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EU commends Lesotho’s progress in economic development November 24, 2010

Posted by Rethabile in poverty.
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APA-Maseru (Lesotho) The ambassador of European Union (EU) to Lesotho, Han Duynhouwer, has commended Lesotho’s progress in its development agenda even though major challenges remain, APA learns at a three-day third joint annual review of the General Budget Support that was held in Maseru on Tuesday.
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Will Madonna now look to adopt a baby in Lesotho June 7, 2009

Posted by Rethabile in adoption, poverty.
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By KATIE NICHOLL
Last updated at 11:55 PM on 06th June 2009

Madonna may be planning to adopt a baby from the African kingdom of Lesotho after being told to ‘expect the worst’ over her bid to become the new mother of Malawian girl Mercy James.

Her quest for another child could be the reason why the singer and her adopted son David Banda watched Prince Harry play at a polo match in aid of his charity Sentebale in New York last weekend.

The Prince has close links with Lesotho and Sentebale raises money for vulnerable children in the country, which has one of the highest AIDS rates in the world.
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Disco for baby love May 30, 2009

Posted by Rethabile in lesotho, poverty.
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Saturday, 30 May 2009

My partner and I are heading to Lesotho, from August 14 to September 3 to help build an orphanage and baby care unit. We need to raise approximately £5,000 between us.

We are holding various events to fund this project including a speed dating night and disco on Thursday, June 4, at The King’s Head (opposite The King’s Hall), Belfast, at 9pm. Tickets cost £5.

Money raised will be given to Lesotho Orphanage Construction to help build a larger orphanage.

Jennifer McKeown
Ulster Cancer Foundation

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No sh*t! March 16, 2009

Posted by Rethabile in poverty.
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Some of the world’s biggest banks have been accused of dealing with some of the world’s most corrupt regimes by Global Witness, the human rights and environmental campaign group.

LINK: http://business.timesonline.co.uk

Being all right with one’s wealth March 13, 2009

Posted by Rethabile in poverty, society.
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Happiness Index is the title of the four-part work he’s readying for Voices in Motion, Bodies That Sing, and although it doesn’t borrow directly from African music, it’s definitely inspired by the time that Hannan has spent in Lesotho, where his wife, Dr. Karen Stancer, mentors health-care workers dealing with AIDS.

“It’s, like, the poorest country in the world, with every problem that entails,” Hannan explains, in a separate telephone interview. “But the thing that really struck me from being there is that people are no more or less happy or no more or less complaining than anyone I know here.”

Inspired by their resilience, Hannan has composed a suite of four discrete songs. One is based on an unsettling conversation he had in Lesotho, during which he was asked if he “was all right” with the western world’s wealth.
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Woman, are you crazy?! March 8, 2009

Posted by Rethabile in faith, poverty, resources, sotho, stupidity.
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GOD LOVES LESOTHO
Author: Teresa
Filed under: Uncategorized
Saturday
Mar 7,2009
3/7/09

Today we had the privilege to speak at a church called River of Life There is a group of ladies who are called “Women in Evangelism”, who have been praying for their country for quite some time. When Jennifer shared her dream with them, they were moved to tears at the reality of how much God loves them. He loves them so much that He sent someone from across the world to tell them that He hasn’t forgotten them.

Isn’t it amazing that He would go to such great lengths to let them know He hears their crys? If you have ever thought God didn’t hear you, this is proof that He does. There is never one prayer that goes unheard, one tear shed that He doesn’t see. I am so moved by the fact that our God is never too busy to know exactly where we are and what we need.

Tomorrow we will be at the largest church in the country, where Jennifer will be speaking to the congregation, and I will have the opportunity to speak to the youth of the church. I am so excited to get to impart to them the importance of their generation to this country.

The whole country has such a pattern of immorality, hopelessness, and poverty mentality. This generation has the ability and the chance to change and make a difference, if they will rise up to the task. It won’t be easy, but it has to start somewhere. I pray that something I say will motivate them and stir up their hearts and give them the courage to be different.
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Is this person crazy or what? Is she talking about me and my people when she says, “The whole country has such a pattern of immorality, hopelessness, and poverty mentality”? What immorality? What hopelessness? What poverty mentality? Stay in a poor country and see how long you last. What’s a poor country?

It’s a country where the rains don’t come and the earth is as hard as baked clay. It’s a country where an epidemic is on the loose, in this case AIDS. It’s a country that has been destroyed by a number of other things, among them bad politics, and a legacy of colonial rule. A poor country is a country where you survive only if you have hope, and if you do not succumb to what you call the poverty mentality. We have not, and that’s why we’re still alive on this baked mountain. And if it’s not baked it’s frozen.

“He loves them so much that He sent someone from across the world to tell them that He hasn’t forgotten them.”

Are you out of your mind? God’s love for my people is evidenced by the fact that Jennifer went to my country and shared her dream with us? Are you trying to insult our intelligence or what? I, too, have had dreams about America and Americans. If I travel to your town and share these dreams, and tell you I’m doing so as proof that God loves you, what are you going to think?

“The people of Lesotho have many resources but don’t seem to know how to put them to work. They have fertile land, cattle, water, diamond mines, etc., but they don’t have the mentality of making life better for themselves.”
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Stuff like this pisses me off. They have fertile land. Soil erosion has taken away our fertile land, the one that remained after the English had given most of it, along the Mohokare River, to the Boers. In order to win our fertile land back from the elements, we are going to need resources and practically no other big battle (poverty, AIDS, drought, bad governance, etc) to fight. Our country is criss-crossed by dongas and rocky terrain, and they have fertile land?

We have water and diamond mines, that’s correct. But have you ever done the math and determined how much of the revenue from these actually stays in Lesotho, for the Basotho? That’s one of the big battles I mentioned above: bad governance. In your country, eight years of bad governance brought you to your knees, and you were already a strong economy that had resources and a vibrant financial life. Eight little years was all it took. And now the whole world is gasping.

No, it has little to do with whether or not we have the mentality of making life better for ourselves. That’s an insult to our humanity and to our intelligence. And I demand an apology. It sounds to me like you see yourself as the all-knowing messenger sent by God to uplift this poor people that doesn’t know how to care for itself, that is immoral, that is heathen, that doesn’t know how to talk to God properly. We knew how to talk to God before your nation was born. If you want to go to my country to help the poor, by all means do so, but go with a spirit of respect and siblinghood. God doesn’t love other people more than others.

Consider yourself lucky to have enough money to eat and to educate your loved ones properly — do not think this is because you know how to talk to God, do not think it’s because you’re less immoral than others, do not think it’s because you have the mentality to make life better for yourself. You were born into it, and someone else wasn’t. If you had been born in a poor country into a poor family, you’d be poor and probably sick. As I respect your people, I want you to respect mine.

Toxic waste dumped in Africa February 18, 2009

Posted by Rethabile in africa, human rights, poverty, stupidity.
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“Tonnes of toxic waste from municipal dumps in the West are being dumped illegally in countries like Nigeria and Ghana, an investigation has found.
Hundreds of thousands of broken items like TVs and computers are being sold to dealers on the pretext of re-use.
Under EU law, such household appliances must be dismantled or recycled.
But they are stripped of raw metals by those working on poisoned waste dumps, the report by Greenpeace, Sky News and Britain’s Independent newspaper found.”
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See, this pisses me off…

Migrating from rural areas February 6, 2009

Posted by Rethabile in jobs, lesotho, poverty.
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At precisely 11:30 a.m. the parking lot of Precious Garments, one of the many clothing factories in Maseru, Lesotho’s capital, fills with thousands of workers hurrying through drizzling rain to take their lunch break.
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Follow that Diamond! December 16, 2008

Posted by Rethabile in poverty, resources.
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Link: http://www.retail-jeweller.com/page.cfm/action=Archive/ArchiveID=1/EntryID=114

December 13, 2008

Posted by Rethabile in food and water, lesotho, poverty, water.
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Menu for Hope V launches Monday

Mfh5smallIn case you haven’t heard, our annual Menu for Hope begins again next Monday.  
You don’t know what Menu for Hope is? What, you’ve been living in the mountains somewhere, cut off from the food blog world? Well, fret not, here’s a list of frequently asked questions to answer your every query. Read it and join us! (If you’re on Facebook, join us there too.)

What is Menu for Hope?
When will this year’s campaign take place?
Who is the beneficiary of this year’s campaign?
Who collects the money?
How can I help?
  I’m a blogger
  I’m a restaurateur, author or food/wine producer/seller
  I’m a food blog reader or a food lover

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Menu for Hope?
Menu for Hope is an annual fundraising campaign hosted by me and a revolving group of food bloggers around the world.  Five years ago, the devastating tsunami in Southeast Asia inspired me to find a way to help, and the very first Menu for Hope was born. The campaign has since become a yearly affair, raising funds to support worthy causes worldwide. In 2007, Menu for Hope raised nearly $100K to help the UN World Food Programme feed the hungry.

Each December, food bloggers from all over the world join the campaign by offering a delectable array of food-related prizes for the Menu for Hope raffle. Anyone – and that means you too – can buy raffle tickets to bid on these prizes. For every $10 donated, you earn one virtual raffle ticket to bid on a prize of their choice. At the end of the two-week campaign, the raffle tickets are drawn and the results announced on Chez Pim.

When will this year’s campaign take place?
December 15 through Christmas. 

Who is the beneficiary of this year’s campaign?
Once again we’ve chosen to work with the UN World Food Programme.WFP is the world’s largest food aid agency, working with over 1,000 other organizations in over 75 countries. In addition to providing food, the World Food Program helps hungry people to become self-reliant so that they escape hunger for good.

With the success of last year’s campaign to support the school lunch program in Lesotho, we are going to continue our support to the same program.  During the duration of Menu for Hope V, we will be posting updates from the kids and the farmers we supported this past year.

If you weren’t around  last year for Menu for Hope 4, let me explain a bit about why we are supporting this particular program.  We chose to support the school lunch program because providing food for the children not only keeps them alive, but keeps them in school so that they learn the skills to feed themselves in the future. We chose to support the program in Lesotho because it is a model program in local procurement – buying food locally to support local farmers and the local economy. Instead of shipping surplus corn across the ocean, the WFP is buying directly from local subsistent farmers who practice conservation farming methods in Lesotho to feed the children there.

Who collects the money?
Certainly not me, nor is it the other bloggers participating on the campaign. We know our readers trust us, but we also want to be completely transparent in our fundraising. So, we use a very good online fundraising company called Firstgiving, who has worked with us since the first Menu for Hope years ago.

Donors can make an online donation with a credit card. Firstgiving collects and processes the payments and, at the end of the campaign, transfers the donations in one lump sum to the WFP. This is a win-win situation for all parties involved. The bloggers never touch the money. The WFP don’t waste overheads on processing mini-donations, the majority of which were between $10-$50, that’s a whole lot of tenners to make up $90K.  Firstgiving does all the work and collects a small fee, which include the credit card processing charges.

Last year, Firstgiving gave back 1% of the total amount raised in lieu of a discount on their processing fee. Thank you Firstgiving, we appreciated it very much!

Check back on Monday to get the link to the donation site.

How can you help?

If you are a blogger:
Participate in Menu for Hope V by hosting a raffle prize or by promoting Menu for Hope on your blog. The prize you offer need not be of high monetary value, but it should appeal to your readership. A small rule of thumb we’d like to suggest is that each prize offered should have the potential to raise at least $200. That means, don’t offer a prize unless you are pretty sure you could get at least twenty of your readers to donate $10 for a raffle ticket toward that prize.

Please do not solicit prizes from restaurants or producers whom you do not know. A big part of our success in prior years came from the personal connections between bloggers, food producers/restaurateurs/authors, and the readers who donate to the campaign. Basically, if they know your name, it’s ok. If you pick up the phone and introduce yourself and the person at the other end of the line goes “huh?”, you shouldn’t be asking them.

Each blogger is also responsible for shipping their prize to the winning donor. Make sure you have enough in your budget to cover shipping. It’s important that you specify where your shipping area will cover when you offer the prize.  Frankly, we prefer that you don’t restrict shipping area, but if you must, then please be very clear in your blog post so as not to confuse our donors.

Forward this post to all other bloggers you know so they can participate too.

Here are your local hosts for this year’s Menu for Hope

Europe *and* the UK
Sara of Ms.Adventures in Italy (sara.rosso@gmail.com)

US: West Coast (If you are closer to SF than you are to NY then you belong here.)
Matt Armendariz of Matt Bites (matt.armendariz@gmail.com)

US: East Coast
Jaden Hair of Steamy Kitchen (jaden@steamykitchen.com)

Canada
Meena Agarwal of Hooked on Heat (meena@hookedonheat.com)

Asia Pacific, Australia, New Zealand
Ed Charles of Tomato (edcharles@mac.com) 

and, last but not least, our special Wine Blog Host
Alder of Vinography (alder@vinography.com)

If you’d like to participate, please send your prize information (plus two images 75×75 thumbnail and 200x200px) to your local host so that they can give you a prize code (important!) and more instructions on what to do for Monday.

If you are a restaurateur, author or food producers/sellers:
Consider offering your products and services as raffle prizes. If you have a corportate blog, you can host the prize yourself. If you don’t, find a food blogger to host your prize. If you don’t know any, contact me, I’ll see what I can do.

If you are a food blog reader or a food lover:
Come back to Chez Pim on Monday December 10 when the campaign goes online. You can browse our amazing array of prizes by type, or find a prize near you by searching by region. Bid on as many prizes as you’d like. Buy raffle tickets as holiday gifts to your loved ones. Just come back and check us out on December 10. Help us help the WFP end world hunger.

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