment that many were hoping for.

The ‘global strategy for growth and jobs’ has taken up the majority of discussion time at the two-day summit. David Cameron thinks this was “rightly…the most pressing concern of the Summit”.

But there is little that’s new on financial regulation or the system for managing exchange rates – the core business of the G20 and an underlying cause of continuing problems in the global economy.

Whilst we agree that fixing crises in G20 countries matters for the poorest who will suffer from the fall-out; if that is all that the G20 can cover, then its future is not bright.

Given the brief attention given them, development issues did make a happy appearance in the final communique – with sections on food security, climate change and addressing the challenges of development. But there is little for poor nations to celebrate.

For example, the G20 recognises the long-overdue need for infrastructure investment in poor countries – with two thirds of the population in sub-Saharan Africa lacking access to electricity. However, by picking out eleven large-scale pet projects and pushing private investment, the G20 risks doing more harm than good.

We know that where returns are small, oversight is weak and local communities are not consulted, impacts of private sector investment in infrastructure have had negative impacts on the poorest. The G20 needs to acknowledge these lessons and adapt its much-needed infrastructure plan to include rural roads, health centres and other vital local investments that support poor people’s livelihoods.

A lot of critical discussions have simply been pushed back – the Gates report has resulted in the G20 agreeing that new sources of funding being found for development and climate change should happen ‘over time’. Climate change gets a political nod that the G20 want something to happen at Durban but all we learn about the promising World Bank and IMF report on climate finance was that they had bothered to read it.

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Pakistan 6 months after floods: Monica’s story

Monika Vrsanska on a field trip to Pakistan. Credit: CAFOD

by Monika Vrsanska, CAFOD programme officer for the Pakistan Emergency

On the road to the village of Parto Malik, we finally see the water. A lot of water, considering the flood was supposed to have ended a couple of months ago. The road is very dusty and we cough a lot, but the surrounding fields are still covered with water.
 

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Filed under Emergencies, Pakistan floods 2010

Cancun climate conference: Response to the Cancun Agreements

CAFOD (Caritas England and Wales) response to the Cancun Agreements

CAFOD’s head of policy Gwen Barry said: “Cancun has shown people whose lives depend on these negotiations that the world is serious about preventing devastating climate change. The gains made here in Mexico lay the foundations for action towards a legally binding agreement that could safeguard the future for our children and grandchildren.

“It is a credit to the Mexican presidency of the COP that they created the political space for meaningful negotiation. After the damaging adversarial tone of Copenhagen and Tianjin they have offered us glimpses of a political dynamic that could successfully tackle climate change. The collective spirit of multi-lateralism that filled the last hours of Cancun engendered a level of compromise that saw even recalcitrant nations find room for flexibility.

“But Japan, the US, Russia and Canada – and any nation that did not come to Cancun with ambitious mandates - must be reminded that when the present economic crisis has ended, climate change will still be gathering pace.  And with each year that passes without a globally binding agreement to cut emissions and finance poor countries’ needs to adapt to climate change and develop low-carbon economies, the impacts will become more and more severe. Continue reading

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Filed under Cancun Climate summit, Climate change