| Putting Women's Faces on the Grim Statistics About
AIDS.  [Africa] "In the Continuum" is about Abigail, a
    middle-class, married mother in Harare, Zimbabwe, and Nia, a teenager in the 
Los Angeles ghetto.  They are very different but have a dark connection:
    both are pregnant and H.I.V. positive, having contracted the virus from their men.  The authors were inspired to write about AIDS by the
    frightening increase in H.I.V. infection among black women in the United States and Africa.  Ms. Gurira, who is 27 and has a degree
 in
    psychology, was all too familiar with the disease because one of every four
adults in Zimbabwe is estimated to
    have the virus.  Ms. Salter, 26,
learned that
    AIDS was now the leading cause of death for African-American women ages 25 to 34 by
    watching a news program. | 
  
    | Women Seek Power as Liberia Prepares to Vote
.  [
Liberia
] From girls in high heels brandishing Kalashnikovs to a
    grandmother who wants to be Africa's first female president, women in Liberia have always been
    a potent force.  But as the nation prepares to
    vote in its first elections since one of Africa's most brutal wars, women are taking over the political scene
    like never before.  More than half of the 1.3
    million people registered to vote in Tuesday's polls are female, a statistic
 none of the
    22 presidential candidates can afford to ignore.  Two
    of the candidates are women.  "During the
    war, men were all in hiding or away fighting.  Women
    were the breadwinners, going behind enemy lines to feed their children," said
    Jeanette Ebba-Davidson, one of the founding members of Liberia's Association of
    Female Lawyers. "Now the war is over, we're speaking out again and saying we don't
    want to be a deputy this or that, we want to be ministers and presidents," said
    Ebba-Davidson, who was forced to flee her home three times during the war. | 
  
    | Force-fed
    Women Fight the Fat in Africa.  [
Mauritania
] Mauritanian
    girls made to drink camel's milk to gain weight for marriage.  Mariem Sow was a little girl when her
sister
    Zeinabou choked to death in front of her while being force-fed camel's milk
by a family
    slave.  Beaten if she refused to
swallow the
    rich diet of sweetened milk and millet porridge, Zeinabou was one of many Mauritanian
    girls fattened up because of an ancient belief that corpulent women make more desirable
    wives. | 
  
    | Mr.
    Bush, This Is Pro-Life?  [Niger] When I walked into
    the maternity hospital here, I wished that President Bush were with me.  A 37-year-old woman was lying on a stretcher,
    groaning from labor pains and wracked by convulsions.
      She was losing her eyesight and seemed about to slip into a coma from
    eclampsia, a complication of pregnancy that kills 50,000 women a year in the
 developing
    world.  Beneath her, cockroaches
skittered
    across the floor.  Fathi Ali rode
 a camel for
    40 miles across the desert to reach a clinic, however before she could get proper medical
    attention she lost her unborn child.  "We're
    just calling for her husband," said Dr. Obende Kayode, an obstetrician.
  "When he provides the drugs and
surgical
    materials, we can do the operation," a Caesarean section.  Dr. Kayode explained that before any
surgery can
    begin, the patient or family members must pay $42 for a surgical kit with bandages,
    surgical thread and antibiotics.  In this case,
    the woman - a mother of six named Ramatou Issoufou - was lucky.  Her husband was able to round up the
sum quickly,
    without having to sell any goats.  Moreover,
    this maternity hospital had been equipped by the U.N. Population Fund - and
that's why I
    wished Mr. Bush were with me.  Last month, Mr.
    Bush again withheld all U.S. funds from the U.N. Population Fund.  The Population Fund promotes modern contraception,
    which is practiced by only 4 percent of women in 
Niger, and safe childbirth.  But
    it has the money to assist only a few areas of Niger, and Mrs. Issoufou was blessed to live in one of
them.  Even when they don't die, mothers often suffer
    horrific childbirth injuries.  In
 the town of Gouré, a
20-year-old
    woman named Fathi Ali was lying listlessly on a cot, leaking urine.  After she was in labor for three days, her mother
    and her aunt had put her on a camel and led her 40 miles across the desert to a clinic -
    but midway in the journey the baby was stillborn and she suffered a fistula, an internal
    injury that leaves her incontinent.  Village
    women are the least powerful people on earth.  That's
    why more than 500,000 women die every year worldwide in pregnancy - and why
we in the West
    should focus more aid on preventing such deaths in poor countries.  Mr. Bush and other conservatives have
 blocked funds
    for the U.N. Population Fund because they're concerned about its involvement
 in China.  They're right to be appalled by forced
    sterilizations and abortions in China, and they have the best of intentions.  But they're wrong to blame the Population Fund,
    which has been pushing China to ease the coercion - and in any case the solution isn't to
    let African women die.  (Two American women
    have started a wonderful grass-roots organization that seeks to make up for
the Bush cuts
    with private donations; its website is www.34millionfriends.org.) | 
  
    | Obasanjo Wants More Women Representation in Elective Offices.  [Nigeria
] Olusegun Obasanjo, wants more women representation in elective
    offices in Nigeria.  Receiving the
    caucus of Female Parliamentarians of the National Assembly, at the State House Abuja, the
    president expressed concern over the few number of women in elective positions even as he
    observed some level progress in advocacy, persuasion and understanding.  He, however, said that much needed to be done to
    ensure the increase in the quantity and quality of women in elective offices.  There are about 27 women out of the 469 members in
    both the Senate and House of Representatives.  "Women
    must be given a pride of place in this country.  If
    women are about 50 per cent of our population, not to give them the rightful
 place in all
    facets of our developmental and human activity, is like talking about development with
    half of the population or if you put it in another way, if you say men and women in a
    country form the two legs or wings, if you do not give or enable the women,
then it means
    that one wing is impaired. | 
  
    | South Africa Brutalises Women, Girls.  [South 
Africa] A woman is raped every 10 minutes in South Africa, one is
    beaten up every six minutes - and seven women are murdered, on average, every day.  This harrowing picture of widespread brutality
    against women and young girls emerged from the police annual crime statistics released
    this week.  And police say the truth is even
    more shocking as two-thirds of all rapes may not be reported because "victims often
    depend on the perpetrators for a livelihood".  The
    SA Police Service's annual report for 2004/2005 says that "the details
of the crimes
    are of such an intimate and traumatic nature that the women and, especially,
 children
    involved will not easily share these with anybody".  The
    police figures show that rape increased nationally by 4% between April 2004
and March
    2005.  Countrywide, 55 114 cases were reported.  Sixty
    percent of the victims were adult women, and 40% children.  The
    province with the highest number of reported cases is Gauteng (11 923),
    followed by KwaZulu-Natal and the Eastern 
Cape. |