Author: Publisher

  • Uganda MPs Adopt Bill Criminalising Spread of HIV

    Uganda MPs Adopt Bill Criminalising Spread of HIV

    Uganda’s controversial HIV/Aids Prevention and Control Bill that, among others, criminalises the intentional spread of HIV/Aids.

    The lawmakers who sit on the joint Parliamentary Health and HIV/Aids committees have supported a contested proposal that makes it a crime for those who “willfully and intentionally” transmit HIV/Aids to others.

    The MPs who are making final touches to the private members’ Bill reasoned that criminalising the intentional spread would act as a long-term solution to combating the spread of the virus.

    Whereas the MPs had removed a clause which subjects offenders who intentionally infect others with HIV to life imprisonment and replaced it with a 10-year imprisonment penalty upon conviction, they stayed over the clause yesterday saying the punishment must be revised and a heavier one re-introduced.

    {{Grave offence}}

    “We want to make the punishment stiffer because the offence seems to be of a grave nature,” said Ms Connie Galiwango,(Mbale women). The law makers have resisted pressure from human rights activists, who are opposed to some clauses in the Bill.

    The human rights activists say that some clauses particularly on criminalisation of HIV and mandatory testing are unnecessary and violate international human rights standards.

    The Bill, a private members’ initiative, was tabled by legislators on the Parliamentary HIV/Aids Committee during the 8th Parliament and has been pending for some time.

    NMG

  • Sweden Proposes Trade Ties, Less Direct Aid to Africa

    Sweden Proposes Trade Ties, Less Direct Aid to Africa

    {{Africa is poised to benefit from a new strategy in which Sweden is proposing new development mechanism for Africa aimed at securing a win-win situation for developing economies.}}

    “Direct aid, while not bad, should be supplemented with strong trade ties for sustainable development… I think we really need to change the system now and trade more,” says Swedish minister for Trade, Ms Ewa Björling.

    Ms Björling told press in Dar es Salaam where she is visiting in company of Swedish Crown Princess Victoria.

    The Swedish minister noted that the best way to build local economies in Africa and bring about prosperity is for the donor community to change from providing direct aid and opting for strengthened trade relations.

    She added that changing from aid to trade would benefit both sides and help developing countries.

  • Burundi Court: Key Opposition Leader Bailed

    Burundi Court: Key Opposition Leader Bailed

    {{A Burundi court bailed on Thursday a key opposition leader arrested in a sex and bribery scandal his supporters claim was a set-up designed to block a challenge to the president.}}

    Frederic Bamvuginyumvira, a former Burundi vice-president and current deputy leader of the Front for Democracy (Frodebu) party was arrested in December “while having sex… in a house of ill repute”, a court official said.

    A bail order was initially made in December, but was then rejected at the request of the prosecution.

    However, on Thursday, bail was granted on health grounds and Bamvuginyumvira released, court officials said, so he could seek treatment for high blood pressure.

    “The anti-corruption court has just made an order for the provisional release my client Frederic Bamvuginyumvira on a bail of a million Burundian francs or €450,” his lawyer Fabien Segatwa said.

    “Mr Bamvuginyumvira has no reason to be in prison because he did not do anything,” he added, maintaining his incarceration was political.

    Bamvuginyumvira, a highly respected leader with a reputation for being tough on graft, was Burundi’s vice president from 1998 to 2001, and is touted as one of the most serious potential opposition presidential candidates for 2015 elections.

    The court decision comes amid growing tensions in the central African country, especially between Burundi’s Hutu and Tutsi communities, who are still struggling to reconcile after decades of conflict.

    The United Nations has called for restraint and dialogue ahead of the polls, in which President Pierre Nkurunziza is expected to campaign for a third term in office.

    Frodebu won the 1993 general elections, bringing to power the country’s first elected president Melchior Ndadaye.

    Ndadaye was assassinated a few months later, triggering a brutal civil war that ended in 2006.

    Like other opposition groups Frodebu boycotted legislative elections in 2010.

    – AFP

  • French Charge Obiang Junior with Money Laundering

    French Charge Obiang Junior with Money Laundering

    {{French judicial authorities have filed preliminary charges of alleged money laundering against the son of Equatorial Guinea’s president.}}

    A lawyer for the son, Vice President Teodorin Obiang Nguema, insisted on Thursday his client has diplomatic immunity.

    French financial prosecutors said Obiang, the son of President Teodoro Obiang, was told by video conference of three counts of money laundering under a probe into the acquisition of properties in France by the leaders of Equatorial Guinea, Gabon and Republic of Congo.

    After Obiang made himself available, French authorities lifted an international arrest warrant they had issued for him.

    Authorities are still working to calculate the total value of real estate, luxury cars, art and other property in France that Transparency International estimates at least in tens of millions of euros.

    – AP

  • S. African Opposition Politician Gives Zuma 20 Days to Resign

    S. African Opposition Politician Gives Zuma 20 Days to Resign

    {{President Jacob Zuma should resign within 20 days, EFF leader Julius Malema said on Thursday.}}

    “Zuma should step down. If he fails to do so within 20 days, the EFF will march to the Union Buildings… and we will not leave the premises until he resigns,” Malema told supporters outside the Sunnyside police station in Pretoria.

    He said he had laid charges of corruption, theft, fraud and racketeering against Zuma with the Sunnyside police.

    This was prompted by the release on Wednesday of Public Protector Thuli Madonsela’s final report on the upgrades to Zuma’s private Nkandla homestead in KwaZulu-Natal.

    In her report, Madonsela found Zuma “unduly benefited from the enormous capital investment” in the Nkandla upgrades, totalling R246m.

    Malema said the charges were laid against Zuma, Police Minister Nathi Mthethwa and architect Minenhle Makhanya, among others.

    Madonsela found that Makhanya had made R16.5m as Zuma’s architect and as the public works department’s principal agent for the Nkandla project.

    Malema said the racketeering charge was added “because Zuma operated with criminals”.

    “Let me help the police here… Zuma does not allow electronic transfers, I have worked with him. He doesn’t take cheques either.”

    He said Zuma should be charged following Madonsela’s report and be arrested.

    Zuma’s children should also be investigated and a lifestyle audit conducted.

    “He has a son who collects the cash for him. All his children must be investigated,” Malema told cheering supporters.

    He accused the ANC of arrogance, and said it had been protecting one man since 2005.

    “They are arrogant and have become a law unto themselves. The police should show that no one is above the law.”

    – SAPA

  • Nollywood’s Iyke Proposes to Nadia Buari; She Says Yes!

    Nollywood’s Iyke Proposes to Nadia Buari; She Says Yes!

    {{After months, probably years, of speculations, Nollywood bad boy actor, Jim Iyke ({pictured above}) has proposed to bubbly Ghanaian actress Nadia Buari.}}

    The actor proposed to the actress on Thursday’s edition of his hit reality show, Jim Iyke Unscripted.

    Jim proposed with a six-carat-diamond ring while having dinner with Nadia, who didn’t hesitate to say “Yes”.

    According to the bad boy actor, the ring was ‘designed’ by him in specially selected countries including Ghana, Sierra Leone, and Gabon, with London providing the final finish.

    The proposal puts an end to the speculations and earlier denials by the two that they were planning to get married.

    Jim tweeted then that, “I’ll resolve this issue by stating as clearly as possible that this marriage rumours is unfounded and far-fetched. My prerogative is known to me only.”

    Shortly after refuting the marriage reports, Jim Iyke flew Nadia Buari on an European city tour on her 31st birthday which fell on November 21, 2013.

    Jim tweeted a photo of Nadia and himself in a flight for the tour that will take them in Madrid (Spain), Frankfurt (Germany), Zurich (Switzerland) and then Barcelona (Spain).

    The love birds are yet to officially announce their wedding plans.

    {myjoyonline}

  • Today Marks UN World Poetry Day

    Today Marks UN World Poetry Day

    Today marks the UN World Poetry Day.

    Irina Bokova, Director-General of UNESCO says:

    {{“As a deep expression of the human mind and as a universal art, poetry is a tool for dialogue and rapprochement. The dissemination of poetry helps to promote dialogue among cultures and understanding between peoples because it gives access to the authentic expression of a language.”}}

    {In honour of the day, IGIHE presents to you a collection of poems by the late great Ghanaian Poet and Writer, Professor Kofi Awoonor in photo below}

    {{OF HOME AND SEA I ALREADY SANG}}

    A calm settles

    at the beckon of sweet age…

    Joy and hope soar

    for the ultimate task

    ahead written about, already

    promised in the trajectories of jail,

    in absence and exile…

    That we will perform our duty by the people

    depose the recalcitrant brutes

    and march ahead of our beloved masses

    to a coming kingdom…

    Let the dream not die, master;

    Let the dove coo at dawn again,

    Let the masthead rear its head

    out of the storm

    and share the night with me on this sea.

    Let me sing the song you gave me.

    Before death comes, master,

    Let me dance to the drums you gave me.

    Let me sit in the warmth of the fire

    Of the only native land you gave me.

    {{A DEATH FORETOLD}}

    Sometimes, the pain and the sorrow return

    particularly at night.

    I will grieve again and again tomorrow

    for the memory of a death foretold….

    I believe in hope and the future

    of hope, in victory before death

    collective, inexorable, obligatory;

    in the enduring prospect of love

    though the bed is empty,

    in the child’s happiness

    though the meal is meagre.

    I believe in light and day

    beyond the tomb far from the solitude

    of the womb, and the mystical night,

    in the coming of fruits

    the striped salmon and the crooked crab;

    I believe in men and the gods

    in the spirit and the substance,

    in death and the reawakening

    in the promised festival and denial

    in our heroes and the nation

    in the wisdom of the people

    the certainty of victory

    the validity of struggle….

    I will not grieve again tomorrow.

    I will not grieve again.

    {{GRAINS AND TEARS}}

    …. Go and tell them I paid the price

    I stood by the truth

    I fought anger and hatred

    on behalf of the people.

    I ate their meagre meals in the barracks

    shared their footsteps and tears

    in freedom’s name

    I promised once in a slave house in Ussher

    to postpone dying until

    the morning after freedom.

    I promise.

    {{SONGS OF SORROW}}

    I.

    Dzogbese Lisa has treated me thus

    It has led me among the sharps of the forest

    Returning is not possible

    And going forward is a great difficulty

    The affairs of this world are like the chameleon faeces

    Into which I have stepped

    When I clean it cannot go.

    I am on the world’s extreme corner,

    I am not sitting in the row with the eminent

    But those who are lucky

    Sit in the middle and forget

    I am on the world’s extreme corner

    I can only go beyond and forget.

    My people, I have been somewhere

    If I turn here, the rain beats me

    If I turn there the sun burns me

    The firewood of this world

    Is for only those who can take heart

    That is why not all can gather it.

    The world is not good for anybody

    But you are so happy with your fate;

    Alas! The travelers are back

    All covered with debt.

    II.

    Something has happened to me

    The things so great that I cannot weep;

    I have no sons to fire the gun when I die

    And no daughters to wail when I close my mouth

    I have wandered on the wilderness

    The great wilderness men call life

    The rain has beaten me,

    And the sharp stumps cut as keen as knives

    I shall go beyond and rest.

    I have no kin and no brother,

    Death has made war upon our house;

    And Kpeti’s great household is no more,

    Only the broken fence stands;

    And those who dared not look us in his face

    Have come out as men.

    How well their pride is with them.

    Let those gone before take note

    They have treated their offspring badly.

    What is the wailing for?

    Somebody is dead. Agosu himself

    Alas! A snake has bitten me

    My right arm is broken,

    And the tree on which I lean is fallen.

    Agosi if you go tell them,

    Tell Nyidevu, Kpeti, and Kove

    That they have done us evil;

    Tell them their house is falling

    And the trees in the fence

    Have been eaten by termites;

    That the martels curse them.

    Ask them why they idle there

    While we suffer, and eat sand.

    And the crow and the vulture

    Hover always above our broken fences

    And strangers walk over our portion.

    {{THE WEAVER BIRD}}

    The weaver bird built in our house

    And laid its eggs on our only tree.

    We did not send it away.

    We watched the building of the nest

    And supervised the egg-laying.

    And the weaver returned in the guise of the owner.

    Preaching salvation to us that owned the house.

    They say it came from the west

    Where the storms at sea had felled the gulls

    And the fishers dried their nets by lantern light.

    Its sermon is the divination of ourselves

    And our new horizon limits at its nest.

    But we cannot join the prayers and answers of the

    communicants.

    We look for new homes every day.

    For new altars we strive to re-build

    The old shrines defiled by the weaver’s excrement.

    {{REDISCOVERY}}

    When our tears are dry on the shore

    and the fishermen carry their nets home

    and the seagulls return to bird island

    and the laughter of the children recedes at night,

    there shall still linger here the communion we forged,

    the feast of oneness which we partook of.

    There shall still be the eternal gateman

    Who will close the cemetery doors

    And send the late mourners away.

    It cannot be the music we heard that night

    That still lingers in the chambers of memory.

    It is the new chorus of our forgotten comrades

    And the halleluyahs of our second selves.

    {{THE CATHEDRAL}}

    On this dirty patch

    a tree once stood

    shedding incense on the infant corn;

    its boughs stretched across a heaven

    brightened by the last fires of a tribe.

    They sent surveyors and builders

    who cut that tree

    planting in its place

    a huge senseless cathedral of doom.

  • Rapper Jay Polly Urges Participation in Andika Rwanda

    Rapper Jay Polly Urges Participation in Andika Rwanda

    {{Rwanda’s popular Hiphop star Jay Polly has announced his support for Andika Rwanda, a national competition for writing stories and poems for children. }}

    “I’m a writer,” Jay Polly said. “I write because I want to change people’s lives through the messages in my songs. You have to write to express yourself, you have to let people know what you think.”

    The rapper made the comments at Lycee de Kigali on Friday during a surprise appearance at the secondary school’s morning assembly.

    The competition, which launched last month, is a joint initiative of the Rwanda Education Board, the USAID-funded Literacy, Language, and Learning (L3) Initiative, implemented by the Education Development Center, and Drakkar Ltd.

    The visit was to urge students and youth in general to adopt the culture of writing and to submit a story or poem to the competition.

    Primary and secondary students—at both public and private schools—as well as adults are eligible to participate.

    Winners receive tablets, books, and a trip to Kigali for a writers symposium and awards ceremony, as well as professional publication of their stories and poems.

    The published volumes of winning stories and poems will then be distributed to primary schools across the country, providing children access to interesting, locally-authored stories and poems.

    “Anyone can be a writer,” said Jay Polly. “Why not enter the competition?”

    Primary and secondary students can learn more from their teachers, and adults can visit their sector offices for more information.

    Interested participants can also visit www.reb.rw. The deadline for submissions is Friday, May 9th.

  • Mozambique Approves 600MW Coal Power Station Deal

    Mozambique Approves 600MW Coal Power Station Deal

    {{The Mozambican government has approved a 25-year concession contract for the construction of a 600MW coal-fired independent power producer (IPP) in Moatize, Tete province}}

    A consortium led by ACWA Power Moatize Termoelectrica (APMT), comprising Vale, Mitsui and ACWA Power of Saudi Arabia, will manage the plant.

    The state-owned utility Electricity de Mozambique (EDM) and local investor Whatana Investment Group will be minority shareholders in the project, industry sources said.

    Moatize IPP will reportedly be developed on a build own operate and transfer (BOOT) basis, and is expected to be a pulverised fuel, sub-critical coal-fired power station.

    The first phase of the project will involve the construction of a 300MW plant for US$1bn.

    Of this capacity, 250MW will feed the coal mine being developed by Vale MZ, while the remaining 50MW will be utilised by EDM to feed the grid, according to ACWA Power.

    Paddy Padmanathan, president and CEO of ACWA Power, said, “The Moatize IPP will significantly enhance ACWA Power’s position as a rapidly expanding power developer in the southern cone of Africa, one of our target markets, and also help to diversify ACWA Power’s fuel experience beyond oil, gas and solar to now coal.”

    The sponsors have selected international contractor GS Engineering & Construction from South Korea for the engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) of the project, and ACWA Power’s wholly-owned subsidiary NOMAC will be responsible for the operation and maintenance of the plant.

    The project is expected to be the first large-scale greenfield power project in the country to be financed using the project finance framework.

    {africanreview}

  • $4M lost in Infrastructure Projects

    $4M lost in Infrastructure Projects

    {{The government of Rwanda has lost more than $ 4 million (Rwf 2.5 billion) due to some of the Infrastructure projects poorly studied by the contractors, said the Secretary of State in the Ministry of Infrastructure, Emma Francoise Isumbingabo, addressing the Committee on Political Affairs and Gender promotion, March 20th 2014.}}

    In 2006, HPI (International Hydropower) was offered the contract for the construction of seven small hydroelectric dams for a period of one year against a budget of U.S. $ 12,767,256.19.

    Isumbingabo said that construction activities have not been completed up to date and those completed need to be rehabilitated, adding that the company was unable to complete its contract.

    For the Minister, the deficit in the project was caused by poor evaluation studies of the scope of the work.

    She warned all those who are responsible for the failure of the project noting that they will be punished for their weakness, irresponsibility and ignorance presented throughout the project implementation.

    angedelavictoire@igihe.com