Category: Rubrique

  • Robert Mugabe Sets Poll Tone

    {{President Robert Mugabe said zimbabweans should work together despite their political differences for the benefit of current and future generations.}}

    He made the remarks while officially opening the Fifth Session of the Country’s Seventh Parliament.

    “Let us also continue to engender within ourselves the belief that we are masters of our own destiny and the resolve to jealously guard our hard-won independence and nationhood, hoisting national unity as our solid bond.

    “To this end, I wish to appeal to all our leaders, followers of our parties and other organisations and stakeholders, including the media, to adopt the pledge to work genuinely for national unity and cohesion.

    “Let us all shun violence in all its manifestations and latent forms, especially as we look forward to our national elections.”

    The President said as principals to the Global Political Agreement, they expect the next stage of Constitution making to proceed with haste so that the process is concluded expeditiously.

    “The Select Committee of Copac should work frantically to produce a report of the conference summarising the views expressed by the stakeholders, in particular the divergent views, and submit the report to the principals in Government who will take the necessary steps to set up an appropriate mechanism to build the required consensus on the way forward, mindful always that our major objective remains the holding of the next harmonised elections in March, 2013 under a new Constitution,” he said.

    The Constitution-making process, said the President, took long to complete, an indication that it was a difficult one.

    “There is now the need for Government to assume the management of the process leading to the holding of a referendum.

    “Should the people express their affirmation of the Draft Constitution, then Parliament would be asked to pass it as the fundamental law of our country. Elections will then become a necessary sequel.”

    In setting up the legislative agenda, the President outlined eight Bills that would be tabled in the coming session.

    These are the Constituency Development Fund Bill, Attorney-General Amendment Bill, Zimbabwe Investment Authority Bill, Mines and Mineral Amendment Bill and the Civil Aviation Amendment Bill.

    Others are the State Enterprise and Parastatal Management Bill, Diamond Bill and the Tripartite Negotiating Forum Bill.

    Soon after the speech, Zanu-PF Chief Whip, Cde Joram Gumbo, who is also Mberengwa West MP, moved a motion calling for a respectful address to be given to the President for the speech he delivered.

    The same motion was moved in the Senate by Chief Mtshane Khumalo.

    Finance Minister Tendai Biti gave notice that he would deliver the 2013 National Budget statement on November 15.

    The official opening of Parliament started with staff from the President’s Office preparing the vintage Rolls Royce used by President Mugabe and the First Lady Amai Mugabe for the grand occasion.

    The photo session at State House, with a new site away from the usual front of the State House was a moment to cherish.

    The President shared jokes with the staff, photographers and reporters.

    After the photo session, he inspected a Guard of Honour by the ZRP Mounted Unit.

    The procession led by the First Couple in the vintage Rolls Royce then started its journey to Parliament Building.

    People lined up Josiah Tongogara Avenue, Sam Nujoma Street and Nelson Mandela Avenue and cheered as the presidential entourage passed.

    Some youths added a new dimension to the commemorative event as they marched just behind the entourage.

    Supporters of different political parties and schoolchildren witnessed the event from Africa Unity Square adjacent to Parliament Building.

    Others climbed on treetops for a better view of the proceedings, especially the arrival of President Mugabe and the First Lady.

    The spectators were treated to traditional dances and music by the army band, while others sang praises for their leaders and parties.
    Members of the apostolic sect in the crowd sang choruses, with the famous one being “Gabriel Mutungamiri Wedu”.

    Unlike last year, this year’s event was peaceful with no clashes between political party supporters.

    There was ululation, whistling and joy when the President arrived and as he inspected the Guard of Honour mounted by the Presidential Guard.

    The event was accompanied by a booming 21-gun salute and a fly-past by the Air Force of Zimbabwe.

    Judges and Members of Parliament then filed into Parliament Building.
    People in Africa Unity Square followed the President’s speech from two giant monitors.

  • 4 Kenyans Killed in Violent Protests

    {{Four people were killed on Monday in Kisumu following violent protests that were ignited with the killing of an Orange Democratic Movement (ODM) parliamentary aspirant Shem Onyango alias Kwegah.}}

    The three were among a group of five people who had sought refuge at a furniture shop in Kondele to escape the crossfire between rioters and the police.

    According to an eye witnesses, police lobbed a teargas canister which burst into flames due to contact with a flammable substance.

    Two people who survived the incident were admitted at the New Nyanza General Hospital with serious burns.

    Protesters also blocked the Kisumu – Kakamega highway and destroyed properties.

    Motorcycle taxi operator, Kenneth Oduor, who was ferrying a passenger that got killed early in the day said his client was shot as they approached a police station.

  • President Kabila Says Rwanda is ‘Bad Boy’

    {President Joseph Kabila of DRC invited nine Ugandan journalists, mostly from the broadcast media, for a chat in Kinshasa.

    Kabila is said to have made no opening remarks, choosing instead to take only questions.

    Below is the detailed Interview.}

    {{The M23 rebels have dismissed the UN group of experts report (implicating Rwanda and Uganda) as compilations done by your intelligence services. How do you respond to that? }}

    You cannot expect anything less from such a rebel movement than rejecting the report by the UN group of experts.

    We believe that the report, which in fact is the conclusion of the initial report, is the truth about what is happening or has been happening over the last eight months in North Kivu; the true face of the people definitely behind what is happening; the insecurity and its disastrous consequences on the population.

    We have Congolese citizens displaced internally and others living as refugees in Uganda. I wasn’t expecting the M23 rebels or anybody else adversely mentioned in that report to accept it.

    The rebels say they want to have a dialogue with you over the failure to implement the 2009 peace agreement, but that you don’t recognise them.
    Who wants to talk to me or the Congolese government? The Congo has always been open to discussions; we have had many security-related conferences, had a transitional government but you have to reach a point and get back to the drawing table and ask: What really is happening?

    {{So, what is the cause of this crisis and who are the principal players? Your Excellency, please mention the people involved without diplomacy.
    Unfortunately, I’m a diplomat (laughs). What exactly is happening?}}

    That is exactly what we want to find out. Initially, the M23 group demanded an evaluation [of the implementation] of the agreement which was signed on March 23, 2009.

    This is exactly what has been happening, we are yet to receive the official report of that evaluation; Uganda, as chair of the Great Lakes region, was given that particular task and we are waiting for the final report.

    {{Your government has always said it has evidence that Rwanda supports M23 rebels, could you tell us the actual evidence you have gathered?}}

    You don’t really need any evidence from me, you just take a look at the report of the UN group of experts and you will find all the evidence.

    These are issues that are not new at all. We have put these issues to our Rwandan counterparts on many occasions, and what we would have expected from them is to say, well, we are going to look into it instead of saying this is just baseless; these are lies. Yet that has been the attitude.

    {{How do you hope to work with Rwanda now that it has been elected to the UN Security Council as a non-permanent member?}}

    I don’t know but we hope to work with all the members on the Security Council.

    What one would expect and hope is that with Rwanda (now) being a member of UN Security Council, it [should] basically leave this tendency of being the bad boy in the region, and make peace a reality in the region, especially along the border.

    The leaked report of the UN group of experts says Uganda is also offering support to the M23. Uganda, and in this case President Museveni, happens to be the chairperson of the International Conference of the Great Lakes Region (ICGLR).

    {{Do you see Uganda playing any more credible mediation role between your government and M23 rebels? Could you confirm that aspect of Uganda’s involvement indicated in the report is correct?}}

    In fact we have not yet had time to talk directly to the Ugandan authorities; we will do that in due course. Are they involved or are they not involved? The report is out there for everybody to see. Although it is not yet the official report, it is a leaked [version of the final] report.

    We are definitely going to raise this issue (with Uganda) at the highest level and I expect, or we hope, that they will be forthcoming; meaning that they will work on this particular report and come back to us and say that we believe that it is true that one, two, three or four individuals have been doing one, two, three things. These are the measures that we are going to take or have taken.

    Uganda is heading our organisation (ICGLR) and one would expect something better than it being mentioned [adversely] in the UN report.

    Just to clarify, Uganda government through Foreign Affairs junior minister Oryem Okello has said the allegation is “rubbish” and that it has no hand whatsoever in supporting M23.

    (Laughs) Well, that is what you say at a press conference. That is not the reply I’m expecting to get from the Ugandan authorities.

    I believe in the coming few days, we shall have the final official version of the leaked UN report and this will allow each and everyone else to really voice their official position. But it will just be too bad if that will be Uganda’s only reply: That the allegation is rubbish and that is it. No. We expect much more from them than that.

    {{What agreements have you reached with Rwanda on the sharing of any kind of resources on the common border?}}

    We haven’t reached any agreement on the sharing of any kind of resources on our common border.

    I don’t know whether the question is with Uganda or Rwanda, but I believe there is definitely need for proper coordination in as far as the exploitation of these resources is concerned.

    {{Your government tried to block Rwanda but it got elected to the UN Security Council. What is your comment about that?}}

    Now Rwanda is a non-permanent member of the UN Security Council. It’s true we tried to block that except the process of electing a non-permanent member to the Security Council is a lengthy one; it starts a year and beyond before.

    In this case, it started long before through the East African Community and then the African Union.

    Our thought and position was that with the current situation, you cannot have a non-permanent member participating in the deliberation of the UN Security Council and at the same time, directly or indirectly, participating in making it sure that there is no peace in the neighbouring country.

    So, that was our position and it is still our position.

    So it’s a lengthy process and a process that started a year and a half, which was before this current situation came up.

    {{Why would Rwanda and Uganda want to fight Congo?}}

    That is the question I would like you to put before the authorities in those two countries. We have been asking ourselves that question but don’t seem to have found the answer.

    We have been very open as far as Congo is concerned and with all the countries of the region in order to work for peace, and find a peaceful solution and we will continue to do that.

    There is peaceful, diplomatic and or political solution and a military option will still be on the table as part of the solution in addition to those three.

    What happens in the event that the peaceful options fail?
    In the event that diplomacy fails, we still have other avenues; we will continue to pursue those avenues with the same objectives; peace, security and stability not only for the Congolese people but our region as a whole.

    {{There is visible development in Kinshasa; the streets are neater, the roads themselves are eight lanes, now replacing what used to be swimming pools. Congratulations! This is a good-looking capital but what are your thoughts about other provinces?}}

    Thank you. Our infrastructure programme does not only concern the capital, this is a programme that started in 2008; the objective is getting most of our infrastructures to a higher level through re-construction.

    The programme started in Kinshasa because it is the capital where you have the biggest population concentration of about 10 million people. This is a programme that is in the eleven provinces that make up the country.

    If you go to any of those, you will see similar road works, similar infrastructures projects although not at the same level as in Kinshasa.

    You have all these huge ongoing infrastructure projects. How does your government avoid the corruption jinx?

    The issue of corruption is in every country, and that is why stronger institutions become very important. We scrapped the anti-corruption commission six years ago.

    We believe that the proper way of tackling corruption is by reinforcing the justice system; rendering it very secure and have individuals who will not be corrupted. That is the best way to start tackling corruption.

    Aspect two is checks and balances. When you have the Executive which is in charge of most of these projects, controlled by the National Assembly and the Senate (DRC has the lower and upper houses), it renders it difficult for corruption to thrive.

    It is not as if we have attained zero level of corruption in this country. But at least we ensure that funds that have been allocated to all these projects have been used for the projects in question.

    There is concern that you hand-picked a Chinese company and gave it the contracts to run these projects without following public procurement procedures.

    We have a procurement process established by law; it stipulates how a contract is awarded.

    As for the bigger projects, we thought that we had to break the classic way of doing things: we talked to a number of countries, not only Chinese with which we have a good relation, and decided to work on our infrastructure.

    China does 50% of our infrastructure works. We decided to open the door to investors to invest in our mining sector from which we get resources to fund the infrastructures and projects such as in agriculture.

    {{Let’s go to the tourism sector. DRC is richly endowed and home to majority of the endangered mountain gorilla species. Is your government investing enough to promote the country’s vast tourism potential?}}

    Unfortunately, tourists like investors are very worried about insecurity. You, the press, are not helping us, because each and every time you talk of the Democratic Republic of Congo, one sees ‘red’ yet it is not the reality on the ground.

    I believe our tourism potential surpasses by far that of other countries, but in order to tap it, you need to assure and reassure the tourists that when they come, they will be safe and that there is peace and security.

    That is why our priority has been peace, security and stability. Not only to tap into or exploit the tourism market but also for other investments in the country.

    The number of tourists we receive would be bigger had there been positive reporting in the media and if we had the peace and stability in Rutshuru (eastern DRC).

    Uganda is accused of sponsoring the M23 rebels, but then we are having a problem of Congolese refugees in western Uganda. How is your country collaborating with Kampala and other partners to help these people?

    The fighting in North Kivu province has affected everybody; it has affected Congo because we are losing a lot of resources in customs at Bunagana border post and surrounding areas, it has also affected the neighbouring countries because the East African Community does 50% of its business with basically eastern DRC.

    So, all these chaps that are disrupting the peace, the economy and the economics of the region either don’t know the consequences of their actions or are doing so deliberately.

    You have individuals that are benefiting from this mayhem, the state or states are not benefiting, the population is not benefiting. We have to put these individuals under lock-and-key in order for Congo to move forward and peace to be a reality.

    If and when the refugees move in another country, then you don’t have only the two countries working together but you have a tripartite arrangement, which means, the Congo, Uganda and the UNHCR working together.

    That is what has been happening. We have had a number of our officials who have gone to the two or three refugee camps and have seen our compatriots there and have stayed there until stability comes before they return home.

    {{Your Excellency, do you believe that this proposal by your colleagues from the Great Lakes region to have a Neutral International Force of 4000 troops is the best way to solve this crisis? }}

    There is no best way of solving a crisis, this is not just a proposal from my colleagues; this is a proposal from the region. In fact initially, this was a proposal that came from Congo. Why?

    Because we believe that we have a problem in a given part of the region; we believe that there is no confidence between the Rwanda and Congo governments and we needed, or we need, an international force to be posted on that particular border so that this international force gives the necessary assurance to Rwanda that any armed group or any negative force will not cross the border to attack Rwanda, just as much as we also need the same assurances that Rwanda will not be crossing the border to assist whatever armed group or negative force in the region. That is objective number one.

    Objective number two, which we clearly stated as a region, is to carry out operations against the negative forces that we have identified.

    The Neutral International Force (NIF) is part of the solution. There is need to build confidence, the solution is for the people to say the truth, for all of us to have basically the same vision: peace, security and development for our people.

    Rwanda claims that the Interahamwe or FDLR extremists are hibernating in DRC and Uganda also alleges that the Allied Democratic Forces have a lair in eastern DRC due to alleged diminished state authority there. Do you believe those concerns are legitimate and what is your government doing to address them?

    Those concerns might be legitimate concerns but how do you deal with them? That is the issue. As far as Uganda was concerned, there was not only ADF; there was Joseph Kony with his Lord Resistance Army rebels.

    We managed to carry out joint operations with Ugandan army against the LRA, we ourselves continued with those operations against the LRA, now there are officially no LRA elements in Congo.

    We were going to carry out the same operations against the ADF had it not been for the instability, the chaos, mayhem caused by the M23 with all the backers that they have.

    As far as FDLR is concerned, a number of operations were carried against this group, we intended and in fact in some areas in South Kivu we are continuing with operations, North Kivu also, had it not been for the current situation which has now diverted most of our resources to combating these other negative force with minor operations now being carried out against FDLR.

    So, yes, those concerns are legitimate just as are our concerns about [Rwanda and Uganda’s] support for these other negative force are legitimate.

    {Monitor, Uganda}

  • Former Colin Powell Aide Says Republican Party ‘Full of Racists’

    {{Colin Powell’s former chief of staff condemned the Republican Party on Friday night saying, “My party, unfortunately, is the bastion of those people — not all of them, but most of them — who are still basing their positions on race.}}

    He added, “Let me just be candid: My party is full of racists, and the real reason a considerable portion of my party wants President Obama out of the White House has nothing to do with the content of his character, nothing to do with his competence as commander-in-chief and president, and everything to do with the color of his skin, and that’s despicable.”

    Retired Army Col. Lawrence Wilkerson made the comment in response to Mitt Romney campaign surrogate John Sununu’s suggestion on Thursday that Powell’s endorsement of President Barack Obama’s re-election was motivated by race.

    Wilkerson, who served as Powell’s chief of staff when the general was secretary of state during the first George W. Bush term, told Schultz that he respected Sununu “as a Republican, as a member of my party,” but did not “have any respect for the integrity of the position that [Sununu] seemed to codify.”

    The retired colonel also said that “to say that Colin Powell would endorse President Obama because of his skin color is like saying Mother Theresa worked for profit.”

    Sununu said,”when you take a look at Colin Powell, you have to wonder whether that’s an endorsement based on issues or whether he’s got a slightly different reason for preferring President Obama.”

    Obama himself dismissed Sununu’s suggestion on Friday.

  • Racism Will Affect US Polls

    {{Candidate Barack Obama has a deficit of 23% points, trailing Republican Mitt Romney 60% to 37% among whites, according to the latest Washington Post-ABC News national tracking poll.}}

    That presents a significant hurdle for the president — and suggests that he will need to achieve even larger margins of victory among women and minorities, two important parts of the Democratic base, to win reelection.

    Overall, Romney has edged ahead in the contest, garnering 50% of likely voters for the first time in the campaign, according to the Post-ABC poll.

    As Romney hits 50%, the president stands at 47%, his lowest tally since before the national party conventions.

    The three-point edge gives Romney his first apparent — but not statistically significant — advantage in the national popular vote.

    The challenger has a clear nine-point lead when it comes to whom voters trust to handle the economy, which has long been the central issue of the contest.

    He has also effectively neutralized what has been a consistent fallback for Obama: economic empathy.

    Romney’s momentum in these areas comes from improvements against the president among white voters.

    The slippage among whites is something of a setback for Obama, who campaigned on bridging the racial divide in his election and has sought to minimize rifts that have arisen in his presidency.

    Although Democrats typically win minorities and fare worse among white voters than their Republican rivals, Obama outpaced previous losing Democratic candidates with both groups.

    Less than two weeks before the election, the evidence suggests that a much more sharply divided country will head to the polls.

    As he did in 2008, Obama gets overwhelming support from nonwhites, who made up a record high proportion of the overall electorate four years ago.

    In that contest, 80% of all nonwhites supported Obama, including 95% of black voters, according to the exit poll. In the Post-ABC tracking poll released Thursday, Obama again draws support from 80% of nonwhites, and backing for his reelection is nearly universal among African Americans.

    In other words, Romney appears to have made no inroads in chipping away at Obama’s support among Hispanics and African Americans.

  • China Condemns NY Times Story

    {{The article said Mr Wen’s family members “have controlled assets worth at least US$2.7billion”.}}

    A Foreign Ministry spokesman said the report had “ulterior motives”.

    Both the NYT’s Chinese and English sites are being blocked inside China, as are references to the report on micro-blogging sites.

    “Some reports smear China and have ulterior motives,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei said when asked about the story in a daily press briefing. On the blocking, he said the internet was managed “in accordance with laws”.

    In its report, the New York Times said Mr Wen’s relatives’ holdings included property, insurance and construction firms.

    “Many relatives of Wen Jiabao, including his son, daughter, younger brother and brother-in-law, have become extraordinarily wealthy during his leadership,” the newspaper wrote.

    “In many cases, the names of the relatives have been hidden behind layers of partnerships and investment vehicles involving friends, work colleagues and business partners.”

    The family’s investments reportedly spanned several sectors. The newspaper cited one holding as Ping An, an insurance company which it said had benefited from reforms enacted in 2004 by a state body over which Mr Wen had oversight.

    It said that partnerships controlled by Mr Wen’s relatives, along with their friends and colleagues, had bought into the firm before its IPO, or stock market flotation, in 2004, and held as much as $2.2bn in the company in 2007.

    The newspaper said both the Chinese government and Mr Wen’s relatives declined to comment on the investigation, which was based on corporate records from 1992-2012.

    BBC

  • Colin Powel Endorses Obama

    {{Former US secretary of state Colin Powell Thursday endorsed President Barack Obama’s bid for re-election.}}

    The Republican who used to be chairman of the joint chiefs of staff said, “I voted for him in 2008, and I plan to stick with him in 2012.”

    Powell said that in 2008, the Democrat Obama inherited an economy that was close to depression, with Wall Street in chaos and the housing sector starting to collapse.

    Under Obama’s leadership, stability has come back to the financial community, housing is picking up and and consumer confidence is rising, although unemployment remains high, among other problems, Powell said.

    Also, Obama has protected America from terrorism and wound down the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, he added.

    “And so I think we ought to keep on the track that we are on,” Powell said.

    Powell, himself once widely touted as a prospect for the White House, said his party affiliation has not changed — but he said he’s “a Republican of a more moderate mold,” something he said was “a dying breed.”

    Four years ago, Powell, the first African-American to occupy the top US military post, also came out publicly in support of Obama, who became the first African-American president.

    Powell said then he thought “Obama would be a transformational president.”

  • Obama Attacks Romney on Foreign Policy

    {{President Barack Obama had the best lines, but perhaps Republican presidential challenger Mitt Romney had the best night. Not in the sense that he won the debate – it was a draw if you have to judge these things that way. This final debate probably won’t shift the opinion polls, but it saw a marked change in emphasis in Mr Romney’s foreign policy.}}

    Their debates now history, President Barack Obama and Republican Mitt Romney on Tuesday open a two-week sprint to Election Day powered by adrenaline, a boatload of campaign cash and a determination to reach Nov. 6 with no would-have, should-have regrets in their neck-and-neck fight to the finish.

    From here, the candidates will vastly accelerate their travel, ad spending and grass-roots mobilizing in a race that’s likely to cost upward of $2 billion by the time it all ends.

    All the focus now is on locking down support in the nine states whose electoral votes are still considered up for grabs: Colorado, Iowa, Florida, New Hampshire, Nevada, North Carolina, Ohio, Wisconsin and Virginia. No surprise then, that Obama campaigns Tuesday in Florida and Ohio while Romney heads West to Nevada and Colorado.

    Neither candidate scored a knockout punch in their third and last debate Monday, as both men reined in the confrontational sniping that had marked their last testy encounter. And though the stated topic this time was foreign policy, both kept circling back to their plans for strengthening the fragile U.S. economy — Job 1 to American voters.

    Closing out their trio of debates, Obama concisely summed up this pivot point in Campaign 2012: “You’ve now heard three debates, months of campaigning and way too many TV commercials. And now you’ve got a choice.”

    The president framed it as a choice between his own record of “real progress” and the “wrong and reckless” ideas of Romney.

    Romney countered by sketching “two different paths” offered by the candidates, one of decline under Obama and one of brighter promise from himself.

    “I know what it takes to get this country back,” he pledged.

    With polls showing the race remains incredibly tight, first lady Michelle Obama made a prediction before the candidates left Florida that neither side would dispute: “This election will be closer than the last one — that’s the only guarantee.”

    Obama made it look easy in 2008: He won 365 electoral votes to 173 for Republican John McCain. And he got 53 percent of the popular vote, to 46 percent for McCain.

    With 270 electoral votes needed for victory, Obama at this point appears on track to win 237 while Romney appears to have 191. The other 110 are in the hotly contested battleground states.

    The candidates’ strategies for getting to 270 are implicit in their itineraries for the next two weeks and in their spending on campaign ads.

    Obama and his Democratic allies already have placed $47 million in ad spending across battlegrounds in the campaign’s final weeks, while Romney and the independent groups supporting his candidacy have purchased $53 million, significantly upping their buys in Florida, Ohio and Virginia. And both sides are expected to pad their totals.

    After Obama and Vice President Joe Biden campaign together in Ohio on Tuesday, the president splits off on what his campaign is describing as a two-day “around-the-clock” blitz to six more battleground states. He’ll be in constant motion — making voter calls and sleeping aboard Air Force One as he flies overnight Wednesday from Nevada to Tampa, Fla.

    The vice president is midway through a three-day tour of uber-battleground Ohio, and Obama’s team contends its best way of ensuring victory is a win there.

    The campaign says internal polling gives Obama a lead in the Midwestern battleground state, in large part because of the popularity of the president’s bailout of the auto industry.

    But even if Obama loses Ohio, his campaign sees another pathway to the presidency by nailing New Hampshire, Iowa, Wisconsin, Nevada and Colorado.

    Romney and running mate Paul Ryan are picking up the pace of their campaigning as well, and their schedule reflects an overarching strategy to drive up GOP vote totals in areas already friendly to the Republican nominee.

    The Denver suburbs. Cincinnati. Reno, Nev. They’re places that typically vote Republican, but where McCain fell short of the margins he needed to defeat Obama. To win in all-important Ohio, the GOP nominee must outperform McCain in typically Republican areas.

    Romney and Ryan start their two-week dash in Henderson, Nev., then hopscotch to the Denver area for a rally with rocker-rapper Kid Rock and country music’s Rodney Atkins at the Red Rocks Amphitheatre.

    Then Romney heads back to Nevada, on to Iowa and then east to Ohio for three overnights in a row. By week’s end, he’s likely to be back in Florida.

    The following week brings a significant uptick in Romney’s schedule. Aides say he’ll touch down in two or three states a day, or hold that many daily events in big states like Florida.

    Both candidates are done holding fundraisers — no doubt a happy thought for the two of them.

  • President Kibaki Warns Against Mombasa Independence

    {{President Mwai Kibaki has once again warned the Mombasa Republican Council that his government will not tolerate calls for secession.}}

    The president, who spoke when he led the nation in commemorating Mashujaa Day, warned that his administration will not tolerate any groups that threaten the country’s security.

    “As a government we will take firm and decisive action in dealing with those who have issued threats of secession or those who threaten our security. Kenya is one unitary state. The Constitution is clear on that and so is our history. Let us learn from that history and not seek to distort it and let us respect our Constitution,” he warned.

    “Let it be known to those who seek to harm us that we will not relent in the work we have begun. We shall get the job done, until we have order and security,” further warned the president saying that he intends to abide by the oath he took to defend the Constitution and the people of Kenya.

    President Kibaki spoke a day after a magistrate in Mombasa declared the MRC unlawful and ordered the police to arraign all its leaders in court to face charges of being members of the banned group.

    Mombasa Chief Magistrate Stephen Riech who declared the group illegal following a successful application by the State, said all its leaders – including those who are in remand after failing to raise bonds of Sh2 million each for incitement and firearm possession charges – will face fresh indictment.

    On Saturday, President Kibaki further called on Kenyans work closely with security forces and the Provincial Administration in order to flush out dangerous elements who threaten Kenya’s security.

    The Commander in Chief of the armed forces congratulated the Kenyan Defence Forces for their role in liberating Somalia from the Al Shabaab – for over a year now – as well as internal security agencies that have continued ward off threats of terrorism.

  • US: Romney Says Obama Has no Agenda

    In the ongoing US presidential campaigns, Republican candidate Mitt Romney has said that President Barack Obama has “no agenda” worthy of a second term in office.

    At a campaign rally in Florida, he said the Obama campaign had been “reduced to petty attacks and silly word games”.

    Hours earlier, Mr Obama decried Mr Romney for shifting his positions as election day draws nearer, saying the Republican suffers from “Romnesia”.

    The two meet for their final debate, on foreign policy, in Florida on Monday.

    Mr Romney and the Republicans are continuing to focus on the Obama administration’s handling of a deadly attack in Benghazi, Libya, in which four Americans including the US ambassador were killed.

    The incident provoked a flashpoint during Tuesday’s second debate, and is likely to be hotly debated again in Boca Raton.