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World Bank to fund environment projects in Madagascar
by Staff Writers
Antananarivo (AFP) June 22, 2011

The World Bank said Wednesday it was loaning an extra 52 million dollars (36 million euros) to Madagascar over three years to fund environmental projects despite the unsettled political situation on the Indian Ocean island.

"The financing will help boost conservation efforts in 30 national parks and three new protected zones covering a total area of 2.7 million hectares (6.6 million acres), a bank communique said.

The decision had been hotly debated as Madagascar's transitional government is not recognized by the international community.

Noting that its program in Madagascar has been frozen since March 2009, the bank stressed "the exceptional nature of this additional funding both for environmental and humanitarian reasons."

A source familiar with the case said on condition of anonymity that the United States abstained from voting after a long debate.

"Far from signalling a re-engagement of the World Bank in Madagascar, it (the loan) rather underscores that the social and environmental costs of inaction are simply too high," said Haleh Bridi, the bank's country director for Madagascar.

"Madagascar's biodiversity is a huge resource on the world scale and an irreplaceable public asset. We have no choice but to protect it," she added.

The statement said "additional safeguards were put in place to ensure that the Madagascar government play its role in protecting national parks and respect laws which ban the illegal exploitation and export of timber."

"The bank reserves the right to suspend disbursements if the government fails to meet its commitment," it warned.

The impoverished Indian Ocean island nation has been gripped by political tensions since the ouster of ex-president Marc Ravalomanana amid violent street protests in March 2009.

His return has been a major sticking point in efforts by the 15-nation Southern African Development Community (SADC) to mediate the crisis.

The SADC has called for Madagascar's current strongman Andry Rajoelina to allow Ravalomanana to return "unconditionally", while also urging Ravalomanana to sign off on a roadmap to new elections that would make Rajoelina president of a transitional government.

But Rajoelina said Tuesday his rival would only be allowed to return when security conditions are "favourable".




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Sudan reinforces army in South Darfur ahead of split
Khartoum (AFP) June 22, 2011 - Sudan is beefing up security in areas of South Darfur close to the southern border for fear of unrest around the country's imminent partition, the state's deputy governor said on Wednesday.

"The state has started to increase security in areas on the border with south Sudan to be ready for any disturbances coinciding with separation," Abdelkarim Musa was quoted as saying by the Sudan Media Centre, a website close to the security forces.

"The state has deployed security forces so that they are ready to face the new situation in the south and to secure South Darfur from any attack that might come from the armed rebel groups," Musa added.

Tensions are running high along Sudan's porous north-south border, which runs to more than 2,000 kilometres (1,250 miles), but whose demarcation the two sides have yet to fully agree on, just weeks ahead of southern independence on July 9.

Some 20 percent remains disputed, including two areas along the border with South Darfur.

The Sudan People's Liberation Army of the south accused Khartoum of deploying troops along their shared frontier last week, after the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF), or northern army, shelled the southern border town of Agok.

On Wednesday, the SAF confirmed that extra troops had been deployed in parts of South Darfur, without giving details of numbers, but said the move was "normal," given the presence of Darfur rebels in those areas.

"To us as soldiers, the practice of relocating troops is normal, because we are free to move our troops where we want, when we want, and in those areas, the Darfur rebels are active," the army's spokesman Sawarmi Khaled Saad told AFP.

The south has consistently rejected northern claims that it has been aiding the Darfur rebels.





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AFRICA NEWS
Somalia Islamists vow loyalty to Zawahiri
Mogadishu, Somalia (UPI) Jun 21, 2011
The al-Shabaab Islamist group has sworn allegiance to Ayman al-Zawahiri, the new leader of al-Qaida, and declared, "We await your instructions." Al-Shabaab - The Youth - is losing ground to an offensive by Somalia's Western-backed Transitional Federal Government, backed by African peacekeepers, in Mogadishu, war-battered capital of the Horn of Africa state. But with two dozen, ... read more


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