Tag: GreatLakesNews

  • DRC Peace Agreement to Be Signed on Sunday

    Rwanda is expected to participate in the signing of a framework agreement to restore peace in eastern DR Congo.

    The signing will be held on Sunday in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia , the foreign.

    The signing ceremony will be attended by the UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon and presidents and officials from DR Congo, Uganda, Burundi, Angola, Congo, South Africa and Tanzania.

    The leaders refused to sign the agreement during the African Union summit in Addis last month.

    The framework agreement will lay out a security plan that will toughen the UN peacekeeping mission to fight the negative armed forces in eastern DR Congo.

    African Union has spoken out previously that it will not allow losing the command and control of the proposed Neutral International Force (NIF) to be deployed in Congo, and being place not be placed under the UN peacekeeping mission in Congo MONUSCO.

    The Natural International Force with a proposed 4,000 troops will be deployed in eastern DRC to take on the negative elements of M23, FNL, FDLR and ADF-NALU which are a threat to stability in DR Congo, Burundi, Rwanda and Uganda.

  • Juba Denies Plans to Abandon Lamu Port Project

    South Sudan has disputed reports claiming it may abandon the plan to develop a crude oil pipeline between its oil fields and the port of Lamu in neighbouring Kenya.

    Kenya-based Standard newspaper, quoted the chairperson of New Sudan Federation (NSF), Costello Garang Ring, saying South Sudan could consider going to Djibouti or Tanga, “if the speed with which the Kenya Government is constructing Lamu port and doing the railway does not change dramatically”.

    Barnaba Marial Benjamin, South Sudan’s information minister told journalists the NSF chairperson might have been quoted “out of context”.

    “I can assure you that there is no way that the Republic of South Sudan is going to pull out of the Lamu project because it a project that has a lot of future for the three countries, including our own country,” he said.

    Marial said the project, estimated to cost between $22-23bn, is a multiple approach project, to which the three countries of Kenya, South Sudan and Ethiopia have committed themselves.

    “It is geared towards development. In this project, there is the construction of highways, tourist cities, a pipeline [South Sudan-Kenya pipeline], the port, an airfield and railway lines connecting the two countries”, the minister said.

    Marial said construction of the pipeline through the Kenyan port of Lamu will begin when feasibility studies, contracted to German company ILF, are completed by the end of the year.

    He expressed optimism that the country could export its oil via the Kenyan transport link by 2014, if construction started immediately after completion of feasibility studies on the proposed route.

    Last week, South Sudan council of ministers unanimously agreed to endorse the petroleum and mining policy framework of the oil ministry, which will guide petroleum and mining activities, as well as the operation of the ministry and partners.

    The new policy, officials say, will particularly play vital roles in laying out procedures and processes relating to granting contracts to international and national companies wishing to invest in the petroleum and mining sector.

    South Sudan shutdown oil output a year ago following a dispute over how much the new nation should pay in pipeline fees to transport crude via its northern neighbour for export from Port Sudan.

    During the African Union-backed talks in Ethiopia last month, both governments failed to reach an agreement on a number of sticking points, including the South’s alleged ongoing support for northern rebels and the withdrawal of troops from border regions – a prerequisite for resuming oil exports.

    (ST)

  • East African Breweries Boss Resigns

    East African Breweries’ (EABL) managing director Devlin Hainsworth is set to resign from the company at the end of next month, eight months after he was appointed to head the regional brewer.

    EABL said in a statement sent to the Capital Markets Authority (CMA) and the Nairobi Securities Exchange (NSE) on Friday that Mr Hainsworth will be replaced by Charles Ireland from April 1.

    Mr Ireland has been the managing director of Guiness Anchor Berhad, a joint venture between Diageo—EABL’s majority owner—and Asia Pacific Breweries, Malaysia’s third largest consumer goods business which is listed on the Malaysian Stock Exchange.

    “Mr Devlin Hainsworth will be leaving the position of group managing director of EABL effective March 31 in order to pursue other interests outside EABL and Diageo,” said EABL in the statement.

    NMG

  • Jendayi Frazer Attacks Carson For Meddling in Kenya’s Election

    The woman who held the State Department’s top Africa post prior to Mr. Johnnie Carson denounced on Wednesday his recent warning to Kenyan voters of possible “consequences” stemming from their choice of president in the March 4 election.

    “I am troubled by Johnnie Carson’s statement that is essentially meddling in Kenya’s election,” declared Jendayi Frazer, who served as the Bush administration’s assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs from 2005 to 2009.

    “It is very reckless and irresponsible, given that the election is very close, for us to try to intervene in Kenya’s election decision,” Ms Fraser added.

    “We should not be threatening Kenyans about their choice by pointing to an ICC case that is not proven.”

    “I think the ICC case against Uhuru Kenyatta is a weak one and is based on hearsay,” Ms Fraser added.

    Speaking at a Washington think tank forum on Kenya’s election, Ms Frazer questioned the ICC’s legitimacy, saying the court is “a very manipulated institution, particularly by the West”.

    Ms Frazer’s stinging criticism of Mr Carson’s “consequences” statement struck some observers as a partisan attack by a Republican Party supporter on a Democratic administration’s leading Africa diplomat.

    Ms Frazer’s remarks drew a sharp rejoinder from Karuti Kanyinga, a professor at the University of Nairobi who took part in the forum at the Brookings Institution.

    “The ICC is the best thing for Kenya,” Prof Kanyinga said. He described Kenya as “a country where senior and influential people are never held to account for anything whatsoever.”

    The ICC serves to warn those suspected of serious crimes that “no matter how far you run, no matter where you go, you will be treated like an ordinary person.”

    readmore….http://www.africareview.com/News/Bush-envoy-denounces-Carson-on-Kenya-poll/-/979180/1700380/-/oxdufk/-/index.html

  • Canon Establishes in East Africa

    Canon Middle East, a marketer of printers, cartridges and toners, has established a subsidiary in Kenya, joining a raft of multinationals setting up regional bases in Nairobi.

    The regional arm of Japanese firm Canon Inc that is banking on new office to oversee seven African countries will strengthen its position across the rapidly growing markets of eastern Africa.

    Its entry is expected to test the dominance of HP especially in the Kenyan market.

    Canon Kenya will provide marketing and channel development services in Kenya, Ethiopia, Tanzania, Uganda, Somalia, Eritrea, Rwanda and Burundi, according to Mr Anurag Agrawal, the managing director of Canon Middle East.

  • Uganda Lags in Sannitation–Report

    A Sannitation report by an international organisation, WaterAid, shows that Uganda is still lagging behind on the reduction of people without sustainable access to basic sanitation.

    Uganda, according to the report, has achieved only 34 per cent access to basic sanitation compared to the required 72 % by 2015.

    This means that more than half of the Ugandan population lack access to basic sanitation facilities.

    Rwanda, one of the five African countries studied in the report, has achieved 64% access to basic sanitation.

    However, the same report also indicates a steady progress that Uganda has achieved in access to clean and safe drinking water, which stands at 72%.

    “Only four countries in the region are on track to achieve the MDG target and, on current trends, the target will not be met until well into the next century,” notes the report.

    While Uganda is not performing well in regard to sanitation and hygiene, it has scored better than several African countries like Sierra Leone, where only 13 per cent of the population has access to adequate sanitation.

    The authors attribute the slow progress to neglect of the sanitation and hygiene sector and poor funding.

  • Juba Arrests Opposition Figures Without Charge

    South Sudan’s government has detained scores of opposition figures without issuing arrest warrants or giving them access to lawyers since unrest broke out in a northwestern town in December, Amnesty International said on Wednesday.

    South Sudan has struggled to establish the rule of law since it split from Sudan in July in 2011 following a long civil war that left the new country awash with weapons.

    Human rights groups regularly accuse its army, an assortment of poorly-trained former guerrilla fighters known as the SPLA, of abuses against civilians, which the government routinely denies.

    Ten people were killed in the town of Wau in December when security forces opened fire on a protest against the relocation of a local council headquarters.

    At least 13 others were killed during unrest that followed the shooting.

    Since the violence, the government of Bahr El Ghazal state has detained 100 people, among them opposition figures, civil society activists, journalists and security officers, Amnesty International said in a report.

    “Arrests of perceived opponents of the government continue to be carried out,” the group said.

    “While some of these arrests appear to have a legitimate basis, evidence gathered by Amnesty International shows that many of the arrests were arbitrary and contravene provisions in national and international law,” it said.

    South Sudan government officials were not immediately available for comment.

    Unverified video footage broadcast on Doha-based Al-Jazeera television showed state security personnel opening fire on unarmed protesters during the December protest.

    The failure of the authorities to properly investigate the violence has increased tensions in Wau, Amnesty said.

    Reuters

  • Kenya Chief Justice Claims State intimidation

    The Kenya Chief Justice Willy Mutunga now claims he has received threats from the dreaded Mungiki sect warning him of dire consequences if the courts issued a ruling against Jubilee presidential candidates Uhuru Kenyatta and William Ruto, in their integrity case.

    The CJ told journalists on Wednesday that he received a letter on February 18, cautioning him against issuing such a verdict that would stop the two from seeking the presidency.

    Mutunga added that the letter, dated February 13, also issued grave threats to ambassadors and judges reminding them of past Mungiki deeds.

    He noted that more than five judges had been attacked in the recent pasts with some of the attacks involving lethal weapons.

    “My office received a poison pen letter from the Mungiki Veterans Group/ Kenya Sovereignty Defence Squad and it warns against an adversarial ruling on the presidential and deputy presidential candidacy of Uhuru Kenyatta and William Ruto,” he said.

    On February 15, two days after the supposed letter was written, the High Court issued a ruling clearing Kenyatta and Ruto.

    Mutunga further accused the State of harassment recalling an instance on February 14 when an immigration official tried to bar him from travelling to Dar-es-Salaam since he did not purportedly have clearance from the Head of the Civil Service Francis Kimemia.

    He also said that judicial officers were being politically intimidated, ahead of the March 4 general election, but made it clear that he would not be cowed.

    “It requires quite some courage, ignorance or political patronage or a combination of all three for an immigration officer, on his own motion, to summon the confidence to stop a Chief Justice from travelling,” he said.

  • Cash, Sexism & Violence Keep Kenya Women out of Politics

    Violence, a deeply chauvinistic society and a lack of cash are locking women out of elected office in Kenya, east Africa’s leading economy but a laggard when it comes to female representation.

    The country’s new constitution guarantees women a third of seats in parliament, but two and a half years since its adoption, Kenya’s male-dominated assembly has still not passed the necessary legislation to put the constitutional principle into practice.

    In next month’s general election only one of eight presidential runners is female, and women held just 10 percent of seats in the last parliament, half the sub-Saharan average.

    “Society sees our place being the kitchen and the bedroom. Nothing beyond there,” parliamentary candidate Sophia Abdi Noor told Reuters. Noor is the only woman running for parliament in the remote, arid northeast.

    Hailing from Kenya’s conservative ethnic-Somali community, Noor and her family have been on the receiving end of public taunts and curses since her first foray into politics in 1997.

    “People abused my husband. They told him, ‘Now wear the skirt, let Sophia wear the trousers’,” said Noor, who in 2007 was handed a seat reserved for marginalized groups.

    The northeastern region has never elected a female lawmaker.

    Across Kenya, from the fertile slopes of the Rift Valley to the steamy Indian Ocean coastline, female political aspirants painted the same picture: politics is the preserve of men in a country that struggles to deal with women in authority.

    Many look with envy to Rwanda, where more than half of legislators are women, more than anywhere in the world.

    There women have pushed through reforms granting them equal inheritance, property and citizenship rights.

    The lack of women in Kenyan politics, critics say, means women’s and children’s rights rarely get a proper hearing in the rowdy parliamentary chamber.

    “We are a patriarchal society. Power and money are two things that are very difficult for men to let go of,” said Naisola Likimani, a former head of advocacy at the Africa Women’s Development and Communication Network.

    GUNS, THREATS AND CONDOMS

    That desire for power and money – and political office tends to bring both in Kenya – means that violent attacks, or threats of violence, against women are not uncommon.

    Last month, Millie Odhiambo was seeking her party’s nomination for the Mbita parliamentary constituency in western Kenya. Before voting even began in the party primary, she says, supporters of a rival loaded the ballot papers on to a pickup truck as three men in police uniforms entered the polling station firing guns in the air.

    Their intent, she said, was to spoil the vote.

    “I literally had to jump on the pickup to protect that ballot,” Odhiambo told Reuters. She went on to win the ticket.

    In other primaries, female candidates said they were threatened with rape and shunned by elders for violating tradition.

    One found a rival had littered the polling station with condoms with her name on them in an attempt, she said, to portray her as promiscuous in the eyes of conservative voters.

    In next month’s general election, 156 women will battle it out against men for parliamentary seats, a sharp fall on the 269 who contested the last ballot in 2007.

    This is, in part, because another 300 will focus their bids on the 47 seats reserved for women representatives of each county, a new post. This, however, will only guarantee women 16 percent of the overall seats in the chamber.

    A complete lack of political will was to blame for the last parliament’s failure to implement constitutional guarantees of affirmative action, said social policy analyst Atieno Ndomo.

    “People who are benefiting from this arrangement have no interest whatsoever to change it,” she said.

    Kenyan lawmakers are among the best paid in the world.

    THE “IRON LADY”

    One woman determined to shatter the common belief that Kenya is not ready for a female president is Martha Karua.

    Nicknamed the ‘Iron Lady’ after the steely former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, the former justice minister is the only female presidential candidate in the March 4 vote.

    She won’t win. The latest opinion polls show her with just 1-2 percent of the vote, a sign Kenyan voters are still not ready to depart from the old-boys-club style of politics that has defined Kenya’s political scene since independence.

    Karua’s gender, and the fact she is divorced, often count against her in this deeply religious society.

    “A woman is supposed to be under men,” said 23-year-old Hyphe Ouya at a rally attended by Karua. “We don’t believe a woman could be president.”

    Women politicians don’t only need to change the minds of men like Ouya, they also need cash to run their campaigns.

    One Nairobi think-tank estimates that the front-runners Prime Minister Raila Odinga and Uhuru Kenyatta will spend a combined $350 million on their campaigns, a record for Kenya .

    Personal wealth and political and business ties are key to wracking up such huge campaign funds. Karua has said she can’t match their spending power.

    But sidelining women from politics when they make up more than half of Kenya’s 40 million-strong population is not an option, says Karua.

    “If you don’t include women, then it is a sham democracy,” she told Reuters.

    “I don’t want my daughter ever to be told that Kenya is not ready for a woman president. If there is a glass ceiling, I am here to break it.”

    (TrustLaw is a global legal news service run by the Thomson Reuters Foundation and covering women’s rights and governance issues)

  • Uganda’s EALA Representation Contested

    The High Court is yet to give a ruling in preliminary objections raised by Uganda’s Attorney General and the Secretary General of the East African Community, opposing a petition in which two NRM youths are seeking to recall Uganda’s members of the EALA on ground that they were illegally elected.

    The ruling had been slated for last week, but the court deferred it to an unnamed date in future on the ground that it was not ready for delivery.

    Earlier, the youths, Jeremiah Birungi Kamurali and Robert Araali Byaruhanga Tumusiime filed a petition contending that Uganda’s members to the East African Legislative Assembly (EALA) were illegally elected and should be recalled and fresh elections should be conducted.

    However, before the petition could be heard, the Attorney General and the EALA’s Secretary General opposed it saying that they had filed it late and contrary to the Parliamentary Elections Act that stipulates 30 days within which they should have filed it.

    It had been also argued that apart from Kamurali’s affidavit supporting the petition, Tumusiime, the second petitioner, had not sworn an affidavit as required by law.

    It had been further argued that the petitioners should have petitioned against the 9 members that represent Uganda on the EALA, because the outcome would be affecting them and; therefore, they should not be condemned unheard.

    It had also been argued that the High Court had no jurisdiction to hear such matters concerning the EALA elections.

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