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Africa Must Adapt To Soaring Temperatures

Two killed in Egypt fire fanned by sandstorm
Cairo (AFP) April 17 - At least two people were killed Tuesday in a fire fanned by a fierce sandstorm in Cairo which halted all flights at the main airport and delayed the arrival of US Defence Secretary Robert Gates, a police source said. The two died when the fire, triggered by a flame from a gas stove and fanned by strong winds, set some 50 homes ablaze in the village of Atalia in the Nile Delta governorate of Menufiyah, the source told AFP. Eight other people suffered burns. The blaze swept through the village due to strong winds and the fact that roofs are often made of palm tree stems. Some 30 firetrucks were deployed to control the fire. Meanwhile, air traffic had by late afternoon partially resumed at Cairo international airport after a five-hour interruption which left thousands of passengers stranded. "The resumption of normal traffic should take several hours," the official MENA news agency reported. All take-offs and landings had been interrupted during the sandstorm "which cut visibility to fewer than 500 metres (yards), which is 300 metres below the necessary field of vision," operations director General Abdel Fattah Badran told reporters. Two flights -- one from Sudan and one from Luxor in upper Egypt -- were diverted to Egypt's Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh, Badran added. The US Defence Secretary, who is on a Middle East tour, was due in Cairo around 1.30 pm (1130 GMT) but was stuck in Amman because of the storm. Photo courtesy AFP.
by Staff Writers
Johannesburg (AFP) April 17, 2007
African governments must urgently look at ways to adapt to effects of rising temperatures on the continent most vulnerable to climate change, authors of a United Nations report said Tuesday.

As global temperatures rise due to greenhouse gasses that have already gathered in the atmosphere, sub-Saharan Africa will have to deal with an unavoidable one degree temperature increase.

"At least 0.6 degrees (centigrade) of global warming appears unavoidable given how much greenhouse gas has accumulated in the atmosphere," said Guy Midgley, a chief scientist of South Africa's National Biodiversity Institute.

"The unavoidable regional warming is closer to one degree. Adaptation is going to be necessary," he said, during a regional briefing on the landmark Intergovernmental Panel of Climate Change's fourth assessment report.

This could see the continent, whose marginal resources are already stretched, suffering more droughts, floods and less food as agriculture is affected by the rising temperatures.

Another of the report's authors, Pauline Dube, said a reduction in water sources represented one of the most pressing threats to countries in the region.

"South Africa and Botswana experience water stress. The city of Gabarone is severely handicapped and often construction has to stop. The city has to recycle water," said Dube, a senior lecturer in the University of Botswana's environmental science department.

The 1,500-page report, which has been developed over five years, was presented as a summary for policymakers, who have the power to find ways to adjust to the effects of climate change.

earlier related report
Italy urges united Africa aid policy
Tokyo (AFP) April 17 - Italian Prime Minister Romano Prodi called Tuesday for Europe and Japan to coordinate aid to Africa in the face of China's increasingly visible presence in the continent.

"With regards to Africa, Europe and Japan should align in their communication and become closer," Prodi told students at the University of Tokyo, speaking through an interpreter.

"If we look at numbers, Europe and Japan together present a great deal more aid to Africa than China," said Prodi, the former head of the European Commission. "But when I talk to African leaders, they only talk about China."

China has become a growing investor and donor in Africa, although it has come under criticism in the West for supporting nations such as Sudan despite the mass killings in the Darfur region.

Prodi also called on European nations to focus on their relations with Asia.

"I think it is very important to direct the European Union's politics towards Asia. This is Asia's century... and Asia's revival will give support to the Mediterranean region," Prodi said.

Prodi met Monday with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and agreed to put African development and global warming high on the agenda in upcoming summits of the Group of Eight industrialised nations.

China responded that it wanted all sides to cooperate on aid for Africa.

"We believe if other countries of the world want to collaborate on helping Africa, this is a good thing. No one side can exclude the other," foreign ministry spokesman Liu Jianchao said in Beijing.

"When China engages in economic, trade and cultural cooperation, it will not exclude any other side. We welcome any other countries, especially developing countries, to give a hand to Africa so that Africa can develop like other countries," he said.

Many observers view Beijing's overtures to Africa as motivated mainly by China's desperate need for oil and other resources to fuel its booming economy.

Source: Agence France-Presse

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Ugandan Police Attack Opposition Leaders In Capital
Kampala (AFP) April 17, 2007
Ugandan police fired live bullets, tear gas canisters and beat people on the streets of Kampala on Tuesday as opposition leaders attempted to hold a press briefing, eyewitnesses said. The trouble began when police hurled tear gas canisters at opposition leaders heading to a press briefing to demand the release of people arrested in a land protest last week.







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