Tag: GreatLakesNews

  • Congo frees U.S. security adviser working for presidential contender

    {CONGO: A U.S. citizen working as an adviser to Congo’s leading opposition presidential candidate has been freed six weeks after being arrested during a street protest and will return to the United States, the general prosecutor said on Wednesday. Darryl Lewis, who was detained on April 24 along with three other members of Moise Katumbi’s entourage in the southern city of Lubumbashi, has been handed over to the U.S. }

    ambassador in the capital Kinshasa, Victor Mumba Mukomo told reporters. Katumbi, the former governor of mineral-rich Katanga province in the south, was indicted last month on charges of hiring mercenaries as part of a plot against the state. He denies the accusations, saying they are meant to derail his campaign to succeed President Joseph Kabila in the vast Central African country’s elections scheduled for November.

    Congolese authorities said Lewis was arrested because he lacked a permit to work in Congo. He will return to the United States but his case will remain open, Mukomo said.

    Lewis’s lawyer Azarias Ruberwa confirmed that Lewis would return home and said U.S. officials were looking into the case.

    Political tensions are running high in Congo, which has vast reserves of precious minerals, ahead of the election.Kabila is ineligible to stand after serving two elected terms but opponents accuse him of plotting to hold onto power by delaying the vote or even changing the constitution to remove the term limit, as several African leaders have recently done. The government has said the vote is unlikely to occur on time because of logistical and budgetary problems.\

    In May, Congo’s highest court ruled Kabila could remain in power until elections can be held. Protests against any delay have already turned violent and authorities have arrested dozens of critics of Kabila, who took power when his father Laurent Kabila was assassinated in 2001. Congo has never had a peaceful transfer of political power.

  • Uganda:I have no powers to release Besigye from Luzira prison- Museveni

    {Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni has said he cannot influence the release of his closest rival during the February 2016 presidential election, Dr Kizza Besigye, from Luzira prison where he’s held.}

    Dr Besigye was charged with treason and remanded after a video clip in which he (Dr Besigye) sworn in as president circulated online.

    Mr Museveni on Wednesday said at the Serena Hotel in Kampala during the reading of the 2016/17 budget, “It is court that releases people.”

    Dr Besigye’s party, the Forum for Democratic Change (FDC) insists he won the polls with 52 per cent of the valid votes cast. Besigye was the party’s flag bearer.

    Mr Museveni’s remarks that there is no much he can do to free Dr Besigye, came after some members of the Opposition in Serena conference room stood up and displayed placards demanding the release of Dr Besigye who was arrested on May 17, a day before president took oath of office.

    Their action, on the other hand, followed Mr Museveni’s derisive remarks that he had heard that FDC had finally appointed a Leader of the Opposition in the 10th Parliament.

    As their murmurs spread through the conference hall, Mr Museveni’s voice was drowned.

    At this point, the Speaker of Parliament Rebecca Kadaga then requested the mainly Opposition MPs to show the President respect by resuming their seats and keep quiet.

    “Hon. Members your request has been heard and noted. Please take your seats,” Ms Kadaga pleaded.

    During the State of the Nation (SON) address a week ago, Mr Museveni avoided mentioning Dr Besigye, who like many political activists, and lately some development partners, has been calling for political reforms.

    President Yoweri Museveni
  • Motion to pull Kenya from ICC tabled in Parliament

    {The government has insisted that future crimes against humanity cases would be handled locally.}

    A Bill seeking to have Kenya pull out of the Rome Statute has been tabled in the National Assembly.

    Though cases against six Kenyans — among them President Uhuru Kenyatta and his deputy William Ruto — were dismissed by the International Criminal Court, the government has insisted that future crimes against humanity cases would be handled locally.

    The tabling of the Bill by Bumula MP Boniface Otsiula was expected.

    During a thanksgiving at Afraha Stadium, Nakuru in March after the charges against Mr Ruto and Mr Joshua arap Sang were dismissed, President Kenyatta said no Kenyan would be allowed “to travel ICC route” in future.

    {{ISSUED WARRANT OF ARREST}}

    ICC prosecutor Fatou Bensouda has issued an arrest warrant against three Kenyans, accusing them of interfering with witnesses.

    Attorney-General Githu Muigai has insisted that the offences they are accused of can be dealt with by local courts.

    In September 2013, an emergency motion was sent to the House by Jubilee MPs seeking the exit of Kenya from the ICC after the court summoned President Kenyatta to The Hague.

    The motion was boycotted by most opposition lawmakers.

    The ICC judges dismissed the cases against Mr Ruto and Mr Sang, saying the evidence did not meet the threshold to convict them.

    However, they said the cases could be revived in future if the prosecutor gathered enough evidence. The charges facing the Kenyans referred to as “Ocampo six” stemmed from the violence that followed the declaration of Mr Mwai Kibaki president two days after the December 29, 2007 general elections.

    ICC Prosecutor Fatou Bensouda. A Bill seeking to have Kenya pull out of the Rome Statute has been tabled in the National Assembly.
  • Arusha man fined 7m/- or face 3 years in jail for ridiculing Magufuli

    {The man who was facing charges of belittling President John Magufuli through online chat, in which he allegedly insulted the head of state, has been subjected to pay a fine of 7 million/- or be sent to jail for three years.}

    Resident Magistrate, Augustine Rwizile, ordered the accused, Isaac Habakuki Emire, to pay the penalty in two instalments of 3.5m/- each, with the entire sum to be settled before August 8, this year.

    “The first payment should be settled on July 8 and the second one must be completed a month later. However, due to the fact that August 8 is going to be a public holiday, the money can also be submitted on August 9 but not later than that,” ruled the resident magistrate.

    Habakuki who was debating online via group chats with mates, about the issue of President Magufuli’s performance in comparison to the Father of the Nation, Mwalimu Julius Nyerere, found himself being dragged before the court of law for allegedly speaking foul and belittling the head of state.

    Emire initially defended himself before Resident Magistrate Rwizile, arguing that he was in the midst of an innocent online debate through Facebook Messenger with mates and he didn’t insult President Magufuli as claimed, adding that the matter was being overblown out of proportion for no good reason.

    Emire a resident of Olasiti area, in the outskirts of Arusha City, is alleged to have irked some people during the media conversation prompting some to report the matter before the Tanzania Communications Regulatory Authority (TCRA), according to the TCRA Zonal Manager, Annette Matindi, who filed the case.

    Earlier on, the Arusha Regional Police Commander (RPC), Charles Mkumbo, explained here that after the night chat session, the suspect was arrested at the Annex Hotel area, in Levels and was found with a Tecno smartphone believed to have been used during the online discussion.

    Representing TCRA, Advocate Johannes Kalungula quoted section 16 of the Cybercrime Act 14 of 2015 which Emire allegedly breached, saying that was the law under which the authority has accused the suspect.

    Apparently, it all started with President Magufuli’s decision to phone in into one of the local Radio Stations (Clouds FM), speaking live to its audience, upon which the online debate was initiated by people who wanted to get opinion regarding the head of state’s performance, compared to the first president of Tanzania, the late Nyerere.

  • Burundi frees some students accused of defacing president’s photo

    {Burundi said on Tuesday it had released six juveniles who were part of a group of 11 students jailed last week for allegedly defacing a photograph of President Pierre Nkurunziza in a school text book.}

    Authorities in the central African country have been cracking down on critics and the opposition against a backdrop of tension and violence sparked by Nkurunziza’s decision to run for a third term last year.

    Last Friday, police shot and wounded a student and a taxi driver during a protest by schoolchildren against the arrest of their colleagues a day earlier.

    Agnes Bangiricenge, spokeswoman for the ministry of justice said in a statement six of the students had been dealt with under proceedings for juvenile offenders. “After a hearing…the juvenile judge provisionally released them,” she said.

    Prosecution of the other five students, aged between 18 and 21, would proceed “normally”.

    In another incident last month, more than 300 students of a school in the capital’s Ruziba neighborhood were sent home after being accused of defacing Nkurunziza’s image.

    Violence broke out in Burundi last year after Nkurunziza announced he would seek re-election for a third term.

    Opponents accused him of violating the constitution, which they said limited him to two five-year terms. The government cited a court ruling which they said cleared him to stand again, and Nkurunziza subsequently won re-election last July.

    More than 450 people have been killed in violence between government security forces and various rebel factions opposed to his continued rule. The United Nations estimates the year-long violence has displaced over 250,000 Burundians, who have fled mostly to Tanzania and other neighboring countries.

    Burundi's President Pierre Nkurunziza walks during a ceremony in tribute to the former late President Colonel Jean-Baptiste Bagaza at the national congress palace in Bujumbura, Burundi May 16, 2016.
  • Congo to launch new crackdown on criminal gangs

    {Democratic Republic of Congo’s government said on Tuesday it would launch a fresh crackdown on criminal gangs and defended its previous such operation against allegations from a human rights group that it executed 51 people.}

    Interior and Security Minister Evariste Boshab announced the new campaign at the release of a long-awaited government report into Operation Likofi, a three-month crackdown against gangs in the capital that started in November 2013.

    Likofi, which means “punch” in the Lingala language, was an “exemplary success”, Boshab told a news conference. He gave no death toll but said that even if just one person died unnecessarily the government would consider that a failure.

    The new campaign would be “conducted with strict respect of the operational plan” with a view to guaranteeing respect for human rights, he said, without giving details.

    The campaign would come in the context of high tension in the country because of uncertainty over the political intentions of President Joseph Kabila.

    He is ineligible to stand at an election due in November after serving two elected terms. His opponents accuse him of plotting to retain power by delaying the poll or even changing the constitution to remove the term limit.

    U.S. human rights advocacy group Human Rights Watch has said police summarily executed at least 51 people during Operation Likofi and were responsible for the disappearance of at least 33 more.

    The United Nations Joint Human Rights Office (UNJHRO) in Congo accused the Congolese National Police of executing at least nine people in the operation and said 41 people died and 32 others have not been seen since.

    Nongovernmental organizations in Kinshasa criticized the government’s report, arguing that it downplayed the number of killings, failed to mention those who had disappeared and had come far too long after the events themselves.

  • Uganda:New Cabinet: Dropped ministers speak out

    {Left out. President Museveni on Monday appointed 38 new persons to the Cabinet and dropped 35. In other cases, Mr Museveni transferred a minister from one ministry to another – as he did with his wife, Janet Kataha Museveni, whom he moved from Karamoja Affairs to the Education ministry. Some of those Mr Museveni dropped from the cabinet told Daily Monitor’s Neslson Wesonga they saw it coming and that, fortunately, they have always had something to fallback to.}

    Efforts to reach others, including Mr Jim Muhwezi (Information and National Guidance), Mr Asuman Kiyingi (State minister for Works), Ms Prisca Ssezi Mbaguta (State minister for Public Service), Ms Rebecca Amuge Otengo (State minister for Northern Uganda), Mr Fred Jacan Omach (State minister for Finance General Duties), Ms Rose Akol Okullu (Internal Affairs), failed.

    John Nasasira: Information and Communication Technology

    “I retired from elective politics [in 2016]. I was involved in an accident and since I had to go abroad for treatment, I informed my constituents I would not be in position to run for Parliament again. I am happy with the 27 years that I served as a Member of Parliament and a minister. I am not in the new cabinet. I will now focus on my private work as an engineer and a farmer. Definitely, I have not retired from working for the National Resistance Movement.”

    Barbara Nekesa Oundo: State for Karamoja Affairs

    “I am not bitter I have been left out of cabinet because there is a time for everything. God knows. I have not yet decided on my next move. I could decide tomorrow or even next week. I was committed to my constituents in Busia District in eastern Uganda.”

    Henry Banyenzaki: Economic Monitoring
    “ I am going to attend to my businesses. I am not bitter. I did my part; I have served the nation diligently. If those who fought against my reelection follow me in business, I will fight back. I support NRM. But in business, I would not want to mix it with politics.”

    Fredrick Ruhindi: Attorney General
    “I will be at Ruhindi & Company Advocates in Kampala. I look back to my time [in politics] with a lot of gratitude. I appreciate the people of Nakawa [in Kampala] who gave me an opportunity to serve them. I appreciate the appointing authority who found it fit to appoint me to the Cabinet [then].

    Suleiman Madada: State for the Elderly

    “I thank the President for having given me an opportunity to serve Uganda. There are many Ugandans he could have chosen. I served in the ministry for 10 years nonstop. Since I was active before I joined politics, I will never be idle; I am enterprising. I have institutions of learning and a foundation that deals with employment issues that I run.

    Sarah Kataike Ndoboli: State for Luweero Triangle

    “ I saw it coming. But I am not bitter with the appointing authority. Actually, I thank the appointing authority for having me serve in the previous Cabinet. I also have been working with Gen Salim Saleh, the chairperson Operation Wealth Creation (OWC). So OWC is the immediate address I could go to.

    Clockwise: (Fredrick Ruhindi: Attorney General), Sarah Kataike Ndoboli (State for Luweero Triangle), John Nasasira (Information and Communication Technology), Suleiman Madada (State for the Elderly), Henry Banyenzaki (Economic Monitoring) and Barbara Nekesa Oundo: State for Karamoja Affairs
  • Kenya:Police bosses grapple with rising indiscipline cases and crime by juniors

    {Hundreds of cases are currently being investigated by Ipoa and the Internal Affairs Unit (IAU)}

    Police commanders are grappling with increasing disciplinary and criminal cases involving their juniors across the country.

    Apart from the hundreds of cases currently being investigated by the Independent Policing Oversight Authority (Ipoa) and the Internal Affairs Unit (IAU), at least 25 police officers have been subjected to either disciplinary proceedings or criminal investigations in the last five weeks.

    At least nine police officers deserted duty and police records indicate that three of them have been arrested and arraigned in court.

    Four officers who are among those were declared deserters by the Starehe police commander (OCPD) Ms Alice Kimeli three weeks ago have returned to work in unclear circumstances.

    Reports indicate that even officers from other security agencies have also been implicated.

    On June 2, for example, a Prisons Service warder Kelvin Mureithi was arrested in Dandora Phase 5 on allegations that he had stolen a motorcycle belonging to Mr Erick Mwenda.

    EXTORTION

    The officer allegedly stole the motorcycle on January 6 and disappeared until last week when the complainant saw him in Dandora. He was arrested by residents who handed him over to the police.

    An Administration Police (AP) officer based at the Border Patrol Unit in Garissa was arrested in Mwiki, Nairobi, after he was found extorting money from the owners of Shankers Pub.

    Police officers arrested Constable Leonard Okunda who had handcuffed Mr Dennis Munene and demanded Sh5,000 to release him.

    Another police officer based at the Likoni Police Station was also arrested after he absconded duty and kept his G3 firearm in his house which was later stolen.

    Constable Alexander Kipyegomen was issued with a G3 rifle loaded with 20 rounds of ammunition and assigned night duties at the reporting office.

    He left the place of duty, removed his uniform, left his gun unattended and went on a drinking spree.

    He came back the following day at around 7.30am but found the firearm missing.

    On June 1, an AP inspector was disarmed of his Ceska pistol and then arrested after he was found drunk in Kayole-One.

    DRUNK AND ARMED

    Two members of the public, Mr Gerald Ondieki and Pascal Omondi, reported at Soweto Police Station that there was a man who was drunk and appeared armed.

    The man was arrested and later identified as AP Inspector Edward Ndoria Gathara.

    Another officer, Constable Geoffrey Ndau, who had deserted duty on September 27 last year was traced and arrested in Kayole on May 31 after absenting himself from duty for about seven months.

    A warrant of arrest had been issued by the Makadara Law Court on November 30. After the arrest, he was arraigned in court the following day.

    Police records also indicate that Chief Inspector William Chepkwony of Kisauni Police Division headquarters was arrested in Kayole’s Matopeni area on May 3.

    He was still armed with his official firearm, a Ceska pistol serial number A050527 loaded with 14 rounds of ammunition. The senior officer had been declared a deserter on May 3.

    Langata OCPD Elijah Mwangi reported the arrest of Constable James Nderitu, who was based at the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport (JKIA) and who had been declared a deserter

    Mr Nderitu was arrested at the Langata shopping centre while in possession of fake currency totalling Sh11,000. A court had already issued a warrant of arrest against the constable.

    Police officers at a past event. Police commanders are grappling with increasing disciplinary and criminal cases involving their juniors across the country.
  • Tanzania:NEC hands over 12bn/- it saved from 2015 polls

    {The National Electoral Commission (NEC) handed over 12bn/- to President John Magufuli, which was saved after last year’s general election.}

    NEC Chairman, Judge (retired) Damian Lubuva handed the cheque to the President at the State House in Dar es Salaam, saying the saving did not in any way affect the polls’ conduct.

    “Although we had a short time to prepare, we managed to save such an amount, which did not affect the electoral process at all,” said Judge Lubuva.

    Speaking shortly after receiving the dummy cheque for the said amount, President Magufuli commended the NEC for saving such amount and handing it over to the government to cater for other activities of national importance.

    “This reflects how NEC is very honest. A sum of 270bn/- was allocated for last October’s polls. They spent 261.6bn/-.

    You would have even said that no amount has remained and no one would have discovered or doubted it,” he noted, commending the electoral body ‘’for their sincerity and austerity spirit’’.

    He called on other public institutions to learn from the NEC and put the nation’s interests first. The president, has however, directed that the money be used for building NEC offices in the country’s designated capital, Dodoma.

    Dr Magufuli’s directive came following Judge Lubuva’s concern that the elections management body was spending over 1bn/- to pay rent, transportation and other expenses.

    He also accepted the proposal by the commission of establishing a special fund that will be accumulating money every year for general election purposes.

    PRESIDENT John Magufuli receives a dummy cheque for 12bn/- from the Chairman of the National Electoral Commission (NEC), Judge (Retired) Damian Lubuva, at the State House in Dar es Salaam, being savings from last year’s general election expenses. Right is Director of Elections, Mr Ramadhani Kailima. (Photo by State House) PRESIDENT John Magufuli receives a dummy cheque for 12bn/- from the Chairman of the National Electoral Commission (NEC), Judge (Retired) Damian Lubuva, at the State House in Dar es Salaam, being savings from last year’s general election expenses. Right is Director of Elections, Mr Ramadhani Kailima.
  • Uganda:UFirst lady named Education minister

    {In Exercise of Powers conferred on the President of Uganda by Articles 108(1), 108 (2), 113(1), 114(1) and Article 99(1) of the 1995 Constitution of the Republic of Uganda, I have appointed the Vice President, the Prime Minister, created new Departments of Government (Ministries); and appointed Cabinet Ministers and Ministers of State as indicated below, Mr Musevni has sai.
    }

    H.E. the Vice President ─ HON. KIWANUKA
    EDWARD SSEKANDI

    1. Rt. Hon. Prime Minister ─ DR. RUHAKANA
    RUGUNDA

    2. 1st Deputy Prime Minister ─ GEN. MOSES ALI
    & Deputy Leader of Gov’t
    Business in Parliament

    3. 2nd Deputy Prime Minister and ─ HON. KIRUNDA
    Minister of East African KIVEJINJA
    Affairs

    4. Minister of Education and ─ HON. MUSEVENI
    Sports JANET KATAAHA

    5. Minister of Public Service ─ HON. MURULI
    MUKASA

    6. Minister of Trade, ─ HON. KYAMBADDE
    Industry & Cooperatives AMELIA ANNE

    7. Minister of Internal Affairs ─ GEN. JEJE ODONGO

    8. Minister of Agriculture, ─ HON. SSEMPIJJA
    Animal Industry & VINCENT
    Fisheries BAMULANGAKI

    9. Minister of Finance and
    Economic Planning ─ HON. KASAIJA MATIA

    Uganda Federal Alliance (UFA) president Betty Kamya has been appointed Minister in charge of Kampala city