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  • President Kagame Receives Swedish Finance Minister

    President Kagame Receives Swedish Finance Minister

    {{President Paul Kagame on thursday at his office received the Swedish Finance Minister, Anders Borg who has held the post since 2006 and is in the country as part of a 3 day nation tour covering Kenya, Uganda and Rwanda to discuss future cooperation and partnerships between Sweden and Africa starting with the East African region.}}

    Sweden’s annual development aid to Rwanda is 30 MillionUS Dollars. Several Swedish universities have cooperation agreements with the National University of Rwanda whereby Rwandan lecturers and students go to Sweden to pursue graduate and post-graduate studies.

    “For Sweden, Africa is now an important market to target, a continent that has many emerging countries, much more so than it was the case in the previous years.

    Aid to Rwanda has now been restored and we have had a development aid strategy that span 3 years, the first one went from 2010- 2013, but we are now working on development new agreements for the period 2014-2017.

    Those are the discussions that we are having with them now; these funds will be channelled to different sectors and activities for a period of 3 years.”

    Sweden has been Rwanda’s main bilateral partner in the Nordic region; Rwanda’s cooperation with Sweden began after the 1994 genocide against the Tutsi. In 2007 Rwanda opened an Embassy in Stockholm.

    In 2010 Sweden opened an embassy in Rwanda, through upgrading of SIDA’s existing section offices.

    The Embassy in Kigali is headed by a Chargé d’Affaires and a nonresident Ambassador who is based in Kampala.

    The Kingdom of Sweden is the largest Country in the Nordics region, third largest in the EU by area only behind France and Spain (almost double the United Kingdom).

    With a population of 9.5 million, Sweden is also the most populated country in the Nordics. It is the largest economy and the most diplomatically influential Country in a region ranked by the UN as the wealthiest globally.

    {presidency}

  • Rwanda Police Peacekeepers in Mali Donate to Vulnerable Pupils

    Rwanda Police Peacekeepers in Mali Donate to Vulnerable Pupils

    {{The Rwanda Police Formed Police Unit (FPU) contingent operating under United Nations Multidimensional Integrated Stabilization Mission in Mali (MINUSMA) has donated an assortment of scholastic materials to vulnerable pupils in the West African nation.}}

    The support which includes one year tuition fees and clothes was given to pupils of Ecole fondamentale de Boulgoundjie located in GAO city on February 25.

    It was handed over to the beneficiaries by the Rwanda FPU Mali 1 contingent commander, Chief Supt. Mutezintare Bertin.

    The beneficiaries are those that were either orphaned or separated from their families during the North Mali rebellion which took place in 2012.

    The support is a financial contribution of each of the Rwanda Police peacekeeper serving in Mali.

    The Rwanda Police peacekeepers also provided free medical consultation to 41 patients.

    Chief Supt. Mutezintare appealed to the beneficiaries and the youth not to lose hope.

    “Even in the face of difficult situations, don’t lose hope; have faith and utilize the available opportunities to pave way for a better future,” Chief Supt. Mutezintare told the students.

    He urged them to concentrate on their studies to be future better leaders the country expects.

    MINUSMA and the school administration thanked Rwanda Police peacekeepers for their generosity and going beyond their mandate to give hope to the vulnerable youth to acquire education.

    They were also commended for being a professional force. There are 141 Rwanda Police peacekeepers in Mali.

    The event was also attended by Rwanda Police peacekeepers, MINUSMA staff and area residents.

    RNP

  • A Spicy Evening With Rwanda’s Funniest Comedians

    A Spicy Evening With Rwanda’s Funniest Comedians

    {{The Comedy Knights’ new show will be served this Friday and it is all about culture: How do Rwandans live compared to other citizens of the world such as Americans, Congolese, Banyamulenge and others? As usual, two hours of finest stand-up comedy waiting for you, powered by Rwandan musicians.}}

  • US Moves Ahead on Massive Africa Power Bid

    US Moves Ahead on Massive Africa Power Bid

    {{US lawmakers broke through a logjam Thursday on a plan to bring electricity to 50 million Africans, in what Washington hopes will be its next major initiative for the continent.}}

    During a visit to Africa in June, President Barack Obama announced a US drive to improve power for the two thirds of Africans who lack a reliable supply.

    But legislation in Congress, which is more concrete and ambitious than Obama’s initial statement, had been held up by a dispute on whether to support electrical plants that produce large amounts of carbon blamed for climate change.

    The bill, approved by the House Foreign Affairs Committee, sets a goal of installing 20,000 megawatts of power in sub-Saharan Africa by 2020 and reaching at least 50 million people who do not have electricity.

    The funding would come from the private sector, using government-backed credit guarantees.

    Representative Ed Royce, who chairs the panel, hailed the Electrify Africa Act as a way for the United States to contribute to the continent’s development, as lack of power impedes everything from education to health care.

    Royce, a Republican who worked on the bill with members of Obama’s Democratic Party, said that the plan would also help American companies tap into a growing consumer market and show US engagement in the face of China’s rising presence in Africa.

    The bill still needs approval from the full House of Representatives and Senate, but the committee vote indicated broad support.

    However, the legislation came under fire from Representative Mo Brooks, a conservative Republican from Alabama who said that the United States was not financially sound enough to be “building power plants and power lines in Africa.”

    “I very much appreciate the altruistic motivations that I’ve heard in support of this legislation, but quite frankly, I don’t believe America’s financial condition is such that it supports spending money that we don’t have on these projects,” Brooks said.

    Lawmakers from both parties countered that the US-backed financial institutions involved in the initiative – the Overseas Private Investment Corporation, or OPIC, and the Export-Import Bank – do not spend taxpayer money and in fact create US jobs by boosting economic activity.

    Democratic Representative Gerry Connolly denounced Brooks’s view as “dangerous” and said of the act: “It’s not just ‘altruism,’ it’s enlightened self-interest.”

    “I don’t want to be the person who has to answer the next generation, ‘Why is Africa-Chinese trade the dominant trade in that part of the world and we don’t even have a slice of it?’ And the answer is because somebody, somewhere, 20 years before said we can’t afford it,” Connolly said.

    Obama had promoted electricity as the next big goal for the United States in Africa after his predecessor, George W. Bush, worked with Democrats to fight diseases including HIV/AIDS and former president Bill Clinton helped jumpstart trade.

    But the bill had been held up as corporations pushed to ease existing requirements that OPIC steer clear of carbon-intense projects.

    General Electric said it supported renewable energy but that efforts in Africa also needed other sources, such as gas.

    In a compromise, the bill does not address the issue. The fight was partially diverted as Congress took up OPIC funding when drafting the $1.1 trillion spending bill for fiscal year 2014.

    Environmentalists argued that major fossil fuel projects have proven to be a failure in much of Africa and that US investment could encourage more innovative clean energy in a continent expected to be hard hit by climate change.

    One, the anti-poverty group co-founded by U2 frontman Bono, pressed for passage of the legislation.

    Tom Hart, the group’s US executive director, said that the bill “shows the best face of America.”

    AFP

  • Radioactive Cars Still at Mombasa port

    Radioactive Cars Still at Mombasa port

    {{A container with four motor vehicles alleged to be contaminated with radioactive materials is still lying at the port of Mombasa a year after it was recommended for reshipping to Japan.}}

    Correspondence between State agencies and a motor vehicle importers lobby group indicates the container detected on January 31st last year is yet to be shipped out following a dispute.

    The Car Importers Association of Kenya says the Kenya Bureau of Standards (Kebs), through its appointed inspection agency — the Japan Export Vehicle Inspection Centre (Jevic) — gave the consignment a clean bill of health that was rejected by the Kenya Radiation and Protection Board (KRPB) upon offloading at Mombasa.

    “Our stand as an association is that Kebs is carrying out the radioactive measurement in Japan and this can be evidenced by the roadworthiness certificate which quotes ‘radiation free zone’.

    Importers are paying inspection charge at a rate of $220 (Sh18,700),” association chairman Peter Otieno said in a letter to KRPB dated January 6.

    Whereas Kebs has appointed agents to do pre-export verification, KRPB, which is charged with testing radio-active contamination, has appointed two agencies to carry out tests before vehicles are off-loaded from the ship at Mombasa port for a charge of Sh1,000.

    Those that fail the standard test are not allowed onshore but taken back to their country of origin.

    The board dismisses claims that Kebs agents carry out radioactive tests, saying Jevic did not apply to be a radiation service provider with the board and, therefore, the radioactive tests are not recognised by the authority.

    “The board has confirmed that Jevic Ltd inspection fee of $220 is not for radiation. In fact, this is the same figure of inspection fee charged by Jevic Ltd even before the March 11, 2011 Fukushima Daiichi nuclear accident in Japan,” KRPB wrote to the Kenya Maritime Authority in a letter dated January 29.

    According to the association, since it is the responsibility of the government to ensure radiation-free imports before shipment into the country, the consignee should not bear any cost in case tests turn positive after arrival of the vehicles. “Inspection should be done at the port of loading not that of discharge.

    Logistical challenges

    This will protect all the interests of importers,” said Mr Otieno, adding that the cost of re-exporting a container ranges between $3,000-4,000 and importers do not have any way of recovering it.

    On Wednesday, Nixon Mdachi, the principal radiation protection officer in Mombasa, said reshipping of the vehicles had delayed due to logistical challenges.

    Storage charges have hit $56,000 (Sh4.7 million) and the importer has asked for a waiver that is yet to be granted.

    In an earlier interview, lobby Kenya Auto Bazaar Association secretary Charles Munyori claimed KRBP does not have the capacity to test vehicles for radioactive before they leave the ship.

    {Containers at the Mombasa port. One container with four motor vehicles alleged to be contaminated with radioactive materials is still lying at the port a year after it was recommended for return}
    {businessdaily}

  • ‘Strange Object’ Falls from Sky, Burns House in Kenya

    ‘Strange Object’ Falls from Sky, Burns House in Kenya

    {{Residents of Kibaraa in Kuresoi are still in shock after a suspected meteoroid fell from the sky hitting a house loudly before blasting into flames. }}

    Jane Sitonik said she saw an object at around 7.30p.m on Thursday evening fell from the sky and hit her house. She was heading home from a nearby posho mill. She said she screamed and fell down since her three children were inside the house at the time.

    “I fell down not knowing how to rescue my three children who were inside and the house was brought down immediately my children were outside,” shocked Sitonik said Friday. She described the object as disintegrated flames having a head and a tail like a snake.

    Samuel arap Sitienei , a neighbour, said he heard the loud burst and screaming and his family too abandoned the evening meal to witness the rare incident which he says was like lightning.

    “We are just sorry for what happened and fortunately no one was injured,” he told The Standard. Mary Kisortich who saw the object at the end of the village also described it as a snake-like burning cloud.

    “I thought it was a bomb and I asked God to save us,” said Mary adding that the whole village, amid screams, became very bright for a short time.

    “I thought God had come,” Mary added. According to Sitonik, one child who was among three others inside the house, sustained minor injuries while being rushed outside to safety.

    {standard}

  • Ouattara to Return to Ivory Coast on Sunday

    Ouattara to Return to Ivory Coast on Sunday

    {{President Alassane Ouattara is due to return to Ivory Coast on Sunday after an operation in a French hospital this month, an aide said on Thursday.}}

    Ouattara, who came to power in the world’s top cocoa-producer following a brief post-election civil war in 2011, underwent a successful operation to alleviate pain caused by sciatica, the government said last week.

    The 72-year-old leader left hospital earlier this week to recuperate at his Parisian home. Ivorian parliament president Guillaume Soro said in statement on Wednesday he met Ouattara and that he was “doing well, in fact very well”.

    Ivory Coast is emerging from a decade of political turmoil that saw the country divided between a rebel north and government-controlled south and which fractured society along political and ethnic lines.

    Ouattara, an economist and former International Monetary Fund official, has been praised by donors for the rapid renaissance of French-speaking West Africa’s largest economy.

    Analysts, however, warn that slow progress towards national reconciliation and a failure to reform the army and police still pose threats to Ivory Coast’s political stability.

    The absence from daily political life of the normally highly visible Ouattara has fuelled rumors in Ivory Coast that his health condition is more serious than officially stated, sparking concern over a potential succession battle.

    {wirestory}

  • Ghana Loses $1.2bn in Tax Incentives to Foreign Companies

    Ghana Loses $1.2bn in Tax Incentives to Foreign Companies

    {{Ghana loses approximately $1.2 billion in tax incentives offered foreign companies every year which would otherwise have been channelled into segments of the economy crying for real resuscitation, a study carried by ActionAid Ghana has established.}}

    Consequently, the study has advised the enactment of necessary legislation so that all the huge sums or money that go to cushion foreign companies operating in the country, find their way into the national kitty.

    ActionAid Ghana, a non­-governmental organization, in collaboration with ISODEC centre, launched the report sensitizing the media to tax justice, tax incentives and the “Tax Power Campaign,” all in a bid to encourage Ghanaians to demand proper accountability in taxes paid by companies, and also to pay the right taxes required of them.

    The report reiterates that Ghana loses huge sums of money in taxes that could have been used to alleviate poyerty, to the tune of $1.2 billion (GHc 2.4 million) annually as a result of tax incentives to foreign and big companies operating in the country.

    This figure was arrived at, having taken into consideration, the GDP base between 2012 and 2014 as well as the annual tax- expenditure.

    The report also says that analysis of the percentage component of total revenues given as incentives in different categories, shows that in 2012, 41% of trade tax revenues were lost through tax exemptions compared to 28% of direct tax and VAT revenues.

    The 2013 Budget and Economic Policy Statement of the government estimates that Ghana’s tax expenditure was about 3.28 per cent of GDP.

    In the 2014 Budget, the figure has been readjusted to 2.1 per cent of GDP. It is therefore estimated that Ghana lost $1.2 billion as a result of tax incentives equivalent to the total health sector budget for the year

    The estimations also show that in the year 2012 alone, direct tax and VAT exemptions amounted to US$876 million. This is also about 67 per cent of all exemptions with trade- related exemptions making up 33 per cent of all tax exemptions in 2012.

    Presenting part of the report findings, Mr Bernard Anaba, a policy analyst with ISODEC, says the research shows that there has been a decline in trade revenues from 2006 to date due to tax exemptions such as import tax exemptions and tax completions among ECOWAS countries.

    However, he says that all this notwithstanding, Ghana’s tax rate remains the lowest in the sub- region.

    He adds that when Ghana gives tax incentives, “we are not able to close all the loopholes or gaps and we lose billions of dollars.”

    ActionAid recommends that the tax exemption gap be closed, otherwise government will be forced to impose high taxes on its people, especially the poor ones. The impact of income tax on the poor, therefore, must be a source of worry for all.

    ActionAid representative, Mr Anaba, said those incentives are “harmful” because the way they are granted makes some sectors of the economy suffer.

    He said Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) inflow inched up in Ghana due to oil exploitation from 2011, and over 79-per cent of FDIs are located in Accra and Tema. Mr Anaba called for urgent negotiations and discussion in order to provide solutions.

    Mr Emmanuel Budu-Addo, Head of Finance at ActionAid, says that taxation can be traced to the Egyptian taxing on households and added that even American taxation dates back to colonization.

    He said taxation has four fundamental purposes referred to as the 4 Rs — Revenue which stands for the income generated by the government to enable it to undertake important projects for the citizenry.

    Representation is the power given to the citizens through the payment of taxes to challenge the government as to how the state is governed in that by paying taxes they acquire the right to demand accountability from the government.

    Redistribution stands for resources. By generating income from taxes, government is able to distribute resources including water, electricity and other necessities to reach every citizen. In this case, all areas of the economy will be catered for and citizens’ satisfaction will be enhanced.

    And, finally, re-pricing, which would encourage or discourage the acquisition and use of certain less important products such as tobacco and alcohol.

    He said this would help the government to address the Balance of Payment (BoP) difficulties.

    Mr Budu-Addo said that equity is a cardinal principle of taxation, which requires the tax burden to be proportional and based on benefits received from society. He stressed that “the equity principle is not about how much you pay but the effect on you when you pay.”

    He explained that tax dodging is a grey line between tax evasion and avoidance, and decried the rate at which such practices have denied the government much needed revenue to carry out development projects.

    He said such practices also breach the principle of equity, in which usually the poor man is always the one who suffers while the big companies rather benefit.

    {myjoyonline}

  • Sudan Dispatches New Troops to Front Lines

    Sudan Dispatches New Troops to Front Lines

    {{Khartoum dispatched reinforcements to its front lines Thursday as government and rebel delegations gathered in the Ethiopian capital to resume talks to end fighting in Sudan’s South Kordofan and Blue Nile states.}}

    The African Union-mediated negotiations aim to end the nearly three-year-old war in the two restive states, which aid groups say has left 1.2 million people in need of humanitarian assistance.

    Sudan’s Armed Forces are battling ethnic insurgents of the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement-North.

    In a statement, SAF said it held a ceremony on Thursday to send more than a battalion to the “operational areas”, which it did not name.

    “SAF troops are ready to defeat the rebels,” said State Minister of Defence Yahya Mohammed Khair, former governor of Blue Nile.

    The military has made similar vows before, leading only to “the same stalemate,” an African diplomat said last week.

    Khair made his comments at a farewell ceremony for Popular Defence Force and other troops. The PDF is a type of reserve unit frequently used to support units of the regular army, which is also fighting an 11-year-old rebellion in Sudan’s Darfur region.

    The official SUNA news agency quoted Ibrahim Ghandour, Khartoum’s chief negotiator, as saying three days of talks would start on Thursday, and would focus on a draft ceasefire agreement proposed by the African Union.

    Rebel spokesman Arnu Ngutulu Lodi told media that the SPLM-N delegation had already travelled to Addis Ababa for the talks.

    A first round of negotiations adjourned on February 18 without a single face-to-face meeting between the combatants.

    AU chief mediator Thabo Mbeki said Tuesday that he hopes the renewed talks will be a step towards SPLM-N participation in a broader national dialogue about Sudan’s political future.

    AFP

  • World Bank Suspends $90M Uganda Loan Over Anti-Gay Law

    World Bank Suspends $90M Uganda Loan Over Anti-Gay Law

    {{The World Bank has postponed a $90m (£54m) loan to Uganda over its tough new anti-gay law that has drawn criticism from around the world.}}

    World Bank officials said they wanted to guarantee the projects the loan was destined to support were not going to be adversely affected by the new law.

    The loan was intended to boost Uganda’s health services.

    The new law, enacted on Monday, strengthens already strict legislation relating to homosexuals in the country.

    It allows life imprisonment as the penalty for acts of “aggravated homosexuality” and also criminalises the “promotion of homosexuality”.

    The law has been sharply criticised by the West, with donors such as Denmark and Norway saying they would redirect aid away from the government to aid agencies.

    US Secretary of State John Kerry has called the law “atrocious”. Both he and South African Nobel peace laureate Desmond Tutu compared it to anti-Semitic laws in Nazi Germany or apartheid South Africa.

    NMG