Friday, 7 February 2014

The trials of teenage pregnancy

Childbirth is the leading cause of death for teenage girls – according to this year’s UN population report, Motherhood in Childhood.  As experts from around the globe attend the world’s largest family planning summit in Addis Ababa today, the UN warns that teenage pregnancies are rising dramatically. 

West and Central Africa have the highest teenage pregnancy rates in the developing world.  The BBC’s Tamasin Ford reports from Abidjan, the commercial capital of Ivory Coast.

To listen to this report, please click on this link.

Former Ghanaian President defends Ivorian government







Former Ghanaian President, John Kufuor, has defended President Alassane Ouattara’s efforts at reconciling post-conflict Ivory Coast.  He was speaking to the BBC in Abidjan on an official visit as head of Interpeace – an independent organisation focussed on conflict resolution.  More than three thousand people died after elections sparked violence across the country three years ago.  The BBC’s Tamasin Ford began by asking him about Ivory Coast’s developments since the crisis.

To listen to this interview, please click on this link.

Increase in sexual violence

Rape and other forms of sexual violence are on the increase in Ivory Coast – that’s the warning from the United Nations Independent Expert on Human Rights. He was speaking to reporters in Abidjan earlier this week – after a ten day mission to assess the human rights situation in the country. He also said there’s worrying evidence that state actors, like the army, are often the perpetrators. The UN expert’s comments back up what local and international charities in the country have been telling the BBC’s Tamasin Ford – who sent this report from Bouake, the former capital of the north of Ivory Coast.

To listen to this report, please click on this link.

Ivory Coast hopes to squeeze the profits from palm oil







The palm oil industry originated in West Africa but is now dominated by massive plantations in South-East Asia. The BBC's Tamasin Ford reports that Ivory Coast, and other African countries, are trying to take the lucrative business back home to tap into its profits.

An hour's drive to the west of Abidjan, Ivory Coast's skyscraper-filled commercial capital, palm trees dominate the landscape; thousands upon thousands of them in neat orderly rows.

People have renamed the long, sweeping highway "Plantation Road". Most of the land belongs to PALMCI, a subsidiary of SIFCA Group, an Ivorian company involved in palm oil, sugar and rubber production across West Africa.

But, as in Nigeria and Ghana, it is the smallholders in Ivory Coast, like Desire-Jacques Porquet, who produce most of the country's palm oil.

To read the rest of this article, please click on this link to the BBC website.



Palm oil comes home







When you think of palm oil, you probably think of countries like Malaysia or Indonesia.  Quite rightly…as that’s where more than 90% of the world’s oil comes from.  But land is quickly running out in these countries and as demand for the oil increases, companies are flocking to Africa instead.  More specifically West Africa – where, in fact, palm oil originates from.  The BBC’s Tamasin Ford went to visit a palm oil plantation in Ivory Coast for Focus on Africa.

West Africa's only female forensic scientist

Women in the 21st century have more rights and opportunities than ever before.  But more than a century after they began winning the vote, most societies are still denominated by men.  Women’s wages are lower.  They make up just 20% of the world’s governments.  And millions of teenage girls never get a chance to finish school.  But there ARE women out there breaking down those barriers.  In Ivory Coast, the BBC’s Tamasin Ford went to meet one woman doing just that.  As the head of the Forensic Science Institute, Professor Helena Yapo Etté is the only female forensic scientist in the whole of West Africa.

Les Elephants!









I speak to Yaya Toure and Salomon Kalou ahead of the World Cup qualifier against Senegal in October 2013. Have a listen to Toure telling me about his new found love of Twitter...and Kalou on pressures in the run up to Brazil 2014. 

The Tour de Cote d'Ivoire







They have cycled up mountains, through rainforests and over pot-holed roads – the Tour de Cote d’Ivoire is no ordinary cycling race.  It’s one of tough terrains and souring humidity levels.  But it’s also one of the many emerging tours in Africa hoping to become accredited by UCI – the sport’s world governing body.  The BBC’s Tamasin Ford was at the finish line in Abidjan, the country’s commercial capital.

Friday, 25 October 2013

The inexhaustible energy of one Liberian entrepreneur

Listen to the BBC's From Our Own Correspondent as Tamasin Ford reflects on how the inexhaustible energy of Liberia's young entrepreneurs is often held back by bribery - and high electricity prices.

Even with peace, it's hard to be a Liberian entrepreneur





For years, the small West African nation of Liberia was associated with violence, child soldiers, blood diamonds, 14 years of one of the world's most brutal civil wars. Now Liberia is celebrating a full decade of peace. Tamasin Ford brings us the story of one enterprising young woman there who's learning to operate in the new Liberia.