#paysendeveloppement

  • ‘A world problem’: immigrant families hit by Covid jab gap | Global development | The Guardian
    http://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2021/jul/08/a-world-problem-immigrant-families-hit-by-covid-jab-gap
    https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/bdb918878352dcaa40cf733864c3db0e2c01db57/0_244_4500_2700/master/4500.jpg?width=1200&height=630&quality=85&auto=format&fit=crop&overlay-ali

    ‘A world problem’: immigrant families hit by Covid jab gap
    Families spread across rich and poor countries are acutely aware of relatives’ lack of access to vaccine. For months she had been dreaming of it and finally Susheela Moonsamy was able to do it: get together with her relatives and give them a big hug. Throughout the pandemic she had only seen her siblings, nieces and nephews fully “masked up” at socially distanced gatherings. But a few weeks ago, as their home state of California pressed on with its efficient vaccination rollout, they could have a proper reunion.“It was such an emotional experience, we all hugged each other; and with tears in our eyes, we thanked God for being with us and giving us the opportunity to see each other close up again and actually touch each other,” she says. “We never valued a hug from our family members that much before.”
    A couple of weeks later, the high school counsellor set off from her home in Oakland for a family trip to Disneyland on the outskirts of Los Angeles. It felt “strange … but wonderful” after a year spent hunkered down with her elderly parents. But while they were away she and her relatives received news that brought great sorrow: one of Moonsamy’s cousins, the daughter of her father’s sister, had died of Covid-19.This was not a family member in California, where Moonsamy has lived for 35 years, but in South Africa, the country where she was born and her parents left during apartheid. There, Covid is running rampant in a virulent third wave. Less than 6% of the population has had one dose of the vaccine and less than 1% has had two.
    The virus has now claimed the lives of 13 of Moonsamy’s family and friends, and she feels every day may bring more bad news. Amid talk of the pandemic nearing its end in California, where more than half the population is fully vaccinated, she has very mixed feelings.“It’s definitely exciting,” she says. “But at the same time you think of the ones that have gone, and you feel, if only they were able to get to this point – to celebrate with us. That would be just so great. We need to remember them … and look forward. To celebrate the freedom but at the same time keep the ones who have gone in mind.”
    Moonsamy is far from the only person to feel conflicted about the easing of restrictions. Across Europe and North America in the coming months, mass vaccination programmes are expected to bring back some form of normality. In England restrictions are due to be eased on 19 July, baptised “Freedom Day” by the tabloid press. In the US, most states have lifted restrictions already. Across the EU, to varying degrees, countries are preparing to reopen for summer. But in much of the rest of the world – from Kampala to Cape Town, the Philippines to Peru – the pandemic is not only ongoing but worsening. In low-income countries just 1% of the population on average has been given at least one dose of the vaccine.Caught in the middle of this growing divide are millions of people with relatives in the developed and the developing worlds, who find themselves struck by the staggering global inequality in their daily family catchups, WhatsApp groups and Skype chats.These huge differences have long been a facet of the diaspora experience, but the pandemic has magnified them. For many, the two-speed vaccination programmes have come to represent all that one part of the family has and the other has not.
    “[I feel] a huge amount of guilt … and a lot of sadness,” says Isabella (not her real name), a law student born in Colombia but who has lived in Canada since she was four.Like much of South America, Colombia is in the grip of a third wave of Covid-19, which has claimed about 45,000 lives since mid-March – more than 40% of the total death toll. About 24% of the population has had their first dose of the vaccine; in Canada, the figure is 69%.
    Isabella, 23, is fully vaccinated. Getting her first dose last month was an emotional experience. “I felt happy but I also remember just wanting to burst into tears when I was sitting in the little chair, because when I looked around me it was incredible to see how well organised the vaccination programme was, but I also knew that this is not the case in Colombia and it would be at least another year before my cousin my age in Colombia would be sitting in the same chair,” she says. “And who knows what might happen between now and then?” Farouk Triki, 30, is a Tunisian software engineer living in Paris. He left his parents and siblings behind to move to France with his wife four years ago. He has had his vaccination, but none of his family back home have: the Tunisian rollout has seemed tortuously slow to those living there, with just 5% having received both doses.
    “[I’m] concerned and scared,” says Triki, “because I’ve heard that it’s even worse than the British [variant]”, which his family caught in March. His parents, Farouk and Hanen, both teachers in Sfax on the Mediterranean coast, emerged unscathed from the illness, with neither requiring hospital treatment. But Hanen remembers the time with sadness. “Many relatives and friends died of Covid 19,” she says.For Isabella, who could only watch from afar as Covid tore through first her mother’s side of the family and then, last month, her father’s, the predominant feeling is helplessness. “I think [that] is the biggest thing, a feeling of not being able to do anything,” she says. “We try to help our family financially, sending them money if they need it, but other than that … that’s really all we can do from here.”
    Others in a similar situation have attempted to rally the community to send money to help their home countries. Raj Ojha, a mortgage broker from Nepal living in Slough in the south of England, has raised £2,000 through his organisation, the Nepalese British Community UK group. The money will go to two grassroots charities helping those hit hardest in the small Himalayan nation.“We are here in the UK and we can’t physically go back to Nepal. All we can do is extend our helping hands to the organisations that are working tirelessly in Nepal,” he says.
    At the start of this year, the head of the World Health Organization, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, warned that the world stood “on the brink of a catastrophic moral failure” if it did not get more vaccinations to the developing world. But such efforts have stalled. The Covax scheme, designed to deliver cheap doses and promote vaccine equality, was already facing accusations of aiming too low when its chief supplier, the Serum Institute of India, announced it was diverting its vaccine exports for domestic use. So far, it has distributed only 95m of the almost 2bn vaccines promised this year. Supplies are not the only problem: in many lower- and middle-income countries the logistics of a mass vaccination rollout put a huge strain on fragile healthcare systems.
    Moonsamy, Ojha and Isabella agree that there is an ethical imperative for richer countries to help those with fewer resources. However it would not simply be altruism – it just makes sense.“Now that developed countries are getting on the way to having their populations vaccinated, huge, huge efforts need to be made to get vaccines to developing countries – if not for the goodness of doing that for others then at least to protect the rest of the world from more variants,” says Isabella. Moonsamy agrees. “This is a world problem that affects all of us. By helping others, we are actually helping ourselves,” she says. Last weekend, Moonsamy held a 4 July gathering for some of her Californian relatives. They laughed, ate and talked. They also prayed for their family in South Africa. “Our hearts ache for them,” she says.
    “As much as we enjoy our amazing freedom from being locked down for the past year … we are not really free until we are all free. So we continue to do our part by helping others so that we can one day all celebrate our freedom together.”

    #Covid-19#migrant#migration#sante#immigrant#diaspora#vaccination#inegalite#paysdeveloppe#paysendeveloppement#OMS#solidarite

  • European Union’s Covid-19 travel pass discriminates against the developing world | South China Morning Post
    https://www.scmp.com/comment/opinion/article/3140118/european-unions-covid-19-travel-pass-discriminates-against

    European Union’s Covid-19 travel pass discriminates against the developing world. Restricting the certificate to only those inoculated with four EU-approved jabs exacerbates the vaccine inequality already perpetuated by the West. The exclusion of India’s Covishield, manufactured using the AstraZeneca formula, is particularly mind-boggling.
    International travel to the EU is currently suspended, but once travel resumes, these rules would likely apply to international travellers as well. The “green pass”, as it is more popularly known, will disproportionately affect people of colour, discriminating widely against Asians, Africans and much of the developing world.
    At first glance, the policy seems innocuous and well-meant. It’s a digital proof of vaccination, allowing vaccinated travellers greater freedom of movement across the European Union, without the need for tiresome quarantines in every country.However, to have this privilege, travellers must have been vaccinated with one of four EU-approved vaccines – Pfizer/BioNtech, Moderna, Johnson & Johnson and Vaxzevria, the latter developed by AstraZeneca and Oxford University in Europe and the United Kingdom.There are some notable omissions on this list – every vaccine manufactured outside the global West, for instance, despite their having received emergency approvals by the World Health Organization. The Russian-made Sputnik V
    And while those assessments could possibly take time, even those who have taken AstraZeneca jabs manufactured in other parts of the world, such as India’s Covishield, have not been authorised for travel under the green pass as yet, even though these vaccines are being manufactured with the identical formula to the EU approved Vaxzevria. While vaccines have been the source of much debate in recent months, there is one aspect on which most people tend to agree: when you cannot choose, you take the vaccine that is available and offered in your country.
    However, if entry into the EU is being denied because these vaccines aren’t good enough protection, why are they being distributed through Covax in the first place, an alliance which is supported and philanthropically fundedby many European countries, including Sweden, Germany and Italy? It is no secret that AstraZeneca has had a rather bumpy ride with European regulators. It was authorised for use in Europe at the end of January but has since run into one controversy after another.
    In March, several countries in Europe banned it briefly due to concerns over cases of blood clots emerging as a rare side-effect in people under 30. Despite its published efficacy data
    from Phase 3 clinical trials showing 76 per cent efficacy after the first dose and 82 per cent after the second, the AstraZeneca vaccine’s efficacy has been repeatedly questioned; a German newspaper recently even falsely claimed that it wasn’t effective in an elderly population.However, none of this explains why the UK/European-made Vaxzevria version of AstraZeneca jabs is acceptable for the green pass, but travellers who received the Indian-manufactured version of the vaccine are not.India even threatened retaliatory action, saying it would allow ease of travel only for European countries that recognised its Covishield and Covaxin vaccines.
    And in a startlingly inconsistent move since the green pass was announced, some European countries, including Estonia, Greece, Spain and Iceland, have since accepted the Indian-made AstraZeneca vaccine. Media reports suggest that they bowed to pressure, not because they realised the discrimination involved, but because they wanted to allow UK-based holiday travellers into the EU. Nearly 5 million British people have been vaccinated with batches of India’s Covishield. On July 1, the day the green pass came into effect, the WHO issued a statement urging all countries to accept the vaccines that it has authorised. Failure to do so could undermine the authority of the global health regulator, and if every country were to cherry-pick its own vaccines, it could mean even more difficulty and chaos for travellers. In a Covid-19 world, it’s evident that vaccines are becoming the new tools of discrimination and division. Decolonising global health should be an urgent priority, otherwise medicines meant to heal will leave deep, festering wounds.

    #Covid-19#migrant#migration#UE#paysendeveloppement#vaccination#passesanitaire#frontiere#circulation#sante

  • No lost generation : can poor countries avoid the Covid trap ? | Kristalina Georgieva | Business | The Guardian
    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2020/sep/29/covid-pandemic-imf-kristalina-georgieva
    https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/bd9b0a0f48ea95280aa2c3f594fe75e0192cd936/0_317_4928_2956/master/4928.jpg?width=1200&height=630&quality=85&auto=format&fit=crop&overlay-ali

    Just as people with weak immune systems are more vulnerable to the virus, so low-income countries with weak fundamentals are more prone to its economic effects. More than half of these countries were already at high risk of – or actually in – debt distress before the crisis began.The pandemic has exacerbated this with a poisonous cocktail of external shocks: sharply falling exports and commodity prices, collapsing trade, evaporating tourism and less capital inflows. Remittances, which are the main source of income for many poor families, have been hit hard – by almost 20% in countries such as Bangladesh.It is urgent that we act now to prevent “scarring” – long-term loss of human and economic capacity – in the poorest countries. Most importantly, we must secure access to opportunities – education, jobs, financing to start businesses – for the generation of young people upon whom the future of these countries depends. What needs to be done?
    First, governments must prioritise health for a durable exit from the pandemic. Saving lives and saving livelihoods are two sides of the same coin. Given that lockdowns are difficult to sustain, this means combining investments in treatment capacity with targeted measures such as social distancing and contact tracing, and with an emphasis on the most vulnerable, including elderly people. Vietnam and Cambodia are examples of where this is happening.
    Second, economic measures – especially fiscal ones – should be even more focused. The quality and effectiveness of domestic resource mobilisation and spending are at a premium. For example, protecting education is critical to avoid permanent damage to young people’s prospects. And there must be zero-tolerance of corruption. The crisis has exposed structural weaknesses in social protection systems and offers an opportunity to build stronger systems that can reach vulnerable populations.

    #Covid-19#migrant#migration#sante#transfert#paysendeveloppement#vulnerabilite#systemesante#protection#economie#FMI

  • Près de 80 millions de réfugiés et déplacés dans le monde en 2019, en cinq graphiques
    https://www.lemonde.fr/international/article/2020/06/18/pres-de-80-millions-de-refugies-et-deplaces-dans-le-monde-en-2019-en-cinq-gr

    Parmi ceux qui cherchent refuge dans un pays tiers, plus des deux tiers sont issus de cinq pays seulement ; 85 % des réfugiés vivent dans des pays pauvres ou en voie de développement, généralement voisins de leur pays d’origine. Plus de huit réfugiés sur dix vivent dans des pays pauvres ou en voie de développement, généralement voisins du pays qu’ils ont fui, où ils sont exposés à des risques accrus, que la crise sanitaire actuelle du coronavirus peut aggraver.

    #Covid-19#migrant#migration#refugie#personnesdéplacées#crisesanitaire#paysendeveloppement#sante#vulnerabilite

  • Salut #OLPC - OLPC News
    http://www.olpcnews.com/about_olpc_news/goodbye_one_laptop_per_child.html

    OLPC News rappelle que l’OLPC (le modèle d’ordinateur portable XO1) a 8 ans... et qu’il semble en passe de disparaître. Les pièces de rechange sont devenues difficiles à trouver. Et l’organisation OLPC semble ne plus accorder d’aide à son développement... Sugar, le logiciel pour apprendre à programmer, semble connaître la même déshérence. OLPC Boston n’a plus de bureau. Et Nicholas Negroponte, l’initiateur et défenseur du programme, semble depuis s’être consacré au X-Prize project : http://www.xprize.org Cela ne veut pas dire que l’idée d’OLPC est morte. OLPC Miami continue des déploiements en Uruguay, au Perou, au Rwanda et a licencié les droits commerciaux de la marque à Sakar/Vivitar pour développer la tablette XO : http://www.xotablet.com "L’excitation, l’énergie et l’enthousiasme qui nous a (...)

    #education #paysendeveloppement

  • Pourquoi la technologie seule ne résoudra pas tous les problèmes du monde - Forbes
    http://www.forbes.com/sites/eshachhabra/2014/02/20/why-tech-alone-cant-solve-all-the-worlds-problems

    La révolution mobile dans le monde en développement a laissé pensé que les mobiles et les SMS allaient être la solution pour résoudre tous les problèmes de développement. Mais le SMS est-il toujours la meilleure solution pour communiquer ? Certes, la téléphonie mobile a pénétré brutalement les PVD, mais disposer de téléphones mobiles ne veut pas dire savoir les utiliser efficacement, explique une entrepreneure indienne, rappelant les obstacles que forment multiples langues indiennes et l’illettrisme d’une bonne partie de la population. Plutôt que de demander aux gens d’envoyer un SMS, en Inde, de plus en plus de solutions fonctionnent avec la technique de l’appel manqué et du rappel par celui qui reçoit un appel manqué. Le coup de fil est souvent plus efficace, car nul besoin de savoir lire ou écrire (...)

    #paysendeveloppement

  • Les paiements mobiles se diffusent chez les indiens les plus pauvres - NYTimes.com
    http://www.nytimes.com/2013/12/05/business/international/mobile-payments-gain-traction-among-indias-poor.html?pagewanted=all

    Inspiré du succès de M-Pesa au Kenya, MoneyOnMobile - http://www.money-on-mobile.net - est son équivalent indien permettant de payer avec son téléphone mobile. Avec 3,2 milliards de dollars transférés en 2012, le service connaît un grand succès parmi les nombreuses solution de paiement mobile qui ont vu le jour suite à M-Pesa (dont Easypaisa au Pakistan, bKash au Bangladesh... qui cumulent tous deux encore plus de paiements que la solution indienne) et pourraient atteindre 350 milliards de dollars en 2015, soit 30% des paiements indiens ! Avec 75 millions d’utilisateurs (contre 18 millions pour M-Pesa) et 163 000 points de ventes équipés (contre 79 000), le système séduit par sa simplicité. La transaction moyenne s’établit à 1,5$... Tags : internetactu2net (...)

    #paysendeveloppement #m-paiement #mobilite

  • Comment les enseignants en Afrique sont mis en échec par l’apprentissage sur mobile - SciDev.Net
    http://www.scidev.net/global/education/opinion/how-teachers-in-africa-are-failed-by-mobile-learning.html

    La révolution mobile s’annonce comme une révolution qui va réduire la pauvreté et les défaillances des systèmes éducatifs dans les pays en développement... Mais l’implantation est la clé. Seul les professeurs peuvent assurer le succès des offres d’apprentissage sur mobile, estime Niall Winters du laboratoire de la connaissance de l’université de Londres. Et de plaider pour une approche centrée sur l’utilisateur plutôt que sur la technologie. L’idée que la technologie ou les contenus seuls pourraient relever les défis éducatifs du monde doit être combattue. La recherche montre que cela ne marche pas. Il faut coconcevoir les produits éducatifs avec les enseignants et ces projets devraient bénéficier de financements prioritaires. Tags : internetactu (...)

    #éducation #paysendeveloppement

  • La prochaine révolution sans fil : l’électricité ! - NYTimes.com
    http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/09/11/the-next-wireless-revolution-in-light/?ref=opinion

    Pour Tina Rosenberg, les innovateurs du secteur des technologies ne voient pas les pauvres vivant en milieu rural comme une perspective de marché, notamment parce qu’ils n’ont pas d’infrastructure à disposition. Un quart des habitants de la planète n’accède pas à l’électricité et la moitié n’a pas l’eau courante. Pourtant, 75 à 80 % des Africains ont un portable ! Le succès est venu de la mobilité. L’avenir électrique pour les plus pauvres repose sur les alternatives à l’électricité (éolien, petit (...)

    #électricité #paysendeveloppement #énergie

    • There is no political will for the expensive task of electrifying Africa. The grid, in fact, is growing more slowly than the population.

      voir le tag #solaire

  • Mettre fin à la pauvreté en donnant de l’argent aux pauvres - NYTimes.com
    http://economix.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/06/20/ending-poverty-by-giving-the-poor-money/?_r=0

    Selon une étude menée par Christopher Blattman de l’université de Columbia, Nathan Fiala de l’Institut allemand pour la recherche économique et Sebastian Martinez de la banque interaméricaine de développement, donner de l’argent à des porteurs de projets d’un pays en développement, sans vérifier ce qu’ils en font, comme l’a fait le programme Google Ouganda réalisé avec le programme Youth Opportunities Program - http://www.poverty-action.org/project/0189 - a eut des effets profonds. Au bout de 4 ans, (...)

    #économie #innovationsociale #paysendeveloppement #investissement

  • Bangladesh : les appels manqués, un nouveau moyen de protestation ? - Global Voices en Français
    http://fr.globalvoicesonline.org/2013/01/27/136248

    La méthode de l’appel manqué est largement utilisé dans les pays en développement dans le but de faire des économies de minutes d’appel sur mobile. Sur le réseau mobile de Grameenphone au Bangladesh, les appels manqués peuvent correspondre jusqu’à 70 % du trafic total. Au Bangladesh, l’appel manqué est devenu un outil de protestation pour faire modifier les prix d’un opérateur. Tags : internetactu fing (...)

    #paysendeveloppement