Posts Tagged ‘Africa’

Flash: Sylvia Bongo, Gabon’s First lady Lead Thousands To Protest Ritual Killings

Several thousand people protested in Gabon on Saturday against a spate of ritual killings that has seen mutilated bodies washing up on beaches in the central African state this year.

Sylvia Bongo, Gabon’s first lady, led most of the demonstrators, while rights groups tried to lead a separate march but members said they were dispersed by tear gas and several leaders arrested by the security forces.

Body parts of humans and animals are prized by some in the region and Gabon’s Association for the Prevention of Ritual Crimes estimates that 20 people have been killed so far this year and their lips, tongues, genitals and other organs removed.

President Ali Bongo, who addressed the main body of protesters, said: “Anyone who is convicted will be jailed for life, without the chance of parole. We must put an end to this phenomenon that tarnishes the image of our country.”

But the rash of killings this year has led to accusations by rights groups that Bongo’s government has not done enough to tackle the issue.

Several hundred people tried to take part in a separate demonstration from the one led by Bongo’s wife, according to witnesses.

“The police fired tear gas to disperse the demonstrators,” said Anne Lea Maye, a member of Gabon’s Coalition of Women Against Ritual Killings.

Six senior figures from rights groups leading the rival march were arrested, said Marc Ona, a senior member of the movement.

The Interior Ministry had earlier said only the Bongo-led march would be authorised.

Critics say that until recently few in the closed-door power circles in Gabon would comment on the issue of ritual killings.

In the most high-profile ritual murder court case in Gabon to date, a convicted killer accused a Gabonese senator of ordering the 2009 murder of a 12-year-old girl for her organs.

Courtesy Reuters

Leave your comment here

About these ads

Flash: Dangote Secures $4.25 Billion Loan To Build 400,000 BPD Refinery

Dangote

The Chairman of the Dangote Group of Companies, Alh. Aliko Dangote has secured loans to the tune of $4.25 billion to build a refinery in Nigeria. The loan was negotiated from two offshore banks and some Nigerian banks. Dangote made this known in an interview at the World Economic Forum on Africa in Cape Town South Africa on Tuesday.

The refinery is planned to be located in the Southwest of Nigeria and would process up to about 400,000 barrels of crude per day

Nigeria’s four refineries process less than the 445,000 barrels per day working at far less their capacities due to aging infrastructure and poor maintenance while it exports close to 2 million of crude.

Whereas, the nation is a member of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, about 70 percent of the oil products needed is imported to meet domestic requirements.

Dangote is Africa’s richest person, with an estimated wealth of $20 billion.

Leave your comment here

Flash! Mali: Al Qaeda In North Africa Calls For “Around The World’ Attacks On France

attack

An Algeria-based al-Qaida offshoot said in an online video on Tuesday that Muslims have an obligation to attack French interests around the world because of France’s military intervention in Mali.

In a message posted on YouTube, Abou Obeida Youssef Al-Annabi, a notable in the Al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb group, or AQIM, said the “crusade” led by France in Mali makes its interests “legitimate targets.”

French President Francois Hollande said he takes the threat seriously. Hollande ordered the Jan. 11 intervention to stamp out AQIM and two other groups of radicals that controlled northern Mali.

The speech by Al-Annabi said the military campaign against AQIM “is an issue of religion being disgraced and a people being annihilated and an identity destroyed.” He said, “It is an obligation on you, Muslims, to respond … by confronting French interests everywhere.”

“These interests,” Al-Annabi said, “have become legitimate targets for you,” warning that France risks falling into “the same swamp which America fell in in Iraq and Afghanistan.”

The group had previously threatened French interests but in less dramatic written statements.

France, helped by African forces, quickly pushed AQIM and other jihadists from Mali’s main northern cities, including Timbuktu, killing or dispersing jihadists. Special forces and other troops are now in a clean-up phase, searching for scattered fighters and their caches after seizing some 200 tons of munitions and arms.

“We take seriously this threat from AQIM. We have inflicted tremendous loss to AQIM via the intervention in Mali,” Hollande said at a news conference. “But AQIM networks exist outside Mali,” he noted.

The intervention in Mali will continue “for the time required,” Hollande said, while France remains vigilant elsewhere, including protecting French installations.

He noted the April 23 car bomb outside the French Embassy in Tripoli, the Libyan capital, that wounded two French guards and a Libyan girl in a home nearby. No group claimed responsibility for that attack.

French authorities have said they were increasing security around Africa’s Sahel region where Mali, a former colony, is located as well as in the Middle East. In France, there is extra surveillance at monuments and facilities that draw the public such as airports.

France has nearly 4,000 troops in Mali. They have been joined by African forces, including from Chad, and soldiers from other African nations are being trained to replace French forces as they make a staggered departure. However, French authorities have said that there will still be 1,000 troops in Mali by the end of the year, along with U.N. peacekeeper, as the nation prepares for presidential elections, perhaps as early as July.

AQIM emerged in 2006 from a previous movement of radical Algerian insurgents, and bit by bit spread its extremism around a large area of the Sahara. By last year it reigned over northern Mali.

Courtesy AP

Leave your comment here

Flash: Worst Place To Be A Mother Is……….DRC Congo – Report

congo-worst-place-woman

The Democratic Republic of Congo on Tuesday displaced fellow African nation Niger to gain the unenviable distinction of being the worst place in the world to be a mother, according to the annual report of Save the Children.

Countries in sub-Saharan Africa took up each of the bottom 10 places for the first time in the 14 years that the report has been produced.

In contrast, Finland took the top spot, with its Nordic neighbours filling the other leading positions.

The London-based charity’s “State of the World’s Mothers” compared 176 countries in terms of maternal health, child mortality, education and levels of women’s income and political status.

The group called for investment to close the “startling disparities” in maternal health between the developed and developing world and for a push to fight inequality and malnutrition.

The report found that a woman or girl in the DRC has a one in 30 chance of dying from maternal causes — including childbirth.

In Finland the risk is one in 12,200.

“By investing in mothers and children, nations are investing in their future prosperity,” said Jasmine Whitbread, Save the Children International’s Chief Executive.

“If women are educated, are represented politically, and have access to good quality maternal and child care, then they and their children are much more likely to survive and thrive – and so are the societies they live in,” she added.

“Huge progress has been made across the developing world, but much more can be done to save and improve millions of the poorest mothers and newborns’ lives.”

After the DRC, the next worst countries were listed as Somalia, Sierra Leone, Mali and Niger.

The report blamed the high death rates for babies in sub-Saharan Africa on the poor health of mothers — citing figures which show 10 to 20 percent are underweight.

It also highlighted the number of mothers giving birth “before their bodies have matured”, the low use of contraception, poor access to satisfactory healthcare and a dearth of health-workers.

The study identified four potentially lifesaving products which it claims could be rolled out universally.

They are corticosteroid injections to women in preterm labour; resuscitation devices to save babies who do not breathe at birth; chlorhexidine cord cleansing to prevent umbilical cord infections and injectable antibiotics to treat newborn sepsis and pneumonia.

The top countries after Finland were Sweden, Norway, Iceland and the Netherlands, with the USA trailing in 30th place behind Slovenia and Lithuania.

The report blamed the poor placing on its “weaker performance on measures of maternal health and child-wellbeing”.

Courtesy AFP

Leave your comment here

Update: Uncertainty Grows In Algeria Over Ailing President Bouteflika’s Absence

Algerian-President-Abdelaziz-Bouteflika

Uncertainty was growing in Algeria on Monday over President Abdelaziz Bouteflika’s health, 10 days after he was hospitalised in France after suffering a mini-stroke and in the absence of official comment.

Rachid Bougherbal, his doctor in Algeria before he was transferred to Paris, referred questions about Bouteflika’s condition to the prime minister’s office when contacted, with the latter declining to provide an update.

“The paralysed state,” ran the headline of an article in the independent Algerian daily El Watan on the “total blackout (which) surrounds the evolution of Abdelaziz Bouteflika’s health.”

The newspaper lamented that “after the terse statements about his hospitalisation, followed by others reassuring about the state of his health, the political authorities suddenly decided to lock down communication channels.”

Bouteflika was admitted to the Val-de-Grace military hospital in Paris on April 27, after suffering a “transient ischaemia,” or mini-stroke, official sources said, sparking intense speculation that his 14-year rule might be drawing to a close.

El Watan said the president’s return to Algeria had been “adjourned,” following a statement by his doctor on April 29 that Bouteflika would return to Algeria in “not more than seven days.”

Last Tuesday, Bouteflika addressed Algerians for the first time since arriving in Paris, congratulating workers on the eve of the Labour Day holiday, in a message carried by national media, and insisting he was on the road to recovery.

The ageing president’s health has been an endless source of speculation in Algeria since 2005 when he had surgery at the same Paris hospital for a bleeding stomach ulcer and spent a long period convalescing.

A leaked US diplomatic cable in 2007 suggested he might be suffering from terminal stomach cancer, and since being re-elected for a third term in 2009 he has rarely appeared in public or travelled outside the capital.

Algerian politics is typically shrouded in secrecy, and some commentators have speculated that Bouteflika could even run for a fourth term in the presidential election next year, if he recovers.

But the media are increasingly questioning the implications for Algerian government of the president’s latest absence, given his central constitutional role in running the country, with El Watan warning of a “perilous, multifaceted deadlock.”

Courtesy AFP

Leave your comment here

Flash! $40 Million Electricity Company Fraud: Ally Of Niger Ex-President Jailed

Niger's President Tandja attends the plenary session of the Africa-South America Summit in Margarita Island

Niger jailed a close ally of former president Mamadou Tandja on Monday on suspicion of embezzling some 20 billion CFA francs ($40 million) as head of the state electricity company, judicial sources said.

The arrest marked another blow against corruption in the poor West African nation by President Mamadou Issoufou’s government, which has made tackling graft a priority since taking office in 2011.

“Foukory Ibrahim, the former head of Nigelec, was imprisoned on Monday in the framework of an investigation into embezzlement at the company,” a magistrate in the capital Niamey confirmed, asking not to be identified.

Ibrahim ran Nigelec until February 2010 when Tandja was toppled in a coup. He has been a member of parliament for the opposition MNSD party for two years but was stripped of his parliamentary immunity in March 2012 as part of the investigation.

He was detained in a non-military prison in Kollo, 35 km (22 miles) southeast of Niamey.

The landlocked former French colony remains one of the poorest countries in the world despite rich uranium deposits.

In February, Niger arrested about 20 doctors suspected of embezzling funds from a charity backed by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation to promote vaccination in poor countries, the Gavi Alliance.

Last year, Issoufou fired two ministers suspected of illegally awarding state contracts.

Courtesy Reuters

Leave your comment here

Flash: ICC Postpones Kenya VP, Williams Ruto’s Trial Start Date (See Press Release)

William-Ruto

Ruto and Sang case: Trial Chamber V provisionally postpones trial opening

 ICC-CPI-20130506-PR903

Today, 6 May 2013, Trial Chamber V of the International Criminal Court (ICC) decided to provisionally vacate the date of the trial’s start in the case of The Prosecutor v. William Samoei Ruto and Joshua Arap Sang and conveyed a public status conference on 14 May 2013. The trial in the case against Mr Ruto and Mr Sang was initially scheduled to start on 28 May. A new date for the trial’s opening will be scheduled after hearing the parties and participants’ observations during the status conference.
During the public status conference on 14 May 2013, the parties and participants will present their observations on the Prosecutor’s request to add five witnesses to the list of witnesses and the Defence’s request to vacate the trial date. The Chamber will also hold non-public ex parte status conferences with the Prosecution on 7 May 2013 and with the Defence on 14 May 2013, to discuss these issues and other procedural matters.
The ICC is a permanent international court whose primary purpose is to help to put an end to impunity for the perpetrators of the most serious crimes of concern to the international community as a whole, namely genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes, thus contributing to the prevention of such crimes.
Courtesy ICC
Leave your comment here

Flash: Prospects Dim For ‘Greener Pasture’ Africans As US Stops Visa Lottery

Africans could be the big losers as the United States reforms its immigration laws and eliminates the green card lottery, of which Africans are the main beneficiaries.

Half of the 50,000 residence permits handed out at random each year are earmarked for Africans. It is a hugely popular program that has allowed hundreds of thousands of Africans to settle in America since the mid 1990s.

But the ambitious reform project under debate now in Washington, which would provide papers for million undocumented immigrants, contains a clause that would do away with the lottery.

In its place would be a more selective immigration system based on skills, career and family ties.

For years the lottery has been in the crosshairs of Republicans, who control the House of Representatives and say it adds no value to the American economy.

“It’s clear that there are better ways to allocate visas than to randomly give them out through a lottery system,” said Bob Goodlatte, the Republican who leads the House Judiciary Committee. “Our immigration laws shouldn’t be based on the luck of the draw; rather, they should be designed strategically to benefit our country.”

The ‘diversity visa,’ as it is known formally, is set aside for people from countries that do not experience a lot of emigration. So Mexicans, Chinese and Filipinos, for instance, are not eligible. Africans quickly became the main ones to cash in.

All applicants need is a high school diploma or two years of work experience.

Between 2010 and 2012, one in five Africans who came to the United States to stay did so through the lottery. That made it the third most common method, at 21 percent of the total, after family reunification (43%) and refugee status or asylum seekers (23%).

By comparison, in the same period only 10 percent of Europeans who became permanent residents and 3% of Asians did so through the lottery.
“It has proven to be a way of helping those who come from the continent of Africa, those who come from a number of other areas where it is very difficult to get a visa,” said Sheila Jackson Lee, a member of the Congressional Black Caucus, whose members are all Democrats.

But in an effort to preserve the comprehensive reform being negotiated for months by the two parties, the Democrats and President Barack Obama agreed to ditch the lottery.

Representative Charles Schumer, who authored the program in 1990, said it was impossible to keep it.
Schumer said the system that will replace it in 2017 is merit-based and will also give Africans a chance. On average they are more educated than people from other continents. And English-speaking Africans would get a boost because of that language skill.

But Michael Fix of the Migration Policy Institute said, “It really probably won’t admit enough people to offset the effects of the loss of the diversity visa for some years after that. It’s a long time away. It won’t be immediately offset by any means.”

The diversity visas would vanish starting next year under the reform being negotiated.

Only four percent of African immigrants — compared to 21 percent of Asians and 22 percent of Europeans — received a green card for employment reasons in 2012.

The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People says the number of African immigrants will go down even with the merit-based system.

“In essence, we’re concerned,” said Hilary Shelton, the NAACP Washington bureau director.
Dame Babou, who hosts a radio show that caters to Senegalese people in New York, said the scrapping of the lottery is disheartening for Africans.
“Every year many people thought this was going to be their year,” Babou said. “Again, what is being eliminated is hope.”

Courtesy AP

Leave your comment here

Flash: ANC Criticised Over Video Showing Frail, Unsmiling Mandela Amidst Laughing Politicians

 

A new video which shows South African President Jacob Zuma and officials of the governing African National Congress visiting a frail Nelson Mandela has stirred controversy.

The video of the encounter, aired by state broadcaster South African Broadcasting Corporation, has sparked accusations of exploiting the anti-apartheid hero’s illness.

This is the first television appearance Mandela has made in almost a year.

Zuma and ANC officials are shown visiting the former South African president at his Johannesburg home, where he has been resting after a bout of pneumonia.

Mandela stares mostly straight ahead, his face showing little expression in the footage.

The 94-year-old was in “good health” and “good spirits”, the ANC said after Monday’s visit, in the first update on his condition since he was discharged from hospital in early April.

The footage shows Mandela sitting next to Zuma with a pillow behind his head and his legs propped up under a blanket.

“After receiving a briefing from the medical team, the national officials are satisfied that President Mandela is in good health and is receiving the very best medical care,” the ANC said.

But the video shows Mandela in an armchair looking grey-skinned and unsmiling with his cheeks showing what appear to be marks from a recently removed oxygen mask.

Zuma jokes and laughs with two officials of the ANC, some Mandela family members and the former president’s medical team while Mandela stares straight ahead.

Zuma tries to hold Mandela’s hand but, given his lack of response, ends up covering it with his own.

Mandela spent more than a week in hospital being treated for a recurring lung infection identified as pneumonia – the third health scare in four months for the Nobel Peace Prize laureate.

He stepped down as president in 1999 and has not been politically active for about a decade. But he is still revered at home and abroad for leading the long campaign against apartheid and then championing racial reconciliation.

Mandela’s lung problems date from his time as a political prisoner when he contracted tuberculosis. He spent 27 years on Robben Island and in other jails for trying to oust the white-minority government.

Television stations showed still images of Mandela smiling broadly during a visit by Hillary Clinton to his country home in August.

The last video footage of Mandela showed his birthday celebrations in July last year.

Courtesy Aljazeera

Leave your comment here

nelson-mandela-anc-video

Flash: 200 Boxes Of British Crime Files On Nigeria, Other Colonies Hidden In London – Report

As Nigeria prepares for her centennial celebration next year, British lawyers have revealed that a file containing Colonial Britain’s criminal activities in Nigeria are in secret boxes.

They are files on torture from 37 different colonies and protectorates, including Aden, Ceylon, Cyprus, Kenya, Malaya, Malta, Nigeria and Northern Rhodesia.

The Northern and Southern protectorates were amalgamated by the British colonial government in 1914, giving birth to Nigeria.

However, British lawyers and media, in a publication in The Guardian of London, weekend, said the secret government files from the final years of the British empire containing its crimes in Nigeria and other colonies were hidden in London.

There is a 1960 file concerning Northern Cameroons, both of which the Foreign Office plans to withhold until 2029.

These files remain classified under the terms of Section 3.4 of the 1958 Public Records Act, which permits government departments to withhold from public view any historic document “required for administrative purposes” or that “ought to be retained for any other special reason.”

Last year, a Nigerian website, USA Africa Dialogue Series, accused the UK of destroying records of its colonial crimes. It said between 1954 and 1959, the regional governors in Nigeria were encouraged by the Colonial Office to send “chatty reports” mainly on socio-political developments and on personalities in their regions.

But these governors, in spite of their cooperation in this regard, also demanded that their returns should be destroyed after they might have been digested.

A governor was said to have written “as you will see some of the comment is ‘hot’ and I should not like them to get too wide a circulation. I would be most grateful therefore, if after you read it you burn it.”

In the northern region, Sir Brian Sharwood-Smith (the colonial governor), pleaded that his “chatty reports” and other series to T. B. Williamson in the Colonial Office on his (Sir Brian’s) appraisal of the politicians and political situation should not be filed and were in fact to be (N.F.F.= Not For Filing) destroyed after Sharwood-Smith’s retirement.

The publication said the information is contained in 200 boxes of files: 1.5 tons of paper that covered about 200 metres of shelving.

Courtesy Vanguard, The Guardian

Leave your comment here

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 9,661 other followers

%d bloggers like this: