Author: IGIHE

  • Notre Dame students walk out of Mike Pence speech

    {Students dressed in caps and gowns protest White House policies as vice president delivered commencement speech.}

    Dozens of students at Indiana’s Notre Dame University have protested against White House policies by walking out of a commencement speech by Vice President Mike Pence, who criticised political correctness at US colleges.

    The members of the graduating class – dressed in caps and gowns together with some 2,000 classmates -stood up and quietly left the school’s football stadium when Pence began delivering his speech on Sunday, videos posted online showed. Others cheered and some booed.

    Notre Dame, in the city of South Bend, is one of the country’s most prominent Catholic universities.

    Pence, who received an honourary degree from the university, said that “far too many campuses across America have become characterised by speech codes, safe zones, tone policing, administration-sanctioned political correctness – all of which amounts to nothing less than suppression of the freedom of speech”.

    “These all-too-common practices are destructive of learning and the pursuit of knowledge, and they are wholly outside the American tradition,” he added.

    A religious social conservative, Pence is a former Indiana governor who was born in the state and also served as one of its representatives in Congress for 12 years.

    The protest comes amid mounting controversy over what constitutes free speech at college campuses since the election of President Donald Trump in November, with students objecting to appearances by divisive conservative figures. Some schools have cancelled events.

    In addition to Pence’s record as governor, the protesters said they wanted to voice objections to Trump’s threat to civil liberties and policies such as his attempts to ban travellers from several Muslim-majority countries .

    “The participation and degree-conferring of VP Pence stand as an endorsement of policies and actions which directly contradict Catholic social teachings and values and target vulnerable members of the university’s community,” Notre Dame student Xitlaly Estrada said in a statement by the student group WeStandForND, which organised the protest.

    More than 100 people walked out, organisers said. Many wore rainbow pins or flags, a symbol of gay pride.

    Pence delivered his speech while Trump was on the first day of his first trip abroad as president. In a speech in Saudi Arabia, he called on Middle Eastern leaders to help defeat extremism.

    Source:Al Jazeera

  • UN urges Libya to release all refugees, asylum seekers

    {UN refugee chief ‘shocked at the harsh conditions’ in which Libya keeps refugees and migrants in detention centres.}

    The head of the UN refugee agency has urged Libyan authorities to free all asylum seekers and refugees from its detention centres.

    Filippo Grandi, United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, visited one of the detention centres in the Libyan capital of Tripoli on Sunday.

    “I fully appreciate that the government has security concerns,” he said, but added that “other solutions” could be found for people fleeing countries in conflict such as Syria and Somalia.

    Thousands of refugees are being held in dozens of detention centres in Libya, after being stopped or rescued from rickety boats as they attempted the perilous Mediterranean crossing to Europe.

    “I was shocked at the harsh conditions in which refugees and migrants are held,” Grandi said in a statement released on Sunday by the agency’s Geneva headquarters.

    “Children, women and men who have suffered so much already should not have to endure such hardship.”

    UN needs to do more for refugees in Libya

    The UN refugee agency has secured the release of more than 800 refugees and asylum seekers from Libyan detention centres over the past year and a half, the statement said.

    Grandi promised to reinforce his agency’s presence in Libya if security conditions allowed it, and also to provide assistance to thousands of Libyans displaced by conflict.

    “The time has come for us, as the UN refugee agency, to step up our presence and activities in the country,” Grandi later told AFP news agency.

    He said that doing so could take time for political and security reasons, however.

    “But meanwhile we are doing whatever we can to help the Libyans manage better these issues,” he said.

    Source:Al Jazeera

  • Ronaldo helps Real Madrid bag La Liga crown

    {Barcelona’s win over Eibar not enough to overtake Real Madrid who seal first league title since 2012.}

    Real Madrid ended their five-year wait for the La Liga title as Cristiano Ronaldo and Karim Benzema scored in a 2-0 win at Malaga, clinching a 33rd league triumph.

    Real needed just a point to wrap up the title and raced into the lead when Ronaldo scored in the second minute, ensuring the champions scored in every league game of the season. Benzema wrapped up the win early in the second half.

    Real finished the campaign on 93 points after a sixth straight league win since going down 3-2 to Barcelona in April.

    Last year’s champions Barcelona finished second on 90 points after coming from two goals down to beat Eibar 4-2 at home.

    Barcelona manager Luis Enrique was given a warm send-off at the Camp Nou as he was greeted with a giant banner reading “One of us forever”.

    And Barca at least salvaged some pride by fighting back from 2-0 down to avoid a first ever defeat against Eibar.

    Japanese midfielder Takashi Inui had the visitors dreaming as he hit a pair of sweetly struck half-volleys in off the underside of the crossbar either side of half-time.

    However, David Junca turned into his own net after Neymar had hit the post to start Barca’s revival 25 minutes from time.

    Yoel Rodriguez produced an incredible save to deny Lionel Messi from the penalty spot moments later.

    Barca were not to be denied a sixth straight win to end the season though as Luis Suarez bundled home from close range before Messi made amends with his second penalty 15 minutes from time.

    And Messi rounded off the scoring with his 53rd goal of the season in stoppage time.

    La Liga standings (top-5)

    1 Real Madrid
    2 Barcelona
    3 Atl Madrid
    4 Sevilla
    5 Villarreal

    Source:Al Jazeera

  • Zambia’s new national strip unveiled

    {Zambia have unveiled a new kit ahead of their 2018 World Cup and 2019 Africa Cup qualifying campaigns.}

    The future is clearly orange for the country’s national senior and junior teams as the all-green strip has been discarded.

    The new kit was used for the first time in the under-20 side’s 2-0 win over Portugal at the Fifa World Cup in South Korea on Sunday.

    Ponga Liwewe, secretary general of the Football Association of Zambia said the deal signed with Singapore-based kit suppliers Mafro is worth $200,000 over two years.

    “The decision to engage Mafro as a kit supplier of our national team is based on Mafro’s successful global partnership with various clubs and national sides,” Liwewe said in a statement

    Zambia has not had a kit supplier since 2014 when the contract with US sportswear behemoth Nike expired.

    Mafro are no strangers to the Zambian football scene as they also supply kit for local Super Division side Power Dynamos.

    Mafro has also signed a three-year deal to supply kit for Kenya’s national teams.

    The aptly named Fashion Sakala wearing the new kit

    Source:BBC

  • Egypt refers 48 to court over Coptic church bombings

    {Egypt’s public prosecutor says 48 suspected members of so-called Islamic State (IS) have been referred to a military court in connection with three bombings of Coptic churches.}

    Thirty-one of the suspects are in custody while the others are still at large.

    More than 70 people died in suicide attacks against churches in Cairo in December and in the cities of Tanta and Alexandria in April.

    IS said it carried out the bombings.

    In a statement on Sunday, public prosecutor Nabil Sadek said some of the suspects were leaders within IS and had formed cells in Cairo and the southern province of Qena to carry out the church attacks.

    He said the militants were also responsible for killing eight police officers at a checkpoint in Egypt’s Western Desert in January.

    The attack in December killed 29 people at Saint Peter and Saint Paul Church in central Cairo, close to the headquarters of Coptic Pope Tawadros II.

    In April, 45 worshippers celebrating Palm Sunday died in attacks at St George’s Coptic church in Tanta and St Mark’s in Alexandria.

    IS has threatened more attacks on Egypt’s Coptic Christians, who make up 10% of the population.

    Egypt’s President Abdul Fattah al-Sisi announced a three-month state of emergency after the attacks in April.

    The Coptic Orthodox Church is the main Christian Church in Egypt. While most Copts live in Egypt, the Church has about a million members outside the country.

    Copts believe that their Church dates back to around 50 AD, when the Apostle Mark is said to have visited Egypt. The head of the Church is called the Pope and is considered to be the successor of St Mark.

    This makes it one of the earliest Christian groups outside the Holy Land.

    The Church separated from other Christian denominations at the Council of Chalcedon (451 AD) in a dispute over the human and divine nature of Jesus Christ.

    The early Church suffered persecution under the Roman Empire, and there were intermittent persecutions after Egypt became a Muslim country. Many believe that continues to this day.

    Coptic Christians in Egypt have long felt vulnerable and marginalised

    Source:BBC

  • WHO optimistic on controlling DRC Ebola outbreak

    {The World Health Organization’s regional chief for Africa reports prospects for rapidly controlling the spread of the deadly Ebola virus in the Democratic Republic of Congo are good.}

    While not underestimating the difficulties that lie ahead in bringing this latest outbreak of Ebola to an end, Matshidiso Moeti told VOA she is “very encouraged” by the speed with which the government and its national and international partners have responded to this crisis.

    “I am quite optimistic because this is a government that is experienced at this, and which has got off to a very quick start and we are already on the ground with the partners.

    “We are getting logistic support from WFP (World Food Program) and from the U.N. mission. So, I am quite optimistic,” Moeti said.

    WHO has reported 29 suspected cases, including three deaths since Ebola was discovered in a remote region of DRC on April 22. This deadly virus causes fever, bleeding, vomiting and diarrhea. It spreads easily through bodily fluids and can kill more than 50 percent of its victims.

    This is the eighth recorded outbreak of Ebola in DRC since 1976. The outbreak was first detected in Bas-Uele Province, a densely-forested area in northeastern Congo near the border with the Central African Republic.

    {{Outbreak isolated}}

    Moeti calls the remoteness of the area “a mixed blessing.”

    She said that there was little likelihood of a “rapid expansion of the outbreak to other localities due to population movement as happened in West Africa. Although, we are keeping a close eye on the Central African Republic … where we are concerned that there is insecurity there.”

    She said it was difficult to operate and carry out surveillance or investigations in this area because the road network leading there was not very well developed and “we have to drive long distances, not in a car, but have to use a motorbike.”

    To remedy this, she said the government had fixed up a landing strip to enable helicopters to fly in the experts and material needed to deal with this crisis.

    Moeti, a South African physician, replaced Luis Gomez Sambo of Angola as WHO regional head for Africa in January 2015 after he was criticized for his lackluster leadership in handling the 2014 Ebola outbreak in West Africa.

    The World Health Organization has come under scathing criticism by the international community for its slow and inept response to that unprecedented epidemic. By the time WHO declared the Ebola epidemic at an end in January 2016, the deadly virus had killed 11,315 people in Liberia, Sierra Leone, and Guinea.

    {{Experience put to use}}

    During a recent visit to Kinshasa, Matshidiso Moeti said she saw how the hard lessons that have been learned from this tragic experience were being applied in DRC.

    “What I observed was that the government itself was very quick in getting out to this remote area from the central level.

    “So, they sent a team from Kinshasa within a day or two of getting this alert to go and investigate and from the provincial level very rapidly, the government got down into this local area,” she said.

    Moeti is leading a reform process to transform the WHO in the African Region into what she called a “more responsive, accountable, effective and transparent organization.”

    She told VOA that this process was a component of WHO’s global reform effort and she would be rolling out the plan during a side-event on May 22, the opening day of this year’s World Health Assembly.

    She said the reform program focused largely on how to improve measures for more quickly and efficiently tackling emergencies and communicable diseases.

    “Clearly, as we saw very starkly with the Ebola outbreak, an outbreak can quickly transform into a big humanitarian crisis with all sorts of impacts.”

    While the job of health reform is far from complete, Moeti said, “I am really pleased to say that we are starting to see how those changes that we have made are making a difference in how we operate.”

    Source:Voice of America

  • Why Dlamini-Zuma is unlikely to be South Africa’s next president

    {While South African President Jacob Zuma is doing all in his power to ensure his pick — his ex-wife Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma — is the next leader of the ruling party, the African National Congress (ANC), and quite possibly of the country, the outcome of who will govern both is far from certain.}

    Despite Zuma’s efforts to ensure ‘more of the same’ under his ex-wife’s leadership, others are determined to end the scandal-rich corruption and patronage system imposed by the president and which has severely hampered SA’s ability to grow new jobs, enhance living standards for the poor and deliver on basic services.

    {{Cyril Ramaphosa }}

    As the ANC readies itself for a year-end elective conference at which the issue of its — and quite possibly South Africa’s — next leader will be decided, several figures have been touted as potential successors to Zuma.

    Among these, the leading candidate, despite Zuma’s efforts, is the ANC’s wily deputy president Cyril Ramaphosa.

    Until recently, local pundits had it that Ramaphosa’s bid to be elected as the ANC leader — and the likely next South African president — were more or less dead in the water.

    Commentary was that he seemed to have no co-ordinated strategy after ‘throwing his hat’ into the elective ring late last year and had had no discernible on-the-ground campaign to speak of.

    {{Campaign trail }}

    On the other hand, the former African Union chairperson Dlamini-Zuma, having returned from an unremarkable stint at the AU, has hit the campaign trail running, showing up at all sorts of events as the main speaker and luminary despite currently holding no formal position in government.

    Dlamini-Zuma’s campaign team looked organised and determined while Ramaphosa was characterised as ‘dithering’.

    But he was not — he was biding his time.

    There has long been a culture in the ruling party that it is ‘unseemly’ to be seen to be running for elected office in the party before the 11th hour, when an elective conference actually gets under way — and Zuma himself has been calling for that.

    {{Zuma challenged }}

    But that was just another Zuma ploy, it turns out, to have his hand-picked successor take the top job.

    What Zuma wanted was for his ex-wife to get a huge head start and leave others, primarily Ramaphosa, in the dust.

    But Ramaphosa has been ‘around the block’, as the saying goes, and has been quietly working back channels, even as loyalist Zuma lapdogs, specifically the ANC Women’s League and its once-feisty Youth League, have been touting Dlamini-Zuma as the heir-apparent.

    What Ramaphosa has all in hand was made clear in a recent speech (April 24) in Port Elizabeth, where he openly and fiercely challenged Zuma on his running of both the party and the country.

    {{No Charisma }}

    Since then, Ramaphosa’s quiet work in the background has become apparent and his campaign is flying along.

    Dlamini-Zuma’s public appearances, though numerous and heavily covered by pro-Zuma media, have, however, been lacklustre and thoroughly uninspiring — to the degree that, at a recent event, as the would-be next SA leader paused for applause, there was none forthcoming until the embarrassing silence was broken by her largely ineffective “cheering section”.

    Indeed, Dlamini-Zuma has failed to ignite even mediocre spontaneous enthusiasm at the carefully selected events where she has spoken.

    And she may have triggered another round of “State capture scandals” in the process, something which could easily end her bid to lead South Africa with a continuation of the same failed policies that Zuma’s baleful presidency has provided — but that is an as-yet-untold story for another day.

    {{Cabinet Reshuffle }}

    For his part, Ramaphosa has been naming names and calling Zuma out in an unprecedented fashion.

    Sources close to the ‘top six’, the committee that runs the day-to-day affairs of the ANC, say that, away from the cameras, relations between Zuma and Ramaphosa would have to warm up considerably to be described as merely frosty.

    Zuma’s high-handed attitude, which has seen him cited by the Constitutional Court — the highest in the land — as having failed in his constitutionally prescribed duties over multimillion-dollar upgrades to his family homestead in the country’s most populous province of KwaZulu-Natal, has been repeated with his recent midnight Cabinet reshuffle, in which loyalist but incompetent ministers were retained while some opposed to his desire to get his hands into the public coffers were ousted.

    {{Gupta family }}

    Just prior to her completion of her stint, the former Public Protector, whose job is to keep an eye on government officers up to and including the president, released a report on what is known here as “State capture”.

    This refers to efforts, allegedly undertaken by a wealthy and powerful Indian immigrant family, the Guptas, to have Zuma and various other key government and parastatal senior executives doing their bidding, ostensibly to favour them in major deals.

    Among these is a vastly expensive fleet of nuclear power plants, which even the government now admits South Africa does not need for at least the next 20 years.

    The public outcry over State capture is at such a fever pitch that it has already weakened Dlamini-Zuma’s hopes to succeed her ex-husband at the helm — even his endorsement is a problem for her, by association.

    {{COMMISSION OF INQUIRY}}

    Zuma has been painted as not merely incompetent but an outright mendacious character of low ethical standards who is prepared to harm his country’s economy severely in order to keep his pals’ noses in the public money feeding trough.

    Harsh as such characterisations have been, they are increasingly difficult to refute convincingly.

    And Ramaphosa has used his recent public platform outings to drive that point home in no uncertain terms.

    He has called for a judicial commission of inquiry into allegations of State capture, essentially putting Zuma on notice that, should he become president, he will have him investigated.

    {{NUCLEAR POWER PLANTS}}

    This is on top of several hundred corruption charges lingering in semi-abeyance several years after a one-time friend and ‘associate’ was found guilty of corruption for his dubious dealings with Zuma and sentenced to 15 years in prison.

    Zuma is obviously determined to not only avoid jail time but also keep his and his family’s oar in the public funds waters for as long as possible.

    For instance, the proposed nuclear deals with, among others, Russia and the US, would see his son’s company receive billions of dollars of public money for playing a peripheral role in seeing several unwanted and unnecessary nuclear power production plants into existence.

    The Constitutional Court recently ruled that the deals, although signed by government officers, were invalid.

    But this has not put off the Zuma administration, which now says it will simply go ahead, this time carry out the necessary public consultations and environmental impact studies that were not done before.

    {{CRUCIAL ALLIANCES}}

    Zuma also wants former Public Protector Thuli Madonsela’s State of Capture report, which calls for a judicial inquiry, reviewed by the High Court.

    Last week, a date for later in the year, probably October, was set for that review, even though it is understood that Zuma has been privately warned by legal experts that his prospects of success are low and the probability of such a review leading to formal inquiry high.

    Meanwhile, Ramaphosa has in the past few weeks been popping up at events around the country and going into meetings with key ANC mid-level and provincial leaders in what is obviously a carefully devised strategy to do to Zuma what the latter did to former SA President Thabo Mbeki — an ambush at the elective conference of the party, due in December.

    He has reportedly vowed to visit all nine provinces before the ANC’s June policy conference, a key precursor to the December conference and at which the battle lines will not only be clearly drawn but also crucial alliances and voting blocs will be formed or cemented.

    {{VOTING DELEGATES}}

    While Zuma, and by extension Dlamini-Zuma, still hold the high ground as Zuma loyalists bend over backwards to create opportunities for Dlamini-Zuma to appear ‘presidential’ in public, Ramaphosa has stuck with his behind-the-scenes approach while also relying on growing anti-Zuma sentiment, which saw massive countrywide public marches and protests at Zuma’s State of the Nation address in February and then again several times since.

    Recently, Ramaphosa received a boost from the ANC leadership in the country’s smallest region by population, the Northern Cape.

    Contributing just five per cent of voting delegates at the year-end elective conference, this province is nonetheless important because it was the first to back him publicly, at its provincial congress.

    Newly elected provincial leaders were quoted as saying that, while small in number, they had always backed the elective conference winner.

    {{BLIND LOYALTY}}

    Ramaphosa is also expected to pick up delegates in other smaller provinces, and from the many but still silent ANC delegates who are doubtful that they may even have a job in government should anyone but Ramaphosa succeed Zuma.

    Dlamini-Zuma, for her part, has received some support from at least four of the provinces that have vowed to remain loyal to Zuma.

    But the days of getting a provincial vote en bloc may be over for Zuma as Ramaphosa is garnering a growing and increasingly vocal support group from regional leaders unhappy with those ANC leaders in the larger provinces who are expecting blind loyalty come December.

    Even in Zuma’s seemingly impregnable home turf of KwaZulu-Natal, Ramaphosa has been campaigning ahead of key by-elections, with every indication that his lobbyists have been busy ‘in Zuma’s backyard’.

    {{ANTI-ZUMA PROTESTS}}

    Sources have claimed that something like a third or more of the KwaZulu-Natal delegates — the largest voting bloc of all — will back Ramaphosa at the ANC conference.

    Zuma loyalists have been combing through party lists from the regions, leaving the impression among those who don’t know any better that Ramaphosa has little support in most regions — but it is only an impression since most of his supporters are keeping their silence to ensure that they are not removed from the party’s regional delegate lists.

    Because of all the behind-the-scenes machinations under way, it is literally impossible for anyone to have a real grip on who is making progress among likely voting delegates.

    But the public anti-Zuma sentiment is now so strong that even having the word ‘Zuma’ as part of her surname is likely to cost Dlamini-Zuma in the party elections — and even more so in the 2019 national elections.

    {{DEATH OF MINERS}}

    Also weighing heavily on senior ANC leadership, even down to local government level, is the poor showing of the ruling party in last August’s municipal elections, where it garnered a mere 52 per cent of the total vote (14 per cent less than the last national government elections) and lost three major metropolitan areas, including the industrial and commercial hub Johannesburg and Pretoria, the administrative seat of power.

    It is now being openly acknowledged that, without some major change and if things continue as they have, the ANC may no longer be the absolute winner in the 2019 national elections — and if its support drops below about 47 per cent it won’t even be able to team up with smaller parties to form a minority ‘government of national unity’, the latter having already been touted by some analysts as a possibility.

    Ramaphosa’s single biggest hindrance is the idea in the popular mind that he was at least partly responsible for the deaths of dozens of mineworkers at Marikana, near Pretoria, in late 2012, when police opened fire on protesting workers.

    {{WOMAN LEADERSHIP}}

    He has let it be known, having already apologised in public for that event, that he plans to personally apologise to the widows of the mine workers who were killed.

    That may help to fix his problem in this front.

    Dlamini-Zuma’s main thrust, beside the backing of Zuma, is along the lines of ‘it’s time for a woman to lead’, which is a softer version of ‘it’s time for Zuma to go’, the chant among the hundreds of thousands who have a turned out to numerous anti-Zuma protests in the past few months.

    Once, the ANC could paper over divisions within and between its members and its main partners, the SA Communist Party (SACP) and the Congress of SA Trade Unions (Cosatu), with calls to ‘unity above all else’.

    {{FORMIDABLE OPPONENT}}

    That no longer holds true; such are the divisions within the ANC with both leading Cosatu and SACP figures calling for him to step down.

    When the jostling is over and the votes are counted, there seems under current conditions hardly any other candidate likely still to be standing with a hope of beating Ramaphosa, who has spent more than 20 years awaiting his time at the helm.

    Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma, then the chairperson of the African Union Commission, speaks in Lagos on December 3, 2014 during a send-off ceremony for 250 Nigerian health workers on a mission to fight the Ebola virus in affected west African countries. In the race for president of South Africa, Dlamini-Zuma’s main thrust, beside the backing of Zuma, is along the lines of "it’s time for a woman to lead".

    Source:Daily Nation

  • Mali on the spot at Arusha human rights court sessions

    {The African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights (AfCHPR), sitting in Arusha, has begun its 45th Ordinary Session to determine 84 cases, including application against violation on inheritance rights, consent and minimum age of marriage for girls.}

    A statement issued in Dar es Salaam yesterday shows that the application in question has been filed by two applicants, the Malian lobby group APDH, and the Institute of Human Rights Development in Africa (IHRDA) against the Republic of Mali.

    The APDF presents itself as a Malian Association with observer status before the AfCHPR, with the mission to encourage women’s groups to defend their rights and interests against all forms of violence and discrimination.

    Meanwhile, the IHRDA presents itself as a panAfrican NGO based in Banjul, Gambia, with the mission to assist victims of human rights violations in their quest for justice using national, African and international instruments.

    The Republic of Mali, as respondent in the matter, became a party to the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights on January 22, 1982; the Protocol to the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights on the Establishment of the African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights on June 20, 2000.

    It became party to the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights on Rights of Women on February 3, 2005 and to African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child on August 14, 1998 and deposited special declaration allowing individuals and NGOs to directly access the Court, on February 19, 2010.

    The statement quotes the applicants as stating that on August 3, 2009, the National Assembly of Mali, by majority, passed Act No 2011-087 establishing the Draft Persons on Family Code (PFC).

    This draft was the outcome of lengthy review of the former Marriage and Guardianship Code 1962 which contained substantial gaps and several provisions of which had become obsolete.

    Such Draft Code, welcomed by a broad section of the population as well as human rights advocacy organizations, was however rejected by another important segment of the population, particularly the mainstream Islamic organizations in the country.

    The Draft Code was thus referred back to the Parliament for a second reading so as to enlist broader support from amongst the communities that came up against the adoption of this bill. The amended law was then promulgated on December 30, 2011 by the President of the Republic.

    It is submitted by the applicants that the enacted law violates the relevant provisions of several aforementioned international human rights instruments ratified by Mali. It is for these reasons that the applicants brought the application before the court on July 26, 2016.

    The applicants, APDH and IHRDA, allege violation by the Republic of government of Mali of women rights under the Maputo Protocol, notably violation of the right to inheritance as per Article 21(2) of Maputo Protocol and Articles 3 and 4 of African Charter on Rights and Welfare of Child (ACRWC).

    They allege violation of minimum age of marriage for girls (Article 6.b of the Maputo Protocol and Articles 1(3), 2 and 21 of ACRWC and violation of right to consent to marriage (Article of Maputo Protocol and Article 16(a) and (b) of Convention on Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW).

    Furthermore, the applicants allege violation of the obligation to eliminate traditional practices and attitudes that undermine the rights of women and children as per Article 2(2) of the Maputo Protocol, 5(a) of the CEDAW and 1 (3) of the ACRWC.

    Source:Daily News

  • Commitment won liberation war-Gen Kabarebe

    {The Minister of Defense, Gen James Kabarebe has said that RPA soldiers’ victory over the hate government guided by divisionism and oppression, despite enormous foreign support, was a result of commitment guiding RPA soldiers to fight with bravery during the struggle as they stood for truth. }

    Kabarebe who was Friday speaking during the commemoration of former judges, prosecutors among other employees of the Ministry of Justice killed in the 1994 genocide against Tutsi noted that: “No RPA soldier was forced to advance during the struggle to stop genocide. When we alerted them ‘Simama juu (stand up), Advance, Speed’ everyone did so because they knew the value of what they were striving for. That is why genocide was stopped in a few months,” he added.

    Kabarebe said RPF had analyzed the war before as they wanted to solve a serious problem.

    “Between 200 and 300 soldiers came from another country carrying guns. It was hard to fight an organized country having structured diplomacy, with steady military, police and support from foreigners,” he said.

    Kabarebe noted that the courage they had led them to repel foreign forces including French soldiers among others.

    “We had three months of fighting Interahamwe and French soldiers. We fought French soldiers from Byumba in 1992 and in Zone Turquoise. We had a severe fight that is why they got weakened. The attack which stopped them as they entered Butare coming from Gikongoro made them speak of us thus; ‘they are not people to fight with’, ”he said.

    The Minister of Defense, Gen James Kabarebe
  • Regional bloc strikes common accord on EPA

    {East African heads of state have jointly agreed that the EAC members that have not signed the European Union -EAC economic partnership agreement (EPA) will not do so pending clarification of outstanding issues.}

    In a joint communiques of the EAC Heads of Summit concluded in Dar es Salaam on Sunday, the presidents agreed that Kenya should not be disadvantaged since it had already signed the agreement.

    Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni, the new EAC chairman, has been mandated within one month to reach out to EU to communicate the former’s circumstances. In the event that an acceptable way forward is not reached within the next six months, the chairman is expected to explore the use of variable geometry in implementation of the EPA, working with the council of ministers

    “I have been officially mandated to harmonise the vision about this issue of EPA within the EAC Country States,” said President Museveni.

    {{Move forward
    }}

    President Museveni said any agreement would only be reached with all members of EAC, and not a few countries. He explained there was no way EAC could move forward until the issue of sanctions on Burundi, among others, were resolved.

    Only Kenya and Rwanda have signed the EPA agreement. Tanzania, Burundi and Uganda were yet to sign.

    The summit also agreed that the EU sanctions on Burundi should be discussed alongside the EPA discussions.

    “Burundi is member of the EAC. How can they sign EPA with EU when they are still under sanctions?” asked President Museveni, adding that EU should negotiate the trade deal with EAC and not a single member state.

    {{Academic certificates}}

    The heads of state also declared the EAC as a common higher education area in order to harmonise and enhance the quality of education in the region. They directed the council to operationalise the transformation.

    The move will enable partner states to recognise academic certificates from universities and higher learning institutions in the region, and students will be able to transfer credits across universities.

    The heads of state noted with concern the declining intra-EAC trade and directed the council to resolve the outstanding non-tariff barriers and report to the 19th summit.

    The presidents considered a report on the accelerated integration of South Sudan into EAC, and received another on the verification for the admission of Somalia and directed the council to follow-up and report to the 19th summit.

    Uganda's president Yoweri Kaguta Museveni and his counterpart of Tanzania , Dr. John Pombe Magufuli were the only heads of states to attend EAC Summit while others sent representatives.

    Source:The East African