Fri, 13:00 16 Jan 2009 GMT17

 
Kate Thomas
Kate Thomas is a foreign news reporter for the Independent, paying special attention to humanitarian and development stories. She has reported from West Africa, Europe and Southeast Asia. Kate has previously worked in the NGO sector in Thailand, Cambodia and the UK, and regularly contributes to travel supplements and guidebooks on developing countries.
Liberians sing the refugee blues
16 Jan 2009 12:22:00 GMT
Author: Kate Thomas

In a world fairer than this, Sarah Mayson might have been a soul singer. With a dark indigo headband, long purple earrings and eyelids painted to match, she looks the part. And the girl can sing. Her voice, strong and velvety, drifts through the refugee camp, sweetening the thick, stagnant air.

I don't understand her native language, Madingo, but the tone of her lyrics makes me think of WH Auden's World War II poem, Refugee Blues.

 ... 
 
Eastern Congo: Looks like heaven, feels like hell
10 Dec 2007 18:07:00 GMT
Author: Kate Thomas

The government official spun around in his chair, kicked an empty beer bottle with his heel and stared out of the window. "North Kivu looks like heaven," he said.

I agreed. A sunbird sang and we sat for a moment in silence, lost in the sunset. In the distance, cormorants and cuckoo hawks circled high above the glassy waters of Lake Kivu.

 ... 
 
Losing everything in Congo's violent North Kivu
16 Nov 2007 11:43:00 GMT
Author: Kate Thomas

The only thing Manga Mutaka thought he would lose at the Mugunga camp for internally displaced people was his eyesight. In the end, he lost everything.

Mutaka and his family are Twa, or Pygmies, from the volatile Ngongo region of North Kivu province in war-torn eastern Congo. When they tired of a life on the run from escalating rebel clashes, they gave in and came to Mugunga, a camp that houses nearly 30,000 people, 15 km (9 miles) from North Kivu's capital Goma.

 ... 
 
Indignity and despair in Liberia's biggest prison
24 Sep 2007 10:12:00 GMT
Author: Kate Thomas

When Richard Lovelace penned the 17th century love poem that begins "Stone walls do not a prison make", he obviously hadn't been to Liberia's most overcrowded jail. For at Monrovia Central Prison there is little else but crumbling stone walls, rusty iron bars and the stench of rotting dignity.

 ... 
 
Conditions grim in Sierra Leone’s diamond mines
04 Sep 2007 17:13:00 GMT
Author: Kate Thomas

It could have been a scene from a movie. Another long, hot day was coming to an end and the African sun was sinking into the dusty red earth. As the blue sky blushed, he knelt in front of me and held out a sparkling rock. But this was no proposal. And if it were a movie it could only have been "Blood Diamond".

Last year the Hollywood blockbuster brought the story of Sierra Leone's brutal diamond-fuelled war to the silver screen. The conflict ended in 2001 and since then the recovering West African nation has made great strides in combating illegal exports of blood diamonds.

 ... 
 
Next entries

Latest news

Breaking stories
Europe Turkey's military criticises coup plot probe

Africa Syria calls on Arabs to cut all ties with Israel

AlertNet insight
Asia Disaster-heavy 2008 raises pressure for climate pact, insurance

Aid agency news feed
Middle East CARE resumes distributions in Gaza Strip - Supplies destroyed in the bombed UN warehouse and hospitals

Blogs
Africa Liberians sing the refugee blues

Maps
Damage Assessment for the Gaza Strip (As of 10 January 2009)





URL: http://www.alertnet.org/db/bloggers/26088

For our full disclaimer and copyright information please visit http://www.alertnet.org