blog

WDM blog

Blog posts are articles presented in a journal format in a more casual style to our normal news and press releases.

When attending international meetings, or for special large scale events, WDM campaigners produce blog posts which can be rapidly updated with pictures and video. 

You can also follow our campaigners on twitter for instant updates from wherever they are.

29/07/2010 - 20:56

Yesterday afternoon, James, Kiama Kaara from Kenya Debt Relief Network and I drove to Thika, a medium-sized town 40km north east of Nairobi along a bustling road lined with traders, construction workers and shops for a meeting with Zachary Makanya from the PELUM Association.

29/07/2010 - 06:36

Over the weekend we visited Makueni, a market town about two and a half hours drive to the south of Nairobi. Driving first down the main road to Mombassa, then turning off to pass through the regional centre of Machakos, we arrived in Makueni after dark with the crickets signing to us. In the big cities, great poverty nestles next to relative wealth, but the further you go into the countryside, the more poverty keeps its own company.

27/07/2010 - 10:26

The Kibera slum in Nairobi is home to around 1.5 million people. That's half the population of Nairobi, squeezed into just 2.5 square kilometres. On the way there, our driver, Charles described the extent of the violence that erupted in Kibera during the 2007 elections.

26/07/2010 - 15:15

Ingredients
1 full page article in the Guardian newspaper
1 interview on BBC Radio 4 Today programme
1 interview on BBC Newsnight
10 articles across other newspapers
31 articles online
900 sign ups to a phone action,
65 comments on our website

Take all the ingredients and combine well to create heat and froth.

23/07/2010 - 08:54

WDM campaigners James O’Nions and Caroline Griffin are in Kenya to research the effects of food price rises on ordinary Kenyans. James reports on their first visit to Kibera, the huge slum on the outskirts of Nairobi.

19/07/2010 - 08:38

By Kate Blagojevic

Today, we launched a report showing how banks speculate on foods causing their price to rocket, increasing hunger in developing countries. Yesterday the Mail on Sunday revealed that a hedge fund bought over 250,000 tonnes of cocoa beans, a move designed to make millions for the hedge fund but losses for people in the UK who are partial to a Twix or farmers in developing countries who are finding it impossible to plan what to grow when the prices are rising and falling like a yo-yo.

06/07/2010 - 14:39

By Rosie Rogers, campaigns and policy intern

Bright-eyed and ready to save the world in one internship, I was ready to take on any challenge! As part of our new commodities campaign. I was asked to find out how to complain about Goldman Sachs (GMS). A simple task I thought…

05/07/2010 - 14:54

By Pontus Westerberg, web officer

I’m really pleased to see that journalist and art critic Johann Hari, described by the Daily Telegraph as one of the most influential people on the left in Britain, wrote a piece for the Independent last week urging people appalled about bankers speculating on food prices and causing hunger to get involved in WDM’s food speculation campaign. The article was circulated widely on the internet, including being passed on by Stephen Fry, and also appeared in the Huffington Post on Saturday.

24/06/2010 - 12:50

By Tim Jones, policy officer

Some of us may have been surprised to wake up this morning to hear that a hosepipe ban may be introduced soon in north-west England following a lack of rain. For the past few years the ‘weather story’ in the UK has been one of cold, wet summers. Those unable to distinguish between ‘weather’ and ‘climate’ have used this story to spread absurd falsities about climate change, such as the Conservative MEP who told me “the world has been in a cooling phase for the last ten years”.

17/06/2010 - 11:25

By Tim Jones, policy officer

I don’t drink coffee. Good job as the price of coffee traded in London shot-up by 20 per cent in just three days at the start of this week.

What could possibly cause such a huge jump in prices? Maybe it’s extra demand for the stimulant after the lack of stimulation in the first week of world cup matches? Seems unlikely.

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