Author: Théophile Niyitegeka

  • Youth to converge in Burundi for a peace run

    {Dubbed the Bujumbura Peace Run, the event is one of several activities to promote the Burundi peace process and East African Community integration.}

    The run, whose launch coincided with the start of the AMF Burundi Chapter last Thursday, is the brain child of a youth group Afrika Mashariki Fest (AMF).

    AMF is a regional youth platform that uses art and sports in its advocacy for the promotion of regional integration.

    Uganda’s ambassador to Burundi Maj. Gen. Matayo Kyaligonza, who also as Dean of Diplomatic Corps was chief guest, thanked AMF for their efforts to mobilise youths.

    “By using sports you are using the right medium to mobilise youth. Sport transcends boundaries with its power to unite and bring happiness.”

    The launch took place at Bujumbura’s Bel Air Hotel also in the presence of the country’s representatives to the East African Assembly.

    Burundi’s minister for East African Affairs Leontine Nzeyimana, Kenya’s duputy ambassador to Burundi Sylvane Chongwony, Bujumbura Mayor Freddy Mbonimpa and Burundi Athletics Federation president Dieudonne Kwizera all welcomed the initiative.

    “We are here to preach peace, cohesion and patriotism to fellow youth as fundamentals of development of Burundi,” stated AMF CEO Ronnex Kisembo.

    The youth have been taking a back seat in the region’s integration, Kisembo noted.

    “There is an urgent need for the youth to rise and become front runners of this campaign.”

    Kisembo thanked all authorities in Burundi for not only welcoming AMF but also embracing the idea.

    Fabrice Niragira will head the AMF Burundi chapter. Fidelite Ngenzi will serve as general secretary, Frank Ndisanze (treasurer), Landry Nokira (publicity), Aldine Nezerwe (marketing).

    AMF was launched in Uganda in 2013.It has since staged two half marathons in Kampala.

    It spread out to Kenya last year where it staged a half marathon in Mombasa.

    Uganda’s ambassador to Burundi Maj. Gen. Matayo Kyaligonza (in blue) at the lauch of the peace run .

    Source:The New Vision

  • DRC dubs video massacre fake, but admits ‘excesses’

    {Kinshasa – A Democratic Republic of Congo spokesperson condemned as “ridiculous montage” a video purporting to show a massacre of unarmed civilians by DRC soldiers (FARDC).}

    But confusion reigned after a later government statement referred to possible “excesses and abuse” by soldiers, two of whom it said were on trial for unspecified charges.

    The seven-minute video, which appears to be taken by cellphone, was provided to AFP late Friday by a Congo specialist, who said it might have been filmed on February 11 or 12.

    “What kind of army would let someone film while they kill?” said government spokesman Lambert Mende.

    “This is the work of desperate people. It’s clumsy and ridiculous. It’s worthy of scenes from a Rambo movie,” he said.

    But just hours after Mende’s comments, a government statement said there had indeed been clashes, in December, in the village of Mwanza Lomba, which the video purported to show, between a troop patrol and the “terrorist group” Kamwina Nsapu as well as “other armed assailants”.

    The government statement added: “Any excesses and abuse signalled (ascribed to) elements of the FARDC in this operation” had been “taken into account in accordance with the military penal code at the end of this operation last year.

    According to the statement, two soldiers, including an officer, “are already facing military justice” without specifying the charges against them.

    Reported clashes

    A spokesman for the UN mission for the stabilisation of the country, MONUSCO, could not be reached Saturday, but a source in the mission said it was investigating “the video and other claims” regarding operations in the Kasai regions.

    Unconfirmed reports have indicated that 50 to 100 people had been killed in clashes between government forces and supporters of a slain tribal chief in the Kasai-Central region in the south of the country.

    An AFP analysis was unable to confirm when or where the video was made.

    It shows a group of eight soldiers speaking Lingala, the language used by DRC’s army, and Swahili, spoken in the east of the country.

    The soldiers advance on a group of people a few dozen metres away who are singing “Our land, our land” in Tshiluba, a language of Kasai-Central.

    “These bastards, they’re coming to get killed”, one can be heard saying, and then an order is shouted: “Advance! Shoot!”

    The soldiers begin firing, without any attempt to find shelter: Nobody is seen shooting back.

    The shooting stops, and the video shows the soldiers amid the bodies littering the ground. They fire at some to finish them off, starting with a woman.

    As the camera lingers on one victim in his death throes, a man says, “you’re dying for nothing, for nothing.”

    The person narrating the film earlier set the scene.

    “Here we are in the village of Mwanza-Lomba, we came across them today. We have shown them that power is the law.

    “There are lots of them but we’ll chase them to infinity, he said.

    “Look at them, they’re armed with slingshots, wear red scarves around their heads; they have grisgris on their belts,” he says, referring to amulets associated with voodoo.

    Mwanza-Lomba is in Kasai-Oriental, between Mbuji-Mayi, the capital of the state, and Kananga, the capital of Kasai-Central.

    The region has been wracked by violence since a tribal chief, Kamwina Nsapu, was killed by government forces in mid-August.

    More than two dozen people have been killed in the area since the start of the year, and the United Nations mission in the country has said it will send at least 100 peacekeepers to the Kasai-Central region.

    Source:AFP

  • Fayez al-Sarraj not hurt after convoy comes under fire

    {No injuries as motorcade carrying prime minister of Libya’s UN-backed government comes under fire in Tripoli.}

    Unidentified gunmen have opened fire on a convoy carrying the prime minister of Libya’s UN-backed government, Fayez al-Sarraj, in Tripoli without causing any casualties, according to his administration.

    Ashraf al-Thulthi, the administration spokesman, said on Monday that the incident occurred as the motorcade passed near the Abu Salim district of the Libyan capital.

    “All the cars were armoured-plated, and there were no injuries,” he said, adding an investigation was under way to identify the attackers.

    It was unclear whether it was a targeted attack, Thulthi said.

    The convoy was also carrying Abdurrahman Swehli, the head of the state council, Najmi Nakua, the commander of the presidential guard, according to Thulthi.

    Sarraj’s Government of National Accord (GNA) said in a statement that Sarraj, Swehli and Nakua had opened a new criminal investigations unit in Tripoli on Monday morning, and published pictures of the three at the event. It did not mention the shooting.

    Sarraj and the GNA’s other leaders arrived in Tripoli last March following a UN-backed deal signed in late 2015.

    Yet, his Tripoli-based government has struggled to impose its authority, particularly in eastern Libya where a rival administration holds sway.

    It was unclear whether it was a targeted attack

    Source:Al Jazeera

  • Robert Mugabe turns 93, vowing to rule on in Zimbabwe

    {Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe, the world’s oldest national ruler, turns 93 on Tuesday, defiantly vowing to remain in power despite growing signs of frailty and failing health.}

    He will celebrate with his staff in a private ceremony in Harare while supporters use state media to send their annual gushing messages of goodwill and congratulations.

    The main celebrations will be held Saturday at Matobo National Park outside Bulawayo, Zimbabwe’s second-largest city, and are expected to attract thousands of officials and ZANU-PF party faithful.

    Large game animals are often slaughtered for the occasion. In previous years Mugabe has reportedly been offered elephants, buffalo and impala for the feast.

    {{Call to step down }}

    Mugabe has ruled out any prospect of retiring soon, saying that ZANU-PF officials believe there is no “acceptable” alternative.

    “The call to step down must come from my party… In such circumstances I will step down,” the state-owned Sunday Mail newspaper quoted Mugabe as saying in an interview aired late Monday.

    “They want me to stand for elections… If I feel that I can’t do it any more, I will say so to my party so that they relieve me. But for now, I think I can’t say so,” he said.

    “The majority of the people feel that there is no replacement, a successor who to them is acceptable,” Mugabe added.

    The veteran leader came to power when Zimbabwe won independence in 1980 and his rule has been criticised for ruthless repression of dissent, election rigging, and for causing the country’s economic collapse.

    {{Advanced age }}

    Several incidents in recent years have highlighted his advanced age — including a fall in February 2015 at Harare airport.

    In September of the same year he read a speech to parliament apparently unaware that he had delivered exactly the same address a month earlier.

    Despite growing calls to step aside, his party has endorsed him as its candidate for general elections next year, and he remains widely respected as a liberation hero by other African leaders.

    On Friday, his wife, Grace, claimed that Mugabe would be the voters’ choice even after he dies.

    She has also vowed to use a wheelchair to transport him to election rallies if needed.

    Mugabe has avoided naming a successor, and his party is divided between factions hoping to succeed him.

    {{Mugabe’s successor }}

    Grace, 51, was appointed head of the ruling party’s women’s wing in a surprise move that could make her a possible successor to Mugabe.

    Another leading candidate is Mugabe’s vice-president Emmerson Mnangagwa.

    Last year, security forces brutally quelled a series of street protests in Harare, a rare public expression of opposition to Mugabe’s regime.

    According to Bloomberg News, Zimbabwe’s economic output has halved since 2000, when many white-owned farms were seized by ZANU-PF supporters, leaving the key agricultural sector in ruins.

    President of Zimbabwe Robert Mugabe at the African Union summit in Addis Ababa on January 30, 2017. He has said he will not retire.

    Source:AFP

  • South Sudan suffering ‘man-made’ famine

    {South Sudan on Monday declared famine in some parts of the country, with more than three years of war leaving nearly five million hungry in what aid groups called a “man-made” tragedy.}

    Isaiah Chol Aruai, chairman of South Sudan’s National Bureau of Statistics, said some parts of the northern Greater Unity region “are classified in famine, or… risk of famine”.

    Aid agencies said 100,000 people were affected by the famine, which threaten to affect a further one million people in the coming months.

    “A formal famine declaration means people have already started dying of hunger. The situation is the worst hunger catastrophe since fighting erupted more than three years ago,” said a statement by the World Food Programme, UN children’s agency UNICEF and the Food and Agricultural Organisation (FAO).

    {{Coup against Kiir }}

    South Sudan, the world’s youngest nation, was engulfed by civil war in 2013 after President Salva Kiir accused his rival and former deputy Riek Machar of plotting a coup against him.

    An August 2015 peace deal was left in tatters when fighting broke out in Juba in July last year.

    Violence — initially between ethnic Dinka supporters of Kiir and ethnic Nuer supporters of Machar — has since spread to other parts of the country, engulfing other ethnic groups and grievances.

    The United Nations has warned of potential genocide and ethnic cleansing and there is no prospect of peace in sight.

    {{Humanitarians under attack }}

    Oil-rich Unity State, a traditional Nuer homeland and Machar’s birthplace, has been one of the flashpoints in the conflict and has flipped several times between government and rebel forces.

    “The convergence of evidence shows that the long-term effects of the conflict coupled with high food prices, economic crisis, low agricultural production and depleted livelihood options” have resulted in 4.9 million people going hungry, Aruai said.

    That figure represents 42 percent of the country’s population.

    The famine classification is made according to an internationally recognised sliding scale of hunger in which an extreme lack of food has led to starvation and death.

    {{Major food crisis }}

    “The main tragedy of the report that has been launched today… is that the problem is man-made,” said Eugene Owusu, the United Nation’s Humanitarian Coordinator for South Sudan.

    “The underlining drivers have been there for some time and we have all known that we have a major food crisis.”

    He said conflict and insecurity for humanitarian workers, who had suffered attacks while carrying out their work, and the looting of “humanitarian assets” had exacerbated the crisis.

    In September last year, several aid agencies had to pull out of the famine-hit area of Leer because of escalating fighting between the two forces.

    “I would like to use this opportunity to call on the government, the warring parties and all actors to support humanitarians to provide the necessary access so we can continue to bring lifesaving services to those in need,” Owusu said.

    {{Agriculture disrupted }}

    According to aid groups, the number of people facing hunger is expected to rise to 5.5 million at the height of the lean season in July if nothing is done to curb the spread of the food crisis.

    “Many families have exhausted every means they have to survive,” said the FAO’s representative in South Sudan, Serge Tissot.

    “The people are predominantly farmers and war has disrupted agriculture. They’ve lost their livestock, even their farming tools. For months there has been a total reliance on whatever plants they can find and fish they can catch.”

    The famine declaration comes as millions across the Horn of Africa are going hungry due to a devastating drought following two failed rainy seasons.

    The UN said Monday it is “scaling up assistance and protection” in Somalia, as about 6.2 million Somalis, or half the country’s population, is in need of humanitarian assistance.

    Nearly 1 million children will be acutely malnourished.

    “The drought situation is deteriorating rapidly,” said Peter de Clercq, the humanitarian coordinator for Somalia. “Accelerated scale-up…assistance is required to avoid a dramatic rise in the number of malnourished children and a spike in mortality.”

    Famine last hit the region six years ago, killing an estimated 260,000 people in Somalia.

    The drought has also affected food security in South Sudan, however the biggest contributor to the famine is the inability of aid agencies to reach areas where the economy has collapsed due to the war.

    A mother breastfeeding her child who suffers acute malnutrition at the clinic run by Doctors Without Borders (MSF) in Aweil, northern Bahr al-Ghazal, South Sudan on October 11, 2016.

    Source:AFP

  • Nigeria urges AU to intervene over ‘South Africa killings’

    {Nigeria on Monday urged the African Union to step in to stop what it said were “xenophobic attacks” on its citizens and other Africans in South Africa.}

    The presidency said there was a need for the continental body to “intervene urgently,” claiming that in the last two years “about 116” Nigerians had been killed, including 20 last year.

    “This is unacceptable to the people and government of Nigeria,” a senior presidential aide on foreign affairs, Abike Dabiri-Erewa, said in an emailed statement.

    There was no independent verification of the claimed number of deaths, which may have been the result of wider criminal activities rather than anti-immigrant sentiment.

    According to the Nigerian Union in South Africa, there are about 800,000 Nigerians in South Africa, many of them living in Johannesburg.

    The community was hit badly by the wave of xenophobic violence that hit the country in April 2015 but South African police said only seven Nigerians died.

    An independent watchdog has said 640 people died from police brutality or in custody in South Africa.

    Dabiri-Erewa renewed Abuja’s call on the government in Pretoria to take “decisive and definite measures” to protect Nigerian citizens and other Africans in South Africa.

    She said there was credible information that more attacks were being planned for Wednesday and Thursday.

    Nigeria has met senior South African officials, including the resident high commissioner to protest against the attacks on its citizens.

    South Africans police and government officials were not immediately available to comment.

    A demonstrator holds a banner through in Johannesburg on April 23, 2015 during a march gathering several thousands of people to protest against the recent wave of xenophobic attacks in South Africa. Nigeria says over dozens of its citizens have been killed in xenophobic attacks in South Africa in the last two years.

    Source:AFP

  • A tonne of ivory, hacked into pieces, seized in Uganda

    {Ugandan authorities have seized more than a tonne of ivory, chopped into small pieces and treated with a chemical intended to prevent it being detected, the national wildlife protection service has said.}

    The haul was made in a Kampala suburb on Saturday, before it could be loaded at Entebbe international airport and flown off to an unknown destination, the authorities said.

    A Liberian and two suspects from Guinea Bissau have been arrested in Kampala, Uganda’s wildlife authority spokesman Simplicious Gessa told AFP.

    {{Laws lax }}

    “In a joint operation with police, we recovered over 1,000kg of ivory suspected smuggled from either Tanzania or Democratic Republic of Congo and the operation is ongoing,” Gessa said.

    He added that the Ugandan authorities suspect the smuggling network goes beyond the three in custody “involving shipping agents and other officials as the consignment was suspected to be going through Entebbe (airport)”.

    The traffickers may have used Uganda “because our laws are a little lax on trafficking”, calling for harsher laws against wildlife smugglers “so that Uganda is not used as a smuggling route”.

    {{30,000 killed }}

    Some 30,000 African elephants are illegally killed each year for their ivory tusks, mainly to satisfy demand in the Asian market for products coveted as a traditional medicine or as status symbols.

    Uganda is a key transit country for the illegal trade, especially from Congo’s huge forests.

    The trade is estimated to be worth $600 million annually.

    According to the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), the African elephant population recorded its biggest drop in a quarter century last year, with an estimated population of 415,000 elephants, 111,000 fewer than a decade ago.

    Officials from the Uganda customs and revenue authority check elephant tusks seized at the Entebbe international airport on June 19, 2012. A tonne of elephant tusks were seized at the airport on February 20, 2017.

    Source:AFP

  • Kenya School of Law ordered to admit Ugandans

    {The High Court in Nairobi, Kenya has quashed a decision by the Kenya School of Law (KSL) to lock out Ugandan, South Sudanese, Tanzanian, Rwandese and Burundian students from KSL’s Advocates Training Programme (ATP).}

    One needs to go through the ATP to practice law in Kenya.

    Justice John M. Mativo said KSL’s decision violates Article 27 of Kenya’s Constitution, 2010.

    “…the decision [by KSL] offends the petitioners constitutionally guaranteed rights…” Justice Mativo ruled on Monday, February 20.

    The judgment – assuming Kenya’s Council of Legal Education (CLE) and KSL do not appeal – settles the matter of admitting non–Kenyans, who possess undergraduate Law qualifications, into KSL.

    KSL had in November 2016 barred Ugandans and a South Sudanese from the ATP, arguing they that were ineligible.

    Some of the students had undertaken their undergraduate law studies in either universities in Kenya or Uganda.

    KSL’s decision came on the heels of a directive by CLE.

    CLE, drawing from Kenya’s Advocates Act, had opined that for non-Kenyan East Africans to be admitted by KSL for the ATP they must have been admitted as advocates in their respective countries of origin.

    Section 12 (a) of the Act says ‘No person shall be admitted as an advocate unless he is a citizen of Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania and (b) he is duly qualified according to Section 13 of the Act.

    Section 13 (1) adds that ‘A person shall be duly qualified if (a) having passed the relevant examinations of any recognised university in Kenya he holds, or has become eligible for the conferment of, a degree in law of that university.’

    The judge notes that KSL has in the past been admitting and training East Africans.

    Indeed it has.

    But in 2016, it started referring some of them to Riara University, a new, private tertiary institution, “for remedial classes” to reportedly meet the threshold prescribed under Part Two of the Second Schedule of Kenya’s Legal Education Act.

    Though Ugandans went for the remedial classes, CLE later said non–Kenyans are ineligible for admission to Kenya’s Advocates Training Programne.

    At some point last year, KSL, acting on directives from CLE, stopped up to 75 Ugandan students from sitting for bar examinations, prompting the students to petition the Milimani High Court.

    The court ruled that they should be allowed to sit for their examinations.

    Justice Mativo, however, said on Monday, “A decision which violates the Constitution [of Kenya, 2010] is void.”

    One needs to go through the ATP to practice law in Kenya

    Source:Daily Monitor

  • There’s a lot to learn from Isange,India’s VP wife

    {The wife of the Vice President of India, Mrs. Salma Ansari, has commended Rwanda’s holistic approach of setting up Isange One Stop Centres to support the vulnerable victims of gender based violence and child abuse.}

    While visiting the centre at Kacyiru District hospital on Monday, where she was given an insight into the idea behind its establishment and services offered, Mrs Ansari said that although India has almost a similar set up, there’s a lot to learn from Rwanda’s approach.

    Mrs. Ansari is in the country accompanying her husband and the Vice-President of India, Shri M Hamid Ansari, for a three-day visit.

    “We have such centres in India, but it’s always better to have new in puts…it is always nice to learn best practices… something new, which can also be very useful to us,” Ansari said.

    “This – Isange One Stop Centre – is a very impressive centre; how women are give care in times of crisis…looking into it in every detail; this is very inductive as a whole,” she added.

    She hastened to add that the mental, emotional and physical crisis that victims of GBV and child abuse pass through necessitates to best approach to rehabilitate the affected, and that Isange Stop Centre stands out.

    This, she underscored, is a great achievement worth of learning from.

    Isange, which started in 2009 as a pilot project, offers free psycho-socio, medical, legal and counseling services to victims of GBV and child abuse.

    Under the scale up programme, Isange has so far been established in at least 28 hospitals across the country as part of the grand programme to replica them in all district hospitals and health centres countrywide.

    Supt. Shafiga Murebwayire, the coordinator of Isange centres, said: “We do a lot of things to ensure that a victim gets all required services. We give them medical services through which we also get evidence to supplement judicial process against the culprit, and give them counseling to ensure that a victim is full rehabilitated, and victims get justice.”

    Isange, loosely translated as ‘feel at home’ is run by Rwanda National Police (RNP) in partnership with the ministries of Justice, Health, and Gender and Family Promotion, with the support of Imbuto Foundation and other partners.

    Mrs. Salma Ansari visiting Isange One Stop Center.
    Mrs. Salma Ansari signs in the visiting book at Isange One Stop Center.

    Source:Police

  • 30 qualities you need to be a true leader

    {To be a true leader, there are certain qualities you need to have. Check them out below.}

    1. Do not be scared of making mistakes.

    2. Avoid making the same mistake twice.

    3. Be a good listener.

    4. You don’t need to be aggressive when expressing yourself. Talk softly and make sense.

    5. Have a positive outlook. Tackle problems thinking you’re already going to solve.

    6. Know your responsibilities.

    7. Know what you rightfully deserve and don’t let anyone take them away from you.

    8. Be willing to help.

    9. Ask if you aren’t getting something right.

    10. Be honest in everything.

    11. If you’ve a great idea or a view you think people should hear about, just do it.

    12. Don’t take things to heart,

    13. Always keep learning.

    14. Don’t run away from challenges.

    15. Apologize when you need to. You will gain people’s respect in the long-run when you apologise.

    16. Always remember to say thank you. It will cost you nothing.

    17. Never stay at a place; keep improving.

    18. Respect everyone you come across, whether young or old.

    19. Be fearless and stand up for what is right.

    20. You have to be on time, every time.

    21. Don’t judge. Take people as they are.

    22. Be your biggest critic.

    23. Try to avoid conflicts as much as you can.

    24. Read a book every day.

    25. Have a plan and try to stick as closely to it as possible.

    26. Give people their due credit.

    27. Give people a chance.

    28. Don’t let people take you for granted. Be stern in your actions

    29. Make new friends whenever you can.

    30. Not everyone will like you but do not consider anyone as an enemy.

    Gandhi (left) and Mandela (right) strove for non violence.

    Source:Elcrema