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  • 23 Students Represent Rwanda at East African Games

    {{Twenty three teams including 12 boys and 11 girls from Rwanda Secondary schools will represent Rwanda at the East African post primary games scheduled to take place at Lira town in North Uganda.}}

    According to lorent Rwigema the Rwanda School Sports Federation (RSSF) Executive Secretary, “We shall set-off from Lycée de Kigali tomorrow (today) morning at 9am after a short briefing of all athletes.”

    The games will start August 24 and conclude on August 31. Several Teams from the region will compete in games including; athletics, badminton,basketball, netball, hockey ,football, handball, rugby, table tennis and tennis.

    However, Rwanda will not be represented in the Badminton and Hockey competition.
    In the previous competitions held in 2012 in Burundi capital Bujumbura, Rwanda didnt score any points.

    Boys’ teams

    APE Rugunga and ESI Gisenyi (football), Saint Joseph Kabgayi and Lycée de Nyanza (volleyball), Lycée de Kigali and College Amis des Enfants (basketball), ES Kigoma and Saint Aloys Rwamagana (handball), ET Mukingi (rugby), 20-athlete team of athletics, two-man teams of tennis and table tennis.

    Girls’ teams

    Solidarity Academy (football), GS Indangaburezi and Saint Joseph Kabgayi (volleyball), ET Mukingi and APAPEKI Cyuru (handball), APE Rugunga (basketball), GS Gahini (netball), 20-athlete team of athletics, two-player teams of tennis and table tennis.

  • African Islamist Militias Merge, Declare Jihad on France

    {{An al-Qaeda-linked group led by Algerian militant Mokhtar Belmokhtar says it has merged with another group to take revenge against France for its military campaign in Mali.}}

    Belmokhtar’s Masked Men Brigade and the Mali-based Movement for Oneness and Jihad in West Africa (Mujao) have formed Al-Murabitoun, a statement said.

    In July, the US offered a $5m reward for Belmokhtar’s capture.

    He is accused of masterminding a deadly siege at an Algerian plant in January.

    The US has charged him with hostage-taking, kidnapping and conspiring to use a weapon of mass destruction.

    Three US citizens were among at least 37 hostages killed when Algerian troops stormed the Tigantourine plant to end the siege.

    In May, Mujao and Belmokhtar’s group jointly carried out twin suicide attacks in Niger on a military camp and a French-run uranium mine, killing 25 people.

    “Your brothers in Mujao and Al-Mulathameen [Masked Men Brigade] announce their union and fusion in one movement called Al-Murabitoun to unify the ranks of Muslims around the same goal, from the Nile to the Atlantic,” the groups said in a statement published by Mauritanian news agency ANI, which is often used by the militants to communicate.

    Command of Al-Murabitoun, an Arabic phrase meaning “the sentinels”, has been ceded to “another personality”, the statement added.

    He is believed to be a non-Algerian jihadi who fought in Afghanistan, ANI reported.

    {{‘Stronger than ever’}}

    The jihadist movement in the region was now “stronger than ever” and it would “rout” France and its allies, the statement said.

    France led an offensive in January to recapture northern Mali from the militants, who had ruled the north for about eight months after taking advantage of the chaos caused by a coup.

    They have since retreated to their desert hide-outs and towns and cities are now under the control of Malian and UN troops.

    A 12,600-strong UN force is being deployed to Mali, as France begins to pull out its 3,000 troops.

    Belmokhtar was a former leading figure in al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) but he later formed the Masked Men Brigade, which is also known as the Signed-in-Blood Battalion and the Khaled Abu al-Abbas Brigade.

    Mujao was formed in 2011 to spread jihad across West Africa and it believed to be a well-disciplined group.

    It is thought to be led by a Mauritanian ethnic Tuareg Ahmed Ould Amer, who goes by the nom de guerre “Ahmed Telmissi”,media reports.

    AFP

  • Kirehe: Cattle in 3 Familes Attacked

    {{Unknown people have attacked and cut five heads of cattle belonging to three familes at Nganda cell in Musaza sector located in Kirehe district.}}

    The attakced stormed the krals in which the cattle are sheltered and cut them before fleeing. The affected persons include; Bizimungu Mariko(2 cows), Rwagasana Thacien (2cows) and Musafiri Jean Bosco (1cow).

    The herders said that in the morning when they entered the kral to clean up, they found the cattle cut and a pool of blood and later informed the owners.

    The Agriculture official in Musaza Sector told the AIP Hakizimana Alfred that there is no hope the injured cattle will survive since all their limbs had been severely cut.

    Investigations have been launched to locate the culprits and bring them to book.

  • Students Debate on EAC Integration

    The Minister of East African Community Hon. Muhongayire Jaqueline has today launched a schools debate at provincial level aimed at senstising students about matters of EAC regional bloc.

    The debate was launched at Mater Dei school in Nyanza district where the minister urged the youths to fully understand the affairs of EAC and take advantage of the opportunities involved in the regional economic bloc.

    According to the EAC ministry, the debates code named EAC Integration Club Debate, are being held countrywide.

    The debates have been ongoing at district level but this time the minister has laucnhed the same debate at Provincial level and will be completed at national level.

    Minister gahongayire told participants that the debates are aimed at senstising the students about the government’s 2020 Vision and fully understanding the opportunities Rwanda has in the EAC economic bloc.

  • 20 Peace Corps Volunteers to Be Sworn-in

    {{Over twenty Peace Corps Volunteers wil be sworn-in on Friday at an event scheduled at Residence of the United States Ambassador in Kacyiru.}}

    The 20 volunteers will be providing service to rural health clinics and health organizations across the country, where they will work with Rwandan community-based and non-governmental organizations as well as local and national government institutions in different districts across the country.

    The ceremony will be officiated by the United States Ambassador to Rwanda, Donald W. Koran, the Rwandan Ministry of Health, and Peace Corps Country Director, Stephen Miller.

    This will be the 9th group of Peace Corps Volunteers to serve in Rwanda since Peace Corps reopened operations in 2008.

  • Fire Burns House, 3 Killed

    {{A family of three in Gatsibo district burnt to death last night in Ihanika village,Gatsibo cell in Gatsibo district.}}

    The victims included an expectant mother her husband and a child.the incident happened at about 11PM.

    Relatives say, the deceased head of the family was previously involved in charcoal burning. On Tuesday he had brought home charcoal fresh from the kiln that could have caused the fire.

    However, three other children survived the inferno as they were sleeping in a nearby house.

  • Homegrown Solutions Helped Rwanda to Rebuild after Genocide Against Tutsi–Minister Busingye

    {{The Minister of Justice, Hon Johnston Busingye opened on 21 August at Rwanda Peace Academy in Musanze District, a one week regional course on “transitional justice and peace building”.}}

    Minister Busingye told participants that Rwanda used homegrown solutions to implement reconciliation and reconstruction of the country after 1994 Genocide against Tutsi.

    He cited Gacaca courts as one way of home solutions Rwanda used to trial in a period of 7 years about 2 millions of people that participated in the Genocide.

    The normal procedure of justice was found impossible to deal with a big number of perpetrators of genocide, said Minister Busingye.

    He cited demobilization and reintegration program, ingando and Itorero defined as civic education, one cow per family among other programs that boosted unity and reconciliation and helped to rebuild the economy of Rwanda.

    Minister Busingye said that these are some experiences Rwanda can share with representatives of countries that came for the course.

    Walter Bogita Ongeri, participant from Kenya said that they expect to share and learn from each other’s experiences.

    Mentioning the genocide against Tutsi in 1994 he said that” we can learn how the good leadership changed this country which had problems”.

    He also emphasized that there is a need for Africans looking a way of solving their problems amicably.

    Col Jill Rutaremara, Director of Rwanda Peace Academy said that the goal of the course “is to present the concept of transitional justice in peace building contexts”.

    He added that the course will provide a holistic overview of the current transitional justice strategies and mechanisms, their nature and practical application, and the challenges and lessons learned that various actors may encounter and apply when participating in post-conflict settings.

    The course was jointly organised by Rwanda Peace Academy and UNITAR, the United Nations Institute for Training and Research.

    It is attended by 25 military, police and civilian officers from 6 African countries. The countries represented are the Republic of Burkina Faso, Burundi, Kenya, Rwanda, South Sudan and Uganda.

    Source: MOD

  • Counterfeit Medicine Trade Targets Africa’s Poor

    {{From Cameroon to Ivory Coast, Kenya to the DR Congo, traders in counterfeit drugs do a thriving business with the utmost cynicism and sometimes at the cost of human lives.}}

    “Street medication kills. The street is killing (safe) medication,” declares a banner outside a pharmacy in the Cameroonian capital Yaounde, where the dangerous trade is rampant.

    The market is saturated with counterfeit anti-malaria drugs, painkillers, antibiotics and even rehydration serum. No domain of the pharmaceutical industry is spared by illicit manufacturers and traffickers, according to media reports.

    “That’s powerful Diclofenac (an anti-inflammatory), which is the bestseller,” says Blaise Djomo, a street vendor at Yaounde’s central market. “And this is Viagra, which Cameroonians are really wild about.”

    About 100 traders like Djomo are set up under parasols in full view of everyone, their boxes heaped with medicines. Bubble-pack strips of pills are lined up in the wooden stalls.

    People can even buy single pills at this market or even at some grocery stores. Vendors often mix fake medication with the real thing, which has either been legally acquired or stolen from supplies meant for hospitals and clinics.

    At best, fake prescription drugs have no effect, acting like placebos, but at their worst, they are highly toxic. Either way they bring in vast sums of money for those behind the illicit traffic.

    The UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) warned at a conference last February that counterfeit drugs are a multi-billion dollar business accounting for 30 percent of the pharmaceutical market in parts of Africa.

    “Fraudulent medicines have proven to be harmful and at times fatal, as well as an increasingly lucrative area for organised criminal networks,” the agency said in a press release.

    “The supply routes are of two kinds. Alongside the small-scale smugglers, there are international criminal networks that undertake the supply of drugs from distant manufacturers in China and India,” said Parfait Kouassi, who chaired the National Order of Pharmacists in Ivory Coast from 2005 to 2012.

    Kouassi, who made a priority of fighting the dangerous trade in fake medicines, escaped two murder bids at the headquarters of the Order of Pharmacists. “That’s a sign that major interests are in play and that it’s not just a matter of small-scale local traffickers,” he said.

    The phenomenon is spreading and represents between 20 and 25% of the drug market in Ivory Coast, adds Kouassi.

    In Kenya, 30% of drugs sold in 2012 were either fake or counterfeit, according to the Pharmacy and Poisons Board of Kenya. Cameroon health officials give a similar figure.

    However, in the Democratic Republic of Congo, as in many other African countries, there are no national statistics, just records of frequent drugs seizures.

    In Nigeria — once known as a major source of counterfeit medicines — phony drugs and real ones that had passed their expiry date made up 70% of sales in 2002, according to the World Health Organisation.

    Since then, in the continent’s biggest market with some 160 million people, officials say that high-profile efforts have greatly reduced the number of fake or adulterated drugs, but reliable figures are hard to obtain.

    “Most of these fake and adulterated drugs come from China and India, from where we import more than 50 percent of the drugs we use in Nigeria. We don’t import much drugs from the US,” says Abubakar Jimoh, spokesman of the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC).

    “They no longer bring … illicit drugs in large containers but in small packs. They also change the labels of the drugs from outside the country to make them look original,” Jimoh said.

    Health authorities have set up a service to enable consumers to check the authenticity of drugs by verifying the PIN serial number on the product label via an SMS message.

    {{Safe vs. cheap: the cost factor}}

    The outstanding exception on the continent in fighting the illicit drug trade is South Africa, which has a strictly enforced licencing system, according to Griffith Molewa, head of law enforcement at the Medicines Control Council.

    “We have dedicated ports of entry for medicines, restricted to Durban, Cape Town, Port Elizabeth and OR Tambo airport in Johannesburg,” Molewa said. “We also have a vertically integrated system, meaning only manufacturers can sell to the wholesalers, and then the wholesaler to the retail outlets, and then the pharmacies can only serve the patients.”

    “Any product found on the street is seized and given to the police for prosecution. The penalty is a fine or up to 10 years of imprisonment or both.”

    In most other countries, measures against the counterfeit drug trade are limited to police raids on public markets to seize fake or adulterated products, along with public information and awareness campaigns, which appear to have little effect on consumers.

    For in countries where medical expenses — from drugs to hospitalisation — are not even partly reimbursed by the state, the relatively cheap price of street medication trumps the risk factor for many.

    “I’m here to buy a worm treatment and something to protect my children from malaria,” customer Nadine Mefo told media at Yaounde’s central market. “It costs less than in the pharmacy and it soothes the children.

    “Doctors say that street market medicines are dangerous, but since I’ve been coming, I’ve not yet had a problem,” she adds, clutching two packs of pills of unknown origin.

    AFP

  • Somalia Vows Action Over Alleged rape by AU troops

    {{Somalia’s government vowed Wednesday to deliver justice in the case of a local woman who alleged she was gang raped by African Union troops and Somali soldiers.}}

    “My team and I are committed to getting to the bottom of this case, and all other allegations of sexual violence,” Somalia’s minster for human development, Maryan Qasim, said in a statement Wednesday.

    “We want perpetrators of crimes to be brought to justice and to build a society where the rights of every citizen are protected.”

    Qasim, the head of a government team probing the case, distanced herself from an audio recording in Somali media in which she appeared to angrily criticise rape victims for publicising their cases in the press.

    Instead, she said she had been “misquoted and misrepresented”, and that she had instead been stressing the need to “protect each and every rape victim’s identity”.

    “Rape in all its forms is totally unacceptable,” Qasim added. “The government cannot tolerate such incidents, no one should be allowed to violate the rights of Somali women.”

    Late last week a Somali woman alleged she was kidnapped by three soldiers from the national army, blindfolded and forced into a car, before being handed over to African Union troops to be repeatedly raped.

    The unnamed woman, in her late 20s with a young baby, told Somali media that she was unconscious during the attack and says she does not know how many men raped her.

    AMISOM, the 17,700-strong United Nations-mandated force that supports the government in its fight against Al-Qaeda-linked Shebab insurgents, said it has launched an investigation together with the Somali army.

    AMISOM, fighting since 2007 in Somalia and funded by the UN and European Union, insists it “strongly condemns … sexual abuse or exploitation”.

    The force is mainly made up of troops from Uganda, Burundi and Kenya, with smaller numbers from Djibouti and Sierra Leone.

    AFP

  • Dar es Salaam in Shortage of Competent Directors

    Tanzania lacks adequate number of competent directors, an expert has said, calling upon concerted efforts among various stakeholders to address the issue.

    This unfortunate situation, according to the Bank of Tanzania (BoT) deputy governor Mr Juma Reli responsible for administration and internal control, results in poor performance of both public and private institutions.

    Opening a corporate governance seminar organised by Institute of Directors in Tanzania, Mr Reli said poor performance in these institutions is caused by the negligence of the board of directors and the lack of general management principles.

    Mr Reli said when a board of directors fails to play well its oversight duty, an institution must performs poorly. “Boards of directors are heads of those institutions if they fail to do their part as outlined in the rules and regulations, their organisations fail,” he said.

    He said that IoDT is currently establishing itself and has aptly chosen to concentrate on developing a strong and sustainable director training programme to cater for the shortage. “Its work in this area is to provide guidelines for chairs and directors suffering from competence issues,” he said.

    NMG