Tag: GreatLakesNews

  • Kenya:Voters lead silent revolt as they sweep out powerful politicians

    {The nomination season is officially coming to a close this weekend but the aftershocks of the silent revolt by voters are being felt across the country, from Kisumu to Kisauni.}

    In many counties, voters did not want their national leaders to guide them on who to elect.

    They wanted to make that choice with no one forcing their hand, a break from the past when local aspirants perceived to be darlings of the establishment enjoyed a head start during nominations. Those times are now gone.

    In some counties, such as Bomet and Nandi, voters picked virtual unknowns to represent them as Members of County Assemblies (MCAs).

    {{Security guard wins ticket }}

    In Kericho, a security guard won the Jubilee Party MCA ticket.

    Mr Eric Bett beat a long list of opponents in the race for Kapchebor ward.

    His opponents included the current MCA, Mr Joel Siele.

    In neighbouring Bomet, Mr Zadock Kibet Kilel, a tractor driver beat opponents who included the incumbent, a former long-serving councillor.

    This trend is a clear indictment of the appetite for allowances and other perks that MCAs have demonstrated.

    {{Political consciousness }}

    Only on Thursday this week, High Court judge Edward Muriithi ruled that MCAs can earn their salaries for the eight months they will not be working when their term in office will be cut prematurely in August.

    Though the ruling may be good news for the more than 4,000 MCAs countrywide, it could also influence the choices that voters will make during the August 8 General Election.

    Several leaders, until now perceived to be powerful and influential, were rejected by voters, heralding a new wave of political consciousness where voters are exerting their democratic right like never before.

    {{Cheboi cast out }}

    Tellingly, in areas where political parties handed victory to undeserving candidates, wananchi were quick to show their wrath and to demand justice.

    In many of this instances, the parties have had to listen to the voices of the people.

    Jubilee for instance, has said that no candidate will be issued with a winner’s certificate if his or her election is the subject of a dispute.

    And in counties like Baringo, voters were simply demanding better services from the devolved government.

    They showed their dissatisfaction by rejecting Governor Benjamin Cheboi, who was a shoo in in 2013.

    In one polling station in Muserechi, Eldama Ravine Sub-County, Mr Cheboi did not secure any vote at all.

    Overall, Mr Stanley Kiptis, his challenger, was declared winner after garnering 64,589 votes against Cheboi’s 21,388.

    “Basically, his administration was marred with corruption. The nomination exercise was a referendum against him and his administration,” Mr Solomon Komen, a youth leader and political commentator, said.

    {{Democracy }}

    This year’s nominations have seen one of the highest electoral casualties by both incumbents — particularly governors and MCAs — as well as by aspirants considered to be pro-establishment or who were thought to be imposed on party leaders.

    The new wave appears to draw from the worldwide trend — from the Philippines and the US, from France to the Gambia — where leaders considered as rank outsiders swept to victory in a rebuke to the establishment, which voters accuse of ignoring them.

    Prof Nyaga Kindiki of Moi University attributed the wave to the coming of age of Kenya’s democracy.

    “It shows that we are truly becoming a republic, a rule by the people. Kenyans are becoming acutely aware of their rights and power,” Prof Kindiki, who teaches international education and policy, said.

    According to him, the “revolution” was weakening the elite’s stranglehold on politics.

    {{Senator sang’s victory }}

    In Nandi, former Cabinet ministers Henry Kosgey and Felix Koskei were trounced by Nandi Senator Stephen Sang who pulled a surprise in the battle for the governorship.

    At the age of 30, Mr Sang is now in line to become one of the youngest governors in Kenya.

    National Assembly Legal Affairs Chairman Samuel Chepkong’a, a close ally of the Deputy President, lost the Jubilee nomination for Ainabkoi constituency to a newcomer, Mr William Chepkut.

    The Deputy President’s communication official, Mr Emmanuel Tallam, was also floored in the Nandi Hills contest.

    Mr Tallam was considered a formidable challenger to area MP Alfred Keter, considered a rebel in Jubilee Party.

    Mr Keter garnered 19,734. Mr Tallam only got 5, 620.

    {{Uhuru kin }}

    It is significant that close confidants of both President Uhuru Kenyatta and ODM leader Raila Odinga were not spared either, the name recognition of such candidates notwithstanding.

    The resounding loss of the county’s Woman Rep, Ms Anne Nyokabi, a relative of President Kenyatta’s.

    Ms Nyokabi garnered a mere 20,768 votes in her bid to capture JP ticket and defend her seat in August.

    She lost to a newcomer, Ms Gathoni wa Muchomba, who got an overwhelming 374,768 votes, one of the highest for any candidate nationally.

    Out of the 60 MCAs in the county, only three won their nomination race — meaning that 57 will lost out.

    Similarly, of all the parliamentarians in Nyeri County, only Kieni MP Kanini Kega beat the odds of being rejected. His five counterparts were all defeated by greenhorn politicians.

    {{Big shots lose }}

    Mukurweini’s Kabando wa Kabando, Mathira’s Peter Weru, Tetu’s Ndung’u Gethenji, Nyeri Town’s Esther Murugi and Othaya’s Mary Wambui all lost their bid to retain their seats.

    Similarly, Senator Mutahi Kagwe, who was aspiring to be the next governor, lost his bid to former Vision 2030 director Wahome Gakuru who won by a landslide.

    Analysts in the county said his biggest undoing was his failure to intervene when the county fell into a crisis, which resulted in a stalemate between the ward representatives and Governor Nderitu Gachagua, who died last month.

    Mr Gachagua’s successor, Mr Samuel Wamathai, lost primarily on account of his personality.

    He was perceived to be reserved and lukewarm. “He did not give us the impression of a leader,” one voter, Mr Joseph Maina, said.

    {{Populism }}

    In Nyanza, Mr Odinga’s backyard, his cousin Jakoyo Midiwo — who is also the Deputy Minority Leader in the National Assembly — lost his bid to defend his Gem parliamentary seat.

    So did Raila’s brother Dr Oburu Oginga. However, he was later controversially handed the ticket to run for the Bondo constituency seat. The move sparked protests voters.

    One analyst said that Mr Odinga’s sister Ruth, the Deputy Governor of Kisumu, recoiled from running for the governorship after sensing resistance from voters.

    Constitutional lawyer and political commentator Wachira Maina reads the arrival of the global wave of populism, which has swept through America and Europe for the nomination of such governor candidates as Mike Mbuvi Sonko of Nairobi and Ferdinand Waititu of Kiambu.

    “Mr Sonko may not have swept the board with the landslide that most people predicted but his nomination as Jubilee candidate for governor of Nairobi and that of Mr Waititu, shows that the subalterns are revolting against the dominance of the middle classes as they have done in Europe and America,” Mr Maina argued.

    {{Results disputed }}

    One of the most surprising losses was that of Nakuru Governor Kinuthia Mbugua, who was trounced by former Nakuru Town MP Lee Kinyanjui.

    Mr Mbugua, one of the most guarded personalities outside the presidency, having carried over some privileges from his former job as head of the Administration Police, had become inaccessible, thus alienating him from voters.

    Although he had brought about order in Nakuru town by flushing out hawkers from the streets, making the town clean, secure and ideal for business, this did not stop voters from casting their lot with his challenger.

    However, Mr Mbugua has protested the outcome, saying that some polling stations had higher turn-out that exceeded registered voters.

    In Murang’a, Kigumo MP Jamleck Kamau, a close ally of the President, was rebuffed by voters despite a four-year long campaign to oust the incumbent, Mr Mwangi wa Iria.

    However, he blamed his loss on irregularities, arguing that some election officials were compromised.

    “I hereby reject the nomination results for Jubilee Party governorship in Murang’a. I will not file an appeal as I had already complained before the nominations,” he said at his Lavington home in Nairobi yesterday.

    {{Ruto’s project }}

    In Uasin Gishu, Mr Bundotich Zedekiah Kiprop Buzeki, who ran a loud and vigorous campaign, lost to incumbent Governor Jackson Mandago, because he was viewed as a project of people close to the Deputy President.

    “Mr Buzeki has been meeting with some people from the office of the DP and strategising on how to kick me out,” Mr Mandago said a day to the cancelled Jubilee nominations of Friday last week.

    This may well have turned the tables, coming as it did hot on the heels of the false start of the nomination, which some attributed to a scheme to handpick preferred candidates across the country.

    However, Mr Buzeki refuted the claim.

    “I am a man on my own. The attempt to link my candidature to DP’s office is mere propaganda,” he said.

    It may have been a case of too little too late. The revolt has already taken its toll.

    And another round could be awaiting leaders on August 8.

    Baringo Governor Benjamin Cheboi votes at Shimoni in Eldama Ravine during Jubilee Party nominations on April 24, 2017. He lost the nomination to Mr Stanley Kiptis.

    Source:Daily Nation

  • Magufuli blames leaders’ laxity for country’s woes

    {The ongoing problems in the country that involve recruiting of workers with fake certificates and payments to ghost workers have been increasing in recent years, due to the presence of irresponsible political and other leaders in offices, President John Magufuli said, yesterday.}

    The Head of State said political and other leaders were the main root of the ongoing problems that have forced the fifth phase government to take austerity measures in many areas of the economy including conducting thorough certificates verification exercise across the country.

    President Magufuli was speaking after receiving a report on public servants certificates verification. The report was handed to the Head of State by the Minister of State in the President’s Office (Public Service Management and Good Governance), Ms Angellah Kairuki.

    The Head of State said leaders contributed greatly to the problems since they failed to act on time and allowed dishonest people to penetrate and appear on the government pay list. “We (leaders) are the root cause of all these problems.

    We created them because some of us were not responsible in executing our duties,” said President Magufuli. He said that some leaders failed to fulfil their responsibilities and allowed ‘thieves’ to appear in the government payroll.

    “I fail to understand, why some of the leaders failed to identify these people, why did they wait for Minister Joyce Ndalichako and Angellah Kairuki to reveal this,” he noted. President Magufuli said he is not intending to discuss past events, but he will not hesitate to mention the wrongdoings that have led the country into big troubles and misuses of taxpayers’ money.

    “I understand that it is not a good thing to discuss past leaders, but at least we must discuss their wrongdoings so that we can avoid committing same mistakes,” he said.

    He added that the government has been losing revenue at the Dar es Salaam Port, in the mining sector and other potential areas due to poor leadership.

    In December, 2015, it was revealed that a network of corrupt public servants, politicians and businessmen were directly responsible for the rot at the country’s main port.

    A study by the World Bank estimated that corruption cartels and general inefficiency at the Port were fleecing government of revenue estimated at 345bn/- (157m US dollars) annually.

    The situation forced President Magufuli and Prime Minister Kassim Majaliwa to conduct impromptu visits to the Port. It was revealed that some officials had turned the port into a cash cow, receiving millions of shillings in direct benefit and also openly soliciting for contributions to turn a blind eye on the looting.

    It was exposed that more than 2,700 containers were cleared without due taxes being collected; in the course denying the government a reported 80 billion/- taxes.

    Yesterday, the Head of State reiterated that leaders were behind the ongoing problems in the country. However, he assured the public that his government will stand firm to fight any kind of criminality within its systems and make sure every ‘mwananchi’ is served as required.

    Source:Daily News

  • Fuel shortage far from being worked out in Burundi

    {Long queues of cars, motorcycles and people who have cans, wait for hours at the few stations that are open. City oil and Kingstar stations from the southern to northern neighborhoods in the capital Bujumbura are providing fuel. “I have spent four days looking for fuel but in vain”, says a taxi-driver. He also says he and his family will die of hunger if nothing is done. “I cannot afford food for my family if the shortage of fuel persists”, says another driver met at Kinindo City Oil station in southern Bujumbura.}

    Many vehicles and motorcycles are empty of fuel. Cans could be seen on the long queues. However, their owners have not been served like others and started complaining about the unfair supply of fuel. “Those who have cans should put them aside, they have no right to be served”, says a police officer trying to supervise fuel distribution at Kinindo City Oil.

    Many of the oil stations in Bujumbura city were dry. Engen, Mogas and Kobil branches operating in Burundi have no fuel due to the lack of foreign currency. “It’s been a couple of days we are not working. We don’t know the day we will receive the foreign currency to resume the supply of fuel”, says an agent of Mogas branch.

    During the plenary session in the National Assembly on 25 April, Côme Manirakiza,Minister of Energy and Mines said shortage of fuel in the capital Bujumbura and the countryside is due to the lack of foreign currency. He, however, said the administration, the police and the ministry must work together to avoid any speculation from oil tankers.

    “Sanctions should be imposed on fuel managers who may distribute fuel in cans or try to raise the price”, says the Minister.

    However, over the last week, the Ministry of Energy and Mines said the shortage of fuel earlier was due to a “technical breakdown” that interrupted clearance processes within the Burundi Revenue Authority (OBR), an allegation the Authority denies. OBR dismissed the claim saying it “is not aware of any connection breakdown”.

    Source:Iwacu

  • Sweden awards 6 million USD to UNICEF for their health programme in the DRC

    {Sweden has awarded 57 million Swedish Kronas (6 million USD) to support UNICEF’s health programme in the DRC (Democratic Republic of the Congo), under the terms of partnership agreement signed on 25th April 2017 in Kinshasa.
    }

    Sweden has lent its support to UNICEF since 2014, with a total of 23.6 million USD for the implementation of the healthcare component of their Co-operation Programme in the DRC, which aims to improve maternal and childhood health and child survival rates. They achieve this by promoting very efficient interventions, such as vaccination services, care for pregnant women and newborns, services for the care of respiratory and diarrhetic illnesses and for malaria and chronic malnutrition, and activities which promote good nutrition for young children. This programme aims to support these interventions by reinforcing the healthcare and community systems.

    The DRC continues to tackle the extremely high child and maternal mortality rates, respectively 104 out of 1000 live births, and 846 out of 100,000 live births in 2014. Nevertheless, the DRC has still made considerable progress in terms of reducing the child mortality rate which has gone from 148 deaths per 1000 live births in 2007 to 104 deaths per 1000 live births in 2014 (Demographic and health study 2013-2014).

    {{Health programme in the DRC to reduce mortality}}

    The additional 6.3 million American Dollars in 2017 will be used for several endeavours. Firstly, to intensify the efforts to speed up the reduction of maternal, newborn and child mortality thanks to better accessibility to basic, efficient, equal health services. Secondly, to support reform in the healthcare system. Thirdly, to spread proven, high impact interventions in the areas of health and nutrition from UNICEF by her health programme in the DRC. Particular importance will be placed on community approaches in order to reinforce community participation, which will ensure that the interventions continue.

    This is a major contribution from Sweden, which gives priority to improving the health of mothers and children in the context of the Democratic Republic of the Congo’s development policy. The co-operative development between Sweden and the DRC contributes to a sustainable country and to the consolidation of the state, as well as improving living conditions for those living in poverty and oppression. Sweden is also one of UNICEF’s humanitarian programme partners in the DRC.

    UNICEF promotes the rights and wellbeing of each child, in everything we do. We work in 190 countries and territories all over the world with our partners to make this dream a reality, with a particular emphasis on going to the aid of the most vulnerable and marginalised children, in the interests of all children, wherever they may be.

    Source:Relief Web

  • Uganda:Besigye re-appears before Nakawa Court

    {Former presidential candidate Dr Kizza Besigye re-appears before Nakawa Chief Magistrates Court this morning for the routine mention of his treason case.}

    The State is expected to update the court and other concerned parties including Dr Besigye on how far police investigations into the treason case have gone.

    Should the State inform the court that they are done with investigations; the four-time presidential candidate will be sent to the High Court to stand trial.

    On the contrary, prosecution will ask court for an adjournment to a later date to enable them tie the loose ends in investigations.

    The court is also expected to extend the bail of the former Luweero bush war fighter for the next one month.

    It’s now almost a year ever since the state slapped the grave treason charges against the opposition politician but the police has never finalised with the investigations to have him committed to the High Court to stand trial.

    Dr Besigye has always wondered what kind of evidence the state is looking for in order to incriminate him on grounds that he claimed to have won last year’s February 18 general elections.

    In an interview with this newspapers about two months ago, Mr Mike Chibita, the Director if Public Prosecutions attributed the delay in concluding the investigations to the defiant witnesses who allegedly witnessed the swearing-in of Dr Besigye but doesn’t want to record statements with the police.

    The treason charges against Dr Besigye arise from the alleged swearing-in of himself as president of Uganda following last year’s disputed February 18 presidential elections in which he claims to have won by 52 per cent.

    The alleged swearing-in of Dr Besigye clip went viral on May 11 last year which happened to be the eve of President Museveni’s swearing-in for the 5th elective term at Kololo ceremonial grounds.

    Former presidential candidate Dr Kizza Besigye.

    Source:Daily Monitor

  • Kenya:Snake blamed for crash that killed eight people in Makueni

    {The driver of a matatu that collided with a lorry at Malili on the Nairobi-Mombasa highway, killing eight people, was avoiding running over a snake, one of the accident victims has revealed.}

    Ms Elizabeth Mwongeli, 28, told the Nation at Machakos Level 5 Hospital, where she was admitted, that just before the crash she heard the driver shout that he had seen a big snake.

    “The driver was avoiding a snake,” Ms Mwongeli, who appeared traumatized and in pain, said.

    “I heard him shout before he swerved and hit a lorry. I don’t know if the snake was hit.”

    {{Victims recuperating }}

    Speaking in the casualty ward as she waited for a plaster of Paris to be fitted on her leg, Ms Mwongeli, who was injured on the head and right knee, said she had gone barely two kilometres from her Salama home taking a sick child to Machakos Hospital.

    Ms Mwongeli recalled seeing bodies on the road.

    “I counted five bodies of those who had died on the spot,” Ms Mwongeli said.

    The child was also admitted at the hospital.

    Seven victims were admitted in the casualty ward and a child was at the intensive care unit.

    In the casualty ward were Ms Christine Kitivo and Mr Daniel Kiasya. The couple, who were travelling from Kibwezi, had heavy bandages on the head and legs.

    “I was asleep and when I woke up I realised I was injured. We were going to Nairobi to buy spare parts for my machines,” Ms Kitivo recounted.

    {{Careless driving }}

    Mr Onesmus Kiio, 23, a student at Catholic University of Eastern Africa in Nairobi, sustained hip injuries and was due for surgery.

    Mr Kiio, who said he boarded the matatu at Sultan Hamud, claimed to have heard other passengers caution the driver, who died in the accident, against driving carelessly but he retorted that he was experienced.

    The 45-seater minibus, christened Jasho Dreams, shuttles between Nairobi and Kambu shopping centre in Makueni County.

    The matatu driver was attempting to overtake another vehicle when the accident occurred, acting Kilungu divisional police boss Zacharia Bitok told the Nation on phone.

    {{Speeding }}

    Mr Bitok said the eight died on the spot and 10 others sustained serious injuries and were taken to hospitals in Machakos and Makueni counties.

    The bus conductor, Mr Justus Musembi, who was being treated for deep cuts on the right leg at Mukaa Hospital, Makueni, however said the lorry was speeding and it swerved into the matatu’s lane.

    “It smashed the cabin on the driver’s side and killed or badly injured passengers in the first three rows of seats behind the driver,” Mr Musembi said.

    The lorry crew were unhurt.

    Source:Daily Nation

  • EAC to fully rollout Single Customs Territory

    {The East African Community (EAC) Committee on Customs has agreed on full implementation of Single Customs Territory system (SCT) effective 31 July, this year, to enable faster clearance of goods and reduce the cost of doing business in the region.
    }
    Through this, the respective governments look forward to cutting time and resources used in collecting custom taxes at various borders. The agreement was reached in Dar es Salaam, yesterday, by respective Commissioner Generals of Revenue Authorities from Tanzania, Kenya, Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi and South Sudan.

    “SCT commenced in 2014 as a pilot project and we believe that we had enough time to examine how it operates and now is the time to roll it out. This is the most important decision we have made after a week-long meeting,” said, Chairperson of the Committee, Dicksons Kateshumbwa.

    He further said that implementation of SCT, in pilot areas, has reduced the cost of doing business tremendously in which turnaround time has been reduced from 21 days to between three and five days on average, at Tanzanian entry points to Uganda, Rwanda and Burundi.

    In addition, the Chairperson said EAC Secretariat in collaboration with Trade and Markets East Africa and other partner states, particularly Tanzania Revenue Authority (TRA), were looking into the possibility of interfacing the Electronic Cargo System platform with the existing systems along the Northern Corridor.

    Presenting resolutions reached during their meeting, Mr Kateshumbwa said, on customs interconnectivity they have taken note of the progress made in the project and will also provide uniform and consistent mechanism of handling cargo and trade facilitation through risk profiling as provided for in the SCT framework.

    Mr Kateshumbwa, who also doubles as Uganda Revenue Authority, Commissioner Customs, said due to the changing and dynamic business environment, the EAC has embarked on a comprehensive review of the EAC Common External Tariff to align it to the realities of trade.

    “The CET is supposed to be reviewed after every five years, the review process will be completed by next year,” he noted. On operationalisation of one-stop border posts, he said that out of 15 borders earmarked to operate, 12 have been completed, of which 10 are operational, including Taveta/Holili, Kabanga/Kobero, Kagitumba/Mirama hills and Nemba/Gasinye, to mention a few.

    To support capacity building for customs administration, Mr Kateshumbwa said that all partner states have already rolled out the EAC Customs post-graduate diploma and certificate programmes which are being implemented by revenue authority training institutes.

    He said that the EAC was also exploring the possibility of entering into mutual recognition agreement with the rest of the world, to allow traders enjoy benefits when trading with other regions of the world. However, he said that will depend on refining operationalisation of the Authorised Economic Operator (AEO) programme with the EAC.

    Source:Daily News

  • No media freedom in Burundi, Reporters Without Borders says

    {Reporters without Borders (RSF) ranks Burundi the 160th out of 180 countries in the 2017 World Press Freedom Index. RSF says the country was the 156th in 2016. It is ranked behind all the East African Community countries.}

    The situation in Burundi has become more and more complex since the outbreak of the 2015 crisis. The main independent radio stations have remained closed since the May 2015 coup attempt, according to RSF report. On 14 May, on the eve of the coup against President Pierre Nkurunziza, five media were destroyed. Two of them namely Isanganiro and Rema FM were allowed to reopen. The three remaining others which are Bonesha FM, Radio Publique Africaine (RPA) and Télévision Renaissance are still closed.

    RSF says new government propaganda media outlets have been created. This NGO says Burundian Journalists find it hard to work freely and are often harassed by security forces encouraged by an official discourse associating non-aligned media with enemies of the nation. The journalist Jean Bigirimana’s disappearance in July 2016 has still not been solved, says RSF.

    Innocent Muhozi , Chairman of the Burundian Press Watchdog (OPB) says, it is not surprising that Burundi moved from its 156 in 2016 to 160 in the 2017 ranking by RSF in terms of press freedom. “Media freedom is not possible when the right to life and the fundamental human rights are violated,” says Muhozi.

    Gabriel Bihumugani, Deputy Chairman of the Burundi’s media regulator (CNC) dismisses RSF report. He says it was written on the basis of false information. “RSF only considered the events of 2015 and the disappearance of Jean Bigirimana, journalist at Iwacu Press Group.” Burundi journalists are not ill-treated,” he says.

    Bihumugani says the press regulator left no stone unturned to find Jean Bigirimana but in vain. “CNC urges competent authorities to give clarification on the journalist’s disappearance”, Bihumugani says. He says CNC is doing its best to guarantee press freedom.

    Source:Iwacu

  • DR Congo: UN seeks $64 million to tackle humanitarian crisis in Kasaï region

    {The United Nations has appealed for $64.5 million to respond to the urgent needs of 731,000 people over the next six months in the Kasaï region, the latest “humanitarian hotspot” in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC).}

    “The Kasaï crisis is an acute crisis of massive proportions in a country that is already going through one of the world’s most relentlessly acute humanitarian emergencies,” the Humanitarian Coordinator in DRC, Mamadou Diallo, said in Kinshasa.

    “We are facing a new challenge that requires additional resources to respond to the needs of thousands of displaced people and host families as our current capacities are being outstripped,” he added.

    According to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), more than one million people are estimated to be currently displaced as the violence started in Kasaï Central and rippled across neighboring Kasaï, Kasaï Oriental, Lomami and Sankuru provinces.

    Currently some 40 national and international humanitarian organizations are working across the five provinces to respond to the crisis, which was borne out of armed clashes that erupted in August 2016 between the Congolese army and a local militia group.

    The appeal launched today will provide water, food, medicines and health services, basic household items, and provide protection services, among others, to minors, women who have suffered sexual violence, and other civilians who have been victim of violence.

    In Kasaï Central province alone, the current humanitarian needs are 400 per cent above what humanitarian actors had planned for earlier this year.

    “An effective response requires that new and fresh funding be allocated as humanitarian actors cannot afford to take away from their current operations in the eastern provinces to support the Kasaï crisis,” Mr. Diallo said.

    More than four months into the year, the 2017 Humanitarian Response Plan only received $66 million, or less than 10 per cent of the overall $748 million appeal.

    Returned persons from Kasala village, Kasaï Province, awaiting food distribution by the NGO COPROMOR and Christian Aid. Photo: Joseph Mankamba/OCHA-DRC

    Source:UN News Centre

  • WFP says food shipment blocked by Burundi has turned back

    {The U.N.’s World Food Program says a convoy of food aid blocked from entering Burundi has returned to Rwanda.}

    Peter Smerdon, a WFP official in East Africa, said Wednesday that authorities in Burundi prevented the convoy from entering the country because of “security issues.”

    He said the food was a regular shipment of WFP aid from Rwanda into Burundi, where it would have fed about 112,000 people.

    WFP says more than half of Burundians are chronically malnourished.

    The East African country has seen almost two years of deadly political violence over President Pierre Nkurunziza’s stay in power.

    Rwanda and Burundi have seen a rise in tensions, with Burundi’s government claiming that rebel forces have been trained and armed in Rwanda. Rwanda denies the allegations.

    Source:Associated Press