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ALMA Reps Email Circular: 16 November 2005

From Sheenagh Burrell ALMA Communications Officer
sb@burrell1980.freeserve.co.uk T: 020 8567 7400

Many thanks to those of you who came to the Trade Justice Lobby on 2nd November. I received the information below this morning and thought it might be of some encouragement!

MAKE POVERTY HISTORY and the Trade Justice Movement today announce that the mass lobby of parliament held on 2 November was the largest in the history of modern British democracy with trade justice campaigners lobbying 375 MPs in a single day. However, there's still a long way to go! Email me if you would like a copy of the full press release.

The purpose of this email is to send two things to you and give you an advance DIARY DATE

  1. an article on the Angolan former soldier working with Returnees who spoke in London in October. This may be useful if your church is using the Christian Aid Christmas Appeal 'Coming Home' which is to support work in Angola.
  2. a report on a hopeful malaria advance in Mozambique which I heard on the midnight news! (If you go to www.bbc.co.uk and enter “mozambique malaria” there are several other interesting articles).
  3. DIARY DATE: Alma REPS Meeting Monday 27th February 2006 at Diocesan House. Details to follow.

with best wishes,

Sheenagh

1 Ex-soldier preaches peace after civil war in Angola

By Bill Bowder

A FORMER soldier in Angola is using peace-education techniques learnt in South Africa to help congregations find healing for their country, which has been torn by decades of war. He is the Revd Luis Samacumbi, pastor of Bungo Congregational Church in the capital, Luanda, and he asks his congregation what would happen if they thought that someone in their street, or in their family, was the devil. He then shows them that that is what they have been doing to their former enemies. Mr Samacumbi, who is 34, spoke about his work last week in London at the headquarters of Christian Aid. His church is a partner of the charity, which has made support for Angolan families its Christmas appeal. Angola gained independence from Portugal in 1975, but outside interest in its massive reserves of diamonds, ore, and oil fuelled a civil war. A ceasefire was eventually agreed in 2002.

Mr Samacumbi once fought with the government MPLA forces, while his brother was part of the opposing UNITA forces. He went on to gain a Master’s degree in conflict resolution from the University of Natal. He believes peace education can break the spiral of violence.

"People have to learn that we are one, and the united body of Christ. At the end of worship, around the table, we gather in four or five or six groups in small ‘peace unities’. People from the same neighbourhood gather and talk about the image of describing someone as a devil. "Then we link that situation with the country. If we consider our leaders as devils, we will never be at peace. Children and young people will develop revenge and rejection." He also uses football to teach peace. He stops the game when one side is winning to ask how both the winning and the losing team feel. Mr Samacumbi had to practise what he preached: after being demobilised in 1992, he was holed up in his church for 50 days while a battle raged around him. After he emerged, he was refused food because a member of his congregation would not issue him with a food pass because he was a former government soldier. "When I repeat these stories, I sometimes feel like crying," he said.

Angolans’ behaviour must now change, he said. "For 30 years, people have received humanitarian aid, and some people have become lazy. Sixty-eight per cent of the population lives on less than $1 a day. Through the projects, through funds from Christian Aid, we distribute basic agricultural tools for those returning to their villages, who have been internally displaced, or are returning across the border. "We encourage people to grow crops, and, with part of their produce, buy livestock. They used to pay for their children’s schooling by selling livestock, but that was completely lost during the war. The projects come from the field, and are a result of discussions we have from people in the community — these are their real priorities." One thing he did not fund was the building of bridges. "We encourage the community to reflect on the relevance of having a bridge to connect the villages. Then they will themselves mobilise the people, who will go into the bush and cut trees and lay a bridge.

"The church organisation is country-wide and is everywhere, even where the government is not. There is a catechist there, a deacon there. They are living with the people, and you don’t have to pay them," he said.

Mr Samacumbi had become "really sensitised" on his visit to England when he realised how hard people worked to raise funds for his Church. "When I return, I want to challenge our Churches to learn from this commitment, to give what they have, to volunteer, and to challenge those in the cities to give to those who have less in the country."

BBC NEWS

2 Malaria jab's long-term promise

A malaria vaccine has been found to protect children in Africa from serious disease for at least 18 months.

Researchers working in Mozambique found the jab cut the risk of clinical malaria by 35% and nearly halved the risk of serious malaria. The vaccine was already known to offer six months' protection - but experts argued that vaccinating children twice a year was not practical in Africa. Details were presented to a pan-African malaria conference in Cameroon.

There is a malaria vaccine that protects children from malaria and it actually lasts long enough to make it a real public health intervention
Melinda Moree

Malaria kills over a million people world-wide each year, and one African child every 30 seconds. Most experts believe that there is no immediate prospect of a vaccine that could wipe out malaria, or even provide lifelong immunity. But a vaccine that would turn the disease into a mostly mild infection would make a huge dent in the effort to control malaria.

No waning

The latest candidate - Glaxo Smith Klein's RTS, S/AS02A - was given to 1,442 children in Mozambique in 2003. The initial six month follow-up showed that the vaccine reduced the risk of clinical malaria by 30%, and the risk of serious disease by 58%. The latest follow-up, details of which were published online by The Lancet, found that the protection offered by the jab did not wane after a further 12 months. Dr Joe Cohen, the vice president of research and development for vaccines for emerging diseases at Glaxo Smith Klein, has been working on the prototype for 19 years. He said further work was already planned on more extensive trials.

"They will involve many thousands of children, probably somewhere between 10,000 and 15,000 children, and it will take another two to two-and-a-half years.

"By 2010 we do hope that we will be able to submit a registration file to the appropriate regulatory authorities."

Glaxo Smith Klein has been working with the University of Barcelona, the Ministry of Health in Mozambique and the Malaria Vaccine Initiative to develop the jab since 2001. Melinda Moree, of the Malaria Vaccine Initiative, said: "We are very excited because there is a malaria vaccine that protects children from malaria and it actually lasts long enough to make it a real public health intervention that can have an impact on malaria in Africa."

Story from BBC NEWS

Published: 2005/11/15 17:17:21 GMT

© BBC MMV