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  • Mutabazi Trial Adjourned Until 13th May

    Mutabazi Trial Adjourned Until 13th May

    {{While the trial of the Former President Kagame’s Body guard, Lt Joel Mutabazi and comrades was on its fifth day, the Kanombe Military Court has, today 13th February, decided to adjourn this Terror trial until May 15, 2014.}}

    This was due to lawyer’s request to have time with clients to discuss their rights in this trial.

    Today’s hearing focused on the case of last year’s coordinated bomb attacks in Kigali in which Lt Mutabazi and Nshimiyimana alias Comrade have coordinated 2 bomb blasts in Kicukiro market.

    Some of the accused started to cry after hearing the court that adjourned in May this Trial. They said the date is far-away since they want justice as soon as possible.

    Some victims of bomb attacks attended today’s trial to witness for themselves justice they deserve. One of them is Emmanuel Nzaramba who was a cleaner at the American Embassy before was severely injured by Kicukiro bomb attacks.

  • Education Minister Dismisses Condoms Distribution in Schools

    Education Minister Dismisses Condoms Distribution in Schools

    {{Rwanda’s Minister of Education has dismissed the proposal of distributing condoms in Secondary schools as a way of curbing unexpected pregnancies and fighting against HIV/AIDS among students.}}

    Minister Dr. Biruta Vincent said only distributing condoms in schools are not the last solution to deal with the issue of unexpected pregnancies among students.

    Biruta warns that people should not look for solutions in the distribution of condoms but the matter can be addressed through different behavior change campaigns as well as helping Youth in adjusting their everyday behavior.

    Rate of secondary school students who became pregnant in 2012 was equivalent to 30%. Journalists found this number to be alarming as far as the matter of education is concerned.

    A big number of pregnant students were found in Districts of Huye, Karongi and most of the schools located in the Eastern Province.

  • Tanzanian Among 20 semi-finalists in Google Competition

    Tanzanian Among 20 semi-finalists in Google Competition

    {{Tanzania’s Gloria Mangi has been named among 20 semi-finalists in Google’s Africa Connected competition launched last August.}}

    The initiative aims at gathering the largest collection of inspiring stories about ventures established online by Africans, in Africa.

    In June, last year, Ms Mangi launched African Queens Project, a website to promote her community’s improvement, which celebrates African women who are significant activities that give back to their communities.

    The site — africanqueensproject.com — shares successful stories via blog posts, audio clips and videos.

    The young Tanzanian and the 19 other semi-finalists were picked from over 2,200 entries across 35 countries on the continent.

    {The Citizen}

  • Search Teams Comb Plane Wreckage

    Search Teams Comb Plane Wreckage

    Search teams combed the wreckage of an Algerian military plane yesterday for clues to why it crashed in a mountainous region killing all but one of 78 people on board.

    Algerians began three days of national mourning after the C-130 Hercules aircraft carrying 74 passengers, soldiers and their families, and four crew came down in bad weather on Tuesday in the northeast Oum El Bouaghi region.

    One survivor was found, official sources said of Algeria’s worst aviation disaster in more than 10 years.

    A special unit arrived at the crash site early yesterday, as search teams scoured the snowy and rugged area.

    “Rescue reinforcements and sniffer dog teams have begun their search,” headed by the emergency service chief Mustapha Lahbiri, a source at the scene told reporters.

    The male survivor, suffering from serious head injuries, was taken to the military hospital in the city of Constantine, where the plane had been headed, as were the bodies of the 77 dead.

    No more information about the survivor was available.
    “School notebooks and military duffle bags were also visible at the site of the crash,” he said.

    Colonel Lahbiri said the black box flight recorder had not yet been found, contradicting earlier reports by Algerian media that rescue teams had located one of two black boxes.

    The military transport plane was flying from the desert garrison town of Tamanrasset in the deep south to Constantine, 320km east of Algiers, and lost contact with the control tower as it was preparing to make its descent.

    Algerian television broadcast images of the crash scene showing the broken carcass of the aircraft lying in a mountainous landscape, at an altitude of 1 500 metres.

    “Very bad weather conditions, involving a storm and heavy snowfall, were behind the crash,” the defence ministry said in a statement on Tuesday.

    AFP

  • Museveni Warns Critics: ‘Iam a War General’

    Museveni Warns Critics: ‘Iam a War General’

    {{For several years Ugandans and other people have been closely synthesising various statements and actions by Ugandan president Gen. Yoweri Museveni over the issue of whether he would seek re-election in 2016.}}

    However, during a retreat last weekend that consisted largely of members of Uganda’s ruling party ({National Resistance Movement}), Gen. Museveni surprised party members signalling that he might seek re-election come 2016.

    “I am a war general, not a classroom general. Those who think they can dislodge me like that are mistaken.” Gen. Museveni warned sending members in the room into silence.

    Gen. Museveni who has ruled Uganda since 1986 told the ruling NRM’s parliamentary caucus that he had contained former confidantes who fell out of favour.

    In terse statements that reportedly set off something of a panic, Gen. Musevni told the law makers, “There is one little problem; lack of cohesion in the leadership of NRM which you have witnessed over the past years. I would like to advise those involved to restrain themselves. The forums are there to discuss everything. Why, then, create cliques?”

    {Monitor}

  • Kabila Declares Amnesty for Former M23 Rebels

    Kabila Declares Amnesty for Former M23 Rebels

    {{President of the Democratic Republic of Congo, Joseph Kabila, announced an amnesty on Wednesday for former members of the defeated M23 rebel army.}}

    The amnesty covers “acts of insurgency, acts of war and political offences” committed in the DR Congo up to December 20, 2013, when the bill was approved by the government.

    Announced on state television on Wednesday, the presidential order was welcomed by the UN and Western countries as a way of moving on from the conflict, which ended with an ignominious defeat for the M23 rebels in early November.

    More serious crimes are excluded from the amnesty, including genocide, crimes against humanity, terrorism, torture, sexual violence, child conscription and embezzlement and looting.

    {Members of the former Congolese M23 rebels sit at a compound in Bihanga’s Training School in Uganda, about 380km south west of the capital Kampala.}

    {Newvision}

  • SPLM Seven to Join Addis Ababa talks: IGAD

    SPLM Seven to Join Addis Ababa talks: IGAD

    {{The seven South Sudanese political leaders recently released from detention in Juba accused of being involved in an alleged coup attempt in December and flown to Kenya at the end of January will arrive in the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa, late on Wednesday, according to mediators.}}

    “The released political leaders, who had been expected to attend the official launch yesterday, are now on their way from Nairobi and expected to arrive in Addis Ababa tonight accompanied by the Ethiopian Ambassador to Kenya” IGAD, the East African bloc brokering South Sudanese peace talks said in a statement released on Wednesday.

    Seven out of the 11 former senior officials from South Sudan’s ruling party – the SPLM – detained in connection with an alleged coup attempt were freed on January 29 after a ceasefire agreement was signed in Addis Ababa on 23 January between the South Sudanese government and rebels who have named themselves the SPLM/A In Opposition.

    However Juba has refused to release four of the senior SPLM figures, including Pagan Amum, the party’s former secretary general who has been sacked by South Sudan’s President Salva Kiir.

    The four detainees along with former vice-president and current rebel leader, Riek Machar, are facing charges of treason. All the accused deny the government’s allegations that attempted to overthrow the Kiir on December 15.

    Kenya’s government on Sunday refused to allow the seven leaders permission to travel to Ethiopia to take part at the second round of negotiations, arguing their bail terms meant they were not allowed to leave Kenyan territory.

    After Nairobi decision, rebel negotiators in Addis Ababa threatened to boycott the fresh round of talks.

    On Wednesday Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta met with the seven former detainees, who have been joined by Rebecca Garang the widow of the late the SPLM’s former leader John Garang and his son Grang Demebiar.

    Garang was not arrested but she was part of the group who described President Kiir as “increasingly dictatorial” at a press conference in earlier December.

    Kenyatta said he was sending Kenya MP Dalmas Otieno, a former Cabinet Minister, “as an envoy to help them during the process”.

    {{Leaders won’t Take Sides}}

    It is not yet clear whether the seven political figures will ally themselves with rebels or emerge as a separate party. Rebel officials in Addis Ababa have declined to comment on the issue when they are asked by Sudan Tribune.

    Also, Machar spokesperson, James Dak, said their main concern was to ensure their release and freedom to travel to Addis Ababa and join the political dialogue. “Whether they will join us, or join the other party, or stay neutral is their right to decide as a group or individual leaders,” he further said.

    However, IGAD chief negotiator, Seyoum Mesfin, said the former detainees are seeking to form a “third block” rather than taking side.

    “They rather would like us to prepare a sort of a triangular table for their negotiations,” Seyoum told reporters.

    Speaking to Sudan Tribune, Haile Girma, a political analyst, however said he doubts the seven leaders due to join talks tomorrow would “deny’’ Machar’s delegation which secured their release.

    Ahead of the arrival of the seven SPLM leaders, IGAD mediators today were separately consulting with delegations of the two warring parties and other stakeholders.

    “In addition, the envoys also received a preliminary report from the advance team of the IGAD Joint Technical Committee that has been conducting the pre-deployment assessment for the monitoring and verification mechanism” said IGAD.

    “Some members of the team continue with the assessment mission, especially in the opposition-held areas” it added.

    A week ago, IGAD deployed a team of ceasefire monitors from Ethiopia Kenya and Sudan as well as from the two South Sudanese factions to evaluate the implementation of the truce.

    {{Humanitarian Crises}}

    Despite a ceasefire agreement signed between the South Sudan government and rebels led by Riek Machar, the peace pact has not stopped the fighting on ground.

    The conflict in South Sudan, which erupted nearly two months ago has claimed the lives of an estimated 10,000 people and displaced nearly a million people, causing a huge humanitarian crises.

    The conflict has made it extremely difficult to deliver emergency aid supplies.

    The UN said on Wednesday that the humanitarian crises in South Sudan is a ’level three emergency’, the highest level under the UN’s categorisation, putting the East African nation on the same level to that of the humanitarian crises in Syria.

    Both warring sides have failed to implement the cease fire agreement and have repeatedly traded accusations that the other has violated the ceasefire deal.

    Uganda’s military presence, which has also been a setback to the implementation of the ceasefire deal, with rebels repeatedly calling for their withdrawal. The presence of the Ugandan People’s Defence Force have proved controversial as Uganda is a member of IGAD, the body mediating the talks.

    Ethiopia is the first IGAD member to call for the UPDF to leave South Sudan, with prime minister, Hailemariam Desalegn, on Tuesday saying his country is against the presence of any foreign forces in South Sudan.

    (ST)

  • South African chemical Giant buys US$36.7M Water Treatment Unit

    South African chemical Giant buys US$36.7M Water Treatment Unit

    {{South African chemicals company AECI has agreed to buy a water treatment unit from Switzerland-based company Clariant for US$36.7mn}}

    According to Bloomberg, the company seeks to expand in the region and tap demand for treating industrial wastewater.

    According to Clariant, AECI will pay cash for the business, which generated about US$45mn in sales last year.

    It will use the deal to build on its ImproChem division, which used the 2012 acquisition of General Electric’s chemical and monitoring solutions business to help build a platform for water-treatment sales in Africa and the Indian Ocean.

    Mark Dytor, CEO of AECI, said, “This footprint will be enhanced since ImproChem’s direct sales capability in many African countries will enable it to leverage Clariant’s penetration of these markets.”

    AECI is shifting from a reliance on South Africa’s mining industry to focus on higher-margin products including water treatment.

    africanreview

  • Airport Bombers Denied Bail at Nairobi Court

    Airport Bombers Denied Bail at Nairobi Court

    {{Four Somali men charged in Kenya in connection with a blast last month at the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport (JKIA) were denied bail on Wednesday after the country’s top prosecutor appealed a lower court’s decision to release them.}}

    A magistrate ruled that the four could be bailed if they paid a bond of Sh20 million each, but the Director of Public Prosecutions Keriako Tobiko made a fast-track application to the High Court to have the bail decision overturned.

    High Court judge Msagha Mbogholi ordered the suspension of the decision to grant bail, until Tobiko’s application could be heard in full.

    The explosion took place on January 16 at a cafe adjacent to one of the terminal buildings in JKIA, the region’s busiest transport hub. There were no casualties.

    Police initially played down the incident, insisting a “loose light bulb” had fallen into a waste paper basket.

    After a bullet-ridden car containing a dead body and explosives was found the following morning at a housing estate near the airport, they were obliged to change their story.

    Hassan Abdi Mohamed, Mohamed Osman Ali, Yusuf Warsame and Garad Hassan Fer were charged a week ago with being behind the attack.

    Leonard Bwire, an officer with the police anti-terrorism unit, said the four had acquired Kenyan passports illegally.

    Since Kenya sent troops into southern Somalia in October 2011 to help fight the Al-Qaeda-linked Shabaab insurgents, it has been hit by a series of attacks.

    The Shabaab claimed last September’s attack on Nairobi’s Westgate mall, in which at least 67 people were killed.

    Grenades have been hurled into restaurants in crowded areas in Nairobi as well as on the popular tourist Indian Ocean coast, and the remote northeast region bordering Somalia has seen a string of attacks.

    capitalfm

  • IMF Signals Rosier Oulook for US Economy

    IMF Signals Rosier Oulook for US Economy

    {{The International Monetary Fund (IMF) will raise its growth forecast for the US economy in 2014, IMF chief Christine Lagarde said on Sunday.}}

    Speaking on NBC television, Lagarde cited the recent budget deal reached by Congress that reduced sequestration – the automatic cuts to the federal budget that amounted to 1 trillion dollars, the decrease in US unemployment and actions by the US Central Bank as reasons for the IMF’s rosier outlook for the US economy.

    The US Federal Reserve announced that in January it will begin tapering its efforts to spur growth through purchasing debt, which is seen as a sign of confidence in the economy.

    The IMF in October forecast US growth of 2.6% in 2014. The current year saw growth of 1.6%.