Tag: GreatLakesNews

  • Mbeki Suspends talks on Sudan’s Two Areas, Refers Process to AU

    Mbeki Suspends talks on Sudan’s Two Areas, Refers Process to AU

    {{The African Union High-Level Implementation Panel (AUHIP) Sunday announced that it can no longer continue its mediation to end the conflict in Sudan’s Two Area due to the considerable gap in the positions of the two parties and referred the matter to the African Union Peace and Security Council (AUPSC).}}

    On 18 February, the mediation handed over to the Sudanese government and Sudan People’s Liberation Movement-North (SPLM-N), a draft framework agreement calling to cease hostilities, open humanitarian access to reach civilians in the rebel areas.

    The proposal also suggested to hold direct talks on the Two Areas and to prepare the ground for a national conference on constitutional reforms.

    The government delegation accepted the proposal of the mediation and insisted that the rebel group should accept to disarm and reintegrate its combatants. From its side, the SPLM-N proposed to negotiate a new humanitarian deal.

    Also, the group stressed that Khartoum should lift a ban on its political activities and accept them as political partner in the constitutional conference. Furthermore, the group called to hold a preliminary meeting in Addis Ababa to fix the modalities of the process.

    “As is its right, the SPLM-N presented a fundamentally different proposal, which rendered an agreement unattainable. The Panel is of the view that as matters stand, it is impossible to bridge the chasm between the Parties and will therefore refer the matter back to its mandating principal, the AUPSC, for further guidance,” the AUHIP said in its statement.

    The panel of mediators headed by the former South African president Thabo Mbeki further praised the discussions that the government is holding with the opposition political parties to convene an inclusive national dialogue inside the country.

    “This underscores the need urgently to find a peaceful settlement of the conflict in the Two Areas, the better to integrate the Two Areas into the national dialogue,” the mediation added.

    The government said it intends to end the military conflicts with the rebel groups in the Two Areas and Darfur region through separate peace agreements after what they can join a national process aiming to adopt a new constitution.

    The rebels groups in the South Kordofan and Blue Nile and Darfur proposed to sign a comprehensive cessation of hostilities and to participate in an inclusive process with the other political parties after the formation of a new government. This holistic conference will discuss the regional conflicts, and adopt a new constitution.

    In Addis Ababa, the government and rebel delegations traded accusations over the collapse of negotiations.

    The government chief negotiator Ibrahim Ghandour who arrived on Sunday morning to the venue of the talks in Addis Ababa told reporters that SPLM-N is responsible for the failure of the talks because they demand the inclusion of national issues in a process destined to resolve the conflict in South Kordofan and Blue Nile.

    Ghandour further criticised the AUHIP for not blaming the SPLM-N rebels and holding them “responsible for spoiling the talks”. He further expressed hope that the position of the AUPSC on the resolution of the conflict in the Two Areas be more fair.

    The presidential assistant further expected that SPLM-N rebels escalate military attacks in South Kordofan.

    He also said that they would not accept to internationalise the national dialogue process.

    “We will not accept the internationalisation of dialogue, and Mbeki has nothing to do the dialogue process. The claims of the SPLM-N are an attempt to waste time and resources needed by the Sudanese people,” Ghandour said.

    The spokesperson of the SPLM-N negotiating delegation was not reachable to comment on the suspension of talks.

    However, in a press conference held on Saturday evening in Addis Ababa, the rebel top negotiator, Yasir Arman, reiterated that the 28 June 2011 framework agreement is the reference point for the peace process.

    The deal, which is denounced by the government, establishes a political partnership between the ruling National Congress Party and the SPLM-N and provides they work together to achieve democratic reforms.

    Arman further said that the presidential initiative for national dialogue creates a good atmosphere to implement the framework agreement more than any time before. However he blamed the government delegation for not coming with new ideas about the comprehensive political solution.

    “We do not want intentions, but we want solutions”. If the government and the NCP do not have ready ideas now, or want to complete the process of consultation with all political forces they must ask a specific period to complete the dialogue, and then come up with clear ideas,” he further added.

    The deputy head of the Sudanese government delegation, Suleiman Omer, told reporters on Saturday that they have a mandate to negotiate only on the Two Areas.

    In October 2009, the former South African president presented a report about justice and peace in Darfur to the AUPSC and the UN Security Council.

    Since he was appointed to chair a follow-up panel to help to implement his recommendations for peace in Darfur and the Comprehensive Peace Agreement of 2005 related to the South Sudan before its independence and democratic transition in the country.

    {sudantribune}

  • Uganda Accuses World Bank of Blackmail Over its anti-gay Law

    Uganda Accuses World Bank of Blackmail Over its anti-gay Law

    {{Uganda has accused the World Bank of blackmail after the lender stalled a $90 million loan over the East African nation’s adoption of a draconian anti-gay law.}}

    “The World Bank is a multi-lateral institution that should not blackmail its members however small,” government spokesman Ofwono Opondo said on Twitter.

    The World Bank announced on Thursday that it was blocking the loan, which was intended to help Uganda strengthen its health-care system.

    “We have postponed the project for further review to ensure that the development objectives would not be adversely affected by the enactment of this new law,” a World Bank spokesman said.

    Earlier this week, Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni signed off on one of the world’s toughest anti-gay laws despite warnings from his Western allies.

    Museveni capped his defence of the law — which could see homosexuals jailed for life and requires people to denounce them — with a lurid description of his particular revulsion to oral sex.

    Museveni has been in power for 28 years, a record in East Africa.

    Opondo argued in another tweet that the bank’s “so-called ‘cut’ is attempted blackmail to set Ugandans against their government.”

    US Secretary of State John Kerry, who earlier this week likened the law to anti-Semitism in Nazi Germany, on Thursday called the Ugandan leader to express Washington’s “deep disappointment” about the legislation.

    He “noted that the decision complicates the US relationship with Uganda. He also raised US concerns that this discriminatory law poses a threat to the safety and security of Uganda’s gay community,” State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said.

    “And he urged President Museveni to ensure the safety and protection of all Ugandan citizens.”

    The move follows action by Norway and Denmark to freeze or change aid programmes for Uganda.

    But Opondo replied by accusing the West of attempting to impose its values on Africans.
    “Why does the West criminalise polygamy but allows homosexuality if indeed they are defending (freedom of association),” he said.

    AFP

  • Will it be Lupita Nyong’o’s big Night at Oscars?

    Will it be Lupita Nyong’o’s big Night at Oscars?

    {{Hollywood’s finest finally hit the red carpet Sunday for the most fiercely contested Oscars show in decades – after organizers scrambled to make sure the weather doesn’t rain on the glamorous parade.}}

    After months of drought, a huge storm has hit just in time for the Academy Awards, drenching the famous red carpet where A-listers will strut their stuff as Tinseltown’s annual awards season comes to a climax.

    Final preparations underway on the red carpet in front of the Dolby Theatre in Hollywood on March 1, 2014 for the 86th Academy Awards in Hollywood, California.

    Three movies – harrowing historical drama “12 Years a Slave,” 3D space thriller “Gravity” and 1970s crime caper “American Hustle” – are leading a packed field for the top prizes.

    On the acting front, Cate Blanchett is the hot favourite for her turn in Woody Allen’s “Blue Jasmine,” while Matthew McConaughey is widely tipped to strike Oscars gold for his portrayal of homophobic HIV-positive AIDS activist Ron Woodroof in “Dallas Buyers Club.”

    Jared Leto’s role as Woodroof’s unlikely transgender business partner has put him ahead of the field for best supporting actor, and Lupita Nyong’o could take home a statuette for her big-screen debut in “12 Years a Slave.”

    red Leto poses with his award for Best Supporting Actor in Dallas Buyers Club at the 2014 Independent Spirit Awards on Saturday, March 1, 2014 in Santa Monica, California.

    {{VERY SUSPENSEFUL}}

    On the eve of Hollywood’s biggest night, “12 Years a Slave” scored a last-minute boost by winning best feature and best director for Briton Steve McQueen Saturday at the Independent Spirit Awards.

    McConaughey, Leto, Blanchett and Nyong’o took home the acting awards, further cementing their status as the ones to beat for the prized Oscar statuettes.

    {nation}

  • Kenya’s Inflation Drops in February

    Kenya’s Inflation Drops in February

    {{Overall inflation for the month of February declined to 6.86 percent compared to last month’s 7.21 percent, attributed to drop in the cost of some food prices and electricity.}}

    The price of a kilo of sugar dropped by 2.27 percent from Sh114.71 in January to Sh112.12 in February, while the price of a kilo of kales went down by 2.01 percent from Sh45.01 to Sh44.11.

    According to the Kenya National Bureau of Statistics (KNBS), the average price of a kilo of cooking fat in February was Sh216.41 from Sh217.84 in January representing a 0.66 percent.

    The cost of electricity declined by 2.09 percent to Sh515.70 per 50 kilowatt-hours in February compared to Sh526.70 last month.

    “Although there was no major change observed in respect of fuel cost adjustment charges to the previous month, slight decreases in forex adjustment and the Water Resources Management levy charges caused a decrease in the cost of electricity,” KNBS stated on Friday in its monthly review.

    However, the Transport Index increased by 0.24 percent over the same review period mainly on account of higher prices of petrol, diesel, parking charges as well as public transport fares.

    “Within Nairobi for instance, parking charges were increased from Sh140 to Sh300 per day,” KNBS said.

    During the period under review, Food and Non-Alcoholic Drinks’ Index increased by 0.36 percent. This was a result of aggregate rise in prices of some food items outweighing notable falls in prices of others.

    Housing, Water, Electricity, Gas and other Fuels’ Index increased by 0.70 percent due to rise in prices of cooking gas, charcoal and firewood, despite drop in kerosene prices.

    Last month, the country’s inflation slightly went up to 7.21 percent from 7.15 percent in December 2013, attributed to increase in the cost of food items, fuel and transport.

    {captialfm}

  • EA Countries Told to fight Ivory Smuggling

    EA Countries Told to fight Ivory Smuggling

    {{As Tanzania gears up for the second phase of the anti-poaching campaign Operesheni Tokomeza Ujangili, it has been urged to create National Environment Security Task Forces (NESTs) inclusive of NGOs.}}

    Interpol makes the recommendation to all East African countries in the recently released report titled Elephant Poaching and Ivory Trafficking in East Africa: Assessment for an Effective Law Enforcement Response.

    According to the report, NESTs should rope in police, prosecutors, customs, environmental agencies, other specialised agencies and–where appropriate–non-governmental organisations and inter-governmental partners.

    The big question has been how it is that the authorities have failed to track the contraband until it makes its way to the international markets. In November 2012, Hong Kong authorities seized $1.4 million worth of smuggled ivory in a container from Tanzania. The 569 tusks were found buried under hundreds of bags of sunflower seeds.

    Blame was directed then at customs officials at the Tanzania Revenue Authority (TRA), police and inspectors from the ministry of Natural Resources and Tourism and the Tanzania Ports Authority (TPA) for being unable to tackle the rampant ivory smuggling at the port of Dar es Salaam.

    Some of the smuggled ivory is reportedly stolen from stocks held by the ministry of Natural Resources and Tourism in Dar es Salaam. Interpol also extended the olive branch by inviting investigative requests from East African countries.

    “East African elephant range countries should request Interpol’s investigative support teams to assist with evidence collection and analysis pertaining to elephant poaching and ivory seizures,” the report reads in part.

    Mr David Higgins, the head of Interpol’s Environmental Security unit that produced the report, said during the launch of the document on Tuesday in Nairobi that Interpol’s global databases and network provide a unique platform to support these activities and coordinate a multinational response from law enforcement worldwide.

    “If we are to target those individuals behind the killing of thousands of elephants every year, who are making millions at the cost of our wildlife with comparatively little risk,” he said, “we must address each and every stage of this criminal activity in a cohesive manner.”

    According to the report, 18 large-scale seizures (over 500 kilograms) accounted for 41.6 tonnes of illicit ivory in 2013. Like other reports before it, it also indicates that a significant portion of ivory reaching international markets, especially in Asia, is derived from elephant populations in Tanzania.

    The report reads in part: “The majority of large-scale ivory seizures have occurred in maritime ports.

    The ivory is hidden in shipping containers, and it is usually concealed by other lawful goods. By these methods, East African ivory originating primarily from Tanzania has been transported directly to Asian maritime transit hub.”

    According to a report released last September by the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (Unodc), 37 per cent of the illicit ivory consignments seized globally between 2009 and 2011 originated from Tanzania.

    {ivory}

  • Juba Recalls top Diplomats From Key Countries

    Juba Recalls top Diplomats From Key Countries

    {{South Sudan’s government has admitted recalling ambassadors from key countries, but denied its decision was due to their failure to convince the host countries that there was an attempt to overthrow President Salva Kiir’s administration in mid-December last year.}}

    The country’s foreign affairs minister, Barnaba Benjamin Marial told reporters that the heads of mission in Washington, Moscow, Addis Ababa and Brussels were recalled as part of a normal diplomatic reshuffle.

    “The recall of the heads of mission from these countries is the normal routine in foreign affairs. They were recalled before for a briefing and they have been called for a general transfer within the ministry,” Marial said on Saturday.

    “Some of them will go to new places. Others will come to the headquarters. It is a transfer within the ministry, which is the first transfer to occur in the ministry of foreign affairs,” he added.

    After his official visit to London in early February, the foreign minister claimed that he had convinced the international community of the government’s narrative that last year’s alleged failed coup attempt by former vice-president Riek Machar sparked off the conflict.

    Marial did not, however, mention any specific countries that seemed convinced with South Sudan government’s version of events that occurred.

    Members of the United States administration said there is not enough evidence to prove the was a coup attempt on the night of 15 December.

    The fighting between members of the presidential guard came after weeks of tension within South Sudan’s ruling party (SPLM), especially after Machar and others openly criticised President Kiir’s leadership, and further accused the latter of becoming increasingly dictatorial since South Sudan’s independence in 2011.

    Machar, who denies instigating the uprising, said he now controls the soldiers who largely defected in the capital, Juba as well as the states of Jonglei, Unity and Upper Nile. The ex-vice president now leads an armed rebellion against the government.

    Talks to end the violence, which has killed an estimated 10,000 people and displaced almost 900,000 people, have stalled over Machar’s demands that political detainees be released and that the Ugandan army withdraw and stop fighting alongside the South Sudanese army (SPLA).

    {sudantribune}

  • Tanzania Falters in Gold Trade

    Tanzania Falters in Gold Trade

    {{Earnings from gold have continued to drop, dealing Tanzania’s external trade a major blow last year after the country recorded a slump in the value of the goods and services it exported.}}

    The latest Central Bank review of the economy shows that the trade deficit widened further last year after the value of exports of goods and services declined to $8,519.1 million from $8,675.6 million in 2012.

    The Bank of Tanzania (BoT) attributes the slump in export earnings to a drop in the value of goods exported in the year, with gold playing a major role.

    Only manufactured goods performed better in this category, raking in $1,072.1 million. Whereas foreign exchange from exports dwindled by about $156.5 million, the import bill went up by 7.3 per cent to $13,602.2 million in 2013, from the previous year’s $12,678 million.

    The surge saw the trade balance–the difference between export and import proceeds–rise to $5,083 million from the 2012 deficit of $4,002.4 million.

    “The value of non-traditional exports declined by 9.2 per cent from the amount recorded in 2012 to $3,782.3 million in 2013, mainly on account of low export value of gold,” BoT notes in the January monthly economic review.

    “The value of gold exports declined after a fall in both export volume and unit price. Despite the decline, gold continued to dominate non-traditional exports, followed by manufactured goods.”

    Last year, gold exports fetched $1,732.9 million compared to $2,117.4 million and $2,224.1 million earned in 2012 and 2011 respectively. Much of the foreign exchange came from the travel trade, which brought in $1,888.4 million that made it the major source of export earnings during the year.

    The decline in gold export earnings is likely to affect the contribution of the sub-sector to the national economy, which has not been convincing so far. There is a belief in many quarters that the country benefits very little from the industry and these concerns have led to revision of the law regulating the sector.

    According to the Tanzania Chamber of Minerals and Energy, the industry now directly employs over 15,000 people, up from the 1,781 jobs it created in 1997 when large-scale mining took off. In 2012, the sector contributed 3.5 per cent to the gross domestic product (GDP).

    Between 1997 and 2012, mining companies paid a total of $1.339 billion (Sh2.17 trillion) to the government in royalties, statutory taxes and other contributions.

    NMG

  • New Mombasa Port Charges Draw Outrage From Importers

    New Mombasa Port Charges Draw Outrage From Importers

    {{Importers in Uganda are outraged following an increase in cargo handling tariffs by the Kenya Ports Authority (KPA).}}

    According to a communication from KPA-Mombasa offices, there will be a 5 per cent increase for loading and discharging of Saloon, Station Wagon and Vans (not exceeding 1.5 tonnes) effective March 15.

    This means importers will now pay $73.50 up from the current $70 for the above vehicles.

    In an interview with the Daily Monitor, Ms Jennifer Mwijukye, the managing director of Unifreight, a cargo handling and freight-forwarding company, said they were not consulted about the new changes.

    “We were not consulted as users of the port who contribute to 75% of the transit cargo in the port,” Ms Mwijukye said.

    In the new arrangement, tariffs for handling of self-propelled units at the Container Freight Station (CFS)-Shore Handling Saloon, Station Wagon, Vans and Cars (not exceeding 1.5 tonnes) have also gone up to $83.50 from $80 , thus indicating a 4.4 % increment.

    Additionally, self-propelled units (imports or exports) for the above mentioned cars will also attract a $67.50 tariff up from $65 , indicating 4 % increase.

    “The new tariffs were made in accordance to the changes in the operations of the business environment and are aimed at making the current tariff more competitive,” a KPA communication said.

    When this newspaper contacted Kampala City Traders Association spokesperson Issa Ssekitto, about the development, he expressed ignorance about the new charges.

    “It’s so disappointing that all these years as stakeholders; we are still not consulted when tariffs are being reviewed. We thought being part of the East African Community, we would have a big say in the operations of the port,” Mr Ssekitto said.

  • Post Office Returns Letter After 12 years

    Post Office Returns Letter After 12 years

    {{ A woman received an undelivered letter she posted 12 years ago, The Saturday Star reported}}.

    Deidre Allen was shocked to see a letter she posted in 2002 returned to her as undeliverable, according to the report.

    “This letter has been hanging around for the last 12 years and now it has come back to my postbox,” she told the newspaper.

    The letter was a brochure she sent from Johannesburg to KwaZulu-Natal advertising a workshop she was hosting.

    The letter raised concerns for Allen who still has not received as many as 14 Christmas cards from relatives overseas, the newspaper reported.

    She has complained to the post office, but has not received any response.

    Post office spokesperson Nobuhle Ngapha said a supervisor monitored specific delivery routes if the company received complaints about non-receipt of mail.

    “Our customer service centre keeps records of all feedback from customers and that is used to address operational issues,” she was quoted as saying.

    She said international mail could be affected by the erratic schedules of cargo ships and delayed by means out of the control of the Post Office.

    – SAPA

  • US to Withdraw Military Aid to S. Sudan

    US to Withdraw Military Aid to S. Sudan

    {{ The United States has reportedly taken a decision to withhold its military aid to war-torn South Sudan, despite officials in the new nation saying it had not been notified about the new development.}}

    The spokesperson of South Sudan’s foreign affairs ministry told Sudan Tribune on Friday that it has not received any official communication from the US or its affiliated financial institution about reports that the latter had decided to withhold military aid to the conflict-ridden East African nation.

    “There is no official communication that I know from the government of the United States notifying the government of the Republic of South Sudan about its decision to withhold any assistance,” said Mawien Makol.

    The official was reacting to reports that President Barak Obama’s administration had decided to withhold military aid to the new nation and transfer some of that money to the Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD) in support of the ceasefire monitoring efforts.

    Several officials and activists as well as experts on South Sudan and Sudan testified on Wednesday before the congress that the current developing political and security situation in the two countries require immediate attentions and actions through strong engagements.

    Ambassador Donald Booth declared in testimony to a House of Representatives panel that “business as usual” must cease in the case of strife-torn South Sudan.

    “As one sign of this”, he said, “I would note that our security assistance to South Sudan is not going forward at this time, and that some of it is being re-programmed to support the regional verification mission.”

    The top US envoy did not, however, specify the amount of US funding being transferred to the ceasefire monitoring and verification initiative being carried out by IGAD, a regional bloc that consists of Sudan, Ethiopia, Kenya, Uganda, Djibouti and Somalia as its seven founding members. Eritrea was admitted in 1993, but was suspended in 2007.

    South Sudan, which seceded from Sudan in 2011, became an IGAD member the same year it joined the United Nations and African Union bodies.

    The envoy also did not indicate how much funding for South Sudan’s army and police is being withheld by the US, though the research arm of the US Congress notes that aid to South Sudan’s security sector has totaled more than $300 million during the past 10 years.

    In his remarks on Wednesday, Ambassador Booth criticised the performance of South Sudan government, pointing out authorities in Juba “attempted to contain inter-communal violence without fully committing to the hard work of addressing its causes, which include trauma from decades of war, economic disparity, historical grievances between communities, human rights abuses, and political grievances due to real or perceived under-representation.”

    “On top of this”, Booth noted, “the government had also progressively reduced the space for political competition, within and outside the ruling party, and for independent media and civil society voices to be heard.”

    He endorsed the efforts by IIGAD, which is presently mediating the talks between the government and the rebels, who defected in mid-December, to try to resolve the conflict in the youngest nation.

    “Their premise, one with which I agree, is that the government must not be given the space to return to business as usual with a quick fix and political accommodations for the main protagonists, for the simple reason that this will not bring about a sustainable peace”.

    Meanwhile, John Prendergast, a leading US human and civil rights activist, also testified before the House Subcommittee on Africa, Global Health, Global Human Rights, and International Organizations on the developing situation Sudan and South Sudan.

    {sudantribune}