| Anger,
    Frustration as Ethiopians Bury Their Dead.  [Ethiopia
]
In a crowded, dingy room
    in the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa, women 
in traditional white veils sit on a wooden
    bench, crying uncontrollably. In a scene of grief replicated across the city, Felege Wolde
    Tsadik, 70, paces back and forth in front of her fellow mourners, clutching two
    black-and-white photographs and wailing.  The two pictures announce a double tragedy
    for Felege, whose 18-year-old grandson Abyei Mulat was shot dead by police on Wednesday
    during almost a week of political unrest.  Abyei was killed just two weeks after his
    father died of an illness, leaving Felege without a breadwinner.  "I am as good
    as dead.  How will I survive?" the sobbing woman asked Reuters.  "I do
    not have anyone else to take care of me.  Why should I live anymore?" | 
  
    | Woman Claims Liberian
    Presidency.  [Liberia] 
Liberia's Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf 
claimed success in her bid
    to become Africa's first democratically elected female president, but 
her soccer star
    opponent refused to concede, pressing his fraud allegations.  With almost 91 percent
    of ballots counted by late Thursday, the electoral commission said 67-year-old
    Johnson-Sirleaf held about 59 percent of Tuesday's vote, compared with 41 percent for
    George Weah of Chelsea and AC Milan 
fame.  ''I think the results are clear,''
    Johnson-Sirleaf told The Associated Press at her residence late Thursday.  ''It's
    clear that the Liberian people have expressed confidence in me.  They have elected me
    to lead the team that will bring reform to the country and 
that will deliver development. | 
  
    | Liberians
    Elect Africa's First Female President.  
[Liberia] 
The former Liberian finance
    minister, Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, has claimed victory in the presidential run-off and looks
    likely to become Africa's first elected woman head 
of state.  Announcing what seemed
    to be an unbeatable lead for the Harvard-educated banker, the National Elections
    Commission said that with ballots tallied from more than 90 per cent of polling stations,
    Ms Johnson-Sirleaf had 59.1 per cent of the votes from Tuesday's election.  Her
    rival, George Weah, a millionaire soccer star, had 40.9 per cent.  "I think the
    trend is now irreversible," said Ms Johnson-Sirleaf, 67, known as the Iron
    Lady.  "Just my own performance 
 is going to raise the participation of
    women not just in Liberia but also 
in Africa.  It's a big challenge but I'm looking
    forward to it." | 
  
    | Liberia's Message for
    the Women of Africa.  [Liberia] 
These were the women I grew up with in Liberia,
    the women all across Africa - the worst place there is to be a woman - who somehow manage
    to carry that entire continent on their backs.  These are the women who went to the
    polls in Liberia last 
week.  They ignored the threats of the young men who vowed more
    war if their chosen presidential candidate, the former soccer player George Weah, didn't
    win.   "No Weah, no peace," the boys yelled, chanting in the streets and
    around the polling stations.  Ever since the voting results started coming in a few
    days ago, showing what the Liberian women had done, I've been unable to get one image from
    Bukavu out of my mind.  It is of an old woman, in her 30s.  It was almost
    twilight when I saw her, walking up the hill out of the city as I drove in.  She
    carried so many logs that her chest almost seemed to touch the ground, so stooped was her
    back.  Still, she trudged on, up the hill toward her home.  Her husband was
    walking just in front of her.  He carried nothing.  Nothing in his hand, nothing
    on his shoulder, nothing on his back.  He kept looking back at her, telling her to
    hurry up.  I want to go back to Bukavu to find that woman, and to tell her what just
    happened in Liberia.  I 
want to tell her this: Your time will come, too. | 
  
    | A Society at a
    Crossroads.  [Liberia] 
The election last week of Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, the
    Harvard-educated former World Bank economist as president of 
Liberia, is a
    milestone.  She will become the first woman African head of state and give her
    tormented country the only real opportunity in more than a generation to emerge from the
    ashes of a savage civil war.  But these rays of hope will be extinguished if George
    Weah, her vanquished opponent, becomes bellicose and stokes violent conflict.  The
    election of Johnson-Sirleaf notwithstanding, history will repeat itself unless the
    international community acts resolutely.  Although she won 60 percent to Weah's 40
    percent, Weah has refused to concede defeat, charging fraud and other
    irregularities.  International monitors have categorically stated that there is no
    evidence to bolster Weah's allegations.   Most Liberians seem to have voted for
    experience and technocratic competence over glamour.  The belief is that 67-year-old
    Johnson-Sirleaf, with her connections and legitimacy in the world of global finance and
    capital, stands a better chance of leading Liberia 
to economic recovery and international
    demarginalization.  The silver lining for Weah is that he has established himself as
    a powerful political force and the man likely to succeed Johnson-Sirleaf. | 
  
    | Woman Wins
    Historic Liberia Vote.  [Liberia] 
Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf has been declared
    president of Liberia following 
runoff elections, having received
 nearly 60 percent of the
    vote.  The declaration was made Wednesday by 
Liberia's National Electoral Commission,
    which investigated election fraud claims filed by Johnson-Sirleaf's rival, international
    soccer star George Weah.  Johnson-Sirleaf is the first female elected president 
in Africa. | 
  
    | Horrifying Rapes
    On The Increase.  [Namibia] 
The abuse of women and children continues to escalate
    in Namibia, and ways 
must be found to stem this tide of violence.  Condemnatory
    statements are made from time to time by various leaders and civil society groups, but
    still we fail to make a difference in the lives of our most vulnerable.  The cases of
    rape reported by the Police this week alone were in the double figures by the time of
    going to press, the majority of them involving minors.  Rape and violence against
    women and children in our society is no longer merely a problem - it is a national
    disaster.  The news of a barrage of rapes this week comes while a two-day national
    conference on woman and child protection, under the theme of 'Speak out against abuse', is
    taking place in the capital.  Reported cases in 
Namibia in 2003 alone, according to a
    Unicef spokeswoman, show that there are close to three rapes a day in a country with a
    population of less than two million.  Bearing in mind that these are only the
    incidents that are reported to the Police, we can hazard a guess that the actual figures
    are much higher. | 
  
    | Protect
    Women and Kids, Men Urged.  [South 
Africa] The department of justice initiative
    is a national program, but the Western 
Cape has launched its own activities.  On
    Friday the city hosts the 1 000 Men Breakfast at the Cape Town International Convention
    Centre and a men's march.  Ramatlakane said the switching on of the lights in Wale
    Street was a sign that the 
Western Cape government believed the abuse of women and
    children could be overcome.  "We must work to overcome this scourge of abuse
    against women and children not only during the 16 Days of Activism for Non-Violence
    Against Women and Children, but every day."  The MEC encouraged men to pressure
    their peers to be "good men", who did not abuse women and children. | 
  
    | It's Back to the 'Village Well'
    in Zimbabwe's Crumbling Cities.  [Zimbabwe] 
Balancing a bucket filled with water
    on her head, much like in the old childhood days in the rural district of Chirumhanzu,
    42-year-old mother of four Marian Kanyonga breaks a sweat - it has been a hectic morning.
     She has just made her sixth trip to a nearby unprotected well, where using a rusty
    old plate she has to kneel and scoop water into her 25-litre bucket, a skill she has now
    almost perfected into an art.  Kanyonga is not alone, women and children, buckets and
    containers in hand discuss the problems afflicting them, from water shortages, raw
    effluent flowing in the streets, uncollected garbage to a burgeoning HIV/AIDS epidemic
    that is killing at least 3 000 Zimbabweans every week.  This is not Chirumhanzu, a
    dusty rural area, more than 200km south of Harare. 
 It is Zengeza suburb, situated in
    the dormitory town of Chitungwiza, some 30km south of the Zimbabwean capital, where water
    has become an elusive commodity with some residents forced to walk several kilometres to
    buy the precious liquid for $1 000 a litre.  Residents live in fear of a serious
    health crisis. |