Category: People

  • China Seizes $14.5 billion From ex-Security Chief

    China Seizes $14.5 billion From ex-Security Chief

    {{Chinese authorities have seized assets worth at least 90 billion yuan ($14.5 billion) from family members and associates of retired domestic security tsar Zhou Yongkang, who is at the centre of China’s biggest corruption scandal in more than six decades, two sources said.}}

    More than 300 of Zhou’s relatives, political allies, proteges and staff have also been taken into custody or questioned in the past four months, the sources, who have been briefed on the investigation, told media.

    The sheer size of the asset seizures and the scale of the investigations into the people around Zhou – both unreported until now – make the corruption probe unprecedented in modern China and would appear to show that President Xi Jinping is tackling graft at the highest levels.

    But it may also be driven partly by political payback after Zhou angered leaders such as Xi by opposing the ouster of former high-flying politician Bo Xilai, who was jailed for life in September for corruption and abuse of power.

    Zhou, 71, has been under virtual house arrest since authorities began formally investigating him late last year. He is the most senior Chinese politician to be ensnared in a corruption investigation since the Communist Party swept to power in 1949.

    “It’s the ugliest in the history of the New China,” said one of the sources, who has ties to the leadership, requesting anonymity to avoid repercussions for speaking to the foreign media about elite politics.

    The government has yet to make any official statement about Zhou or the case against him and it has not been possible to contact Zhou, his family, associates or staff for comment. It is not clear if any of them have lawyers.

    The party’s anti-corruption watchdog and the prosecutor’s office did not respond to requests for comment. In the secretive world of China’s Communist Party, targets of its investigations usually disappear, often for months or even years, until an official announcement is made.

    Xi ordered a task force formed in late November or early December to look into accusations against Zhou, sources have previously told Reuters.

    They have not said what the allegations were except that they were related to violating party discipline, official jargon for corruption.

    A third source with ties to the leadership said Zhou had refused to cooperate with investigators, insisting he was the victim of a power struggle.

    “Zhou Yongkang is tough and claims its political persecution,” the source said.

    Zhou rose through the ranks of China’s oil and gas sector before joining the elite Politburo Standing Committee in 2007, where as domestic security chief his budget exceeded defense spending.

    He retired in 2012 and was last seen at an alumni event at the China University of Petroleum on October 1.

  • Man Robbed Detained in Car Boot

    Man Robbed Detained in Car Boot

    {{A Zimbabwean man aged in Bulawayo was robbed of his cellphone at knife point before being shoved into the boot of the car where he was detained by his assailant for nearly five hours.}}

    Bongani Malane of Gwabalanda said he was on his way home from work around 11PM when his assailant, Kelvin Shanga (24) pounced on him.

    “He suddenly appeared from a bushy area behind me and demanded cash at knife point. He threatened to kill me if I resisted before searching my pockets and took my C3 cellphone,” said Malane.

    He said Shanga dragged him to a car that was parked nearby, opened the boot and ordered him to get inside.

    “He pushed me into the boot and closed it. I heard him minutes later slamming the vehicle doors,” said Malane.

    He said he was crammed in the boot where he was gasping for air for nearly five hours.
    “I eventually shouted for help and started kicking the boot while shouting. It was in the morning when a passer-by came to my rescue and opened the boot.

    “The man helped me out and I made a report to the police,” said Malane.
    Shanga appeared before Western Commonage magistrate Temba Chimiso yesterday charged with theft.

    Prosecuting, Ruvimbo Chanduru told how on March 23 around midnight Malane was walking between Mudamburi and Matshayisikova Primary School on his way home when he met Shanga.

    “The accused produced a knife, demanded cash from him before searching him and took his cellphone,” said Chanduru.

    Shanga allegedly bundled Malane into his car boot and closed it. Malane was allegedly rescued by a passerby hours later. The trial continues tomorrow.

    {herald}

  • Virunga Park Oil Exploration Protested

    Virunga Park Oil Exploration Protested

    {{Protesters have taken to the streets of Goma and other parts of the country expressing their anger against government for authorising oil exploration in Virunga national park.}}

    The Virunga Park is shared amongst three countries including Rwanda, Uganda and the vast DRCongo.

    On Monday, a conference on mining and natural resources of the Congo opened in DR-Congo’s Eastern border city of Goma.

    Protestors accuse the Kinshasa government for granting British Firm to explore oil in the Virunga Park.

    Outside the conference venue, protestors carried placards with inscriptions “No to oil exploration in Virunga National Park ,” while others were Pinned-up on a roundabout in the centre of Goma.

    “I do not agree because I know the consequences of oil extraction. Those who cultivate around the lake , they will soon reap the fruits of their land , “said a protester

    DRC is currently conducting oil exploration along the shores of lake Albert shared between DRC and Uganda.

    Over seven associations opposed to oil exploration in the country are represented at the conference where they are expressing their refusal to see their habitat and livelihoods endangered by oil exploitation .

    Josue Mukura representing fishermen Vitshumbi : ” We live only fishing. And when the exploitation of oil pollutes the waters , there is decrease in fish. And when there is reduction of fish , it directly affects our social life.”

    About 7000 Fishermen have been promised a compensation worth $ 186 000.

  • Kagame Pledges €50,000 to Perfect Joanne O’Riordan’s Robot

    Kagame Pledges €50,000 to Perfect Joanne O’Riordan’s Robot

    {{President Paul Kagame has pledged to match a €50,000 donation to perfecting a robot built for Cork teenager Joanne O’Riordan.}}

    Speaking in Dublin yesterday President Kagame told the UN Broadband Commission meeting that his country would match the funds being put forward by the International Telecommunication Union.

    Robbie the Robot was unveiled on Friday, having been built by a team of Trinity College engineers in response to a challenge set down by Joanne two years ago.

    He is designed to help Joanne, who was born without limbs, maintain her independence, picking up objects for the 18-year-old.

    On Friday, engineers stressed that Robbie is a working prototype and not the finished product. He was built in €50,000 in funding in just three months.

    The ITU pledged €50,000 to help fund the perfection of the robot, with President Kagame committing to match that amount.

    More funding is expected to have been put forward by private firms at the meeting, which was hosted by billionaire Denis O’Brien.

    {thejournal}

  • Ugandan Working in US Falls to Death

    Ugandan Working in US Falls to Death

    {{A Ugandan immigrant working as an elevator operator in the US city of Boston has fallen to his death, according to media reports.

    Police were on Friday yet to identify the name of the man who plunged several feet down an elevator shaft, the New York Daily News reported online.

    According to reports, a source said the victim’s family – including several children – live in Uganda.

    He is said to have fallen 30 feet to his death at around 10am (5pm Ugandan time) on Friday, according to the Boston Fire Department.}}

    {wirestory}

  • Thousands Join Rare Algeria Rally

    Thousands Join Rare Algeria Rally

    {{Thousands of Algerian opposition supporters have called for a boycott of next month’s presidential election, during an unprecedented mass rally.}}

    Islamist and secular opposition parties at the rally denounced 77-year-old President Abdelaziz Bouteflika’s attempt to win a fourth term of office.

    They say a stroke last year has left him unfit to govern.

    Mr Bouteflika, in power since 1999, scrapped constitutional rules in 2008 limiting him to two terms in office.

    He has rarely been seen in public in recent months, but correspondents say the backing of the governing National Liberation Front (FLN), army factions and business elites almost guarantees him election victory.

    {{‘The real Algeria’}}

    Chanting “boycott” and “the people want the regime out” about 5,000 people packed into the sports stadium where various opposition leaders denounced Mr Bouteflika’s re-election bid and demanded reforms to a political system they see as corrupt.

    Large opposition gatherings are unusual in Algeria, where FLN elites and army generals have dominated politics since independence from France in 1962.

    “The people here are the people who have been excluded, who have been put aside, but this is the real Algeria,” Rally for Culture and Democracy (RCD) party spokesman Mohsen Belabes told cheering crowds.

    “The regime will collapse, but Algeria will survive.”

    Correspondents say Mr Bouteflika ordered heavy spending from Algeria’s oil earnings on housing, public services and infrastructure projects to offset social unrest after the Arab Spring uprisings across North Africa in 2011.

    But the parties within the opposition are not united and remain weak, analysts say.

    Evidence of this disunity was evident at Friday’s rally, where rival Islamist and secular supporters heckled and taunted at each other across the stadium.

    The president is one of the few remaining veterans of the war of independence against France.

    But he has had persistent health problems and his rule has recently been dogged by corruption scandals implicating members of his inner circle.

  • Ivory Cost to Transfer ex-Youth Leader to ICC

    Ivory Cost to Transfer ex-Youth Leader to ICC

    {{Cote d’Ivoire announced Thursday it will transfer Charles Ble Goude, the jailed right-hand man of former president Laurent Gbagbo, to the International Criminal Court for crimes against humanity.}}

    In September last year, The Hague-based ICC unsealed a warrant for 42-year-old Ble Goude, who faces four counts of crimes against humanity over 2010-2011 post-election unrest.

    Mr Gbagbo’s former youth leader was arrested in Ghana more than a year ago and extradited to Cote d’Ivoire but the authorities were hesitant to send him to the war crimes court.

    Ble Goude, once known as Gbagbo’s “Street General”, will be transferred to the ICC “as soon as possible”, government spokesman Bruno Kone tsaid after the cabinet meeting during which the decision was made.

    In a statement, the ICC said it “welcomes the decision of the Ivoirian authorities and is ready to move forward with proceedings against him as soon as he is transferred”.

    The firebrand former leader of the “Young Patriots” will join his former boss in ICC detention.

    Mr Gbagbo, who was transferred to the Netherlands in late 2011, also faces four counts of crimes against humanity but the court has yet to confirm the charges, pending further investigation.

    The Ivorian crisis started with Mr Gbagbo’s refusal to concede defeat in November 2010 elections, sparking armed clashes that killed more than 3,000 people.

    His election rival Alassane Ouattara, now the president, eventually ousted him thanks to international military backing.

    Abidjan’s decision came as a surprise to many as it had previously refused to extradite Gbagbo’s wife Simone, also wanted by the ICC, on the grounds that its judiciary now offered sufficient guarantees of a fair trial.

    Ble Goude’s lawyer, Claver Ndri, said the decision to transfer his client was politically motivated and had no legal standing.

    Legal process

    Like Mr Gbagbo, Ble Goude will be stuck in an endless legal process and become an ICC “hostage”, Ndri said, but added he had no doubt the former youth leader would be found innocent in the end.

    Mr Gbagbo loyalists are still a force to be reckoned with in Ivorian politics and Ouattara had in recent months tried to foster reconciliation with gestures toward the opposition.

    The leader of Gbagbo’s FPI party, Pascal Affi N’Guessan, regretted the decision, arguing that it would not ease tensions.

    “This does not show that the country is advancing on the path of normalisation, of some kind of way out of conflict,” he said, but cautioned he would only make further comments when more is known about the transfer.

    Mr Ble Goude said in an interview in 2012 that he was not afraid of going to the ICC.

    “I am not an advocate of weapons, I never maintained a single militia. If the ICC wants to invite me for having organised protest marches, I have no problem appearing before the ICC,” he said.

    “I am ready to go before the ICC so that we may finally know in Cote d’Ivoire who did what.”

    Mr Ble Goude galvanised support for Gbagbo during the crisis with fiery speeches urging mass mobilisation against what he called pro-Ouattara “rebels” and their foreign backers, France and the UN.

    NMG

  • Kenyan Wins Coveted Global Award in Los Angeles, US

    Kenyan Wins Coveted Global Award in Los Angeles, US

    {Mr Robert Muchoki (Centre) poses for a photograph with the incoming Young Presidents Organisation (YPO) Chairman Bernard Auyang of Hong Kong (Left) and outgoing chairman Fulton Collins (Right) soon after the Kenyan entrepreneur received the 2013 Best performance Award at a Los Angeles Hotel}

    {{A Kenyan entrepreneur has bagged the 2013 Young Presidents Organisation (YPO) Award.}}

    Mr Robert Muchoki – who is the chairman of the global organisation’s Nairobi Chapter – beat hundreds of other contenders and was feted as the overall winner of the Award dubbed “Best of the Best” at a ceremony held in the city of Los Angeles, California.

    YPO is a global network which connects over 21,000 successful young chief executives of leading companies. By the end of February this year, the companies in the network had generated over US$6 trillion in annual revenues and employed over 15 million people in 125 countries.

    During the Global Leadership award ceremony held recently, Mr Muchoki received a standing ovation from his peers drawn from around the globe for his contribution to the virtues espoused by the organization.

    “Your efforts showcase the energy of the YPO network to bring together members from around the globe to connect and share life-changing ideas and experiences. You set the bar with your excellence and we want to personally thank you,” said Mr Devan Capur, the Chairman of International Education Committee.

    “Champions like you make the YPO-WPO experience relevant for members, and we appreciate your dedication,” he added.

    Muchoki is a co-founder of MIGAA, one of East Africa’s premier planned neighbourhood communities. The concept combines community development, natural beauty, landscape integration and organic configurations.

    In 2013, he developed an award winning education program – Outliers – which was adjudged as an exceptional contribution to the organization’s ambition in sharing life-changing ideas and experiences.

    This effort, as well as others within the Chapter, earned Robert the 2012 – 2013 International Best of the Best Award for Overall Education Program, an award that recognizes contributions of members to create better leaders by providing them access to extraordinary education experiences.

    To qualify for YPO membership, one must be under 45 and the chief operator (CEO, managing director, president, chairman or equivalent) of a company that fulfills minimum size and revenue requirements.

    Once members reach the age of 50, they “graduate” from YPO into WPO (World Presidents’ Organization), a network that builds upon the YPO experience by providing lifelong leadership opportunities.

    Mr Muchoki has initiated various programmes seeking to improve the lives of less fortunate Kenyans.

    They include the Home Afrika Foundation which undertakes various community projects in the areas of health, education, orphans, water and sanitation, mentorship, sports and social welfare.

    He is a registered Quantity Surveyor, a member of the Board of Registration of Architects and Quantity Surveyors and the Architectural Association of Kenya. Muchoki holds a degree in Building Economics.

    Nation

  • Amnesty International Awards Cameroonian Gay Rights Lawyer

    Amnesty International Awards Cameroonian Gay Rights Lawyer

    {{A lawyer in Cameroon has been recognised for her work to promote gay rights in Africa with an award from Amnesty International.}}

    Alice Nkom has spent a decade defending people accused of practising homosexuality.

    Homosexual acts are illegal in Cameroon and carry a five-year prison term.

    Ms Nkom described the award, which she received from the German branch of Amnesty International in Berlin on Tuesday, as a “prize of hope”.

    “Being gay in Cameroon is like being in hell,” she told reporters.

    “Permanent jail, permanent harassment, permanent violence and discrimination. From your family to the workplace to everywhere.”

    The 69-year-old lawyer became the first black woman to be called to the bar in Cameroon in 1969.

    She vowed to continue her work despite being sent death threats and warnings from government officials that she could face imprisonment.

    The campaign for gay rights in Africa has been hit in recent weeks by a new law in Uganda which allows life imprisonment for acts of “aggravated homosexuality” and also criminalises the “promotion of homosexuality”.

    Africa remains the continent with the toughest anti-gay laws, with homosexual acts punishable by death in Mauritania and South Sudan and parts of Nigeria and Somalia.

    BBC

  • Migrants storm Africa’s Spanish Enclave

    Migrants storm Africa’s Spanish Enclave

    {{ More than 500 people forced their way into Spain’s North African enclave of Melilla on Tuesday, Spanish officials said, the largest number to storm the border in almost a decade as increasing naval patrols discourage entry by sea.}}

    Spain has two enclaves in Morocco, Ceuta and Melilla, and migrants from all over Africa regularly try to reach them, mostly by climbing the triple barriers that separate them from Morocco. Deaths and injuries are common.

    Making the most of dense fog to sneak up to the crossing and climb the high wire fence, a total of 1,100 people, according to Spanish figures, and about 600, according to Morocco, made a rush across the border throughout the night and morning.

    Nearly 300 were arrested and at least 28 were injured, the Moroccan Interior Ministry said.

    “There’s been a mass rush (which was) unfortunately violent, which has become the norm. On the Moroccan side they threw stones, sticks and other objects at the security forces,” Melilla governor Melilla, Abdelmalik El Barkani, told reporters.

    Twenty nine migrants were being treated by emergency services in Melilla, according to the Spanish government.

    Migrants, throwing sticks and stones, ignored warnings of security forces on the scene and injured five police officers by throwing stones, the Moroccan Interior Ministry said. In a dawn rush, about 120 migrants were arrested, including 28 who were injured and hospitalized in the Moroccan city of Nador, it said.

    {Would-be immigrants react from behind the fence of a temporary immigrant holding center after crossing the border from Morocco to Spain’s north African enclave of Melilla March 18, 2014.}

    wirestory