Author: Publisher

  • Tanzania & Burundi in Deal to Build Cargo Railway Line

    Tanzania & Burundi in Deal to Build Cargo Railway Line

    {{Tanzania and Burundi have signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to construct a 195km railway cargo line between the two East African countries.}}

    According to government officials, the project is expected to cost US$700mn and would facilitate transport of cargo between Tanzania and Burundi. The line will be built between Msongati in Burundi and Uvinza in Tanzania, officials added.

    Harrison Mwakyembe, minister for transport in Tanzania, said, “Since last year, we have been engaged in talks over this project and we are happy that it can commence after the endorsement of the attorney generals and other senior officials of the two governments.”

    Apart from the Msongati-Uvinza project, Mwakyembe added that efforts are underway to improve the central railway line, which is currently undergoing rehabilitation in segments.

    “We are planning to assign one company for this joint work to easily monitor performance. Letting each country secure its own contractor can positively affect the implementation of the project,” added Mwakyembe.

    Ciza Virginie, minister for transport, public works and equipment of Burundi, said the two countries will share costs of the projects.

    {africanreview}

  • World Cup 2014: Ghana’s Budget Halved

    World Cup 2014: Ghana’s Budget Halved

    {{Ghana will go into the World Cup finals in Brazil with less than half the budget they had for the tournament in South Africa four years ago.}}

    The country’s government has approved an amount of US$9.6m for the campaign – a total that would be paid if the Black Stars make it all the way to the final.

    It is massively reduced figure from a proposed $22m, largely because of a huge public outcry about the cost.

    Ghana had a budget of US$19m approved for the last edition of the World Cup.

    This time around, Ghana will spend $4m on preparations and the first three group games, with another $5.6m available to pay expenses and players’ bonuses should the team make it further in the competition.

    Sports Minister Elvis Afriyie Ankrah said the allocation means the players, who have been seeking an increase in appearance fees and bonuses, will earn the same as they did during Ghana’s run to the quarter-finals in 2010.

    “Various numbers came up but those were proposals from the players. When you go into negotiations you put a figure down but in this case the government, which is the paymaster, determines what has to be paid”, Afriyie-Ankrah said.

    “Based on our discussions, the government insists that we should pay the same bonuses as the 2010 World Cup in South Africa. For the record the 2010 figure was $75,000 because we are all going through challenges – the President and the rest of us we have cut out our salaries by 10%.

    Afriyie Ankrah added that he is confident the players will understand and accept the terms put together by government.

    “I’m sure in the coming hours or days we will hear from the players themselves so I don’t want to pre-empt what they will say but all I can say is that they are also Ghanaians.

    “The players are patriotic and understand the situation as reasonable and rational people, especially when you engage them and explain things to them”, he said. added.

  • Islamists Attack Hotel in Central Somali Region

    Islamists Attack Hotel in Central Somali Region

    {{Somali Islamist militants drove a car bomb at a hotel in a town in central Somalia that was being used by African Union and Somali military forces, a resident and the militant group said.}}

    The al Qaeda-linked al Shabaab movement said its raid on Monday claimed many lives, but poor communications in that region made it difficult to verify numbers.

    The insurgent strike followed an attack on a military convoy near the capital Mogadishu, also on Monday, which killed four Somali soldiers, an army captain said.

    Somalia’s African Union peacekeeping force AMISOM, now bigger after Ethiopian troops joined this year, has launched an offensive to clear territory still held by al Shabaab.

    The Islamists have responded with more guerrilla assaults and have threatened attacks on contributors to the African force, such as Kenya and Uganda. Both those nations have warned of threats and Kenya detained two would-be bombers this week.

    Hussein Nur, a resident in Somalia’s central Bulobarde town, said a car bomb exploded late on Monday at the Camalow hotel, then troops and militants fought for several hours. His line cut before he could provide further details.

    AMISOM could not immediately be reached for comment.

    “First, a mujahid (holy warrior) with a car bomb entered the hotel, followed by two well-armed fighters who sprayed bullets,” said Sheikh Abdiasis Abu Musab, Al Shabaab’s military operation spokesman, told media on Tuesday.

    He said 32 soldiers were killed. In the past, al Shabaab has exaggerated numbers while officials have downplayed losses.

    Al Shabaab, which is seeking to impose its version of Islamic law, was driven out of bases in the capital more than two years ago, but has continued to control swathes of countryside and smaller towns, which it uses as launchpads to strike.

    {{Regional States Alert}}

    Regional nations and the West worry that, unless al Shabaab is denied the use of such territory, it will be able to plan strikes well beyond Somalia’s borders, such as the attack on a Kenyan shopping mall last year that killed at least 67 people.

  • South Africa’s Biggest Union Calls Strike For March 19

    South Africa’s Biggest Union Calls Strike For March 19

    {{South Africa’s biggest union has called a one-day strike for Wednesday to highlight youth unemployment in the country, where one in four people are jobless, the union said.}}

    The 340,000-member National Union of Metalworkers of South Africa (NUMSA) draws its members from car manufacturing, the metal industry, transport and general workers.

    The strike would be the latest in a string of work stoppages in Africa’s largest economy, weeks before a May 7 general election.

    “It is a strike that members in all other unions can join. We think half a million workers will take part,” Karl Cloete, deputy general secretary of NUMSA, told Reuters on Sunday.

    In December, NUMSA, the biggest bloc in the COSATU labor grouping, said it would not support the ruling African National Congress in the election.

    Many South Africans are disgruntled by the slow pace at which the ANC led by President Jacob Zuma is rolling back poverty two decades after the end of apartheid.

    A strike over wages in the platinum sector has been going on for nearly two months and has cost employees more than 3.8 billion rand ($354 million) in lost earnings.

    The strike has cost mining companies 8.6 billion rand in revenue so far, according to a tally updated almost every second on the Chamber of Mines’ website.

    ($1 = 10.7215 South African Rand)

  • Egypt Police Convicted Over Detainee Deaths

    Egypt Police Convicted Over Detainee Deaths

    {{A court in Cairo has convicted four Egyptian policemen over the deaths of 37 Islamist detainees last August.}}

    Deputy chief of Heliopolis police station Lt Col Amr Farouk was sentenced to 10 years in prison for involuntary manslaughter and extreme negligence.

    The other three officers were given one-year suspended sentences.

    The detainees died as a result of asphyxiation when tear gas was fired into the back of a vehicle transporting 45 of them to a prison outside Cairo.

    Security officials initially said the detainees had rioted and captured a guard while en route to Abu Zabal prison on 18 August, causing the officers to respond by firing tear gas into the vehicle.

    However, prosecutors found no evidence to support the claim and that the vehicle transporting them was designed to carry only 24 detainees.

    Crowd-control experts said at the time that the detainees would have died in agony, gasping for air and incapable of resisting the guards.

    The incident sparked international condemnation, with UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon saying he was “deeply disturbed” by the deaths and calling for a “full investigation”.

    It took place four days after almost 1,000 people were killed when security forces cleared two sit-ins in Cairo by supporters of President Mohammed Morsi, who was ousted by the military in July.

    Thousands of Islamists have since been detained, among them Mr Morsi and other senior leaders of the Muslim Brotherhood movement, who are being tried on a variety of charges including inciting murder and conspiring with foreign organisations to spread violent chaos throughout Egypt.

    BBC

  • RDF Announces Recruitment for Cadet Officers Course

    RDF Announces Recruitment for Cadet Officers Course

    {{The Rwanda Defence Forces (RDF) is seeking to recruit interested Rwandan nationals for Cadet Officers Course.}}

    In an announcement signed March 14, posted on the Ministry of Defence website, interested candidates are required to register at their respective districts effective 20th March 2014.

    Interested Candidates should be; aged between 18 and 24 years, Must be Rwandan nationals, single (not married), Good health, Willing, Never served prison sentence (6 months and above), must have completed Senior six (with atleast 3 credits).

  • Africa’s Rush to Borrow Raises Concern

    Africa’s Rush to Borrow Raises Concern

    {{Nearly a decade after Nelson Mandela and anti-poverty activists Bono and Bob Geldof persuaded the rich world to forgive Africa’s crushing debts, many countries’ debt levels are creeping up again, which could undermine the region’s growth boom.}}

    As African states line up to join the growing club of dollar bond issuers, economists and analysts warn of a slide back into indebtedness that could undo recent economic gains and create a “Eurobond curse” to match the distorting “resource curse”.

    “Eurobonds have become like stock exchanges, private jets and presidential palaces. Every African leader wants to have one,” said one investor, asking not to be named.

    In 2007, Ghana became the first African beneficiary of debt relief to tap international capital markets, issuing a $750 million 10-year Eurobond. Since then, previously debt-burdened countries, such as Senegal, Nigeria, Zambia and Rwanda, have also put their names on the list of bond issuers.

    Governments seeking to replace declining foreign aid and pay for infrastructure are also taking concessional funds from multilateral institutions, more expensive commercial bank loans and bilateral financing from lenders like China and Brazil.

    No Sub-Saharan countries are in immediate danger of default and most are largely financing themselves domestically, but the debt build-up is stirring up troubling memories of the past.

    “The financial sector loves to find people to prey on and their most recent prey are governments in developing countries,” Nobel prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz told media in an interview during a conference in Johannesburg this month.

    “They get overindebted, they get a bailout from the World Bank and IMF and they start over again. I think it’s unconscionable, but their memory is short and their greed is large, so it’s going to happen again.”

    Up to 30 low-income sub-Saharan African countries had their debts reduced under the IMF and World Bank’s Highly Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC) initiative, which was later supplemented by the Multilateral Debt Relief Initiative (MDRI).

    An estimated $100 billion of debt was wiped out, easing countries’ onerous debt burdens, often the result of loans taken on by corrupt regimes. These had meant more being spent on debt service payments than on health and education combined.

    {{Risk of Over-Borrowing}}

    Although debt sustainability in Africa has improved since the debt relief initiative, a forthcoming World Bank paper warns of a risk of over-borrowing, especially by countries expecting new revenues from resource discoveries. One of the co-authors of the study shares its findings with media.

    In Ghana, Uganda, Mozambique, Senegal, Niger, Malawi, Benin and Sao Tome and Principe, debt levels are creeping back up. If all continue to borrow and grow at current rates their debt indicators could be back to pre-relief levels within a decade.

    Others with rapidly rising debt ratios include Ethiopia, Tanzania and Burkina Faso.

    Nevertheless, the study finds that on average there has only been a modest rise in debt-to-GDP ratios in nearly a decade.

    In the 26 African HIPC beneficiaries studied, nominal public debt fell from a GDP-weighted average of 104% of GDP before relief, to 27% by 2006 when most had received full debt relief. Half a decade later the ratio was at 34%.

    The trend has been broadly the same for resource-rich and resource-poor, and high- and low-income economies, said Mark Roland Thomas, a World Bank manager and co-author of the paper, the first review of debt dynamics in Africa since debt relief.

    Ghana, which sold a new $750 million Eurobond and bought back a portion of the 2017 issue last year, shows how growing debt levels can threaten countries’ fiscal dynamics.

    Ghana’s stability and roaring economic growth, reaching 14.5% in 2011, have made it an investor favourite. But the government’s inability to tame widening fiscal deficits has led to a deterioration in its debt ratios. Its debt now represents just over half of its GDP, from 32% in 2008.

    An expanding current account gap has hit the cedi currency, which has weakened more than 9% against the dollar this year, after a 24% slide in 2013. Fitch downgraded the cocoa, gold and oil producer to B from B-plus last October.

    In a sign of waning market confidence, yields on Ghana’s sovereign debt are higher than for any other African country with an actively traded international bond, at around 9% for its 2023 Eurobond and over 20% for domestic debt.

    Zambia’s story is in some ways a slow-motion version of Ghana’s. Africa’s biggest copper producer, which sold a hugely oversubscribed debut $750 million Eurobond in 2012 and plans to return to the market, was also downgraded by Fitch last year.

    Zambia’s debt is around 30% of GDP, still quite low. The government needs to spend on roads and energy but economists worry its current pace of borrowing cannot be sustained.

    {{“Eurobond Curse”?}}

    For Michael Cirami, an emerging markets fund manager at Eaton Vance Corp, Ghana and Zambia challenge the notion that sustained growth is a given for African nations. While international bonds bring countries into the global financial market and scrutiny from investors can improve policymaking, there may also be a flipside of looser fiscal policy, he said.

    “I wonder and sometimes fear about a Eurobond curse, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa, where all of a sudden you get what seems like a windfall of money and you end up with policymaking deteriorating,” he said.

    Ghana’s GDP will likely only grow by 4.8% in 2014, the IMF says, from 5.5% last year. The market has less faith than the government that future growth will be enough to repay debtors, said Antoon de Klerk, a fund manager at Investec.

    “If Ghana’s growth falls short of expectations, it will very quickly run into debt servicing problems,” de Klerk wrote in a note to clients.

    Ghana’s finance ministry declined comment for this story.

    In Zambia, ministry of finance permanent secretary Felix Nkulukusa told media that concessional financing from the IMF and World Bank was insufficient to fund big infrastructure projects, forcing the country to turn to private creditors.

    “The pace of borrowing is sustainable because we are not going to be borrowing forever,” he said.

    The World Bank and IMF say Ghana and Zambia’s debt is sustainable at current levels but Ghana is vulnerable to shocks.

    {{Tougher Questions}}

    Despite misgivings about certain countries, Africa is still in a fundamentally different place than it was 20 or 30 years ago when the old debts were taken on, thanks to robust growth and better public sector management, said Todd Moss, a senior fellow at the Washington-based Center for Global Development.

    Borrowing from private creditors also puts a higher burden on leaders to be responsible, Moss said, “whereas borrowing from the World Bank, there’s clearly a dynamic of lend and forgive.”

    The challenge for governments will be to ensure that borrowed funds are invested wisely and not mismanaged.

    Eurobonds may also be a short-term funding solution for Africa as tapering of the U.S. Federal Reserve’s bond-buying stimulus ends an era of low interest rates in the rich world that sent investors rushing to higher-yielding emerging markets.

    Investors will do more homework on issuers’ fundamentals than in the past and ask tougher questions about use of funds, bankers say. A key test will be if infrastructure investments generate returns that enable governments to service their debts.

    Nick Dearden, director of the World Development Movement, says governments should use borrowed funds to reduce commodity dependency, still a widespread problem for Africa.

    “Getting more minerals out of the ground may be very beneficial for Western nations … but if it’s not developing African economies in a genuine way they’re likely to be left with the debt and none of the resources they’ve invested in.”

    {reuters}

  • 458 Police Officer Cadets Commissioned

    458 Police Officer Cadets Commissioned

    {{President Paul Kagame, on March 17, presided over the pass-out of 458 officer cadets, including 87 females, who successfully completed a one year training course at the Police Training School (PTS) in Gishari, Rwamagana District.}}

    In a colourful ceremony attended by heads of security organs, government officials, and parents and relatives of the graduants, the Head of State promoted the officers to the rank of Assistant Commissioner of Police (AIP).

    41 of the officers are from Rwanda Correctional Services (RCS).

    It is the sixth officer cadet intake to be conducted since the RNP was formed in June 2000 and the first of its kind to be conducted at PTS.

    Previous cadet courses were conducted at the National Police College (NPC) in Musanze.

    The Head of State thanked the graduants for their resilience and for enduring the course challenges and added that the country expects a lot from them to ensure sustainable security.

    He also lauded female officers who successfully completed the course saying that “it’s an indication of the big role women play in the development of the country.

    He urged the officers to use the acquired skills to further ensure security of people living in Rwanda and their property and to further build a law-abiding country.

    The Head of state said the safety and security Rwandans enjoy today is the foundation to development and called upon the RNP to continue this great cause.

    He also commended the force for establishing a polytechnic school – Gishari Integrated Polytechnic – to create a job creation community and for the current good Police-Public cooperation which he said is an indication of good governance.

    The President observed that the Policing architecture is changing dimensions due to the emerging of modern and cross-border crimes such as terrorism largely facilitated by modern technology.

    He explained that this also requires Police and other security organs to acquire more and modern skills and knowledge to always be ahead to foil criminals’ evil plans.

    Fighting cross-border crimes, he said, requires cooperation between security organs both locally and internationally but called for vigilance because such foreign forces can also be a source of insecurity by supporting and conniving with enemies of the state.

    The Head of State also reminded those who want to destabilize the country that their criminal deeds will haunt them.

    “I am responsible for the good, development and security of Rwandans and whoever tries to destabilize the safety of Rwandans will pay the price. We will use the little we have to ensure the safety and security of Rwandans,” President Kagame said.

    He also reminded those who ask him about the security of other countries to first ask him about the security of Rwanda.

    Commissioner of Police (CP) Joseph Mugisha, the Commandant of PTS said the officers we equipped with skills to help them contribute a lot in making sure that people living in Rwanda feel safe, involved and reassured.

    The officers, he said, were equipped with necessary skills in leadership, management, development and professional Policing such as ethics, law, road safety, crime prevention strategies, Community Policing and Peace Support Operations.

    RNP

  • US Holocaust Museum Marks 20th Commemoration of Genocide in Rwanda

    US Holocaust Museum Marks 20th Commemoration of Genocide in Rwanda

    {{The US Holocaust Memorial Museum is scheduled to host a Global conversation themed; ‘Reflections on the genocide in Rwanda, 20 years later’.}}

    The conversation will be held 18th March at 7PM at the Joseph and Rebecca Meyerhoff Theater, 100 Raoul Wallenberg Place, SW Washington, DC.

    In just 100 days in the spring of 1994, up to one million Rwandans, predominantly Tutsis, were murdered in one of the world’s worst crimes of the 20th century. Decades later, we find ourselves asking again how this could have happened as the world stood by.

    The conversation aims at exploring the difficult questions that still haunt us today about the leaders who instigated violence, the individuals who participated willingly in mass murder, and the international community that looked away.

    Panelists will include; Philip Gourevitch (author and journalist), Yvette Rugasaguhunga (Embassy of Rwanda to the United States), Carl Wilkens (director, World outside My Shoes), Mike Abramovitz (Director, of the Centre for the Prevention of Genocide)
    Opening remarks will be given by H E Professor Mathilde Mukantabana, Ambassador of the Republic of Rwanda to the United States, and Margit Meissner, Holocaust survivor.

  • Scientists Revive Frozen Antarctic Plant After 1,500 Years

    Scientists Revive Frozen Antarctic Plant After 1,500 Years

    {{British scientists have successfully revived mosses that have been frozen under the Antarctic ice for 1,500 years.}}

    The researchers thawed out the ancient vegetation and were surprised to see new shoots rapidly appear.

    While bacteria of a similar age have been recovered before, the scientists say these are the oldest plants to be brought back to life.

    The research has been published in the journal Current Biology.

    Mossy banks are a curious feature of the frozen Antarctic, formed over thousands of years from the accumulation of these tenacious plants that spring to life in the brief southern summer.

    The oldest banks date back over 5,000 years and are a useful archive for scientists of past climatic conditions.

    Researchers have made previous attempts to revive long-frozen moss, but they have only managed to grow material that had been locked in ice for about 20 years.

    {{Shoots of recovery}}

    Now scientists from the British Antarctic Survey (BAS) and the University of Reading have taken sliced and seemingly dead samples from the deep permafrost and brought them back to life.

    They were placed in an incubator at 17C, a temperature often found in Antarctic moss plants in summer.

    After three weeks, new shoots appeared.

    “Various people have asked us did we do anything complicated to make it re-grow,” co-author Prof Peter Convey, from BAS, told media.

    “We’ve basically just cut it in half and put in the incubator and did as little as possible.”

    While the researchers did little to the plants, they took great care to ensure that there was no contamination from other life forms. Carbon dating put the age of the newly growing material at 1,530 years.

    “The shoots are alive right the way through the moss bank,” said Prof Convey.

    “The blue sky result is that we’ve really stuck a much older age on recovery than anyone has done so far.”

    In both the Arctic and Antarctic, mosses are an important part of the ecosystem.

    They play a major role in storing carbon and in the Arctic particularly, there are concerns that as the world warms the permafrost will emit even more CO2 into the atmosphere.

    But could the discovery that moss in the southern ice can be revived after 1,500 years mean that carbon release is less of a worry?

    Not quite, says Prof Convey. He says that most of the moss frozen in the Arctic is already dead and can’t be revitalised. Warming there would see that carbon seep back into the atmosphere.

    In the Antarctic though, it might be a different story.

    “In a warmer wetter world, mosses actually grow quite well. The question is how much are these thawing mosses going to grow in response to changes and how much can that been seen as a carbon sink?”

    The researchers also believe that the discovery signals that, in the right circumstances, multi-cellular organisms such as plants can survive for longer timescales than previously thought.

    “My gut feeling is that if you looked at a range of plants that have these sort of tactics, in the right conditions you’d start detecting these things back longer for a number of organisms,” said Prof Convey.

    BBC