Indigenous Ogiek health volunteers want clean water access

Kenya's Mau Complex is well known for being one of the most important water catchment areas in the country. The main rivers that snake their way through the famous Rift Valley in the country derive their waters from this area.

The rich and fertile Mau Forest Complex is also the ancestral home of the Ogiek --- the indigenous hunter-gatherer community, that has recently won yet another legal battle against the Kenyan government over evictions from the forest. While the complex is a source of plenty of water, access to clean and safe water for domestic use is still a major challenge for the Ogiek.

It is common to see animals such as cattle and donkeys drinking side by side with girls and women fetching water into jerrycans to take home for domestic use. Poor sanitation practices such as open defecation further contaminate these water sources.

'Diseases such as typhoid, cholera, and dysentery are quite common in our communities,' says Patrick Oldaisaba, an Ogiek Community Health Volunteer (CHV). 'As a matter of priority, both at the county and national levels, the issue of access to clean water for the Ogiek must be sorted.'

In Nessuit, Nakuru County, Minority Rights Group International, in partnership with the Ogiek Peoples' Development Program, is working to improve health outcomes among the community, under the 'Ethnic Minority Defenders: Amplifying the voices of minority indigenous human rights defenders to advocate for the rights to health and education' programme.

This project, funded by the Delegation of the European Union to Kenya, aims to attain improved health outcomes in these communities through the training of CHVs like Patrick, who are also supported with stipends.

As health role models among the Ogiek, CHVs educate members of their community on best hygiene and sanitation and how to prevent outbreaks of water-borne diseases in their homes. However, their efforts are being derailed by a lack of access to clean and safe water in Nessuit.

'We move from one household to another to tell people to use clean water, but what choice do they have if they cannot get water from a clean and safe source?' wonders Hellen Sitiengi, another CHV. As the popular phrase goes, 'health is wealth.' Good health is a major contributor to improved prospects of communities, and even more so with indigenous peoples such as the Ogiek.

CHVs play an important role in improving public health among the Ogiek. They sensitise people on diseases and encourage the sick to go to health facilities for medications. As vital and selfless as this work is, these volunteers need support. As new political leadership shapes up across Kenya, from the national to county levels, authorities need to prioritise clean water access for the Ogiek.

Nobody should have to look to contaminated shallow rivers and streams for domestic water. The government should extend reliable piped water to vulnerable communities in the medium term. Meanwhile, in the short term, protected springs, boreholes and even water tanks should be availed to the Ogiek to facilitate their access to clean water.

Source: Minority Rights Group

SAPS urging motorists and truck drivers to be vigilant

BLOEMFONTEIN - Truck drivers and motorists are urged to be vigilant and practice safety following an increase in hijackings in the province.

This warning follows after Police received reports about motorists who were hijacked by hitchhikers in the province especially on the R82 road between Sasolburg and Koppies, R30 between Welkom and Orkney as well as R59 between Parys and Sasolburg and the N1 stretch between Bloemfontein and Heuningspruit. Free State police are once more advising motorists to refrain from offering lifts to unknown people. Recently police opened cases of hijacking after armed hitchhikers attacked a motorist and left him on the road.

Police are also sending a warning to motorists and truck drivers, using the Free State roads, against a group of armed males whose modus operandi is to use private vehicles fitted with blue lights and to stop motorists and truck drivers posing as Traffic officials or SAPS members.

The suspects who are heavily armed would stop the driver of the targeted truck and two or three suspects would get out of the vehicle and force the driver out from the truck at gunpoint.

Motorists are urged to be vigilant and report any suspicious vehicles by calling the Police Emergency number 10111 or Crime Stop on 08600 10111 while driving to the nearest safer spot. All SAPS Highway patrol vehicles are marked and members will follow you if you indicate that you don’t feel safe to stop at that spot as directed.

Source: South African Police Service

SA reaffirms commitment to inclusive, sustainable future through education

Government has endorsed and reaffirmed the country’s commitment to achieve a more resilient, equitable, inclusive, peaceful and sustainable future through education.

Speaking at the G20 Education Ministers’ Meeting 2022, which is currently underway in Bali, Indonesia, Higher Education, Science and Innovation Minister, Dr Blade Nzimande said South Africa embraces the G20 on Education vision, as contained in the theme under the Indonesia Presidency, “Recover together, recover stronger through education”.

“This vision is aligned to South Africa’s priorities and interventions set out in our country’s approach to dealing with [the] post-COVID-19 era, that is, we simply just do not return to pre-COVID times which is in line with our Economic Reconstruction and Recovery Plan to move forward to new heights and a new period of reconstruction and development,”

“We thus pledge to continue to work with the G20 and other partners to expand and deepen solidarity and international partnerships which enable the sharing of resources [and] expertise.”

The three-day G20 Education Ministers’ Meeting 2022 got underway on Wednesday and is expected to conclude on Friday. The meeting is convened by the Ministry of Education, Culture, Research, and Technology of the Republic of Indonesia.

The session is held under this year’s G20 Education Working Group (EdWG) theme, "Recover, Reimagine, and Rebuild Stronger".

The G20 is a strategic multilateral platform connecting the world’s major developed and emerging economies, and holds a strategic role in securing future global economic growth and prosperity.

Nzimande expressed his gratitude to Education, Culture, Research and Technology Minister Nadiem Anwar Makarim and the Government of Indonesia for their leadership and hospitality in convening and organising the meeting.

Source: South African Government News Agency

New South African Driving Licence Card approved

Cabinet has approved the replacement of the current Driving Licence Card to a one with more secure design features.

The current system has been in operation since 1998.

In a statement on Thursday, Cabinet said the technology has since evolved and it is becoming expensive to maintain the current infrastructure.

“The new proposed card will make the country’s driving licence compatible with the International Information Technology Personal Identification Compliant Driving Licence (ISO18013),” Cabinet said.

In February this year, Transport Minister Fikile Mbalula announced that department plans to introduce a new driving licence card in South Africa from October 2023.

Speaking in a media briefing held at the time, Minister Mbalula said the new card will feature a number of security enhancements and international recognition – meaning it can be used as a form of identification.

He said that following cabinet approval, the Department of Transport will undergo a procurement process, with the new licence card expected to be piloted in October 2023.

The Minister said that the current card will be phased out over a five-year period, with the government also looking at extending the renewal period of the card from five to ten years.

Source: South African Government News Agency

Cabinet welcomes slight decline in unemployment rate

Cabinet has welcomed the slight decline in South Africa's unemployment rate.

This comes after figures in the second 2022 Quarterly Labour Force Survey, released by Statistics South Africa, this week revealed that unemployment in the country decreased by 0.6 percent, from 34.5% in the first quarter to 33.9 % between April and June.

In a statement, following its meeting on Wednesday, Cabinet said the modest yet impressive gains show that the concerted efforts by government and its social partners to grow the economy and create much-needed jobs are beginning to bear fruit.

The QLFS indicated that the biggest job gains were recorded in Community and Social Services (276 000), Trade (169 000), Finance (128 000) and Construction (104 000).

The total number of employed persons stood at 15.6 million in the second quarter of 2022, and the number of unemployed persons increased by 132 000 to 8.0 million in the second quarter of 2022 compared to the previous quarter.

“This is a testament to the fact that if we all work together by harnessing our collective strengths, we can overcome the challenges facing our economy,” said Cabinet.

Cabinet further added that it understands the frustrations of South Africans as they struggle to go about their daily lives owing to the cost of living and high unemployment rate.

“As a caring government, we remain determined and committed to working together with our social partners to build a better tomorrow for everyone. Government remains committed to supporting local businesses by buying local goods and services.”

Source: South African Government News Agency

Local Government Amendment Act welcomed

Cabinet has welcomed the signing into law the Local Government Municipal Systems Amendment Act by President Cyril Ramaphosa.

The Bill repeals the Amendment Act and has been properly tagged as a section 76 Bill. The Bill was approved by Parliament on 3 May 2022 with further amendments following comprehensive public participation processes at both national and provincial levels.

Following its meeting on Wednesday, Cabinet in a statement said it was confident that the changes would ensure that those who are appointed or elected into these positions will be able to deliver on their promises so that we can achieve a better life for all.

The Act aims to improve the capacity and ethical standards of local government. The law forms part of government’s efforts to professionalise the public service and ensure the sustainable provision of services to the people, as a basic right enshrined in the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa of 1996.

The Act specifies the processes to be followed for senior position appointments. It now prevents senior public officials from holding political office in political parties. Also with this Act in place, vacant municipal manager posts are expected to be advertised nationally to attract a wide pool of suitable candidates.

Source: South African Government News Agency

Have your say on radio frequency spectrum

Cabinet has approved the publication of the draft Next Generation Radio Frequency Spectrum Policy for public comment.

The proposed policy intends to support the spectrum allocation and licensing for fixed mobile; broadcasting; aeronautical and marine; research and development; community access, and other relevant industries.

The policy also seeks to promote equity and fair allocation to contribute towards the transformation of the sector and accessibility of digital connectivity even in outlying parts of the country.

“Radio frequency spectrum is a finite natural resource that is vital to the growth of South Africa’s digital economy and communication infrastructure,” Cabinet said in a statement issued on Thursday.

South Africa’s candidature for ITU Council approved

Cabinet has also approved South Africa’s candidature of Mandla Samuel Mchunu to the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) Radio Regulations Board (Region D).

Mchunu is currently a serving board member of ITU Radio Regulations (Africa Region), and he is proposed for re-election to the ITU Council for the term 2023 to 2026.

“The elections will take place during the ITU Plenipotentiary Conference to be held in Bucharest, Romania from 26 September to 14 October 2022. South Africa remains committed to the goals and objectives of the ITU of bridging the digital divide and connecting all the people of the world,” Cabinet said.

Source: South African Government News Agency