Tag: GreatLakesNews

  • Second Somali MP Killed in Mogadishu

    Second Somali MP Killed in Mogadishu

    {{Unknown gunmen shot dead a Somali lawmaker on Tuesday in Mogadishu, capital of Somalia, who was the second Somali member of parliament (MP) killed in 24 hours, Radio Mogadishu reported.}}

    Lawmaker Abdelaziz Isaq Mursal was shot dead as he left his home in the western district of Dherkenlay in Mogadishu, according to the report.

    “The attackers escaped in a vehicle after the killing. Somali security forces arrived in the scene of the incident,” Radio Mogadishu reported.

    The killing of the MP comes a day after lawmaker Isaq Mohamed Riino was killed in a car bomb explosion.

    {{Push out Al-Shabaab}}

    Islamist militant group Al-Shabaab has claimed responsibility for the killing of Riino and the militants vowed to continue targeting Somali government officials.

    The killing of the MP was widely condemned by the Somali government, UN envoy and African Union Mission in Somalia (Amisom).

    Somali Prime Minister Abdiweli Sheikh Ahmed said the killing was a cowardly act and vowed to bring to justice those behind the deadly bomb blast.

    UN Somalia envoy Nicholas Kay described the killing as a terrorist act and called for a “full investigation” of the assassination of Riino while Amisom said the assassination was “unacceptable” as representatives of the Somali people, “any attack on MPs is an attack on the people.”

    Somali government officials vowed to tackle insecurity in Mogadishu which has lately been witnessing intermittent explosions and targeted killings of both civilians and government officials.

    The extremist Al-Shabaab group has been pushed out of several key areas in the south and center of Somalia by Somali government and Amisom forces.

    wirestory

  • Kenyan Firm Wins Global Medical Tourism Award

    Kenyan Firm Wins Global Medical Tourism Award

    {{A Kenyan organization is among thirteen companies that have been recognized as the best in medical tourism at the inaugural International Medical Travel Awards held in Dubai. }}

    Pathway International has been recognized for innovation and excellence in the medical travel, medical tourism and health tourism industry and has been named the Medical Travel Agency of the year.

    Pathway International facilitates medical visits for patients seeking treatment in Kenya and countries such as India, Israel, South Africa, Europe and the USA.

    Speaking while receiving the International Medical Tourism Journal (IMTJ) award, Simon Karo, the founder and CEO, Pathway International said they are committed to ensuring Kenya take a leadership position as the medical travel destination in the region.

    “We seek to connect our patients to the best healthcare options, where can evaluate the various options of treatment, access a wider range of experts and the best treatment at the lowest cost.

    This award is made possible by the immense support we have received from all doctors and hospital partners who we work hand in hand, as well as our dedicated staff,” said Karo.

    Medical tourism is a relatively new but growing industry which is now valued at $100 billion with India increasingly becoming the preferred medical destination for most of Africa due to affordability and quality of service.

    According to Al Jazeera, India received 1.1 million medical tourists between 2009 and 2012, earning the country $2.4 billion.

    “Medical travel is an exciting and growing global industry, with many providers delivering excellence in both medical care and customer service. The IMTJ Medical Travel Awards are the first independent awards to recognize those who are the best of the best and hopefully to encourage others to emulate them.

    The judges wanted to reward innovation and excellence, highlight best practice and celebrate those who are leading the way in the industry and delivering successful outcomes for patients,” said the Chairman of the judging panel and Managing Editor of IMTJ Keith Pollard

    Health institutions from Malaysia, India and Singapore were also awarded by the IMTJ in delivering internationally recognized services to patients, while Jordan was named the Destination of the Year.

    “All our winners exemplify the way the medical tourism industry should be run – professional, offering exceptional patient care and providing the best possible medical outcomes.

    I’m already looking forward to next year’s awards in the hope that other clinics and companies will have raised their game to match or even better this year’s winners,” added Pollard.

    The awards were presented in March 2014 at a high profile reception in Dubai during the International Medical Travel Exhibition and Conference, which brings together the pre-eminent providers and experts in medical travel and medical tourism.

    {capitalfm}

  • Aggreko to Double Power Output in Cote d’Ivoire By 2016

    Aggreko to Double Power Output in Cote d’Ivoire By 2016

    {{Power generation company Aggreko plans to double its output in Cote d’Ivoire to around 400MW within the next two years, in order to meet the growing demands of the country.}}

    Cote d’Ivoire is currently registering a GDP growth of around nine per cent and is investing heavily in long-neglected power infrastructure in an effort to boost output and maintain its rapid economic expansion, according to reports.

    Marc Vatel, operations director of Aggreko in Africa, said, “We hope to double our electricity production in one or two years as we have that capacity.”

    The West African country is home to offshore natural gas reserves, and also supplies power regionally to Ghana, Burkina Faso, Togo and Mali.

    Cote d’Ivoire also plans to add Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea to its power grid shortly, reports added.

    The nation’s estimated total electricity capacity is around 1,600MW, which the government aims to push to 4,000MW by 2020.

    However, exports to its neighbours have declined in recent years as domestic demand has outpaced new power generation.

    ”Our cooperation with the government could legitimately increase because our power station functions with gas, producing cheap, clean energy with domestic gas,” Vatel added.

    Aggreko recently began supplying 50MW of emergency power to Conakry, capital of neighbouring Guinea.

    {africanreview}

  • Somali MP Bombed

    Somali MP Bombed

    {{A Somali MP has been killed by a car bomb in the capital, Mogadishu, officials say.}}

    Islamist group al-Shabab told Reporters it was behind the attack on MP Isak Mohamed Rino.

    Another MP, Mohamed Ali, was wounded in the blast, which comes as the government hosts a security conference.

    Pro-government forces have made gains from al-Shabab in recent years but the al-Qaeda-linked group still controls many southern rural areas.

    Prime Minister Abdiweli Sheikh Ahmed condemned the car bomb as a “cowardly attack”.

    President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud on Sunday opened a three-day conference, saying the “culture of lawlessness that has plagued Somalia for the last 23 years is coming to an end”.

    Al-Shabab frequently stages attacks in Mogadishu and elsewhere.

    Somalia has been ravaged by constant warfare since 1991, when Siad Barre was ousted.

    wirestory

  • Gen. Bashir to Form Transitional Government

    Gen. Bashir to Form Transitional Government

    {{An opposition party revealed that president Omer Hassan Al-Bashir agreed to form a transitional government to implement a national political program saying it must not last for more than two years.}}

    Sudan’s opposition Popular Congress Party’s (PCP) secretary of foreign relations, Bashir Adam Rahma said, in an interview with the Qatari Al-Watan newspaper on Sunday, that Bashir accepted this transitional government which will administrate the country during the national dialogue process.

    Rahma said the recent political roundtable meeting Bashir organised with political forces was meant to discuss formation of the Higher Commission for the National Dialogue (HCND) which will manage the process.

    However several political forces brought up the issue of the transitional government although it was not part of the meeting’s agenda, he underscored.

    “The transitional government will be discussed when presenting the paper regarding the interim period. The ruling National Congress Party (NCP) agreed to form a transitional government after it is being approved by the dialogue’s general conference”.

    The PCP official added the transitional government would last for a maximum of two years, noting it would adopt a program to stop the war, address the issue of refugee return, and reform the civil service and foreign relations.

    The interim government will hold the general elections and form a constituent assembly to draft the constitution and prepare the country for a new democratic era, the said in order to explain what was outlined in the meeting.

    Earlier this month, the Sudanese president Omer Hassan Al-Bashir, held a political roundtable in Khartoum with the participation of 83 political parties. The move came within the framework of a call he made last January for a comprehensive national dialogue.

    The opposition official was keen to explain that besides the HCND, there will be different commissions to prepare draft papers but only the General Conference will approve it.

    The HCND, which is headed by president Omer Al-Bashir, is composed of 14 members 7 from the opposition and 7 representing the government parties. Its membership would be increased to 21 if the other opposition parties and rebel groups join the process.

    Rahma further said the political parties which took part in the meeting agreed to Bashir’s chairing of the higher commission, indicating that the general conference can be rotated between the political forces participation in the process.

    “It is preferable that Bashir chairs the higher commission (HCND) in order to be legally bound to implement the outcome of the dialogue because he is the person who controls power and the state,” he added.

    The PCP official said differences which may arise among political parties will be referred to an expert committee comprised of neutral and independent persons.

    He said they received information that Bashir and several senior government officials believe that dialogue is the only option for solving Sudan’s problems, pointing that “angry” factions within the NCP stand against dialogue and democratic transformation.

    Rahma didn’t rule out that rebel groups could agree to take part in the dialogue inside Sudan if the government takes several measures including creating an environment conducive for dialogue, declaring ceasefire, issuing general amnesty for convicts, and allowing humanitarian aid to affected population in the war areas.

    He added such measures must be guaranteed by the African Union (AU) and the international community, saying they received positive signals that the European Union (EU), AU, and the United States will support the comprehensive national dialogue.

    sudantribune

  • Zanzibar Seeks Treaty-Based Union

    Zanzibar Seeks Treaty-Based Union

    {{A Zanzibar minister yesterday said the Constituent Assembly (CA) will likely be a missed opportunity for the welfare of the Union between Tanganyika and Zanzibar.}}

    Justice minister Aboubakar Khamis Bakary (CUF – House of Representatives), said the Union was bogged down with shortfalls which could be effectively rectified if a treaty-based model would be adopted.

    “Much as the Constitution Review Commission has proposed a three-tier Union government structure, what we have to do is support it because all we want is development,” he said.

    The Union foundation was not adhered to, as most of the decisions were made by only one latent side, namely Tanganyika, he said.

    “There are about 30 Tanzanian embassies abroad, yet a mere three of the envoys are from Zanzibar…are we not clever enough to hold the posts?” the minister, who doubles as a member of the Constituent Assembly, queried.

    “Not a portion of fertilizer worth Sh10 billion belonging to the Union government was sent to Zanzibar,” lamented the minister, stressing that such shortfalls have to be rectified.

    “What does the Union government have to do with non-Union matters in the East African integration process when the Zanzibar government is present?” Mr Bakary queried.

    Clauses 4 and 6 of the Articles of the Union implying that Tanzania comprised three separate authorities indicated the intent to have a three-tier merger right from the inception, he added.

    “Remove the coat hiding Tanganyika to vividly show the existing three governments,” he said.

    NMG

  • Regional Law on Cooperative Societies Scrutinized

    Regional Law on Cooperative Societies Scrutinized

    {{Uganda is spearheading the passing of the East African Community Cooperative Societies Bill 2014 that is currently being scrutinized by the East African legislative Assembly (EALA).}}

    The bill which was read for the first time during EALA’s session in Kampala in January 2014 is a private member’s bill by Uganda’s EALA representative Mike Ssebalu.

    According to Ssebalu, the bill which is being studied by partner states is intended to transform the cooperative sector in respective countries for economic development.

    The bill is also intended to strengthen the emerging cooperative societies with in the region and also empower the existing cooperatives.

    “This proposed bill if passed into law, will bring fresh blood to the cooperative society movement , we hope to exploit regional integration process by removing legal and administrative barriers to do business , however this should not compromise with internationally agreed cooperative principles,” said Elizabeth Nsimadala.

    Nsimadala, who is the Regional women representative Eastern African farmers’ federation Uganda cooperative Alliance, made the remarks in Kampala during the stakeholders meeting to discuss the bill.

    Leonard Msemakweli, the secretary general Uganda cooperatives alliance said there was need to set standards in the cooperative movement for improved regional trade using cooperatives.

    “With the East African community cooperative societies law in place, we are likely to see increased expertise and resource mobilization within the region and this means economic development for our region,” he said.

    However some of the stakeholders that attended the meeting urged the framers of the proposed law to ensure that grassroots farmers are involved to ensure sustainability of locally produced goods that are consumed through cooperatives.

    “We need to ensure that all local farmers are oraganised in groups so that they can benefit from this,” said Moses Kibirige, the African region manager financial and privatization sector World Bank.

    The bill in its current form proposes heavy penalties such as deregistration to regional cooperative societies that go astray.

    It also proposes a decrease in the current number of 30 people that are required to register a cooperative society to only 10 people for easy registration.

    According to a study, Uganda last amended its cooperatives society Act in 1991, Tanzania in 2003, Kenya in 2004, Rwanda in 2007 and Burundi in 2011.

    NV

  • South Sudan on Brink of Collapse

    South Sudan on Brink of Collapse

    {{When not plotting military strategy to seize South Sudan’s crucial oil fields, sacked vice-president turned rebel chief Riek Machar spends time reading the economic and political history “Why Nations Fail”.}}

    Cynics might argue he would do better to simply look around his basic bush camp, where mutinous soldiers and an allied ethnic militia crammed with child soldiers ready themselves to attack government forces, as a brutal 4-month-long civil war in which thousands of people have already been killed intensifies.

    “I didn’t want to fight any more war again,” Machar told media in a recent interview at his rebel hideout, saying people had had enough of fighting during Sudan’s long civil war, in which he was a guerrilla commander.

    It was that war, which lasted more two decades, that paved the way for South Sudan’s independence from the north.

    But although less than three years old, the world’s youngest nation is spiralling towards collapse. With a ceasefire deal in tatters, the United Nations fear more than one million people are at risk of famine, and analysts warn the war is dragging in regional nations.

    Over one million people have fled their homes, with violence worsening amid a renewed offensive by the rebel forces, as well as revenge attacks by multiple militia forces.

    Women, children killed in attack

    Peace talks in luxury hotels in Ethiopia have made little if any progress, while analysts warn that any solution will require major changes, not simply more promises inked only on paper.

    “Propping up the government in Juba and polishing its legitimacy with a dose of political dialogue and a dash of power sharing will not end the conflict,” the International Crisis Group (ICG) wrote in a recent report.

    On Thursday hundreds of gunmen stormed a UN peacekeeping base in the flashpoint town of Bor, killing at least 48 men, women and children sheltering there from a rival ethnic group before peacekeepers fought them off.

    The UN Security Council called the attack an “outrage” that may constitute a war crime.

    “Badly outgunned peacekeepers are no match for the thousands of heavily armed forces and militias,” the ICG added.

    When fighting broke out on 15 December, it was sparked by “primarily political” arguments between Machar and President Salva Kiir, the ICG said, but the battles have since escalated, spreading to other states in the oil-rich but grossly impoverished nation.

    Ethnic violence

    “Ethnic targeting, communal mobilisation and spiralling violence quickly led to appalling levels of brutality against civilians,” according to the ICG.

    Atrocities were also carried out further north in the oil-hub of Bentiu, which the army admitted on Wednesday it had lost to rebel forces.

    The UN aid agency said it had reports of “targeted killings based on ethnicity”, with “several dozen” corpses rotting on the streets.

    The violence is rooted in decades-old grievances between former rebels turned political leaders, combined with unhealed wounds left over from the long civil war that preceded South Sudan’s independence from Khartoum in 2011.

    The fighting is between soldiers loyal to Kiir against mutinous troops who sided with Machar, but has also taken on an ethnic dimension, pitting Kiir’s Dinka tribe against militia forces from Machar’s Nuer people.

    Many of the fragile gains made by the billions of dollars of international development aid that poured in after independence have been lost.

    Regional conflict looms

    “The war risks tearing the country further apart and is pulling in regional states,” the ICG said, pointing to a plan by regional nations to send in military forces in addition to UN peacekeepers.

    Neighbouring Uganda has sent in troops and fighter jets to back the government, while Information Minister Michael Makuei has accused “forces from Sudan” of backing Machar, although he stopped short of actively accusing the government in Khartoum of interfering.

    Back at the camp Machar predicts, gloomily, that “this will be a regional conflict”.

    He says he is “looking for funding” but rejects accusations that he is seeking support from neighbouring Sudan, old friends who backed him during the 1983-2005 war.

    Rival gunmen from Sudan’s war-torn Darfur are accused of fighting on both sides in South Sudan.

    “Worse is yet to come,” Jonathan Veitch, the Unicef chief in South Sudan said last week, warning if the war is not stopped, there will be “child malnutrition on a scale never before experienced here.”

    Absurdity of war

    The United States, the key backer of South Sudan’s move to independence, has threatened targeted sanctions.

    Experts say sanctions would be symbolic, but they fear they would have little positive impact.

    “Many ordinary people seem to think that it is about time world powers spoke up against the absurdity of this war,” said Jok Madut Jok, a former top government official who is now head of the Sudd Institute think tank.

    But he also said he fears sanctions would mean little to rebels stationed in the remote bush, while the government could be pushed “into further rogue behaviour, having nothing more to lose.”

    – AFP

  • ICC Wants Kenya to Force Witnesses to Testify Against Ruto

    ICC Wants Kenya to Force Witnesses to Testify Against Ruto

    {{The International Criminal Court (ICC) on Thursday issued subpoenas for eight prosecution witnesses no longer willing to testify in the case against Deputy President William Ruto and former Kass Presenter Joshua arap Sang.}}

    Trial Chamber V(a) also directed the Registry of the Court to request the Kenyan government to not only serve the subpoenas but to enforce them through threat of sanction if necessary.

    “The Chamber found that the Government of Kenya has an obligation to cooperate fully with the court by serving the subpoenas to the witnesses and by assisting in compelling their attendance before the Chamber, by the use of compulsory measures as necessary,” a communiqué from the court read.

    The Chamber said it granted the prosecution’s request for subpoenas after finding that, contrary to the defences’ assertions, it had the power to compel witnesses to appear before it.

    “The Rome Statute State Parties did not intend to create an ICC that is ‘in terms a substance, in truth a phantom’. Rather, they must be presumed to have created a court with every necessary competence, power, ability and capability to exercise its functions and fulfil its mandate in an effective way. These include the power to subpoena witnesses,” the communiqué stated.

    The Chamber composed of Presiding Judge Chile Eboe-Osuji, Olga Herrera and Robert Fremr by majority therefore requested that the Kenyan government fulfil its obligations, as set out in the Rome Statute, by:

    “Compelling and ensuring the eight witnesses’ appearance before the Chamber by video-link or before the Chamber convened on the territory of Kenya,” the communiqué continued to state.

    In February Attorney General Githu Muigai told the court that even if it did issue subpoenas, the Kenyan government would not be compelled to enforce them.

    “These persons reserve the right to voluntarily comply with the summons or refuse to do so,” he submitted.

    ICC Prosecutor Fatou Bensouda had requested the Chamber to issue the subpoenas after initially seven of her witnesses refused to testify.

    Ruto and Sang’s defence had also argued that the ICC had no power to do subpoena witnesses and that the Prosecutor was trying to deflect blame for the shoddy investigations carried out by her office by blaming the collapse of her case on the refusal of witnesses to testify.

    “There’s no penalty; there’s no power of arrest, even on these inviolable premises within ICC security. If such a witness was strong-armed, that would be an assault,” Karim Khan, defence counsel for Ruto argued.

    wirestory

  • Armed Mob Attacks U.N. Base in South Sudan

    Armed Mob Attacks U.N. Base in South Sudan

    {{A mob of armed civilians pretending to be peaceful protesters delivering a petition to the United Nations in South Sudan forced their way into a U.N. base sheltering some 5,000 civilians on Thursday and opened fire, the world body said.}}

    A U.N. source, speaking on condition of anonymity, said at least 20 people had been killed and 60 wounded in the attack on the base in Bor in northern Jonglei state, where there are Indian and South Korean U.N. peacekeepers. The source warned that the death toll was likely to rise.

    U.N. spokesman Stephane Dujarric said dozens of civilians were wounded, but the exact number of people killed or wounded had not yet been confirmed. Two U.N. peacekeepers were wounded repelling the armed mob, he said.

    More than 1 million people have fled their homes since fighting erupted in the world’s youngest country in December between troops backing President Salva Kiir and soldiers loyal to his sacked vice president, Riek Machar.

    Thousands of people have been killed and tens of thousands have sought refuge at U.N. bases around the country.

    “This attack on a location where civilians are being protected by the United Nations is a serious escalation,” Dujarric said.

    “The assailants – a mob of armed civilians – came to the base under the guise of peaceful demonstrators intending to present a petition to UNMISS (the U.N. peacekeeping mission).”

    “The armed mob forced entry on to the site and opened fire on the internally displaced persons sheltering inside the base,” he said. “At the time of the attack there were some 5,000 displaced civilians … inside the base.”

    Dujarric said the wounded were being treated at the U.N. compound.

    The U.S. State Department condemned the attack.

    {agencies}