One-in-500 women die in childbirth in Bangladesh – with cultural factors as much to blame as a lack of medical care There’s hardly a man to be seen in the maternity ward of the Maternal and Child Health Training Institute in Dhaka, the capital of Bangladesh. Despite the lack of any law forbidding men to enter the delivery room, fathers are normally not present during the birth of their own child – an attitude that needs to change, say the country’s first midwives, who are due to graduate next month. “Men need to be involved in the labour process if we are to reduce maternal mortality,” says Mala Reberio, one of the 20 midwives being trained to international standards in Bangladesh, which is still heavily reliant on community skilled birth attendants, who lack the skill and the authority to perform more complicated deliveries. Currently, one in 500 women in Bangladesh dies during childbirth. “If [men] could see firsthand the complications of childbirth, they would be more likely to send their pregnant wives to proper medical facilities and less likely to insist on early childbirth after marriage,” says Reberio. More than 75% of deliveries take place at home, and the average age of women having their first child is just 16 years, according to the UN. Fathers are not present during the delivery. The support role is usually taken on by the father’s mother or another senior female member of the family, said Dr Roushon Ara Begum from the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), the organisation leading the training. However, recent figures show that attitudes towards childbirth are changing. According to the government’s Bangladesh Maternal Mortality and Healthcare Survey 2010 , women are increasingly choosing to use professional medical facilities (mainly due to a growth in private practices). The proportion of women giving birth in medical facilities has more than doubled, from 9% in 2001 to 23% last year – a trend that is likely to continue as fertility rates decrease, incomes increase and education levels improve. “I would recommend to everyone to give birth in a hospital for comfort and safety,” says Samia Zakia Sultana, 20, who is expecting her first child in a few weeks. Bangladesh is on target to meet MDG5 – reducing maternal mortality. According to the BMMS 2010, the maternal mortality ratio in Bangladesh has declined from 322 per 100,000 in 2001 to 194 in 2010. However, data collection in this area is notoriously difficult and there tends to be a large margin of error and much disagreement about the exact figures. Other reports from 2010 place Bangladesh as the worst in south Asia for maternal mortality.
Continue reading …It’s a weird and uncomfortable feeling for a journalist when a musician you have interviewed has died When news of Smiley Culture’s death during a police raid broke on Tuesday, I was as shocked as anybody. He’d only had two hits in the 80s, but his singles Police Officer and Cockney Translation pioneered a cheeky, narrative street style that reverberates through pop today. They were great, great singles and the manner of his death was shocking. But something else troubled me about his passing. Just months ago, I’d been speaking to Smiley on the phone . For a journalist, it’s a weird and uncomfortable feeling when someone you’ve interviewed has died. On the one hand, an interview is a short, transient, sometimes even formal process. I must have had Smiley on the phone for all of 20 minutes. But sometimes, even in short encounters like that one, artists tell you things about themselves and open up emotionally. When they subsequently die, especially in such shocking circumstances as Smiley, it’s hard not to feel a personal connection, even grief. The one that really got me was World of Twist’s singer Tony Ogden, who passed away in 2006 and whose music and death affected me so much I felt compelled to go to his funeral. Although they never made it big, the Manchester band played one of the best gigs I saw in the 1990s, at Leeds Warehouse. Sons of the Stage (currently being played live by Beady Eye) is one of my favourite singles of all time , and only months before his death Ogden had been reminiscing on the phone . He sent me a CD of his new music and I promised to give him an opinion, but somehow lost his number. He left me messages – always beginning, “Dave, it’s Tony O,” – but never left a return number. I tried to get a message to him through his old record company, to no avail. When he died, my girlfriend found me in floods of tears. The death of someone I never even met had affected me terribly. I felt I’d let him down. It’s no easier when you’ve met them personally. In 1994, I interviewed Jeff Buckley for what must have been hours. There was a different connection to normal because we’d both lost fathers when we were very young, and, as a new artist, he’d never been interviewed about this before and opened up for ages. I saw him a few times after that and while it would be an exaggeration to say we were friends, I still remember how he ruffled my hair in affection before a gig in Dublin. He’s been dead for 14 years – after plunging into the Mississippi river – but barely a week passes in which I don’t think about him in some way. When stars you’ve interviewed die, the chances are they haven’t passed away happily at the end of a long life with a pint of beer in their hand. They have probably died young, often in shocking circumstances. I remember Lush’s drummer Chris Acland as a cheery, easy-going guy who could talk for hours about punk rock, which doesn’t square at all with his 1996 suicide. Similarly, the Michael Hutchence I spent a memorable night drinking with in 1994 just doesn’t square with the troubled character who, just three years later, would die a strange and lonely death. I suppose this tells me that whatever people tell a journalist about their deepest feelings and however much you think you’ve bonded, you never really know them, and it’s naive to feel you do. Meanwhile, their music and articles about them continue to keep them in your memory. When I spoke to a chatty and amusing Smiley Culture last summer, I never expected to be penning his obituary this year. It feels like a bad dream you suddenly expect to wake up from. I’d love to be able to pick up the phone again and ask: “Smiley, you came across like a really happy-go-lucky guy. This week, what the hell happened?” Reggae Jeff Buckley Celebrity Dave Simpson guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …US first lady to publish book about healthy eating and the vegetable patch she created at the White House Michelle Obama is hoping to join her husband on the bestseller lists with a book devoted to her experience of creating a vegetable plot on the White House lawn. The book, due in April next year, will detail the US first lady’s pet project, set up as part of a campaign against obesity, and will be padded out with the Obamas’ favourite healthy recipes. Given the success of books by previous first ladies, it is almost certain to become a bestseller. Barack Obama made a small fortune from his autobiography, Dreams From My Father, and a political treatise, Audacity of Hope, but the proceeds of his wife’s book will to go to charity. Michelle Obama dug her first vegetable garden on the White House lawn in March 2008, two months after Barack Obama became president, and has grown about 55 varieties, most of whichare used by the White House chefs. As well as vegetables, such as lettuce, peppers and spinach, Obama and her team of helpers also grow herbs and berries. She was out on the lawn again on Wednesday for photographers to mark the garden’s third season. In an interview with AP, she said she wanted to share the story of the garden with the rest of the nation and perhaps the rest of the world because she “received so many questions about it: How did we do it? Why did we do it? How do I do this in my own home or community?” Eleanor Roosevelt had a “victory” garden at the White House during the second world war and the Clintons made a modest effort, with a few vegetable pots on the White House roof. Michelle Obama did not have a vegetable plot in her home city, Chicago, but was persuaded by advocates of healthy eating to take it up as project when she moved to Washington. She has said she was partly influenced by a paediatrician who expressed concern about the diet of the Obama children, Malia and Sasha, brought up in Chicago on processed, fast-foods such as pizza, and how they might put on weight. Obama said her book, which will be written with the help of a ghost-writer, will have the president’s input in some capacity. “I will definitely have him be involved and look at it,” the first lady told AP. Michelle Obama United States Barack Obama Gardens Ewen MacAskill guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Of course, this form of collective bargaining is a mere formality. Without basic medical care, women get UTIs, yeast infections, and all sorts of fun stuff that will prevent them from having sex. Or so I’m told. So gents, while those of you who oppose funding for women’s healthcare aren’t literally cutting off your noses to spite your faces, there are anatomical equivalents that you are welcome to plop into that metaphor. Waytogo, geniuses. Naturally, none of this is meant to exclude members of the LGBT community from this proposed arrangement. And there are lots of ways to help . And, for anyone who may somehow think this an objectifying premise in service of satirical advocacy, our apologies. But at least we aren’t the first .
Continue reading …Clashes in Manama, and earth-moving equipment reportedly brought in to Pearl Roundabout Security forces in Bahrain arrested six key opposition members whom they accused of having contacted “foreign agents”, as a crackdown on a two-month anti-government rebellion continued. Several were accused of incitement to murder. They include Hassan Musaima and Abdul Jalil al-Sangaece, who had been jailed for allegedly plotting to overthrow the monarchy but had been freed in February as part of an amnesty designed to build trust. The pair had been critical of the government since their release. Clashes continued in the capital, Manama, but not on the same scale as the pitched battles on Tuesday and Wednesday which drew strong international condemnation and set Bahrain’s rulers at odds with the US , their key western backers. Friday prayers loom as a further flashpoint in the violent rebellion, which has seen the Shia majority pitch against a ruling Sunni elite. Tensions soared this week after Bahrain’s beseiged rulers invited into the kingdom troops from the Gulf Co-operation Council , led by a contingent from Saudi Arabia, which had felt increasingly threatened by the Shia uprising on its northern border. The Saudi intervention marked a dramatic divergence from a month of peace overtures led by Salman bin Hamad al-Khalifa, the kingdom’s crown prince. They had done little to stop the rolling protests with main roads and government sites regularly used by demonstrators to call for political reforms and the installation of a political monarchy. The prospect of dialogue appears to have evaporated for now, with the crisis taking on a strong sectarian tone. The crown prince has not commented publicly this week and demonstrators say the death toll of at least seven people this week makes political reconciliation all but impossible. Iraqi Shias took to the streets of the shrine city of Karbala to rail against Saudi Arabia and the crackdown in Bahrain. Demonstrations were also planned in Bahrain. Meanwhile, there were reports of earth moving equipment being brought in to the Pearl Roundabout site, which had been the main base for demonstrators and as significant in Bahrain’s uprising as Tahrir Square was to Egypt. Bystanders reported large diggers being used to carve away at the roundabout lawn, which is topped by a giant white sculpture that serves as one of Manama’s main landmarks. Bahrain Arab and Middle East protests Middle East Martin Chulov guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …This is very, very bad news for the people of Japan and those living in areas where radiation may be carried: The United States expressed increasing alarm Wednesday about the the threat posed by Japan’s nuclear crisis, with its top nuclear energy chief suggesting that one crippled reactor was in danger of a complete meltdown. The U.S. urged Americans to evacuate a wider area around the plant. Other governments advised their citizens to leave the country altogether. Amid the controversy, Japan’s military dropped water from two helicopters onto another crippled reactor. Gregory Jaczko, chairman of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, painted a much bleaker picture of the situation at the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant than Japanese officials. He told a congressional hearing in Washington that all the water was gone from the spent fuel pools at Unit 4, one of six reactors at the complex. “There is no water in the spent fuel pool and we believe that radiation levels are extremely high, which could possibly impact the ability to take corrective measures,” he said. Japanese officials denied that all the cooling water was gone. Hajime Motojuku, spokesman for plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Co., said the “condition is stable” at Unit 4. If Jaczko is correct, it would mean there’s nothing to stop the fuel rods from getting hotter and ultimately melting down. The outer shells of the rods could also ignite with enough force to propel the radioactive fuel inside over a wide area. Jaczko did not say how the information was obtained, but the NRC and U.S. Department of Energy both have experts at the Fukushima complex along Japan’s northeastern coast, which was ravaged by last week’s magnitude-9.0 earthquake and subsequent tsunami.
Continue reading …How can Irish cuisine make its mark: by using local produce in new ways or incorporating imported ingredients in traditional dishes? • Blue cheese potato cakes with bean and cider stew • Cabbage timbale with tomato sauce and parsnip gnocchi • Braised turnip galette of mushrooms and chestnuts When St Patrick’s Day comes on to our radar each year, we dust down the things we consider traditional; things we might proudly show off to the outside world. In truth, this is mostly in response to curiosity from the media and, to a lesser extent, from tourists in search of a golden age of Ireland. I’m sure the same thing happens elsewhere – think Scotland around Rabbie Burns night or France on Bastille Day. The Irish, however, as well as being very comfortable in our modern skins, are spectacularly self-obsessed and believe that the rest of the world is fascinated with the country, its cultures and traditions. As a chef and food writer, I might envy my country-folk who can trot out their writers, poets, musicians, theatre, dancers, singers while we scramble around for the few bits and bobs of scraps we can claim to be a traditional food culture. In a country that spent much of the last few hundred years in poverty, it’s a bit rich expecting us to have concocted a food culture that would stand up as a coherent cuisine. As a vegetarian chef, there is even less for me to cling on to. I wasn’t always a vegetarian, and I grew up in a small town through the 1960s and 70s so remember the native traditional diet before the arrival of spaghetti, Chinese food and broccoli. Dinner was almost always a meat – poultry, pig or mutton – simply cooked and served with the same vegetables year round: potatoes, cabbage, carrots, parsnips and turnips – aka swedes . These were boiled, there were no recipes. Yes, we did sometimes mash the cabbage into the spuds but we didn’t call that colcannon, or any other name. Nor did we have a name for that most delicious dish whereby all the roots were mashed together. On the rare occasions when we ate out, the food was essentially the same as home cooking and the only advantage was not having to do it yourself. Hence my mother’s best compliment for a meal – “Isn’t it grand to put your feet up and have it served up to you?” If you encounter food in Ireland that claims to be from a traditional culture, it is most often aimed at the tourist. That said, there are chefs, such as Danny Millar and Richard Corrigan who create wonderful dishes from the bones of the tradition, with the application of techniques and styles borrowed from the classic cuisines of France and Italy and, to some extent, from the “big country house” cooking, a sophisticated style which was essentially English anyway. Far from seeing this as a disadvantage, however, I’ve always seen this absence of a strong food tradition as an opportunity to create a new, modern culture unburdened by the need to look over our shoulders or to feel the weight of past masters’ eyes on how we work. I have long argued that, when it comes to food, Ireland is a New World country, with all the freedom that gives us to import ideas and make them our own. There has been a massive food revolution in Ireland over the last 20 years or so. It may have started with a hunger for imported ingredients and dishes, but it gradually morphed into something rooted in the best aspects of a culture, place and people. Cheesemakers and vegetable growers, as well as artisans in other areas, began first to experiment and then to adapt, until they were making and growing foods that were specific to their locality. The cooks who worked with these ingredients – and I’m thinking as much about home cooks as professional chefs – use them in dishes that might be seen as of other cultures. But that is to miss the essential point of a food culture. An example I often cite is this: is it more Irish to make colcannon with imported potatoes and cabbage or to make a personalised variation on a green curry with vegetables you buy from a farmer down the road? Irish stew with New Zealand lamb from the supermarket or homemade pasta with South Cork artichokes and sheep’s cheese from County Clare? Irish restaurants have absorbed the cuisines of other countries for a long time now and have recently taken ferociously to the idea of sourcing locally, creating a cuisine that is unique to each pocket of the country. In my restaurant, Cafe Paradiso , we work with a local grower , who can produce anything we need, from artichokes, aubergines, squash and sweet peppers to turnips and cabbage, as well as roots we had forgotten about such as salsify and scorzonera. Our menus are littered with flavour combinations that might seem vaguely Moroccan, Thai, Italian, South American, Japanese… though none would be recognised as traditional in those places, so much have they been adapted to our place. More importantly, this is happening in the wider food culture, too. This is how everyone cooks and increasingly it is how everyone shops. The key to a vibrant food culture and a relevant living tradition is an engagement by the consumers with the local producers. The longer this revolution goes on, the more the cuisine we create will become our own, and the more confident we will become in creating it. An interesting aspect of this is the resurgence of traditional ingredients, as though being one step further away from the association with subsistence they might bring, the more we can find new ways to use them. Aubergines, tomatoes, artichokes, peppers and the like from Gortnanain Farm south of Cork city may have become our new staples, but increasingly I love to create surprising dishes from the turnips , potatoes and cabbage that I grew up on. The new Irish food culture may not yet be an exportable thing but it is alive and vibrant and deeply rooted in its sense of place. I wonder, though, what visitors really want from Irish cuisine, how much of it is for the novelty value, as a one-off holiday food experience, or something to be cooked up on St Patrick’s day. On a trip to Dublin, where you eat some boxty or colcannon, I wonder if you go home thinking you might add those to your repertoire of recipes? • Denis Cotter oversees the kitchen at Cafe Paradiso in Cork, and teaches cookery in Ireland and overseas. His latest book, For the Love of Food is published in April 2011 (HarperCollins, £20). Pre-order a copy for £16 from the Guardian bookshop Food & drink Ireland Word of Mouth Denis Cotter guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Latest images from the developing humanitarian crisis as aid agencies struggle to reach people in freezing weather
Continue reading …Limbaugh has said some disgusting stuff in his time, but his mean-spirited, sick rants against the Japanese people as they face a nuclear meltdown and radiation poisoning on top of the massive earthquake and tsunami are beyond the pale. In a just world we would see him get fired. A boycott should at least come out of this. CALLER: I need some of your wisdom. I’m confused. At the top of the first hour, you played a clip. Diane Sawyer, I believe, about the recycling that is still going on in Japan. LIMBAUGH: I did. You’re right. CALLER: If these are the people that invented the Prius, have mastered public transportation, recycling, why did mother earth, Gaia if you will, hit them with this disaster? LIMBAUGH: Well, that’s an interesting question. Let’s go back and grab Diane Sawyer. Audio sound bite number nine. This is her report on a shelter for refugees in Japan and how they are handling their waste management. [PLAYS CLIP] DIANE SAWYER: This is a shelter. Some of these people here for days, and look, it’s recycling. Organized for recycling. GUEST: Plastic, combustible, burnable, canes. [END CLIP] LIMBAUGH: Did I really hear this? Did I really hear — Diane Sawyer is in a refugee camp in Japan. Play this again. This is almost like a kindergarten teacher talking to the four year olds. That is how old you are in kindergarten, right? Five? Five? Four? Alright. This is — some of these people here for days and look, look it’s recycling, organized for recycling. [PLAYS CLIP] SAWYER: This is a shelter. Some of these people here for days and look it’s recycling, organized for recycling. GUEST: Plastic, combustible, burnable, canes. [END CLIP] RUSH: My god, she sounds like she saw her husband for the first time in six months there. Oh, it’s recycling, look, organized for — these people are in the midst of earthquake devastation and the credit they’re getting is for recycling and our caller Chris with a great question. The Japanese have done so much to save the planet. He’s right. They’ve given us the Prius. Even now, refugees are still recycling their garbage, and yet Gaia levels them [laughs], just wipes them out. Wipes out their nuclear plants, all kinds of radiation. What kind of payback is this? That is an excellent question. They invented the Prius. In fact, where Gaia blew up is right where they make all these electric cars. That’s where the tsunami hit. All those brand new electric cars sitting there on the lot. I like the way this guy was thinking. It’s like — it’s like Gaia hit the Prius in [inaudible]. It’s like they were in the crosshairs, if we can use that word, it does. What is Gaia trying to tell us here? What is the mother of environmentalism trying to say with this hit? Great observation out there, Chris. Here’s Tom in Naples, Florida. You’re next on the EIB network. Hello. CALLER: Hey, Rush Limbaugh, how you doing? LIMBAUGH: Fine sir, thanks much. CALLER: Hey, I know, I’m calling about and I was trying to just add a little levity to the day. My issue is that I don’t want Obama to pick Ohio State in his brackets, because that’s who I’m picking. Great observation out there, Rush. Yea, what a kick in the pants it is that Gaia would hit the home of the Prius with this kind of devastation. I bet Japan is laughing right with you. What a sick, sick, diseased man. After being called out on it, Limbaugh tried to downplay his laughing at Japan And the news at the point that I wrote this post from the NY Times: U.S. Calls Radiation ‘Extremely High,’ Sees Japan Nuclear Crisis Worsening The chairman of the United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission gave a far bleaker appraisal on Wednesday of the threat posed by Japan ’s nuclear crisis than the Japanese government had offered. He said American officials believed that the damage to at least one crippled reactor was much more serious than Tokyo had acknowledged… read on
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