Cathryn MacCallum
Cathryn MacCallum began her career in development as a cheese-maker on a coconut plantation in Tanzania. Passionate about rural development (North and South) she became involved in the development education movement. She has more than 20 years experience of working as a research and programme manager in international development and development education, she has co-written a number of textbooks aimed at secondary school students on learning for sustainable living for the Zanzibar Government and Welsh Curriculum.
She is currently a Director of Sazani Associates, a small international NGO based in Wales (with offices in Zanzibar and Belize) that supports sustainable livelihoods through participatory approaches to rural development. In 2009 she was put on the WGgreen list for her work in international sustainable development and sits on the UNESCO UK Committee. She also lectures on an MA in Development Education at the Institute of Education where her doctoral rese
Professor Trevor Duke is a paediatrician, clinical head of the general intensive care unit at Melbourne s Royal Children s Hospital, and Professor in the Department of Paediatrics, University of Melbourne.
He is also the Adjunct Professor of child health in the School of Medicine at the University of Papua New Guinea. He is an author and editor of the WHO Pocketbook of Hospital Care for Children, and WHO guidelines for Oxygen Therapy for Children.
Interests include the epidemiology and case management of acute respiratory infections, improving the quality of paediatric care in district and provincial hospitals, oxygen and hypoxaemia, disease surveillance and auditing, neonatal care, meningitis, and childhood tuberculosis.
Michael Somare (1936-2021) and the failure of bourgeois nationalism in Papua New Guinea wsws.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from wsws.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
577 reads
The body of the late member for Kerema, Richard Mendani arrived at the National Parliament House yesterday at 10am, accompanied by his grieving widow and family, for the Lie-in-State ceremony.
The casket was laid in the grand hall for members of parliament and dignitaries to pay their respects.
Among them was Prime Minister James Marape and Leader of Opposition Belden Namah.
Due to COVID-19 restrictions, it was a closed casket ceremony with no viewing of the body.
The casket was in parliament for an hour before it was taken back to the funeral home where it will spend the night before being flown to Kerema early tomorrow morning.