Tag: GreatLakesNews

  • Burundi’s Nkurunziza asks criminal gangs to surrender in next 15 days

    {President Pierre Nkurunziza has given armed gangs in Burundi 15 days to surrender to authorities and hand in their weapons or face unspecified action.}

    Nkurunziza was speaking during a visit to Mugamba district, some 65 km southeast of the capital Bujumbura, where many local officials have been killed in recent weeks.

    Tit-for-tat attacks between Nkurunziza’s security forces and his opponents have escalated since April 2015 when he announced a disputed bid for a third term. He won re-election in July.

    “We give them 15 days to surrender,” Nkurunziza said of the armed gangs on Wednesday. “On the 15th (of June) we will put a stop to (the violence). I came to tell you that we won’t rest until security is restored.”

    The government conducted a similar arms mop-up in the capital in November.

    Burundi police said in early May that more than 450 people had been killed in unrest that began a year ago. The United Nations says over 250,000 have fled the country since last April.

    A new round of peace talks between the government and its opponents aimed at ending the political crisis was launched in the Tanzanian city of Arusha in late May. Previous discussions in Burundi and Uganda over the past year collapsed or stalled.

    Burundi's President Pierre Nkurunziza addresses a news conference attended by the visiting United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon (not seen in picture) in the capital Bujumbura February 23, 2016.
  • Uganda:Govt abandons FDC defiance case

    {Government last evening withdrew its application that was intended to extend a court order that had banned all the defiance campaign activities of Opposition Forum for Democratic Change (FDC) party and its former presidential candidate Kizza Besigye.}

    The application for the new interim orders had been scheduled for hearing yesterday at 3pm. However, the Attorney General (AG) who was the applicant in the matter, in a notice to the Constitutional Court, withdrew the application without giving any reasons.

    The application had been scheduled to be heard by Deputy Chief Justice Steven Kavuma. The same judge, sitting as a single justice of Constitutional Court, had issued interim orders banning defiance activities for four weeks effective April 29. They expired at the weekend.

    The Constitutional Court had on Wednesday summoned FDC party officials and Dr Besigye to appear for the hearing of the new application for interim orders.

    “We do hereby apply to withdraw the above captioned applications under Rule 2 (2) of the Court of Appeal Rules with no orders to costs…” read in part the Attorney General’s letter signed by Mr Denis Bireije, the acting director of civil litigation.

    The withdrawal means FDC party members are at liberty to resume their defiance campaign activities such as holding their proclaimed weekly prayers, holding peaceful demonstrations and the media is no longer constrained to give a live coverage of the same activities.

    In a related development, Dr Besigye, who is currently held at Luzira prison and had been listed as one of the respondents in this application, had written, informing court that he was unable to file his response before the application was later withdrawn.

    Dr Besigye, who is facing treason charges for allegedly swearing-in himself as the president of Uganda, explained in a letter to court that since he is representing himself, he has to personally be present in court.

    He added that in case he was not delivered to the court by the prison authorities, the hearing of the application shouldn’t proceed.

    “Today June 1, 2016 at 13:30 hours, I was served with this application which requires me to file a response in time for the hearing at 15:00 hours tomorrow (yesterday). I am incarcerated at Luzira prison since May 18, 2016 and I was not permitted to attend court in another matter in Nakawa Chief Magistrate’s Court,” Dr Besigye said.

    Dr Besigye speaks out
    “It is logically difficult to respond within the time given. I am advised that the rules of this court require at least two days’ notice between the service and the hearing,” he added.

    “I would like to be present so as to raise arguments against the application since I represent myself. In the event that I am not produced by the prisons authorities as it happened today (on Wednesday), I would like to be put on record and notify the judges hearing the application should not proceed in my absence as to do so, would be to violate my rights under article 28 (5) and 44 (c) of the Constitution.”

    Shortly after the flop of the hearing of the new interim orders, human rights lawyer Ladislaus Rwakafuuzi, who had come to represent the FDC party in court, told journalists that the AG feared to continue with this application without the physical presence of Dr Besigye.

    He explained that the law demands that the respondent be present in court and that the State could not secure his presence in court as it would attract more than one million city dwellers who are his supporters to come to court.

    Left to Right: FDC leaders Wasswa Biriggwa, Mugisha Muntu, Kizza Besigye, Wafula Oguttu, Cecilia Ogwal and other members attend the party’s weekly prayers which were held as part of the defiance campaign recently.
  • Raila gives Uhuru deadline to name talks team

    {At Uhuru Park, Mr Odinga said the invitation had come too late.}

    Cord leader Raila Odinga on Thursday told a prayer meeting in Kisumu that he and President Uhuru Kenyatta had agreed to form a team to spearhead talks on how to disband the electoral commission.

    But State House has said that that was not true.

    During the prayer rally to mourn the three people who were killed during IEBC protests last week, Mr Odinga also named the five people that will represent Cord in the talks, which he said had been agreed on at State House on Tuesday.

    “I am ready to swear with the Bible. We agreed that we should come up with a team of five each from the coalitions, and it is very dishonest of the President and his Deputy to lie to Kenyans on national television,” Mr Odinga said.

    He was referring to President Kenyatta’s sentiment during Madaraka Day celebrations that it was not possible for a few people to have their way at all times.

    A statement from State House late Wednesday refuted claims that Mr Kenyatta and Mr Odinga had agreed to form a 10-member team to lead talks on how to disband the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission.

    The statement by State House Spokesman Manoah Esipisu said the President supported the mechanism set out in the Constitution, which gives Parliament the power to remove commissioners after receiving petitions.

    Mr Odinga said he had given the governing Jubilee Coalition until Sunday to appoint its team.

    He also named Senators James Orengo (Siaya), Johnson Muthama (Machakos) and MPs Eseli Simiyu (Tongaren), Mishi Mboko (Mombasa) and Junet Mohammed (Suna East) to represent Cord in the talks.

    Earlier Balambala MP Abdikadir Aden had been named to the team but Mr Mohammed was picked to replace him.

    NOT ILLEGAL
    Speaking during the Kisumu prayer rally, Mr Odinga said: “We are waiting for five names from Jubilee. Should they fail to give out the names, I will be leading the Opposition to the streets on Monday as usual.”

    He said it was not wrong to agree outside Parliament and gave an example of the 1997 Inter-Parties Parliamentary Group and the Serena talks which led to the formation of the Grand Coalition Government in 2008.

    “It is not unconstitutional to hold talks out of Parliament. In Serena those who sat for the talks that included Deputy President William Ruto were MPs but still agreed on the formation of the Grand Coalition government in a hotel,” Mr Odinga said.

    On Wednesday, State House said it had not agreed to form such a team.

    Meanwhile, sources have said that a failed phone call from State House on Tuesday evening could have been to blame for the failure by Mr Odinga and Ford Kenya Leader Moses Wetang’ula to honour the President’s Madaraka Day invitation.

    Mr Kenyatta, who met the two leaders on Tuesday, had invited them to Nakuru where this year’s national celebrations were to be held.

    However, neither Mr Odinga nor Mr Wetang’ula showed up. Instead, they waited in Nairobi for the State function to end before addressing a rally at Uhuru Park.

    Cord leaders said they waited for a call from State House but it never came. They said President Kenyatta and Mr Ruto were to call Mr Odinga in the night after seeing off visiting South Korean President Park Geun-Hye.

    According to Cord leaders, the call had not come by 6am on Wednesday. It was then that Mr Odinga communicated his decision to his allies, confirming he would not travel to Nakuru.

    Sources in Cord also said that a military helicopter had been reserved to fly Mr Odinga and Mr Wetang’ula to Afraha Stadium.

    The helicopter had been waiting for the two at the Kenya Broadcasting Corporation grounds at Karen, near Mr Odinga’s home. They never boarded it.

    And at Afraha, two seats reserved in the front row of the presidential dais for the Cord leaders remained unoccupied during the celebrations.

    TOO LATE

    On Thursday, State House sources refuted the claims by the Cord leaders. They said the telephone call was only meant to discuss Cord’s Uhuru Park rally in view of the visit by Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan. Mr Erdogan arrived in Nairobi on Thursday.

    The State House sources said it was Mr Ruto — not the President — who was to call Mr Odinga after consulting the Inspector-General of Police on security arrangements.

    The sources said it was Mr Ruto who had raised the security issue because the Cord rally was slated to take place between President Park’s departure and arrival of President Erdogan.

    According to the sources, Mr Odinga raised the issue of IEBC commissioners but the President told him that they would discuss it after the Madaraka Day celebrations.

    The President was said to have indicated that since both sides were in agreement about reforming IEBC, they could go together to Nakuru and start talks over the commission thereafter.

    He, however, insisted that Parliament remained the best option.

    It was then agreed that the two Cord leaders would travel to Nakuru and arrangements would be made to fly them to Nairobi for their rally later in the afternoon.

    Addressing wananchi during the celebrations on Wednesday, President Kenyatta said: “I invited them but I don’t know why they didn’t come.”

    At Uhuru Park, Mr Odinga said the invitation had come too late.

    “This is not an act of defiance,” he told the rally. In Kisumu on Thursday, Gem MP Jakoyo Midiwo blamed Mr Ruto for the failure of the talks to take off.

    Cord principal Raila Odinga (center) and other leaders pay their respects to people killed during the anti-IEBC protests in Siaya and Kisumu. The prayer rally was held at Kirembe grounds in Kisumu on June 2, 2016. Mr Odinga said he had given the governing Jubilee Coalition until Sunday to appoint its team.
  • EAC retains top brass fat pay despite Magufuli austerity call

    {The EAC secretariat is implementing a number of cost-cutting measures ordered by Tanzania President John Magufuli two months ago.}

    The East African Community (EAC) secretariat has opted to retain the pay structure of its top brass as it moves to implement a number of cost-cutting measures ordered by Tanzania President John Pombe Magufuli two months ago.

    Among the highest-paid EAC staff are secretary-general Liberat Mfumukeko, his deputies, and the regional court judges who earn more than Sh2 million per month each.

    Also on the spot are the East African Legislative Assembly members who take home up to Sh1,490,800 per month in salaries and allowances.

    Under the austerity measures which takes immediate effect, the secretariat has instead chosen to trim the cost incurred in holding regional meetings and hiring of consultants.

    The changes announced on Wednesday state that no more than two delegates will be allowed to travel on EAC budget from each member state to attend technical meetings.

    Such meetings will also be attended by no more than three secretariat staff and should not drag beyond four days, the new guidelines state.

    At least 25 per cent of the EAC meetings will henceforth be held via video conferencing with remaining ones being held mostly in free-of-charge government-owned facilities, Mr Mfumukeko says.

    Otherwise, the EAC procurement unit has been directed to negotiate for “corporate” conferencing and accommodation rates in each partner state.

    “The secretary-general noted that the EAC organs and institutions had been experiencing liquidity challenges as a result of delays in disbursement of contributions by both the partner states and development partners,” the secretariat said in a statement.

    The changes come just two months after President Magufuli took over on March 2 as chairman of EAC Heads of State Summit, the bloc’s apex body, with a strict warning that the secretariat cut all unnecessary expenses.

    The regional integration project has been in financial distress as donors scale down their support while member states have also been accused of failing to submit their contribution on time.

    Figures tabled before EALA last week indicates that the EAC would receive about Sh5.78 billion for its 2016/2017 programmes or Sh1.22 billion less than its current Sh7 billion budget.

    Under the stringent expenditure guidelines, the secretariat staff will only be allowed to be away from their duty station(s) for not more than 50 per cent of their time even after getting travel clearance.

    The guidelines say short-term studies and trainings will have to be cleared by inter-sector committee in bid to cut spending on consultancies.

    The rules outlaw late booking of air tickets which normally attract extra costs and restrict per diem rates to levels recommended by donors.

    The secretariat is expected to set up Projects Coordination Unit by July 1 to act as one-stop desk and repository for information on all projects.

    In the meantime, the EAC top brass will continue to enjoy their allowances that include housing, education, dependency, insurance, medical, travel, mileage and language.

    Tanzania's President John Magufuli.
  • Tanzania:Weakening dollar, rising exports to ease pressure on shilling

    {Shilling depreciation is expected to narrow this year as the local currency will be gaining from weaker US dollar and positive balance of payment.}

    BMI Research, a Fitch Group Company forecast the shilling on average to depreciate below 8.0 per cent against the US Dollar this year from an average of 22.4 per cent last year which compelled the Central Bank to take measures to correct the free-sliding.

    “The shilling will experience a much less rapid pace of depreciation in 2016 than in 2015,” BMI Research, a Fitch Group Company, said on its latest Tanzania Country Risk Report.

    The document gave the reason behind less depreciation in this year as due to “benefits from a weaker US dollar, positive balance of payments dynamics and improved local sentiment.”

    However, the report showed that a major risk to the country economic outlook comes from the weather. “Poor rains would not only exacerbate tight food supplies … but would also once again hamper hydroelectricity production, raising costs for businesses and by extension, consumers,” the report said.

    The country economy depends on agriculture and agro-exports inflows assist smoothening shilling depreciation, while food inflation was the major driver of rapidly rising headline inflation in 2011.

    The Bank of Tanzania (BoT) figures show that the shilling since January has depreciated around 1.5 per cent to 2,192/97 of yesterday. BoT early this month said the shilling was expected to strengthen this year as inflows are expected to improve as trends show stabilisation.

    The central bank said currently trends show the shilling has find a new market equilibrium which was good for economic stabilisation.

    The shilling has remained stable and expected to hold firm for the rest of the week, thanks to BoT intervention and end of month inflows. CRDB Bank said on its market highlights report that the end of month inflows and central bank intervention will likely stabilise the prices throughout this week.

    “We expect the shilling to remain stable supported by end month inflows and dollar supply from agricultural sector, tourism and mining that is enough to counter demand from the oil and energy sector,” CRDB said.

    International Monetary Fund (IMF) said when replying the letter early this year that the shilling depreciation was largely reflected the global strength of the dollar.

    The IMF also said domestic factors contributed to the volatility and such as the loosening of monetary policy in late 2014.

    “Staff’s preliminary assessment is that the recent depreciation has brought the real effective exchange rate, which was last assessed in 2014 to be somewhat overvalued, closer to equilibrium,” IMF report showed.

  • Burundi: UN agency warns 4.6 million people facing food insecurity

    {1 June 2016 – Some 4.6 million people in Burundi are food insecure, with more than 500,000 of them requiring urgent emergency food assistance, the United Nations food relief agency has said, warning that food stocks are stretched as a result of the fragile socio-economic context in the country.}

    In a situation report, the World Food Programme (WFP) highlighted that as of 30 May, more than 265,000 Burundians had fled the country into the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Rwanda, Tanzania, Uganda and as far away as Zambia. In all, there are 1,000 new arrivals weekly into neighbouring countries.

    In addition, WFP said it requires $57 million for the next six months to meet the needs of new arrivals and existing refugees, particularly in Rwanda and Uganda.

    The Emergency Food Security Assessment (EFSA) conducted in April 2016 in 18 provinces across the country concluded that about 4.6 million people are food insecure. Of these, about 590,000 are severely food insecure and require urgent emergency food assistance, WFP said.

    “The assessment further indicates that the socio-political crisis has aggravated an already fragile food security, nutrition, and socio-economic context in Burundi,” the agency said.

    WFP noted that among the drivers of food insecurity include increasing poverty levels; reduced agricultural production; El Niño phenomena associated with heavy rainfall, flooding and landslides, which resulted in displacements and destruction of crops; adoption of severe livelihood coping strategies, such as reduction of expenditure on agricultural inputs; and disruption of markets.

    The assessment recommends provision of short-term food assistance and farm inputs for shorter-season crops.

    In addition, the assessment recommends strengthening of resilience activities for vulnerable food insecure households and strengthening or expanding social protection programmes for the most vulnerable, to enable them to cope with shocks, WFP said.

    In camp Lucenda, Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), Burundian refugees redeem vouchers for food of their choice at food fairs organized by WFP with local merchants.
  • Uganda:Martyrs Day: Police issue traffic guidelines

    {With barely a day to Martyrs Day celebrations, police have issued strict traffic guidelines.}

    Mr Norman Musinga, the director of traffic in Kampala Metropolitan Area, said public and private vehicles, as well motorists, will not go beyond Kireka Town with effect from the night of June 2.

    “It is only vehicles carrying Very Very Important Persons (VVIPs) and Very Important Persons (VIPs) that will access the Catholic and Anglican shrines on Martyrs Day,” Mr Musinga said while addressing the media at Central Police Station (CPS) yesterday.

    According to Mr Musinga, VVIPs and VIPs going to Catholic shrines will be given red and blue stickers and would access the venue through Kyaliwajala and will park at Namugongo Primary School playground.

    Pilgrims with yellow stickers will park at Little Sisters of St Francis and will access the venue via Kyaliwala-Kira or Ssemambo Road.

    VVIPs and VIPs going to Nakiyanja Anglican Shrine will pass via Seeta –Bweyogerere and will park at the Protestant playground, whereas those using buses will be dropped at Kyaliwajala and their buses parked at Namboole stadium parking lot.

    Catholic pilgrims using Northern Bypass will park at St Peters Nalya Seconday School, whereas those using the eastern route will park at Namboole stadium parking lot.

    Other Protestant pilgrims will park at the church farm that will be accessed through Seeta-Sonde.

    Mr Musinga said the route from Kyaliwajala to Catholic and Anglican shrines will strictly be used by only pedestrians.

    “There will be no U-turns at Kyaliwajala junction. We ask pilgrims using buses to have coordinators who will mobilise them in one place after the events,” Mr Musinga said.

    He said the organisers of the two events had issued 300 VVIPs tickets, 50VIPs and 100 other invited guests. He added that the police will tow all vehicles that will be found parked by the roadsides.

    Mr Fred Enanga, the police spokesperson, on Monday said the police were expecting more than two million pilgrims. He asked parents and relatives of elderly persons to keep a close eye on them for their safety.

    Asked why the police have made it a norm to divert traffic flow whenever there is a visiting foreign dignitary, Mr Musing said: “Most of our drivers are very indisciplined. They can easily cross over a VIP convoy.”

    Eighty-year-old Rose Kiconco (with grey hair) with other pilgrims from Kasese Diocese walk past the Northern By-pass roundabout in Busega as they headed to Namugongo for Martyrs Day celebrations yesterday.
  • President hits out at Cord leaders for snubbing Madaraka fete invite

    {The President asked leaders to lead by example, acknowledging the good work of others and criticising constructively where necessary.}

    President Kenyatta on Wednesday termed as disrespectful Cord leaders’ decision to ignore his Madaraka Day invitation and instead carry on with their rally at Uhuru Park, Nairobi.

    Speaking in Nakuru, where he presided over the 53rd Madaraka Day celebrations — the first such national event outside Nairobi — Mr Kenyatta said Cord leaders should respect the rule of law and embrace dialogue.

    “I invited them (for the Nakuru celebrations) but I don’t know why they didn’t come,” said the President. “Maybe they have decided to go and have their own elsewhere, but they should know one day they will also want to be tolerated, and it is imperative, therefore, that they respect those in power.”

    The President asked leaders to lead by example, acknowledging the good work of others and criticising constructively where necessary.

    “This is the core of great leadership — and this is the leadership with which I am looking to partner as we seek greatness,” he said.

    He said while Kenyans love politics, it should be exercised with moderation, terming lack of it “a fire that can destroy the house we have so painstakingly built these last 50 years”.

    “It must be tempered with the moderation of wisdom. As your fourth President, I remind you that we shall have a fifth, a sixth, and even a tenth President. Leaders will come and go, but Kenya will remain,” he said.

    The President and his deputy, William Ruto, criticised Cord’s strategy of weekly protests and its hardline stance against the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission, warning that the coalition’s behaviour could cause unrest in the country.

    “Let us respect each other and follow the law and Kenya will make progress,” said the President. “It is not possible that if you do not like a decision or institution, you demand that it is disbanded or reject it. We must all be faithful to the Constitution; it is about the rule of law.

    “We can differ — and that is okay in a democracy — but it cannot be that things must always go your way as an individual or a few, it becomes hard,” he said.

    REMAIN A NATION

    Thousands of Kenyans attended the national Madaraka Day celebrations, held at the iconic 17,000-seater Afraha Stadium in Nakuru.

    Mr Kenyatta and Mr Ruto, in their speeches, said all Kenyans, irrespective of class and status, must respect the Constitution.

    “It is the only way we can remain a nation, the only way Kenya can make progress,” the Deputy President said.

    Mr Kenyatta warned that the continued hard stance taken by Cord in addressing issues of contention risked putting the country in trouble, calling upon the Opposition to support the government in nation building.

    He cited Nakuru as one region whose people have experienced, first-hand, the consequences of violence and bad politics, and used the opportunity to urge respect and dialogue.

    He said it was ironical that Cord leader Raila Odinga and his brigade supported the adoption of the Constitution but have issues with some of its provisions.

    “How can it be that the same people who supported the Constitution now find it hard to adhere to it?” he posed. “Law cannot be good only when it is in your favour and bad when it is not. We cannot work like that.”

    Mr Ruto accused Cord of engaging in personality politics and pursuing selfish interests.

    “We have the most progressive and robust Constitution, made by Kenyans themselves. I now wonder why we want to transact the business of Kenya over a cup of tea, tête-à-tête and street demos clouded in teargas,” said the Deputy President.

    “We cannot address issues in a way that is subject to the whims of personalities or individuals or groups. The business of Kenya is so important and cannot be left to the designs of a few people,” he added.

    Mr Ruto said Cord must respect court orders barring its weekly demonstrations. “The court decided our friends in Cord can have their meeting in Uhuru Park, because we respect the rule of law, when the court decided we accepted its decision,” he said.

    “The same court decided that they cannot continue with demonstration in the country; we expect them to respect the decision. They cannot continue to torment the country with demos every Monday,” he said.

    The President used the occasion to highlight some of his government’s achievements in the last three years, citing the tablets to schools, connection to the power grid, expanded and better roads, access to safe water and medical care and the cash stipend to the elderly as some of the major scores for the Jubilee administration.

    He said two of the three national days will be celebrated outside Nairobi and announced that Machakos would host this year’s second national holiday — Mashujaa Day, to be celebrated on October 20.

    Several dignitaries attended the celebrations, including various diplomats, Cabinet Secretaries, Speaker of the Senate Ekwe Ethuro, National Assembly Speaker Justin Muturi, Chief Justice Willy Mutunga, and members of the clergy.

    President Uhuru Kenyatta during Madaraka Day celebrations in Nakuru on June 1, 2016.
  • WWF faulted on elephant report

    {The government has disproved claims contained in a report by World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) that elephants in the Selous Game Reserve will be extinct by 2022.}

    Through the Ministry of Natural Resources and Tourism, it has instead criticised the WWF for failing to take into consideration efforts taken to curb poaching in the country.

    Speaking to the ‘Daily News’ yesterday, the Permanent Secretary (PS) in the Ministry, Major General Gaudence Milanzi, said although there was rampant poaching in the country, it was not to the extent such as propagated by the WWF report.

    The WWF report released on Monday noted that Selous Game Reserve, one of Africa’s oldest reserves, could see its tusker population decimated by 2022 if urgent measures are not taken to stem industrial-scale poaching.

    The PS said that the government, in all its phases, have taken deliberate efforts to curb poaching, including the recent establishment of a Wildlife Crime Unit and training of rangers as paramilitary unit as part of government’s strategy to curb poaching.

    “We are not refuting that fact that there is poaching in Selous game reserves and elsewhere but not to the extent being alleged by WWF reports, because the government and international organisations are taking action to fight poaching.

    I believe these efforts are bearing fruits,” he explained. Maj. Gen. Milanzi reported on the strategy in which the ministry and other stakeholders are targeting the financiers behind poaching activities in a move to tackle the vice from the roots.

    The Judiciary is also working with the government to speed up hearing of poaching cases in courts, some of which have been completed and ruling given, the PS noted, adding that in March, two poachers, both Chinese citizens, were sentenced to 30 years in jail each or pay 108.7bn/- fine.

    “We cannot say that poaching is not there. It is; but with these efforts from both the government and international community, there should be a rise in the number of elephants in some areas,” he remarked.

    The WWF report noted that Selous Reserve, the country’s largest protected area, which was home to one of the greatest concentrations of African elephants on the continent, has seen the population reduced by 90 per cent in fewer than 40 years due to ivory poaching.

    According to the report, nearly 110,000 elephants once roamed the savannahs, wetlands and forests of the Selous. But as of now, only about 15,000 remain in the ecosystem.

    An analysis written for the WWF by Dalberg Global Development Advisors shows how the loss of Selous’ elephants would have a negative effect on Tanzania’s nature-based economy, putting the livelihoods of 1.2 million people at risk.

    Travel and tourism in Selous generate 6 million US dollars annually and nationally, the industry represents a combined yearly contribution of 5 billion US dollars to the GDP of Tanzania, which is home to world-renowned assets such as Mount Kilimanjaro and Serengeti National Park.

    WWF United Kingdom’s Lead Campaigner for Shared Heritage Chris Gee was quoted saying that the poaching crisis in the Selous acts as a stark reminder of the tragic impacts caused by the illegal wildlife trade.

    “This industrial level poaching is not only devastating elephant populations but threatens livelihoods of local communities and risks destroying this World Heritage Site,” Mr Gee quipped.

    He added that the government of Tanzania must ensure that they commit to achieving zero poaching of elephants in the Selous by 2018 and stop industrial scale activities that threaten the site’s World Heritage status. “We need to work together to help Tanzania realise the full social and economic value of this irreplaceable habitat,” he stressed.

    In 2014, UNESCO placed Selous on its ‘List of World Heritage in Danger’ due to the severity of elephant poaching. At the recent peak of the crisis, an average of six Selous elephants was being gunned down by criminal syndicates each day.

    UNESCO also has expressed concern about other potentially harmful industrial activities that threaten the reserve, such as mining, oil and gas exploration and dam construction. The Selous status will be on the global agenda again at the annual meeting of the World Heritage Committee next month.

    For the Selous to be removed from UNESCO’s in danger list, WWF is calling for greater effort in combating wildlife crime, an assessment of the impacts of proposed industrial activities, investment in sustainable tourism infrastructure and an equitable distribution of benefits to nearby communities.

    Country Director of WWF-Tanzania Amani Ngusaru said Selous is the only natural World Heritage site in southern Tanzania and one of the largest wilderness areas left in Africa, noting that its value to Tanzania and the rest of the world is dependent on its big wildlife populations and pristine ecosystems.

  • 2 Judo Athletes From Congo Hope to Make Refugee Olympic Team

    {For the first time, one of the teams competing in the Olympic Games will be made up of refugees who hail from different countries they no longer call home.}

    Popole Misenga and Yolande Mabika, both judo athletes from Congo, are two of those competing for spots on the refugee squad. They say the chance to be part of history feels like a form of vindication, a collective recognition of both the suffering and aspirations of refugees everywhere.

    “For me, this is incredible because a refugee has never participated in the Olympics before,” said Misenga, 24. “The whole world will be watching.”

    This week, the two hopefuls will find out whether they made the cut. The International Olympic Committee is expected to name members of the Refugee Olympic Team on Friday. Officials say they have identified 43 athletes who could potentially qualify for the games, but that the final refugee team will have only five to 10 members. The team will compete under the Olympic flag instead of any one country.

    Getting to the point of possibly competing in the Summer Games this August in Rio de Janeiro has been a long road.

    Both Misenga and Mabika fled their war-torn hometowns as children. Civil strife in the central African nation has caused the deaths of several million people since the mid-1990s.

    Eventually, the two became part of Congo’s national judo federation. But they say training was harsh and a failure to win medals in competitions meant punishments, including stints inside a cell with little food or water for days.

    In 2013, the two traveled to Brazil with the team to compete at the World Judo Championships. They say that in Rio team officials treated them as harshly as they had at home. They claim officials left them at their downtown Rio hotel for three days prior to the competition without food, money or passports.

    “A few days before our fight, I was very, very hungry. I almost died,” said Mabika, who is 28.

    Mabika decided to leave the hotel and roamed around the busy streets of Rio looking for food and help. That venture out led Mabika and Misenga to apply for asylum in Brazil, which granted them refugee status.

    Emails to Congo’s judo federation seeking comment on the athletes’ accusations were not returned.

    With the help of the Reacao charity, Misenga and Mabika have daily judo classes and do cross-training just like Brazilian athletes preparing for the Olympics. They train with Geraldo Bernardes, who has led the Brazilian national team to four Olympics.