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21. 1997 Human Rights Reports: Cameroon
a gendarmerie facility in the Northwest province town of wum to await indigenous People. The population of indigenous Baka Pygmies, a term that fact encompasses
http://stockholm.usembassy.gov/human/human97/cameroon.html
U.S. Department of State
Cameroon Country Report on
Human Rights Practices for 1997
Released by the Bureau of Democracy,
Human Rights, and Labor
January 30, 1998.
CAMEROON Internal security responsibilities are shared by the national police, the National Intelligence Service (DGRE), the gendarmerie, the Ministry of Territorial Administration, military intelligence, the army, and to a lesser extent, the Presidential Security Service. The police and the gendarmerie have dominant roles in enforcing internal security laws. The security forces, including the military forces, remain under the effective control of the President, the civilian Minister of Defense, and the civilian head of police. The police and gendarmes continued to commit numerous serious human rights abuses. Following nearly a decade of economic decline and widening financial imbalance, economic performance has improved, with annual gross domestic product (GDP) growth averaging more than 5 percent over the last 2 years. The Government began in 1996 to implement a program of structural reforms. The majority of the population is rural. Agriculture accounts for 25 percent of GDP, while industry and the services sectors account for 22 and 35 percent, respectively. The petroleum sector accounts for less than 10 percent of public revenues. Principal exports include timber, coffee, cocoa, cotton, bananas, and rubber.

22. Country Reports On Human Rights Practices For 1999 - Cameroon
September 29, 1998, an Anglophone barkeeper died while in detention, reportedly as a result of torture by gendarmes in the town of wum in the indigenous People.
http://stockholm.usembassy.gov/human/human1999/cameroon.html
Country Reports on Human Rights
Practices for 1999
Released by the Bureau of Democracy,
Human Rights, and Labor
U.S. Department of State

CAMEROON
February 2000
TOC Preface Introduction Africa ... Appendixes Internal security responsibilities are shared by the national police (DGSN), the National Intelligence Service (DGRE), the gendarmerie, the Ministry of Territorial Administration, military intelligence, the army, and to a lesser extent, the Presidential Guard. The police and the gendarmerie have dominant roles in enforcing internal security laws. The security forces, including the military forces, remain under the effective control of the President, the civilian Minister of Defense, and the civilian head of police. The security forces continued to commit numerous serious human rights abuses. RESPECT FOR HUMAN RIGHTS Section 1. Respect for the Integrity of the Person, Including Freedom From: a. Political and Other Extrajudicial Killing There were no confirmed reports of political killings; however, the security forces continued to use excessive, lethal force against private citizens and committed numerous extrajudicial killings. On the night of January 18-19, in the Yaounde neighborhood of Cite Verte, a gendarmerie captain named Angoula shot and killed Yves Atiback following a dispute. Captain Angoula was arrested and charged with murder. At year's end, he was detained in the Yaounde Central Prison, where he was awaiting trial.

23. Dairy Production In Cameroon: Growth, Development, Problems And Solutions
reestablished dairy operations by organizing the wum cooperative cheese working with local people so as of commercial dairying with cattle indigenous to the
http://www.fao.org/ag/aga/agap/war/warall/u1200b/u1200b0g.htm
Dairy production in Cameroon: Growth, development, problems and solutions
Review of dairy production
Constraints to dairy production

Integrating the dairy sector in rural development activities

Designing and implementing a community dairy project
...
Bibliography
E.N. Tambi The author is Assistant Chief of the Institute of Animal Research, Bambui, PO Box 80, Bamenda, Cameroon. Compared with an average of 210 kg in the developed countries, milk consumption per caput in Cameroon is approximately 10 kg, while per caput production is only 5.11 kg. Since the difference in consumption is made up by dairy imports, which are continually increasing, special attention needs to be given to developing dairy production in the country. Holstein-Friesian and Jersey cattle were brought from the United States in 1974, 1976 and 1981, and cross-breeding took place with the local zebu (White and Red Fulani). Although some 87 pure-bred and cross-bred cattle were distributed to farmers and missions by 1982, dairying is still only carried out on a small scale. A coordinated development strategy is needed for the dairy industry to remove constraints to rural producers, ensure remunerative prices for products and promote cooperatives to integrate milk production processing and marketing within rural development.

24. FIOH FUND - CAMEROON PROJECTS
the eucalyptus, and the benefits of the indigenous trees, become Many people from the project area travelled to situations in and around Bamenda, wum and Douala
http://www.fiohnetwork.org/fiohfund/fiohfundcam1.htm
Projects supported in the Cameroon HOME FIOH International Network Plant a Tree in Africa
BACK TO
...
Fund

The FIOH Education and Development Fund
48 Churchward Avenue
Swindon
Wiltshire SN2 1NH
UK
Tel/Fax 01793 532353
Registered Charity Number 1047953
EUCALYP TUS REPLACEMENT PROJECT BACKGROUND The project area is located in the highlands of the Northwest Province around the small town of Kumbo in the districts of Donga Mantung and Bui. The climate is rarely excessively hot or cold. The rainy season starts in March/April and the dry season starts around November. The main project was launched in November 2000 following the establishment of two small pilot projects in April 1999 and April 2000. The first introduction of eucalyptus trees to the area is not known exactly but the widespread popularity of the trees in this once grassland area, appears to have followed the extensive planting by German missionaries in the early 1900's. A further boost to planting in the 1960's followed a collapse in the price of coffee, one of the main local cash crops. Their spread throughout the area in recent years appears to have been as much the result of default as design. Seeds germinate easily where they fall from established trees and many millions are spread throughout the area.

25. City Of Toronto, City Council Legislative Documents
displays, collects, studies and researches the indigenous textile traditions of the provides quality entertainment for young people and their Theatre wum$6,900.
http://www.city.toronto.on.ca/legdocs/agendas/committees/ed/ed980918/it003.htm
Accessing City Hall Mayor Councillors Meeting Schedules City of Toronto Council and Committees All Council and Committee documents are available from the City of Toronto Clerk's office. Please e-mail clerk@toronto.ca REPORT TO ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT COMMITTEE FROM ANNE COLLINS, PRESIDENT TORONTO ARTS COUNCIL August, 1998 SUBJECT: CITY OF TORONTO ARTS AND CULTURE GRANTS JANUARY TO JUNE, 1998 TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction 1998 Grants: January to June Economic Analysis Loan Fund Method of Grants Evaluation Grant lists: Project Grants - March 16, 1998 deadline Operating Grants - March 16, 1998 deadline 1998 Appeals list Project Grants:March 16, 1998 deadline Operating Grants: March 16, 1998 deadline Cultural Facilities Support Grants Grants Rescinded Board of Directors Committees INTRODUCTION This report, covering the first six months in 1998 (January 1 to June 30), describes the economic impact of the City's financial investment in the arts community and the impressive array of new work, creativity and community animation which resulted. Jurisdiction: At its meeting held on January 2, 6, 8, and 9, 1998, City Council approved the final report of the Transition Team on an interim basis. In doing so it approved Recommendation 103 which provides that for 1998, the Toronto Arts Council will continue to allocate grants within its former area of jurisdiction, which is the former City of Toronto.

26. Dairy Production In Cameroon Growth, Development, Problems And
dairy operations by organizing the wum cooperative cheese and skills; · working with local people so as of commercial dairying with cattle indigenous to the
http://www.ssdairy.org/AdditionalRes/worldAnRev/DairyproductioninCameroon.htm

27. Life In Central America: Life In Central America
Remember the cargo cults in africa? These guys were smart; they watched the white men carefully funding has been diverted to protect areas in the Amazon region, africa, or Asia
http://ticokid.blogs.com/life_in_central_america/life_in_central_america
Life in Central America
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28. Untitled
it soon. BTW my wife, teenage step daughter, and 1month-old infant and myself are flying to Lesotho, africa in a week
http://www.cjfearnley.com/geodesic-logs/1994/LOG9407.txt
From Mon Feb 6 17:00:09 1995 Received: from netaxs.com (root@netaxs.com [198.69.186.1]) by access.netaxs.com (8.6.9/8.6.9) with ESMTP id RAA29335 for ; Mon, 6 Feb 1995 17:00:09 -0500 Received: from UBVM.cc.buffalo.edu (ubvm.cc.buffalo.edu [128.205.2.1]) by netaxs.com (8.6.9/8.6.9) with SMTP id QAA04309 for ; Mon, 6 Feb 1995 16:59:34 -0500 Message-Id: Received: from UBVM.CC.BUFFALO.EDU by UBVM.cc.buffalo.edu (IBM VM SMTP V2R2) with BSMTP id 3003; Mon, 06 Feb 95 16:58:32 EST Received: from UBVM.CC.BUFFALO.EDU (NJE origin LISTSERV@UBVM) by UBVM.CC.BUFFALO.EDU (LMail V1.2a/1.8a) with BSMTP id 9074; Mon, 6 Feb 1995 12:40:06 -0500 Date: Mon, 6 Feb 1995 12:39:41 -0500 From: "L-Soft list server at UBVM (1.8a)" Subject: File: "GEODESIC LOG9407" To: "Christopher J. Fearnley" Status: RO ========================================================================= Date: Sat, 2 Jul 1994 06:42:56 GMT Reply-To: List for the discussion of Buckminster Fuller's works Sender: List for the discussion of Buckminster Fuller's works From: Chris Fearnley Organization: Critical Path Project Subject: Re: Developing an operational pi In article writes: [Stuff deleted] > > >To say that something is an approximation is to indicate that some perfectly >accurate representation exists. Everything I know contradicts this; >everything is inexact - mutating and changing constanty, subtly, and even >extensively. That which is not does not appear to be measurable. >

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