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Title: Food riots rock Yemen
Source: [None]
URL Source: http://www.inteldaily.com/?c=148&a=5876
Published: Apr 4, 2008
Author: By Bill Weinberg
Post Date: 2008-04-04 20:53:33 by DeaconBenjamin
Keywords: None
Views: 499
Comments: 17

Tanks have been deployed in parts of southern Yemen after a fifth day of angry protests by thousands of mostly young people. Youth are blocking roads and burning tires, and up to 100 have been arrested. In al-Dalea, two police station were torched, and military vehicles burned, while riot police fired into the air and used tanks against street barricades. In response, armed protesters threw up roadblocks on the main road between the capital, Sanaa, and the port of Aden, halting traffic.

The unrest started in the Radfan region of al-Dalea province March 30 and spread the next day to the province of Lahj. President Ali Abdullah Saleh called an emergency meeting of the National Defense Council on April 3. Al-Dalea residents report that one of at least 14 people wounded had died. The official Saba news agency said April 2 there were no fatalities.

Rising food prices helped trigger the protests. The price of wheat has doubled since February, while rice and vegetable oil have gone up 20%. Disaffection in southern Yemen has been long-standing following the civil war of 1994, in which the south lost its independence. Southerners say a government amnesty granting former southern soldiers re-admission to the army has not been fulfilled, and that they are kept out of government jobs

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Riots prompt Ivory Coast tax cuts

ABIDJAN, April 03 -- Ivory Coast President Laurent Gbagbo has cancelled custom duties after a second day of violent protests against rising food costs.

Mr Gbagbo also cut taxes on basic household products, saying he was sensitive to people`s concerns.

But he added that increases in food prices were a world-wide problem.

One person was killed and at least 10 others injured on Tuesday as security forces dispersed demonstrations across the economic capital, Abidjan.

Anti-riot police fired in the air and used tear gas in an attempt to disperse predominantly female demonstrators who had set up barricades, burned tyres and closed major roads.

The protests were the latest in a series of similar demonstrations throughout the world against rising food prices, says a journalist working there.

Violent demonstrations against the rising cost of living have been staged in several West African countries, including Cameroon, Burkina Faso and Senegal.

The protests are linked to the high price of oil, the growing demand for bio-fuels and the expanding economies of Asia and Latin America, our correspondent says.

They come as the head of the World Food Programme warned rising food prices had helped create a "perfect storm", leaving more people hungry than ever before.

"The cost of our food has doubled in just the last nine months," said WFP Executive Director Josette Sheeran. "We`re very concerned about our operations."

Speaking to the joint African Union and Economic Commission for Africa conference in the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa, Ms Sheeran said the world was also confronting "a new face of hunger".

"We are seeing more urban hunger than ever before," she said.

"Often we are seeing food on the shelves but people being unable to afford it."

DeaconBenjamin  posted on  2008-04-04   22:48:45 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


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Three Haitians killed in protests as U.N. peacekeepers quell riot over food prices

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP): At least three Haitians were killed and 25 others injured amid food riots and clashes with U.N. peacekeepers in southern Haiti on Friday, a mission spokeswoman and Haitian radio said.

A young man was shot in the head and killed Friday morning. It was not immediately clear who shot him, although protesters blamed U.N. troops for the death.

U.N. soldiers fired back because they were fired upon, said U.N. spokeswoman Sophie Boutaud de la Combe. She said the mission has opened an investigation into the death but declined to provide any other details, citing a lack of information.

At least two other people were found dead in other parts of Les Cayes where rioting occurred on Friday, Radio Kiskeya reported. It was not clear how they died. Boutaud said the U.N. mission was not aware of those deaths.

Nine people were treated for bullet wounds and four others were arrested, Boutaud said. A U.N. soldier was slightly injured.

Thousands of Haitians blocked roads and looted stores in the southern town of Les Cayes on a second day of protest against high food prices. They also burned cars and tore down the front gate of a U.N. base. Additional troops have been sent for reinforcement, Boutaud said.

Several demonstrators have chanted in support of Guy Philippe, a fugitive rebel leader with a pending U.S. federal drug trafficking charge. Agents recently raided his home about 18 miles (30 kilometers) north of Les Cayes.

Food prices are rising worldwide but the problem hits hard in Haiti, where 80 percent of the population lives on less than US$2 (euro1.30) a day. Rice, beans, fruit and condensed milk have gone up 50 percent from last year, while the cost of pasta has doubled.

The food crisis threatens the country's fragile security, U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said in a report this week.

DeaconBenjamin  posted on  2008-04-04   22:50:58 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


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Desperate NKorea stops food rations to capital

Thu Apr 3, 12:27 AM ET

SEOUL (AFP) - North Korea's food shortage is so severe that even elite citizens in the capital have had state rations cut off, an aid group said Thursday.

South Korea's Good Friends, which works in the North, said Pyongyang announced a six-month moratorium on rations in the entire city from April.

Only favoured citizens are allowed to reside in the showpiece capital of the communist state, and they normally have better access to food than other areas.

Good Friends said in its newsletter that Pyongyang residents are having to survive by purchasing food with their own money or eking out any stockpiles.

It said the situation is even worse elsewhere, with rice prices soaring and farmers yet to prepare for the spring planting season due to a lack of rice seeds and fertiliser.

"Word is going around that people in Pyongyang and other cities may begin dying of hunger in April, which may lead to massive deaths by starvation in May," the group said.

Officials at South Korea's unification ministry, which handles North Korean affairs, could not immediately confirm the claims by the aid group.

North Korea's food shortage is so severe that even elite citizens in the capital have had state rations cut off, an aid group said Thursday. The UN's World Food Programme (WFP) had no information on whether rations had been suspended in the capital but said the overall situation is bad.

"We are very concerned about food security overall in North Korea this year because of floods last year," regional spokesman Paul Risley told AFP.

More food would have to be imported or greater help would be needed from the WFP, he said.

South Korea has yet to ship its annual humanitarian aid of rice and fertiliser to North Korea. No official request has come from Pyongyang amid worsening ties with the new conservative government in Seoul.

The Good Friends aid group quoted a resident in the eastern coastal city of Hamhung as saying farmers were desperate.

"Most needed is something to eat and fertiliser, and we should have got fertiliser and plastic material for greenhouses," he told the group.

"If we are not ready to plant seeds right now, we will not be able to farm this year. We don't know what bad things will happen if we don't farm."

Good Friends said last month that the North had suspended food rations in its main grain-producing area and reduced them significantly in most of the capital.

Seoul's Hyundai Economic Research Institute warned last month that soaring international grain prices would aggravate the acute food shortage and encourage more people to flee.

The North was hit by famine in the 1990s which killed hundreds of thousands. It has since heavily depended on international food aid to help feed its population.

Severe floods last August badly damaged farmland.

The WFP said in February that almost a quarter of the North's 23 million people suffer from a severe lack of food, with children, nursing and expectant mothers and the poor most at risk.

DeaconBenjamin  posted on  2008-04-04 23:03:06 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


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