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"C'è un altro mondo, ed è in questo" (Paul Eluard)
15.05.2006 'Picture this: a village where the disappearance of a whole generation has left children to bring up children (the Lord of the Flies syndrome). I'm a witness to this. What can I do?' Read Bono's editorial comment from today's special RED edition of The Independent, where, for one day only, he is in the Editor's chair. With Bono the preacher man on his mission to Africa The runway, Johannesburg Airport
The road to Maseru 3.30PM Precious Garments Factory, Maseru Outside, later, Bono sits with five of the factory workers. Wages are above the national average. Unions are recognised. There is an HIV and Aids counselling service. Bobby Shriver, founder along with Bono of the Red brand, has a straight answer. 'If it wasn't for Gap, some of these people would be dead.' Bono speaks to a group of five women sitting at a table outside, asking questions about their drug treatment. They each have HIV, but courses of anti-retrovirals have meant that they can carry on with their lives. Three years ago the drugs were only available to those who could afford $20,000 a year. Now they cost $140 a year, with many of the treatments in Lesotho financed by the Global Fund. 'I find it hard to get my head around some stuff,' Bono says. 'These women found the courage to come forward, to speak up.' In a country where HIV and Aids was a subject surrounded by suspicion and violence, it is now talked about more openly. Well, a little more openly. The government has agreed a universal testing and counselling service, the first on the continent. The treatments have also helped break down stigmas - having Aids no longer means the end of life. Anti-retrovirals can work for 20, 30 years. Bono walks away from the women. 'When it comes to the time to write the history of this, it will be their names that will be important. Not mine,' he says. 'This is the face of transformation.' He does a little jig, right there in the factory. 8PM Dinner, Lesotho Sun Hotel, with Lesotho's Prime Minister 'I'm an artist not a politician. But I prophesy that what was once impossible is possible. I prophesy that I will probably drink one too many red wines this evening. I'm sure, maybe, some people might dance on the tables. 'I prophesy that a day is coming when there will be no HIV. 'I prophesy that this jewel of a kingdom is soon to become a giant. 'Colin Powell once said that the greatest weapon of mass destruction is a virus called HIV. But no WMD could break the spirit I feel in this room. God is in the house, I feel.' A spotlight plays on his face, silhouetted, surrounded by the smoke from the fashion show. The crowd cheer, clap, ululate. Bono is a preacher. That's the difference. People shout: 'Bono, sing, Bono, sing.' He could do 'Forty' now and have them eating out of his hands. But he doesn't. Later, outside over a glass of wine I ask him what was going on in there. 'The future,' he says. 'Didn't you feel it?' Wednesday 11.30AM Butha Buthe Hospital, Butha Buthe, Lesotho 'I'm a traditional healer,' Daniel says, by way of an interpreter. 'I use secret herbs to heal.' 'What kind of herbs?' 'It wouldn't be a secret if I told you, would it?' Outside an old woman lies under a blanket. She looks like she is dying. 10PM The plane to Kigali, Rwanda But companies are motivated, the critics say, by wanting to look good. 'It's irrelevant what their motives are. It is not about what my motives are, either. It could be the halo effect, it could be something else. What we have to measure is whether people's lives are being drastically improved or not by these interventions.' He says people should grow up, leave the agitprop behind. If getting anti-retrovirals means working with business, then work with business. He describes the new movement of glamour-giving as 'hip hop', not afraid of commerce, not afraid of making money. 'We used to be into indie music, all long coats and worrying and wagging our fingers at everyone. But hip hop is now.' He could just be a rock star, of course. Why isn't he? He pauses. 'I could see a way through some of these issues and I would have felt culpable if I hadn't done what I could see needed doing. Love thy neighbour is a command, not a piece of advice.' Thursday 11.30AM The Global Fund clinic, Kigali, Rwanda Now he is standing amid the overflowing beds and he wants to say something, something angry. 'I want [them] to see these pictures, three patients to a bed is absurd, but three families to a bed is obscene.' The NBC cameras record the preacher's words. Later that afternoon we stand in the Nyamata genocide memorial, high in the hills outside Kigali. Eugenie Nyirajyimuzanye, a survivor, tells of the day she was attacked by machete-wielding militia. In the head. In the leg. In the back. She was left for dead among the rotting bodies of her friends and family from her village. She limps and the scars are still visible. The country says it is getting on, dealing with the past. The rain pitter-patters on the tin roof and Bono stands and listens in silence.
From: www.todayreuters.com Bono presses Africa to tackle corruptionBy Lesley Wroughton ABUJA, Nigeria (Reuters) - Rock star and activist Bono, pressing wealthy nations to keep their aid promises to Africa, said on Sunday the continent needs to tackle corruption, the single biggest obstacle to more investment. With pledges by the industrial nations to double aid by 2010, Bono cautioned that unless corruption was tackled the goodwill of industrialized nations could dissipate. "There is a window of opportunity but it could close if things like the corruption issue are not tackled or the peer review mechanisms are not felt to be real," he told reporters traveling with him before addressing African finance ministers in the Nigerian capital of Abuja.
"I'll go further and say that the single biggest obstacle to business and the renewal of the economies in the south is corruption and the single biggest obstacle to getting start-up money for those businesses, if you want to look at aid as investment, is corruption," he added. He said taxpayers in developed nations were also demanding more accountability from their own political leaders to ensure that money going to Africa was properly used. Bono said it was an "oversimplification of Africa to think" of all African countries as corrupt. He said in many cases aid had done more harm than good in Africa and it was important to create opportunities for the continent to help itself through more trade. "The West really has to understand that Africans don't want aid, they need aid, and what Africa desires and what (it) deserves is trade as a route out of their present difficulties," he said. "Africans may be more sick of AIDS, TB and malaria but they are plenty sick of aid," he added. © Reuters 2006. All Rights Reserved. Oggi sono un pò triste, nonostante la giornata molto bella (adoro il sole caldo), mi è preso il solito scazzo che mi prende sempre quando penso al mio futuro.
Che palle! Non avrei mai dovuto andare a quella lezione di inglese....mi fanno riflettere e mi deprimono... ....in questo momento avrei bisogno di tranquillità, di pensare a quello che devo fare...e invece...Perchè le cose non sono semplici almeno una volta? O sono io che me le devo sempre complicare? In questo momento vorrei almeno essere sicura che potrò portare avanti le mie scelte (passate e future).....nonostante tutto...E TUTTI.....anche me stessa. "I'm forever black-eyed
A product of a broken home..." (Black-Eyed _ Placebo) Bene@
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