Author: IGIHE

  • Qatar will not shut gas pipeline to UAE: QP CEO

    {Saad al-Kaabi says despite the blockade against Qatar, Doha will not shut its gas pipeline to its ‘brothers’.}

    Qatar will not cut gas supplies to the United Arab Emirates despite a diplomatic dispute between the two nations, the chief executive of the state-run Qatar Petroleum has told Al Jazeera.

    Saad Sherida al-Kaabi told Al Jazeera Arabic’s Liqa al-Yaum (Today’s Meeting show) on Sunday that although there was a “force majeure” clause in the Dolphin gas pipeline agreement – which pumps around 2 billion cubic feet of gas per day to the UAE – Qatar would not stop supplies to its “brothers”.

    “The siege we have today is a force majeure and we could close the gas pipeline to the UAE,” he said.

    “But if we cut the gas, it does great harm to the UAE and the people of the UAE, who are considered like brothers … we decided not to cut the gas now.”

    According to analysts and industry sources, a shutdown of the 364km Dolphin pipeline, which links Qatar’s giant North Field with the UAE and Oman, would cause major disruptions to the UAE’s energy needs.

    Earlier on Sunday, the chief executive of Sharjah National Oil Corp said he did not expect flows of natural gas from Qatar to the UAE to be interrupted by the diplomatic dispute in the region.

    Four Arab states – Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Bahrain and Egypt – severed diplomatic and trade relations with Qatar on June 5, accusing it of supporting “extremism” and aligning with their regional rival Iran – charges that Qatar has repeatedly denied.

    The Saudi-led bloc of nations cut off sea and air links with Qatar and ordered Qatari nationals to leave their countries with 14 days.

    Qatar Airways, one of the biggest regional carriers, was forced to take long detours after it was barred from using Saudi, UAE and Egyptian air space.

    The air, sea and land restrictions imposed by its three Gulf neighbours have not so far affected maritime routes for Qatari LNG vessels which can pass through the Strait of Hormuz.

    Most of Qatar’s almost 80 million tonnes of annual LNG supplies are shipped in tankers, mainly to Japan, South Korea and India, as well as to several European countries.

    Any disruption to Qatar’s LNG exports could anger the European Union as the UK, Spain and Poland rely on Qatari LNG.

    Source:Al Jazeera

  • Philippines to halt operations against communist rebels

    {Truce allows government troops to focus on quelling a month-long siege by ISIL-linked fighters in Mindanao province.}

    The Philippine government has announced it would suspend offensives against communist fighters, allowing troops to focus on quelling a bloody siege by ISIL-linked fighters in the country’s south.

    Silvestre Bello III, chief government negotiator, said on Sunday that the government move is in response to a similar plan by the communist New People’s Army rebels.

    He did not specify when such a suspension of government offensives would take effect and under what terms.

    READ MORE: Peace is still possible in Duterte’s Philippines

    In the last year the administration of President Rodrigo Duterte has been engaged in an on-and-off truce with the communist rebels.

    Despite the latest peace overtures, Philippine troops killed five communist fighters in separate clashes in the south while the rebels stormed a police station in a central Philippine island of Leyte and seized a dozen assault rifles and pistols over the weekend, officials said.

    Three communist fighters were killed in Davao Oriental province and two others died in Compostela Valley in separate clashes with army troops on Saturday, military officials said.

    While in Leyte, about 50 communist rebels stormed a police station and seized 12 rifles and pistols, and other equipment, according to the police.

    The rebels claimed responsibility for the attack, saying in a statement that they waged the assault to punish police officers, whom they accused of being involved in extortion, gambling and distribution of illegal drugs.

    {{Fighting two fronts in Mindanao}}

    While Duterte has pursued talks with the communist rebel, he has expressed outrage over continuing attacks.

    The rebels have also protested what they said were continuing military assaults on their rural strongholds.

    The accusations and other differences have hampered negotiations being brokered by Norway, causing a scheduled round of talks to be canceled in May.

    The communist rebels have been waging one of Asia’s longest-running armed rebellion, which has left tens of thousands dead.

    Separately, the government is also fighting Muslim armed fighters in the southern island of Mindanao.

    Thousands of troops and police have been deployed to end a 27-day siege by fighters aligned with the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL, also known as ISIS) in the southern city of Marawi.

    The siege in Marawi has forced Duterte to declare martial law in the southern island.

    The intense fighting has left at least 242 fighters, 56 soldiers and policemen and 26 civilians dead and turned the heartland of the Muslim-majority city into a battlefield, and displaced 300,000 people.

    The US military has deployed a spy plane and drones to help troops end the insurrection, which was started by an estimated 500 ISIL-fighters, including foreign operatives.

    The military said more than 100 fighters are holed up in the city, holding an unspecified number of civilian hostages.

    In the last year, the government has engaged in an on-and-off truce with communist rebels

    Source:Al Jazeera

  • Police seize arms in Burundi

    {Burundian police on Saturday night uncovered eight grenades hidden in a small bush at Sororezo in Kanyosha district in Bujumbura Rural province, 10 kilometers southeast of the Burundian capital Bujumbura, the police spokesman said.}

    He said the eight grenades included five defensive grenades and three offensive ones.

    Burundi has faced a political crisis since April 2015 when Nkurunziza announced his controversial decision to run for a third term, which he eventually won in an election boycotted by main opposition candidates.

    Since April 2015, at least 410,000 Burundians have fled to neighboring countries, including the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Rwanda, Uganda and Tanzania, the UN refugee agency said in May.

    The refugee population is expected to increase by 26 percent by the end of 2017, according to the agency.

    Source:Xinhua

  • Mali attack: Two dead as gunmen storm tourist resort

    {Gunmen have stormed a tourist resort in Mali popular with Westerners and two people are dead, the country’s security minister has said.}

    “It is a jihadist attack. Malian special forces intervened and hostages have been released,” Salif Traore told AFP news agency.

    “Unfortunately for the moment there are two dead, including a Franco-Gabonese.”
    The attack happened at luxury resort Le Campement Kangaba, east of the capital Bamako.

    The minister said four assailants had been killed by security forces.

    “We have recovered the bodies of two attackers who were killed,” said Mr Traore, adding that they were “searching for the bodies of two others”.

    One of them left behind a machine gun and bottles filled with “explosive substances”.

    {{World’s most dangerous peacekeeping mission}}

    The ministry said another two people had been injured, including a civilian.

    A security ministry spokesman told Reuters 32 guests had been rescued from the resort.

    Malian special forces intervened, backed by UN soldiers and troops from a French counter-terrorism force.

    Witness Boubacar Sangare was just outside the compound as the attack unfolded.

    “Westerners were fleeing the encampment while two plainclothes police exchanged fire with the assailants,” he said.

    “There were four national police vehicles and French soldiers in armoured vehicles on the scene.”

    He added that a helicopter was circling overhead.

    The European Union training mission in Mali, EUTMMALI, tweeted that it was aware of the attack and was supporting Malian security forces and assessing the situation.

    Earlier this month, the US embassy in Bamako had warned of “possible future attacks on Western diplomatic missions, other locations in Bamako that Westerners frequent”.

    BBC correspondent Alex Duval Smith says many expats and wealthy Malians go to Kangaba at weekends, to enjoy the pools, cocktail bar, canoeing facilities, and other activities for children.

    Mali has been fighting a jihadist insurgency for several years, with Islamist fighters roaming the country’s north and centre.

    In November 2015, at least 20 people were killed when gunmen took guests and staff hostage at the Radisson Blu hotel in Bamako.

    Al-Qaeda’s North African arm, Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM), said it was behind that siege.

    Mali has been in a state of emergency since the Radisson Blu attack. It was extended for a further six months in April.

    The country’s security has gradually worsened since 2013, when French forces repelled allied Islamist and Tuareg rebel fighters from parts of the north.

    French troops and a 10,000-strong force of UN peacekeepers have been battling to stabilise the former French colony.

    Mali's government has said it suspects jihadists are behind the resort attack
    French soldiers stand around a United Nations vehicle following an attack where gunmen stormed Le Campement Kangaba in Dougourakoro

    Source:BBC

  • The funeral of Ivorian star Cheick Tiote is held in Abidjan

    {The funeral of Ivorian star Cheick Tiote was held in Abidjan on Sunday following his sudden death in China earlier this month.}

    Tiote died aged 30 after collapsing during training with his Chinese club Beijing Enterprises.

    The former Newcastle United midfielder was honoured with a military funeral with a host of dignitaries and players in attendance.

    His body was flown back home to Ivory Coast from China earlier this week.

    Hundreds of people, including former Elephants coach Herve Renard, were at Abidjan’s international airport to receive Tiote’s body on Thursday.

    Cheick Tiote won more than 50 caps for his country and was part of the Ivory Coast squad that won the 2015 Africa Cup of Nations.

    A number of his former team-mates attended the funeral, including Germany-based striker Salomon Kalou who said he, like so many others, was left devastated by the news of his death.

    “He’s someone I respected as a human being but also as a football player,” Kalou told BBC Sport.

    “I played six years with him in the national team and I played against him with Chelsea when he was at Newcastle, so we had a good relationship and I couldn’t miss this funeral for anything in the world.

    “It’s unreal. It looks like a dream right now. We’re all here to show him love and to show him he’s always going to be in our hearts,” Kalou added.

    England-based striker Wilfried Bony recalled how Tiote had been a mentor figure for him when he first started playing for the Elephants.

    “From the beginning when I joined the team in 2010, he was one of the first players who came and talked to me about how to be here, my attitude, how to train, how I need to react with the other players.

    “And Tiote was a player who loved to win who loved to be first, he never wanted to lose. He wanted always to be the best,” said Bony.

    Ivorian Prime Minister Amadou Gon Coulibaly was joined by Ivorian Sports Minister Albert Amichia and President of the Ivorian football federation Augustin Sidy Diallo at the funeral in Abidjan as the country paid its last respects to its former international midfielder.

    Pallbearers carry the coffin of Ivorian football star Cheick Tiote during his funeral ceremony in Abidjan.

    Source:BBC

  • Ugandan killed in UK to be buried in London cemetery

    {The remains of the victim of a June 6 fatal stabbing in Kingston are to be buried in a Cemetery in South West London at Worcester Park, his mother has said.}

    Derick Mulondo, a Ugandan is said to have died on June 6, 2017 after being stabbed by his ex-girlfriend following a heated argument.

    A post-mortem examination at Uxbridge Mortuary gave the cause of death as a stab wound to the left lung.

    Police were called to the scene in the Cambridge Estate at about 6pm on the fateful day where officers found the 38-year-old Kingston resident and father of a 16-year-old son was suffering from stab wounds.

    Paramedics and a team from London Air Ambulance delivered emergency first aid, but he died at the scene.

    As a result, two people, Shauna Doyle, 23, from Burritt Road in Kingston, and Eric Wertz, 45, from Comber Road in New Malden, were charged in court with his murder.

    They appeared in custody at Wimbledon Magistrates’ Court on June 9, and were remanded.

    Both suspects were also charged with possession of an offensive weapon.

    His mother, Sophie Kafeero called for the community, police and the government to tackle knife crime.

    Mulondo and his mum moved from Uganda to Kingston in the early 90s when he was only nine years old and formed a tight knit African community together in the borough.

    His father, Richard Serunjogi Mulondo died long before they moved to UK.

    Derick lived in Kingston ever since he moved to the UK, going to Hollyfield School and eventually to Kingston College.

    Derick was also a big Chelsea fan and played amateur football for a number of local teams, including United Colours of Kingston, and had recently started training five-year-olds in the borough to play.

    Speaking to Surrey Comet, Ms Kafeero said: “He played as a striker so at the club they called him Maradona. I still have his shirt.

    Before they relocated to London, they lived in Kiwatule, Kampala, while his late father lived in Kyaliwajala, Namugongo.

    On the left is Derick Mulondo as a child in Kingston. Mulondo, 38, died on June 6 after he was stabbed.

    Source:Daily Monitor

  • AU sets out limits on NGO recognition criteria

    {The African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights has delivered a landmark ruling, paving way for non-governmental organizations (NGOs) to file requests for advisory opinions before the Court.}

    In a decision delivered by a panel of seven judges under its President, Justice Sylvain Ore, the Court ruled that “only organizations with an observer status before or a memorandum of understanding with the African Union (AU) and recognised by the same” could bring such requests.

    It was making a ruling following an application filed by a Nigerian NGO, the Socio- Economic Rights and Accountability Project (SERAP) which was registered in 2004 and based in Nigeria with a primary objective of promotion of transparency and accountability in the public and private sectors through human rights.

    The Pan African Court President, Ore, Vice-President Justice Ben Kioko and Justices Gerard Ninguyeko, El Hadji Guisse, Rataa Ben Achoiur, Sollomy Bossa and Angelo Matusse unanimously declared that the Court does not have personal jurisdiction to give an opinion on this particular request.

    The matter that was filed at the Registry of the Court on March 14, 2013, the latter transmitting it to the African Commission as well as to member states of the AU so that those interested could submit written observations on the request – after which the following made submissions: Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cape Verde, Nigeria, Uganda, Zambia and the Centre for Human Rights, University of Pretoria (as amicus curiae).

    Source:Daily News

  • Congolese Military responsible for killing, raping of women, children

    {The United States warned on Friday that it had received new reports from within Democratic Republic of Congo accusing Congolese troops of actively carrying out a campaign of killing and raping women and children in the central Kasai region.}

    These allegations must be investigated and those responsible held accountable,” said US Ambassador to the United Nations, Nikki Haley.

    “Reports of the Congolese government’s campaign of murder and rape of women and children should shock us into action.

    The top UN human rights official last week called for an international investigation into massacres and other crimes committed in the Kasai region where at least 42 mass graves have been found.

    “It is past time for the Human Rights Council to take decisive action and launch an independent investigation into the human rights violations and abuses in the DRC. This is the core mission of the [council],” Haley said.

    Hundreds have been killed and 1.3 million displaced in central Congo since last August in fighting between a militia and government forces. Two UN sanctions monitors disappeared there in March and their bodies were found two weeks later.

    Violence has risen nationally since President Joseph Kabila stayed in power after his mandate ended in December 2016

    The Democratic Republic of Congo mission to the United Nations was not immediately available for comment.

    Source:News Ghana

  • Kenya:How candidates are beating CBK rules on big cash

    {Central Bank of Kenya Governor Patrick Njoroge addresses a media briefing about the Monetary Policy Committee at CBK building in Nairobi on May 30, 2017. The CBK has put in place guidelines to prevent financial fraud. }

    Politicians have resorted to keeping millions of shillings in their houses or using their trusted friends to withdraw money from their accounts beyond the Sh1 million cap imposed by the Central Bank, it has emerged.

    With campaign expenses ranging from millions to billions of shillings, depending on whether one is vying for a parliamentary seat or the presidency, it has become necessary to devise ways of circumventing the Central Bank guidelines introduced last year to fight money laundering.

    Politicians require large sums of money ahead of the August 8 General Election, billed as Kenya’s most competitive and most expensive.

    FINANCE LIMIT
    MPs who were interviewed separately registered their displeasure with the guidelines even as they devised ways of circumventing the rules to run their campaigns.

    Suna East MP Junet Mohamed said the law was not well thought out “and is even stifling the economy”.

    He said the cap is hurting politicians since they are fully in campaign mode, following the indefinite adjournment of the 11th Parliament on Thursday last week.

    “We are having a serious problem at the moment with that cap, politicians are not having it easy,” Mr Junet told the Nation.

    {{Bank accounts
    }}

    The MP said the country has not developed to a point of using cashless transactions and many people still depend on withdrawing huge sums of money from banks to run errands.

    Another MP who wished not to be named said there are many ways of circumventing the guidelines.

    “I have opened five accounts with different names and therefore I can withdraw five million in one day,” the MP, who refused to be named, said.

    {{Illegal }}

    Kikuyu MP Kimani Ichung’wa said the regulation is irregular and illegal and should he make it back to Parliament, he will move an amendment to have it revoked.

    “Why should I be limited on the amount of my money that I should withdraw? The regulations have totally no standing in the law, and I will sue the bank should they block me from accessing my money,” he said.

    As a way of circumventing the guidelines, Mr Ichungwa said many politicians transfer money to their trusted friend’s bank accounts then withdraw it.

    “It has really made life difficult for us. At the moment, we need to pay people whose cars we hire for campaign tours, tents, chairs and other items.

    “When you have a big function and the bills of all these surpass Sh1 million, what do you do? Nobody trusts a cheque from politicians, especially during this campaign period, we have to pay in cash.”

    {{Corruption }}

    He said the regulations were never taken to the delegated committee of Parliament to check their legality and whether they were in the best interest of Kenyans.

    Ugunja MP Opiyo Wandayi described the guidelines as a nuisance and unnecessary inconvenience.

    “There are many ways of going round it, the guidelines are causing a lot of challenges for us at the moment,” he said.

    The directive was put in place in January last year by CBK Governor Patrick Njoroge amid revelations that suspects in corruption scandals were freely carting away millions of shillings in sacks from banks.

    “In compliance with this requirement, all customers making transactions that meet the stipulated amounts will be required to complete a form that captures the source of funds, reason for the transaction rather than electronic means and where the money will be taken after it leaves the bank,” Dr Njoroge said in the guidelines.

    “You can use different names in a cheque and withdraw even Sh10 million in a day, so as much as the law is good, those with more money still get their way,” Bondo MP Gideon Ochanda said.

    {{EACC raids }}

    Other tricks used by politicians, Mr Ochanda said, is keeping the money in the house to avoid hassles in the banks.

    “You have seen when the Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission officers raid a home of a politician or anybody under investigations and millions of shillings in cash is recovered, an indication that people keep money in their houses instead of taking it to the bank.”

    Kajiado North MP Joseph Manje said he has no problem with the guidelines, saying they are good because they would stop money laundering.

    “The guidelines will not affect us much because if you withdraw Sh1 million as a politician that should be enough for you for the day, moreover banks only need a reason for the withdrawal so nobody has been stopped from withdrawing more than one million,” he explained.

    While releasing the guidelines, Dr Njoroge had said: “This new guideline aims to reduce the risk inherent with cash transactions, such as losses due to fraud and theft.

    “We encourage you to consider use of electronic payments, which are an alternative and secure channel.”

    Central Bank of Kenya Governor Patrick Njoroge addresses a media briefing about the Monetary Policy Committee at CBK building in Nairobi on May 30, 2017. The CBK has put in place guidelines to prevent financial fraud.

    Source:Daily Nation

  • Forces loyal to Libya’s Haftar ‘burn 6,000 books’

    {Benghazi police destroy literature they say “promotes violence” and ideas linked to the Muslim brotherhood and ISIL.}

    Forces loyal to renegade Libyan general Khalifa Haftar have been accused of burning more than 6,000 books, including works on religion, politics, poetry and philosophy.

    According to a video posted on Facebook by Al Manara, a Libyan media platform, more than 6,000 books – including reported biographies of the Prophet Muhammad – were destroyed by a police force in the eastern city of Benghazi on Saturday.

    The video showed a police officer claiming that the seized literature was promoting the ideas of “Daesh” (the Arabic term for Islamic State of Iraq and Levant or ISIL), as he sat behind a desk covered with books, including classical Islamic works.

    The officer said the books “promoted violence” and the “ideas of the Muslim Brotherhood”, which has been banned by UAE and Egypt.

    In January, more than 100 Libyan writers and intellectuals, including renowned Brazilian novelist Paulo Coelho, condemned a seizure of books deemed “erotic” or anti-Islamic by authorities in eastern Libya.

    Books by Egyptian Nobel Prize-winning novelist Naguib Mahfouz and Arabic translations of books by German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche were allegedly among dozens seized from a truck heading from Tobruk to Benghazi.

    A video of the book seizure was posted online where security officials denounced the “cultural invasion,” claiming the works promoted sorcery, as well as erotic materials.

    In an open letter, more than 100 novelists denounced the confiscation, calling it “intellectual terrorism”.

    Libya descended into a civil war after a popular uprising toppled long-time leader Muammar Gaddafi in 2011.

    The country has splintered into rival political and armed groups, with the factions backing opposing governments and parliaments in the east and the west.

    Haftar, who has the backing of Egypt and the UAE, controls large parts of eastern Libya and is aligned with the Tokruk-based government. He has staged several bloody attacks against other Libyan militias and designated the Muslim Brotherhood as a “terrorist group”.

    The Benghazi police force said the books promote violence and ideas linked to ISIL

    Source:Al Jazeera