wpid capt.aa32c93b0b514a3e8dd78be998ef8011 aa32c93b0b514a3e8dd78be998ef8011 0 Somalia's refugees celebrate holiday with food aid 
    (AP)

DOLO, Somalia – As she celebrated the Muslim holiday of Eid al-Fitr on Tuesday, Somali mother Quresho Mohmoud Dahir counted her blessings: all her children were alive. They had food. They were safe.

“We will eat very well today,” she said proudly, gesturing at the food rations she’d received that morning. Her 12-year-old daughter sat protectively atop the two sacks of corn and the beans her mother was going to prepare.

Dahir is one of hundreds of thousands of Somalis forced to flee their homes by war and famine. She and her six children, the youngest only three years old, walked 12 days to get to this United Nations-run camp on the Ethiopia-Somali border after her husband disappeared after some fighting in their area.

Some days they were so hungry they ate leaves from trees. At night, she agonized over lighting a fire; it would protect her children from hyenas but might attract criminals or militias. Finally — sick, starving and exhausted — they stumbled into Dolo, a wind-swept outpost of brushwood buildings scattered among the twisted thorn trees and red sand.

Now the seven of them live in a ragged shelter made of plastic scraps and torn clothing stretched over branches. They depend on donors for everything from cooking pots to sleeping mats to food.

Dahir remembers past years when she used to mark Eid by slaughtering her own goats, having a feast for friends and family and giving charity to her poorer neighbors. But she said this year she will cook her donated rations gladly, and give thanks for the kindness of the people that let her family survive a famine that has already claimed tens of thousands of lives.

“Thank Allah that we were welcomed here and given food and we are safe,” she said, squatting in their makeshift shelter. “We are blessed. So many people helped us along the way.”

Many times, her children were so weak she had to leave the younger ones under trees and go begging, she said. There was never much to give — parts of the region they walked through are suffering from the worst drought in 60 years — but impoverished families they passed spared a bottle of milk or a handful of millet, she said. It kept them alive until they reached Dolo three months ago.

She counted the other small improvements since they had arrived. Local families donated two battered pots so she could cook, plus a single torn foam mattress and sleeping mat to share. The Italian government and the U.N. provided food, vaccinations and malaria medicine. A local charity set up a blackboard under a tree to serve as a school. Most of all, they were safe from the militias that destroyed her life more thoroughly than the drought.

“My husband disappeared during the fighting,” she said. “I don’t know where he is.”

The U.N. estimates about 3.7 million Somalis currently need aid. Five regions in Somalia are suffering from famine and officials say that will increase in coming weeks.

There’s also widespread hunger in Ethiopia, Kenya, and Djibouti. Overall, more than 12 million people need help, according to the U.N. The situation is most dire in Somalia, where Islamist rebels fighting the weak U.N.-backed government have barred many aid agencies from their territory.

As Somali families in Dolo prepared their evening meal for Eid — porridge or rice for some, donated scraps of meat for a lucky few — many said the a holiday was especially poignant this year.

For Muslims, Eid is as important as Christmas is for Christians. It’s a time for families to gather and feast, and remember the less fortunate in their offerings and prayers. Most of the families here are more used to giving charity than receiving it.

“We used to give some of our harvest to the poor,” said 26-year-old Habiba Osman Ahmed, a former farmer.

Since then, Somalia’s 20-year civil war pushed the drought into famine. Everything has changed. Now she doesn’t even have a pot to cook in, and must share with another family. She will wait patiently while they finish their food before preparing her own.

“Solidarity with people in need is very much a part of today’s celebration,” said Antonio Guterres, the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees. “That solidarity should inspire first of all Somalis to allow access to those in need … and should also inspire the international community to be more engaged.”

Freedom for aid agencies to move in and help and lack of funding were the two biggest problems they faced, he said. But on Tuesday those problems were eclipsed by other, more personal pains for many of those in Dolo.

“The last Eid I celebrated with all my children, in my own home,” Ahmed said. Since then, she’s lost two of her four children to the famine; one died in her home village and one on the agonizing walk toward help.

“They were gifts from God,” she said as her baby squirmed in her lap. “He gave them to me, and then he took them away.”

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 54027461 tanzania Tanzania

Tanzania has been spared the internal strife that has blighted many African states.

Though it remains one of the poorest countries in the world, with many of its people living below the World Bank poverty line, it has had some success in wooing donors and investors.

Tanzania assumed its present form in 1964 after a merger between the mainland Tanganyika and the island of Zanzibar, which had become independent the previous year.

Unlike many African countries, whose potential wealth contrasted with their actual poverty, Tanzania had few exportable minerals and a primitive agricultural system. To remedy this, its first president, Julius Nyerere, issued the 1967 Arusha Declaration, which called for self-reliance through the creation of cooperative farm villages and the nationalisation of factories, plantations, banks and private companies.

Continue reading the main story

At a glance

wpid 54228551 tanzania kilimanjaro afp1 Tanzania

Politics: Tanzania has enjoyed stability. Multi-party politics was introduced in 1992

Economy: Annual growth rate has averaged 6.7% since 2006, one of the best in sub-Sahara Africa. Power supplies are erratic and fall short of demand. Gold earnings have been rising

International: Tanzania hosts thousands of refugees from conflict in the neighbouring Great Lakes region

Environment: Experts fear a planned highway threatens the Serengeti game park, Tanzania's biggest draw for tourism

But a decade later, despite financial and technical aid from the World Bank and sympathetic countries, this programme had completely failed due to inefficiency, corruption, resistance from peasants and the rise in the price of imported petroleum.

Tanzania's economic woes were compounded in 1979 and 1981 by a costly military intervention to overthrow President Idi Amin of Uganda.

After Mr Nyerere's resignation in 1985, his successor, Ali Hassan Mwinyi, attempted to raise productivity and attract foreign investment and loans by dismantling government control of the economy.

This policy continued under Benjamin Mkapa, who was elected president in 1995. The economy grew, though at the price of painful fiscal reforms. Tourism is an important revenue earner; Tanzania's attractions include Africa's highest mountain, Kilimanjaro, and wildlife-rich national parks such as the Serengeti.

The political union between Zanzibar and mainland Tanzania has weathered more than four decades of change. Zanzibar has its own parliament and president.

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wpid r540575172 Libyan leader sets ultimatum for Gaddafi forces 
    (Reuters)

TRIPOLI/BENGHAZI (Reuters) – Libya's interim leader on Tuesday gave forces loyal to deposed ruler Muammar Gaddafi a four-day deadline to surrender towns still under their control or risk a military showdown.

As the hunt for Gaddafi himself goes on, Libyan officials accused neighboring Algeria of an act of aggression for admitting his fleeing wife and three of his children.

Algeria's Foreign Ministry said Gaddafi's wife Safia, his daughter Aisha and his sons Hannibal and Mohammed had entered Algeria on Monday morning, along with their children.

That stirred a diplomatic row just as Libya's interim council works to consolidate its authority and capture places still loyal to Gaddafi, notably the coastal city of Sirte.

“By Saturday, if there are no peaceful indications for implementing this, we will decide this matter militarily. We do not wish to do so but we cannot wait longer,” Mustafa Abdel Jalil, head of Libya's interim council, told a news conference.

Anti-Gaddafi forces have converged on Sirte from east and west, but have stopped short of an all-out assault in hopes of arranging a negotiated surrender of Gaddafi's birth-place.

“Zero hour is quickly approaching,” military spokesman Colonel Ahmed Bani told a news conference in Benghazi.

“We're not negotiating with the (Gaddafi) regime. We're talking to the elders of the various affiliates and tribes,” he said, adding that Gaddafi loyalists were thwarting the desire of most civilians to “join the free Libya liberated areas.”

Gaddafi's whereabouts have been unknown since his foes seized his Tripoli compound on August 23, ending his 42-year rule after a six-month revolt backed by NATO and some Arab states.

GADDAFI “WENT TO SABHA”

Britain's Sky News, citing a young bodyguard of Gaddafi's son Khamis, said the leader had stayed in Tripoli until Friday when he left for the southern desert town of Sabha.

It quoted the captured 17-year-old as saying Gaddafi met Khamis, a feared military commander, at around 1:30 p.m. on Friday in a Tripoli compound that was under heavy rebel fire. Gaddafi had arrived by car and was soon joined by Aisha.

After a short meeting, they boarded four-wheel drive vehicles and left, the bodyguard told a Sky reporter, adding that his officer had told him: “They're going to Sabha.”

Along with Sirte, Sabha is one of the main remaining bastions of pro-Gaddafi forces.

A NATO spokesman said reports of talks over Sirte were encouraging, but said the alliance, which has kept up a five-month bombing campaign, was targeting the city's approaches.

“Our main area of attention is a corridor… (leading up) to the eastern edge of Sirte,” Colonel Roland Lavoie said.

Some anti-Gaddafi officers have reported that Khamis Gaddafi and former intelligence chief Abdullah al-Senussi were both killed in a clash on Saturday. This has not been confirmed and the NATO spokesman said he had no word on Khamis's fate.

More NTC forces were heading for Bani Walid, a Gaddafi tribal stronghold 150 km (95 miles) southeast of Tripoli.

“Three units were sent from Misrata toward Bani Walid this morning … Our fighters are now 30 km from Bani Walid,” said Mohammed Jamal, a fighter at a checkpoint on the road to the town. “Hopefully Bani Walid will also be liberated soon. Right now there are still many Gaddafi supporters there.”

TENSE RELATIONS WITH ALGERIA

A spokesman for the National Transitional Council said it would seek to extradite Gaddafi's relatives from Algeria, which is alone among Libya's neighbors in not recognizing the NTC.

Nearly 60 countries have acknowledged the NTC as Libya's legitimate authority. Russia, China, India, South Africa and Brazil are among those which have so far withheld recognition.

Algeria's acceptance of Gaddafi's wife and offspring angered Libyan leaders, who want the ousted autocrat and his entourage to face justice for years of repressive rule.

Abdel Jalil, the NTC chairman, who was once Gaddafi's justice minister, called on the Algerian government to hand over any of the former leader's sons on its wanted list. He said he expected the fugitives to move on from Algeria before long.

Algeria, which previously opposed sanctions and a no-fly zone against Gaddafi, has an authoritarian government which is anxious about Arab revolts lapping near its borders.

“I would argue the Algerian regime is making a major blunder, miscalculating monstrously,” Fawaz Gerges, an analyst at the London School of Economics, told the BBC.

“The Algerian regime itself is not immune from the revolutionary momentum taking place in the Arab world.”

A visit to a Tripoli beach compound used by Gaddafi's children and members of his elite revealed a life of opulence and privilege that many Libyans could barely dream of.

Saadi Gaddafi's chalet was strewn with designer clothes, including some unworn suits, and about 100 pairs of shoes. Aisha's house boasted 13 bedrooms and gold-plated cutlery.

Anti-Gaddafi fighters now sleep in the bedrooms of their former rulers, whose gated compound has tennis courts, football pitches and dining centers, along with magnificent sea views.

Many Libyans were overjoyed at the fall of Gaddafi, which followed that of longtime rulers in Egypt and Tunisia earlier this year, but have been chilled by evidence of mass killings in Tripoli as his forces fought losing battles with rebels.

A week after Gaddafi's fall, Tripoli's two million people remain without running water or electricity. Banks, pharmacies and many other shops are still closed. The stench of garbage and sewage still pervades the city, despite clean-up efforts.

A council spokesman said a pumping station for Tripoli's water supply that lies in the pro-Gaddafi town of Sabha had been damaged and could not be reached for repair.

However, a report by the European Union's humanitarian office (ECHO), said pro-Gaddafi forces in Sirte had cut two-thirds of the water supply to Tripoli, most of which comes from the “Great Man-made River,” a huge project built under Gaddafi that pumps out water from under the Sahara desert.

In the port city of Misrata, scene of heavy fighting earlier in the conflict, security forces were holding 332 former Gaddafi fighters in a school, where the captives sat on mattresses in the classrooms, some reading the Koran.

There was no evidence the men had been mistreated.

“These are Gaddafi soldiers who surrendered in battles around Misrata and Zlitan,” said senior warder Haitham Mohammed. “We will eventually take them to court.”

Some prisoners told Reuters, in the presence of the warder, that they had been tricked into fighting for Gaddafi.

“We were told we were fighting foreigners, al Qaeda, so we fought to liberate Misrata but when we came here we were surprised,” said one, named Ali Sadiq Hamuda.

“I'm ashamed that I came here with wrong ideas but now I have discovered the truth — the Gaddafi regime was bad.”

(Additional reporting by Mohammed Abbas in Tripoli, Maria Golovnina in Misrata and Emma Farge in Benghazi; Writing by Alistair Lyon; Editing by Jon Boyle)

Source

 53640789 mozambique Mozambique

Since independence from Portugal in 1975, Mozambique has been battered by civil war, economic mismanagement and famine.

A peace deal in 1992 ended 16 years of civil war, and the country has made much progress in economic development and political stability.

Portugal began to colonise the area that became Mozambique in the early 16th century. An anti-authoritarian coup in 1974 in Portugal ended colonial rule and its ten-year war with the Frelimo independence movement.

Mozambican support for armed groups fighting the white-minority rule governments in Rhodesia and South Africa led to those two countries sponsoring the Renamo movement, which fought Frelimo in the 1977-1992 civil war.

This conflict, combined with Rhodesian and South African intervention and central economic planning by the Marxist leadership of Frelimo left the country in chaos. About a million people died in the civil war and millions more fled abroad or to other parts of the country.

Continue reading the main story

At a glance

wpid 54296697 mozbque beirahotel2 afp Mozambique

Politics: Frelimo party has been in power since independence from Portugal in 1975

Economy: Critics complain that Mozambique is pursuing capital-intensive, showpiece mega-projects that generate little social benefit; natural disasters have slowed post-civil war reconstruction

International: Mozambican UN peacekeepers have served in Burundi

An attempt to secure a ceasefire with South Africa in the Nkomati Accord of 1984 broke down, and the government and Renamo eventually began talks brokered first by Christian groups and then by the United Nations. Frelimo inaugurated a new constitution in 1990 that enshrined free elections, and both sides signed the resulting Rome Peace Accords of 1992.

Frelimo has won all subsequent elections, some of which have been disputed by Renamo and smaller opposition groups. Political life has nonetheless remained stable, with Renamo continuing to work within the constitutional system.

Foreign investors are showing interest in Mozambique's untapped oil and gas reserves, and titanium mining is a growing source of revenue. Most of the population works the land, however, and infrastructure nationwide still suffers from colonial neglect, war and under-investment.

The economy suffered serious setbacks when in 2000 and 2001 Mozambique was hit by floods which affected about a quarter of the population and destroyed much of its infrastructure.

Furthermore, in 2002 a severe drought hit many central and southern parts of the country, including previously flood-stricken areas. Poverty remains widespread, with more than 50% of Mozambicans living on less than $1 a day.

Source

A magnitude 5.8 earthquake rattled the East Coast this afternoon from North Carolina to Boston, the US Geological Survey said. The Pentagon and Capitol Building in Washington were evacuated at 1:51 pm, shortly after a powerful tremble was felt. Read more: www.nypost.com
Video Rating: 4 / 5

wpid 54828192 oscarinpool1 Blade runner Oscar Pistorius (centre) had a very active childhood

“There was a lot of conferring with doctors. His parents took him from doctor to doctor and got lots of different advice,” says his aunt, Diana Binge. “They decided to take the most conservative advice they were given – to leave him with as much leg as possible and as many options as possible.”

Had they agreed to amputate more of Oscar's legs, as some doctors advised, there would have been no question of a running career.

He quickly became very mobile. “He first learnt to walk on his prosthetic legs,” says Ms Binge. “They didn't have actual feet like now, they were sort of little peg legs. He just walked on them – like his brother put his shoes on, he put his legs on.”

2. He was always into speed and excitement.

“He used to roller skate, ride bicycles, climb trees. He ran everywhere – and he ran like the wind,” says Ms Binge.

As a toddler he hurtled down the drive on a moulded plastic motorbike, pushing himself along with his prosthetic legs, and dragging them behind him. The legs would crack and the feet would get worn out.

“He was a battered and bruised child, always hurting himself. He has no perception of danger, which may be one reason why he has been so successful,” his aunt says.

“He once jumped into the swimming pool with his prosthetics on, causing his mother to leap into the swimming pool – because he sank to the bottom, his prosthetics acted almost like cement boots.

“He's just a tearaway.”

3. His blades are both an advantage and a disadvantage.

The advantage comes in the later stages of the race, according to Dr Wolfgang Potthast and his team from the German Sport University in Cologne.

wpid 54828195 blades getty1 Blade runner Oscar Pistorius wears his blades for running – the rest of the time he uses prosthetic legs

“The way of sprinting with two prostheses is entirely different from a mechanical point of view than running with natural legs… In a certain part of the race, when he has high velocity, I feel, and we have data on that, that he has a mechanical advantage,” Prof Potthast told the BBC World Service.

The disadvantage comes at the beginning of the race and on corners.

“In the 400m race, the athletes push out of the blocks with their calf muscles. Oscar doesn't have calfs, so he has to use his hips,” says Professor Bob Gailey, who studies the biomechanics of prosthetics at the University of Miami. “The curve on the track is also harder for Oscar – he needs to maintain balance, and the prosthetics aren't as flexible on bends as a human leg. He only properly gets into his running rhythm on the straights.”

It is unclear whether, overall, he is at an advantage or a disadvantage. In 2008, he was barred from competing in able-bodied competitions, partly due to test data provided by Prof Potthast. This ruling was overturned on appeal.

4. Oscar cannot upgrade his blades.

Oscar Pistorius is only allowed to compete on the carbon fibre blades that he was tested on before, says Bob Gailey.

“If we go back to the community of arbitration's rule, he is only able to compete in the same Cheetah blades that he was tested on in Cologne. If there are technological advances, he would have to petition to change those.”

Bob Gailey says this is consistent with other technical developments in sport.

“We see this in the Olympics, any time any type of new footwear or clothing proves to have a potential advantage it has to be assessed. So I think the same thing has to happen with prosthetic feet as well.”

Oscar only uses the blades for running. “You cannot stand still in a blade, because you have no heel,” says his aunt, Diana Binge. “It's like standing on the balls of your feet – you can only do it for so long.”

5. Oscar Pistorius is the “ambassador” of an aftershave.

wpid 54822142 mugler1 Blade runner The Clarins ad represents Oscar Pistorius as a “bionic man”

“I was looking for a new icon, a real man to incarnate A*men,” says Joel Palix, president of Clarins' Fragrance Group.

“But I was a bit tired of all the famous sportsmen and actors, I felt it was a bit stereotyped. One day I found an article speaking about Oscar and I thought his story was incredible. I am a strong advocate of diversity, I think in today's world every category of person should be in advertising, and be able to be the spokesperson for a product.”

Mr Palix says he was also charmed by Oscar Pistorius' personality and impressed by his “incredible career in sports”.

However, he concedes that he probably would not have chosen Oscar Pistorius if he was less physically attractive.

“After all we sell fragrance that is also a dream of buying a brand – it's only normal that we project the image of a person that is appealing.”

Research by Mark Bosworth

Source

wpid 54780220 1888oromochildrenaden2 Grannys story On their arrival in Yemen, the children were looked after by local families and missionaries

All the 204 slaves freed by Commander Gissing were from the Oromo ethnic group and most were children.

The Oromo, despite being the most populous of all Ethiopian groups, had long been dominated by the country's Amhara and Tigrayan elites and were regularly used as slaves.

Emperor Menelik II, who has been described as Ethiopia's “greatest slave entrepreneur”, taxed the trade to pay for guns and ammunition as he battled for control of the whole country, which he ruled from 1889 to 1913.

Bisho Jarsa was among the 183 children found on the dhows.

She had been orphaned with her two brothers, as a result of the drought and disease that swept through Ethiopia in 1887, and left in the care of one of her father's slaves.

But the continuing threat of starvation resulted in Bisho being sold to slave merchants for a small quantity of maize.

After a journey of six weeks, she reached the Red Sea, where she was put on board one of the Jeddah-bound dhows intercepted by HMS Osprey.

Continue reading the main story

“Start Quote

The missionaries recorded detailed histories of the former slaves, educated them and baptised them into the Christian faith”

End Quote

Her first memory of the British was the sound of automatic gunfire blasting into the sails and rigging of the slave dhow while she huddled below deck with the other Oromo children.

They all fully expected to be eaten as this is what the Arab slave traders had told them would happen if they were captured by the British.

But Commander Gissing took the Oromo to Aden, where the British authorities had to decide what to do with the former slaves.

The Muslim children were adopted by local families. The remaining children were placed in the care of a mission of the Free Church of Scotland – but the harsh climate took its toll and by the end of the year 11 had died.

The missionaries sought an alternative home for them, eventually settling on another of the Church's missions, the Lovedale Institution in South Africa's Eastern Cape – on the other side of the continent.

Bisho and the rest of the children reached Lovedale on 21 August 1890.

The missionaries recorded detailed histories of the former slaves, educated them and baptised them into the Christian faith.

Mandela fascinated

Continue reading the main story

“Start Quote

wpid 54804348 nevillealexander10030822 Grannys story

Her real liberation was not the British warship but the education she later received in South Africa”

End Quote Neville Alexander

Life was tough here too, however, and by 1903, at least another 18 of the children had died.

In that year, the Lovedale authorities asked the survivors whether they would like to return to Ethiopia.

Some opted to do so, but it was only after a protracted process, involving the intervention of German advisers to Emperor Menelik, that 17 former slaves sailed back to Ethiopia in 1909.

The rest had by this time married or found careers and opted to stay in South Africa.

Bisho was trained for domestic service, but she must have shown signs of special talent, because she was one of only two of the Oromo girls who went on to train as a teacher.

In 1902 she left Lovedale and found a position at a school in Cradock, then in 1911 she married Frederick Scheepers, a minister in the church.

Frederick and Bisho Jarsa had a daughter, Dimbiti. Dimbiti married David Alexander, a carpenter, and one of their children, born on 22 October 1936, was Neville Alexander.

By the 1950s and 60s he was a well-known political activist, who helped found the short-lived National Liberation Front.

Continue reading the main story

Ethiopia Returnees

If you know these people – the freed slaves who decided to return home in 1909 – please use the form below to let us know:

Aguchello Chabani

Agude Bulcha

Amanu Figgo

Baki Malaka

Berille Boko Grant

Dinkitu Boensa

Fayesse Gemo

Fayissa Umbe

Galgal Dikko

Galgalli Shangalla

Gamaches Garba

Gutama Tarafo

Hawe Sukute

Liban Bultum

Nagaro Chali

Nuro Chabse

Rufo Gangilla

Tolassa Wayessa

He was arrested and from 1964 until 1974 was jailed in the bleak prison on Robben Island.

His fellow prisoners, Nelson Mandela and Walter Sisulu, were fascinated by his part-Ethiopian origins but at the time, he was not aware that his grandmother had been captured as a slave and so they could not draw any comparisons with their own fight against oppression.

So what did he feel when he found out how is grandmother had ended up in South Africa?

“It reinforced my sense of being an African in a fundamental way,” he told the BBC.

Under apartheid, his family was classified as Coloured, or mixed-race, rather than African.

“We always struggled against this nomenclature,” he said.

He also noted that it explained why he had often been mistaken for an Ethiopian during his travels.

The strongest parallel he can draw between his life and that of his grandmother is the role of schooling.

“Her real liberation was not the British warship but the education she later received in South Africa,” he said.

“Equally, while on Robben Island, we turned it into a university and ensured that all the prisoners learned to read and write, to prepare them for their future lives.”

Do you know any of the 17 people who returned to Ethiopia in 1909? If you do, please use the form to contact the author.

(Required) Name (Required) Your E-mail address (Required) Town & Country (Required) Your telephone number (Required) Comments

If you are happy to be contacted by a BBC journalist please leave a telephone number that we can contact you on. In some cases a selection of your comments will be published, displaying your name as you provide it and location, unless you state otherwise. Your contact details will never be published. When sending us pictures, video or eyewitness accounts at no time should you endanger yourself or others, take any unnecessary risks or infringe any laws. Please ensure you have read the terms and conditions.

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 54024887 sierra leone Sierra Leone

Sierra Leone, in West Africa, emerged from a decade of civil war in 2002, with the help of Britain, the former colonial power, and a large United Nations peacekeeping mission.

More than 17,000 foreign troops disarmed tens of thousands of rebels and militia fighters. Several years on, the country still faces the challenge of reconstruction.

A lasting feature of the war, in which tens of thousands died, was the atrocities committed by the rebels, whose trademark was to hack off the hands or feet of their victims.

A UN-backed war crimes court was set up to try those, from both sides, who bear the greatest responsibility for the brutalities. It completed its work at the end of 2009. Its remaining case, the trial of Charles Taylor, continues in The Hague.

Continue reading the main story

At a glance

wpid 54360973 sierra amputee afp2 Sierra Leone

Politics: Sierra Leone is recovering from a 10-year civil war which ended in 2002; war centred around a power struggle and had a regional dimension

Economics: Substantial growth in recent years, but Sierra Leone remains bottom of UN's league for human development

Sierra Leone has experienced substantial economic growth in recent years, although poverty and unemployment remain major challenges.

In September 2010, the UN Security Council lifted the last remaining sanctions against Sierra Leone saying the government had fully re-established control over its territory, and former rebel fighters had been disarmed and demobilised.

Economic recovery has been slow partly because the reconstruction needs are so great. Around half of government revenue comes from donors.

The restoration of peace was expected to aid the the country's promotion as a tourist destination in the long term. Sierra Leone boasts miles of unspoilt beaches along its Atlantic coast, and hopes to emulate its neighbour Gambia in attracting tourists.

Sierra Leone is also rich in diamonds and other minerals. The trade in illicit gems, known as “blood diamonds” for their role in funding conflicts, perpetuated the civil war. The government has attempted to crack down on cross-border diamond trafficking.

Sierra Leone has a special significance in the history of the transatlantic slave trade. It was the departure point for thousands of west African captives. The capital, Freetown, was founded as a home for repatriated former slaves in 1787.

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The first instalment of the Africa Fashion Week London was held on the 5th and 6th of August 2011 at the Bishops Hall in the east end of London. The groundbreaking event was organised by the CEO/Founder Ms Ronke Ademiluyi and partners to showcase international designers using African prints, textiles and fabrics from most African countries like never before in the UK. The two day event witnessed up to 50 designers from all over the world showcasing their collections on the runway and Factory78TV was on hand to bring you some of the highlights. (Background music used by P-SQUARE taken from invasion Album). TWITTER – @Factory78 @Sopsydoo @Naijavisa
Video Rating: 5 / 5

wpid 54828192 oscarinpool Blade runner Oscar Pistorius (centre) had a very active childhood

“There was a lot of conferring with doctors. His parents took him from doctor to doctor and got lots of different advice,” says his aunt, Diana Binge. “They decided to take the most conservative advice they were given – to leave him with as much leg as possible and as many options as possible.”

Had they agreed to amputate more of Oscar's legs, as some doctors advised, there would have been no question of a running career.

He quickly became very mobile. “He first learnt to walk on his prosthetic legs,” says Ms Binge. “They didn't have actual feet like now, they were sort of little peg legs. He just walked on them – like his brother put his shoes on, he put his legs on.”

2. He was always into speed and excitement.

“He used to roller skate, ride bicycles, climb trees. He ran everywhere – and he ran like the wind,” says Ms Binge.

As a toddler he hurtled down the drive on a moulded plastic motorbike, pushing himself along with his prosthetic legs, and dragging them behind him. The legs would crack and the feet would get worn out.

“He was a battered and bruised child, always hurting himself. He has no perception of danger, which may be one reason why he has been so successful,” his aunt says.

“He once jumped into the swimming pool with his prosthetics on, causing his mother to leap into the swimming pool – because he sank to the bottom, his prosthetics acted almost like cement boots.

“He's just a tearaway.”

3. His blades are both an advantage and a disadvantage.

The advantage comes in the later stages of the race, according to Dr Wolfgang Potthast and his team from the German Sport University in Cologne.

wpid 54828195 blades getty Blade runner Oscar Pistorius wears his blades for running – the rest of the time he uses prosthetic legs

“The way of sprinting with two prostheses is entirely different from a mechanical point of view than running with natural legs… In a certain part of the race, when he has high velocity, I feel, and we have data on that, that he has a mechanical advantage,” Prof Potthast told the BBC World Service.

The disadvantage comes at the beginning of the race and on corners.

“In the 400m race, the athletes push out of the blocks with their calf muscles. Oscar doesn't have calfs, so he has to use his hips,” says Professor Bob Gailey, who studies the biomechanics of prosthetics at the University of Miami. “The curve on the track is also harder for Oscar – he needs to maintain balance, and the prosthetics aren't as flexible on bends as a human leg. He only properly gets into his running rhythm on the straights.”

It is unclear whether, overall, he is at an advantage or a disadvantage. In 2008, he was barred from competing in able-bodied competitions, partly due to test data provided by Prof Potthast. This ruling was overturned on appeal.

4. Oscar cannot upgrade his blades.

Oscar Pistorius is only allowed to compete on the carbon fibre blades that he was tested on before, says Bob Gailey.

“If we go back to the community of arbitration's rule, he is only able to compete in the same Cheetah blades that he was tested on in Cologne. If there are technological advances, he would have to petition to change those.”

Bob Gailey says this is consistent with other technical developments in sport.

“We see this in the Olympics, any time any type of new footwear or clothing proves to have a potential advantage it has to be assessed. So I think the same thing has to happen with prosthetic feet as well.”

Oscar only uses the blades for running. “You cannot stand still in a blade, because you have no heel,” says his aunt, Diana Binge. “It's like standing on the balls of your feet – you can only do it for so long.”

5. Oscar Pistorius is the “ambassador” of an aftershave.

wpid 54822142 mugler Blade runner The Clarins ad represents Oscar Pistorius as a “bionic man”

“I was looking for a new icon, a real man to incarnate A*men,” says Joel Palix, president of Clarins' Fragrance Group.

“But I was a bit tired of all the famous sportsmen and actors, I felt it was a bit stereotyped. One day I found an article speaking about Oscar and I thought his story was incredible. I am a strong advocate of diversity, I think in today's world every category of person should be in advertising, and be able to be the spokesperson for a product.”

Mr Palix says he was also charmed by Oscar Pistorius' personality and impressed by his “incredible career in sports”.

However, he concedes that he probably would not have chosen Oscar Pistorius if he was less physically attractive.

“After all we sell fragrance that is also a dream of buying a brand – it's only normal that we project the image of a person that is appealing.”

Research by Mark Bosworth

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