Tag: GreatLakesNews

  • South Africa: Zuma Calls for More SA, DRC Trade

    South Africa: Zuma Calls for More SA, DRC Trade

    {South Africa and the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) must explore ways to increase trade and investment between the two countries, President Jacob Zuma told the South Africa-DRC Business Forum in Kinshasa on Wednesday.}

    Zuma, who wrapped up his two-day state visit to the DRC on Wednesday, told the forum that the prevailing state of the global economy dictated that regional integration be placed at the top of Africa’s economic agenda.

    “There is no stronger case for intra-African trade than the recent global financial crises, which decreased African export revenues generated from the traditional western markets.

    “Africa has a potential market of US$2.6-trillion. The DRC and the countries surrounding it have a potential market comprising 200-million consumers. Yet only 10% of global trade takes place between African countries.”

    Zuma underscored the current view that the time was right for investors to turn to Africa as the next growth frontier.

    “African growth rates will average 6% in 2014. In comparison, growth in the developed world will average 3.6%. The DRC is estimated to grow at 8.2% in this year alone. Against this backdrop, any investor would be hard pressed to find higher rates of return elsewhere in the world.”

    South African companies are investing in the DRC in the mining, telecommunications, financial services, road infrastructure, construction and hospitality sectors, among others. Total South African investment in the DRC between 2006 and 2012 is estimated at R12.5-billion, with over 4 000 jobs created.

    South Africa and the DRC have a bi-national commission (BNC) which has so far overseen the signing of 32 bilateral agreements.

    Southafrica.info

  • Kenya: Condom shortage attributed to budget

    Kenya: Condom shortage attributed to budget

    {The government has attributed the looming shortage of condoms to lack of a budget for the widely used contraceptive.}

    Health Cabinet Secretary James Macharia while confirming that free condoms will be out of stock in two months time, said they were engaging with the relevant authorities to avert the situation.

    “There has been no budget for condoms for the last two years which has brought about this situation. We are working with Treasury and other partners to make sure the crisis in January is avoided,” said Macharia.

    He noted that there is need to put in place interventions to ensure there is adequate supply of free condoms in future. He proposed the setting up of a fund by the government.

    “We have been donor dependent for a long time and it’s time we make our own budgets,” he said.

    He was speaking Tuesday at a Nairobi Hotel during the opening ceremony of a Reproductive, Maternal, Newborn and Child Health (RMNCH) workshop.

    According to National AIDS and STI Control Program head Dr Martin Sirengo, the looming condom shortage came about when the money meant for procuring the prophylactics was diverted to the counties.

    “The national government was left with no money to assist us in procuring the goods,” said Sirengo. More than 180 million condoms are distributed to different areas of the country annually.

    Standard News

  • Tanzania threatens to pull out of EAC

    Tanzania threatens to pull out of EAC

    {Tanzania is considering pulling out of the East African Community (EAC), in the face of what political leaders in the country regard as “sustained isolation” by Kenya, Rwanda and Uganda.}

    Although there have been simmering tensions between Tanzania President Jakaya Kikwete and his Kenya, Rwanda and Uganda counterparts, on Wednesday Tanzania’s minister for EAC Affairs, Samuel Sitta, confirmed the worst fears.

    He told a charged Parliament in Dodoma that Tanzania will not wait for a “divorce certificate” from Kenya, Rwanda and Uganda, but will shoot before it is shot.

    The minister spoke on the same day President Uhuru Kenyatta, Paul Kagame of Rwanda, Uganda’s Yoweri Museveni and Salva Kiir of South Sudan signed a host of protocols and agreements in Kigali, including free movement of goods and persons, infrastructural development and transformation into a single Customs Union.

    The pacts were signed on the sidelines of the three-day “Transform Africa Summit” to which Tanzania and Burundi, both EAC member states were not invited.

    And Sitta confirmed that not a single Tanzanian minister attended the Kigali event. The only senior government official at the function was the permanent secretary in the ministry of EAC Affairs.

    Standard

  • Uganda calls for Congo ceasefire as peace talks progress

    Uganda calls for Congo ceasefire as peace talks progress

    {Uganda called on the Congolese army and M23 rebels to cease fire on Friday as peace talks progressed in Kampala to end a 20-month conflict.}

    But, while the rebels said they were ready for a peace deal, government forces vowed to pursue their military advantage and crush the rebellion in Democratic Republic of Congo’s mineral-rich east.

    Peace talks resumed in the Ugandan capital Kampala on Wednesday, 10 days after they collapsed over rebel demands for amnesty, triggering renewed hostilities. A week-long army offensive has driven the rebels back to mountain bases.

    “The chief facilitator (Uganda’s Defence Minister Chrispus Kiyonga) has requested the warring parties to stop the fight and from yesterday up until this morning there’s no fighting,” said Ugandan Lieutenant Colonel Paddy Ankunda.

    The U.S. envoy to the Great Lakes region, Russ Feingold, told Reuters on Thursday that an initial agreement could be reached as early as this weekend.

    A Reuters witness said fighting had ceased in the area near Rumangabo, about 50 km (30 miles) north of the regional capital Goma, but army vehicles and troops were present and appeared to be regrouping.

    Roger Lumbala, a former member of parliament who is a senior member of the M23 negotiating team, said the rebels were simply waiting for an invitation from mediators to sign a deal.

    “An agreement could be signed today according to the latest information we have from the facilitator. Nothing is blocking the signing,” he told Reuters.

    The Congolese army, however, said it would push ahead towards its goal of eliminating all rebel groups.

    “JOB IS TO ELIMINATE”

    “Talks have resumed at Kampala but we will continue to pursue the enemy. Our job is to eliminate all the armed groups in the region but we will start with M23,” said army spokesman Colonel Olivier Hamuli.

    M23’s military commander said the rebels were ready to fight on if necessary.

    “We are ready to fight to the end if they pursue us. Negotiations have restarted and there may be an agreement. If there is an agreement that is fine, but if they pursue us, we will fight,” M23’s General Sultani Makenga told Reuters by telephone from eastern Congo.

    M23, led by ethnic Tutsis, took up arms last year accusing Kinshasa of failing to honour a 2009 peace deal to end a previous uprising. It has become the most serious rebellion in Congo’s east since a war ended a decade ago.

    In November last year, rebels alarmed Western powers when they swept past U.N. peacekeepers to take Goma, a city of 1 million people. That led to U.N. forces being bolstered, Congo’s army overhauled and neighbouring countries pressured not to meddle in the conflict, changing the tide of the conflict.

    U.S. envoy Feingold cautioned that any peace deal would not end decades of instability unless the root causes, including ethnic tensions, are resolved. He said the army must not repeat abuses against civilians that could ignite a new conflict.

    In the border town of Bunagana, retaken by army troops on Wednesday, residents said fighting had ceased on Friday but army indiscipline was mounting.

    “They are looting, breaking down doors and stealing from homes. We are still in a situation of insecurity,” said the resident, who asked not to be identified.

    Reuters

  • Sudan: Over 99% of Abyei’s Dinka vote to join South Sudan

    Sudan: Over 99% of Abyei’s Dinka vote to join South Sudan

    {Residents of contested region Abyei chose overwhelmingly to join South Sudan in an unofficial referendum, election officials said Thursday, amid warnings the poll could inflame tensions in the volatile region.
    }

    Only one of the two ethnic groups living in the area voted in the poll, which is not recognized by either Khartoum or Juba and which the African Union has warned is a “threat to peace.”

    The fate of Abyei is one of the most important and sensitive issues left unresolved since South Sudan became an independent state in 2011, ending two decades of civil war in Sudan.

    “The referendum committee has announced the results, and the number of people who have chosen to become part of South Sudan is 99.9 percent of the vote,” Luka Biong, spokesman for the Abyei Referendum High Committee, told AFP.

    Celebrations including dancing and music broke out after the results were announced, he said.

    African Union chief Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma has said the vote was illegal and its organizers risk sparking a return to war between civil war foes in Juba and Khartoum.

    “They pose a threat to peace in the Abyei area, and have the potential to trigger an unprecedented escalation on the ground… with far-reaching consequences for the region as a whole,” she said in a statement on Monday.

    Tim Flatman, an independent observer in Abyei, said that 63,433 of 64,775 registered voters voted in the three-day poll which closed Tuesday night, quoting official results.

    Only 12 voted to be part of Sudan, a number vastly outweighed by even the 362 spoiled ballots, Flatman said, adding that initial observations suggested a “very transparent process.”

    Patrolled by some 4,000 Ethiopian-led U.N. peacekeepers, the area is home to the settled Ngok Dinka tribe, closely connected to South Sudan, as well as the semi-nomadic Arab Misseriya, who traditionally move back and forth from Sudan grazing their cattle.

    Only the Ngok Dinka voted — although organizers insist it was open to all residents — and the Misseriya have already angrily said they will not recognize the results of any unilateral poll.

    “The people are celebrating, there is dancing and music, and the nine chiefs of the Dinka Ngok are marching, they will sign a declaration of commitment to join South Sudan,” Biong added.

  • African Countries Seek One Year Suspension of ‘Uhu-Ruto’ Case

    African Countries Seek One Year Suspension of ‘Uhu-Ruto’ Case

    {A group of African countries will present the UN Security Council with a resolution that seeks a one-year suspension of International Criminal Court (ICC) charges against Kenya’s leaders.
    }

    The decision was announced by a delegation of African foreign ministers from Kenya, Ethiopia, Mauritania, Senegal, Namibia and Uganda on Thursday after meeting with Security Council envoys to push for the deferral of charges against Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta and Vice President William Ruto.

    The two are accused in the case of political violence after a presidential vote in 2007, where more than one thousand people died. However, Kenyatta and Ruto deny the charges.

    The African delegation, led by Ethiopia’s Foreign Minister Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, urged the Council to employ its powers to defer the cases for one year.

    Ghebreyesus said the trials could lead to the destabilization of Kenya, highlighting the volatile situation in Somalia, the September attack by Somali assailants on a shopping mall in the Kenyan capital, Nairobi, and tensions between Sudan and South Sudan.

    “We are asking for deferral because this is a serious threat to international peace and security in addition to our region, and we should prevent any havoc from happening in Kenya,” the Ethiopian foreign minister stated. “We don’t need another destabilized country in that part of the world.”
    Ghebreyesus also said African members of the Security Council, which is led by Rwanda, would put forward the resolution “very soon.”

    The plea comes as the ICC on Thursday postponed Kenyatta’s trial by three months from November 12 to February 5, 2014. Ghebreyesus said the court delay was not enough.

    Judges wrote in their decision to give a third successive delay to Kenyatta’s trial, “The Chamber deeply regrets that repeated adjournments of the trial have been necessary because one or both parties have required more time to prepare.”

    The Security Council is capable of deferring the ICC proceedings for a year under Article 16 of the Rome Statute, which created The Hague-based court. The Council requires adopting a resolution to take the measure.

    However, the Security Council is spilt over the request and gave no firm response to the African delegation. Two previous requests by Kenya for a deferral also did not receive an answer.

    Red Pepper

  • Uganda protests Congo aggression

    Uganda protests Congo aggression

    {Government has protested the bombing of Ugandan territory by the DR Congo army helicopter on Wednesday, in pursuit of M23 rebels}.

    In a diplomatic protest note presented to the DRC Embassy and the United Nations, by Foreign Affairs Minister Sam Kutesa, Uganda protested the violation of its territorial integrity and sovereignty.

    The same helicopter fired shots from a machine gun injuring four Ugandans of Maziba village in Kisoro . Admitted at Mutolere hospital with severe injuries, the victims include a driver with the office of the prime minister.

    During the separate meetings at ministry headquarters, Kutesa said that Uganda, will appreciate a formal explanation from the DRC Government and the United Nations on the circumstances surrounding the bombing of her territory. Mr. Jean Pierre Masala, Charge d’Affaires represented DRC Embassy while Ms. Birgit Gerstenberg, Country Representative of the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights led the UN team.

    {{PROTEST NOTE IN FULL}}

    The Government of the Republic of Uganda expresses deep concern over the unprovoked violation of its territorial integrity and sovereignty by the combined forces of the Armed Forces of the Democratic Republic of Congo and the United Nations.

    A FARDC Puma military helicopter flying along the border fired one bomb at Maziba Trading Centre in Bunagana. The same helicopter fired shots from a machine gun which in total injured four Ugandans, on 30th October, 2013 at about 1630 hrs.

    Uganda protests in the strongest terms possible the violation of its territorial integrity and sovereignty, as referenced above.

    In this regard, the Government of the Republic of Uganda will appreciate a formal explanation from the DRC Government and the United Nations on the circumstances surrounding the bombing of her territory.

    The Government of the Republic of Uganda has a duty and responsibility to protect its territory and her citizens, and therefore seeks assurances that such violations will not occur again.

    New Vision

  • Congo: M23 can only be eliminated through negotiated settlement – says US

    Congo: M23 can only be eliminated through negotiated settlement – says US

    {The US special envoy to the Great Lakes Region has said that Kampala talks should be followed to the end. He told this to the French International Broadcaster RFI and below are excerpts of the interview.}

    Q: {{War has resumed in the East of the Democratic republic of Congo since Friday and the Congolese Armed Forces (FARDC) are having the upper-hand. To resolve the problem of M23 rebels is the military force the best solution?}}

    {{Russell Feingold:}} No. That’s not my reading of things (of the situation). The military solution doesn’t respond to problems caused by the M23 and the forty or forty-five other groups in the region. What it requires us, is a negotiated peace accord with the M23 like the ongoing process, in the framework of the Kampala negotiations. It’s important that these talks reach their objectives soon because that would put an end to the fighting, but it’s also important to achieve that without giving amnesty to those who have committed serious crimes. So, as far as I’m concerned, an excessive military effort risks jeopardizing the Kampala talks and the possibility of seeing the M23 surrendering. It also risks jeopardizing the initiatives for peace that are backed by the international community and the African Union. So, yes, we have seen that the Congolese military has had several victories lately, but we think that at this time, restraint will be the best option.

    Q: {{A few days ago, you met with President Kabila in Kinshasa. Aren’t you afraid that he is getting carried away by his victories and trying to solve the problem with a major military offensive?}}

    {{Russell Feingold}}: I met him before the recent fightings, and he didn’t deny that he would decide on the necessity of a military initiative, but he didn’t give me the impression of a man who was motivated by a military solution. In Kampala, he gave a go-ahead to the negotiators to reach an accord. I managed to see the Congolese negotiators working hard during the five days I was there, and I have the impression that the Congolese government wishes that the process bears fruit, because the military option is not the option he prefers. So we encourage the DRC to show restraint as much as possible.

    Q: {{You also met with President Kagame in Kigali. If the M23 is suffering defeat after defeat, aren’t you afraid that the Rwandan Army can intervene directly on the (battle) field on the side of the M23?}}
    {{
    Russell Feingold}}: It would be an unfortunate development. The Rwandan government and President Kagame say that the M23 is not their movement. We have told them about our worry. We have told them that we think the M23 gets supports. They say they are in favor of the end (destruction) of the M23, that’s exactly what President Kagame has told our group of special envoys, and he has told me that personally. Because it’s what the framework accord envisages, and Rwanda has signed that framework accord. In fact, when the five special envoys met with Paul Kagame some days ago, he made a strong statement in which he requested that the accord be finalized that same evening. That’s not what happened, but there is no doubt that the accord requires the end to M23, and not an implication (involvement) in another war that aims at supporting the M23. And of course, we don’t encourage the latter option which, in addition, would be in contradiction with the engagements of the Rwandan government.

    Q: {{For a year now, you have been imposing sanctions to Rwanda over its support to the rebels of the M23. Have the sanctions had an effect on the ground? Has Rwanda distanced itself from the M23?}}
    {{
    Russell Feingold:}} First of all, to the best of my knowledge, the sanctions target the M23, even if American legislators have recently decided on sanctions to punish those who encourage the recruitment of child soldiers by the M23. It’s a serious issue and as a result, we have decided to take back part of our military assistance because of evidences that we have. I don’t know what has been the impact of these sanctions. But I know that the United States have no other choice but to mean that this kind of practice has indeed happened. I know that the government wholeheartedly seeks to avoid the recruitment of child soldiers, we feel enough at ease to remind that these practices cannot be tolerated, even (when carried out) in an indirect way. With Rwanda, our objective is to have a positive and continuous relation. It’s a friend country to the United States; we acknowledge the progress the country has made following the tragedy it went through. Our concerns regarding the support vis-à-vis the M23 are harming an otherwise excellent relation. So we would like so much to work with Rwanda to allow the Kampala talks to bear fruit, in order to see the M23 demolished, and in order to have a relation in which we wouldn’t need to speak of sanctions or things of the kind.

    Q:{{ President Kagame affirms that the war will not end as long as the Rwandan Hutu rebels, the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR) continue to cause havoc in the region with the help of FARDC [the Congolese Armed Forces]. Also Tanzanian President Jakaya Kikwete suggests a big round-table with everybody, including the FDLR. But Rwanda doesn’t absolutely want that. They say they cannot discuss with forces of the evil. What do you think about that?}}

    {{Russell Feingold}}: I understand why President Kagame is reluctant to engage in this kind of negotiations, and I don’t believe that talks between a sovereign nation and an illegal armed group − as if they were two equal partners – would be the best way to solve this kind of problem. The states-nations involved must be those that take part in negotiations, they must be at the same table; that is, Congo, Rwanda and other countries that are affected. And in the course of this process, then yes, the issue of the FDLR and the issues that carry on about the M23 must be talked about, but that doesn’t mean that these groups must have to sit at the table. They are illegal armed groups. Each of these nations has signed a framework accord which stipulates that these groups must not be tolerated, so I think there is a better approach other than the one which consists of organizing a series of negotiations between a sovereign nation and a rebel group which is considered hostile.

    Q: {{At the discussions in Kampala, the Congolese government threatens to prosecute the rebel chiefs. But when one negotiates with people saying, “As soon as you have signed an accord, I will put you into prison”, isn’t that a way of jeopardizing these negotiations?
    }}

    {{Russell Feingold}}: Congo has the right to try the authors of serious crimes, and those who have ordered them. One cannot expect that Congo renounces this right just because it has accepted to enter the negotiations, it’s not appropriate. There is a difference from an amnesty granted to people who have mounted a rebellion – the Congolese government is compliant with that, it has studied the issue in a reasonable way. But Congo, the international community, and quite recently the United States cannot support an accord that anticipates an amnesty for the authors of serious crimes. This is a way of avoiding the errors of the past, and it’s what the Congolese say in Kinshasa and in the rest of the country. Granting amnesty in a repetitive way to the same people who committed serious crimes has no sense! We are required to take a bend and reach up to a reasonable peace accord, which guarantees security for the members of the M23 who (will) have been demobilized and disarmed, but which [the peace accord] doesn’t anticipate an amnesty for the authors of serious crimes.

    Q:{{ In Congo and Rwanda, one of the problems is the absence of true democracy and the respect of human rights. What do you think of the detention of Victoire Ingabire in a Kigali-based prison and the one [detention] of Diomi Ndongala in a prison in Kinshasa?}}

    {{Russell Feingold}}: I believe that the democratic mechanisms that compel/require (people) to be held accountable reinforce these countries internally and also allow these countries to have the best relations with their neighbours, because the populations can express their desire of peace. One of the most important aspects of my role and the one of Mary Robinson and other special envoys is to encourage the process of reform in Congo. We encourage, with pressure, the organisation of local and provincial elections in the next two years, we wish that the agency that is in charge of these elections, be given transparent financial support, we are looking forward to seeing a more credible presidential election organized in DRC in 2016, contrary to what we saw in 2011, whereas the 2006 election was relatively well-organized. And in the same way, in Rwanda, other democratic practices, that give more room to the expression of the opposition and which require the government to be held accountable, must also be encouraged.

    RFI: {{Have you raised the issue of Victoire Ingabire (while) with President Kagame and the one of Diomi Ndongala (while) with President Kabila?}}

    {{Russell Feingold}}: Personally, no. Most of these topics are talked about in a bilateral way by our ambassadors. My role is to deal with issues that relate to the Great Lakes, so in these two countries it’s our two ambassadors who deal with this sort of things.

  • Saving sight in South Sudan

    Saving sight in South Sudan

    he problem started in Alison Samuel Morris’ right eye. “Small dots” started blocking his field of vision. The size of the dots changed but they never really went away. He does not remember exactly how old he was when the dots appeared, although he knows he was in primary school and had to inch closer and closer to the blackboard to make out what the teacher had written.

    Eventually Morris’ family took him to see a doctor, where he received an uncertain diagnosis and a drug, the name of which he does not remember. His vision temporarily improved, but then the dots returned even worse than before.

    His father was in the army and the family moved around what was then still southern Sudan. Morris went to three different doctors in three different town. But, he says, “every time my vision was decreasing, decreasing”.

    In March last year, with his vision almost completely gone, he saw a doctor in the Sudanese capital of Khartoum, where he was living at the time. He finally got the correct diagnosis: onchocerciasis, or river blindness.

    He also received the devastating news that the disease had advanced so far that his vision could not be saved. He remembers the words the doctor told him: “This thing cannot be treated.”

    The parasitic disease is caused by the filarial worm, which is transmitted from person to person through the bites of infected blackflies. The adult worms can produce thousands of embryos, or microfilariae, which travel throughout the body, nesting in the skin, eyes and other organs.

    When left untreated, river blindness causes persistent, itchy rashes, skin disfigurement and, as in Morris’ case, permanent blindness.

    There is no vaccine, but the disease can be treated with an annual doses of ivermectin. The drug kills off the microfilariae and can save the sight of some. But, like thousands of people across South Sudan, Morris did not know this.

    “I knew before about OV,” he says, using the shorthand name for the disease widely used in government awareness campaigns here. “I know your body can get a rash. But I did not know this thing can affect your eyes.”

    Health officials say they have the resources to eliminate the disease. But first they must make sure people know about it.

    {{A neglected disease}}

    The World Health Organization (WHO) groups onchocerciasis among the world’s 17 neglected tropical diseases. The international health body estimates that nearly 18 million people worldwide are infected, although 99 percent of them are in Africa. It is the second-leading infectious cause of blindness in the world, behind trachoma.

    “One of the few countries where the oncho is still endemic is South Sudan,” says Dr Makur Matur Kariom, the undersecretary at the ministry of health. “I guess we have the heaviest load of all the cases across the world.” It is impossible to determine just how many river blindness cases there are in South Sudan. The country’s patchy healthcare system means that many patients fall through the cracks. But the ministry of health estimates that more than 4.1 million people – nearly half of the population – are at risk of contracting the disease. Communities clumped around fast-moving rivers, where the blackflies breed, are in particular danger.

    An assessment of neglected tropical diseases in South Sudan by the UK’s Department for International Development shows that onchocerciasis prevalence is high in five of the country’s 10 states – especially in the western half of the country.

    “But of late, there are cases reported in other places. Particularly in the southern part of the country, bordering Uganda,” Kariom explains.

    The government recently renewed its commitment to eliminate the disease by 2015, though Kariom admits meeting that goal is “unlikely”. In a country with some of the world’s worst health indicators, river blindness must compete with maternal health, malaria and other neglected tropical diseases for attention.

    “Almost everything for us is a priority,” Kariom says, while acknowledging that river blindness receives some special attention. “It takes a higher position in our priorities, because the morbidity they cause, it changes one’s life forever. Like blindness. We have to prevent blindness. One way of doing it is eradicating one cause.”

    Distributing ivermectin to everyone living in endemic areas once every six months for at least a decade could achieve this. Regular treatment reduces the amount of microfilariae in a community, which in turn reduces the reservoir of the disease to be transmitted by the blackflies.

    Earlier this year Colombia became the first country in the world to eliminate river blindness through a combination of regular treatment and widespread education about the disease.

    Through the support of the WHO’s African Programme for Onchocerciasis Control (APOC) and non-governmental organisations, Kariom says South Sudan is ready to take on the first part of that challenge. He insists the country has the capacity to deliver the drugs for free to all who need them.

    The challenge comes, he says, in explaining to people in endemic areas why they need to be taking the drugs and regularly reaching all of the people who need treatment.Lack of awareness

    Baranda March says the main problem is that people do not know they should be asking for the treatment.Colourful posters explaining how river blindness is transmitted and describing the disease’s telltale symptoms surround March’s desk at the Buluk Eye Clinic in Juba.

    March has been an ophthalmic clinical officer for 25 years. He sees between 40 and 50 patients a day at the clinic, which is one of only four government-funded centres specialising in eye care in the entire country. He estimates that a quarter of his patients have onchocerciasis. The majority seek treatment only after their vision has started to deteriorate.

    Even after health officials engage in outreach, explain the disease and start treatment, they have to figure out how to continue reaching people regularly with the drugs. Because many communities are highly mobile, they are difficult to track year after year.

    {{Changing attitudes}}

    Levi Sunday Clement still thinks elimination is possible in South Sudan. He says the key is convincing people living in endemic areas to take more responsibility for requesting and sticking to treatment regimens. Clement is the chairman of Equatoria States Union of the Visually Impaired (ESUVI). He started to lose his sight to river blindness in 1988.Being blind is a challenge anywhere, he says, but particularly in South Sudan where it is nearly impossible to continue in school or to find a job. Clement was able to learn braille at a Juba school that specialises in teaching the visually impaired and now has a job there teaching English and social studies.

    His main passion is trying to prevent other people from losing their sight. Several times a year volunteers from ESUVI travel to the communities where river blindness is endemic to talk to people about the disease. They encourage them to stick to the regular doses of ivermectin and to seek out health workers if they are not visiting regularly enough.

    He believes that once communities actually see people who have been affected by river blindness, it changes their attitudes.

    “Some of these people are not taking this as a serious disease,” Clement says. “If they are made more aware, they will realise how serious it is.”

    Aljazeera

  • Congo army enters last major rebel stronghold

    Congo army enters last major rebel stronghold

    { {{Offensive of DRC’s UN-backed military sends thousands fleeing into neighbouring Uganda.}} }

    Congolese government troops have entered the eastern border town of Bunagana as M23 rebels abandoned what was the last significant town they were holding.

    The town was first seized by the rebels last year and its loss is the latest success in an offensive by Democratic Republic of Congo’s UN-backed army, which is seeking to crush a 20-month rebellion.

    Al Jazeera’s Malcolm Webb, reporting from Bunagana, said the town was deserted when government forces swept in because civilians and rebels had fled fearing the advance.

    “The civilians came running back when they saw the army come in,” said Webb, who was travelling with government forces. “Now, it’s a very jubilant mood. People were cheering and hugging the soldiers.”

    Celebrating soldiers shouted and high-fived for the cameras, giving martial arts demonstrations and performing dramatic dance moves in the centre of the town, surrounded by dozens of laughing locals.

    But the heavy fighting that erupted as they closed in on some of the last pockets of territory held by the rebels has forced more than 10,000 Congolese to flee into Uganda, officials and humanitarian workers have said.

    Lucy Beck, a spokeswoman for the UN refugee agency in Uganda, said the Congolese crossing the border were now “too many to count”. The number of Congolese seeking refuge in Uganda rose from 5,000 to more than 10,000 within hours on Wednesday, she said.

    {{Kampala talks}}

    Among those crossing the border on Wednesday was Bertrand Bisimwa, the civilian head of the M23 movement, who was reported to be on his way to the Ugandan capital, Kampala, at the request of a mediator trying to bring an end to the 18-month rebellion, according to Uganda’s top military spokesman.

    Bisimwa does not face arrest in Uganda, which has been mediating failed peace talks between the Congolese government troops and the M23 since December, said Uganda Lt Colonel Paddy Ankunda.

    The talks stalled again earlier this month and, within days, clashes erupted between Congolese forces and the rebels.

    M23 briefly overtook Goma – a city of 1 million people – last November but has been substantially weakened in the past year by internal divisions and waning Rwandan support, according to a United Nations group of experts.

    Aljazeera