Category: Rubrique

  • Danish Diplomat Named new UN Envoy to South Sudan

    Danish Diplomat Named new UN Envoy to South Sudan

    U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on Wednesday named Danish diplomat Ellen Margrethe Loj as his new special envoy to South Sudan and head of the U.N. peacekeeping mission in the world’s newest nation.

    Loj replaces Hilde Johnson of Norway, who stood down this month after three years in the job and amid renewed violence sparked by a power struggle between President Salva Kiir and his sacked deputy Riek Machar.

    The conflict has reopened deep ethnic tensions in the South Sudan, which only won independence from Sudan in 2011, pitting Kiir’s Dinka against Machar’s Nuer.

    Thousands of civilians have been killed and more than a million forced to flee their homes since December, prompting U.N. warnings of a looming famine.

    Ban said Loj “brings to the position a wealth of experience in peacekeeping and international affairs, having served as the Special Representative of the Secretary-General to the United Nations Mission in Liberia from 2008 to 2012.”

    She has also been Denmark’s ambassador to the Czech Republic, the United Nations and Israel.

  • Poll Shows Brazil’s Rousseff Would win Presidential Runoff

    Poll Shows Brazil’s Rousseff Would win Presidential Runoff

    Brazil President Dilma Rousseff would win a second-round runoff against either opponent and has 38 percent of voter support ahead of her October re-election bid, a new poll by the IBOPE polling institute showed on Tuesday.

    Her main challenger, Aecio Neves, has the backing of 22% of potential voters while Eduardo Campos has 8%, according to the survey broadcast on TV Globo.

    The changes in voter intention for all candidates are within the poll’s margin of error from June, when Rousseff had 39% of support, Neves had 21% and Campos 10 percent, suggesting Rousseff’s support is not eroding as other recent polls have suggested.

    The approval rating of her government remained at 31%, unchanged from a month ago when Brazil was starting to host the month-long soccer World Cup. Her personal approval rating was also unchanged at 44%.

    The tournament was considered a surprising logistical success but moral in the soccer-loving nation was hurt by the national team’s stunning 7-1 loss to Germany.

    In a second-round runoff vote, Rousseff would defeat Neves of the centrist PSDB party with 41% of the vote compared with his 33 percent, IBOPE found.

    She would also win with 41% against Campos, a former state governor and leader of the Brazilian Socialist Party, who would get 29%.

    Other polls released by Datafolha and the Sensus polling institute on Friday and Saturday showed the election headed to a runoff, with Rousseff and Neves tied in a second round.

    Until recently Rousseff appeared to be cruising toward re-election, but she now finds herself in an unpredictable race almost certain to go to a runoff vote as an already sluggish economy takes a turn for the worse.

    Her popularity has been declining this year due to concerns about high inflation as well as economic growth.

    Discontent has been on the rise since protesters took to the streets a year ago, and 70% of those interviewed in July desired change.

  • South Sudan Rebels ‘Break Ceasefire’

    South Sudan Rebels ‘Break Ceasefire’

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    The United Nations (UN) has accused South Sudanese rebels of violating a ceasefire by launching an offensive to recapture its former headquarters.

    The attack on Nasir town was the “most serious resumption of hostilities” since May, the UN said.

    The rebels said they had seized the town in an act of “self-defence”. The government denied the town had fallen.

    Fighting between government and rebel forces broke out in December, leaving more than a million homeless.

    President Salva Kiir and rebel leader Riek Machar met in May and recommitted themselves to a ceasefire negotiated in January by regional leaders.

    ‘Major attack’

    Rebel spokesman Lul Kuang said they launched an offensive because of several attempts by government forces to arrest their commander.

    “The fall of Nasir now paves the way for military resources to be refocused on Poloich Oil Fields, Maban and Malakal,” Mr Kuang said in a statement.

    South Sudanese army spokesman Philip Aguer denied Nasir had fallen following clashes between the two sides.

    “It is deplorable that this major attack comes at a time when intensive efforts are under way by mediators of the Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD) to convince all parties to resume the suspended peace talks in Addis Ababa,” Unmiss acting head Raisedon Zenenga said in the statement.

    “The attack is a clear violation of the cessation of hostilities agreement,” he added.

    South Sudan is the world’s newest state and became independent in 2011.

    Conflict erupted in December after Mr Kiir accused Mr Machar, his sacked deputy, of plotting a coup.
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    BBC

  • UN calls for Ceasefire in Gaza

    UN calls for Ceasefire in Gaza

    The UN Security Council has called for an immediate ceasefire between Israel and Palestinian militants in Gaza.

    It comes as US Secretary of State John Kerry heads to Cairo for talks on the crisis amid a mounting death toll.

    More than 500 Palestinians, mainly civilians, have been killed since the Israeli offensive began 13 days ago, Gaza’s health ministry says.

    Twenty Israelis – 18 of them soldiers – have died, Israel says, as it seeks to end rocket fire from Gaza.

    Sunday was the deadliest day since the start of Israel’s offensive, with 13 Israeli soldiers and more than 100 Palestinians killed.

    Israel says it has killed at least 120 militants since Thursday night when it launched a ground offensive, the second phase of a military operation that began on 8 July.

    In other developments:

    Overnight air strikes in southern Gaza kill more than 30 members of two families in Khan Younis and Rafah, local officials say

    Artillery fire and air strikes continue to the east of Gaza City, with Israeli aircraft seen over Shejaiya district for a second day, and the Maghazi neighbourhood
    Ten Hamas militants die after using tunnels in the northern Gaza Strip to infiltrate Israel near the town of Sderot, Israel says.un.jpg

  • Afghan Elections Audit Suspended

    Afghan Elections Audit Suspended

    Afghanistan’s election commission has suspended an audit of votes from June’s hotly-disputed presidential run-off.

    The Independent Election Commission (IEC) said this was due to a “misunderstanding”,without elaborating.

    Both candidates Ashraf Ghani and Abdullah Abdullah accuse each other of electoral fraud.

    The audit process of more than eight million votes – brokered by US Secretary of State John Kerry – has been marred by walkouts by both sides.

    Mr Ghani won the 14 June run-off, according to preliminary results. Mr Abdullah came top in the first round in April, but failed to secure 50% of the vote to avoid the run-off.

    Analysts warn that any further delays could further destabilise the conflict-torn country.

    Unity threat

    The IEC announced its decision just four days after the process began. It did not provide further details.
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  • Israel-Gaza Ceasefire Deal ‘Reached’

    Israel-Gaza Ceasefire Deal ‘Reached’

    A comprehensive ceasefire agreement has been reached between Israel and Gaza, an Israeli official has told the press.

    The ceasefire is due to take effect on Friday at 06:00 local time (04:00 GMT).

    Earlier, Palestinian militants fired three mortars from Gaza at Israel during a brief humanitarian ceasefire, Israeli security forces say.

    Some 227 Palestinians have died in Israeli air strikes since the current crisis began on 8 July. Militant rockets have killed one Israeli.

    Israel launched its military operation in Gaza nine days ago with the stated objective of halting Palestinian rocket attacks on Israel.

    However, the United Nations says most of those killed in Gaza have been civilians.

    Israel accuses Hamas of hiding its military infrastructure within the civilian population.

    Emergency Relief

    Hamas and Israel had agreed to halt fighting for five hours on Thursday to allow Gazans to stock up on supplies.

    As Palestinian militants reportedly fired mortars during the truce, Hamas TV accused Israel of firing mortar shells near eastern Rafah in south Gaza.

    “While the IDF holds its fire, three mortars fired from Gaza just hit the Eshkol regional council,” the Israeli military said on Thursday, two hours after the ceasefire came into effect at 10:00 local time (07:00 GMT).

    Thursday’s brief ceasefire, due to last until 15:00 local time, was requested by the UN and other international organisations.

    The UN’s relief operation in Gaza said it would use the temporary truce to step up emergency work in the Palestinian territory. Spokesman Chris Gunness said providing water, food and hygiene kits was the main priority.

    Correspondents said Gazans were queuing outside banks, and traffic was building up as residents rushed to stock up on supplies.

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    BBC

  • Community of Sant’Egidio – France-Afrique: agenda Hutu Power?

    Community of Sant’Egidio – France-Afrique: agenda Hutu Power?

    On 26 June in Rome in Trastevere, there was an international meeting organized by the Community of Sant’Egidio, a Catholic lay movement of Christian inspiration dedicated to prayer and the Gospel.

    The meeting was attended by the Special Envoy of the European Union Koen Vervachke, the special envoy of the United Nations for the Great Lakes region, Mary Robinson, and the head of the UN peace mission in Congo (MONUSCO) Martin Kobler.

    The Theme of the meeting: the disarmament of the Rwandan armed group, the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda, FDLR.

    Since 1990 the Community of Sant’Egidio is engaged in international peace mediation, inaugurated in Mozambique when this Catholic movement reuse to open a negotiation between FRELIMO and RENAMO in 1992 that led to the signing of the Peace Accords in Rome, which put an end to a civil war that lasted for over ten years.

    The June 26 meeting should be included in peace initiatives undertaken by the Community of Sant’Egidio, yet an aura of mystery and secrecy surrounding it.

    The initiative has not been disclosed to the Italian media despite the presence of high personalities of the European Union and the United Nations. No press that clarifies the reason for the meeting was issued by the Community of Sant’Egidio.

    The organization of this meeting, which began in Africa, is studded with serious questions. In reporting the news is the international radio station Radio France International (RFI) through an article published the same day on which the meeting was held. The article reveals in a neutral way, but clearly the reasons for such secrecy adopted by the Sant’Egidio Community.

    FDLR and collaboration of International community

    General Iyamuremye manages the huge mafia networks inherent in the illicit trade of minerals in eastern Congo in close collaboration with the Congolese president’s brother: Zoe Kabila.

    It is also the most active commander of the FDLR in Kivu region.

    Jyamuremye is the subject of a criminal investigation and an arrest warrant ordered by the International Criminal Court for crimes against humanity committed during the 1994 genocide in Rwanda and war crimes committed against the Congolese civilian population from 2001 to 2012.

    His role during the genocide consisted in the coordination of the death squads and the relationships with the French troops of Operation Tourquoise. He is also included in the list drawn up in 2005 by the United Nations of the characters underwent complete diviteto of international travel, the list of people under economic embargo for violations of the arms trade in the Congo drawn up by the European Union in October 2001.

    His name is also was included in the economic sanctions against the war criminals of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, drawn up by the British Government (update 28 February 2013).

    Despite all sanctions General Iyamuremye, made a peaceful stay in Rome June 22 to 30, 2014.

    An investigation carried out by an Italian Newspaper L’INDRO reveals an intense collaboration between the Community of Sant’Egidio, the French Government and the peacekeeping mission of MONUSCO.

    In January 2014 Father Matthew Zuppi and Andrea Riccardi, founder of the Sant’Egidio Community, activate international diplomacy to ensure the presence of the Vice-President of the FDLR in Italy, in close collaboration with the French Minister of Foreign Affairs Laurent Fabius and Martin Kobler of MONUSCO.

    On 14 June 2014, the General Iyamuremye is transported on a military helicopter from Kanyabayonga of MONUSCO in Goma despite international sanctions issued by the UN.

    On June 16, the Assistant Secretary General of the United Nations Hervé Ladsous, of French nationality, lever temporarily ban on flights and international travel burden on General Iyamuremye so that he can participate in a “major initiative for peace in Rome.”

    Ladsous acts without informing the Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and the Security Council. Thanks to the intervention of the Rwandan intelligence services.

    General Iyamuremye on June 20, 2014 embarked on Etiophian Airline landing at Fiumicino airport with regular tourist visa. The reactions of Rwanda were immediate. The government in Kigali has branded the initiative is a clear violation of international law involving the two countries (France and Italy), branches of the United Nations and the Community of Sant’Egidio.

    “It’s a shame that those responsible for the genocide in Rwanda in 1994 are still free to pursue their agenda of genocide,” said Foreign Minister Louise Mushikiwabo.

    The meeting had the clear aim of creating an image of respectability politics of FDLR, which is included in the list of international terrorist organizations of the U.S. State Department and place them on the international stage as legal partners, thus forcing the Rwandan government to open peace negotiations.

    “Ask the Rwandan government to dialogue with the genocidal FDLR forces is like asking the Israeli government to recognize the movements of neo-Nazis and talk with former Nazis responsible for the Holocaust,” says General Carlos Alberto dos Santo Cruz, head of military operations missions of UN peacekeeping in Congo, MONUSCO.

    A request sharply contrasting with the position of the Rwandan government, which includes: the immediate unconditional surrender of FDLR and the application of international arrest hanging over the heads of leaders guilty of genocide and crimes against humanity.

    Despite recent hopes of detente between France and Rwanda, Paris, participating in the organization of the secret meeting in Rome, looks set to continue the political support to FDLR achieved through two strategies delineated.

    The first involves disarmament of the FDLR in exchange for political recognition by the government of Rwanda and the start of peace negotiations with the aim of sharing power.

    The second is the organization of a mock unilateral disarmament of the terrorist group and its dissolution to reappear immediately under a new acronym. The two strategies are implemented at the same time.

    The first through the meeting in Rome organized by the Community of Sant’Egidio and the second with the birth of a new Hutu Power movement to the east of the Congo, FPPH Forces (Protection of the Hutu People) already active militarily in the territories occupied by the FDLR in North and South Kivu.

    Transactions of voluntary disarmament of the FDLR militias are already taking place to the east of the Congo with wide media coverage.

    “These are symbolic gestures engineered by MONUSCO and Paris to decrease international attention on this terrorist group and the inability of the United Nations to eradicate. The militiamen who until now have surrendered do not exceed 105 units. The weapons delivered are old guns of World War II. The FDLR military structure remains intact and free to continue preparing for the invasion of Rwanda, “says a South African diplomat to the weekly ‘The East African’.

    The French expert strategists are having serious difficulties for a year if you really understand the FDLR, stronger than 12,000 men in the east of Congo and Tanzania in 2000, represent really the trump card to regain Rwanda.

    Despite the army at the disposal and modern weapons supplied by the Congolese government with the complicity of the UN peacekeeping mission and in stark contrast with the arms embargo by the United Nations in the Congo, the actual number of soldiers truly capable of fighting would not arrive at 4,500.

    According to L’INDRO, France begins to understand that the FDLR have a structural weakness that prevents the Hutu population of Rwanda to take its parts.

    The inability to understand the real military capabilities of the terrorist group, called to confront a classical war with the second regional army, well equipped, motivated, and paid with logistical support and satellite guaranteed by the CIA and MOSSAD, forcing France to take time removing the decision of the international community to eradicate seriously one of the main factors of regional instability that is damaging the interests of various corporations.

    Some objectives have been achieved as the decision taken last week in Luanda, Angola, to grant FDLR a period of six months to arrange the surrender. After that time the United Nations should intervene militarily. Six months in the confused and tormented reality of the Great Lakes is an eternity where everything can happen.

  • Afghan Poll Contender Claims Victory

    Afghan Poll Contender Claims Victory

    Afghan presidential contender Abdullah Abdullah has claimed victory in last month’s poll, despite results giving a lead to his rival, Ashraf Ghani.

    Addressing supporters in Kabul, Mr Abdullah repeated claims that the election process was marred by fraud.

    US Secretary of State John Kerry had earlier warned against a power grab, amid reports that Mr Abdullah was planning a “parallel government”.

    Meanwhile, a bomb near Kabul has killed 16 people, including four Nato troops.

    Ten civilians and two police officers were also reportedly killed in the attack on a clinic near Bagram, home to the largest US base in the country.
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    Mr Abdullah told the gathering in Kabul that he would never “accept a fraudulent government”.

    “We are the winners of this round of elections, without any doubt,” he said, to cheers from the crowd.

    However, he stopped short of declaring a parallel government as his supporters had earlier suggested he might. Instead, he called for a unified country.

    “We don’t want civil war, we don’t want a crisis,” he said. “We want stability, national unity, not division.”

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  • Libya to Announce Elections Results on July 20

    Libya to Announce Elections Results on July 20

    Libya will announce results of last month’s parliamentary elections on July 20, the head of the elections commission said on Sunday, pushing back the results another week.

    Fewer than half of registered Libyans voted, reflecting disillusionment with the chaos prevailing since Gaddafi’s overthrow. The government and outgoing parliament have failed to produce security and curb militias who helped oust Gaddafi but now defy state authority.

    The North African oil producer elected on June 25 a new assembly in a vote marred by a low turnout and violence, opening a new chapter in Libya’s bumpy transition toward democracy since the 2011 fall of Muammar Gaddafi to an armed uprising.

    Emad Sayeh, head of the High National Election Commission, said final results would be announced on July 20. Partial results from some cities have been published but Sayeh said the commission needed more time to produce accurate results.

    Results from 24 polling stations are being withheld because of some “illegal acts”, he said, adding that out of 1,751 candidates 41 had been disqualified under a law banning former officials in the Gaddafi regime from taking a public office.

    Sayeh also said the commission was still waiting for the old assembly to organize a new vote in constituencies where polling stations remained closed on election day due for security reasons.

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  • South Africa’s ANC Moles Accused of Trying to Destroy EFF

    South Africa’s ANC Moles Accused of Trying to Destroy EFF

    South Africa’s opposition Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) leader Julius Malema has claimed that the ANC has planted agent provocateurs to destabilise his new party in the same manner that the governing party destroyed the Congress of the People (Cope) and other black-led parties.

    “They are being used as infiltrators to collapse the EFF, render it dysfunctional and impose the same fate as all opposition parties since 1994 that were started and led by black leadership,” he said.

    Malema said such tactics would fail in the EFF because he was well aware of them. He claims to have been part of the “underground core” within the ANC that planned and executed the destruction and eventual collapse of Cope from its inception in 2009.

    Some disgruntled members of the EFF in Gauteng have accused Malema of dictatorship and of resorting to tactics he used when he was in the ANC Youth League to remove people from crucial positions ahead of the EFF’s elective conference in December.

    – City Press