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African Fair Trade Shows Its Own Face
ISSUE 219
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Index

This Week's Somaliland News

Headlines

A Showdown Between The Parliament And ‎The President Over The Amina-Weris Case‎

6 Terrorist Suspects Recaptured following Jail Break‎    

Meet Me In Baidoa‎‎‎‎‎‎

Somaliland Forum Slams Yemeni Times Biased ‎Coverage‎

Somaliland Supreme Court Acquits ONLF ‎Rebels‎‎

Ethiopian Pastoralists Benefit From Export Of ‎Livestock To Somaliland‎

Will The Arabs Dare To Listen To Somaliland?‎‎‎

Regional Affairs

The Arms Embargo On Somalia’s TFG Must Not Be ‎Lifted By The UN

EU Backs Abdillahi Yusuf’s Leadership, Pledges More Aid‎

Ethiopia Signs Agreement With U.S. Firm On Oil ‎Exploration‎

Fisheries Sector In Djibouti Receives Boost ‎With US$100,000 Grant

IGAD Vows To Take On Somali Warlords‎‎‎

Somali Pirates Hijack Fuel Tanker: Official

Fort Riley Soldiers Deploy to the Horn of Africa‎‎

2.5 Million People Affected By Drought - Meles‎‎

South African Firm Wins Bid To Administer ‎Ethio-Djibouti Railway‎

Editorial
Special Report

International News

Bringing An African Dictator To Justice‎‎

Support Somaliland Has Been Invited To ‎Chancellor Gordon Brown’s Speech About ‎The Millennium Development Goals‎‎‎‎‎‎‎

UK Parliament: Written Answers‎‎‎

Killers Of Somali Cabbie Get Longest ‎Sentences Allowed

Toll Rises In Bahrain Boat Disaster‎

African Fair Trade Shows Its Own Face

Stop These Warlords‎‎

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

Somaliland: The International Community Should ‎Recognize and Support Right to Development‎

Somaliland: WS On The Case Of ‎Somaliland

SOMALILAND: Exiles Return Home As Investors

Embrace Asylum Seekers: Survivor's Final Wish

Opinions

Is CARE An International Organization Or Part ‎Of Somaliland Ministry Of Planning?‎

Awdal Region And The Emerging Businesses‎‎‎

Somaliland Citizens Rights Versus Abusers Of ‎Office Power‎

A Private Visit To The Somali Region In ‎Ethiopia‎‎‎

Expelling CARE Isn’t The Answer; Firing The ‎Minister Is‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎ ‎‎‎

Somaliland Must Respond To The Unfounded ‎Allegations of Yemen And Somalia


By Somalilandtimes network

Cotonou, Benin, March 28, 2006 – Organizations and individuals who work with and promote fair trade in Africa are set to meet in Bénin next month for a ground-breaking four-day Symposium which will analyze the impact of fair trade in Africa and draw a plan of action for its development.

The event, scheduled from the 6th to the 9th of April 2006 at the Marina Hotel in Cotonou, Bénin, allows some of the most important players in fair trade to share and analyze experiences of 30 years of fair trade in the continent. The Symposium plans a full agenda of talks, panel discussions and workshops, which will both examine past successes, and the potential of a greater role for African Fair trade at both regional and international levels in the future.

“The main message of the Symposium is that African actors should build their own vision and practices of Fair Trade,” says Pierre Johnson, member of the Fair Trade steering committee at the Workgroup on a Solidarity Socio-Economy, one of the initiating parties of the Symposium. “Africa is a continent that has a great deal of potential in terms of trade. It is rich in natural resources and cultural values, such as family and community solidarity, which represent an untapped potential for a balanced and sustainable development. If those values could pass from community level to national and continental level, then Africa could invent its own type of economy, based on these values.”

Fair trade began around 50 years ago, when small benevolent societies began purchasing goods directly from local producers and selling them, encouraging a fair price for goods and a more direct relationship between producers and consumers. Nowadays, fair trade is seen as an alternative to traditional profit-driven markets, as it reinforces the importance of promoting social and environmental sustainability, along with long-term relationships between producers, traders and consumers. Fair trade today can present a key to the development of regions within Africa, who are marginalized in the global trade environment.

The organizers welcome participants and observers to the event, whether businesses, government or interested individuals. The preliminary program can be viewed at the Symposium website: http://www.fairtrade-africa.org/

The Symposium is supported by groups as diverse as Cooperation of Fair Trade in Africa (COFTA), the Rural Foundation of West Africa (FRAO), the African Trade Network, Oxfam International, and financially by ICCO, the Charles Léopold Mayer Foundation for the Progress of Humankind and VECO Bénin. It is organized jointly by the Workgroup on Solidarity Socio-Economy (WSSE) of the Alliance for a Responsible, Plural and United World and the Research and Action Group for the Promotion of Agriculture and Development (GRAPAD).

Pierre Johnson is available for interviews by telephone on the 31st March and 1st April 2006. Please call +33 6 76 76 31 90 or email pwj@alliance21.org should you wish to arrange an interview. Aurélien Atidegla can be interviewed in Bénin at +229 95955478 or email grapad@intnet.bj


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