Category: Politics

  • South Sudan rebel leader Riek Machar postpones return to Juba

    The expected return of South Sudan’s rebel leader Riek Machar to the capital, Juba, has been postponed for logistical reasons, a spokesman said.

    He was due to take up the post of first vice-president, a key part of the peace process aimed at ending more than two years of civil war.

    Mr Machar fled Juba at the start of the conflict in December 2013.

    More than two million people have been displaced and tens of thousands killed in the fighting.

    Rebel spokesman William Ezekiel told journalists waiting for Mr Machar at Juba’s airport that the trip had been postponed until Tuesday.

    He said that the rebels were still committed to the peace process.

    South Sudan: The world’s youngest country

    Split from Sudan in July 2011 after an independence referendum

    One of Africa’s least-developed economies. Highly oil-dependent

    Relations with Sudan strained by disputes over oil revenue sharing and borders

    Power struggle led to civil war in December 2013

    An estimated 2.2 million fled their homes during conflict

    A tentative, internationally mediated, peace agreement signed in August 2015

    Riek Machar was expected to take up his post as vice-president in a new unity government led by President Salva Kiir

  • Why Did Congo Offer Clinton $650,000 For Two Pics And A Speech?

    Congo, one of the poorest nations on Earth, offered former President Bill Clinton a speaking fee of $650,000–a sum equal to annual per-capita income of 2,813 Congolese. Indeed, the International Monetary Fund ranks the Democratic Republic of the Congo dead last in its global income rankings. What did it expect in return for its investment?

    In the proposed 2012 contract, the organizers expected a speech and at least one photograph each with the leaders of the Democratic Republic of the Congo and the Congo, which appeared to be splitting the princely honorarium. (Since there are two nations known as Congo, in this article, unless otherwise specified, I am referring to the Democratic Republic of the Congo whenever I write “Congo” alone.) That doesn’t seem like much of a return, two snaps and a chat. So the question is: What else did Congo want for its money?

    Congo’s extraordinary offer to Clinton first surfaced in a batch of Hillary Clinton’s emails released this past August, where it won little attention at the time. Newly leaked documents, known as the “Panama papers,” shed new light on the mystery as well as the misdoings of Congo’s corrupt rulers.

    While Hillary Clinton was Secretary of State, America’s top official dealing with foreign leaders, former President Bill Clinton travelled the world giving speeches to world leaders and overseas interests–earning at least $48 million while his wife was America’s top diplomat. Why weren’t the payments to one Clinton not considered a bribe to the other Clinton?

    Former US President Bill Clinton (ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS/AFP/Getty Images)

    Congo, one of the poorest nations on Earth, offered former President Bill Clinton a speaking fee of $650,000–a sum equal to annual per-capita income of 2,813 Congolese. Indeed, the International Monetary Fund ranks the Democratic Republic of the Congo dead last in its global income rankings. What did it expect in return for its investment?

    In the proposed 2012 contract, the organizers expected a speech and at least one photograph each with the leaders of the Democratic Republic of the Congo and the Congo, which appeared to be splitting the princely honorarium. (Since there are two nations known as Congo, in this article, unless otherwise specified, I am referring to the Democratic Republic of the Congo whenever I write “Congo” alone.) That doesn’t seem like much of a return, two snaps and a chat. So the question is: What else did Congo want for its money?

    Gallery
    Hillary Clinton’s (Very) Public Life
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    Congo’s extraordinary offer to Clinton first surfaced in a batch of Hillary Clinton’s emails released this past August, where it won little attention at the time. Newly leaked documents, known as the “Panama papers,” shed new light on the mystery as well as the misdoings of Congo’s corrupt rulers.

    While Hillary Clinton was Secretary of State, America’s top official dealing with foreign leaders, former President Bill Clinton travelled the world giving speeches to world leaders and overseas interests–earning at least $48 million while his wife was America’s top diplomat. Why weren’t the payments to one Clinton not considered a bribe to the other Clinton?

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    Precisely to prevent this perception, the State department had to vet all of the international speeches of the former president. Thus, the foreign policy director at the Clinton Foundation, Amitabh Desai, emailed Clinton’s request to accept the $650,000 to a State department official, writing “WJC [William Jefferson Clinton] wants know what state thinks of it if he took it 100% for the foundation.”

    This a favorite camouflage of the Clintons. The money was destined for the non-profit Clinton Foundation, which is controlled by the Clintons and their daughter, where it would be used for healthcare, schooling and other good works. Using money to help your fellow man isn’t self-enrichment, they say. True, but beside the point. Giving money to charity doesn’t address whether that money was received as a bribe. To answer that key question, one would have to know what foreign leaders wanted in exchange for their donations. After all, Congolese leaders aren’t worried about charitable deductions on their U.S. tax forms. So why did they proffer so much of their poor country’s money?

    Apparently Foggy Bottom nixed Clinton’s plans to travel to Congo as well as his request to give a paid speech in North Korea. In any event, he didn’t go. But the offer itself is the issue.

    What could Congo President Joseph Kabila want? While the possibilities are endless, two seem most likely: he sought U.S. permission to ignore Congo’s constitution and stay in power beyond his two-term limit, which expires in 2016, and he wanted to shield his overseas assets from international investigators.

    Bill and Hillary, especially when she was secretary of state, could be helpful on each count, if they wanted to be. Staying in power and keeping billions in shadowy gains would certainly be worth $650,000, if that was the deal that Kabila had in mind.

    It is time for the Clintons and their foundation to disclose all of their communications with Kabila and his regime. How was the $650,000 sum arrived at? What did Congo want in return? Did the Clintons offer to provide any help with U.S., UN, EU or other international officials?

    Former US President Bill Clinton

  • I will serve all Ugandans, Museveni reassures

    President Museveni on Saturday castigated residents of Kasangati village, Kyadondo East Constituency in Wakiso District for voting the Opposition.

    Kasangati village is under Kyadondo East Constituency that was won by Mr Apollo Kantinti, an FDC parliamentary candidate. Kasangati is also home to President Museveni’s political rival Dr Kizza Besigye.

    “I know some of you did not vote for us, but others voted for us. Those who did not vote for us and those who voted for us we shall work for you all,” Mr Museveni said.

    The President was speaking at centenary celebrations for Wampewo Primary School that is located not so far away from Dr Besigye’s home. Mr Museveni told the residents that his government had constructed Gayaza Road and others in the nearby Kira Municipality.

    According to the final results that were released by the Electoral Commission chairman, Mr Museveni received 5,617,503 votes (60.75 per cent) and Dr Besigye emerged second with 3,270,290 votes (35.37 per cent).

    The school which opened in April 16, 1916 is currently in a very sorry state with insufficient and dilapidated structures. It has 1,200 pupils. The school also lacks staff quarters according to Ms Marjorie Kilemerwa, the headmistress.

    Ms Kilemerwa said the school needs to raise the Shs2.8b to erect a three-storeyed structure which can accommodate the pupils and teachers.

    “We started a fundraising campaign three years ago but we have only collected Shs31million. Many people are hesitant to contributing funds because we are seen as an Opposition school,” she said while speaking to Daily Monitor on the sidelines of the fundraising.

    Not even Mr Museveni’s presence at the celebrations that also acted as a fundraising campaign could change the situation as less than Shs50m was collected. The President contributed Shs30m in cash and pledged another Shs20.

    “I have seen the school has very old structures. I am going to take special interest in it. I am going to task the Education ministry to consider it in its plans,” the President added.

    Bishop Wilberforce Kityo Luwalira of Namirembe Diocese applauded Mr Museveni for steering education in the country.

    President Museveni picks an envelope for a pupil of Wampewo Day and Boarding Primary School in Nangabo, Wakiso District during celebrations to mark 100 years of the school’s existence yesterday.

  • Iraqis protest as political deadlock deepens

    Third attempt to approve new cabinet fails after dissenting MPs continue attempts to replace the speaker of parliament.

    Protesters have taken to the streets in Baghdad to demand a new government, after the Iraqi parliament cancelled its third session in a week to discuss political reforms.

    Saturday’s session was scrapped because “parliament couldn’t be secured” by security forces, said a statement from the office of the speaker, Salim al-Jabouri, whose position is under threat as some legislators are seeking to replace him.

    The political crisis centres around divisions over a plan by Haider al-Abadi, the prime minister, to bring technocrats into cabinet in a bid to check corruption.

    On March 31, Abadi presented a list of independent professionals who he hoped could free ministries from the grip of dominant political groups.

    But under pressure from leading politicians, he drafted a second list this week based on party links.

    The modified list, which Abadi had planned to present for a vote, prompted a sit-in by MPs who say it will allow corruption to continue to flourish.

    Al Jazeera’s Jane Arraf, reporting from Baghdad, said if the reforms are actually put in place, it will be the most significant development in Iraqi politics since 2003.

    “The political system created after Saddam Hussein was toppled distributed power among Shia, Sunni and Kurdish political blocs. It has created a government that many Iraqis feel serves politicians but not the people,” she said.

    Power distribution

    The dissenting MPs, who accuse the speaker, Jabouri, of blocking reforms, said they would meet on Monday to elect a new assembly leader.

    The protesters include followers of influential Shia cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, who on Saturday issued a statement asking all the ministers to immediately resign, and even Abadi’s Dawa party.

    Sadr pledged to start protests in 72 hours if the nation’s leaders failed to vote on a technocrats’ cabinet.

    “If these conditions are not met then let it be known that the people will decide,” he said in a handwritten statement.

    Earlier this week, a parliamentary session degenerated into a massive brawl with shoving, shouting, and water bottles thrown.

    The UN has called on Iraqi leaders to resolve the political crisis, warning that instability could jeopardise the fight against the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL, also known as ISIS) group, which still controls much of northern and western Iraq.

    “The only party that benefits from the political divisions and chaos …. is Daesh,” said the UN’s acting head of mission to Iraq, Gyorgy Busztin, using the Arabic acronym for ISIL.

    The costs of the war against ISIL, along with the plunge in the price of oil – which accounts for 95 percent of Iraq’s revenues – have caused an economic crisis, adding fresh urgency to calls for reform.

    Iraqi officials predict a budget deficit of more than $30bn this year.

  • France and Germany back Libya unity cabinet

    The French and German foreign ministers have made an unannounced visit to Libya, in a show of support for the country’s new UN-backed government.

    In Tripoli, Germany’s Frank-Walter Steinmeier said the EU was ready to train Libya’s security forces.

    Since 2014 the country has had two competing administrations.

    The new UN-brokered unity government is trying to restore peace in Libya, which has been ravaged by conflict since the fall of Col Muammar Gaddafi in 2011.

    Western nations hope the Government of National Accord (GNA) – led by Prime Minister-designate Fayez Sarraj – will be able to unite the country and combat an affiliate of the so-called Islamic State, which has a foothold in the country.

    ‘Defending same cause’

    “We know how difficult it is to get legal security forces behind this government and so we don’t want to underestimate the challenge of fighting against the cancer of Daesh (Islamic State),” Mr Steinmeier said on Saturday.

    “We also know that only the Libyans themselves can tackle this task successfully.”
    Mr Steinmeier suggested the training of Libya’s security forces and border guards could start outside the country.

    If the situation stabilised in the country, the minister added, the training could continue on Libyan soil.

    French Foreign Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault said: “We are defending the same cause, we are defending the same interests: the respect of the identity, the integrity, the independence of every country.

    “It’s for the sake of this common cause that we came here, bringing our complete support to the government of Mr Seraj and calling on all countries who want to join, to give a real chance of success to the legitimate, national unity government of Mr Seraj.”

    Mr Sarraj’s government arrived in Tripoli earlier this month, and is now operating from the city’s naval base.

    The GNA is yet to receive an official endorsement from the parliament in the eastern city of Tobruk, which is internationally recognised as legitimate.

    A vote on the issue is expected on Monday.

    The rival government – backed by powerful militias – is based in Tripoli.
    Libya slid into chaos after the 2011 Nato-backed uprising that ousted Col Gaddafi.

    German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier (left) and his French counterpart Jean-Marc Ayrault in Tripoli, Libya. Photo: 16 April 2016Image copyrightEPA Image caption Ministers Steinmeier (left) and Ayrault said Europe was ready to train Libya's security forces

  • UN weighs options for Burundi police force

    Calling the situation in Burundi “alarmingly precarious,” UN chief Ban Ki-moon is proposing three options for a new UN police mission there, ranging from a full force of 3,000 officers to a light dispatch of 20 to 50.

    The options were detailed in a report to the Security Council obtained by AFP on Saturday, two weeks after the council agreed to send a police force to the African country to help quell a year of violence there.

    In the report, Ban said dispatching a force of up to 3,000 was “the only option that could provide some degree of physical protection to the population” but that the mission would take months to prepare and present logistical challenges.

    A second option, he said, would be to send 228 UN police officers to work with human rights officials and possibly with African Union monitors to provide early warning, but it would not offer any protection to civilians.

    The secretary-general said the council could also decide to send a group of 20 to 50 officers who would assess the Burundi police force and “help bring about concrete and measurable improvements in the respect for human rights and rule of law.”

    The council is under pressure to take action in Burundi where the descent into violence has raised fears of mass atrocities, similar to those that convulsed neighboring Rwanda in 1994.

    Burundi has been in turmoil since President Pierre Nkurunziza announced plans in April last year to run for a third term, which he went on to win.

    Violence has left more than 400 dead and driven more than 250,000 people across the border.

    Diplomats said the proposed force of 228 police officers appeared to be the best option, but it remained unclear if Bujumbura would accept that many officers.
    The government has told the United Nations that it was ready to receive some 20 unarmed police experts, but would oppose any “large” UN police presence.

    Alarming situation

    Ban’s proposals followed the adoption earlier this month of a French-drafted resolution that called for the deployment to monitor the security situation and help promote human rights.

    “The security situation in Burundi remains alarmingly precarious,” Ban wrote in the 11-page report to the council sent late Friday.

    “Even as hand grenade attacks on public venues peaked in late February, attacks targeting military and police personnel, including assassinations and abductions, have increased.”

    Ban cited a “rising trend in enforced disappearances, arbitrary arrests, illegal detention and ill treatment and torture,” although the number of killings has decreased in the past two months.

    The proposed police force would allow the United Nations “to maintain situational awareness” and could help develop a strategy to address the crisis, Ban said, but he warned that it was no substitute for a political dialogue.

    The United Nations has repeatedly called on Nkurunziza to open up serious talks with the opposition on ending the crisis, but the appeals have been ignored.

    The African Union in January abandoned plans to deploy a 5,000-strong peacekeeping force after the Bujumbura government rejected what it described as an “invasion force.”

    In this Saturday, Dec. 12, 2015 file photo, men captured by the security forces, who were said by them to have been involved in attacks on military targets but which could not be independently verified, are paraded during a press conference at the country’s intelligence service headquarters in the capital Bujumbura, Burundi.

  • Hundreds of Egyptians stage anti-Sisi protest

    Demonstrators call for “overthrow” of Sisi government as anger spreads for first time since general’s rise to power.

    Egyptian security forces fired tear gas and live ammunition into the sky to scatter hundreds of protesters demonstrating on Friday against the government of President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi.

    Protesters gathered in the Giza area of Cairo after Friday prayers calling for the overthrow of the “regime”, chanting slogans that were common during the 2011 revolution that toppled former president Hosni Mubarak.

    “Sisi Mubarak, we don’t want you, leave,” they yelled.

    More than 80 people were arrested in Cairo, Giza and the Mediterranean port city of Alexandria, security officials said.

    The protests were the first significant move against Sisi since he was elected president in the summer of 2014.

    Sisi’s government announced last week that it had signed a maritime demarcation accord, a move that prompted a public outcry.

    A growing number of Egyptians are losing patience over corruption, poverty, and unemployment, the same issues that led to Mubarak’s downfall, while Sisi has appeared increasingly authoritarian in televised speeches.

    “We want the downfall of regime. We have forced disappearances, all the youth are in jail. I just got out of jail a year ago after two years inside,” Abdelrahman Abdellatif, 29, an air-conditioning engineer, told Reuters news agency.

    “The youth of the revolution are still here. We are not gone.”

    Sisi, who came to power after the removal of the Muslim Brotherhood’s Mohamed Morsi in 2013, has faced mounting criticism in recent months over a range of issues, including his management of the economy.

    A Reuters witness said a crowd was dispersed and riot police had taken control of an area outside a mosque in the Mohandiseen district of the capital. Four people were arrested, security sources said.

    Sisi has a large base of support among Egyptians who fear for their security. At a rally Friday in the city of Alexandria, about 500 supporters carried posters with photographs of the president and chanted: “We love you, el-Sisi.”

    But critics say Sisi’s government has mishandled a series of crises, from an investigation into the killing of an Italian student in Cairo to a bomb that brought down a Russian airliner in the Sinai last October.

    Calls for protests have gathered thousands of supporters on Facebook, including from the outlawed Muslim Brotherhood.

    Egyptian activists shout slogans against President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi and his government

  • Brazil MPs cleared to sack President Rousseff

    If the Senate finds her guilty with another two-thirds vote, she would be forced from office.

    Brazil’s Supreme Court has rejected a last-ditch attempt by President Dilma Rousseff to halt the impeachment process, clearing the way for a key vote in Congress.

    Judges refused a request for an injunction against proceedings that the government lawyer called “Kafkaesque” and said amounted to denying Rousseff the opportunity to defend herself against claims of illegally fudging government budget numbers to boost her re-election chances in 2014.

    The 7-3 ruling in a Supreme Court session that began late Thursday and went well past midnight in the capital Brasilia paved the way for Sunday’s vote by the lower house of Congress, which is due to decide whether to send Rousseff to an impeachment trial.

    In an atmosphere of maximum drama and tension in Latin America’s largest country and economy, debate in the lower house began later Friday leading up to the vote on Sunday.

    Latest counts of voting intentions in the lower house by major Brazilian newspapers show the pro-impeachment camp either at, or on the verge of, the necessary two-thirds majority.
    If the vote passes, the Senate will have authority to open a trial against Rousseff. If the Senate finds her guilty with another two-thirds vote, she would be forced from office.

    The 68-year-old leader’s grip on power is fast slipping, leaving Brazil in crisis at a time of recession and less than four months before hosting the Olympics.

    Rousseff has desperately been trying to assemble enough support in the lower house.

    GO DOWN FIGHTING

    On Thursday, she launched a new line of defense, sending her government’s top lawyer, Jose Eduardo Cardozo, to file for the injunction. The government alleged procedural failings in the impeachment case, saying it had violated her right to a defense.

    “Evidence unrelated to the case has been included in the process, such as matters related to President Dilma (Rousseff)’s previous term,” Cardozo said in the filing.

    He called the impeachment drive “a truly Kafkaesque process in which the accused is unable to know precisely what she is accused of or why.”

    Rousseff, who has vowed to go down fighting, also tried another tack by repeating an offer to forge a political compromise with opponents if deputies throw out impeachment on Sunday.

    “The government will fight until the last minute of the second half… to foil this coup attempt,” she said in an interview published by various media outlets Thursday.

    Rousseff on Thursday held a meeting with ministers and some of the lawmakers still loyal to her, a presidential source said, shortly before Cardozo announced his appeal.

    Several of the parties in Rousseff’s coalition have jumped ship, starting with the PMDB of her vice president, Michel Temer. Scores of lawmakers have since turned against Rousseff, saying they will vote for impeachment.

    Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff gestures during the Education in Defense of Democracy event, at the Planalto Palace in Brasilia, on April 12, 2016.

  • Kenya:Jubilee to celebrate collapse of ICC cases

    The Jubilee group will be celebrating the collapse of the crimes against humanity case against Mr Ruto and journalist Joshua Sang.

    Justice for post-election violence victims and national healing and reconciliation are the themes likely to dominate talk at two major rallies by Jubilee and Cord on Saturday.

    President Uhuru Kenyatta and his deputy William Ruto will lead the Jubilee troops at Nakuru’s Afraha Stadium while opposition leader Raila Odinga will be in Nairobi’s Kibera.

    The Jubilee group will be celebrating the collapse of the crimes against humanity case against Mr Ruto and journalist Joshua Sang.

    But, observers also say it will be the beginning in earnest of their re-election campaign for the 2017 elections.

    On Friday, Mr Odinga, in a statement from Paris where he is visiting, called for the formation of what he called “baraza” courts in the areas hit by the violence to help bring about reconciliation and healing.

    Without justice for the victims of the 2007 election violence, he said, those at the Nakuru rally will be “dancing on the graves of the dead”.

    “Uhuru and Ruto must cease this continued mockery of the victims of the post-election violence and lead this nation towards the truth and reconciliation that will save us from what is quickly becoming an irreversible descent towards another orgy of violence,” Mr Odinga said in a statement sent to newsrooms.

    And Senate Majority Leader Kithure Kindiki hinted at the formation of a truth and reconciliation commission to put an end to the cyclic violence. “We shall not be in Nakuru merely to celebrate the defeat of ICC, but to restate our values.”

    “In the coming days we shall be sitting down and crafting a national healing and reconciliation programme. We need to find out the truth using local methods, but with a leader of the stature of Desmond Tutu,” he said, referring to the South African icon who led peace efforts after the collapse of apartheid.

    At Afraha Stadium, the President and his deputy will be returning to the launch pad of their campaign machine in 2013 in what their strategists say will mark the beginning of rallies to mobilise their supporters ahead of next year’s elections.

    They are in Nakuru, the epicentre of the 2007 election violence for a victory rally following the end of the ICC case against Mr Ruto and Mr Sang, the last of the initial six Kenyans, that included Mr Kenyatta, who were accused of masterminding the mayhem in which at least 1,133 people died and over 650,000 others were displaced.

    Mr Kenyatta and Mr Ruto, who were on the opposing sides of the 2007 election, closed ranks after they were named suspects by the Hague-based court and built a formidable campaign juggernaut which swept them to victory.

    The other three were former Head of Civil Service Francis Muthaura, former Commissioner of Police Hussein Ali, and former ODM Chairman Henry Kosgey.

    SURVIVORS’ PETITION

    President Kenyatta and Mr Ruto’s need to unite is made all the more urgent by the open-ended manner in which their cases collapsed — with a leeway for the prosecutor to bring them back in future.

    The two will use the euphoria of their victory at the ICC to build support, which they hope will wipe out the winter of discontent among some of their supporters who say rising corruption and failure to implement some of the campaign pledges had dented Jubilee’s first term.

    On Thursday, US Ambassador Robert Godec warned that the “specter of corruption” was haunting Kenya, undermining its security, prosperity, and democracy. (see article on page 11)

    There has also been pressure on President to restore the confidence of Kenyans in the electoral body. The Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission is presently embroiled in an unprecedented crisis of confidence and experts warn there is need to fix it to nip in the bud any possibility of widespread dissatisfaction with the poll outcome particulary if the opposition loses.

    The victory rally also comes against a backdrop of a constitutional petition before the High Court, brought by eight survivors of sexual and gender post-election violence who were gang raped or forcibly circumcised.

    On Wednesday, the survivors asked for reparations including medical and psychological treatment, legal and social services, and compensation.

    They called for the reform of the responsible institutions and change in policies “so that no one else undergoes the suffering we have endured ever again”.

    They said since last year’s State of the Nation address in which President Kenyatta pledged to establish a Sh10 billion restorative justice fund nothing had come of it.

    The ICC Trial Chamber V ended the case against Mr Ruto and Mr Sanga with the court’s presiding judge, Chile Eboe-Osuji, declaring the proceedings a mistrial due to a “troubling incidence of witness interference and intolerable political meddling”. Justice Osuji also argued that Kenya had also failed to address the chaos that occurred during elections since 1992.

    After the December 2, 2012 rally at Afraha Stadium in which Jubilee unveiled their candidate and the running mate, Mr Kenyatta and Mr Ruto held a series of prayer rallies in which they whipped up nationalistic sentiments and fears of being locked up to suffer in foreign prisons.

    Central Kenya Parliamentary Group Chairman Dennis Waweru said the region’s residents will troop to Nakuru to show solidarity and express their gratitude for the collapse of the cases.

    Kigumo MP Jamleck Kamau said the journey for the re-election of Jubilee in 2017 had started in earnest. “There is nothing to stop us. Our focus will now be to deliver key development projects which are ongoing. The opposition will find it rougher this time round,” said Mr Kamau.

    Nominated Senator Beatrice Elachi (TNA) told the Saturday Nation that the coalition was genuine on reconciling all Kenyans.

    But former Subukia MP Koigi wa Wamwere said Jubilee was using the rally selfishly to launch how they can cling to power rather than how they can genuinely unite Kenyans.”

    Yesterday, political leaders in Nakuru called for calm among their supporters ahead of the prayer ceremony.

    Governor Kinuthia Mbugua urged the leaders told their supporters to restrain themselves from insults, heckling and booing.

    The chairman of Nakuru County Luo Council of Elders Mr Richard Obuya said the timing and the venue of the ceremony should be respected as Nakuru was an epicenter of the violence.

    President Uhuru Kenyatta and Deputy President William Ruto acknowledge greetings from residents of Ol-Kalau trading centre, Nyadarua County. The duo will on April 16, 2016 lead the Jubilee troops at Nakuru’s Afraha Stadium to celebrate the collapse of their ICC cases.

  • S. Sudan inks EAC accession treaty

    The Chairman of the East African Community (EAC), President John Magufuli and the President of South Sudan Salva Kiir Mayardit, yesterday signed the Treaty of Accession of the latter into the EAC.

    Speaking at the State House in Dar es Salaam, Dr Magufuli hailed South Sudan, noting that he was proud of the historical event at the time when Tanzania is the Chair of the Community and that a new chapter of cooperation and relations with the Sudan has emerged.

    He added that historically, South Sudan has maintained close relations with East African countries in various fields. The president also said that the inclusion of South Sudan has enlarged the community’s market consumer base which has an estimated 160 million people.

    Dr Magufuli reiterated that for the EAC to make sustainable development it was paramount for peace to be maintained, urging the South Sudan to intensify peace negotiation processes.

    “However, the whole concept of cooperation is to expand business, investment and infrastructure to enable sustainable development with the community, thus I reiterate for member states to maintain peace to reach our intended goals,” said President Magufuli. He also commended President Kiir on his efforts towards ensuring that his country joins the EAC just four months after attaining her independence.

    On his part, President Kiir expressed his deep appreciation and the achievement attained of becoming a full member of the EAC. He also thanked President Magufuli and other presidents of member states for unanimously approving his country’s accession to EAC. President Kiir added that the decision to join EAC was whole heartedly and has the intention of strengthening cooperation for the benefit of EAC people as a whole.

    He said that his country has started making reforms in various systems in his government in order to enable it to participate fully in various steps of cooperation including forming a ministry incharge of EAC. “Eventually, South Sudan has come home.

    EAC is the right forum for my country since EAC is a union which is respected not only in Africa but worldwide,” said the president. Further, the president has announced opening of his country’s embassy in the country and has already appointed Mariano Deng Ngor as the new South Sudan Envoy to Tanzania.

    Earlier before the signing of the Communique, the Minister for East Africa, Regional and International Cooperation and the Chairman of Council of Minister in EAC Ambassador, Dr Augustine Mahiga said that the EAC would cooperate very closely with international community to ensure that the people who were displaced by the South Sudan conflict return to develop their country. The Republic of South Sudan attained its independence in July 9, 2011 and presented its application to join the EAC on November10, 2011.

    The announcement of their acceptance to join the EAC as full member was made by the EAC Chairman at the 17 meeting of EAC heads of state which was held in Arusha in March, this year.

    THE Chairman of the East African Community (EAC), President John Magufuli, exchanges documents with South Sudan President Salva Kiir, following the signing of a Treaty of Accession of the latter into the regional grouping in Dar es Salaam yesterday.