Tag: GreatLakesNews

  • Besigye rejects talks led by clerics

    {Opposition leader, Dr Kizza Besigye, yesterday rejected the prospect of religious leaders and elders to lead the proposed political dialogue between the Opposition and President Museveni’s ruling NRM party.}

    Opposition leader, Dr Kizza Besigye, yesterday rejected the prospect of religious leaders and elders to lead the proposed political dialogue between the Opposition and President Museveni’s ruling NRM party.

    He also reiterated his previous position that there must be an agreed agenda on the national dialogue before it takes place.

    Dr Besigye was addressing the media at his Kasangati home in Wakiso District following an announcement by the Inter-Religious Council of Uganda (IRCU)and the Elders Forum, to have a dialogue between the government and the Opposition, scheduled to start in Octobe.

    Dr Besigye, said religious leaders can not be neutral arbiters and observers since they have a stake in any discussion about the country.

    “In my interactions with them [religious leaders and elders], I appealed to them to take a position on what is happening in the country and therefore in the dialogue that is envisaged, I appeal to them to be an interested stakeholder. They must be seated on the table amongst other stakeholders. They can’t be a neutral party, organising and moderating and having no view in what is taking place on the table,” Dr Besigye said.

    The Opposition leader and former presidential candidate also explained that matters of “justice, peace and national security” are not partisan that religious leaders and elders are obliged to play a neutral role.

    “People who lead religious organisations in our country should be at the forefront of fighting injustice because all religions as we know them, their leaderships must be voices of their people,” Dr Besigye argued.

    Dr Besigye said he had met the IRCU and Elders Forum team twice at his home and during his recent detention at Luzira prison.

    Although he declared his commitment to dialogue, he said he did not reach any position with the team on the process of the talks.

    He said he was “surprised” and “taken aback” to hear that the religious leaders and elders had started the process of dialogue and even set up a secretariat for that purpose.

    “At no time have we agreed on a process in the terms that they indicated in their statement,” Dr Besigye said.

    He said if the religious leaders and elders are keen to being part of the organisers of the dialogue, they have to engage with the four key issues including having a mutually agreed agenda, an agreement on who convenes and moderates the dialogue, who will be part of the dialogue and a clear understanding of how the decisions of the dialogue will be implemented.

    “It is not something one wakes up and says I am going to organise this. It is not like the presidential debate where you invite candidates to come and debate. This is a far more complex, far more serious issue that a lot of ground work must be undertaken before dialogue takes place,” he said.

    The religious leaders and elders early this year organised two historic presidential debates that brought together all candidates for the first time to debate ahead of the presidential election.

    Since the February 18 general election, there have been several efforts led by different people to have political dialogue in the country to resolve or mitigate the animosity between the Opposition and the government.

    Dr Kizza Besigye addresses journalists during a press conference at his home in Kasangati in Wakiso District yesterday.
  • Kenya:State agencies have failed, says Raila

    {Cord co-principal hints at need for 1990s-style agitation that brought change in Kenya.}

    Cord leader Raila Odinga on Friday claimed major State institutions were failures and hinted at the need for 1990s-style agitation that brought change in Kenya.

    Speaking during the Law Society of Kenya’s annual conference in Diani, Kwale County, Mr Odinga asked why they had remained silent while corruption was taking root again in the country.

    He painted a gloomy picture of the country since the enactment of the Constitution, saying important institutions such as the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission; the Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission; and the Judiciary had regressed, instead of improving.

    In his written and off-the-cuff remarks, the opposition leader said even the youth were now growing up in a culture that glorifies get-rich-quick schemes without hard work and patience.

    “Only six years ago, we unveiled what was easily seen as one of the most progressive constitutions in the world. Today, however, we are taking a closer look and once again we are saying we must jump-start reforms in virtually all our key governance institutions: the Judiciary, the police, the Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission, schools, financial institutions and even the Legislature,” said Mr Odinga.

    He blamed the government for the failures of the institutions, saying this was a deliberate move to scuttle change.

    “Kenya is in the middle of a very necessary debate for a just, honest and caring government. All the key institutions are suffering from the impediment created by a government that is resisting change and trying to take the country back to the old order,” he said.

    LIBERATE COUNTRY

    Mr Odinga said the struggle to liberate the country from bad governance, corruption and mismanagement of public funds, which was started during pre-independence times and in which he has participated, should continue.

    He was, however, challenged by lawyer Ahmednasir Abdullahi, over the recent demonstrations to force out the electoral commission members.

    Mr Abdullahi asked why he had led supporters to the streets “knowing very well that it was unconstitutional”.

    Mr Odinga said all attempts at dialogue had been snubbed and there was no way out.

    “The Constitution provides demonstrations as the last option after all means have failed. In fact, protesters should be protected by the police to prevent hooligans from penetrating like what happened,” he said.

    He added: “We got 1.6 million signatures to petition the electoral commission but they rejected 700,000 of them, claiming some looked like elephants.”

    He accused the commission of manipulating and jamming the biometric voter system.

    “Ten million people voted for governors, senators, MPs and MCAs, but an extra two million voted only for the President. How possible was that? Is it not strange?” he asked, quoting figures from a British firm that analysed the presidential poll results.

    He said the government’s economic growth figures were untrue, saying the public debt had increased by Sh71 billion in one year.

    “During the 2015/2016 financial year, debt repayment was Sh262 billion and today, it stands at Sh333 billion only a year later,” he said.

    He said increased public borrowing leads to high interest rates, inflation and overburdening of future generations.

    “There is a conspiracy against our people through corruption and mismanagement of resources. Kenyans today are among the highest taxed people in the world as we steal and borrow, then use the remnants on wrong priorities,” he said.

    Mr Odinga urged lawyers to stand up against injustice, intimidation, bad governance, coercion, blackmail and other social vices perpetrated by the rulers.

    He appealed to Kenyans to demand accountability, transparency and good social virtues.

    Cord co-principal Raila Odinga (left) with Law Society of Kenya president Isaac Okero at the body's annual conference at Leisure Lodge Beach and Golf Resort in Diani Beach, Kwale August 19, 2016.
  • JPM lauds efforts by former AfDB president

    {President John Pombe Magufuli met and held talks with former president of the African Development Bank (AfDB) Dr Donald Kaberuka in Dar es Salaam yesterday, expressing confidence on development counsel that Tanzania will receive from various sectors in the country.}

    President Magufuli said Tanzania can benefit immensely from Dr Kaberuka’s advice on the country’s different development plans, including how the nation can reap more from the abundant natural resources, according to a statement released yesterday from the State House in Dar es Salaam.

    “This is a unique opportunity for Tanzania, we believe that we can gain from your advice on our various development plans and how we can profit more from the abundant natural resources available in the country, including mineral deposits, natural gas, vast land, livestock, ports, lakes and national parks,” stressed President Magufuli.

    The president expressed his appreciation for the contribution extended by Dr Kaberuka during his tenure as the AfDB president, where Tanzania received support on various development projects, especially construction of road infrastructure.

    Dr Magufuli expressed his belief that Dr Kaberuka will continue providing good advice to Tanzania, and more so in the envisaged report from a panel that he, (Dr Kaberuka) is leading on relations between Tanzania and its development stakeholders.

    On his part, Dr Kaberuka commended President Magufuli for being elected Tanzania’s 5th president, where his steps to increase domestic revenue, fight corruption and his plans to use available natural resources shows that the nation is in the right development direction.

    The former President of the AfDB is the Chairperson of a panel formed by the Minister of Finance and Planning, Dr Phillip Mpango, for the purpose of assessing the relationship between the government and development stakeholders.

    He is a Rwandan economist and former Minister of Finance and Economic who studied for his undergraduate degree at the University of Dar es Salaam.

    Dr Kaberuka worked in banking and international trade for over a decade before he was appointed minister in Rwanda in October 1997, where he served in that position for eight years, and is credited with helping to stabilise the Rwandan economy from the effects of the 1994 genocide.

    Meanwhile, President Magufuli yesterday swore in Mr Mrisho Mashaka Gambo as the new Arusha Regional Commissioner. Before the appointment, Mr Gambo was the Arusha District Commissioner.

    He replaces Mr Felix Ntibenda whose appointment was nullified and has been transferred to the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO) to be assigned other duties.

    Former president of the African Development Bank (AfDB) Dr Donald Kaberuka
  • NGOs to Secretary Kerry: More Pressure Needed on Kabila on Congo Elections

    {A coalition of U.S.-based NGOs and Congo experts sent a letter today to U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry calling for greater financial and other pressure on the Government of the Democratic Republic of Congo, as well as incentives. }

    The coalition is deeply concerned about the closing of political space and growing democratic crisis in Congo. The policy aims of these tools should be to help support Congo to hold timely elections in line with its constitution and end political repression.

    {{Read the letter below }}

    August 18, 2016

    The Honorable John F. Kerry
    Office of the Secretary of State
    United States Department of State
    2201 C Street, NW
    Washington, DC 20520

    {{RE: Preventing a Wider Crisis in the Democratic Republic of Congo through Additional Financial Pressure and Incentives}}

    Dear Secretary Kerry,

    We are deeply concerned by the growing crisis of democracy in the Democratic Republic of Congo, which could become a full-blown crisis with serious implications for the region if steps are not taken to prevent it. We appreciate the Administration’s high-level engagement with the DRC government on elections and its recent designation of Kinshasa Police Chief Gen. Célestin Kanyama for targeted sanctions. We strongly believe that the United States can and must exert more leadership now to help facilitate a successful democratic transition and that additional financial and other pressure is needed, as well as incentives.

    The U.S. designation of Kanyama helped pressure the DRC government to not crack down on peaceful demonstrators at the massive July 31 pro-democracy rally. We are also encouraged that targeted sanctions have been welcomed by civil society activists in Congo and received support from Congress through bipartisan Senate and House resolutions and from the E.U. and Belgian parliaments. Nevertheless, the DRC government continues to pursue policies that undermine Congo’s constitution and democratic transition – the root of the ongoing political crisis.

    Recent events have underscored the need for additional pressure on the DRC government to move rapidly towards credible, timely national elections. President Kabila recently stated that elections will not be held at least until late 2017 and is using a dubious ruling by the Constitutional Court to insist that he will remain in office until elections are held. The government denies the electoral commission the funds to complete the voter roll preparation and has refused to release political prisoners who were not already due to be released. It also issued a criminal judgment – said by one of the judges to have been coerced – against presidential candidate Moïse Katumbi and kicked out independent researchers from Human Rights Watch, Global Witness, and the Congo Research Group.

    September 19 and December 19 are constitutionally the days that should mark the beginning of the presidential campaign and the day that President Kabila steps down. It is imperative that the U.S. adopt additional targeted sanctions well before September 19. The pressure should be accompanied by clearly expressed policy goals and consequences for non-performance. Ambassador Swan’s July 4 speech referring to the need for rapid progress towards credible elections and threatening further sanctions if that did not occur was helpful and should be consistently repeated in other official U.S. pronouncements. In addition, we believe the U.S. should take key steps to support the policy:

    Enhanced use of targeted sanctions. Sanctions work most effectively when actions are taken consistently so that actors understand the stakes over a period of time. When sanctions are episodic and not followed up, the impact and overall efficacy diminishes. President Kabila and his senior associates use the U.S. banking system for illicit transactions. The U.S. should thus enact asset freezes, travel bans, and other sanctions on the officials against high impact targets central to Kabila’s glissement strategy of undermining democracy and perpetrating human rights abuses. Higher-impact targets would help move beyond “naming and shaming” and toward having real financial impact and linking with broader illicit networks. Furthermore, sanctions’ coercive effects are only as strong as their enforcement. The U.S. should ensure that designations are properly enforced with the cooperation of regional and international banks and governments.

    Encourage the ICC to issue a warning. The International Criminal Court exerts influence over powerful actors in the region. The State Department should encourage the ICC’s Chief Prosecutor to announce that it will conduct a preliminary examination on the DRC during the electoral period, noting that grave crimes by the regime and others will not go unpunished.

    Messages on dialogue. Re: the dialogue, the U.S. can help advance negotiations by emphasizing the need for prompt, effective action (to avoid further delays and an ineffectual dialogue), strong international facilitation (to manage deep differences among participants) and serious confidence building measures (such as releasing all political prisoners and stopping political prosecutions).

    Review direct budget support. The U.S. should block Congo’s new request for $500 million in direct budget support from the World Bank. It would support Kabila’s unconstitutional usurpation of power, and his government has proven its poor financial mismanagement.

    Additional financial pressure. Treasury’s FinCEN can help counter the laundering of the proceeds of corruption, which would send powerful messages to the Kabila regime that it may be unable to transact in U.S. dollars. FinCEN could issue an Advisory to financial institutions that outlines money laundering concerns and requests more vigorous reporting of suspicious activity.

    Fund the elections. The U.S. should significantly increase the amount of funding for legitimate elections if and when the opposition and Kabila government agree on a constitutional timetable.

    Protection for civil society. Finally, there needs to be greater protection for civil society during this dangerous transition. MONUSCO should expand its protection program for human rights defenders.The U.S. should also increase support to pro-democracy activists and journalists. Support for the documentation of human rights abuses and corruption also is important.

    Now is a critical time for the United States to take further action, starting with a new round of targeted sanctions, to support a peaceful democratic transition. Without urgent pressure from the U.S. and others, the situation will likely deteriorate, and Congo would face an escalation imperiling the future of the country and region.

    Sincerely,

    John Prendergast, Sasha Lezhnev, Holly Dranginis
    Founding Director and Policy Team
    Enough Project
    Anthony W. Gambino
    Former USAID Mission Director to the DRC
    Naama Haviv
    Executive Director
    Panzi Foundation USA

    Stephen R. Weissman
    Former Staff Director
    House of Representatives Subcommittee on Africa
    Wynnette LaBrosse
    President
    Open Square

    Lisa Shannon
    CEO
    Everywoman Everywhere
    Savannah Wooten
    Student Director
    STAND: The Student-Led Movement
    to End Mass Atrocities
    Mike Brand
    Policy Director
    Jewish World Watch
    Karen Stauss
    Director of Programs
    Free the Slaves

    CC: Jon Finer, Chief of Staff and Director of Policy Planning, State Department
    Linda Thomas-Greenfield, Assistant Secretary for African Affairs, State Department

    Cathy Byrne, Senior Director for African Affairs, National Security Council
    Tom Perriello, Special Envoy to the Great Lakes Region, State Department
    Adam Szubin, Acting Under Secretary for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence, Treasury Department

  • Uganda:Police fail to identify van, driver involved in knocking Besigye supporter

    {The police have failed to identify its driver who appeared to have knocked down Dr Kizza Besigye’s supporter last month.}

    The police have failed to identify its driver who appeared to have knocked down Dr Kizza Besigye’s supporter last month.

    Despite Daily Monitor identifying the number plates of the police vehicles that were trailing Dr Besigye, Mr Fortunate Habyara, the commandant of the police Professional Standards Unit (PSU), said they have failed to identify the exact vehicle that deliberately knocked the civilian.
    “It is challenging us to identify the driver and the truck. The video footages we got from NTV and NBS do not clearly show that spot neither the truck number plate,” Mr Habyara said on telephone on Wednesday.

    Mr Habyara also attributed the failure in their investigations to the victim who has since failed to turn up to record a statement. This, he, said has left them wondering whether it was a genuine or a photo shopped footage.

    “We are now wondering why the victim has failed to appear to any of our police stations to recording a statement. We don’t know whether it was a real video or it as an application of technology,” Mr Habyara said.

    However, Mr Habyara said they will not relent until they identify the suspect. He said they have summoned all the drivers and they were going to use the elimination method to identify the suspect

    The Deputy Police spokesperson, Mr Polly Namaye, also says the search for the driver is still underway.

    “We are using internal mechanisms to help us identify the vehicle, the driver and the victim as well as circumstances surrounding that incident so as to ensure justice, “she says.

    The police pickup trucks were identified as UP 4916 (the lead car), UP 5442, UP 5471 and UP4832. Some of these police patrol vehicle had Military Police personnel in army uniforms and donning red berets.

    The Daily Monitor identified the man seen in the footage trampling the civilian who had been already knocked down by a police truck as Mr Yusuf Lubowa. He has previously worked with police officers in operations trailing Dr Besigye and is said to be a leader of the Boda Boda National Security group which works with police in operations, especially in Kampala.

    Boda Boda National Security is under the Boda Boda 2010 group led by Mr Abdallah Kitata, a ruling National Resistance Movement mobiliser and alleged close confidant of the police leadership.

    Mr Lubowa was spotted donning a red cap and a blue shirt mobilising bodaboda cyclists last Wednesday when the pro- Kayihura mobs besieged Makindye Court in protest of the IGP’s prosecution.

  • Kenya:Lion snatches girl from home , kills her in bushes

    {Efforts by villagers to rescue her were futile as the hungry lion could recharge and chase them.}

    Magarini residents are living in fear of attacks by wild animals after a lion killed a 10-year-old girl at Kulesa village, Kilifi County on Tuesday night.

    The incident is said to have happened at around 3a.m when Winnie Makupe was sleeping in their grass-thatched house together with her family.

    “We were awoken by screams after a lion sneaked into our house and grabbed Makupe with its jaws and ran into the thick bush,” narrated the victims’ grandfather Katana Karisa outside Malindi hospital mortuary.

    Mr Karisa said efforts to rescue her were futile as the hungry lion could recharge and chase them.

    “Neighbours, who heard the screams, joined us while armed with pangas, bows and arrows,” he said adding that “but by this time, the lion had already vanished into the bushes and screams of our dear one had also diminished.”

    The search for the girl in the hope of finding her alive was later joined by police and Kenya Wildlife Service officers.

    “We found a traumatising scene of the girls’ remains a kilometre away from the home at around 11am,” he said.

    Earlier, Mtoroni residents also rescued a 14-year-old school boy Kelvin Mbingwa from a lion that attacked him in broad daylight.

    Area ward representative Stanley Kenga called for government intervention in order to end human-wildlife conflict.

    “A group of about five lions and uncounted number of hyenas suspected to have escaped from Tsavo National Park and Boni forest in Tana River County have terrorised residents for the past two months,” he said.

    Mr Kenga said residents are living in fear of being attacks by lions and hyenas that have invaded the area following prolonged drought.

    “Lions have been spotted in Kanagoni, Vuga, Kamale, Timomboni, Kulesa, Muvoni Sorogosa, Dhololo, Adu and Chakama villages,” he said.

    Contacted for comment, the wildlife agency’s Coast conservative assistant director Adan Alio said they had dispatched a team of game rangers to track and capture the animals adding that affected residents should file for compensation.

    A lion killed a 10-year-old girl at Kulesa village, Kilifi County on August 16, 2016.
  • EAC told to tackle chronic problems in the region

    {President John Magufuli said yesterday that the East African Community (EAC) should focus on enabling member states to tackle their chronic problems.}

    Dr Magufuli, who doubles as the chairman of the regional economic grouping, mentioned some of the most persistent challenges as access to clean and safe water, improving transport infrastructures, strengthening health services and build industries that would lead to increase of employment and revenues.

    He noted this in a conversation with the EAC Secretary General, Ambassador Liberat Mfumukeko, at the State House in Dar es Salaam.

    “It would be more beneficial if you executives of the EAC make big efforts to ensure that member countries focus on addressing problems facing the people,” he said, adding: “if you manage to do this and work on reducing unnecessary expenditure, we will achieve more.”

    He commended Ambassador Mfumukeko, who took over the position last April, for coming up with good plans and strategies towards implementing the community’s objectives, including reducing expenditures, attract investors and closely supervise projects and programmes under the bloc.

    Mr Mfumukeko expressed satisfaction on the cooperation he receives from Dr Magufuli as EAC chairman and promised to perform his duties accordingly for the benefit of East Africans.

    Meanwhile, President Magufuli said goodbye to former Country Representative of the United Nations Population Fund (UNPF), Dr Natalia Kanem, who has recently been appointed to the post of Deputy Secretary General and Deputy Executive Director of the organisation.

    Dr Magufuli commended Dr Kanem for being appointed to the new position, saying he was optimistic that she is going to be a good ambassador for Tanzania, particularly on influencing the United Nations to help the country address several challenges, including influx of refugees, poverty and maternal services.

    Dr Kanem praised Tanzania for maintaining peace and supporting refugees from war-torn neighbouring countries.

    President John Magufuli
  • Health officials fear yellow fever outbreak could spread from Congo to Europe and Americas

    {A fatal outbreak of yellow fever in Congo may spread to Europe and the Americas without the help of a huge, newly launched emergency vaccination campaign, health officials said Wednesday.}

    Thousands of suspected cases have surfaced in the Democratic Republic of Congo and 500 there have already died, according to Save the Children, a non-governmental organization that provides health and other relief to kids in developing countries.

    The outbreak is the biggest reported in more than 30 years.

    There is no known cure for the mosquito-spread virus, which is easily prevented with vaccines.

    Once infected, people often fall ill with fever and muscle pain, but many recover after several days. The more toxic phase includes possible bleeding from the eyes, ears and nose, organ failure and jaundice.

    In an effort to combat the epidemic, aid groups are targeting 10.5 million people over the next 10 days.

    They are focusing on Congo’s capital, Kinshasa, and on the border with Angola, where the outbreak began.

    But vaccine supplies are limited.

  • Uganda:Fourteen remanded over Gulu attack

    {Fourteen people, among them three junior soldiers of the Uganda People’s Defence Forces (UPDF) have been remanded in connection with the alleged attack on Gulu Army Detach and Gulu Central Police Station.}

    Kampala. Fourteen people, among them three junior soldiers of the Uganda People’s Defence Forces (UPDF) have been remanded in connection with the alleged attack on Gulu Army Detach and Gulu Central Police Station.
    In May and June, gunmen attacked and raided Opit Army Detach and Central Police Station both in Gulu District killing and injuring security officers.

    The accused persons were charged before the Military Court on offences of treachery. They are also charged with the murder of two soldiers at the army detach, two police officers at Gulu Central Police Station and causing grievous harm to four people.

    Those charged are L/Cpl Simon Mugisha attached to Makindye Military Police, Pte Akina Ophine Kasamba alias Jaimoro Opio Nickson a watchman/ builder of Zika Zone, Kawuku Entebbe in Wakiso District, Agenurwoth Collins Odori, a private guard with Jamal resident of Katende Zone in Nakawa Division, Maditrowth Vincent a private guard resident of Kyebando in Kawempe Division and Lukwiya Kakonick a peasant resident of Pawat Omeru in Nwoya District.

    Others are Richard Okech a boda boda rider of Leb-Ngek in Nwoya, Alfred Odongpiny a boda boda rider of Kal-atoocon village in Nwoya, Geoffrey Komakech a peasant in Nwoya, Charles Onen (Nwoya), Richard Onen alias Munu Opegu boda boda rider of Gulu, Opio Thomas Opiyo peasant from Gulu, Vincent Ochola Ocen alias Okema Denis, a casual labourer from Kitgum District and Pte Okidi Fred Opio Layika attached to papa Batallion under 5th Division.

    They all denied the charges before Makindye General Court Martial chaired by Lt Gen Andrew Gutti. They were remanded until August 30 after the state told court that inquiries into the matter were still ongoing.

    {{The charges}}

    Prosecution alleges that on May 27 with intent to prejudice the security of the country, the group infiltrated and attacked the defence forces at Opit Army Detach in Gulu. The state also alleges that on June 12, the same group with intent to prejudice the security of the defence forces attacked Gulu Central Police Station.

    The accused appear at the General Court Martial in Makindye yesterday.
  • Woman drowns in Hilton Hotel swimming pool

    {The deceased had left an entertainment joint in Westlands.}

    A middle aged woman drowned in the Hilton Hotel swimming pool in Nairobi on Thursday morning.

    Nairobi Central OCPD Paul Wanjama said the deceased had left an entertainment joint in Westlands together with her friend and a pilot with EgyptAir when she decided to swim before going to sleep.

    Police retrieved the body and took it to a city mortuary.

    Mr Wanjama said the three had been at a club in Westlands the whole night.

    A woman drowned at Hilton Hotel swimming pool on August 18, 2016.