Central/South America
Brazil to Vaccinate
Women Against Papiloma Virus. [Brazil] Brazil's health officials said on Wednesday
that the country is studying the possibility of launching a campaign to vaccinate
Brazilian women against the human papiloma virus (HPV). The Brazilian government will test
the new Gardasil vaccine, which treats the HPV, before implementing the measure. The HPV
causes 70 percent of the country's uterine cancer cases, said Luiz Antonio Santini,
director of Brazil's National Cancer Institute. Health officials estimate that 50 percent
of the sexually active women in Brazil have the virus. Santini said the tests will start
as soon as the vaccine obtains approval from the National Sanitary Vigilance Agency
(Anvisa) for sale in Brazil, which will reportedly happen in a few months. "The
vaccine is a great step forward," said Santini. "For the first time we will be
able to prevent one type of cancer." Brazil's health authorities will conduct a study
to find out what types of HPV are most common in different regions of the country before
they start any campaign. "We have to establish which regions need the vaccine and
why. We also need to know the age of the women who will be most benefited from the
vaccine," said Santini. |
Abortion. [ |
Selling Chic With Safety. [Colombia] Are you worried, as a high-profile VIP, that you may be assassinated but you can't bear the thought of going around like a Michelin man wearing layers of armour plating over your finely-tailored suit? Colombian entrepreneur Miguel Caballero may be able to bridge the gap between your security concerns and your wardrobe requirements. From a small factory in the centre of Bogotá, Colombia's capital, Mr Caballero produces a range of finely-tailored blazers, raincoats, stylish shirts, casual denim jackets - and even protective underwear - resistant to a spray of bullets from an Uzi sub-machine gun or a forceful lunge by a knife-wielding attacker. Beyond Latin America, the company now also has representatives selling high-security fashion in the US, in Europe and in Asia. Such is the attractiveness of the product, that it is no longer the exclusive domain of burly male bodyguards and powerful men, but also the high-powered female executive at risk and in search of high-security fashion. "The line of products for women is taking on ever greater importance," Mr Caballero says. "Beforehand it would account for barely 1 per cent of exports. Feminine high-security apparel now makes up 30 per cent of total exports." |
AHC for
Operations Winds Up Mission. [Ecuador] This is a summary of what was said by UNHCR
spokesperson Ron Redmond to whom quoted text may be attributed at the press
briefing, on 9 June 2006, at the Palais des Nations in Geneva. Concluding a four-day
mission to Ecuador, UNHCR Assistant High Commissioner for Operations Judy Cheng-Hopkins
has called for more international attention to be paid to the humanitarian impact of the
Colombian conflict on the whole region. Our latest statistics released today show that
with more than 2 million internally displaced people, Colombia is now the country with the
largest population of uprooted people of concern to UNHCR in the world. And, it's not only
Colombia, but the entire region that's affected as well as the quarter of a million
Colombians in need of protection in Ecuador, there are also tens of thousands more
Colombians of concern to UNHCR in other countries in the region, such as Venezuela, Panama
and Costa Rica. These numbers, which continue to rise, make the Colombian situation not
only the largest UNHCR operation in the Americas but also one of the world's biggest and
most forgotten humanitarian tragedies. On Wednesday and Thursday, Cheng-Hopkins visited
UNHCR's two field offices in Ecuador Lago Agrio and Ibarra both located in
the north of the country near the Colombian border. She was especially worried about the
difficulty of reaching out to a large population of concern scattered over a wide in
difficult and remote terrain. Her greatest concern was the many women and children in need
of protection. |
The Enemy at Home. [Peru] The plot
of the film "Sleeping with the Enemy" is not fictional in essence. Close to 70
percent of all the women killed in one year in Peru died at the hands of their husbands,
partners, lovers or boyfriends, and the murders were committed at home or in a place that
was frequented by the couple. Violence against women has reached alarming levels in Latin
America. More than 300 women have been murdered in Ciudad Juárez, Mexico, in the last 11
years, while in Guatemala, 500 women suffered the same fate in the 2000-2004 period.
Peru's case is also dramatic, to the point that people have begun to talk of
"femicide," or the murder of a person based on the fact of the victim's being
female. But the biggest danger is not out on the street. According to the study
"Violence Against Women: Femicide in Peru," carried out by Amnesty
International-Peru and the non-governmental Flora Tristán Centre for Peruvian Women,
femicide in this country takes the shape of domestic violence. The press tends to describe
killings resulting from domestic violence as "crimes of passion," because the
perpetrators usually claim to have committed them in a fit of jealousy or because the
relationship had broken up. |