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  • 50 Million People Displaced Worldwide, UN Says

    50 Million People Displaced Worldwide, UN Says

    More than 50 million people were forcibly uprooted worldwide at the end of last year, the highest level since after World War Two, as people fled crises from Syria to South Sudan, the U.N. refugee agency said on Friday.

    Half are children, many of them caught up in conflicts or persecution that world powers have been unable to prevent or end, UNHCR said in its annual Global Trends report.

    “We are really facing a quantum leap, an enormous increase of forced displacement in our world,” U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees Antonio Guterres told a news briefing.

    The overall figure of 51.2 million displaced people soared by six million from a year earlier. They included 16.7 million refugees and 33.3 million displaced within their homelands, and 1.2 million asylum seekers whose applications were pending.

    Syrians fleeing the escalating conflict accounted for most of the world’s 2.5 million new refugees last year, UNHCR said.

    In all, nearly 3 million Syrians have crossed into neighbouring Lebanon, Turkey, Iraq and Jordan, while another 6.5 million remain displaced within Syria’s borders.

    “We are seeing here the immense costs of not ending war, of failing to resolve or prevent conflict,” Guterres said. “We see the Security Council paralysed in many crucial crises around the world.”

    UN

  • Gold Holds Gains as Dollar Dips

    Gold Holds Gains as Dollar Dips

    An index of global stocks nestled near record highs on Friday while gold celebrated its biggest one-day rise in nine months as markets wagered monetary policy would stay super loose in the United States, Europe and Japan for a long time to come.

    Investors had piled into bullion while selling U.S. government debt on the premise the Fed might be comfortable with higher inflation if it meant faster economic growth.

    Spot gold was enjoying the view at $1,315.00 an ounce having been as far as $1,321.70 at one stage on Thursday when it climbed 3.3 percent.

    Traders also said a major hedge fund had cut back a large short position in the precious metal which pushed prices above $1,300 an ounce and tripped a host of stop-loss buy orders.

    Stocks were in demand with MSCI’s all-country world index, which includes about 85 percent of global investable equities, passing its previous all-time high set in November 2007.

    Japan’s Nikkei ended steady after touching a fresh five-month peak, while the broader TOPIX brought its gains to more than 10 percent in just the past four weeks.

    “The good mood is still lingering,” said Kyoya Okazawa, head of global equities at BNP Paribas. “Not just foreign investors but also long-term domestic investors like pension funds have been buying as well.”

    MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan ran out of steam, easing 0.4 percent on losses in South Korea and China.

  • Zimbabwe Police Arrests Editor of State Newspaper

    Zimbabwe Police Arrests Editor of State Newspaper

    Zimbabwean police have arrested the editor of a state-owned newspaper, its publisher said on Friday, a week after President Robert Mugabe accused his information minister for hiring journalists sympathetic to the opposition.

    Zimbabwe routinely arrests editors from the private media under tough security and media laws, but no journalist working for a government controlled paper has been affected in the last decade.

    Police on Thursday arrested Edmund Kudzayi, who was appointed editor of the weekly Sunday Mail in April, Zimbabwe Newspapers, the holding company for state-owned papers said in a statement.

    The company said police had confiscated computers from Kudzayi’s office but did not state the reason for his arrest.

    Mugabe last week branded information minister Jonathan Moyo a “devil incarnate”, accusing him of using government-controlled newspapers to sow divisions within the ruling ZANU-PF party.

    Police spokeswoman Charity Charamba could not be reached for comment on Friday, but the state Herald newspaper said the arrest was linked to previous publications by Kudzayi.

    Zimbabwe’s private media outlets say an intense battle within ZANU-PF on who will succeed the 90-year-old Mugabe has sucked in the state-owned press.

    Deputy President Joice Mujuru and Justice Minister Emmerson Mnangangwa have emerged as the front runners, but Mugabe, who has ruled Zimbabwe since independence from Britain in 1980, says the contest is open to all party leaders.

    wirestory

  • Book Describes ‘Farcical’ Aftermath of Mandela’s Death

    Book Describes ‘Farcical’ Aftermath of Mandela’s Death

    Nelson Mandela’s widow was forced to get accreditation to attend his memorial service and could only bring four family members as his clan squabbled after his death, the South African icon’s former private assistant says.

    Graca Machel, who became Mandela’s third wife in his twilight years, was frequently undermined by some members of his family, former Mandela assistant Zelda la Grange wrote in her memoirs published on Thursday.

    “It was becoming farcical. If we could barely get Nelson Mandela’s widow and her children accredited to attend his memorial service, it was becoming downright impossible to get anyone else officially accredited,” la Grange wrote in the book “Good Morning, Mr. Mandela”.

    State inefficiency also meant friends like Archbishop Desmond Tutu and Oprah Winfrey struggled to get passes to the funeral last December in rural South Africa, according to her account.

    Mandela’s daughter Makaziwe has threatened to sue la Grange over the book’s allegations, according to local media.

    “I have learned from Madiba that you will never, ever do anything that will please everyone. You have to be happy with yourself,” she told Reuters, referring to Mandela by his clan name, when asked about the threat of legal action.

    agencies

  • Nigeria Recovers $228M Looted by Former Leader Abacha

    Nigeria Recovers $228M Looted by Former Leader Abacha

    Nigeria will recover $228 million of funds looted by former military dictator Sani Abacha, the finance ministry said on Thursday, after a 16-year battle to retrieve the stolen money from Liechtenstein.

    For years, Abuja’s efforts to get the money back had been stymied by a lawsuit from companies linked to Abacha’s family, alleging infringement of their rights to a fair trial.

    Nigeria’s finance minister last year accused Liechtenstein of using legal challenges as a pretext to keep the money stolen by Abacha, who died in 1998.

    The dictator stole as much as $5 billion of public money during his five years running Africa’s top oil producer from 1993 to 1998, Transparency International says.

    “We can confirm that Nigeria will on June 25, 2014, receive the sum of euro 167 million from the government of the Principality of Liechtenstein, part of looted funds recovered from the Abacha family,” the ministry said in a statement.

    The finance ministry had said it was seeking to repatriate 185 million euros ($252 million) of stolen funds. It was not immediately clear if it would repatriate 18 million later on.

    Nigeria said it had dropped the case against the Abachas as part of a deal to recover the money and, in turn, the dictator’s family agreed to drop its human rights suit.

    Nigeria will invest the money in projects picked by a committee of ministers and monitored by the World Bank. Some of it will go into a fund on behalf of future generations.

    agencies

  • Sweden Upholds Rwanda Genocide Conviction

    Sweden Upholds Rwanda Genocide Conviction

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    A Swedish court of appeal on Thursday upheld a life prison sentence for Stanislas Mbanenande, the first person in Sweden to be convicted of genocide, for crimes committed during the Rwandan genocide of 1994.

    The 55-year-old Swedish citizen of Rwandan origin was first sentenced by a Stockholm district court in June 2013 for a string of crimes, including murder and abduction, in connection with a large number of massacres.

    Mbanenande was a civil engineer and university lecturer when the crimes were committed.

    He and his family left Rwanda during the Genocide and he eventually moved to Sweden in 2007. He became a citizen in 2008.

    He has denied all charges, and his defense team claimed in court that the investigation was fabricated and Mbanenande wrongfully accused.

    The Swedish appellate court said that it found no reason to change the district court’s verdict, arguing that testimony from victims and witnesses was reliable even though the events took place 20 years ago during emotionally difficult and chaotic conditions.

    “The Court of Appeals has concluded that the identifying testimonies, despite the long time that has passed, are so reliable that it is clear it is the defendant,” the Svea Court of Appeal, in Stockholm, said in a statement.

    The defendant’s lawyer, Tomas Nilsson, said that Mbanenande would likely appeal to the supreme court. “We’re very critical of this ruling and believe the court of appeal hasn’t taken into account the particular difficulties regarding the evidence in this case,” he said.

    The case covered multiple crimes at several different occasions. The appeal court said that it had overturned the verdict in one instance because of uncertainty over the perpetrator’s identity, but that it didn’t change the life sentence.

  • U.S. Cancels Military Aid to Uganda Over Anti-Gay Law

    U.S. Cancels Military Aid to Uganda Over Anti-Gay Law

    The United States on Thursday cut aid to Uganda, imposed visa restrictions and canceled a regional military exercise in response to a Ugandan law that imposes harsh penalties on homosexuality.

    The White House said in a statement the measures were intended to “reinforce our support for human rights of all Ugandans regardless of sexual orientation or gender identity.”

    Homosexuality is taboo in most African countries and illegal in 37, including in Uganda where it has been a crime since British rule.

    Uganda’s new law, signed by President Yoweri Museveni in February, imposes jail terms of up to life for “aggravated homosexuality” which includes homosexual sex with a minor or while HIV-positive.

    Widely condemned by donor countries, the law also criminalizes lesbianism for the first time and makes it a crime to help individuals engage in homosexual acts.

    Western donors, including the United States, had halted or re-directed about $118 million in aid to the east African nation’s economy before Thursday’s announcement.

    The White House said on Thursday the United States would impose visa restrictions on Ugandans it believes have been involved in human rights violations, including gay rights.

    The United States will halt $2.4 million in funding for a Ugandan community policing program in light of a police raid on a U.S.-funded health program at Makerere University and reports of people detained and abused while in police custody.

    In addition, Washington will shift some funding for salaries and travel expenses of Ugandan health ministry employees to non-governmental agencies involved in health programs.

    It will also reallocate $3 million in funding for a planned national public health institute in Uganda to another African country, which it did not name.

    A National Institutes of Health genomics meeting would be moved from Uganda to South Africa, the White House said.

    It also canceled plans for a U.S.-sponsored military exercise in Uganda that was meant to include other East African countries. A date had not yet been set for the exercise.

    Uganda is a key Western ally in the fight against Islamic extremism in Somalia, where Ugandan troops for the backbone of the African Union force battling al Qaeda-aligned militants.

    U.S. special forces have also been involved in the hunt for Joseph Kony, the elusive rebel commander seeking to topple the Ugandan government. Kony is believed to be hiding in the jungles of central Africa.

    In Kampala, a government official asked about the U.S. measures said that Uganda would not alter its decision to toughen laws against homosexuals.

    “Uganda is a sovereign country and can never bow to anybody or be blackmailed by anybody on a decision it took in its interests, even if it involves threats to cut off all financial assistance,” government spokesman Ofwono Opondo said.

    U.S. President Barack Obama previously told Museveni the law would complicate relations between the two countries.

    Since then Washington has been reviewing its funding to Uganda, while privately pressing Museveni’s government to repeal the law.

  • Charles Taylor Says Prefers Rwanda Prison

    Charles Taylor Says Prefers Rwanda Prison

    Former Liberian president Charles Taylor says his imprisonment in Britain breaches his human rights and has applied to serve the rest of his jail term for war crimes in Rwanda, his lawyer said Thursday.

    Taylor was jailed for 50 years in 2012 on 11 counts of war crimes and crimes against humanity over acts committed by Sierra Leonean rebels he aided and abetted during the brutal 1991-2001 civil war.

    He was the first former head of state to be jailed by an international court — the UN-backed Special Court for Sierra Leone in The Hague — since the Nazi trials at Nuremberg in Germany after World War II.

    Taylor’s lawyer John Jones told British media: “What he has applied for is for the revocation of the sentence to be served in the UK so that he can serve his sentence in Rwanda where all the other prisoners convicted by the special court for Sierra Leone are.”

    Jones added: “The UK has a duty to ensure family life, not just for him but for his family. It’s a clear duty under international law and English domestic law.

    “If the UK is unable to make these family visits possible, no matter what he has been convicted of, he is going to serve a 50-year sentence, he has got a right to see his wife and children.”

    Taylor’s family, which reportedly includes 15 children, has previously complained about conditions at HMP Frankland in northeast England, the maximum security prison where he is being held.

    “They took him to this prison where high (-risk) criminals, terrorists and other common British criminals are kept and he is being classified as a high-risk prisoner,” his wife Victoria Addison Taylor told media last year.

    “He is going through humiliation and you cannot treat a former head of state that way.”

    Britain’s Foreign Office said Taylor was treated in the same way as any other prisoner and the court in The Hague would decide on his application.

    “In terms of him being mistreated, the answer is no. As with any other prisoner in the UK, he’s being held in decent conditions,” a spokesman told reporters.

    “He and his family have the same conditions and visiting rights as any other UK prisoner.”

    AFP

  • AMISOM in Mogadishu Gets New Leader

    AMISOM in Mogadishu Gets New Leader

    The Deputy Special Representative of the Chairperson of African Union Commission (DSRCC), Lydia Wanyoto Mutende will head the AU Mission in Somalia until the appointment of a replacement.

    Wanyoto, a former East African Legislative Assembly member takes office effective July 2, 2014 when the incumbent ambassador Mahamat Saleh Annadif leaves office.

    According to statement issued by AMISOM in Mogadishu, Ambassador Mahamat Saleh Annadif will leave the mission on same date.

    Mahamat Saleh Annadif on Wednesday held separate meetings with the president, the Somalia’s prime minister and the speaker and formally introduced the deputy special representative, Mutende and the recently appointed police commissioner, Anand Pillay, as part of the handover process.

    He said: “As I leave Somalia, I’m impressed by your determination to bring sustainable peace and stability to your country. I’m particularly happy to note that the horn of African nation is currently enjoying its longest period of relative peace since 1991 and that through your leadership, we have of late witnessed amicable resolution of disputes amongst various different groups.”

    The AU Special Representative thanked Troop Contributing Countries (TCCs) as well as international partners, notably the UN and the EU, for supporting him during his tenure and for their continued commitment to peace and stability in Somalia.

    The contribution of Burundi, Djibouti, Ethiopia, Kenya, Sierra Leone and Uganda to the building of peace in Somalia is something of which all Africans can be proud.

  • Sudan’s NUP Set New Conditions For Resuming National Dialogue

    Sudan’s NUP Set New Conditions For Resuming National Dialogue

    Sudan’s opposition National Umma Party (NUP) has suggested that it intends to set new conditions in order to resume participation in the national dialogue stressing that this process cannot start from the point where it stopped prior to the arrest of its leader al-Sadiq al-Mahdi.

    The NUP suspended participation in the dialogue last month to protest al-Mahdi’s arrest and what it said was a government crackdown on political and media liberties.

    Al-Mahdi was arrested on May 17th for criticizing alleged crimes and atrocities committed by the Rapid Support Force (RSF) government militia in conflict zones.

    He was released on Sunday and the state media said the move was done after al-Mahdi’s lawyers appealed to the justice minister Mohamed Bushara Dousa to use his powers under article (58) of Sudan’s penal code which allows him to stop criminal proceedings against any suspect at any point before being sentenced by a court.

    It carried a statement by NUP Central Commission stating that they support the Sudan Armed Forces (SAF) and said that what al-Mahdi mentioned regarding RSF is derived from complaints and claims “that are not necessarily all true”.

    However, several NUP leaders including Meriam al-Mahdi denied offering an apology, describing the statement attributed to the NUP Central Commission as “fake”. However the opposition party has yet to formally deny its authenticity.

    The NUP said in a statement on Wednesday that its call for national dialogue was driven by strategic and circumstantial reasons relating to the dangers facing the country, adding that it joined the government’s initiative for dialogue with great enthusiasm and urged all political parties to join as well.

    “Following this bitter experience [of arresting al-Mahdi] things cannot begin where it stopped and a genuine review for the reasons behind the failure of the government’s call for dialogue must be conducted in order to determine who is responsible for that failure”, the statement reads.

    The NUP emphasized in the statement that it does not react impulsively but has a strategic view which is based on the national interest of the country, reiterating commitment to establishing a new regime without resorting to violence or seeking foreign support.

    The NUP further mentioned that the new regime will be established through direct contact with all Sudanese parties inside the country and abroad in order to achieve national objectives including full democratic transition and comprehensive and just peace.

    The statement thanked all those who supported al-Mahdi during his prison time, saying they are confident the Sudanese people and political parties would facilitate the NUP mission of reaching a unified national position to achieve the country’s national interests.

    sudantribune