Author: Publisher

  • West African Resources Ltd Takes Over Burkina Faso’s Gold Mining Permit

    West African Resources Ltd Takes Over Burkina Faso’s Gold Mining Permit

    {{West African Resources Limited has acquired a 100 per cent stake in Burkina Faso’s Tanlouka Permit for US$50,000 for gold mining.}}

    The company had recently bought over the remaining 10 per cent share in the permit, which is a part of the Boulsa Gold Project in the west African country.

    West African Resources Limited is expected to develop the Mankarga 5 area in the Tanlouka Permit.

    The company said that it has set a goal of being a 1,417kg per annum gold producer within two years.

    West African Resources Limited also announced recently that it had secured a second-hand 1.6mn tonnes per annum heap leach plant as part of its plan to fast-track development of Mankarga 5.

    Richard Hyde, MD of West African Resources Limited, said, “Reaching agreement to take our ownership of the Tanlouka permit to 100 per cent is an important milestone for us.

    “We are moving on quickly following the acquisition of Channel Resources in January 2014. We will deliver a resource upgrade for Mankarga 5 by the end of Q1, and complete a preliminary economic assessment and scoping study in the first half of 2014.”

    {africanreview}

  • Kenya, Sudan Match off in Venue Row

    Kenya, Sudan Match off in Venue Row

    {{A friendly between Kenya and Sudan has been called off following a row over the venue and timing of the match}}.

    The match, which was originally to be played in Sudan’s capital, Khartoum, was later switched to El Fasher in the volatile region of Darfur.

    The game had been pushed back a day to Thursday after the late arrival of the Kenya squad on Tuesday night.

    But Football Kenya Federation (FKF) officials said they were not aware of the change of venue and could not risk the safety of the players.

    Instead of travelling to play in the conflict-hit Darfur region, FKF officials have ordered the team to return home.

    “FKF will not allow our players to be subjected to situations where their security will be at risk.

    “We have a responsibility… hence our decision to instruct the team to return home without kicking a ball in Sudan,” FKF chairman Sam Nyamweya said in a statement.

    Kenya beat Sudan 2-0 in the final of the Cecafa Senior Challenge in Nairobi last December.

    Kenya had called up four foreign-based players for the match, including Inter Milan midfielder McDonald Mariga and skipper Victor Wanyama from English Premier League side Southampton.

    BBC

  • Kwibuka Flame of Remembrance Travels to Gicumbi District

    Kwibuka Flame of Remembrance Travels to Gicumbi District

    {{The Kwibuka Flame of Remembrance today arrives in Gicumbi District, the 20th stop on its nationwide tour. }}

    The flame will return to Kigali on 7 April 2014, the start of the national mourning period and twenty years since the Genocide against the Tutsi in Rwanda.

    You can view an interactive map of the tour here. The flame travels next to Nyagatare District on 11 March 2014.

    Today’s event is hosted by Mayor Alexandre Mvuyekure and will reflect on the events of the genocide in 1994 as well as the journey of Gicumbi and Rwanda since.

    The special guest is Hon. Minister Agnes Binagwaho, Minister of Health. The Governor of the Northern Province, Aimé Bosenibamwe, will also speak.

    The Flame of Remembrance will be received from Rulindo District by two 20-year-old students, Marie Louise Dusabe and Viateur Mbarushimana. A children’s choir will sing ‘Urumuri Rutazima’ (Never Ending Flame) to welcome the flame.

    Anastase Kamizikunze (40) will speak at today’s event about how he survived the genocide in Mutete and about going back to school after the genocide.

    Perpetrator Innocent Nyirigira (48) will speak about his role in the genocide and his new life after being released from prison. A song will be performed by Chantal Ndatenyirigira.

    Gicumbi District is composed of former Kiyombe, Mukarange, Cyumba, Kibali, Bwisige, Kinyami, Rutare, Giti, Buyoga and Cyungo communes. Byumba in Gicumbi is among the places where Tutsi were systematically killed as early as 1990.

    Some of the victims who were killed there were brought from Nyagatare and other areas in the east. The first training of the militia under what was called “civil defence” started in Byumba communes, where the distribution of guns to the civilian population began in 1991.

    When the genocide began, almost half of the district was under the control of Rwandan Patriotic Army.

    This prevented the killing of Tutsi throughout the whole district but wide spread killings took place in Mutete, an area under control of the government forces (FAR).

    Tutsi who had assembled at Zoko were initially able to resist attacks from the Interahamwe but succumbed when reinforcements arrived on 15 April 1994.

    There were 1789 victims of the genocide in Gicumbi, some of whom were killed before 1994. Among the perpetrators from the region was the influential businessman, Athanase Ntakaveve, who killed his own wife, Catherine, as an example for others to follow.

  • Malaria ‘Spreading to New Altitudes’

    Malaria ‘Spreading to New Altitudes’

    {{Warmer temperatures are causing malaria to spread to higher altitudes, a study suggests.}}

    Researchers have found that people living in the highlands of Africa and South America are at an increased risk of catching the mosquito-borne disease during hotter years.

    They believe that temperature rises in the future could result in millions of additional cases in some areas.

    The research is published in the journal Science.

    Prof Mercedes Pascual, from the University of Michigan in the US, who carried out the research, said: “The impact in terms of increasing the risk of exposure to disease is very large.”

    {{Vulnerable to disease}}

    Areas at higher altitudes have traditionally provided a haven from this devastating disease.

    Both the malaria parasite and the mosquito that carries it struggle to cope with the cooler air.

    Prof Pascual said: “The risk of the disease decreases with altitude and this is why historically people have settled in these higher regions.”

    But the scientists say the disease is entering new regions that had previously been malaria-free.

    To investigate, scientists looked at densely populated areas in the highlands of Colombia and Ethiopia, where there are detailed records of both temperature and malaria cases from the 1990s to 2005.

    They found that in warmer years, malaria shifted higher into the mountains, while in cooler years it was limited to lower elevations.

    “This expansion could in a sense account for a substantial part of the increase of cases we have already observed in these areas,” said Prof Pascual.

    The team believes that rising temperatures could cause a further spread.

    In Ethiopia, where nearly half of the population live at an altitude of between 1,600m (5,250ft) and 2,400m, the scientists believe there could be many more cases.

    “We have estimated that, based on the distribution of malaria with altitude, a 1C rise in temperature could lead to an additional three million cases in under-15-year-olds per year,” said Prof Pascual.

    The team believes that because people living in areas that have never been exposed to malaria are particularly vulnerable to the disease, attempts to stop the spread should be focused on areas at the edge of the spread. The disease is easier to control there than at lower altitudes where it has already established.

    According to the latest estimates from the World Health Organization, there were about 207 million cases of malaria in 2012 and an estimated 627,000 deaths. Most deaths occur among children living in Africa.

    {agencies}

  • Moroccan king Beefs Up Business, Religious Ties on African tour

    Moroccan king Beefs Up Business, Religious Ties on African tour

    {{Moroccan King Mohammed VI arrived in Gabon late on Wednesday for the last leg of a long visit to West and Central Africa marked by dozens of trade agreements.}}

    Reports from Libreville described the same display of giant royal portraits and Moroccan flags as on the previous steps in his itinerary, where enthusiastic crowds gathered to welcome him in the regions’ capitals – a sign of Morocco’s growing influence in the region.

    “This makes us proud because most Western leaders have avoided Guinea in recent months, favouring Mali and Senegal,” said Mouktar.

    Yet the trip’s success is simply gloss on the hard economic reality, which Mohammed VI described in very direct terms in Ivory Coast.

    “Diplomacy used to serve the strengthening of political relations. Nowadays, the economic dimension comes first, and it forms the basis of diplomatic relations,” the king told a meeting of around 500 Ivorian and Moroccan business leaders in Abidjan on February 24.

    Mohammed VI’s record in the past two weeks would put the best sales reps to shame: he has signed an average of 20 trade agreements in each of the three countries he has visited so far and opened Moroccan-contracted projects ranging from social housing to fishing ports, fibre optic links and cement factories.

    “At a time when Africa is seen as the next business frontier and Europe and the US are hit by the crisis, Morocco is pushing its banks and free-trade agreements to open commerce with countries forming a 250 million-inhabitant market,” said Bakary Sambe, a political scientist at Gaston Berger University in Saint-Louis, Senegal and the author of a book on Morocco’s diplomacy in sub-Saharan Africa. “Some Moroccan companies now beat French ones for tenders in the region, thanks to such lobbying,” he told reporters.

    {{Business on the one hand, religion in the other}}

    The Moroccan King’s status as a traditional Muslim leader in West Africa is another sign of Rabat’s influence in the region. “In the Middle Ages, the Moroccan empire used to spread all the way to Timbuktu and Senegal, and the Tijaniyyah brotherhood still recognizes the king as their spiritual leader,” Ismaïl Régragui, the author of “Moroccan public diplomacy: a religiously branded strategy?” told FRANCE 24.

    During his tour, Mohammed VI donated hundreds of Korans and signed several agreements to train African imams in Morocco. His Maliki school, a moderate branch of Sunni Islam, is particularly appealing to governments struggling to contain rising radicalism in the region.

    “Faced with the rise of Wahhabi and Salafi Islam on the one hand, and Iranian Shiite Islam on the other, the king is trying to create a sort of holy alliance around moderate Maliki Islam, with Morocco at its centre,” said Bakary Sambe.

    This has allowed Mohammed VI to become a mediator in the Malian crisis between Bamako’s central government and Tuareg and radical Islamist movements in control of much of northern Mali – a job for which he trumped Morocco’s arch-rival in the region, Algeria.

    {{Mohammed VI gains support on Western Sahara – at Algeria’s expense}}

    Algiers and Rabat are in open conflict over the fate of Western Sahara, a former Spanish colony claimed by Morocco.

    Algeria has always supported the territory’s independence. By strengthening ties with sub-Saharan African countries, Morocco, which left the African Union in 1984 in disagreement over its recognition of the Western Saharan Polisario movement, wants to break its 30-year-old isolation.

    “Morocco was feeling surrounded: to the North by Spain, with whom relations are difficult over the enclaves of Ceuta and Melilla; to the east by Algeria, which supports the Polisario movement. Its foreign policy is to open up towards the south as the regional diplomatic landscape is being rejigged,” said Sambe.

    The king’s effort seem to have yielded some results: Mali’s new president Ibrahim Boubacar Keita departed from his country’s traditional support for the Polisario movement by acknowledging Morocco’s “credible and serious efforts” to find a solution for Western Sahara.

    This week’s final leg of Mohammed VI’s visit in Gabon, a longstanding ally of Morocco, can only confirm the king’s growing influence in the region.

    “Africa needs a popular, democratic leader whose country has economic credentials,” said Youssoufa, a caller to RFI’s ‘Appels sur l’actualité’.

    “That space was left empty by Colonel Gaddafi and Morocco has the economic potential to play that role.”

    Yet Bakary Sambe warned that Mohammed VI had one more thing to do at home if he wanted to become truly popular with sub-Saharan Africans: change Morocco’s image as Europe’s “anti-immigration policeman” – a perception that recent immigration reform has so far failed to alter.

    {wirestory}

  • 11th National Leadership Retreat to Discuss ‘Accountable Governance’

    11th National Leadership Retreat to Discuss ‘Accountable Governance’

    {{More than 250 members of cabinet, ambassadors, mayors and heads of key government agencies, senior members of the legislature and judiciary, and representatives of the private sector will gather at GabiroSchool of Infantry in Eastern Province from 8-10 March for the 11thGovernment Leadership Retreat .}}

    Chaired by President Kagame, this year’s retreat is themed “Accountable Governance” and provides an opportunity for Rwanda’s leaders to hold each other accountable,reflect on the country’s progress and forge common solutions that will ensure improved the delivery of services to Rwandans.

    The retreat will discuss the role of education, governance and private sector as key to achieving EDPRS2 and Vision 2020.

    The interactive discussions will begin with panels discussing improving the quality of basic education, improving planning, coordination and service delivery as well as mechanisms to accelerate private sector growth.

  • Verdict on Congolese Warlord Seen as Test of ICC

    Verdict on Congolese Warlord Seen as Test of ICC

    {{The International Criminal Court will deliver its verdict Friday in the trial of Congolese ex-militia leader Germain Katanga, accused of using child soldiers in a 2003 attack on a village that killed 200 people.}}

    Judge Bruno Cotte was to read the verdict at 0830 GMT in The Hague in the case against Katanga, the one-time commander of the ethnic-based Patriotic Resistance Forces in Ituri, operating in the Democratic Republic of Congo’s mineral-rich northeast.

    The case is a key test of the prosecutors’ ability to bring solid cases and win convictions at the tribunal.

    The verdict will be only the ICC’s third since opening its doors more than a decade ago. It is also the first time that the charges at the court have included sexual violence.

    Katanga, 35, went on trial more than four years ago facing seven counts of war crimes and three of crimes against humanity, including murder, sexual slavery and rape for his alleged role in the attack on the small village of Bogoro on February 24, 2003.

    Prosecutors allege Katanga, also known as “Simba”, and his force of the Ngiti and Lendu tribes attacked villagers of the Hema ethnic group with machine guns, rocket-propelled grenades and machetes, murdering around 200 people.

    {france24}

  • President Kagame to Attend EU-Africa Summit in Brussels

    President Kagame to Attend EU-Africa Summit in Brussels

    {{President Paul Kagame confirmed Thursday he will attend the forthcoming EU-Africa summit to be held on 2 and 3 April in Brussels, said the Belgian Minister of Development Cooperation, Jean-Pascal Labille.}}

    Mr. Labille buckled Thursday a mini-tour in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and Rwanda, along with the European Commissioner for Development, Andris Piebalgs.

    This four-day visit ended with a meeting with the European Commissioner, Belgian Minister and the President of Rwanda.

    President Kagame will be part of the Heads of State and Government who will be early April in Brussels, among which also included Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe.

    The participation of DRCongo President Joseph Kabila, however, remains uncertain, despite the invitation.

    Belga

  • Scientists Say Can Extend Human Life to 500years

    Scientists Say Can Extend Human Life to 500years

    {{American Science researchers have announced that they have succeeded in efforts of prolonging human life up to about 500years.}}

    The researchers have managed to alter the genetics of a species of worm metabolism which multiplied by five its life expectancy. If the same is applied on humans, man would live up to 500years.

    Eternal life. It is the dream (?) Sold by scientists Buck Institute of Research on Aging, located in California .

    As they published December 12 in the journal Cell Reports (and relayed from or through high perspective daily geek show), researchers have found a way to increase life expectancy by five blocking molecules – which affected the action insulin – and an enzyme.

    These regulating growth , mobility and cell survival . At first, they had looked on the enzyme, tripling the life expectancy.

    Doubling blocking, they exceeded their expectations. “Both mutations have triggered a positive feedback loop in specific tissues that have amplified life ,” said Pankaj Kapahi , a member of the research team . ” Basically , these worms lived the human equivalent of 400 to 500 years.”

    Apart from longer life , this discovery provides , in a first time , the prospect of anti- aging treatments through genetic interactions . ” It is quite likely that interactions between genes are essential for the lucky managing to live long and healthy ,” said Kapahi .

    So the man took a step closer to immortality. After the ” genetic backup ” , a new process – which will take years before being tested on humans – promises eternal life. A happy prospect ?

    {wirestory}

  • Simbikangwa Trial: Paris Court Rejects Defence Requests

    Simbikangwa Trial: Paris Court Rejects Defence Requests

    {{The Paris Court on Thursday rejected the request of the defence of Pascal Simbikangwa , the first Rwandan to be tried in France in connection with the 1994 genocide against ethnic Tutsi’s in Rwanda.}}

    The prosecution announced its intention to ask the court to answer a question about the guilt of the accused of the crime of genocide, not just of “complicity in genocide”.

    The defence had argued Wednesday that moving the court in Rwanda, saying it would remove some of the “discrepancies between the testimonies.” Otherwise, she had asked a supplementary information on some points, which amounted to a transfer of the case to a judge.

    President Olivier Leurent announced the rejection of both applications, saying “multiple sketches, photos, plans (…) so as to inform the court.” He also held that the fact that many places have been changed in the two decades since the facts “render illusory the provision of on-site inspection” also legally impossible abroad.

    For its part, the Advocate General Bruno Sturlese asked the court for a “redefinition ” of the prosecution , saying that ” the discussions showed that Mr. Simbikangwa was not guilty of complicity in genocide but of genocide ” . ” He who does not commit an accomplice but a writer,” he has said.

    Technically, this reclassification would form a subsidiary question to the jury and imply that it meets first “no” to questions about the complicity put to him under the terms of the order of indictment.

    The list of questions submitted to the jury should be finalized by Friday, President Leurent who said he ” would think ” about this request.

    “I collapsed , I’m surprised , I’m shot ,” said the accused. “After the good I have done,” he continued with reference to at least two families he saved Tutsi genocide, and whose members have testified in court.

    Whether for genocide or complicity, the accused faces life imprisonment.

    {jeune Afrique}