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This is an archived USAID document retained on this web site as a matter of public record.

THE PILLARS

In this section:
Forestry Reform Begins in Liberia
Alliance Promotes Health through Soy
Bednets Take the Bite Out of Malaria
After 20 Years, the Rule of Law Takes Root


ECONOMIC GROWTH, AGRICULTURE, AND TRADE

Forestry Reform Begins in Liberia

Photo of three canoers in the Sapo National Park in Liberia.

USAID is helping to ensure that the Sapo National Park—Liberia’s only national park—and other forested areas in the country are well managed.


ReneeHubee@arthouse2002

Liberia’s forests have long played a vital role in its economy but have suffered from years of mismanagement under the former regime of Charles Taylor. Timber revenues were used to enrich government officials and fund armed conflict in the region.

A civil war led to the overthrow of Taylor in 2003. Then the U.S. Congress committed $4 million to help reform the forest sector. With these funds, USAID joined with the State Department, U.S. Forest Service, World Bank, United Nations, and several NGOs to launch the Liberia Forest Initiative (LFI) to ensure that forests are managed sustainably and for the benefit of all Liberians.

The LFI had to meet the needs of commercial forestry, community forestry, and forest conservation together. As recently as 2002, forestry generated up to 60 percent of the nation’s foreign exchange.

In the commercial component, the LFI is trying to establish a viable system of granting concessions, or legal permissions to extract timber, in a fair,

competitive, and transparent manner. Revenues from concessions are to be invested in public services such as roads, schools, and clinics.

In the community forestry component, the initiative is increasing community involvement in decisions regarding the management of forests and helping communities use forest resources to improve their lives. And, in the conservation component, LFI is working to save strategic forested areas for future generations. Liberia’s forests constitute the largest remaining blocks of the Upper Guinean Forest Ecosystem, a threatened global hotspot for biodiversity that is home to the critically endangered western chimpanzee.

In the last two years, LFI reviewed 70 forestry concessions and recommended they all be canceled for failure to meet contractual obligations, nonpayment of taxes and fees, or other reasons. If the recommendation is accepted by Liberia’s government, it may help lift UN sanctions on timber from the country.

LFI also helped secure Sapo National Park by removing illegal loggers, miners, and squatters, and by working with communities to create economic livelihood opportunities near park boundaries.

“LFI is about much more than saving forests,” says Erik Streed, a forestry advisor with the Bureau of Economic Growth, Agriculture, and Trade. “In fact, the success of LFI will be critical to the success of other multilateral initiatives, such as the Governance and Economic Management Assistance Program, which is an umbrella effort to improve financial and fiscal administration, transparency, and accountability in Liberia’s new government.”


GLOBAL DEVELOPMENT ALLIANCE

Alliance Promotes Health through Soy

Photo of Glenda Valladares and Tita Zuniga, co-owners of a Honduran bakery.

Doña Tita Zúniga (right) and daughter, Glenda Valladares, owners of Eben-Ezer Bakery, are including soy flour in their semitas, a traditional breakfast bun popular in Honduras. They found that the soy flour helps lengthen the shelf-life of the semitas, and they are now exporting them to Honduran communities in Miami and Houston.


WISHH

TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras—Glenda Valladares, owner and manager of Eben-Ezer Bakery here, is adding nutritious soy flour to her traditional breakfast buns, known as semitas, and has begun exporting them to Honduran communities in the United States.

Her use of soy-fortified products is part of a USAID effort to add nutritional value to food, particularly staples like breads and cereals. Fortification—with soy, vitamins, minerals, and other substances—can improve the health of millions of people in the developing world, expand local markets, and grow small businesses, according to health experts from the World Initiative for Soy in Human Health (WISHH).

USAID—through the Office of Global Development Alliance and the Bureau for Economic Growth, Agriculture, and Trade—partnered with WISHH in 2004 to urge farmers in numerous countries to grow and use soy beans.

An estimated 800 million people worldwide suffer from malnutrition, which is often caused by insufficient amounts of protein and micronutrients. Malnutrition plays a role in half of the more than 10 million annual child deaths in the developing world, and maims, cripples, and blinds on a massive scale.

Soybeans are an abundant and a complete source of protein that are affordable, easy to consume, and can be used without changing the taste or the physical property of foods to which they are added.

In Honduras, Valladares is among 160 people to receive food technology training and use soy in their products. The Healthy Schools Office of the Honduran Government—along with the Honduran Bakers Association, WISHH, and the Illinois Soybean Association—produced a high-protein cookie that is now handed out to thousands of Honduran school children along with their lunches. The cookies are a source of up to 10 grams of daily protein.

“Many in Honduras are protein deficient, so we are getting a very positive response from Honduran bakers who can expand their businesses by adding high-protein soy into foods that are already popular,” said Phil Bradshaw, a soybean farmer from Illinois who serves on the WISHH board of directors.

The project is also working with bakers in Kenya. Devkan Enterprises, one of the companies that participates in WISHH, recently began selling soy products in 12 stores in Nairobi, Mombasa, and Kisumu.

“What is most encouraging is the awareness and interest that Kenyan millers and bakers have in product improvement,” says Dwight Alan Smith, USAID assistant mission director in Kenya. “This bodes well for developing market opportunities and the expansion of therapeutic feeding programs that improve the quality of peoples’ lives.”

WISHH, an NGO created by U.S. soybean grower organizations to fight hunger and malnutrition, has worked to improve diets and health in over 23 countries around the world.

USAID invested $400,000 in this project. Another $750,000 came from WISHH and other private partners, including the American Soybean Association, Archer-Daniels-Midland, Cargill, The Cutting Edge nutritional consulting firm, and the University of Illinois.


GLOBAL HEALTH

Bednets Take the Bite Out of Malaria

Photo of president of Tanzania handing out free insecticide-treated bednets.

Zanzibar President Abeid Amani Karume hands out free insecticide-treated bednets to mothers at the launch of a U.S. funded antimalaria campaign, known locally as Kataa Malaria. U.S. Embassy Chargé d’Affaires Daniel Delly stands to right of Karume.


Chris Thomas, USAID

ZANZIBAR, Tanzania—Thousands of residents here braved the scorching sun for hours in mid-December to receive locally produced, free insecticide-treated bednets to protect their families from malaria.

The distribution of the nets is the first Tanzanian activity under the President’s Malaria Initiative (PMI), a $1.2 billion U.S. government commitment over five years to combat the disease in 15 sub-Saharan countries. Efforts—in collaboration with the Zanzibar Malaria Control Program—include distributing bednets, indoor insecticide spraying, and improved treatment and diagnostics.

Malaria kills about 1 million people worldwide each year. In Tanzania, it is the leading cause of death in children under age 5. The mosquito-transmitted illness kills 125,000 people annually, and nearly 80,000 of those are children. Overall, 93 percent of Tanzanians are considered at risk of infection.

Zanzibar, the second most densely populated region of the country, is PMI’s first target because 20 percent of the population is under age 5 and about 4 percent of the population is made up of pregnant women—another high-risk group.

An estimated 3.5 percent—or about $121 million—of the country’s GDP is consumed by malaria costs.

Last year, USAID gave a Tanzanian company, A to Z Textiles, the technology to produce long-lasting, insecticide-treated bednets, which are sold cheaply or given free to the most vulnerable populations. The company is the only African bednet producer equipped with such technology.

Through PMI, the Agency is also making available a new drug, artemisinin combination therapy (ACT), which has proven effective in fighting the drug-resistant malaria that has become a growing problem in recent years.

USAID will also provide additional support for the purchase and distribution of nets for at least 130,000 children and pregnant women. The Zanzibar Malaria Control Program will aid in raising awareness about the disease and ways to prevent it. It will also support the distribution of 240,000 nets to pregnant women and families with young children.

“The provision of free nets to the most vulnerable people—those at highest risk from malaria-associated death and illness, pregnant women, and children under 5—is one of our most important commitments to families in Africa,” said Kent R. Hill, assistant administrator for the Global Health bureau. “The fact that the nets are supplied by A to Z Textiles in Tanzania, from Tanzanians to Tanzanians, is especially significant.”


DEMOCRACY, CONFLICT, AND HUMANITARIAN ASSISTANCE

After 20 Years, the Rule of Law Takes Root

Photo of Salvadoran students participating in a mock trial.

Salvadoran law students compete in a mock criminal trial. Two decades ago, before rule of law programs began in El Salvador, legal training was inadequate.


National Council of the Judiciary, El Salvador

Two decades ago, Central America was plagued by civil conflict, human rights abuses, and corrupt judicial systems beholden to political and economic elites. Laws were antiquated, legal training was inadequate, and the poor lacked access to justice.

It was in this volatile environment—which included the 1980 murders in El Salvador of four American women missionaries—that USAID, in cooperation with the State Department, launched a regional rule of law (ROL) program focused on human rights and criminal justice. Today, there are ROL programs in more than 50 countries.

“There was a great deal of skepticism within the Agency and the human rights community about our getting involved in this highly politicized issue,” recalled Fay Armstrong, then coordinator for Administration of Justice in the Western Hemisphere at the State Department. “We were starting from ground zero, and few realized how truly dysfunctional these judiciaries were.”

Over time, USAID’s ROL programs became a key element in democratic consolidation throughout the region.

“For Salvadorans, corruption and impunity in the justice system are no longer considered acceptable or inevitable,” said Mauricio Herrera, a USAID democracy specialist in El Salvador.

“Public awareness and advocacy for reforms on justice system transparency are now common among civil society organizations.”

When the Berlin Wall fell in 1989, USAID expanded its ROL programs, assisting postcommunist states to restructure judiciaries.

“Not only did these countries lack democratic traditions, but they had no history of sovereignty,” said Paul Bonicelli, deputy assistant administrator for the Bureau for Democracy, Conflict, and Humanitarian Assistance (DCHA). “We had to help change mindsets, in addition to forging independent institutions and helping to draft constitutions and laws to enhance due process and secure citizens’ rights.”

Despite resistance from entrenched interests, there has been meaningful progress.

In Ukraine, the 2004 Orange Revolution gained renewed strength when the Supreme Court ruled that presidential elections were stolen and ordered a new vote, paving the way for victory of prodemocracy candidate Viktor Yushchenko. Several of the court justices had participated in a USAID-supported training program on election dispute resolution.

In the 1990s, USAID started programs in Africa, Asia, and the Near East. The Agency helped rebuild Rwanda’s shattered judiciary after the 1994 genocide. In both Bangladesh and the Philippines, USAID worked with NGOs on innovative social justice programs. Since 2001 in Afghanistan and 2002 in Iraq, USAID assisted with new constitutions, built courthouses, and trained judges and lawyers.

“USAID’s ROL programs have a rich history,” said Gerald Hyman, director of DCHA’s Office of Democracy and Governance. “Now, our primary focus must be to assist fragile states rebuild the rule of law and transition to democracy, just as El Salvador has done over the past 20 years.”

Speaking before the American Bar Association’s International Rule of Law Symposium in November 2005, then-Administrator Andrew S. Natsios said: “We know that our development goals postcommunist—whether addressing poverty, economic growth, health, … [the] environment, or democracy—cannot be realized in the absence of rule of law.”

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