Monday, November 01, 2004

small (cheap?) computers for dev world

Kabissa 'Time to Get online' in french and english

Greetings,

I'm pleased to share the news that "Venez Sur Internet: Etapes
Faciles Pour RĂ©ussir sur Internet", the french version of Kabissa's
150-page Internet training manual "Time To Get Online - Simple Steps
to Success on the Internet", is now available. We are very excited as
this release means that Time To Get Online workshops will now be
possible in francophone African countries - stay tuned for improved
support for francophone Africa on our Web sites in the near future.
While tailored for African organizations, they are also perfectly
relevant and useful for nonprofits wherever they are in the world. To
learn more about the materials and to download them for FREE, click
on http://www.timetogetonline.org - or see both the French and
English descriptions of the materials below.

The translation/localization work was made possible through a grant
from the Open Society Initiative for West Africa (OSIWA - see
http://www.osiwa.org). OSIWA, together with GTZ, supported our first
Time To Get Online Training-of-trainers workshop for West African
civil society organizations, which took place in Accra, Ghana this
past August. Participants in that workshop came from throughout West
Africa, and during the course of the next year will run their own
TTGO workshops. More TOT workshops are planned.

For follow-up, please click on http://www.timetogetonline.org or
write to Kim Lowery at info@timetogetonline.org

Best wishes,

Tobias Eigen

--
Tobias Eigen
Executive Director

Kabissa - Space for Change in Africa
http://www.kabissa.org


Kabissa's Time to Get Online learning materials are the foundation of
our capacity building program. We developed the materials for use by
African civil society organizations. They are designed to be both a
self-learning curriculum and to be distributed during hands-on
workshops conducted by our training partners. After each workshop we
reevaluate our curriculum, adding or subtracting material to make our
program more effective. This fine tuning enables us to provide the
best possible learning materials and workshops as possible, tailored
to the needs of African civil society.

What do the materials cover?

The 150-page "Time To Get Online" materials are centered around the
five essential "steps to success on the Internet". The first half of
the materials is geared towards creating Internet-savvy activists.
The second half will help them to become effective Internet
champions, capable of leading their organizations through the
challenging process of integrating the Internet into everything they
do. The Appendices and accompanying CD-ROM (print version only)
contain a wealth of additional resources for continued learning,
freely distributable computer software and more.

How do I get Time to Get Online materials for my organization?

You can access the materials in two different ways:
1) Download them!
Downloading our Time to Get Online materials is FREE. The materials
are in Adobe PDF format which means that you need to have Adobe
Acrobat Reader to read and print them out. The compressed version
downloads faster, but requires a ZIP extractor.

To download the latest version now, click on http://www.timetogetonline.org

2) Order a print version.

You can also order a printed version of the materials. This print
version is accompanied by a CD-ROM containing additional learning
resources, Web sites and software. WE DO CHARGE FOR THE PRINT
VERSION, but just to cover the cost of publication and shipping.
Accordingly, the price charged for the materials depends on the
quantity required and how much it costs us to ship them to you. This
cost usually runs between $25 and $40 USD; please contact Kabissa at
info@timetogetonline.org to determine the exact price and place an
order.


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Via / By / Excerpted / From / Tip from / Thanks to:

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Radio as an ICT

UGANDA: Radio programme that touches hearts of rebels

[This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]


GULU, 1 November (IRIN) - Johny Lacambel, a local radio presenter, offers
his two guests some soda before asking the tall dark male with an
amputated limb to lead in prayers as the programme begins. The
trice-weekly "Dwog Paco", the local Acholi language for "Come Back Home,"
is credited with touching many hearts and convincing a number of rebels to
surrender.

The amputee is Charles Otim Mono, 33, a Lt-Col in the Lord's Resistance
Army (LRA), a rebel group that has been battling government forces in the
north of the country for the past 18 years.

A girl with a pensive look sits next to Otim, seemingly amused by what is
going on. She is Lilly Acira, a rebel fighter, who, like thousands of
children in this region, was kidnapped at the age of 10 years to join the
rebel ranks.

The two were guests for the one-and-a-half hour programme on local radio,
MEGA FM, whose coverage beams across northern Uganda and some parts of
southern Sudan. It is used for former rebels to talk directly to their
colleagues still in the bush about how they have been treated and the
existence of the amnesty given to them by the government.

Acira describes rebel life as being underlined by hunger, which has forced
rebels to feed on leaves; isolation and some times death, before she
appeals to friends still hiding in the bush to give themselves up.

"To our commander Anywa, Evelyn your wife is with us, but she got injuries
in the arms and the breasts," Acira said. "You need to come out and meet
her.

"And to you Vincent Otti (LRA's second in command) - I am your sister,"
she continues. "We come from the same family. One of your wives was
injured during a helicopter raid. I talked to her a few minutes before she
died and the fate of two of your other wives and the escort is not known."

The army and the radio management bring captured rebels on air. Sometimes
they are surrendered rebels or those rescued from rebel captivity. So far,
the highest-ranking LRA rebel that the programme has hosted was Brig
Kenneth Banya, who was the third in command in the LRA hierarchy. The
Ugandan army captured Banya in July.

"When you listen to the children, they are more passionate and they talk
to the heart about their experience in captivity and as rebel fighters,"
Lucy Lapoti, who was doing interpretation for IRIN, said.

Army spokesman Maj Shaban Bantariza calls it "communicating
appropriately".

Lacambel calls his programme the only peace talks with the rebels, who
have eluded efforts to peacefully end the brutal rebellion that has killed
hundreds of thousands of people and whose main victims are children and
women.

"The impact has been good. It undermines LRA's propaganda that suggests we
kill those we capture, rescue or those who surrender to us," Maj Bantariza
adds.

Scores of other LRA members - from adolescent foot soldiers to senior
commanders - have been sneaking away in recent months. The military says
that at least 1,000 LRA fighters, including 84 commanders, have defected
since January, which is dramatically weakening the LRA.

The army's Children Protection Unit (CPU), housed in a dilapidated
building in Gulu, is where all those rescued, captured or surrendered
people are taken for screening before they are rehabilitated. When IRIN
visited the unit, 10 juveniles as young as 12, including two girls, were
being screened.

"I was abducted in 2002 when the rebels attacked Anaka camp," Joel Oloya,
13, said. He took advantage of the darkness after sunset to crawl back
home.

Relief agencies estimate that 20,000 children have been abducted by the
LRA to serve as fighters since the movement began. Most of them are used
as porters or sex slaves for rebel commanders.
[ENDS]

[This Item is Delivered to the "Africa-English" Service of the UN's IRIN
humanitarian information unit, but may not necessarily reflect the views
of the United Nations. For further information, free subscriptions, or
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Copyright (c) UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs 2004

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