2001 PHP Grants in Kitunku, Mabira Division, karagwe District and income generating activities for indigenous women of cooperatives in raising disadvantaged peoples standard of http://www.pcusa.org/hunger/grantlist.htm
Extractions: INTERNATIONAL GRANTS The Presbyterian Hunger Program (PHP) is one of three programs supported by the One Great Hour of Sharing offering. It is part of the Worldwide Ministries Division of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) , and is administered under the direction of the Global Service and Witness work area. The PHP receives about 75% of its funding from the One Great Hour of Sharing offering. Additional support is generated by year-round giving for hunger. The work of the program is guided by an advisory committee comprised of seven, members elected by the General Assembly, the mission-partner-in residence, and a liaison from the General Assembly Council AFRICA $309,889 CAMEROON Hunger Eradication Project Through Micro-Credit
Ostafrika of indigenous Education in an East African Tribe. PG The peoples of Kenya The Taita. 5.; Katoke Israel K. The Making of the karagwe Kingdom. A http://www.baslerafrika.ch/KATOST.htm
Extractions: Acta des Kaiserlichen Gouvernement von Deutsch-Ostafrika: Betreffend Irangi-Gesellschaft-Lieutenant Werther. Protokolle in der Untersuchungss. Gegen Lietenant Werther. Transkription von Giorgio Miescher, Basler Afrika Bibliographien, Basel, 1995. 272p.. 150.- East African Wildlife Journal: Published by the East African Wild Life Society, Volume 4, August 1966. 163p., ill.. 15.- East African Wildlife Journal: Published by the East African Wildlife Society, Volume 5, August 1967. 183p., ill., maps, tables. 15.- Kenya Safari: Prepared by the Department of Information, Kenya. Text by Alastair Matheson. 49p., ill.. 5.- Kenya Today: Nairobi: The Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, Edited by Alastair Matheson, Vol.4, No.2 June 1958. Edited by Enid de Silva. 5 Vols.: Vol.II No.2, December, 1965/ Vol.12 No.3 December, 1966/ Vol.13 No.1 April, 1967/ Vol.13 No.2 July/August, 1967/Vol.13 December, 1967. 15.- Kenya Wild Life Society: First Annual Report 1956, Nairobi, Kenya. 66p.. 3.-
(mai) 150 Nordic NGOs Sign Letter On Investment & The UN IWGIA, International Work Group for indigenous Affairs, Lund, Sweden Joyce, Sweden The karagwe Association of and Social union Norwegian peoples Aid PAND http://lists.essential.org/mai-not/msg00041.html
Extractions: Date Prev Date Next Thread Prev Thread Next ... Thread Index To mai-intl@essential.org (intl), mai-not@essential.org (NOT) Subject From mstrand@citizen.org Date : Thu, 11 Mar 1999 12:12:00 -0500 Organization : Public Citizen Sender mstrand@citizen.org Prev by Date: (mai) MAI most under-reported in US media Next by Date: (mai) Image problems at the WTO Prev by thread: (mai) MAI most under-reported in US media Next by thread: (mai) Image problems at the WTO Index(es): Date Thread
INTERIM TECHNICAL REPORT INBAR BAMBOO PRODUCTION-TO-CONSUMPTION SYS is Muslim and 20% adhere to indigenous beliefs yield annually and are readily accessible to rural peoples. Bukoba urban, Bukoba rural, Muleba, karagwe and Ngara http://www.inbar.int/publication/pubdownload.asp?publicid=83&filetype=txt
Sharing With Other People Network Request for your immediate support VSAT internet connectivity in karagwe, Joseph Sekiku, Chances for indigenous People to attend WSIS, JUSTA africa, 200310 http://dgroups.org/groups/swopnet/index.cfm?op=main&cat_id=1976
ReliefWeb: Humanitarian Aid In Central Africa Human Development Specialists (HDS), are always indigenous to the refugee camps in Ngara and karagwe, are now Common GroundBurundi (SCG) and People for Peace. http://www.reliefweb.int/w/rwb.nsf/0/4e8facf218896f4ec125647900285e21?OpenDocume
Www.cyberweb.ws Other resources are tin and tungsten in karagwe. in general and issues concerning East africa in particular also refused to allow the indigenous people of Sudan http://mycvat.com/easternafricamagazine/aug_issue2003.htm
African Timelines Part II Luo, Bunyoro, Ankole, Buganda, and Karagwebut little overview Islam African indigenous Culture http Karangaancestors of the Shona peoples of southeastern http://www.cocc.edu/cagatucci/classes/hum211/timelines/htimeline2.htm
My Uganda >> About Uganda >> People & Culture >> Tribes >> Bantu >> Bagisu Bantu are a group of people who speak related government could not have been an indigenous one. from Bunyoro, Toro, Ankole, Rwanda and karagwe where the http://www.myuganda.co.ug/categories/about/people_culture/tribes_languages/bantu
Extractions: Find In All Uganda Kampala Adjumani Apac Arua Bugiri Bundibugyo Bushenyi Busia Gulu Hoima Iganga Jinja Kabale Kabarole Kalangala Kamuli Kapchorwa Kasese Katakwi Kibale Kiboga Kisoro Kitgum Kotido Kumi Lira Luwero Masaka Masindi Mbale Mbarara Moroto Moyo Mpigi Mubende Mukono Nakasongola Nebbi Ntungamo Pallisa Rakai Rukungiri Soroti Ssembabule Tororo Home About Uganda Tribes Monarchies Help Line The Bagisu Bafumbira Baganda Bagwere Bakiga ... Back Bantu are a group of people who speak related languages and have similar social characteristics. They occupy a large part of Zaire and southern as well as eastern Africa. The Bantu are said to have originated from somewhere in the Congo region of central Africa and spread rapidly to southern and eastern Africa. Today, more than one half of the population of Uganda are Bantu.) There are several groups speaking different Bantu languages. Bantu are said to have settled in Uganda between A.D 1000 and A.D. 1300. Some reasons are given to explain why the Bantu moved from their original homeland to come to settle in Uganda. One reason is that they might have been overpopulated and therefore some groups decided to move away in search of vacant lands on which to practice agriculture. Another reason given is that they might have moved away just in search of fertile lands or due to internal conflicts within their communi-ties or external attacks by their neighbours.
AfricAvenir - Research - Chronology Of African History 3 Luo, Bunyoro, Ankole, Buganda, and Karagwebut little is but scholars argue that indigenous slavery was Struggles developed among coastal peoples for control http://www.africavenir.org/research/research052.html
Extractions: AFRICAN EMPIRES ca. 300 (to 700) Rise of Axum or Aksum (Ethiopia) and conversion to Christianity. (By CE 1st century, Rome had conquered Egypt, Carthage, and other North African areas; which became the granaries of the Roman Empire, and the majority of the population converted to Christianity). Axum spent its religious zeal carving out churches from rocks, and writing and interpreting religious texts. ca. 600 (to 1000) Bantu migration extends to southern Africa; Bantu languages will predominate in central and southern Africa. Emergence of southeastern African societies, to become the stone city-states of Zimbabwe, Dhlo-Dhlo, Kilwa, and Sofala, which flourish through 1600. Beginning of Islam Khalif Omar conquers Egypt with Islamic troups Islam sweeps across North Africa; Islamic faith eventually extends into many areas of sub-Saharan African (to ca. 1500)
UGANDA Special Report On Resettlement Of Kikagati Returnees lost the elections in the northwestern district of karagwe, Kagera Region by ethnic tension and violence between the indigenous Banyoro people and the http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=27906
ALIN: Arid Lands Information Network >>>> to Chief Ruhinda who lived in karagwe district near program in 1967, local people were removed to study and popularise existing indigenous knowledge, attitude http://www.alin.or.ke/baobab/issue40.htm
Extractions: The killer in the kitchen Women and children hit hardest Indoor air pollution is not an indiscriminate killer. It is the poor who rely on the lower grades of fuel and have least access to cleaner technologies. Specifically, indoor air pollution affects women and small children far more than any other sector of society. Women typically spend between three and seven hours per day by the fire, longer when fires are also used for heating the home. A problem set to get worse The effects of smoke on health Illnesses caused by indoor air pollution include acute lower respiratory infection. A child is two to three times more likely to contract acute lower respiratory infection if exposed to indoor air pollution. Women who cook on biomass are up to four times more likely to suffer from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, such as chronic bronchitis. Lung cancer in women in China has been directly linked to use of coal burning stoves. In addition there is evidence to link indoor air pollution to asthma, tuberculosis, low birth weight and infant mortality and cataracts.
A740 some areas, a sharp decline in indigenous livestock numbers In contrast, the local population in karagwe, where refugee peace still eludes the people of Burundi http://www.jha.ac/Ref/r018.htm
Extractions: REGIONAL CONFERENCE ON REFUGEE ISSUES IN THE GREAT LAKES REGION On 8 and 9 May 1998, UNHCR and the OAU convened a regional meeting on refugee issues in the Great Lakes. The meeting, which was held in Kampala, was attended, inter alia, by the UN High Commissioner for Refugees, the Secretary-General of the OAU, the Secretary-General of the United Nations, President Yoweri Museveni and ministerial-level delegations from eight countries in East and Central Africa. The following proceedings of the Conference are published below: Refugee Protection and Security in the Great Lakes Region Introduction During the past five years, several parts of the Great Lakes region of Africa have been caught up in a vicious circle of insecurity, violence and displacement. Believing their life and liberty to be in imminent danger, massive numbers of people have abandoned their homes and crossed the border into another country, hoping to find safety there. All too frequently, however, these large-scale population movements have generated new forms of insecurity, threatening not only the refugees themselves, but also their countries of origin, the countries and communities which have offered them asylum, and the humanitarian workers who are attempting to provide them with protection and assistance.
Research In African Lit--The Last Of The Bards preBahinda/Babito era (pre-1400) indigenous development of is only in Kiyanja, Ihangiro, and karagwe that many comedies and adventures of the common people. http://iupjournals.org/ral/ral28-1.html
Extractions: In 1952, the late South African musicologist Hugh Tracey wrote the following memorable words regarding Habibu Selemani: It was here (i.e. chief's court at Kabale in Bukoba, Tanzania) that we found our next outstanding African artist, named Habibu bin Selimani. . . . Chief Gabriel Rugabandana was very keen for us to record his zither player who, he said, was the best singer of legends in all of the Haya country. Our subsequent recording of the legend, which accredited their tribal origin to the spirit of the Lake, was a masterpiece of narration. It lasted about fifteen minutes and the reciter was word perfect throughout, the accompaniment of his seven-string deep-toned zither giving an appropriate air of solemnity to the whole performance. ("Recording Tour" 47) This assessment of Habibu Selemani by a man who only met him once and was, moreover, a stranger to the culture that Habibu Selemani represented, is a good indication of Habibu Selemani's stature as a musician even at that early stage in his careerthere was no mistaking the fact that here was a great, budding artist. And Tracey was well-placed to make an informed judgment: he and his team had traveled all over eastern and southern Africa recording traditional music, and Bukoba was among their last stops in their musical odyssey. Tracey's assessment of Habibu Selemani is still true todaytwo years after the latter's death in 1993. As I look back on his repertoire and listen to his many surviving records, I realize that Selemani was a talented master of
Untitled-8 in the Southern Part of the karagweAnkolean Belt of Crotalaria Species Used as indigenous Vegetables » M. Sc A People Called the Hehe » MJ, Carleton University http://caas.concordia.ca/htm/pays/tanzan.htm
COUNTRY REPORT FOR UGANDA into Bunyoro and Toro) and karagwe were in District women Representatives; 10 Uganda Peoples Defence to develop and strengthen the indigenous private sector http://www.bicon.org/en/sidor/uganda.htm
Extractions: COUNTRY REPORT FOR UGANDA A PRESENTATION FOR THE STRATEGIC INSURANCE MANAGEMENT COURSE FOR SENIOR MANAGERS BY MR. BADRU MUSOKE (coordinator) MR. O. KAZIBWE MR. P. KAYE HON. I. K. LUBEGA-KADUNABBI 1.0 THE COUNTRY 1.1 Uganda at a Glance No GDP growth rate (1998/99) Inflation rate (1998/99) Debt Service Ratio (1997/98) Real GDP per Capita (US $) 1997/98 Land area Total Population (millions) projected 2001 Population annual growth rate (%) 1999 Dependency Ration 1997 Population living in absolute poverty % 200 Population in thatched houses % 1997 236,040 sq. km Infant mortality rate per 1,000 live births (1995) Under 5 mortality rate per 1,000 live births (1995) Total fertility rate, 1995 Maternal Mortality rate per (100,000) 1995 Life expectancy at birth (years), 1995 Estimated number of HIV persons (millions) 1997 Access to safe water (% of rural population) 1998 Access to sanitation (% of rural population) 1998 Population per Doctor, 1997 Net Primary enrolment ratio (estimated) 1998 Adult literacy rate % 1995 1.2 General Background Information
Amnesty International Canada - News & Reports police or immigration services in karagwe, Biharamuro and the Specific Aspects of Refugee Problems in africa;; of Displaced and Repatriated People Dr Pascal http://www.amnesty.ca/Refugee/news/view.php?load=arcview&article=1063&c=Refugee_
History and Rwanda and Burundi) and the karagwe kingdom in a crucial political problem, since the people of the in 1993 restored the indigenous monarchies abolished by http://www.ugandahouse.com/tophistory.htm
Extractions: HISTORY There is general scholarly consensus for the view that the entire extent of human evolution was enacted in the Rift Valley and plains of East Africa. This view has been established mainly by archaeological discoveries. Many scholars argue that Uganda has supported hominid life for as long as any other part of East Africa though it has not yielded hominid remains of comparable antiquity to those unearthed in Kenya, Tanzania and Ethiopia. There are only a few places in the country where fossils of such age might be sought. In one of these, the Moroto district, fossils have been discovered that belong to the semi-bipedal proto-hominid Dryopithecusis, thought to have lived about 15 million years ago. East Africa saw two major human immigrations in the period between 1000BC and 1000 AD, both of them involving people of West African of slight physical stature who were similar Bunyoro-Kitara towards the end of the 15th century. In the second half of the 15th century, the Nilotic-speaking Luo left their homeland on the plains of southern Sudan, and migrated southwards along the Nile into what is now Uganda. There they splintered into three groups. The first of these remained at Pubungu (probably near modern-day Pakwach); the second occupied the region of Uganda that lies west of the Nile; and the third continued southwards into the heart of Bunyoro-Kitara. The arrival of the Luo coincided with the emergence of several other kingdoms in the south and east of Bunyoro. These include Buganda and Ankole in modern-day Uganda (and Rwanda and Burundi) and the Karagwe kingdom in what is now northwest Tanzania. These kingdoms share a common Bacwezi heritage. Bunyoro was the largest and most influential of these kingdoms until the end of the 17th century. It had a diversified economy, a loose political structure, and a dominant trade position due to its exclusive control of the region's salt mines.
STUDY REPORTS_ECOSYSTEM of biodiversity in Ngara and karagwe districts is indigenous knowledge of the community, which is important in the need to involve local people in forest http://www.nfp.co.tz/studies_report/ecosystem/biodiversity.htm
Extractions: Forest type [000 ha] % of total forested land area Forests [other than mangroves] Mangrove forests Woodlands Total Use of forest land Production forest area Protection forest area (mostly catchments areas) Total Legal status Forest reserves Forests/woodlands Non-reserved forest land Total Source: Adapted and modified from the National Forest Policy, 1998. According to the Biodiversity country report (VPO, 1998), of a total 250 families of terrestrial flora in Tanzania, there are 10,645 species, 927 sub-species and 1,102 varieties. The 250 families are distributed among four major groups. Dicotyledons (165), Monocotyledons (48), Ferns (31) and Gymnosperms (6). The Angiosperm largest family is Leguminosae with a total of 1,654 taxa, followed by
13. Socio-economic Development PO Box 223, Kayanga Town karagwe Kagera Region social development services for the people of Kenya;; the institutional growth of indigenous social development http://www.inasp.info/pubs/rd/book/ch13.htm
Extractions: Publications GAP Matters (quarterly) ABANTU for Development is a UK registered charity established in 1991. Its aim is to increase the participation of women in decision making and policy influencing on mainstream issues affecting development in Africa. It seeks to strengthen particularly women's NGOs, and NGOs that work for women, to be more effective actors in the development of their countries in a long-term and sustainable way. It plans to achieve this aim through research about women's participation in policy making, training and advice for both policy analysis and organisation strengthening, and information on mobilisation of resources. It has a network of offices in the UK, Eastern Africa (Nairobi, Kenya) and Western Africa (Accra, Ghana and Kaduna, Nigeria). Publications : ABANTU produces high-quality, easily accessible information with African and gender perspectives on all aspects of development, as well as support materials for our programmes. These include