Tag: GreatLakesNews

  • Drone-based blood deliveries in Tanzania to be funded by UK

    {The UK government is to fund a trial of drone-based deliveries of blood and other medical supplies in Tanzania.}

    The goal is to radically reduce the amount of time it takes to send stock to health clinics in the African nation by road or other means.

    The scheme involves Zipline, a Silicon Valley start-up that began running a similar service in Rwanda in October.

    Experts praised that initiative but cautioned that “cargo drones” are still of limited use to humanitarian bodies.

    The Department for International Development (Dfid) has not said how much money will be invested in the Tanzanian effort or for how long.

    It also announced plans to fund tests of drones in Nepal to map areas of the country prone to damage from extreme weather, so help prepare for future crises.

    “This innovative, modern approach ensures we are achieving the best results for the world’s poorest people and delivering value for money for British taxpayers,” commented the International Development Secretary Priti Patel.
    {{
    Parachute deliveries}}

    Zipline’s drones – called Zips – are small fixed-wing aircraft that are fired from a catapult and follow a pre-programmed path using GPS location data.

    The advantage of the design over multi-rotor models is that the vehicles can better cope with windy conditions and stay airborne for longer. In theory, they can fly up to about 180 miles (290km) before running out of power, although Zipline tries to keep round trips to about half that distance.

    Their drawback is that they require open space to land – in Zip’s case an area about the size of two car parking slots.

    Zipline gets round this issue by having its drones descend to heights of about 5m (16.4ft) when they reach their destinations and then release their loads via paper parachutes. Afterwards, they regain altitude and return to base before coming to rest.

    The aircraft fly below 500ft (152m) to avoid the airspace used by passenger planes.
    Tanzania, Rwanda and Malawi – which uses a different type of drone for medical deliveries – all take a permissive approach to unmanned aerial vehicle [UAV] regulations, helping make them attractive places for such trials.

    Earlier in the year, Tanzania also authorised the use of drones in its Tarangire National Park as part of an effort to deter animal poachers.

    {{Saved lives}}

    Dfid estimates that flying blood and medical supplies by drone from out of Tanzania’s capital, Dodoma, could save $58,000 (£47,400) a year compared to sending them by car or motorcycle.

    But a spokeswoman suggested that the time savings were more crucial.
    “Flights are planned to start in early 2017, and when they do it is estimated that [the] UAVs could support over 50,000 births a year, cutting down the time mothers and new-borns would have to wait for life-saving medicine to 19 minutes – reduced from the 110 minutes traditional transport methods would take,” she explained.

    The Ifakara Health Institute – which specialises in treatments for malaria, HIV, tuberculosis as well as neonatal health issues – will be the local partner.

    The Humanitarian UAV Network and other non-profit bodies recently surveyed the use of drones to carry out human welfare tasks.

    The study highlighted the work Zipline was doing, noting the firm was capable of setting up a new drones launch hub in as little as 24 hours, meaning it was well suited to rapid response efforts as well as longer-term projects.

    But the study also noted that humanitarian cargos are often measured in tonnes rather than kilograms, and need to be transported across longer distances than a Zip can manage.

    “Given these current trade-offs relative to manned aviation, the specific cases in which cargo drones can currently add value are particularly narrow in the context of the universe of needs that humanitarian organisations typically face,” it said.

    And it added that more research was needed to properly evaluate whether existing schemes were as reliable as claimed.

    “Organisations considering the use of cargo drones need statistics on flights performed, hours logged, failure rates and other performance measures.”

  • Burundi:Budget inconsistent with Justice Ministry’s importance, study finds

    {The study commissioned by the Association of Burundi Catholic Lawyers (ACJB) has concluded that, based on the analysis of 2016 budget, the Ministry of Justice receives a share that does not reflect the importance of the institution.}

    “The overall assessment is that the Ministry of Justice receives an insufficient budget if one considers the needs the ministry has to satisfy”, says Michel Masabo who has carried out the analysis.

    Consequently, the access to justice for all is hampered due to the lack of qualified human resources, the decaying and insufficiency of infrastructure and equipment.

    The slowness or failure of sentences execution is the most frequent consequence. The study found out that few to no sentences have been executed in different courts of appeal in 2016. For instance, Bujumbura court of appeal, that has the highest average of sentence execution, treated a monthly average of 99.6 cases but executed only 10.7. The courts of appeal of Bururi and Ngozi treated respective monthly averages of 33.5 and 72.66 but executed none.

    Venant Ntakimazi, Director General of Justice, says financial means allocated to the ministry is not sufficient due to current national financial conditions. He says that “there are action plans that we fail to carry out because of the lack of funds”. However, he is optimistic that in the future, the government will be able to provide the ministry with the budget it deserves.

    The Minister of Justice, Aimée Laurentine Kanyana, also said that despite satisfactory achievements of the ministry she presides, “budget constraints handicapped some actions” in 2016.

    The study, that was presented this Wednesday, was carried out in partnership with Cordaid NGO. Zarir Meurat, the representative of Cordaid in Burundi says the organisation he represents collaborates with ACJB because part of its mission is to help ensure access to justice for all citizens.

  • Uganda:How Mumbere celebrated Christmas in jail

    {Earlier on Christmas eve, Mr Bwambale says the royal household made some purchases of food and drinks and took them to Mumbere in jail.}

    Unlike what he has been used to in the past, King Charles Wesley Mumbere spent Christmas in a very different way in Luzira prison. According to the Rwenzururu kingdom spokesperson, Mr Clarence Bwambale, the king usually spends Christmas at his palace with his people. But this year, the king had a different abode.

    “This was so strange for us and him as previously, the king would celebrate Christmas with his people [the royal family] at the palace the whole day,” the spokesperson says. The kingdom spokesperson further revealed that the king’s daughter, Ms Joyce Furaha, who stays in London, said it was very strange for her not to spend the day with her father on Christmas Day.

    Earlier on Christmas eve, Mr Bwambale says the royal household made some purchases of food and drinks and took them to Mumbere in jail.

    According to Mr Bwambale, the Rwenzururu queen, Agnes Ithungu Nyabaghole, visited the king on Boxing Day and found him unwell as he had cough and flu.
    “This indicates that he did not celebrate Christmas in a good mood,” Mr Bwambale said in a telephone interview yesterday.

    However, Uganda Prisons’ spokesperson, Frank Baine said that Christmas Day is a communal day at the prison where the inmates participate in various activities, including prayers and games, adding that Mumbere is quite active in those.
    “He is a social and humble person and participates in such activities,” Mr Baine said.

    Asked how king’s subjects across the Rwenzori sub-region spent Christmas Day, Mr Bwambale said they celebrated peacefully since the king had a day earlier, asked them in his Christmas message to be peaceful.

    “Rwenzori is bigger than us as individuals. Enjoy responsibly, be peaceful and encourage others to also embrace peace. I call for calm and peace,” Mumbere’s Christmas message to his subjects read in part.

    {{Mood in Kasese}}

    In Kasese town, shops remained closed as most dwellers had left for their villages for the celebrations with their families.

    The Omusinga is currently on remand at Luzira prison following his arrest on November 27 in his Buhikira Royal Palace in a joint raid by the police and the army that saw over 100 royal guards and policemen killed.

    King Mumbere, 64, faces several charges including treason, terrorism, murder, attempted murder, aggravated robbery and malicious damage to property. He is charged alongside more than 150 of his royal guards. They return to Jinja court today for mention of their respective cases.

  • Kenya:William Ruto moves to stem Kanu wave

    {Deputy President William Ruto on Wednesday hosted leaders from Baringo County with countering former ruling party Kanu’s growing influence in the region being top of the agenda.}

    Those who attended the closed door meeting at his Sugoi home in Uasin Gishu County told the Nation that the DP was unimpressed with Kanu’s resurgence in the region as the 2017 elections approach.

    Mr Ruto is said to have asked the leaders “to go out of their way” and popularise the Jubilee Party in the region considered a Kanu stronghold.

    “The DP was particularly unimpressed by Kanu’s heightened activities in the region. He urged leaders to ensure that Jubilee wins all the seats in the 2017 General Election,” said the source who sought anonymity.

    Both Kanu and Jubilee have been locked in a supremacy battle to control the vote rich North Rift region ahead of next year’s General Election.

    Kanu, led by Baringo Senator Gideon Moi, has slowly been re-inventing itself as the alternative party in the region, waiting to take advantage of any dissent or fallout following dissolution of affiliate parties to form Jubilee.

    Yesterday, the DP argued that the Jubilee government had done a lot for the county including improving infrastructure as well as provision of water and urged residents not to be swayed by the Kanu euphoria.

    “He also assured us that the party’s primaries will be transparent, free and fair and that he and President Kenyatta had no preferred candidates,” said an aspirant who attended the meeting.

    The Deputy President, at the same time, said he would tour Kerio Valley in the next two weeks to assess the security situation and ensure normalcy returns to the area.

    He said the government was working round the clock to ensure insecurity caused by cattle rustling is dealt with once and for all.

    The MPs, who attended the meeting, said residents of Baringo were firmly behind the leadership of Jubilee because of its initiatives in the county such as water dams, construction of roads, electricity to schools and homesteads and improvement of hospitals among other projects.

    “We are grateful that in barely four years in power, Jubilee has managed to initiate many development projects for the people of Baringo compared to the 50 year rule by the previous government including Kanu,” said Tiaty MP Asman Kamama.

    Baringo North MP William Cheptumo said the Kalenjin would continue to support the leadership of the DP for the sake of peace and development.

    Uasin Gishu Governor Jackson Mandago urged Rift Valley leaders to work together in ensuring the re-election of Jubilee in 2017.

    Baringo Governor Benjamin Cheboi and Mr Kamama said leaders along the Kerio Valley would work with the government to ensure peace is attained in the region.

    DP William Ruto with Baringo leaders — Governor Benjamin Cheboi (second left), MP William Cheptumo (left) and MP Asman Kamama (right) at his Sugoi home in Uasin Gishu County on December 28, 2016.
  • Soldier loses manhood after torture at barracks

    {According to his defence attorneys, Ssebyara passes urine and stool with excruciating difficulty.}

    On June 12, 2015, there was sudden pandemonium at the UPDF base in Somalia’s Lower Shabelle region. A tin containing ammunition for a 12.7mm anti-aircraft gun had vanished.

    Commanders at the base knew they would be in trouble if they failed to account for the missing 85 bullets. And worse, the Ugandan contingent deployed under the African Union Peace-keeping Mission or Amisom would generally be endangered if the ammunitions ended up in the hands of al-Shabaab fighters that they were trying to dislodge from the territory.

    Senior UPDF officers paced up and down the base and made several telephone calls. The gunners became the first suspects and were grilled, with military investigators zeroing on Cpl Majibu Ssebyara.

    The corporal had been deployed as a gunner in 2014 under UPDF’s Battle Group XIV.
    Cpl Ssebyara was arrested one chilly morning on June 12, 2015 by some accounts between 7:30-8:30am that fateful day to begin a journey of being held incommunicado that, after two-and-a-half years, has left him in perpetual pain, bereft of dignity and in a state of erectile dysfunction.

    Officially, he was indicted for failing to protect war materials contrary to section 122(1) (2) (g) of the UPDF Act, 2005 an offence which includes misuse or sale of war material and for which the only penalty under the said law is death.

    He was detained at Makindye Military Police Barracks, outside Kampala, where he remains squirming in pain after suffering injuries allegedly resulting from gross physical abuse.

    In an affidavit in support of an application at the High Court challenging his trial dated August 8, 2016, the soldier recounts how he was “undressed, insulted and tied by the hands on a steel bar, a bag of about 15 kilogrammes tied and hanged on the penis and testicles”. He was then moved to a metallic container, handcuffed for 24 hours and left for days without medical care.

    Medical records dated October 6 and November 2, 2015 from Nakasero Hospital and Bombo Military Hospital, respectively, indicate his right testicle had become “smaller than the contralateral (opposite) testis [and] was non-tender” and he has “a chronic right testicular infarction and internal echogenicity with no flow.”

    In other words, the weight tied to the genitals of the 33-year-old father of three blocked blood flow to the right testicle, causing tissue decay. Cpl Ssebyara now cannot achieve an erection.

    He passes urine and stool with excruciating difficulty, according to his defence attorneys Ivan Mugabi and Isaac Ssemakade.

    In his evidence which the court agreed to, Ssebyara narrates that: “I was tied with sisal ropes and told to stand on top of a sack of sand and ordered to put my hands above the head.” The hands were tied up on an overhead metal barrier and the sand was removed, leaving the feet hanging. The corporal said his tormentors insisted he plead guilty to end the torture, an offence for which perpetrators, whether private individuals or government employees, can be held personally liable under the Prevention and Prohibition of Torture Act, 2012.

    By the time he was released from this torture chamber, he slumped to the ground nearly unconscious and was dumped in a cell for days before his condition deteriorated.

    On September 2, 2015, he was arraigned before the General Court Martial in criminal case UPDF/GCM/15/2015 (Uganda versus RA/145680 Corporal Majibu Ssebyara) and charged with failing to protect war material.

    He denied the charge and was remanded at Makindye Military Police barracks. He filed a complaint with the UPDF Director for Special Investigations Bureau and continues to await feedback months later.

    His plight, for now, appears ignored by even the highest military echelons.

    {{Army to investigate}}

    The Defence and Military Spokesman, Lt Col Paddy Ankunda, when contacted last week said the army would investigate the alleged torture of the soldier, but “there must be a reason why the court is holding him”.

    “However, torture cannot be occasioned by the UPDF [that] I know,” he said in a short text message (SMS) reply after consultation with the General Court Martial chairman, Lt Gen Andrew Gutti.

    In their affidavit dated August 25, 2016 and September 14, 2016 in response to Ssebyara’s submission in court, army witnesses Col Frank Kyambadde, Maj Tom Bbalibya and Maj Raphael Mugisha claim that “the soldier told Maj Bbalimbya and Maj Mpaka [that] he handed the missing ammunition to a Somali citizen.”

    The unnamed resident reportedly told UPDF investigators that the detained corporal had asked him for $1,000 (shs3.8million) in exchange for the bullets, but when he said he did not have the cash; Cpl Ssebyara dug a hole in which he buried the ammunition. The officers claimed to have video evidence, but they did not tender it in court.

    In her November 22, 2016 judgement on the case, High Court Judge Patricia Basaza Wasswa declared the corporal’s trial by the military court as “illegal, null and void” and issued a permanent order staying the proceedings in criminal case number UPDF/GCM/15/2015. She also ordered that the military court, which the Supreme Court in Constitutional Appeal number 3 of 2005 (Attorney General Vs Joseph Tumushabe) ruled was subordinate to the High Court, discharge the soldier and never to use evidence obtained through torture against him.

    Accepting Ssebyara’s account of torture was valid, the judge reminded the army that on September 29, 2015, the then GCM chairman Levi Karuhanga, who died in April this year, had in a bail application ruling admitted that Cpl Ssebyara “suffered from a medical condition that needs him to access urgent medical attention”.

    The soldier’s lawyers are stuck with the High Court order which the army declined to honour as the victim’s condition continues to deteriorate.

    “His testicles are rotting away. It is a disaster and we are frustrated with the army’s conduct,” Mr Mugabi, one of his lawyers, told this newspaper last week.

    When the defence attorneys threatened to sue UPDF for contempt of court, the General Court Martial on December 12 instead charged Cpl Ssebyara afresh, this time with “offences relating to security” contrary to section 130(1)(a) of the UPDF Act, which also attracts death on conviction.

    {{The medical report}}

    Medical records dated October 6 and November 2, 2015 from Nakasero Hospital and Bombo Military Hospital, respectively, indicate that Ssebyara’s right testicle had become “smaller than the contralateral (opposite) testis [and] was non-tender” and he has “a chronic right testicular infarction and internal echogenicity with no flow.”

    Cpl Majibu Ssebyara
  • DR Congo blames shadowy rebel group for wave of massacres

    {The official explanation for a two-year wave of massacres in a restive corner of DR Congo centres on a shadowy rebel group accused of having ties to the global jihadist underground.}

    But some basic details about the alleged killers of more than 700 victims — the latest over the Christmas weekend — haven’t quite convinced observers and experts.

    The truth, they say, is more complicated and may lead all the way to the halls of power in the vast, mineral-rich and unstable central African nation.

    UN experts, referring to the claimed jihadist links in past reports, have simply stated: “There is no proof of this allegation.”

    But that has not stopped the Democratic Republic of Congo’s leadership and the UN peacekeeping mission Monusco from blaming the bloodbath around the town of Beni, in the country’s strife-torn northeast, on the Allied Democratic Forces (ADF).

    Secrecy shrouds the group, which is dominated by hardline Ugandan Muslims who were initially focused on overthrowing Uganda’s Yoweri Museveni.

    The group went on to absorb other rebel factions and started carrying out attacks in 1995. Gradually pushed westwards by the Ugandan army, the ADF relocated most of its activities to DR Congo.

    When the Beni massacres started in October 2014, with most of the victims hacked to death, the ADF was quickly branded the culprit by both Congolese authorities and Monusco.

    PROTECT CIVILIANS

    More than two years on, the government and UN have been unable to protect civilians from the attacks, and the ADF remains the only official explanation — with Kinshasa insisting on a jihadist link to the killings.

    Many ADF recruits — who were drawn this year from Tanzania, Burundi, Kenya and as far as Somalia — were not hardcore ideologues but young Muslims lured by the promise of going to study in Saudi Arabia, an intelligence agent and civil society source told AFP.

    Meanwhile, the ADF has not claimed any of the massacres, and no experts on DR Congo have found a link between the group and the global jihadist underground.

    Others have gone further, alleging government agents have a role in the killing.

    A group run by US researcher Jason Stearns published a report in March claiming several distinct groups “appear to be involved in the massacres”, including soldiers from the regular army.

    The government rejected the claims and said the ADF was “definitely” responsible. Stearns was expelled from DR Congo after the report’s release.

    In explaining the violence, some have cited struggles for control of trafficking in various industries like timber, agricultural produce or minerals in a region with extremely rich potential.

    M23 rebels leave their position in the village of Karuba, eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, on November 30, 2012. DR Congo blames shadowy rebel group for a two-year wave of massacres in a restive corner of DR Congo centres.
  • Tanzania:Prisons to make own uniforms

    {Tailoring workshops under the Tanzania Prisons Force will undergo a major revitalisation in the next financial year to enable them produce enough uniforms for warders and officers, hence geting rid of private dealers.}

    In the same vein, the department will procure clothing materials for making uniforms directly from manufacturers instead of purchasing them from the middlemen, according to the Home Affairs Permanent Secretary (PS), Major-General (Retired) Projest Rwegasira.

    The new arrangement comes in the wake of an order by President John Magufuli who wanted to see immediate halt to the sale of military uniforms by civilians.

    When he made impromptu visit to Ukonga Prison in Dar es Salaam recently, the president condemned the involvement of civilians in making and conducting trade in uniforms, directing all people dealing in military attire to stop it and immediately surrender their consignments to respective forces.

    Dr Magufuli issued the order after receiving complaints from prison wardens over the procurement of their uniforms from private dealers, contrary to rules and principles guiding defence and security forces. The president further directed relevant authorities to take to task all those involved in the shoddy deals relating to uniform supply to prison officers.

    “In the future, we want to deal directly with the manufacturers of the cloth for making uniforms I have already given a directive on this,” Maj.Gen. Rwegasira told the ‘Daily News’ during an interview at the ministry’s head office in Dar es Salaam.

    He admitted that private dealers were involved in the procurement of the uniforms because the current capacity of the industries could not fulfill the demands of the attire for prisons personnel.The prisons have two big sewing industries, one located at Ukonga in Dar es Salaam and the other at Butimba in Mwanza Region.

    There are also two smaller factories in Mbeya and Arusha. The industry in Mbeya has 200 sewing machines while Mwanza has also 200, Dar es Salaam – 500 and Arusha – 100.

    The PS said the industries were capable of producing enough uniforms, only that they lacked enough materials. “We are now going to increase equipment and manpower to these industries, including fully utilising the prisoners as workers in these factories,” he added.

  • Kenya:Senate in make-or-break debate on election

    {Kenya’s political future was last evening hanging on a thin senatorial thread of mediation as the Opposition reached out to the ruling Jubilee coalition in a last-minute bid to broker a deal on contentious amendments to election laws that will be discussed in the Senate on Wednesday.}

    Well aware that they do not have the numbers to muscle their way in the House, Opposition senators worked behind the scenes to convince their Jubilee colleagues that the most amicable way out of the deadlock would be to reject the amendments passed by the National Assembly last week.

    They also suggested the addition of new amendments to the draft law, a scenario that would force the formation of a mediation committee, which by law arises when the National Assembly passes a Bill that is changed or struck down by the Senate.

    Should the Opposition have its way and convince Jubilee senators to shelve their partisan interests on Wednesday and tinker with the amended elections law, it will then seek a stronger, equal footing at the mediation table, which will draw members from both Houses appointed by the respective Speakers. The team will have 30 days to come up with a mediated version of the Bill.

    “There is a possibility that the Bill will not receive the majority votes and will have to go to a mediation committee, which, I believe, will give us a sensible way forward,” said Mombasa Senator Hassan Omar (Wiper).

    Without mediation, the Jubilee-dominated House (25 against Cord’s 22) will most likely pass the Bill, further making the January 4 threats of protests by Cord a stark reality.

    WILFRED LESAN

    Senate Devolution Committee chairman Wilfred Lesan, who is Jubilee-aligned, did not rule out the formation of a committee akin to the 14-member joint select team co-chaired by senators James Orengo and Kiraitu Murungi which came up with the now-disputed laws.

    “The Senate is a sober House and I expect it to take a moderate view on the issue of election laws, perhaps even go for mediation,” Prof Lesan (Bomet, URP) said in a text message to the Nation.

    Prof Lesan argued that though the issue was tough, “the Senate tends to consider nationhood a prime feature of preservation”.

    On Tuesday, the Amos Wako–led Legal Affairs Committee invited the clergy as well as civil and human rights groups before it at 10am on Wednesday. That invitation was the first of a series of steps to ensure that the mediation committee is formed.

    Mr Wako’s team will receive the Bill after it is tabled in the House at 10am and any amendments they will propose, if adopted by the House, will automatically result in the formation of a mediation team.

    “We know the time is short, but we are bound by law to listen to all the stakeholders,” said Mr Wako (Busia, ODM). “We will do just that.”

    Kakamega Senator Boni Khalwale confirmed Cord’s new game plan to scuttle the “ill-advised” amendments, saying “a Bill that was born out of negotiations should only be amended through the same process”.

    “It is not even six months since we passed it and it was assented by the President. Why the hurry?” asked Senator Khalwale.

    WITH DIGNITY

    His Makueni counterpart Mutula Kilonzo Jnr sought to allay fears of hostility in the Senate, saying the debate would be conducted with dignity.

    “There will be no monkey business or histrionics witnessed in the National Assembly,” he said in a statement. “Members of the press are invited to the sessions as well.”

    Senate Majority Leader Kithure Kindiki, who will move the amendments in the House, said that though the issue is divisive, he does not expect the debate to degenerate into chaos as witnessed in the National Assembly last week. “Each side will convince the other through reason and persuasion,” Prof Kindiki (Tharaka-Nithi, TNA) said. “And the Senate will rise to the occasion. When the issue of the IEBC commissioners’ exit turned violent, it is two senators that led the country to reason.”

    Prof Kindiki was referring to the 14-member bi-partisan joint select committee co-chaired by Senators James Orengo and Kiraitu Murungi.

    The contentious amendments which will be discussed in the Senate on Wednesday allow the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC) to have an “alternative mechanism” for the identification of voters and transmission of election results should the deployed technology fail.

    Jubilee argues that this will ensure that no voter is locked out of the ballot if machines malfunction, but Cord has called for street protests on January 4, saying that the amendments to a law they spent weeks negotiating were a scheme by Jubilee “to resurrect dead voters to vote”.

    Mombasa Senator Hassan Omar at Whitesands Beach Resort and Spa in Mombasa on November 4, 2016.
  • Trump to meet with Republic of Congo president on Tuesday: Sassou spokesman

    {Republic of Congo President Denis Sassou plans to meet with U.S. President-elect Donald Trump on Tuesday to discuss the ongoing political turmoil crisis in Libya and other African issues, Sassou’s spokesman said on Monday.}

    Sassou’s spokesman Thierry Moungalla, in a post on Twitter, noted that the two men were meeting to discuss ways to the end the Libyan crisis as well other broader issues affecting the continent, according to a statement attached to the tweet. He did not give any other details about the meeting plans.

    Representatives for Trump’s team did not immediately respond to a request for comment seeking to confirm the meeting with the incoming Republican president, who takes office Jan. 20 and is spending this week at his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida.

    Libya is grappling with continuing political turmoil as rival governments split the nation’s East and West, and other armed factions also compete for power. The United Nations earlier this month also cited an ongoing human rights crisis affecting migrants there.

    Trump, a New York businessman who has never held elected office, has been holding an ongoing stream of meetings at his property in Palm Beach as well as Trump Tower in New York City as he prepares to assume the White House from Democratic U.S. President Barack Obama.

    Most of his meetings have centered on possible candidates to serve in his administration, including his Cabinet.

    In November, Trump met with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and, according to a report, the two plan to meet again Jan. 27.

    Trump has also fielded numerous calls from a number of world leaders since winning the U.S. presidential election Nov. 8 against his Democratic rival Hillary Clinton.

    Congo Republic President Denis Sassou Nguesso reviews honour guards during a welcoming ceremony outside the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China, July 5, 2016.
  • Uganda:At least 30 football players and fans drown in Uganda’s Lake Albert

    {At least 30 Ugandan members of a village football team and their fans drowned on Sunday when their boat capsized on Lake Albert during a party, police said Monday.}

    “There was a party on the boat, the passengers were dancing and others were drunk. The boat was overloaded with 45 people, all members of the football team and local fans,” police commander John Rutagira told AFP.

    “The water was calm but the problem came in when the merrymaking team and fans tilted on one side of the boat… It capsized killing about 30 people,” he added.

    Police officers working with local fishermen managed to rescue 15 of the revellers, who were heading from the village of Kaweibanda in the western Buliisa District to watch a friendly Christmas Day match in Hoima District, Rutagira said.

    The accident was the second major disaster on Uganda’s lakes in three days. On Friday, about 20 people perished in similar circumstances on Lake Victoria.

    Fatal accidents are frequent on Ugandan waters. Last November, 10 people drowned in Lake Albert on the country’s western shore.

    Survivors of a boat accident come back ashore on Lake Albert, on December 26, 2016 in Buliisa, after at least 30 Ugandan members of a village football team and their fans drowned when their boat capsized on Lake Albert during a party.