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KEENAN, JILLIAN (3) answer(s).
 
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ID:   137972


Blood cries Out: in one of Africa’s most densely populated countries, brothers are killing brothers over the right to farm mere acres of earth. there’s just not enough land to go around in Burundi — and it could push the country into civil war / Keenan, Jillian   Article
Keenan, Jillian Article
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Summary/Abstract When Pierre Gahungu thinks about the small farm in the Burundian hills where he grew up and started a family, he remembers the soil—rich and red, perfect for growing beans, sweet potatoes, and bananas. He used to bend over and scoop up a handful of the earth just to savor its moist feel. To Gahungu, now in his 70s, the farm was everything: his home, his livelihood, and his hope. After he was gone, he had always believed, the land would sustain his eventual heirs.
Key Words Africa  Burundi  Land Problem 
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2
ID:   144400


I've told the others ther're not allowed to rapeyou / Keenan, Jillian   Article
Keenan, Jillian Article
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Key Words Niger  Boko Haram 
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3
ID:   129230


Puntland is for pirates: why are convicted high-seas bandits being sent to the Somali region that profits from their crimes? / Keenan, Jillian   Journal Article
Keenan, Jillian Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract H ARGEISA, Somalia - Mowlid Ahmed Abidoon stands quietly in the small prison cell where he has lived for nearly two years. Slot windows on one wall let in only a little sunlight, leaving his face almost entirely obscured in darkness. Yet there are splashes of color all around: The room's bunk beds are covered in sheets with bright floral and geometric patterns, over which hang canopies of blue mosquito nets -- cells within the cell. Clad in a striped polo shirt and prison-uniform pants, Mowlid estimates that he is about 20 years old; the last traces of baby fat still cling to his cheeks. He insists that he shouldn't be behind bars. "I'm a fisherman, not a pirate," he says flatly, as though he has delivered this speech a hundred times before. Court documents from Seychelles say otherwise. On Dec. 6, 2009, Mowlid and a band of fellow Somali pirates used firearms and explosives to attack the Topaz, a Seychelles Coast Guard patrol vessel. (Seychelles, an island nation, is about 825 miles southeast of Mogadishu, Somalia's coastal capital.) They were arrested, convicted, and sentenced to 24 years in prison.
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