Complete video at: http://fora.tv/2009/04/21/Wangari_Maathai_The_Challenge_for_Africa
Nobel laureate Wangari Maathai argues that a community-based approach may succeed in reducing waste while also curbing the spread of malaria. She explains that mosquitoes often breed in pools formed in litter and, if Africans began reusing plastic, they could destroy many malaria breeding grounds.
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Wangari Muta Maathai is the founder of the Green Belt Movement, which, through networks of rural women, has planted over 30 million trees across Kenya since 1977. In 2002, she was elected to Kenya's Parliament in the first free elections in a generation, and in 2003 was appointed Assistant Minister for Environment, Natural Resources, and Wildlife.
The Nobel Peace Prize laureate of 2004, she is the author of Unbowed: A Memoir, and speaks to organizations around the world. Her newest book, The Challenge for Africa addresses the intricacies of African issues, such as the lack of technological developments, the absence of fair international trade, population pressures and enduring hunger, and the dearth of genuine political and economic leadership.
Maathai stresses the need for Africans to invent and implement their own solutions, rather than relying on foreign aid and Western visions of change, and calls for a revolution in leadership on both a political and individual level. - Los Angeles Public Library
Wangari Maathai, winner of the Nobel Peace Prize in 2004, is the founder of the Green Belt Movement in her home country of Kenya, an environmental group that has restored indigenous forests and assisted rural women by paying them to plant trees in their communities. Since 1977, it has planted more than 30 million trees in Kenya and has been replicated in dozens of other African countries. Having helped transform Kenya from a vicious dictatorship to a fledgling progressive democracy, Maathai is currently Kenya's Deputy Minister for the Environment and Natural Resources and a member of Parliament.
what the???? tsk...
gadionson1 1 month ago
@robertg222 : DDT was not banned in most of the world. It is used in bednets and on the ground. The propaganda was not false, DDT has real effects on people and animals; but where malaria is a real problem it is considered worth the risk.
MsTubbytube 1 year ago
@dooeed hahahaha
semiflex 2 years ago
wanker
dooeed 2 years ago
DDT prevented malaria too but the government banned it because of false propaganda from environmentalist..
robertg222 2 years ago
is it real ??????will it create the next serious problems??
s3063215 2 years ago
interesting...hmmmmmm
semiflex 2 years ago