Camels replace cows as Kenya battles drought

Camels replace cows as Kenya battles drought
Samburu pastoralist Chapan Lolpusike, 35, pumps water from a well for some of his camels to drink before heading out to Sereolipi. (AFP)
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Updated 8 sec ago

Camels replace cows as Kenya battles drought

Camels replace cows as Kenya battles drought
  • Samburu county officials launched a camel program in 2015 following several droughts that killed off at least 70 percent of the cattle in Kenya’s arid and semi-arid regions

SAMBRURU: “God, God, God, protect them,” chanted two herders, their eyes following a dozen camels rushing toward acacia trees, oblivious to the dry riverbed in northern Kenya where it hasn’t rained since April.
Sitting on the edge of a nearby well, Chapan Lolpusike recounted how his cows and oxen “all died” following the worst drought in four decades, caused by a succession of poor rainfall in 2021 and 2022.
After that, the herder made a sweeping change.
“We no longer have cattle at home. We only raise camels,” said Lolpusike, a member of the semi-nomadic Samburu community.
Camels can graze on dry grasses, go more than a week without water, and produce up to six times more milk than cattle — making them an increasingly necessary option in northern Kenya, an area particularly vulnerable to climate change.
Samburu county officials launched a camel program in 2015 following several droughts that killed off at least 70 percent of the cattle in Kenya’s arid and semi-arid regions.
The die-off had a devastating impact on malnutrition among local pastoralists.
Around 5,000 Somali camels — a larger and more productive breed than the native herd — have since been distributed, including 1,000 in the last year.

- Camels for every family -

Lolpusike, who previously knew nothing about camels, received some in 2023.
In his manyatta — a hamlet of rectangular huts nestled in a shrubby savannah — a dozen camels lay peacefully chewing dry grass.
The goal is for every family in the county to have their own, said village administrator James Lolpusike (no relation).
“If the drought persists, the cattle will not be anywhere anymore,” he said.
Camel herds are at high risk of disease that could lead to losses.
But there are clear, positive changes as they become a regular sight in the region, including healthier children, said the village administrator.
They are certainly popular in the community, for the fact they can be milked up to five times a day.
“Cows are only milked when the grass is green,” said Naimalu Lentaka, 40.
“Camels... during the dry season, they are still milked, and that’s the whole difference.”
Families now “depend on camels, on those who own them,” she added.

- Racing stars -

Camel milk and human breast milk have similar nutritional and therapeutic properties, according to a 2022 study by Meru University in Kenya.
Camel milk contributes up to half the total nutrient intake during droughts among pastoral communities in the north.
The animal is already a star in the region, thanks to a famous endurance race.
At the Maralal International Camel Derby in late September, around 40 camels frolicked before a cheering crowd.
The winner covered 21 kilometers (13 miles), the equivalent of a half-marathon, in one hour and 22 minutes.
But organizers said the event — whose theme was “peaceful cultural interactions” — was primarily about bringing together communities that used to fight over resources, since, among their many virtues, camels are also a symbol of peace.
Moving cattle herds to more fertile areas during the dry season can spark conflict between herders that have claimed hundreds of lives over the years.
Camels are happy to stay where they are.
Even this hardy animal needs some water, however, so locals still pray for rain.
“We only pray the situation doesn’t get worse,” said James Lolpusike.


Serbia youth lead thousands on march for weekend rally marking deadly canopy collapse last year

Serbia youth lead thousands on march for weekend rally marking deadly canopy collapse last year
Updated 10 sec ago

Serbia youth lead thousands on march for weekend rally marking deadly canopy collapse last year

Serbia youth lead thousands on march for weekend rally marking deadly canopy collapse last year
  • Protesters believe the victims died because government corruption led to sloppy renovation work at the station
  • They have been demanding accountability for the disaster, and an early parliamentary election
BELGRADE: Thousands of mainly young people in Serbia embarked on a two-day march from Belgrade on Thursday, aiming to join a major rally in the country’s north this weekend that will mark the anniversary of a deadly train station disaster.
The concrete canopy collapse at the central train station in Novi Sad killed 16 people on Nov. 1. The tragedy has unleashed a youth-led protest movement against autocratic President Aleksandar Vucic.
Protesters believe the victims died because government corruption led to sloppy renovation work at the station. They have been demanding accountability for the disaster, and an early parliamentary election that they hope will oust Vucic’s populist government from power.
Flag-waving university students on Thursday led the huge column of marchers as they set off on the 90-kilometer (58-mile) journey toward Novi Sad. Saturday’s gathering there is expected to draw tens of thousands of people, piling pressure on Vucic.
Various other groups of university students also have been trekking across Serbia for two weeks before they all converge in Novi Sad on Saturday.
Belgrade residents came out of their houses on Thursday to greet the protesters as they passed by. People honked their car horns, waved or blew whistles. Some cried.
MiHajjlo Jovanovic, a sports academy student from Belgrade, said that he joined the march because “nothing has changed and we are going there (to Novi Sad) hoping that it finally will change.”
Veterinary student Ana Marija Seslija said that “we are walking to show that our struggle has not stopped and that we are all still active.”
Authorities have detained scores of university students and other protesters in the past months, trying to crush the resistance. Police have been accused of brutality toward protesters, including beatings and arbitrary detentions.
While 13 people have been charged in the disaster, no trial date has been set. Doubts prevail that proceedings would untangle an alleged top-level corruption web that critics believe led to the fatal negligence and disregard of construction safety rules during the station building renovation.
Vucic, without offering evidence, has branded student-protesters as Western-backed “terrorists,” while the governing Serbian Progressive Party organized counterrallies. This has fueled political tensions.
Serbia is formally seeking to join the European Union. But the accession process has been stalled, because Vucic has nurtured close ties with Russia and China, while being accused of clamping down on democratic freedoms.

African elections often lack a crucial component: an opposition

African elections often lack a crucial component: an opposition
Updated 8 min 6 sec ago

African elections often lack a crucial component: an opposition

African elections often lack a crucial component: an opposition
  • Behind the scenes are political and business elites that want to ensure their interests are not challenged, but are now spooked by a young generation demanding better governance and jobs

NAIROBI: Multiple African presidents are finding ways to block opposition candidates from running against them, turning elections into foregone conclusions that risk provoking violent unrest and undermining faith in democracy.
Tanzania’s elections descended into violence on Wednesday as voters rebelled against the lack of choice, with the two serious rivals to President Samia Suluhu Hassan either jailed or barred from running.
A day earlier, Ivory Coast President Alassane Ouattara won a fourth term with almost 90 percent of the vote after his two main opponents were similarly excluded.
In Cameroon, 92-year-old Paul Biya, the world’s oldest head of state, secured re-election for an eighth term this month, helped by the fact that his strongest challenger was barred from standing by the constitutional court.
There has been a decline in democracy worldwide in recent decades, with authoritarians finding inventive ways to block opponents everywhere from Asia to Europe to the Americas.
But it has been a striking trend in sub-Saharan Africa, showing “a crisis of democratic governance on the continent,” said Heritier Brilland Ndakpanga, of the Center for Humanitarian Dialogue.
2024 was considered a banner year for African democracy, with opposition parties winning power in Ghana, Botswana, Mauritius and Senegal.
But those were always among the continent’s most democratic countries, and the results may have encouraged other governments to take no chances at the ballot box.
Supposedly independent electoral bodies are often weaponized against the opposition, say analysts.
The running of elections is “in the hands not just of the government... but its most intransigent parts,” said Stephane Akoa, political scientist in Cameroon, bemoaning a “perversion of the system” in his country.
In Central African Republic, the opposition is boycotting polls in December, saying the election body is not independent.
Similar complaints by Tanzania’s opposition were the reason it was barred from taking part in this week’s vote, with its leader, Tundu Lissu, jailed on treason charges for calling for electoral reforms.

- Changing world order -

Behind the scenes are political and business elites that want to ensure their interests are not challenged, but are now spooked by a young generation demanding better governance and jobs.
So-called Gen Z protests have drawn violent crackdowns in Kenya, and toppled the Madagascar government this month, leading to a military takeover.
“People are becoming harder to control and creating more effective opposition movements, and governments are responding with the mechanism they’ve used historically, which is repression,” said Nic Cheeseman, an African elections expert at the University of Birmingham.
Meanwhile, there is less and less pressure from outside, as new international partners make their presence felt in Africa, notably China, Russia, Turkiye and the United Arab Emirates.
“African governments have alternatives in 2025,” said Mandipa Ndlovu, researcher with Leiden University’s African Studies Center.
“Geopolitical competition is eroding the rule of law. Democracy is not a prerequisite for working with China or Russia.”
As for the United States, President Donald Trump’s administration has taken a more transactional approach to diplomacy, telling its embassies to rein in criticism of elections.
“You’re not going to get pushback at all from the US, which historically has been one of the most outspoken when it comes to elections,” said Cheeseman, adding that US foreign-aid cuts have also removed support to pro-democracy groups.

- New generation -

All this makes for a volatile atmosphere.
Tanzanians have long been seen as one of Africa’s most docile populations, so the eruption of violence this week came as a shock to many.
“Gen Z will save us all,” said Ndlovu. “They are coming through and saying this is ridiculous, demanding that their governments provide jobs and proper governance.
“But if we can’t fix the institutions, nothing will change.”
That can require a major crisis, such as Kenya saw in 2007 and 2008, when a disputed election took the country to the brink of civil war.
That scared the elites into reforms and a new democratic constitution that has largely kept elections free and fair.
“But big protests around elections are probably not enough on their own to get regimes and the elite to change course,” said Cheeseman.
“What worries me is that in many countries, populations are becoming increasingly demanding and governments are becoming increasingly repressive.”


Why emboldened Kim had little need for photo-op with Trump

Why emboldened Kim had little need for photo-op with Trump
Updated 26 min 14 sec ago

Why emboldened Kim had little need for photo-op with Trump

Why emboldened Kim had little need for photo-op with Trump
  • North Korea has declared itself an “irreversible” nuclear state and forged close links to Russia, sending troops to support Moscow in its war on Ukraine
  • Closer alliances elsewhere mean Kim has little reason to chase approval from Washington

GYEONGJU: US President Donald Trump may have hoped for an impromptu talk with his old friend Kim Jong Un during a recent trip to Asia, but analysts say the increasingly emboldened North Korean despot had few good reasons to join the photo-op.
Trump sent repeated overtures to Kim during his barnstorming tour of Asia, saying he was “100 percent” open to a meeting and even bucking decades of US policy by conceding that North Korea was “sort of a nuclear power.”
But Pyongyang kept mum on the invitation, instead firing off missiles and sending its foreign minister to Russia and Belarus, with whom it has deepened ties in recent years.
“The brutal reality is that Kim Jong Un had no incentive to participate,” said Seong-Hyon Lee, a visiting scholar at the Harvard University Asia Center.
“It was a fundamental miscalculation by Washington to believe he would,” said Lee.
Trump’s repeated overtures instead represented a “victory” for the North Korean leader — offering him and his nuclear program a massive degree of credibility, Lee said.
“President Trump gave Kim a massive, unearned concession,” he explained.
The pair — who Trump once famously declared were “in love” — last met in 2019 at Panmunjom in the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) separating the two Koreas after the US leader extended an invitation to Kim on Twitter.
That overture to Pyongyang spearheaded by Trump eventually collapsed over the scope of denuclearization of the North and sanctions relief.
Since then, North Korea has declared itself an “irreversible” nuclear state and forged close links to Russia, sending troops to support Moscow in its war on Ukraine.
Kim is now in a “pretty sweet spot,” Soo Kim, a former CIA analyst, told AFP.
“Russia’s backing is probably one of the most decisive factors strengthening and cementing North Korea’s strategic hand these days,” she said.
“He maintains the upper hand, which makes it easier for him to pass on Trump’s invitation,” Kim told AFP.
Heading home from South Korea and a meeting with Chinese leader Xi Jinping, Trump said he had been too “busy” to meet Kim, though he added he could return.
The scene stood in stark contrast to 2019, when denuclearization and sanctions relief talks in Hanoi, Vietnam, collapsed in dramatic fashion — leaving Kim to endure a long train journey back to Pyongyang with no deal in hand.
Vladimir Tikhonov, Korean Studies professor at the University of Oslo, told AFP that experience had left Pyongyang sore.
“They don’t want to venture forward too rushingly,” he said.
Instead, Tikhonov said, Pyongyang may be holding out for more specific proposals from Trump, including formal diplomatic recognition and sanctions relief without denuclearization.

- Friends like these -

And closer alliances elsewhere mean Kim has little reason to chase approval from Washington.
This week, Pyongyang’s foreign minister Choe Son Hui headed to Moscow, where she and Russian President Vladimir Putin agreed to strengthen bilateral ties.
Analysts say North Korea is receiving extensive financial aid, military technology, and food and energy assistance from Russia.
That has allowed it to sidestep tough international sanctions imposed over its nuclear and missile programs that were once a crucial bargaining chip for the United States.
Freeflowing trade with China — which soared to its highest level in nearly six years last month, according to analysts — has also helped ease Pyongyang’s economic isolation.
Last month, Kim appeared alongside Xi Jinping and Russia’s Vladimir Putin at an elaborate military parade in Beijing — a striking display of his new, elevated status in global politics.
Kim now has “no reason to trade this new, high-status quo for a photo-op” with Trump, said Harvard’s Lee.
Kim has a “strategic lifeline from Russia and China, and he sees the US-China competition as a long-term guarantee of his own maneuverability.”
The North Korean leader is now operating from a “position of strength.”


Taiwan does not want China’s ‘one country, two systems’, president says

Taiwan does not want China’s ‘one country, two systems’, president says
Updated 34 min 39 sec ago

Taiwan does not want China’s ‘one country, two systems’, president says

Taiwan does not want China’s ‘one country, two systems’, president says
  • Taiwan will defend its freedom and democracy, president says
  • China making a renewed push for Taiwan to accept its autonomy offer

HUKOU, Taiwan: Taiwan does not want China’s “one country, two systems” and must uphold its freedom and democracy, and resolve to defend itself, President Lai Ching-te said on Friday, rejecting Beijing’s latest push to get the island to come under Chinese control.
China said this week it “absolutely will not” rule out using force over Taiwan, striking a much tougher tone than a series of articles in state media that pledged benign rule if the island comes over to Beijing under a system of autonomy it uses for Hong Kong and Macau.
Lai, whom China views as a “separatist,” told soldiers at a military base in northern Taiwan’s Hukou that only strength can bring true peace.
“Accepting the aggressor’s claims and abandoning sovereignty certainly cannot achieve peace. Therefore, we must maintain the status quo with dignity and resolve, firmly opposing annexation, aggression, and the forced advancement of unification,” he said.
“We reject ‘one country, two systems’ because we will forever uphold our free and democratic constitutional system,” Lai added.
China’s Taiwan Affairs Office did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
No support for China’s proposal
No major political party in Taiwan supports China’s “one country, two systems” idea.
Lai said that the Republic of China – Taiwan’s formal name – and the People’s Republic of China are “not subordinate” to each other and that “Taiwan’s sovereignty cannot be violated or annexed” and its future can only be decided by its people.
“The Taiwanese people safeguarding their sovereignty and preserving their democratic and free way of life should not be viewed as provocation. Investing in national defense is investing in peace.”
Lai has pledged to increase military spending to 5 percent of GDP by 2030, strengthening the island’s defenses in the face of a rising threat from its giant neighbor China.
Lai was in Hukou for a commissioning ceremony for Taiwan’s first battalion of M1A2T Abrams tanks, made by General Dynamics Land Systems, a unit of US firm General Dynamics.
Taiwan has so far received 80 of the 108 M1A2T tanks it ordered from the United States, the island’s most important international backer and arms supplier despite the lack of formal diplomatic ties.
The M1A2T tank can fire high explosive anti-tank warheads and kinetic energy ammunition, such as armor-piercing fin-stabilized discarding sabot.
The US is bound by law to provide Taiwan with the means to defend itself, though President Donald Trump has yet to approve any new arms sales since he took office earlier this year.
US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, meeting Chinese Defense Minister Dong Jun in Kuala Lumpur on Friday, said he had emphasized US concerns about China’s activities around Taiwan, as well as in the contested South China Sea.
Dong said China-Taiwan “reunification” was an irreversible historical trend and the US should take a clear stance in opposition to the island’s independence, his ministry said in a statement.


US will ‘stoutly defend’ its interests, defense secretary tells China

US will ‘stoutly defend’ its interests, defense secretary tells China
Updated 41 min 56 sec ago

US will ‘stoutly defend’ its interests, defense secretary tells China

US will ‘stoutly defend’ its interests, defense secretary tells China
  • Hegseth raised concern about China’s actions toward Washington’s regional allies and partners

KUALA LUMPUR: The United States will “stoutly defend its interests,” Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth told Chinese counterpart Dong Jun during a meeting on Friday in Kuala Lumpur, flagging the importance of maintaining a balance of power in the region.
The meeting, following a September teleconference, was the latest sign of gradually improving communication between the two sides, amid roiling regional tension and increased military deployments across East Asia.
Hegseth told the Chinese minister of national defense that the United States was concerned about China’s activities in the disputed South China Sea and around Taiwan, he said in a post on X that described their meeting as “good and constructive.”
“We will continue discussions with the People’s Liberation Army on matters of mutual importance,” he wrote after they met on the sidelines of a gathering of ASEAN defense ministers in the Malaysian capital.
“The United States does not seek conflict,” he added. “It will continue to stoutly defend its interests and ensure it has the capabilities in the region to do so.”
The Chinese defense ministry did not immediately respond to Reuters’ requests for comment.
Hegseth also said he raised concern about China’s actions toward Washington’s regional allies and partners, in apparent references to repeated clashes with the Philippines in the South China Sea and tension with Australia over surveillance flights.
The remarks came after President Donald Trump said on Thursday that Taiwan did not figure in his meeting with President Xi Jinping in the South Korean city of Busan.
China has also been steadily boosting air, naval and coast guard deployments around democratically-governed Taiwan, which it claims as its own.
It considers Taiwan President Lai Ching-te a “separatist.” Lai rejects Beijing’s sovereignty claims, saying only the island’s people can decide their future.
The Pentagon has been pushing for improved communications with China over its military modernization and regional posture, including greater transparency over its nuclear weapons build-up and more theater-level discussions with military commanders.
In a summary of last month’s video call, Hegseth said he told Dong the US did not seek conflict with China nor was it “pursuing regime change or strangulation” of China.
Shortly before meeting Xi, Trump said he had ordered the US military to resume nuclear testing should Russia and China re-start their own tests.
Trump has described China as a “distant third” behind Russia as a nuclear power but said it would be equal within five years.