欢迎来到VOA在线收网 www.voa365.com
当前位置:VOA NEWS > VOA慢速英语 > AS IT IS >

AS IT IS 2013-11-12 Lawyers in South Sudan Face Struggles

2013-11-12 10:30来源:未知

音频下载

 
 
Hello, and welcome to As It Is.  I’m George Grow.
 
Today we tell about struggles facing lawyers in South Sudan. They are helping the country’s government control rebels -- within the rule of law.  
 
Next, we hear a report about the dangers of pregnancy to girls under age 18.
 
And finally, we remember Grace Kelly, the American film actress who became a European princess.
 
But first, we turn to a young nation’s struggles to establish law and order -- how lawyers are helping.
 
Lawyers in South Sudan Face Struggles
South Sudan won its independence from Sudan in 2011 after many years of bitter fighting. Today, a government made up of former warlords -- former militia leaders -- is seeking to control life-long rebels within the rule of law.

South Sudan's President Salva Kiir (3rd L) shakes hands with Sudan's President Omar al-Bashir as he arrives for talks at Khartoum Airport, Sept. 3, 2013.South Sudan's President Salva Kiir (3rd L) shakes hands with Sudan's President Omar al-Bashir as he arrives for talks at Khartoum Airport, Sept. 3, 2013.
At the center of this new battle are about 250 lawyers. They are working hard in one of the most dangerous jobs in the country.
 
Deng Awur is the head of South Sudan’s only law college. He works in a dark office at Juba University. The office has no electricity, and his law books serve as the only library.
 
Mr. Awur says about 80 people will finish their law school studies and graduate this year. Their skills are deeply needed if the government is to establish the rule of law.

About 250 lawyers have returned to South Sudan from overseas. Mr. Awur says their skills are as mixed as those of members of the country’s legal systems. South Sudan is moving back to a common law system. The system was first established in Sudan during British colonial rule. Islamic law came to Sudan in the 1980s.
 
But more than 60 tribes are using differing customary laws. Mr. Awur says those systems treat half the population unfairly.
 
“A woman cannot inherit property of her husband or her father. But there are real, real issues for women, and laws -- the law is clear, the law is clear. The law is not taking chances with anybody. So we hope, through time, people will be enlightened to accept that reality that human beings are the same. The law is for everybody, the constitution is for everyone, and there is no bias. We don’t want any bias against or for anybody.”

Juba University has stopped teaching Sharia law. In the past, Sharia was one of its main subjects.
 
Victor Lowilla directs legal aid at the South Sudan Law Society. He says Sharia still influences current laws and must be removed.

Mr. Lowilla wants all of South Sudan’s laws to be re-examined. He wants to prevent chiefs from declaring strong sentences. And he calls for ending a number of cruel practices that continue under customary law. For example, a custom calledghost marriagesforces women to marry dead men. This tradition calls for a young girl to be given as payment to the family of a murdered man.
 
Mr. Lowilla also notes that lack of lawyers has left many people in jail, unable to get hearings before judges. But the shortage is most worrying for the hundreds of people awaiting execution. These prisoners are individuals suspected of crimes like murder or rebellion.
 
Mr. Lowilla says prison officials help some of them. And he says others who have enough money can get a lawyer to help with their appeals.
 
“But most of them have no lawyers to represent them during their cases. They have no lawyers to do their appeals. So they have no lawyers to write for them, even, I mean, to write the president to pardon them. “

Lawyers often must travel great distances to help people who need representation. Victor Lowilla says 80 percent of South Sudanese live in rural areas. Yet 85 percent of the country’s lawyers live in Juba, the capital.

In one case in Western Bahr el Ghazal, five lawyers were defending 50 suspects after protests in which security forces attacked civilians. The lawyers received death threats or were threatened outside the court.
                
I’m George Grow
 
Now, on to problems of pregnancy and childbirth for teenage girls
 
The Dangers of Pregnancy for Girls Under 18
A United Nations report says millions of adolescent girls suffer serious long-term health and social problems from pregnancy. The UN Population Fund recently released its State of the World Population report in Geneva, Switzerland. It found that 7.3 million girls under age 18 give birth worldwide every year. The young mothers include two million girls younger than 14.

U.N. Population Fund says adolescent pregnancy is the focus of World Population Day 2013.
U.N. Population Fund says adolescent pregnancy is the focus of World Population Day 2013.
Kelly Jean Kelly has more.

Giving birth to a baby should be a happy time in a woman’s life. But for millions of young girls around the world, early pregnancy and childbirth result in serious problems
 
The UN’s State of the World Population 2013 report finds that in developing countries, 20,000 girls under 18 give birth every day. The report estimates that 70,000 young women in developing countries die each year during pregnancy and childbirth.
 
The director of the UN Population Fund in Geneva, Alanna Armitage, says young girls are more likely to be forced to marry and have sex. She says death among mothers under age 15 from low- and middle-income countries is twice that of older women.

Pregnant teenagers stand at the entrance of a maternity home in Jinotega city, some 160 km (99 miles) north of Managua October 24, 2013. According to the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), Nicaragua has one of the highest rates of teenage pregnancy in Latin America where between 13,000 and 16,000 adolescents give birth every year, counting for about 16% of the total births in the country. Picture taken October 24, 2013. REUTERS/Oswaldo RivasPregnant teenagers stand at the entrance of a maternity home in Jinotega city, some 160 km (99 miles) north of Managua October 24, 2013. According to the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), Nicaragua has one of the highest rates of teenage pregnancy in Latin America where between 13,000 and 16,000 adolescents give birth every year, counting for about 16% of the total births in the country. Picture taken October 24, 2013. REUTERS/Oswaldo Rivas
The report demonstrates the economic results of adolescent pregnancy. For example, the report considers Kenya. It says the Kenyan economy would have improved greatly if the more than 200,000 young mothers studied had been employed instead of getting pregnant. It says the economy would have gained 3.4 billion dollars.
 
The report finds that in every area of the world, poor, undereducated girls from rural areas are more likely to become pregnant than richer urban girls. UNFPA Senior Maternal Health Advisor Luc de Bernis says the young mothers most threatened with death live in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia
 
He also notes that many young women die from getting abortions -- the medical end of pregnancy.

Two-hour old daughter of a 17-year old girl is fed by a nurse at a hospital in Chiang Mai's Fang district.Two-hour old daughter of a 17-year old girl is fed by a nurse at a hospital in Chiang Mai's Fang district.
The report says adolescent pregnancy is a much bigger problem for the developing world than for developed nations. But, it finds that pregnancy for young girls is still important in richer nations. And it says society should help girls and young women instead of blaming them for getting pregnant.
 
I’m Kelly Jean Kelly.

Hollywood Princess    
Now, time to remember the birth anniversary of an American actress who became a lasting symbol of beauty and glamour. Grace Patricia Kelly was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on November 12th, 1929. She is remembered for many films likeRear Window,” “Dial M for Murder” and “To Catch a Thief.” She won an Academy Award for her work in “Country Girl.” 
 
Grace Kelly gave up her career to marry Prince Rainier of Monaco. They had three children. In 1982, Princess Grace died after an automobile accident. She was only 52 years old.
 
I’m George Grow. Thanks for joining us on As It Is.
(责任编辑:v365)
最新新闻
  1. 全球即时看!扎克伯格身家缩水近
  2. 世界信息:国产操作系统再迎喜讯
  3. 当前关注:拼多多“出海”:对标
  4. 微动态丨iPhone 14全线破发 苹果将
  5. 资讯:“二舅”UP主回应质疑:目前
  6. 特斯拉上海超级工厂一期第二阶段
  7. 苹果高管Huang回应iOS 16复制粘贴许
  8. 特斯拉8月份在北京上海等城市新
  9. 苹果宣布10月欧洲 App Store 应用和
  10. Lilium携手软件巨头Palantir展开合作
  11. 暴雪《暗黑破坏神 4》即将封测
  12. 因丰巢快递柜侵犯肖像权等,龚俊
  13. 美富豪亿万艾萨克曼与SpaceX合作
  14. 今日聚焦!碾压iPhone 14系列!曝华
  15. 当前头条:华为Mate50首发5G套装 明
  16. 即时看!iPhone 15明年或将搭载Type
  17. 全球即时:售价799元!华为Mate 50系
  18. 资讯:针对iPhone机型《王者荣耀》
  19. 每日看点!1.5K直屏+骁龙8+旗舰芯!
  20. 【独家】iPhone 14顶配速度拉胯了!
  21. 世界热点评!仅限30条!Mate50卫星通
  22. 天天微资讯!华为Mate 50系列通信壳
  23. 环球速讯:土豪金被冷落!iPhone1
  24. 世界看点:经济学家任泽平:iPho
  25. 每日速讯:工信部:鸿蒙操作系统
  26. 天天信息:鹿晗为关晓彤庆生 鹿
  27. 当前短讯!啃完华为又嚼苹果,手
  28. 天天时讯:赌王三房千金何超云获
  29. 世界看点:成立12年,中国首家上市
  30. 环球今亮点:井柏然晒秋日身穿毛
  31. 天天观热点:《奇怪的律师禹英雨
  32. 天天亮点:汪小菲张颖颖外出聚餐
  33. 世界微动态丨李政宰确诊新冠中断
  34. 世界快看点:林允儿回应《黑话律
  35. 天天视点:魔力红Maroon 5主唱被曝
  36. 全球热点评!9月20日酒泉疫情最新
  37. 环球观速讯:9月20日张掖甘州区疫
  38. 天天视点:9月20日甘肃疫情最新消
  39. 今日精选:9月20日岳阳疫情最新消
  40. 快资讯:9月20日湘潭疫情最新消息
  41. 每日资讯:2022-09-20 14:17哈尔滨疫
  42. 世界热资讯:青海昨日新增本土无
  43. 【环球时快讯】92号、95号汽油价
  44. 世界快播:9月20日杭州疫情最新消
  45. 世界视讯!官宣,iPhone即将支持《
  46. 当前关注:华为Mate 50系列5G通信壳
  47. 环球热门:比iPhone 14PM还贵!华为
  48. 当前视讯!大部分供应商将收到加
  49. 天天百事通!卢伟冰深夜疑惑:年
  50. 环球观焦点:华为Mate 50系列5G通信