Author: Théophile Niyitegeka

  • Kagame attends Munich Security Conference

    {President Paul Kagame is in Germany to attend a Munich Security Conference lasting three days. The meeting has brought together over 500 politicians from across the World.}

    It has also been attended by ministers of defense and others involved in security matters.

    Munich Security Conference discusses security, international political affairs, human rights and fighting terrorism.

    Munich Security Conference was held for the first time in 1963 in Munich city of German following the Second World War. It has since been held annually.

  • Come home, Burundi tells exiled nationals

    {The government of Burundi through its ministry of internal affairs and patriotic training is ready to welcome Burundians who are exiled as refugees.}

    This was announced by Pascal Barandagiye, the minister of home affairs and patriotic education.

    The minister was meeting a group of 34,705 Burundian refugees housed at Nakivale Refugee Settlement Camp. Barandagiye was accompanied by the Burundian ambassador to Uganda Jean Bosco Barege and other government officials from both Burundi and Uganda.

    Barandagiye assured Burundians in exile that the situation in Burundi is stable; explaining that what happened in 2015 is over adding that all Burundians at home are waiting to build a peaceful and stable nation. Barandagiye and his team had gone to talk them about repatriation. He asked the officials of UNCHR and the Ugandan government to work together with Burundi to take back all those who are ready to go.

    He however told them that the government of Burundi would not force anyone to back home but warned those who are sceptical and reluctant to repatriate that their status as refugees is temporary.

    “The purpose of our coming here was to tell you that the government of Burundi is ready to welcome you. We are here telling them to voluntarily go back home for those who feel that they are ready to go. Those who are not ready can still be sensitized till they feel they are ready to go” he said.

    Douglas Asiimwe, the officer in charge of refugee protection in the Prime Minister’s office said Uganda welcomes Burundi’s idea to repatriate its nationals as a durable solution to refugee problems. He said once they are ready and feel reasons that led to their going into exile ceased to exist, that Uganda and UNHCR are ready to support the move.

    He said they are going to continue to engage with them and build confidence in them to return home. Police tightens minister’s security Police heavily deployed and guarded Barandagiye to protect him from being attacked by angry refugees.

    The refugees were first angered by journalists’ cameras that started filming and photographing them shortly after the meeting had commenced. They were again angered by Barandagiye’s order that they should only ask questions not giving lamentations and speeches during a question and answer session.

    “Don’t photograph us, we are going away if they continue taking our pictures” some shouted. The situation was calmed by Asiimwe who cautioned refugees of their indiscipline and convinced them that the journalists were not from Burundi but from Ugandan and that their presence was for their well-being and would help them get more help from international organizations.

    “This is Uganda; you are under our protection and care. As a person in charge of refugees I want to see order here, when you are in Uganda you are under Ugandan laws; in Uganda we are not dis-organized. If you have come to disrupt this meeting you risk being arrested, media has a role of your well-being” Asiimwe warned.

    Refugees vow not to return home Some refugees expressed hesitation to return home. They said some of the things that pushed them out of their country including political discrimination still exist. They also fear persecution, harassment, physical and mental violence, ethnicity discrimination. “We can’t go there since what pushed us to flee is still there, the President is still there in his illegal term, they should have come to tell us that the President Nkurunziza has resigned and the killing of soldiers and policemen has stopped, there we can go back” one of the refugees said.

    “There is no security in Burundi; it is better we live here in the camp rather than going back” another said. A few of them especially those who came six years back indicated their readiness to return home. They also fear targeted albino killings in Burundi, a challenge they said has been there since 2010. In a four-page document they handed over to the delegation, the refugees added that children who were born in exile since 1965, 1972, 1988 and 1993 were forced to return to Burundi and are homeless because their properties were destroyed and their land was taken by leaders and security officers.

    Through UNHCR and the Uganda government, the refugees requested humanitarian organizations that are in charge of defending the international rights of refugees to seriously consider their outcry. They requested the government of Uganda to keep hosting them. They were concerned about Burundi’s withdrawal from the ICC and attributed this to the increasing killings.

    Pascal Barandagiye and his delegation talk to Burundian patients admitted at Nakivale Health Centre III.

    Source:The New Vision

  • Republic of Congo former spy chief dies under mysterious circumstances

    {The Republic of Congo’s former spy chief is dead.

    Colonel Marcel Ntsourou died on Friday morning at a military hospital in the capital Brazzaville.}

    Africanews spoke to one of his lawyers, Yvon Eric Ibouanga, who confirmed his death.

    “I was in court and my phone rang. It was his wife who was calling from France and she informed me that that her husband had collapsed in his cell and taken to the military hospital. I was forced to leave the court and wend to the military hospital where I saw that indeed the Colonel Marcel had died and his body was taken to the morgue at the university Hospital in Brazaville.”

    A former ally to president Denis Sassou Nguesso, until they fell out in 2012, the colonel was serving a life sentence with forced labour after being sentenced in September 2014.

    He had been arrested in December 2013, following violent clashes between his militia men and the Congolese army in the center of Brazzaville.

    The criminal court found him guilty of “rebellion, illegal possession of weapons of war and ammunition, murder, intentional assault and conspiracy.”

    Colonel Ntsourou fell into disgrace after he was blamed for an explosion at an arms depot at Mpila,a residential area in Brazzaville, which caused nearly 300 deaths on 4 March 2012.

    An investigation has been launched to unearth the cause of his death.

    Source:Africa News

  • TRA officials in trouble over narco smuggling

    The Drugs Control and Enforcement Authority (DCEA) is interrogating two officials of the Tanzania Revenue Authority (TRA) in connection with the alleged smuggling of ephedrine Precursor Chemicals.

    In similar vein, four people were yesterday arraigned at the Kisutu Resident Magistrate’s Court charged with illegal possession of drugs.

    DCEA, whose powers gained renewed momentum a week ago after President John Magufuli appointed its Commissioner General, Mr Rogers Sianga, insisted that it has launched a man hunt for two more officials who connived in the smuggling of the drug haul.

    DCEA Commissioner of Operations, Mr Mihayo Msikhela, said at a news conference in Dar es Salaam yesterday that after Dr Magufuli’s appointment of the Commissioner General and two other commissioners of Operations and Intelligence respectively, the authority launched a countrywide operation to crack the whip on all criminals involved in narcotic drugs trade, as directed by the head of state.

    He, however, fell short of disclosing the names of the TRA officials for fear of jeopardising the on- g o i n g investigation. “The crackdown on the narcotic drug dealers, which kicked off on February 13, has yielded positive results in many regions as we have managed to arrest many suspects,’’ said Mr Msikhela. According to the DCEA Commissioner of Operations, Simiyu Region had the widest farms of marijuana that were destroyed.

    “In Simiyu Region we destroyed 40 hectares followed by Tarime/ Rorya which had 36 hectares of marijuana,’’ he insisted. In the operation which was done in collaboration with all regional police commanders (RPCs), Mr Msikhela said that the law enforcers seized heroin, marijuana and khat.

    According to him, in the antidrugs crusade, no stone shall be left unturned regardless of the status and position of suspects. He asked all Tanzanians to volunteer information that shall result in the arrest of drug dealers and consumers.

    In another development, four people appeared before the Kisutu Resident Magistrate’s Court in Dar es Salaam charged with unlawful possession of narcotic drugs. They are Shaban Ndokoi (28), an entertainer; Simon Esabius, alias Nasiss (36), who is a businessman; Justine Luseba (39), a resident of Kunduchi Mtongani and Hemed Rashid (45), who is a fisherman at Ferry in Kigamboni District. Two of the accused persons, Ndokoi and Esabius, pleaded guilty to the charges before Principal Resident Magistrate Huruma Shaidi.

    The magistrate ordered them to remain in remand until February 20 when the prosecution will present a memorandum of facts to the cases. In another court chamber presided over by Principal Resident Magistrate Thomas Simba, the remaining two accused persons, Luseba and Rashid, denied the charges against them. They were remanded after failing to meet bail conditions. The magistrate had ordered each of the accused to secure two reliable sureties. Every surety, according to the magistrate, was to sign a bond of 10m/- .

    The two cases will be mentioned on March 2, as investigations, the prosecution said, had not been completed. State Attorney Estazia Wilson, for the prosecution, told the court that on February 2, this year, at Mwananyamala A within Kinondoni District, Ndokoi was found in unlawful possession of Heroin Hydrochloride weighing 1.21 grams.

    It is alleged that on the same day at Kunduchi Mtongani area in Kinondoni District in the city, Luseba was found in unlawful possession of Heroin Hydrochloride weighing 0.89 grams.

    The prosecution told the court further that on the same day at Ferry Tandavamba area in Kigamboni District in Dar es Salaam, Rashid was found illegally possessing 0.21 grams of Heroin hydrochloride.

    In addition, the prosecution alleged that on February 5, this year, at Kawe Makazi Mapya area in Kinondoni District, Esabius was found in unlawful possession of cannabis sativa (bhang) weighing 16.69 grams.

    Source:Daily News

  • Malawi to learn from Rwanda on programme implementation

    {The Malawi/Rwanda Joint Permanent Commission of Cooperation (JPCC) will among others pave way for Malawi to learn from Rwanda on programmes implementations.}

    Speaking during the official opening of a three day session, Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation, Francis Kasaila said Malawi as a country has well documented programmes, but lack of commitment to implementing them was a major problem.

    “We want to learn from Rwanda on how they implemented their programmes. They came here to learn about vision 2020 and they have implemented it very well.

    “Part of the vision 2020 was that Malawi should not have a thatched house and it is surprising to note that our friends in Rwanda have managed to do away with grass thatched houses through the ‘bye-bye Nyakasi initiative’,” he explained.

    Kasaila added that Rwanda is also the best country in Africa on public service delivery and that Malawi will be learning more to enhance its public reform with the aim of increasing efficiency in public service delivery.

    The Malawi minister said despite little progress, it has started providing subsidized housing materials to the rural population for them to build decent houses and implementing the greenbelt initiative some of which were in the vision 2020.

    Rwanda has also made tremendous strides in the health sector, tourism, gender and public service reforms among others.

    According to Kasaila the meeting is expected to deepen bilateral cooperation between the two countries and urged the delegates to share strategies and best practices to successfully implement the African Union (AU) 2063 Agenda and the 2030 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

    Rwandan’s Permanent Secretary for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Cooperation and Leader of Delegation, Claude Nikobisanzwe said the meeting will enhance the bilateral relationship commitment by the head of states.

    Convening of the meeting is the fulfillment of the commitment made by the two governments during the signing of the General Cooperation Agreement for the establishment of the JPCC between the two countries in July 2016, on the sidelines of the 27th Ordinary session of the African Union Summit in Kigali Rwanda.

    The meeting is expected to deliberate and possibly finalise agreements and Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) on diplomacy in health, agriculture, sports, arts and culture, local government, education and defense and security among others.

    Malawi Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation, Francis Kasaila.

    Source:Nyasa Times

  • CNBC Africa opens new studio at The Kigali Convention Centre

    {CNBC Africa, first in business worldwide, today announced it will launch a brand new, state-of-the-art television studio and lounge in the Kigali Convention Centre.}

    This comes as the pan-African business and finance channel marks its one year anniversary in Rwanda. The new studio in the heart of one of Africa’s leading Convention Centre’s brings CNBC Africa and its viewers, one step closer to some of the major gatherings scheduled to be held at the venue over the next few years.

    Since launching an initial presence in Rwanda in February 2016, CNBC Africa has covered such major events as the World Economic Forum on Africa, held in Kigali last year, along with coverage of the African Union Summit and East African leg of the All Africa Business Leaders Awards, the continents leading business award.

    Roberta Naicker, Managing Director of the ABN Group said: “This television studio in the Kigali Convention Centre marks yet another step towards our ongoing commitment to not only Rwanda, but East Africa, and in telling the African economic story from all corners of the continent. As the channel celebrates its 10th Anniversary on June 1, we are excited to be able to add this important presence on the front line of one of the most high-tech convention center’s to our content offering.”

    The new studio will prove to be of immense value during key events at the convention centre as CNBC Africa will be able to tap into some of the high profile delegates and speakers, first and live. The adjacent CNBC Africa lounge will be a first-class space for guests to wait and relax ahead of their television appearance.

    Rwandan Minister of Finance, Claver Gatete, will be cutting the ribbon to open the second CNBC Africa television studio in Rwanda.

    Source:CNBC Africa

  • Fight against illicit drugs gain momentum as more are seized, destroyed in Kamonyi

    Thousands of residents of Kamonyi District turned up for the public exercise to destroy illicit drugs as the police warned of intensified operations to bring to justice defiant drug dealers.

    At least psychotropic substances that include illicit gin, cannabis and other locally made harmful drinks destroyed, were seized in varied police operations in the last one year.

    At least over Rwf15 million was spent by the dealers in this illegal business, which police called “avoidable loss.”

    The illicit gin mainly included Kanyanga and others packed in banned plastic bags such as African Gin, Blue Sky, Chief and Zebra waragi, whose alcoholic content are said to be above the recommended 45 percent maximum under the law governing narcotic drugs, psychotropic substances and precursors in Rwanda.

    The mayor of Kamonyi, Emmanuel Bahizi, while speaking to the residents on February 15, appealed to the residents to own their security by reporting anyone that could be involved in distilling or trafficking the psychotropic substances.

    “Make security equally your daily responsibility, like development. Your prosperity in your business and your safety in whatever you do or at home depends on the state of security that exist, and these drugs are the obstacle to harmony in family, influence users to commit theft, rape women and defile minors, and worse still, has led to manslaughter and murder. Put a red line on that by reporting any drug dealer to police,” Bahizi said.

    The District Police Commander, Chief Inspector of Police (CIP) of Kamonyi, Ndahimana Gisanga, warned that fighting drugs, among high impact crimes, remains one of the priorities and urged the residents to equally make it their priority in reporting anyone involved.

    “We compiled 107 dossiers of all people who were arrested red-handed with these illicit drugs we have destroyed, which were forwarded to prosecution. Some of these people are facing varied prison sentences while others are still under judicial process. We will not tolerate anyone who tries to destabilize the social wellbeing of the people,” CIP Gisanga warned.

    The exercise was also witnessed by Prosecutor Christa B. Kamikazi.

    Fighting drug related crimes and breaking the chain of supply in particular, is among the Rwanda National Police (RNP) priority fields in crime prevention.

    Early this month, Police in Kigali also disposed of an assortment of narcotic substances including 556 carton of banned illicit gins and over 3000 pellet of cannabis valued at about Rwf15.3million.

    This was after other drugs including 200 kilogrammes of cannabis, valued at over Rwf46.4 million that were seized in Gasabo last month.

    In the same way, police in Musanze and Gicumbi districts seized and destroyed psychotropic substances worth over Rwf46 million, in the last three months.

    The increase in the seized narcotic drugs, police say, is due to increased public awareness that has strengthened partnership and information exchange with the people, and intensified operations especially in prone border districts.

    Source:Police

  • Scientifically-designed fasting diet lowers risks for major diseases

    A phase III trial of a fasting-like diet shows the greatest benefit for ‘at-risk’ patients

    What if you could lose weight and reduce your risk of life-threatening disease without any changes in what you eat — other than a five-day special diet once every few months?

    That’s what happened for 71 adults who were placed on three cycles of a low-calorie, “fasting-mimicking” diet. The phase II trial, conducted by researchers at the USC Leonard Davis School of Gerontology, demonstrated a host of benefits from the regimen.

    The diet reduced cardiovascular risk factors including blood pressure, signs of inflammation (measured by C-reactive protein levels), as well as fasting glucose and reduced levels of IGF-1, a hormone that affects metabolism. It also shrank waistlines and resulted in weight loss, both in total body fat and trunk fat, but not in muscle mass.

    In effect, the diet reduced the study participants’ risks for cancer, diabetes, heart disease and other age-related diseases, according to the findings published Feb. 15 in Science Translational Medicine.

    “This study provides evidence that people can experience significant health benefits through a periodic, fasting-mimicking diet that is designed to act on the aging process,” said Valter Longo, director of the USC Longevity Institute and a professor of biological sciences for USC Davis and Dornsife. “Prior studies have indicated a range of health benefits in mice, but this is the first randomized clinical trial with enough participants to demonstrate that the diet is feasible, effective and safe for humans.

    “Larger FDA studies are necessary to confirm its effects on disease prevention and treatment,” he added.

    One hundred people participated in the trial from April 2013 to July 2015. The participants, ages 20 to 70 and all generally healthy, were divided into two groups for the randomized trial.

    Participants in the first group, the control group, were asked to continue their normal eating habits for three months. People in the second group were placed on a three-month test of the fasting-mimicking diet.

    Those on the special diet were required to eat food products supplied by the nutrition company L-Nutra during the fasting periods of five days each month. The diet, which was designed to mimic the results of a water-only fast, allowed for participants to consume between 750 and 1,100 calories per day. The meals for the fast-mimicking diet contained precise proportions of proteins, fats and carbohydrates.

    After three months, participants in the control group were moved onto the special diet.

    The researchers found that participants on the fasting-mimicking diet lost an average of about 6 pounds. Their waistlines shrank by 1 to 2 inches. Their systolic blood pressure, which was in the normal range when the study began, dropped by 4.5 mmHG, while their diastolic blood pressure dropped by 3.1 mmHg. Also, their levels of IGF-1 dropped to between 21.7 ng/mL and 46.2 ng/mL, reaching a range associated with lower cancer risk.

    “After the first group completed their three months on the fasting diet, we moved over participants in the control group to see if they also would experience similar results,” Longo said. “We saw similar outcomes, which provides further evidence that a fasting-mimicking diet has effects on many metabolic and disease markers. Our mouse studies using a similar fasting-mimicking diet indicate that these beneficial effects are caused by multi-system regeneration and rejuvenation in the body at the cellular and organ levels.

    “Our participants retained those effects, even when they returned to their normal daily eating habits,” he added.

    The researchers also noted that participants considered “at risk” because they had risk factors such as high IGF-1, cholesterol, blood pressure or blood sugar levels, made significant progress toward better health.

    For example, baseline fasting glucose levels for participants with high blood sugar levels (putting them at risk for diabetes) dropped into the healthy range, below 99 mg/dl — but these levels didn’t drop among participants who already had healthy levels at the beginning of the study. Cholesterol was reduced by 20 mg/dl in those with high cholesterol levels, and by about 5 mg/dl in all participants.

    “Fasting seems to be the most beneficial for patients who have the great risk factors for disease, such as those who have high blood pressure or pre-diabetes or who are obese,” Longo said.

    The researchers had invited participants in the study for one last set of tests three months later, at the end of the diet. The research team found that the beneficial effects — from weight loss, smaller waistlines and lower glucose, blood pressure and IGF-1 levels — were sustained.

    The next step for researchers is a large, FDA phase III clinical trial to test the FMD on patients diagnosed with age-related diseases or at high risk for them. The researchers said further investigation will determine whether the benefits of the diet can continue for several months.

    Source:Science Daily

  • Police warning as another aspiring driver is arrested over bribery

    {An aspiring driver and his brother were arrested Thursday in Nyanza District for allegedly attempting to bribe a police officer with Rwf150, 000, after the former failed practical driver’s license tests.}

    Claudine Tuyizere, 33, currently detained at Busasamana police station together with his youth brother – Valens Imanishimwe – were arrested after the former tried to bribe the supervising officer to enlist the latter on the list of those who passed.

    Chief Inspector of Police (CIP) Emmanuel Kabanda, the spokesperson for Traffic and Road Safety department, warned aspiring drivers against such malpractices.

    “We are aware of some of the driver’s license seekers who are ill-guided by their thinking that they can take such illegal and criminal channels to acquire a permit. Well, this and many others who have been arrested in an attempt should serve as an example and warning,” said CIP Kabanda.

    He said that ensuring safer roads includes giving the permit to people who have been tested and qualified.

    “There is no other alternative way of getting a driver’s license other than registering and seating for all the tests individually. No one should lie to you that you can have it without going through this legal channel. Either the person telling you an alternative channel is trying to cheat you or you are being ill-guided by your thoughts. Either way, you will be arrested when you try,” he said.

    Last week, police in Gasabo arrested another driver’s license seeker as he was trying to offer a bribe of Rwf100, 000.

    A similar incident occurred a fortnight ago in Nyaruguru district where police arrested another driver’s license seeker.

    Source:Police

  • How Dads bond with toddlers: Brain scans link oxytocin to paternal nurturing

    {Study looks at neural mechanisms of paternal caregiving.}

    Fathers given boosts of the hormone oxytocin show increased activity in brain regions associated with reward and empathy when viewing photos of their toddlers, an Emory University study finds.

    “Our findings add to the evidence that fathers, and not just mothers, undergo hormonal changes that are likely to facilitate increased empathy and motivation to care for their children,” says lead author James Rilling, an Emory anthropologist and director of the Laboratory for Darwinian Neuroscience. “They also suggest that oxytocin, known to play a role in social bonding, might someday be used to normalize deficits in paternal motivation, such as in men suffering from post-partum depression.”

    The journal Hormones and Behavior published the results of the study, the first to look at the influence of both oxytocin and vasopressin — another hormone linked to social bonding — on brain function in human fathers.

    A growing body of literature shows that paternal involvement plays a role in reducing child mortality and morbidity, and improving social, psychological and educational outcomes. But not every father takes a “hands-on” approach to caring for his children.

    “I’m interested in understanding why some fathers are more involved in caregiving than others,” Rilling says. “In order to fully understand variation in caregiving behavior, we need a clear picture of the neurobiology and neural mechanisms that support the behavior.”

    Researchers have long known that when women go through pregnancy they experience dramatic hormonal changes that prepare them for child rearing. Oxytocin, in particular, was traditionally considered a maternal hormone since it is released into the bloodstream during labor and nursing and facilitates the processes of birth, bonding with the baby and milk production.

    More recently, however, it became clear that men can also undergo hormonal changes when they become fathers, including increases in oxytocin. Evidence shows that, in fathers, oxytocin facilitates physical stimulation of infants during play as well as the ability to synchronize their emotions with their children.

    In order to investigate the neural mechanisms involved in oxytocin and paternal behavior, the Rilling lab used functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) to compare neural activity in men with and without doses of oxytocin, administered through a nasal spray. The participants in the experiment were all healthy fathers of toddlers, between the ages of one and two. While undergoing fMRI brain scans, each participant was shown a photo of his child, a photo of a child he did not know and a photo of an adult he did not know.

    When viewing an image of their offspring, participants dosed with oxytocin showed significantly increased neural activity in brain systems associated with reward and empathy, compared to placebo. This heightened activity (in the caudate nucleus, dorsal anterior cingulate and visual cortex) suggests that doses of oxytocin may augment feelings of reward and empathy in fathers, as well as their motivation to pay attention to their children.

    Surprisingly, the study results did not show a significant effect of vasopressin on the neural activity of fathers, contrary to the findings of some previous studies on animals.

    Research in prairie voles, which bond for life, for instance, has shown that vasopressin promotes both pair-bonding and paternal caregiving.

    “It could be that evolution has arrived at different strategies for motiving paternal caregiving in different species,” Rilling says.

    This is the first to look at the influence of both oxytocin and vasopressin -- another hormone linked to social bonding -- on brain function in human fathers.

    Source:Science Daily