Pages

Welcome

Mission Statement
Rural Empowerment Initiatives (REI) mission is to collaborate in the reduction of poverty through investment in rural areas and training of local people.

Vision Statement
REI's vision is to treat every created being with dignity, respect and love. We strive to work with those most in need by empowering people to recognize their God given talents, enabling them to make the world a better place and providing them hope for the future.

Our Principles
REI believes that all people are created equal.
REI will develop small to medium businesses (SMEs) as one approach to reach those most in need by creating jobs that build the economy in rural areas.
REI's partner businesses will be led, managed and majority owned by local people.
REI will always seek a triple bottom line of economic, spiritual and social transformation.
REI seeks to build sustainable community-oriented business models.
REI's focus of support is to the economically disadvantaged.
REI will seek attractive market and growth opportunities.
REI will incubate pilot projects with capable management.
REI believes in collaboration. We seek partners whose strengths complement our own in an effort to build well-rounded projects of lasting economic value for the communities in which we work.
REI is inspired by the life and ministry of Jesus Christ, and is therefore rooted in the Christian faith.

Give Online

Give Online
Scroll down and look for people and my name Rick S.

Monday, November 12, 2007

Food Crisis

Thanks to Rick r for passing this info on to me....



from a person that is on the ground in Senegal-
... on Friday we heard that millet (their staple
food) has gone from a normal price of 40 to 50 CFA/kilo to 175. So
their staple food is now about four times the price it normally is.
Rich people are stockpiling food now.



Senegal's Wade cuts govt pay as food prices rise Sat 3 Nov 2007, 13:17 GMT

By Diadie Ba

DAKAR, Nov 3 (Reuters) - Senegal's president has pledged to cut the number of ministers in his cabinet and reduce government salaries, including his own, in a show of solidarity for citizens struggling with high energy and food prices.

In an address broadcast on state television late on Friday, Abdoulaye Wade said his government would put an emergency bill before parliament authorising the temporary pay reduction in a bid to "lessen the suffering" of the country's poor.

"At a time when important fringes of our population are suffering in their daily life from the negative effects of the rise in world oil prices on their household, I have decided as president to set an example," the octogenarian leader said.

Prime Minister Cheikh Hadjibou Soumare said Wade had asked him to come up with proposals to reduce the number of ministers in the cabinet from a current 38 as part of the measures.

Surging food prices, with grains and other crops at record highs, are making life difficult for many families in Senegal and across Africa, leaving them struggling to afford the staples such as rice that make up the national diet.

Record oil prices have increased food transport costs, while the explosion of biofuels production from food crops, subsidised by some Western countries as less environmentally damaging than fossil fuels, has also contributed to the rise.

Senegal's state electricity firm Senelec, hit by a cash crunch caused by high global fuel prices and by rising consumption, has struggled to maintain supplies to the former French colony, an economic hub in the region.

Power shortages across the Sahelian nation of 11 million people have steadily increased in recent years, tarnishing its image as one of West Africa's most developed states and disrupting businesses unable to afford their own generators.

Wade urged the population to try to conserve energy in an effort to stave off a worsening in the power crisis.

"I call on the solidarity of all Senegalese, to the business community, the formal and informal sectors, to religious leaders, to take part in this national effort," he said.

1 comment:

  1. Thanks for getting the word out, Rick. I have just started looking into what it takes to get an 18,000 Kg container of rice into Dakar, and from there into the interior. This could be done for less than $18000 US, it appears. It might be as little as $12000 US if we can get donated shipping as a man from the merchant marine told me on Thursday. We're just in the very initial stages pondering this. It would be best to do this through partnership. World Vision is the heavy lifter in this kind of effort, but it would be nice to do this in concert with some group already doing proclamation. World Vision is quite pragmatic in getting development done and we hear from the nationals that they tend to avoid up-front, highly visible identification with Christ. It would be a lot cheaper to take part in the millet stockpiling, but it seems that would hurt others, whereas a container would bless. One container would help feed about 4000 people for a month. There's the distribution issue, tho.

    ReplyDelete