Author: Théophile Niyitegeka

  • DRC Spokesman Criticizes UN After Kidnappings

    {The government spokesman in the Democratic Republic of Congo has criticized the United Nations after two U.N. officials were kidnapped in the center of the country Sunday. The spokesman says his government had not been informed of their movements.
    }

    Michael Sharp, an American, and Zahida Katalin, a Swedish citizen, as well as the four Congolese nationals accompanying them, were kidnapped in the province of Kasai Central in central DRC.

    The U.N. mission in the DRC, known as MONUSCO, and the Congolese security forces have been looking for the six since being informed of their abduction, but so far without success.

    DRC’s communications minister, Lambert Mende, told VOA on Wednesday that the government did not know Sharp and Katalin were in the country, which is not acceptable. Mende says U.N. officials are free to carry out their inquiries and humanitarian work, but that it is necessary to inform authorities of their presence.

    The Kasai region, where the kidnapping took place, has been the scene of an escalating conflict between the DRC’s security forces and militiamen since August of last year when the Congolese military killed a customary chief, known as Kamwina Nsapu. A militia of his followers is now active in the three provinces of Kasai and in Lomami Province. More than 400 people have been killed and 200,000 displaced by the violence, according to the U.N.’s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.

    The DRC’s interior minister told Jeune Afrique, a French magazine, that members of that militia had carried out the attack.

    Mende told VOA that if local authorities had been informed of the officials’ presence, they could have provided an escort or warned the U.N. group that the area is an operational zone where militants are active.

    Sharp and Katalin are members of the U.N.’s Group of Experts on the DRC, which carries out research into conflict in the country and reports directly to the Security Council. The U.N. has more than 19,000 peacekeeping troops in the DRC, but most are deployed in the east rather than the country’s center.

    Blue-helmeted members of the U.N. Organization Stabilization Mission in the Democratic Republic of Congo sit on the back of a pickup truck in Beni, Oct. 23, 2014.

    Source:Voice of America

  • Kenya:Calm restored at Maseno School after protests

    {Calm has returned at Maseno School after a day-long unrest by students that paralysed learning at the institution on Wednesday.}

    The students went on rampage protesting the interdiction of their Principal Paul Otula over bullying claims at the institution.

    Speaking to Nation.co.ke, Kisumu County Education Director Sabina Aroni said students had resumed learning.

    “I received a report in the morning that the students went for morning preps. That is a good indication. I am visiting the school to further check the state of affairs,” said Ms Aronii.

    Mr Otula was suspended for 30 days by the Teachers’ Service Commission following claims that a Form One student was sodomised by senior students.

    He is expected face a disciplinary committee to defend himself against accusations of negligence, allowing bullying and molestation of the student.

    Homa Bay High School Principal Andrew Buop was posted in Mr Otula’s place.

    This caused unrest among the students who demanded that Mr Otula be reinstated.

    It is however unclear whether the new principal has reported to the institution as both Ms Aroni and Kisumu County TSC Director Ado Mohammed chose to steer off the matter.

    Mr Mohammed said due to its seriousness, the matter was being handled from the headquarters.

    “It is best to reach the communications desk at the TSC headquarters for details,” he said.

    The issue is deemed emotive since both parents and students want Mr Otula reinstated.

    The Maseno School Parents Association chairperson James Obondi accused the ministry of education and the media of creating unnecessary stigma on their sons regarding the sodomy allegations.

    “We find the allegations on sodomy in the school as baseless, unjustifiable and in the least, malicious and aimed at tainting the name of the institution and Mr Otula,” said Obondi.

    Maseno School students hold placards in protest of the interdiction of the school principal Paul Otula on March 15, 2017.

    Source:Daily Nation

  • Uganda:US government joins calls for Kasese killings inquiry

    {The US government yesterday backed a call by Human Rights Watch for an international investigation into last November’s killings in Kasese which left more than 100 people dead. }

    The renewed calls for an independent inquiry into the bloodbath, almost immediately, drew a sharp response and another flat refusal by the government to determine if Uganda’s armed forces committed mass murder in Kasese.

    Released yesterday, HRW said in a second report on the killings committed by both the army and police, especially during the raid on the Obusinga Bwa Rwenzururu’s palace, “warrant an independent, impartial fact-finding mission with international expertise”.

    “If given unfettered access to witnesses and forensic evidence”, HRW says “independent experts with a fact-finding mission could determine if the massacre on November 27 should be characterised as a “crime against humanity”.

    The international NGO was soon joined by the US Embassy which released a statement saying it “takes note” of HRW’s report and is “deeply troubled” by the “disproportionate use of force by security officials” especially the reports that “no effort to remove unarmed people from the compound was done which may have contributed to the death of numerous children”.

    “As noted, previously, the embassy urges government to conduct or permit a fair and independent investigation into this incident in the interest of upholding the rule of law. The Ugandan people deserve a full and factual accounting of the events in Kasese, which government has not yet allowed,” the embassy statement, a copy of which was posted on Ambassador Deborah Malac’s twitter handle, said.

    Opposition leader Dr Kizza Besigye, recently, made a similar call to the European Union (EU) during a closed-door meeting with Mr Koen Vervaeke, the European External Action Service (EEAS) managing director for Africa.

    The rights body has also called for the suspension of army and police officials “believed to be most responsible for the killings and other abuses committed during the November violence”.

    “Police spokespeople reported the death toll over the two days as 87, including 16 police. Human Rights Watch found the actual number to be much higher – at least 55 people, including at least 14 police, killed on November 26, and more than 100, including at least 15 children, during the attack on the palace compound on November 27.”

    But the military spokesman yesterday dismissed the call for an independent investigation into a matter before court as “untenable for now because it is at odds with the sub judice rule.”

    Brig. Richard Karemire said Uganda “does not lack independent investigative capability” in case such need arises. Gen. Karemire was addressing journalists at the Government Media Centre, shortly after the report became public.

    Without independent investigations, HRW said, the army’s account that the people killed were armed fighters “raises more questions than answers, particularly regarding the actual death toll and why there was no effort to remove unarmed people and children from the compound.”

    Ms Maria Burnett, associate Africa director at Human Rights Watch said the Kasese killings “which killed more people than any single event since the height of the war in Northern Uganda over a decade ago, should not be swept under the carpet.” Ms Burnett said the people of Kasese, some still searching “for their family members, including children”, “deserve answers and justice for these gruesome killings”.

    At least 95 people in six sub-counties of Kasese district, including many families of the people killed, were reported to have been interviewed by HRW which also reviewed video and photographs of the events in compiling the report.

    Security forces who took part in the operation in Kasese dismissed any notion of children having been killed during the raid. But the rights body reported that it spoke to 14 families missing 15 children between ages 3 and 14 who were last seen in the palace compound on November 27.

    “Human Rights Watch found evidence, including accounts by confidential sources and medical personnel who witnessed the events, that security officials had misrepresented the number of people killed and eliminated evidence of the children’s deaths.”

    The call by both the NGO and US government could likely pile more pressure on Kampala in light of earlier attempts by members of the affected community and other human rights defenders in the country to demand for accountability and justice for the victims with international help.

    Last year, a group of mainly opposition MPs from Kasese petitioned the International Criminal Court (ICC), asking for an investigation into possible atrocities committed by both the army and police. The ICC later issued a statement acknowledging receipt of their petition and promised to reply.

    President Museveni, Maj. Gen Peter Elwelu (the officer who commanded the army units during the palace attack) and Assistant Inspector General of Police Asuman Mugenyi were singled out in the December 9, 2016 petition which government dismissed as “political posturing”. The MPs sought to move the office of the ICC chief prosecutor to commence investigations into the raid on King Charles Mumbere’s palace among other things.

    Quoting the United Nations Basic Principles on the Use of Force and Firearms by Law Enforcement Officials which require law enforcement officials, including military units, to apply nonviolent means before resorting to force among other requirements, HRW called for the suspension of the officers who commanded the operation pending investigations.

    “The government should promptly investigate, prosecute, and punish those responsible in accordance with international standards. The government should protect witnesses and compensate the families of victims.”

    The rights body, particularly, singled out Maj. Gen. Elwelu who was the face of the joint operation. Gen Elwelu was recently promoted and appointed UPDF’s commander Land Forces. At the time of the killings he was a brigadier.

    “He should be removed from command pending a full investigation, and should not participate in any internationally-supported training, conferences or joint exercises until investigations conclude,” Human Rights Watch said.

    Gen Karemire, however, said the demand to suspend some commanders from their duties “is uncalled for and unacceptable”.

    This report comes after HRW’s 2016 report that was released in January 2017 in which the security forces were accused of carrying out at least 13 extra-judicial killings of people in the Rwenzori region shortly after the February 18, 2016 general elections. In that wider report, the NGO implored Uganda’s international partners to “maintain a strong demand for accountability, including support for an independent and impartial investigation with international experts”.

    More than 160 people, including the Rwenzuru King, Charles Wesley Mumbere, have been dragged to court on charges including terrorism, aggravated robbery and murder since the incident.

    A woman weeps on the casket bearing remains of her relative outside Kasese Municipal Health Centre III mortuary.

    Source:Daily Nation

  • Tanzania:7 foreigners in court for defrauding TCRA of 459m/-

    {Seven foreigners appeared before the Kisutu Resident Magistrate’s Court in Dar es Salaam, yesterday, charged with several counts relating to fraudulent use of communication network and occasioning loss of 459m/- to the Tanzania Communications Regulatory Authority (TCRA) and the government.}

    They are: Dilshad Ahmed (36), Rohail Yaqoob (47), Khalid Mahmood (59), Ashfaq Ahmed (38), Muhamad Aneess (48), Imtiaz Ammar (33), who are Pakistan nationals and Ramesh Kandasamy (36) from Sri-Lanka.

    They were not allowed to enter plea to the charges before Principal Resident Magistrate Wilbard Mashauri, as they are facing economic charges.

    The magistrate ordered them to remain in remand as his court lacked jurisdiction to termine any bail application. He directed the accused persons to the Economic, Corruption and Organised Crime High Court’s Division to seek bail if they so wished.

    Magistrate Mashauri adjourned the case to March 19, for mention, as investigations into the matter, according to the prosecution, have not been completed.

    Other counts include conspiracy to commit offences, importation and installation of electronic communication equipment without a licence, use of unapproved electronic equipment and operating electronic communications without a licence and conspiracy to commit an offence.

    The prosecution led by Senior State Attorneys Nassoro Katuga and Johanes Karungura, an attorney from TCRA, alleged that on or before November 2016, within the City of Dar es Salaam, all accused persons conspired to commit an offence of fraudulently using network facilities.

    Source:Daily News

  • Rusizi national flag goes missing

    {A national flag at Ruganda cell of Rwimbogo sector was stolen on Sunday night and recovery efforts have for three days remained futile. }

    The executive secretary of Rwimbogo sector, Nyirandendahimana Mathilde has said that two suspects have been arrested at Gashonga police station.

    “The national flag was stolen last Saturday .Suspects have been detained at Gashonga police station. One of the suspects had told the guard that he would interfere his work,” she said.

    Nyirangendahimana said that the as search for the missing flag is continues, residents of the cell will raise funds to buy another one.

  • 18 netted in police anti-drug swoop

    {Eighteen suspected drug dealers including eight women arrested in separate police operations in Nyarugenge District, were yesterday paraded to the media as Rwanda National Police (RNP) continued to send a strong message and maintained its pace in breaking the chain of supply.}

    The suspects were arrested in the sectors of Gitega Nyarugenge and Rwezamenyo.

    At least 300kgs of cannabis was recovered from the suspects.

    They include wholesalers who owned a depot where at least six sacks were recovered.

    Others include self-styled retailers on cannabis.

    One of the suspects, Marie Ange Uwamahoro was arrested at the Central teaching hospital of Kigali (CHUK) where she was attempting to deliver about 120 pellets of cannabis to a prisoner, who had been taken there for treatment.

    Uwamahoro had covered the pellets in polythene bags and concealed them in five-litre jerrycan, which was full of milk.

    Two other sisters, aged 17 and 18, were arrested in Rwezamenyo with over 4000 pellets concealer in a water tank, which they had buried under their bed, where they had dug a hole.

    Rwanda National Police (RNP) spokesperson, Assistant Commissioner of Police (ACP) Theos Badege said that efforts against narcotic drugs continue to gain momentum, a reason as to why more drug dealers continue to be arrested and substances seized.

    “It’s said that one kilogramme of cannabis has 100 pellets, which are smoked by about 200 people. Those are 200 people poisoned just by one kilogramme. We call for strong efforts by Rwandans to break chains of supply and reverse the problem from the roots,” ACP Badege said.

    “The campaign and operations against drug abuse are mainly geared towards breaking the chain of supply. The best part in this fight is that the public have owned it and they are the main source of information on suppliers in their communities, which is a big step forward.”

    According to Police, although drug related crimes are on decline, partly due to vigorous community policing measures adopted, there’s increased involvement of women compared to the past.

    On several occasion, women have been arrested transporting cannabis in pumpkins carrying them at the back guising as babies and concealing them in veils.

    According to the Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Gender and Family Promotion, Nadine Umutoni Gatsinzi, women are custodians of values, which they should strive for.

    “First, dealing in narcotic drugs is criminal. It’s a crime that causes insecurity to societies, destroys families and affect behaviors of children,” the PS said.

    “But as women, we are also the heart of the family and the country in general, and we play a vital role in passing good values and proper upbringing of children. A woman should stand for such values, maintain their dignity, and join police efforts in fighting the dealers to save our children and the future leaders,” she said.

    Source:Police

  • Whole-body vibration may be as effective as regular exercise

    {Mouse study is the first to show less strenuous alternative can benefit bone health.}

    A less strenuous form of exercise known as whole-body vibration (WBV) can mimic the muscle and bone health benefits of regular exercise in mice, according to a new study published in the Endocrine Society’s journal Endocrinology.

    WBV consists of a person sitting, standing or lying on a machine with a vibrating platform. When the machine vibrates, it transmits energy to the body, and muscles contract and relax multiple times during each second.

    Many people find it challenging to exercise regularly and that is contributing to the obesity and diabetes epidemics. These disorders can increase the risk of bone fractures. Physical activity can help to decrease this risk and reduce the negative metabolic effects of each condition.

    “Our study is the first to show that whole-body vibration may be just as effective as exercise at combatting some of the negative consequences of obesity and diabetes,” said the study’s first author, Meghan E. McGee-Lawrence, Ph.D., of Augusta University in Augusta, Ga. “While WBV did not fully address the defects in bone mass of the obese mice in our study, it did increase global bone formation, suggesting longer-term treatments could hold promise for preventing bone loss as well.”

    To conduct the study, researchers examined two groups of 5-week-old male mice. One group consisted of normal mice, while the other group was genetically unresponsive to the hormone leptin, which promotes feelings of fullness after eating. Mice from each group were assigned to sedentary, WBV or treadmill exercise conditions.

    After a week-long period to grow used to the exercise equipment, the groups of mice began a 12-week exercise program. The mice in the WBV group underwent 20 minutes of WBV at a frequency of 32 Hz with 0.5g acceleration each day. Mice in the treadmill group walked for 45 minutes daily at a slight incline. For comparison, the third group did not exercise. Mice were weighed weekly during the study.

    The genetically obese and diabetic mice showed similar metabolic benefits from both WBV and exercising on the treadmill. Obese mice gained less weight after exercise or WBV than obese mice in the sedentary group, although they remained heavier than normal mice. Exercise and WBV also enhanced muscle mass and insulin sensitivity in the genetically obese mice. Although there were no significant effects in the young healthy mice, the low-intensity exercise and WBV protocols were designed for successful completion by obese mice. These findings suggest that WBV may be a useful supplemental therapy to combat metabolic dysfunction in individuals with morbid obesity.

    “These results are encouraging,” McGee-Lawrence said. “However, because our study was conducted in mice, this idea needs to be rigorously tested in humans to see if the results would be applicable to people.”

    Many people find it challenging to exercise regularly and that is contributing to the obesity and diabetes epidemics. A much less strenuous activity, whole-body vibration, can mimic the muscle and bone health benefits of regular exercise.

    Source:Science Daily

  • DIGP Marizamunda calls for conclusive investigations

    {The Deputy Inspector General of Police (DIGP) in charge of Administration and Personnel, Juvenal Marizamunda has challenged police officers to always ensure “conclusive investigations” and enough evidence for effective judicial process.}

    The DIGP made the remarks on March 15 while officiating at the closing of the week-long criminal investigations of 15 officers, held at the Rwanda National Police (RNP) General Headquarters in Kacyiru.

    The course was organised in partnership with the Federal Police of German.

    DIGP Marizamunda said that protection of crime scenes and evidences are prerequisite for justice to be served.

    He asked officers to ensure that potential physical evidence are not tainted, destroyed or over-looked, which will yield reliable information to aid investigations.

    “You were trained and the skills you acquired should make a difference in professional investigations and execution of your duties”

    The event was also attended by the Germany ambassador to Rwanda, Dr. Peter Woeste.

    Amb. Woeste hailed the existing working relations between Germany and Rwanda National Police.

    While commending the professionalism of RNP, the ambassador challenged the trainees to further improve that image by putting the use the acquired skills to ensure that people acquire the justice they deserve.

    The officers acquired skills in crime scene investigations focusing on finger print search, identification and preservation of evidence, among others.

    The training was in line with RNP’s continued improvement in professional service delivery.

    Source:Police

  • Discovery of an HIV reservoir marker: New avenue toward eliminating the virus

    {French researchers have identified a marker that makes it possible to differentiate “dormant” HIV-infected cells from healthy cells. This discovery will make it possible to isolate and analyze reservoir cells which, by silently hosting the virus, are responsible for its persistence even among patients receiving antiviral treatment, whose viral load is undetectable. It offers new therapeutic strategies for targeting infected cells. This research is part of the ANRS strategic program “Réservoirs du VIH.” It is the result of a collaboration between the CNRS, Montpellier University, Inserm, the Institut Pasteur, the Henri-Mondor AP-HP hospital in Créteil, the Gui de Chauliac hospital (CHU de Montpellier) and the VRI (Vaccine Research Institute), and is published in the journal Nature on March 15, 2017. A patent owned by the CNRS has been filed for the diagnostic and therapeutic use of the identified marker.}

    Since 1996, there has been consensus among the scientific community that a cure for HIV will involve targeting “reservoir cells” that host the virus in the organisms of patients undergoing triple therapy. HIV can remain hidden in these reservoirs, in latent form, for several decades, eluding the immune system’s response and antiviral treatments, without any viral protein being expressed. But if treatment ceases, the virus massively proliferates and the disease progresses again. Patients must therefore receive treatment for life. To envisage eliminating this dormant virus, a first stage consists in distinguishing the HIV-infected reservoir cells from their healthy counterpart cells, which resemble them to a very large degree. This is what has been achieved by a team of researchers, who have identified a marker of reservoir cells: a protein present only on the surface of infected cells.

    Hypothesizing that HIV might leave a mark on the surface of its host cell, researchers from the Institut de génétique humaine (CNRS/Montpellier University) first worked in vitro on an infection model developed in their laboratory. After comparing infected cells and healthy cells, they noticed one particular protein, coded by a gene among the hundred of those expressed in a specific way by infected cells. Present only on the surface of the infected cells, the CD32a protein thus met, in vitro, the criteria of a reservoir cell marker. This was then confirmed by experiments on clinical samples. By studying blood samples from 12 patients living with HIV and receiving treatment, the researchers isolated the cells expressing the marker and observed that almost all were HIV carriers. In vitro, the activation of these cells induced a production of viruses capable of reinfecting healthy cells whereas their elimination entailed a significant delay in viral production.

    In the fight against HIV, this discovery paves the way to a better fundamental understanding of viral reservoirs, which it will now be possible to isolate more easily and analyze directly. In the longer term, it should lead to therapeutic strategies aiming to eliminate the latent virus from the organism and make remission — at least temporary — possible in the absence of antiviral treatments.

    Attempt to describe the discovery of CD32A as a marker of VIH1 reservoir cells by Hyber.

    Source:Science Daily

  • Rutsiro: Students of GS Kigamba form anti-GBV club

    {Students of Groupe Scolaire Kigamba in Rutsiro District have stepped in to boost the efforts against gender based violence by forming an anti-crime club through which they will discuss and raise awareness against the vice.}

    The establishment of the club was a result of the Police anti-crime awareness to about 700 students of GS Kigamba on March 13, which mainly focused on strengthening partnership and breaking silence in human rights violations in homes and communities, such as those related to gender.

    Assistant Inspector of Police (AIP) Jean Bosco Mugenzi, the District Community Liaison Officer of Rutsiro, while addressing the students, urged them not to keep quiet on injustices they witness or face either in their homes or communities.

    “You are equally custodians of the law, and you have been empowered like any other Rwandan to protect the vulnerable by reporting any injustice or crime you witness,” AIP Mugenzi said.

    He further sensitized them on dangers of abusing illicit drugs, introduced them on the meaning of human trafficking and methods used to lure victims.

    The campaign was also organized in partnership with Rwanda Youth Volunteers in Community Policing (RYVCP), which was represented by its district coordinator, Joseph Uwimana.

    The school head-teacher, Boniface Biziyaremye, who commended Rwanda National Police (RNP) for the guidance given to the aspiring future leaders, and pledged the school support for the effectiveness of the formed anti-GBV club.

    Currently, there are 60 anti-crime clubs in Rutsiro, with 49 of them in schools. There are over 1500 anti-crime clubs across the country, majority in schools.

    Source:Police