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  • Oprah to Buy Clippers

    Oprah to Buy Clippers

    {{The NBA set in motion on Wednesday an attempt to force a sale of the Los Angeles Clippers, with Oprah Winfrey signaling interest as a potential buyer, after club owner Donald Sterling was banned for life from pro basketball for racist comments attributed to him.}}

    At least two of the National Basketball Association’s 29 other team owners, including the governing board’s interim chairman, said they expect the necessary three-fourths majority of owners to back Sterling’s full expulsion, a move unprecedented in NBA history.

    The advisory finance committee of the board scheduled a meeting on Thursday to review the next steps for removing Sterling as owner of the Clippers, as urged on Tuesday by NBA Commissioner Adam Silver, a league spokeswoman said.

    Sterling, who bought the Clippers in 1981 for $13 million when the team was based in San Diego, has not indicated whether he would relinquish ownership without a fight. Experts have estimated that the franchise, which moved to Los Angeles in 1984, could now be worth as much as $800 million.

    Moreover, some experts said Sterling’s fellow owners might be hesitant to support action they felt might set a precedent that could jeopardize their own property rights in the future.

    Still, the move to expel Sterling from the league altogether fanned speculation about potential buyers.

    Winfrey’s spokeswoman, Nicole Nichols, said the talk show host turned media mogul was in talks with leading Hollywood executive David Geffen and the chief executive officer of computer technology firm Oracle Corp, Larry Ellison, to bid for the team if were to become available.

    Geffen, who started two record labels and co-founded the Dreamworks film studio, has expressed interest in the Clippers in the past but never tendered an offer. Winfrey’s holdings already include stakes in a cable network and a magazine.

    Geffen, whose net worth has been estimated by Forbes magazine at $6.2 billion, told sports network ESPN on Wednesday that he and Ellison would run the team, while Winfrey would be an investor.

    “She thinks it would be a great thing for an important black American to own (another) franchise,” Geffen was quoted as saying.

    “The team deserves a better group of owners who want to win,” he added. “Larry would sooner die than fail. I would sooner die than fail. Larry’s a sportsman. We’ve talked about this for a long time. Between the three of us, we have a good shot.”

    Other names floated as possible suitors include former NBA Los Angeles Lakers star Earvin “Magic” Johnson, a part owner of the Los Angeles Dodgers baseball team who once had a stake in the Lakers and has built a media empire catering to African-American consumers.

    One of boxing’ s biggest names, champion Floyd Mayweather Jr., expressed his own interest in comments to reporters in Las Vegas on Tuesday.

    wirestory

  • Ukraine Detains Russian Military Attaché for Espionage

    Ukraine Detains Russian Military Attaché for Espionage

    {{Ukraine detained Russia’s military attaché to Kiev on suspicion of spying and ordered the diplomat to leave the country, reports said on Thursday, as the former Soviet republic wrestles with a pro-Russian armed uprising in the east}}.

    Interfax-Ukraine, citing the Ukrainian Foreign Ministry, said the unnamed diplomat was detained on Wednesday while undertaking “intelligence activities”.

    The ministry could not immediately be reached for comment.

    Ukraine accuses Russia of orchestrating the fall of towns and cities across its industrial east to pro-Russian separatists over the past month, spearheaded by well-organized gunmen in masks and military fatigues.

    Russia denies having any part in the rebellion, but has warned it reserves the right to intervene to protect ethnic Russians and has massed tens of thousands of troops on its western frontier with Ukraine.

    Interfax said the diplomat had been ordered to leave the country.

    “The military-naval attaché of the embassy of the Russian Federation in Ukraine is declared persona non grata in connection with his actions, which are not in accordance with his diplomatic status,” the agency quoted the ministry as saying.

    Ukraine’s pro-Western leaders conceded on Wednesday they were “helpless” to counter the fall of government buildings and police stations to the separatists in the Donbass coal and steel belt of eastern Ukraine, source of around a third of the country’s industrial output.

    Having seized key buildings in the capital of the easternmost province, Luhansk, on Tuesday, gunmen took control at dawn on Wednesday in the nearby towns of Horlivka and Alchevsk.

    In Donetsk, the biggest city to fall, mainly Russian-speaking separatists have declared a “People’s Republic of Donetsk” and called a referendum on secession for May 11, threatening to undercut a planned presidential election in Ukraine two weeks later.

    Ukraine hopes the presidential poll will help restore order after five months of the worst civil turmoil in the country since independence in 1991, which have seen Moscow-backed president Viktor Yanukovich toppled by street protests, gunbattles in central Kiev and Russia’s annexation of the Crimean peninsula.

    reuters

  • CAR: Rwanda Peacekeepers Escort 1200 Muslims to Safe Zone

    CAR: Rwanda Peacekeepers Escort 1200 Muslims to Safe Zone

    {{Peacekeepers of Rwanda Mechanized Infantry Battalion (RwaMechBatt1) serving in the African-led International Support Mission to the Central African Republic (MISCA), on 27 April 2014 escorted 1224 Internally Displaced Persons Muslims from Bangui, PK 12 neighborhood to Kaga-Bandoro in northern Central African Republic, 400 Km from Bangui.}}

    The Peacekeepers were supporting International Organisation for Migration in the CAR by providing security to 22 trucks carrying 1224 Muslims leaving Bangui to Kaga-Bandoro to join their families.

    The Internal Displaced Persons hope to have safety and improved living conditions once settled together with their families, nearby their farms in Kaga-Bandoro.

    Last week, Rwandan Peacekeepers had escorted also IOM technical staff assess the establishment of a new camp in Kaga-Bandoro for the Muslims that left Bangui (PK12) on 27 April 2014.

    MOD

  • UN Rights Chief Arrives in South Sudan

    UN Rights Chief Arrives in South Sudan

    {{The UN’s top human rights official arrived in South Sudan on Monday, officials said, amid an increase in global concern over the country’s civil war and a wave of atrocities.}}

    A spokesman of the UN Mission in South Sudan (UNMISS), Joe Contreras, said High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay arrived in the capital Juba on a joint mission with Adama Dieng, the UN’s special envoy for the prevention of genocide.

    The two are expected to remain in the country for two days and investigate on behalf of UN chief Ban Ki-moon. They are expected to meet South Sudan’s President Salva Kiir and other senior officials.

    Last week the UN Security Council brandished the threat of sanctions against South Sudan government forces, loyal to President Kiir, and rebels behind former vice president Riek Machar, who are responsible for escalating abuses.

    Both sides have been implicated in atrocities and war crimes including massacres, rape, attacks on UN bases sheltering civilians from ethnic violence and the recruitment of child soldiers.

    Last week, the rebels were blamed for the killings of hundreds of people in the oil hub of Bentiu, and a pro-government mob killed dozens of civilians in an attack on a UN base in Bor.

    Kiir’s government has been fighting Machar’s forces — a mix of army defectors and ethnic militia — since December 15.

    The four-month-old war has left thousands and possibly tens of thousands of people dead, and forced over one million to flee their homes, sparking a massive humanitarian crisis.

    More than 78,000 civilians are currently crammed into eight UN bases in the country, while more than a million people have been displaced within the country or have fled to neighbouring states, mainly Uganda and Ethiopia.

    Violence has also taken on an ethnic dimension, pitting Kiir’s Dinka tribe against militia forces from Machar’s Nuer people.

    AFP

  • Saudi National Arrested Over Terror Suspicion

    Saudi National Arrested Over Terror Suspicion

    {{The Saudi ambassador to Kenya Malhan Ghorm says his country is “contemplating” legal action against the Kenya police for “illegally detaining” their national.}}

    The ambassador further claims that this action by police was tantamount to “maligning the name of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia” by associating their national with terrorism.

    The Saudi man, Ali Hanash Al Amri was released Monday morning after being held in Lamu.

    Police claimed he was heading to Somalia to support the Al-Shabaab.

    However, the Saudi ambassador says Al Amri was a tourist who was arrested in a hotel.

    The Saudi Arabian university student who has been in police custody in Mombasa for several days over terror links was Monday released to his country’s ambassador in Nairobi for deportation.

    Principal Magistrate Abraham Gachie allowed an application by police to have Mr Al Amri released to the Royal Embassy of Saudi Arabia in Nairobi.

    {{Tourism Purpose }}

    In a letter addressed to the Mombasa County criminal investigations officer, Mr Henry Ondiek, the ambassador stated that: “Mr Al Amri came to Kenya for the sole purpose of tourism and he has no ill will motive towards Kenya”

    The letter which was tabled in court added: “The embassy undertakes upon itself to send him back to Saudi Arabia within the shortest possible time. I therefore request you to release him immediately so as to enable the embassy to send him to Saudi Arabia,”

    Last week, a legal representative from the embassy visited the 25 year old Al Amri at Port Police Station.

    The official also held meetings with top security officers before flying back to Nairobi and returned Monday to receive the man and take him to Nairobi.

    He was arrested at Kiunga border village last Wednesday while in the company of a Kenya government official working for a research institution who told police that the Saudi man requested to travel with him to undertake marine research there.

    Mr Al Amri was identified as a fourth year surgery student at the Maastricht University in the Netherlands who entered Kenya from Tanzania through the Lunga Lunga border point.

    According to court documents seen by the Daily Nation, the man was travelling on a three months holiday visa and had visited Lesotho, South Africa, Zanzibar and Tanzania before arriving into the country.

    {{Detained for 10days }}

    He was to be held for ten days at the police station on a Mombasa court directive to allow police conclude their investigations in relation to terrorism after arresting him along the Kenya-Somalia border.

    According to the United Nations and western security agencies, Kenya has been a main route for foreigner terror recruits travelling to Somalia to fight for the Al- Shabaab.

    In the past, Kenyan security agencies had arrested a number of British, German, French, and Belgium and American citizens on terror suspicions along the border area.

    In March, a Nairobi court sanctioned the deportation of three Belgian men arrested in 2013 in Malindi after completing a one year jail term for being unlawfully resident in Kenya.

    Ben Abdalla Ismail, Rachid Benimari (French) and Mustapha Bouyabaren (Belgian) were extradited to Brussels where they were to answer to terror related charges.

    In 2010 British national Michael Adebolajo was arrested in Kizingitini village before being deported to the UK and was in 2013 sentenced to life after he was convicted of murdering a British soldier on the streets of London.

    NMG

  • Somalis Recalls Envoy in Nairobi

    Somalis Recalls Envoy in Nairobi

    {{Somalia has temporarily recalled its ambassador to Kenya following the arrest and alleged harassment of one of its diplomats in Nairobi, officials said Monday.}}

    The diplomatic protest comes amid an ongoing crackdown in Kenya against suspected militants that has also seen thousands of Somalis and ethnic Somalis detained by Kenyan police and dozens of them deported.

    “I was called in Mogadishu by the government to give an explanation regarding the harassment and arrest made against Somali diplomat by the Kenyan police in Nairobi,” the ambassador, Mohamed Ali Nur, told reporters in Mogadishu.

    “The detention was in complete violation against the diplomatic rights of a country and could damage the relations between the two countries,” he added.

    Somalia’s deputy foreign minister, Mahad Mohamed Salad, said the recall was temporary, and parliament speaker Mohamed Osman Jawari said deputies would also briefed by the ambassador on the crackdown.

    “This is an opportunity for the parliament to hear about the problems facing the Somali people in Kenya and the arrest of the Somali diplomat,” he said.

    Officials identified the arrested diplomat as working in the embassy’s consular department. It was not immediately clear if the diplomat was still being detained, and there were no details on the circumstances of the arrest.

    Earlier this month Kenyan authorities launched mass round-ups of foreigners, saying they needed to weed out sympathisers of Al-Qaeda-linked Shabaab rebels following a string of militant attacks.

    The operation has focussed on Nairobi’s Eastleigh estate, and residents have accused police of indiscriminately arresting people of Somali origin.

    Somalia’s Shabaab rebels claimed responsibility for the attack last year on the Westgate shopping mall in Nairobi which left at least 67 dead, and recent weeks have seen a string of attacks blamed on Islamists in the capital and near the coastal city of Mombasa.

    capitalfm

  • Traffic Police Officer Injured in Car Accident

    Traffic Police Officer Injured in Car Accident

    {{Police warns road users especially drivers against violating road traffic rules resulting into accidents and loss of lives.}}

    Supt. Jean Marie Vianney Ndushabandi, spokesperson of the traffic and road safety department said some drivers drive while drunk.

    On Sunday, a woman identified as Erica Kanyambiriri, who was driving a vehicle registration number RAC 204L, RAV4 type, knocked and injured a traffic police officer at Gishushu in Gasabo district as she tried to speed off after the victim stopped her.

    Supt. Ndushabandi said the woman has no driving licence and was drunk at the time of the incident.

    “At around 5:30am on Sunday, Police officers who were on duty at Kigali Business Centre (KBC), stopped Kanyambiriri for normal traffic checks but she disobeyed and continued,” Supt. Ndushabandi said.

    “She was stopped again by Police officers at Gishushu where she disobeyed again and knocked and injured one of them officers as she tried to speed away,” he added.

    The suspect, a resident of Nyandungu in Kicukiro district, was later apprehended by motorcycle taxi operators who pursued her after witnessing the incident, and handed her over to Police.

    She is currently detained at Remera Police station as investigations continue.

    The suspect also confessed to driving without a licence but argued that she hit the officer accidentally. She however couldn’t explain why she refused to stop when instructed.

    Supt Ndushabandi lauded motorists for the noble action and warned of serious penalties to whoever will be caught going against traffic regulations.

    He noted that means of acquiring a driving licence were made easy to facilitate seekers.

    “Both the vehicle and the driver should be having all the requirements before hitting the road to avoid accidents, loss of lives and destruction of public infrastructure,” he noted.

    In a related development, Ndushabandi also said another man was apprehended for allegedly trying to bribe a police officer at Remera vehicle mechanical inspection centre.

    The suspect supposedly tried to bribe the officer to give him priority for his car to be inspected for others that were there before him.

    “This centre has the capacity to inspect up to 350 vehicles per day in addition to about 80 others inspected daily by the mobile lane in provinces. There no need of taking illegal shortcuts to acquire services,” he said.

    RNP

  • Nigerian & Ghanaian Actors To Screen “Off the hook” in Kigali

    Nigerian & Ghanaian Actors To Screen “Off the hook” in Kigali

    {{Kigali will host renowned Nigerian and Ghanaian movie players on April 30th as part of popularizing their forthcoming movie as well as seeing the level of Rwanda’s Cinema Industry.}}

    Among the players who will present in Kigali, there is Jackie Appiah of Ghana, Prince David Osei of Nigeria with Mr Andy Boyo, the CEO of Nollywood Cinemas in Nigeria.

    Speaking to IGIHE Andy Boyo said that at their arrival on 30 April they will screen the new movie entitled “Off the hook” after which they will head to South Africa as a part of their Film screening Tour.

    Back to Kigali on 9th May, “Off the hook” will be screened at Century Cinema in Kigali City, the same source reveals.

    Actor Prince David Osei, mostly admired by Rwandans, is notorious in Africa Magic TV movie series especially in ‘About to Wed” movie. At this time, Prince David will act in “Off the hook”.

    Mr David has also started to perform in Hollywood Industry in various films such as “The Dead “and” Nana is King”.

    He told this Website that he wished to come to Rwanda for a long time and now his dreams are realized.

    David added that the first person he admires in Rwanda is President Kagame adding that his visit to Rwanda will be productive as he will be able to see Rwanda with his own presence.

    On her part, Actress Jackie is very eager to visit Kigali as well as meeting Rwandans, she says.

    Nigeria’s talented top producer cum director Andy Boyo who is accompanying the delegation commented on “Off the Hook” film noting that the Film was produced in a high and quality way of producing movies

    The movie screening follows Andy’s visit to Rwanda in February this year.

  • First Lady’s Speech at Conference on Women, Poverty & Human Rights

    First Lady’s Speech at Conference on Women, Poverty & Human Rights

    {{Honorable Chief Justice,

    Honorable Minister of Gender,

    Vice President of the Chamber of Deputies,

    Professor Sandra Fredman,

    Distinguished members of Academia and Researchers,

    Graduate students,

    Ladies and Gentlemen,}}

    Good morning.

    I am honored to be speaking to such an academic gathering, on this important theme related to women, poverty and human rights.

    We celebrate the great strides made, in advancing women’s roles and rights in the different societies represented in the room. I believe that I speak for Rwanda, when I say, that the government has established a favorable environment for women to thrive. At the same time, we are mindful of our responsibility to keep fighting for the rights of women and girls; the journey that lies ahead is still long.

    There is no more appropriate time than the present, to reflect on our experience before and during the 1994 genocide against the Tutsi. We came from a society defined by alienation, oppression and separation.

    They were excluded from participating meaningfully, in all aspects of life. Women had no rights to inherit property or any asset. A woman was prohibited from conducting business, unless she had permission from her husband, to do so. Our society was purely patriarchal, with little consideration for women. They were considered movable assets, with the primary purpose of bearing children.

    In Rwanda, as I am sure was the case in other places, the law of the jungle ruled supreme for far too long. Since women were perceived as ‘weak’, and ‘might makes right’ men dominated and took advantage of the limited resources available.

    As women were conveniently perceived to be helpless and fragile, it appeared to be the perfect excuse for men to make themselves even stronger. After all, equality is a power game. In this process, poverty for women was perpetuated; they had no access to resources; naturally their opportunities were extremely limited.

    Today ladies and gentlemen,

    We live in different and more dynamic times. The world has become more demanding of our time, energy and skills. The level of ambition is much higher at every level: as individuals, families, communities and countries.

    There is stiff competition to be better and in order to satisfy these demands; one must work extremely hard. Gone are the ‘business as usual’ days when men and boys were the only ones who went to school, gained employment, owned all the assets. Gone are the days when women stay home to cook, clean and have only children.

    With a population of 52% women, there was the conviction that freeing the productive and creative energies of women was fundamental, to the much-needed social transformation of Rwanda.

    For the case of Rwanda, there was no alternative because we had just emerged from an atrocious genocide. We were faced with the complex task of healing wounds as well as building basic infrastructure, all at the same time.

    We understood how expensive a price we had paid; and how difficult it would be to repair the ruin. There was so much need and every effort counted. And so women became a powerful force for change, from the smallest village council to the highest tiers of national government.

    We saw that without a deliberate effort, it would be an uphill task to reverse centuries of gender imbalance. It became, and still is today, a constitutional requirement to have 30% women in decision-making positions in the public sector.

    With this in place, Rwanda managed to enjoy the highest female legislative representation worldwide at 64%; 40% of the cabinet is made up of women and the judiciary has 40% women as well.

    Discrimination or exclusion for any citizen is punishable by Rwandan law. With a sense of dignity and self worth, Rwandan women have been given a chance to contribute to nation building.

    Distinguished audience,

    Allow me to highlight some of the good progress we are experiencing in favor of women. These all have a direct correlation with reducing poverty.

    On the Education front:

    Not only has Rwanda achieved universal education; but, girls’ enrolment rate at primary school is at an impressive 98%. Boys follow closely behind with an enrolment rate of 95%. Primary education is compulsory and free in public schools.

    Between 1960 and 1990 only a mere 2,500 students graduated from university; over the last 20 years around 84,000 students have graduated from tertiary institutions. This is 30 times the amount of graduates; we had just 2 decades ago! Unlike in yesterday’s Rwanda, today’s Rwanda promotes education for every single child.

    The challenge now is quality – meaning the government is focused on providing more and better trained teachers, sufficient school materials and appropriate school infrastructure.

    Another area that we need to improve on is ensuring that the education students receive, directly correlate with labor market demands.

    On the Employment front;

    Article 37 of the constitution states that ‘persons with the same competence and ability have the right to equal pay for equal work without discrimination.’
    In the late 90’s an ‘inheritance law was passed granting equal inheritance rights to sons and daughters’.

    On the Poverty reduction front:

    In only 5 years, between 2008 and 2012 Rwanda was able to lift 1 million people out of poverty. This is significant given that poverty bore the face of women.

    On the Healthcare front:

    In regards to maternal health, HIV+ pregnant women and their children, have access to PMTCT services in 85% of our health facilities. Because of the success of Prevention of Mother to Child Transmission of HIV, we have managed to take the next step and eliminate the transmission.

    Rwandan women are now delivering their babies in health facilities, as opposed to at home, and this has contributed significantly to a reduction in maternal mortality; putting Rwanda on track for MDG4 (reducing child mortality) and MDG 5 (improving maternal health).

    Rwanda has also instituted a system of maternal death audits, which investigates the circumstances surrounding a woman’s death during childbirth and recommends practical solutions for preventing future fatalities to communities and health facilities.

    These modest improvements make us optimistic. It is clear that the country has set all the wheels in motion; the positive contributions women have made to different aspects of society have won them the confidence of Rwandan men and society at large, who now view women as true partners in nation building.

    Yes, we as women have a more central role; however, I challenge each one of you here to think about what we are doing with this space and support? This is where we still have work to do. Allow me to share some of my thoughts on this:

    One day, unknowingly, my two children illustrated the importance of choice. My 21-year-old daughter had had a tough week at school; she came home and complained that it was all too much to manage.

    Her younger brother, about 16 years, spontaneously responded: ‘You women raised your voices, ventured out, and asked to be empowered, do you want to get an education and work, or do you want to stay at home? Make up your mind’.

    This amusing exchange is a reminder that we should make the best of the opportunities and carry our responsibilities with grace. While there is comfort in being looked after; we have to choose either ‘to be looked after or ‘to be active partners’. We cannot have the best of both worlds.

    As a parting thought, ladies and gentlemen,

    I have come to appreciate the importance of applying the right collective mindset, for the attainment of real societal transformation. As we can see, the prominent role of women in Rwanda today is due to conscious decisions, made by the post-genocide leadership. However, it also takes the acceptance of society to make the process complete.

    Distinguished audience,
    I wish you all fruitful deliberations and now have the pleasure to officially declare this conference on Women and Poverty, with a human rights perspective open.

    Thank you for you kind attention.

  • 180,000 Congolese Refugees to Be Repatriated from Uganda

    180,000 Congolese Refugees to Be Repatriated from Uganda

    {{Ugandan and DR Congo government officials are meeting in Kampala to draw up a plan to enable over 180,000 Congolese refugees return home following the return of peace.}}

    The fourth tripartite meeting which also includes UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) opened Monday at Imperial Royale Hotel in Kampala.

    It is attended by Richard Magenze, the DR Congo minister of internal security, decentralization and customary affairs with governors of the strife-strike provinces of North Kivu, South Kivu, and Orientale.

    Magenze said that with support of the UN mission in DR Congo, the Congolese army has usefully defeated the negative forces in the eastern DRC provinces, and restored peace which is favorable for people to return.

    Musa Ecweru, the state minister for relief, disaster preparedness and refugees said the initial plan to repatriate Congolese nationals in 2011 experienced a setback following a resurgence of fighting by the M23 rebel group.

    “Since 2011, we have been receiving a mass influx of refugees at different times,” said Ecweru. He said that today, a total of 184,837 Congolese refugees live in Uganda, of whom 35,554 live in Kampala.

    Sakura Atsumi, the acting UNHCR representative in Uganda said Congolese comprise majority of refugees in Uganda, and are settled mainly in Rwamwanja, Kyangwali, Nakivale and Kyaka II settlements.

    Minister Ecweru said that there has been spontaneous return to DRC of refugees who have been leaving the settlement camps. However, one such spontaneous return turned tragic when over 100 refugees drowned in Lake Albert last month.

    “Refugees will be provided with necessary information and sensitized about return areas and programmes so that they can make informed decisions about repatriation in safety and dignity. However in the interim, government of Uganda and UNHCR will work out modalities to facilitate spontaneous returns pending organized voluntary repatriation,” said Ecweru.

    Stefano Severe, the UNHCR representative in DR Congo in a statement said displaced civilians who had sought refuge elsewhere are spontaneously returning to their homes in the areas of Beni, Rutshuru in North Kivu.

    Severe however said that in spite of restoration of peace in some parts of eastern DRC, several armed groups remain active and the situation is still volatile and unfavorable for voluntary repatriation.

    Newvision