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  • Pakistan down Oz in thriller

    Pakistan down Oz in thriller

    {{Umar Akmal has smashed 94 off 54 balls as Pakistan bounced back after a morale-sapping loss against India to defeat Australia by 16 runs in the World Twenty20 in Dhaka on Sunday.}}

    Elder brother Kamran Akmal contributed a run-a-ball 31 and Shahid Afridi returned unbeaten on 20 off 11 balls to lift Pakistan to 191-5 after they were sent in to bat.

    Australia were bowled out for 175 in reply off the final ball of the match despite a spectacular third-wicket partnership of 118 from 64 balls between Glenn Maxwell and Aaron Finch.

    Maxwell hit 74 off 33 balls with six sixes and seven boundaries, while Finch chipped in with 65 that included two sixes and seven fours.

    The pair came together after 35-year-old left-arm spinner Zulfiqar Babar, who opened the bowling, dismissed David Warner and Shane Watson in the first over to make it 8-2.

    Maxwell and Finch launched a brilliant counter-attack to raise Australia’s 100 by the eighth over, with Maxwell contributing 58 off 20 balls.

    Seamer Bilawal Bhatti conceded 30 runs in the eighth over, giving away two sixes and three fours, besides bowling a waist-high full toss that fetched five extra runs.

    A relieved Pakistan finally saw Maxwell off in the 12th over when he attempted to sweep Shahid Afridi and holed out to Ahmed Shehzad on the square-leg fence.

    Afridi also bowled skipper George Bailey for four as Australia lost their last seven wickets for 29 runs.

    It was Australia’s first group two match in the Super-10 stage, while Pakistan had lost to India by seven wickets on Friday.

    India, the West Indies and hosts Bangladesh are the other teams in the group, from which the top two will advance to the semi-finals.

    Pakistan captain Mohammad Hafeez said the plan to attack from the start paid off.

    “I think were were a bit defensive against India, but today the boys went out and expressed themselves,” said Hafeez. “Umar Akmal showed his real talent today.

    “We wanted him to attack and that’s what he did. It is really nice to have a win under our belts. It will give us the confidence for the matches to come.”

    Australian skipper George Bailey said poor catching let his team down.

    “Batting and bowling can go either way, but fielding was in our hands,” he said. “We’ve set high standards and we didn’t do well today.

    “Pakistan bowled really well and did not allow us to build the momentum that Maxwell and Finch created.”

    The Akmal brothers put on 96 for the third wicket after Pakistan were reduced to 25-2 by the fifth over, losing the key wickets of Ahmed Shehzad and Hafeez.

    Umar Akmal hit four sixes and nine boundaries before he fell in the final over, caught on the fence attempting another big hit off Mitchell Starc.

    Australia’s 43-year-old spinner Brad Hogg, the oldest player ever in the World Twenty20 competitions, had a forgettable outing.

    Hogg dropped Umar Akmal on the mid-wicket fence when the batsman was on 22 and then conceded 29 runs in three wicketless overs after being called on to bowl in the ninth over.

    Kamran Akmal, who was also dropped early in the innings, was finally dismissed in the 13th over when Warner held a running catch on the point fence off the bowling of Nathan Coulter-Nile.

    Brief scores:

    Pakistan 191-5 in 20 overs (Umar Akmal 94, Kamran Akmal 31, Nathan Coulter-Nile 2-36)

    Australia 175 all out in 20 overs (Glenn Maxwell 74, Aaron Finch 65, Shahid Afridi 2-30, Umar Gul 2-29)

    wirestory

  • Somalia Presidential Palace ‘Back Under Control’

    Somalia Presidential Palace ‘Back Under Control’

    {{Al-Qaeda-linked militants al-Shabaab attacked the Somali presidential palace compound on Friday, blasting through a gate with a car bomb and engaging in a fierce gun battle with African peacekeepers, police said.}}

    Somali Islamist militant group al-Shabaab claimed responsibility for the attack on the heavily fortified compound in Mogadishu, known as Villa Somalia, but the Somali president Hassan Sheikh Mohamud was unharmed.

    “President just called me to say he’s unharmed. Attack on Villa Somalia had failed. Sadly some lives lost,” the UN Special Representative Nick Kay wrote on his official Twitter feed.

    It was not immediately clear how many people were killed.

    In the past few weeks, Mogadishu has been hit by a series of suicide bomb attacks claimed by al-Shabaab, who were pushed out of the city in mid-2011 but have continued to wage a sustained guerrilla campaign.

    Friday’s battle took place at the house of Somalia’s top military commander, General Dahir Aden Indha Qarshe, located in the same compound and near the presidential palace building, Abdikadir Ahmed, a senior police officer, told media.

    {reuters}

  • Burundi to Issue New ID Cards

    Burundi to Issue New ID Cards

    {{Burundi has started a pilot programme on the issuance of machine readable national identity cards.}}

    East African Community partner states have until 2015 to implement the Common Market protocol which will see people from the region move freely using IDs as travel documents.

    Kenya, Uganda and Rwanda are already using machine readable IDs.

    Burundi Minister of EAC Affairs Leontine Nzeyimana said her country had started testing if the IDs could work in Bujumbura before moving to other areas.

    Ms Nzeyimana said free movement of persons with the machine readable IDs remains one of the crucial steps Burundi is taking to catch up with Kenya, Rwanda and Uganda.

    “We have now started issuing the machine readable IDs as a pilot program here in Bujumbura then after we will extend to other provinces and in the near future we will be joining the three partner states which already have,” she added.

    The minister spoke during a media interview in Bujumbura.

    Burundians have been reluctant to register for the new IDs due to information demanded by the government including bank accounts, properties and land which resulted to the low turn out in Bujumbura.

    Ms Nzeyimana says there is need to sensitize the citizens on the benefits and importance of the new IDs as travel documents.

  • Mugabe Appoints New Central Bank Governor

    Mugabe Appoints New Central Bank Governor

    {{Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe has appointed a new central bank governor as his government continues to struggle to bring stability to the economy.}}

    According to State media reports on Sunday, Dr John Mangudya will succeed Dr Gideon Gono who retired in November last year.

    Before his appointment to the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe, Dr Mangudya was the chief executive officer of the State linked CBZ Holdings.

    He takes over a bank saddled with a $1 billion debt and will preside over a banking sector currently battling a liquidity crunch that has been blamed on Zimbabwe’s poor economic performance.

    Finance Minister Patrick Chinamasa said Dr Mungudya’s term would expire after five years.

    “Dr Mangudya is a Keynesian economist who believes in discretionary fiscal and monetary policies and in the rational expectations hypothesis,” he said.

    His predecessor, Dr Gono, said the new governor would be well received by the financial markets.

    “This appointment is a sure confidence booster to the financial markets and this economy in general,” he said.

    “He is one man I know will be equal to the task and challenges ahead.”

    On Saturday the Africa Export and Import Bank (Afreximbank) had provided a $100 million facility to the RBZ aimed at reviving the interbank market to help increase liquidity.

    The interbank market has not been functional since 2009 when the country adopted use of multi-currencies.

    Mr Chinamasa said the two-year facility would improve liquidity through unlocking surplus funds held by large banks to support smaller banks.

    “By so doing, the liquidity which is lying idle will be used to stimulate the interbank market. This is expected to have a multiplier effect on the circulation of money in the system,” he said.

    CBZ was one of the most profitable banks under Dr Mangudya’s stewardship. He also took over from Dr Gono at CBZ.

  • President Kenyatta to Deliver State of EAC Address

    President Kenyatta to Deliver State of EAC Address

    {{President Uhuru Kenyatta of Kenya also the current chairperson of the East African Community is expected to deliver the State of EAC Address.}}

    Uhuru will travel by road from Nairobi to Arusha city in Tanzania. He will also spend time visiting the new €14 million headquarters of the Community, inaugurated in November 2012 and address staff of EAC Secretariat.

    EAC staff were last addressed by a regional Head of State in August 2005, by then Tanzanian President Benjamin Mkapa.

    President Uhuru will also adress the East African Legisitaltive assembly (Eala) in context of the strengthened regional integration.

    Next week’s session of the regional House expects to debate on the EAC Integration Bill 2014 among other activities, according to a statement from the EAC Secretariat.

    The meeting brings together legislators, Council of Ministers and the Department of Political Federation at the EAC Secretariat in Arusha.

  • Microsoft Has Right to Break into Your email

    Microsoft Has Right to Break into Your email

    {{Microsoft is defending its right to break into customers’ accounts and read their emails.}}

    The company’s ability — and willingness — to take such an approach became apparent this week.

    Microsoft admitted in federal court documents that it forced its way into a blogger’s Hotmail account to track down and stop a potentially catastrophic leak of sensitive software. The company says its decision is justified.

    From the company’s point of view, desperate times call for desperate measures.

    “In this case, we took extraordinary actions based on the specific circumstances,” said John Frank, one of the company’s top lawyers, in a blog post Thursday night.

    According to an FBI complaint, Microsoft in 2012 discovered that an ex-employee had leaked proprietary software to an anonymous blogger. Fearing that could empower hackers, Microsoft’s lawyers approved emergency “content pulls” of the blogger’s accounts to track it down.

    Company investigators entered the blogger’s Hotmail account, then pored over emails and instant messages on Windows Live. The internal investigation led to the arrest on Wednesday of Alex Kibkalo, a former Microsoft employee based in Lebanon.

    Although the move could be perceived as a breach of trust, Microsoft says it’s allowed to make such unilateral decisions. It pointed to its terms of service: When you use Microsoft communication products — Outlook, Hotmail, Windows Live — you agree to “this type of review … in the most exceptional circumstances,” Frank wrote.

    Microsoft’s legal team thought there was enough evidence suggesting the blogger would try selling the illegally obtained intellectual property.

    In such instances, law enforcement agents would typically seek a warrant, but Microsoft said it didn’t need one. The servers storing the information are on its own property.

    Ginger McCall, a director at the Electronic Privacy Information Center, said those actions are deeply troubling, because they show “Microsoft clearly believes that the users’ personal data belongs to Microsoft, not the users themselves.”

    “This is part of the broader problem with privacy policies,” she said. “There are hidden terms that the users don’t actually know are there. If the terms were out in the open, people would be horrified by them.”

    Microsoft recognizes that it’s a sensitive topic, especially as the nation grapples with revelations about the extent of warrantless surveillance on Americans by their own government — spying that Microsoft and other major tech companies have loudly criticized.

    That’s why Microsoft is instituting a new policy: In the future, it’ll loop in an outside lawyer who’s a former federal judge and seek his or her approval.

    In a move that might be deemed ironic, Microsoft will now add its own internal searches to its biannual transparency reports on government surveillance.

    {agencies}

  • President Bouteflika Campaigns for 4th Term

    President Bouteflika Campaigns for 4th Term

    {{Algeria’s President Abdelaziz Bouteflika said Saturday his ailing health does not “disqualify” his bid to run for a fourth term in polls next month.}}

    “The difficulties linked to my health do no appear to disqualify me in your eyes or plead in favour of me giving up the heavy responsibilities which have, in part, affected my health,” he said in a message to the Algerian people on the eve of the start of campaigning, carried by national news agency APS.

    Mr Bouteflika, who is 77 and has been in office since 1999, was hospitalised in Paris last year for three months after suffering a mini-stroke.

    Opponents say he is not fit to run in the April 17 presidential election, while others charge that the vote will be rigged and protests against his re-election have multiplied in the runup to the vote.

    But in his message, Bouteflika insisted that he decided to stand in answer to persistent calls from the Algerian people to seek a fourth term.

    wirestory

  • Referee Andre Marriner has apologised for…

    Referee Andre Marriner has apologised for…

    {{Referee Andre Marriner has apologised for sending off Arsenal defender Kieran Gibbs by mistake during the Gunners’ 6-0 defeat by league leaders Chelsea.}}

    A penalty was awarded after Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain tipped Eden Hazard’s shot around a post with his hand but Gibbs was shown the red card.

    Oxlade-Chamberlain seemed to tell Marriner that he was the culprit but the original decision stood.

    A statement read that Marriner was “disappointed” to have made the error.

    Referees’ body the Professional Game Match Officials Limited said in the statement: “Incidents of mistaken identity are very rare and are often the result of a number of different technical factors.

    “Whilst this was a difficult decision, Andre is disappointed that he failed to identify the correct player.

    “He expressed his disappointment to Arsenal when he was made aware of the issue.”

    Left-back Gibbs seemed confused at receiving the red card, protesting his innocence, along with his team-mates, before leaving the field.

    Hazard’s shot was heading inches wide of goal before Oxlade-Chamberlain dived to his left to divert the ball with his fingertips.

    Former top-level British and World Cup referee Clive Thomas, who said in 2012 he had lost faith in modern officials, believes the four in charge of Saturday’s game should be banned for the rest of the season.

    Marriner was handling the Stamford Bridge clash alongside assistant referees Scott Ledger and Marc Perry, with Anthony Taylor as fourth official.

    “It’s the most disgusting, shocking decision I’ve seen. In my opinion these four wouldn’t officiate another Premier League game this season,” the 77-year-old Welshman told media.

  • Gunmen Kill 2 Worshippers at Mombasa Church

    Gunmen Kill 2 Worshippers at Mombasa Church

    {{Two gunmen stormed a church near the Kenyan coastal city of Mombasa on Sunday and shot indiscriminately at worshippers, killing two people and wounding others, witnesses said.}}

    “Two people wearing masks entered the church and then started spraying bullets at us,” Margaret Mwangi told media.

  • Why Africa is Next Frontier for Fund Investors

    Why Africa is Next Frontier for Fund Investors

    {{It only took a look at the financial statements of the world’s largest maker of spirits to convince Larry Seruma that Africa was the place to go.}}

    Seruma was then running a long-short hedge fund and had a position in Diageo Plc, the company behind the Johnnie Walker, Guinness and Captain Morgan brands.

    While African alcohol consumption lagged Europe or the Americas, Diageo’s rapid expansion on the continent was such that, by 2013, the region accounted for 13 percent of global revenue.

    “Africa accounted for its most profitable business lines and a high-growth, high-return opportunity,” Seruma said.

    With that in mind, Seruma wound down his hedge fund and launched the Nile Pan Africa Fund in November 2010.

    Nile Pan Africa, which invests in companies from Cairo to Cape Town, has returned an average of more than 9 percent a year during the last three years through March 19, putting it in the top 5% of emerging markets funds tracked by Lipper.

    And it made those gains with a lower overall risk than its peers, helping it win a 2014 U.S. Lipper Fund Award for emerging markets funds, according to Jeff Tjornehoj, head of Americas Research at Lipper.

    Seruma’s $43.5 million fund doesn’t buy the Diageos and other multinationals that are expanding into Africa.

    Instead, he focuses on small to mid-cap African companies such as New Mauritius Hotels Ltd, Dangote Cement Plc and causal dining company Famous Brands Ltd that are poised to benefit from growth on the continent.

    It’s an approach that is almost the inverse of the benchmark MSCI Frontier Market index, which has a 43% weight in large companies and is made up chiefly of financial firms.

    Seruma, by comparison, has 46% of his portfolio in small companies, and another 15% in micro-caps, the smallest of all publicly traded stocks. Only about 12% of the fund is invested in financials.

    “We want to buy the local star,” said Seruma, who grew up in Uganda and now spends about half of the year in Africa and the rest at his headquarters in Princeton, New Jersey.

    These stocks, he adds, are the least likely to be owned by exchange-traded and large index funds, making it more likely that the companies are mispriced.

    {{Infrastructure & COnsumers}}

    Seruma has about a third of the portfolio in consumer companies, a third in infrastructure and a third in natural resources.

    He typically holds companies in 21 of Africa’s 28 stock markets, avoiding places such as South Sudan that are marked by instability.

    He focuses on countries such as Nigeria, whose population is expected to double by 2040, and on South Africa-based companies expanding in the sub-Sahara region.

    Seruma follows a value-investing approach that looks for companies trading below their intrinsic price. He’s most interested in companies with a declining cost of capital, which should further their ability to expand.

    As many African businesses have high rates of family ownership, most stocks pay a dividend. He aims to hold each company for 5 to 7 years.

    Lately, Seruma has been buying more infrastructure and energy companies because consumer companies look expensive. His largest holding is Portuguese builder Mota Engil SGPS SA.

    The company announced in November that it will spin off its African operations, which account for some 60% of its pending orders in 2014. Mota-Engil stockholders will get a shareholding in the new company once it begins trading.

    “This is going to give a pure play exposure to Africa” at a time when the continent is rapidly expanding highways, dams and bridges, Seruma said.

    He also recently added Africa Oil Corp, a Canadian-based company that explores for oil and gas in Kenya and Ethiopia.

    In February, the company announced plans to explore 20 new wells in the region and continue to test new wells in the South Lokichar basin.

    “This company is still far from reaching its full potential,” Seruma said.

    To target consumers, Seruma holds 4.5% of his portfolio – his second largest position – in Uac of Nigeria Plc, a conglomerate whose businesses range from bottled water to paint to car dealerships.

    Although Uac shares are up 44% over the last 12 months, Sermua said the company is “trading at relatively cheap valuation for where its potential can be” given the consumer expansion in West Africa.

    Investors who want to broaden their portfolios to include Africa should expect high fees. Seruma’s fund imposes an annual expense charge of $2.50 per $100 invested for its class A shares, which also come with a 5.75% load. The fund pays a dividend yield of 2.8%.

    {reuters}