Senin, 31 Maret 2014

South Africa president faces corruption allegations

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JOHANNESBURG (AP) - A scandal surrounding more than $20 million in state spending on the South African president's private home has ignited a debate about moral leadership and alleged corruption ahead of May elections, even prompting satirical songs based on smash hits such as Gangnam Style.


The uproar comes at a pivotal time for President Jacob Zuma and his ruling African National Congress party, the former anti-apartheid movement that has dominated South African politics since the end of white racist rule two decades ago. Opposition parties hope to make inroads against the electoral front runner by driving a wedge between ANC supporters and the president, whose tenure has been hit by allegations of state graft.


President Jacob Zuma said government security officials controlled the project at his home and that efforts by the political opposition to bring criminal charges against him for alleged misuse of state money will fail, South Africa media reported Monday.


"There is no case," The New Age newspaper quoted Zuma as saying at a campaign stop near opposition-held Cape Town. "They can look for me even under the trees. They are never going to find me because I never did anything wrong."


On March 19, South Africa's state watchdog agency released a report concluding that Zuma inappropriately benefited from state funding and should pay back some money for the alleged security upgrades at the president's rural Nkandla residence. Some construction had nothing to do with security, including an amphitheater, a visitors center, a chicken run and an area for cattle, according to the report.


Many South Africans are incensed by the building of a swimming pool at Nkandla that was described by project officials as a "fire pool," or a reservoir to be used to douse any blaze. They are delighted, in turn, by a YouTube parody of the catchy Gangnam Style song by South Korea's Psy.


Nkandla Style doesn't have a trademark dance, just a revolving view of a pile of coins and cartoons of a pulsating transistor radio.


The lyrics include, "If you're number one, you get to drive the gravy train," and "Yes, I'm swimming in your money but I don't know, I don't know, skinny dipping with all my honeys, cool in the pool, my fire pool."


Another spoof came from South African DJ Gareth Cliff, who riffs off American rapper Jay Z's Empire State of Mind with a chorus that goes, "Secret jungle where dreams are made of/There's nothing you can't do/Now you're in Nkandla."


The scandal follows the suspension last year of some security officials after a chartered plane carrying 200 guests from India to a lavish family wedding was allowed to land at a South African air force base. Critics said it was an example of inappropriate links between big business and top government ranks.


The executive committee of the ruling party, which includes Zuma, said Monday that it was committed to accountability and it had noted the watchdog report on the president's home. There are "processes that need to be given a chance," including a report from Zuma as well as a separate state probe, it said.


Some prominent figures in the African National Congress, however, have lamented the Nkandla spending in a country with a deep divide between rich and poor. Last week, Business Day newspaper published a column by Pallo Jordan, a former cabinet minister who criticized ministers in charge of the project and said Zuma bore "moral responsibility."


Jordan wrote: "Even though it has many commendable achievements in health care, education and social security, the record of his administration is littered with scandal."


Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


Read the original story: South Africa president faces corruption allegations






Ebola outbreak in Guinea 'unprec...

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Addis Ababa, 31 March 2014 (WIC) - The Ebola outbreak that has killed 78 people in Guinea is "unprecedented", a medical charity has said.

An official with Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) said the spread of the disease across the country made it very difficult to control.

The West African state is facing a battle to contain the outbreak after cases were reported in areas that are hundreds of kilometres apart.

Ebola is spread by close contact and kills between 25% and 90% of victims.

"We are facing an epidemic of a magnitude never before seen in terms of the distribution of cases," Mariano Lugli, a co-ordinator in Guinea for the aid group said.

"This geographical spread is worrisome because it will greatly complicate the tasks of the organisations working to control the epidemic," Mr Lugli added.

The outbreak of Ebola had centred around Guinea's remote south-eastern region of Nzerekore but it took the authorities six weeks to identify the disease.

It has now spread to neighbouring Liberia, as well as Guinea's capital, Conakry, which has a population of two million people.

Senegalese singer Youssou Ndour cancelled a concert in Conakry on Saturday because of the outbreak.

Although he had already travelled to the city, he told the BBC it would not be a good idea to bring hundreds or thousands of people together in an enclosed area.

Figures released overnight by Guinea's health ministry showed that there had been 78 deaths from 122 cases of suspected Ebola since January, up from 70.

Of these, there were 22 laboratory confirmed cases of Ebola, the ministry said.

Liberia has recorded a total of seven suspected and confirmed cases, including four deaths, the World Health Organization (WHO) said.

Liberia's Health Minister Walter Gwenigale on Monday warned people to stop having sex because the virus was spread via bodily fluids.

This was in addition to existing advice to stop shaking hands and kissing.

The BBC's Jonathan Paye-Layleh in Monrovia, the capital of Liberia, says residents are increasingly concerned and many supermarket workers are wearing gloves as a precaution.

The first two Liberians confirmed as dying from Ebola were sisters, one of whom had recently returned from Guinea.

Sierra Leone has also reported five suspected cases, none of which have been confirmed yet, while Senegal, another neighbour of Guinea's, has closed its land border. (BBC)






Over one million displaced by South Sudan conflict: UN - Monday, 31 March 2014 19:27

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Addis Ababa, 31 March 2014 (WIC) ¬- More than one million people have been forced from their homes by the ongoing conflict in South Sudan, the UN says.


Of these, 803,200 have been displaced within the country, and another 254,000 have fled to neighbouring countries, according to the latest UN report.


It warns that the situation is likely to get worse as the violence continues.


Fighting erupted between the forces of President Salva Kiir and troops loyal to his former deputy, Riek Machar, in December.


The two sides signed a ceasefire agreement in January, but sporadic fighting has continued.

Food security


In its report, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said the conflict had caused "a serious deterioration in the food security situation" leaving around 3.7 million people at high risk.


"Fighting between government and opposition forces has continued, especially in Jonglei, Unity and Upper Nile state, where towns and rural areas have been ravaged by the violence," it added.


The UN estimates that 4.9 million are in need of humanitarian assistance, but it warned that "the remote and dispersed placement sites make it difficult to reach many of South Sudan's conflict-affected people".


In its report, the UN says it has received only a quarter of the money it needs to respond to the growing crisis.


The violence erupted on 15 December between pro-government forces loyal to President Salva Kiir and soldiers backing Riek Machar, his former vice-president.


President Kiir is a member of South Sudan's largest ethnic group, the Dinka, while Mr Machar is from the Nuer community - the country's second largest.


The conflict has seen reports of mass killings along ethnic lines even though both men have prominent supporters in their rival's community. Thousands are feared to have died since the conflict began.


Four top South Sudanese politicians have since gone on trial accused of plotting a coup against the government and inciting an insurgency in South Sudan.


South Sudan seceded from Sudan in 2011 after a long and bloody conflict, to become the world's newest state. (BBC)






Nairobi blast kills at least five: officials

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NAIROBI (AFP) - A blast in Eastleigh, the main Somali district of the Kenyan capital Nairobi, killed at least five people Monday, an official at the national disaster operations centre said.


"Police are securing the area for emergency response services," the official said. Eastleigh has in recent years been the scene of several explosions usually attributed by the police to Islamist extremists.



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Guinea reports Ebola death toll rises to 78

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Click photo to enlarge



CONAKRY, Guinea (AP) — Health authorities in Guinea are facing an "unprecedented epidemic" of Ebola, an international aid group warned Monday as the death toll from the disease that causes severe bleeding reached 78.

The Ebola outbreak is the first of its kind in West Africa in two decades. Authorities in neighboring Senegal have closed the land border with Guinea. Liberia, another neighboring country, has confirmed two cases, one of them fatal.


Senegalese music superstar Youssou Ndour cancelled a weekend concert in Conakry, Guinea's capital, because he feared the disease could spread in a large crowd gathered to hear him. Residents have steered clear of the hospital in the city of 2 million where, according to authorities, relatives of one victim are being held in isolation.


The emergence of Ebola in Guinea poses challenges never seen in previous outbreaks that involved "more remote locations as opposed to urban areas," said Doctors Without Borders. Ebola has struck down people in Conakry as well as in Guinea's rural south.


"The vast geographic spread of the Guinea outbreak is worrisome because it will greatly complicate the tasks of the organizations working to control the epidemic," said Mariano Lugli, the group's coordinator in Conakry.


The Ebola virus was first discovered in Congo — then known as Zaire — in 1976. There is no vaccine or specific treatment for it. The Zaire strain detected in Guinea can kill up to 90 percent of its victims who suffer extensive internal and external bleeding.


Officials have not conclusively ruled how the virus showed up in Guinea, a West African nation far from Congo's borders. However, bats that carry the virus are eaten as a local delicacy in Guinea.


The virus can be transmitted from human to human through direct contact with the blood or secretions of an infected person, or objects that have been contaminated with infected secretions. Bereaved relatives can also contract the virus when coming into contact with the victims' bodies at communal funerals, health officials say.


———


Larson reported from Dakar, Senegal.






The Africa Group

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Addis Ababa, 31 March 2014 (WIC) - The Africa Group (TAG), the US-based boutique advisor and venture capital investor, today announces a 25% stake in Telemed Medical Services (Telemed), an Ethiopian engineering consultancy specializing in health system design and implementation within the Ethiopian healthcare sector.


Telemed’s work is geared to optimize and reinforce limited health resources in Ethiopia, a country where the doctor-to-patient ratio is ~1:30,000 and 80% of the population lives over 5 kilometers from the nearest health center.


Founded in 2012, Telemed signed an exclusive agreement and released its joint venture flagship product, Hello Doctor, with BelCash Technology Solutions PLC, a leading technology platform provider in Ethiopia, and EthioTelecom. Hello Doctor is the first and only facility in Ethiopia where patients can call a short code number to access professional health services that include phone consultations, ambulance dispatch and homecare service.


The Company follows a similar model to various developed-market ventures, including Doctor on Demand, a leading California-based telemedicine company launched around the same time.


A tranche of growth equity provided by TAG and a grant from a USAID and DFID-backed development fund will be used to increase service capacity across Ethiopia, build a remote patient monitoring system, and facilitate a major marketing campaign. In addition, TAG will provide technical assistance to buttress key areas including governance and compliance.


Commenting on the announcement, Dr. Yohans Wodaje, Founder of Telemed stated, “Telemed provides a critical service to the Ethiopian public and it is important to make all necessary investments to ensure the scale-up of this transformative endeavor. Venture capital is a crucial source of financing for start-up business like ours, having the potential of catapulting them to reach greater markets; our partnership with TAG is the perfect match, enabling us access to the appropriate amount of capital with the right kind of technical support.”


Commenting further, Elias Schulze, Managing Partner of The Africa Group noted, “The Africa Group is excited and honored to partner with Dr. Yohans on this brilliant model of private-sector led healthcare delivery. We view this engagement as just the beginning of our journey together and look forward to transforming and deepening our ability to touch greater swaths of the public both in Ethiopia and beyond. The team, led by Special Operations Associate, Tim Burkly, worked tirelessly with Dr. Yohans’ team to complete this unique transaction and we are positioned well to scale together.”


About The Africa Group LLC The Africa Group (TAG) is a boutique advisory and venture capital firm focused on economic growth and investment across Africa. The firm places rapid mobilization, fact-based rigor, and proprietary intelligence as central operating tenets. TAG is defined by its people and partners, bringing together a customized team to meet the needs of each engagement. The Africa Group was founded in 2009 and has representative presence in Washington, Dakar, and Addis Ababa.


About Telemed The mission of Telemed is to allow clients who seek health care services in Ethiopia to receive reliable, affordable and immediate high quality healthcare by optimizing existing healthcare infrastructure with ICT. Hello Doctor, the first and only privately owned m-enabled health care provision platform, is an initiative of Telemed Medical Services PLC. Telemed is a systems and resource engineering consultancy that builds critical architecture around m-health service platforms. (The Africa Group LLC)






South Africa president faces corruption allegations

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Timbuktu hosts reconciliation meetings for Mali

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FILE - In this Tuesday, July 23, 2013, file photo, United Nations peacekeepers from Burkina Faso stand guard during a patrol through a neighborhood on the outskirts of Timbuktu, Mali. Hundreds of Malians are gathering in the northern desert town of Timbuktu, from Monday, March 31, 2014, this week in an attempt to reconcile wounds in this country, which was divided in two for nearly a year by Islamic extremists who amputated the hands of suspected thieves and whipped women for going out in public without veils.(AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell, File)



TIMBUKTU, Mali (AP) — Hundreds of Malians are gathering in the northern desert town of Timbuktu this week in an attempt to reconcile wounds in this country, which was divided in two for nearly a year by Islamic extremists who amputated the hands of suspected thieves and whipped women for going out in public without veils.


After the militants were chased from the cities by French troops, Malian soldiers killed civilians suspected of having links to the jihadists on the mere basis of their ethnicity, prompting a mass exodus of Arab and Tuareg residents who fled for their lives. More than a year later, some 200,000 have yet to return from refugee camps in neighboring Mauritania, Niger and Burkina Faso.


The talks in Timbuktu are being held to try to get all Malians to reconcile.


"There will be representatives from all the communities in the region, and we will be highlighting the reasons for the crisis and what can be done to advance reconciliation and the return to peace to Mali," said Oumou Sall Seck, the mayor of Goundam, who is attending this week's talks. "But it's a long process of reconciliation that starts today."


The fabled town of Timbuktu fell under the control of al-Qaida militants and other jihadists in early 2012, who soon began imposing a harsh interpretation of Islamic Shariah law. A French-led military operation ousted the militants from power in January 2013, though the area has remained roiled by insecurity. Remnants of the radical Islamic groups have attempted suicide bombings and other attacks in recent months.


And amid the insecurity, there has been little movement made toward seeking justice for the Arab and Tuareg victims who were killed in reprisal attacks after the Islamic militants fled.


"Malian refugees are still afraid of coming back because of the insecurity and the Malian army thinks they are rebels," said Hamata El Ansary, who is representing the Malians still in Burkina Faso. "The state should understand there is no problem between the communities, but there is a problem between them and the government, and between the communities and armed groups in the area."


In addition to talks on reconciliation, this week's conference also will discuss ways to promote development in northern Mali, where a lack of economic opportunity over generations helped foment the rebellion. And organizers hope the talks will allow communities to share their opinions with the federal government on how to proceed with reconciliation.


The top issue remains stalled negotiations with the ethnic Tuareg rebels who have long sought independence for northern Mali, which they call Azawad. In January, the rebels withdrew from peace talks with Mali's government, saying they were intended to emphasize reconciliation without addressing the group's political grievances including their push for autonomy.


"The state is going to listen to local groups and take their requests into consideration. It's on this basis that the government is going to sign agreements with the armed groups who claim to represent Azawad," said Chirfi Moulaye Haidara, who is representing the Malian government at this week's meetings.


The conference will give people a chance to talk, said Silvia Chiarelli from the Center For Civilians in Conflict, which is taking part in the discussions.


"It's a good starting point for a discussion," Chiarelli said, "but putting it into action will be another thing."


___


Follow Baba Ahmed on Twitter at http://ift.tt/1h4D7GT .








Guinea reports Ebola death toll rises to 78

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CONAKRY, Guinea (AP) — Health authorities in Guinea are facing an "unprecedented epidemic" of Ebola, an international aid group warned Monday as the death toll from the disease that causes severe bleeding reached 78.


The Ebola outbreak is the first of its kind in West Africa in two decades. Authorities in neighboring Senegal have closed the land border with Guinea. Liberia, another neighboring country, has confirmed two cases, one of them fatal.


Senegalese music superstar Youssou Ndour cancelled a weekend concert in Conakry, Guinea's capital, because he feared the disease could spread in a large crowd gathered to hear him. Residents have steered clear of the hospital in the city of 2 million where, according to authorities, relatives of one victim are being held in isolation.


The emergence of Ebola in Guinea poses challenges never seen in previous outbreaks that involved "more remote locations as opposed to urban areas," said Doctors Without Borders. Ebola has struck down people in Conakry as well as in Guinea's rural south.


"The vast geographic spread of the Guinea outbreak is worrisome because it will greatly complicate the tasks of the organizations working to control the epidemic," said Mariano Lugli, the group's coordinator in Conakry.


The Ebola virus was first discovered in Congo — then known as Zaire — in 1976. There is no vaccine or specific treatment for it. The Zaire strain detected in Guinea can kill up to 90 percent of its victims who suffer extensive internal and external bleeding.


Officials have not conclusively ruled how the virus showed up in Guinea, a West African nation far from Congo's borders. However, bats that carry the virus are eaten as a local delicacy in Guinea.


The virus can be transmitted from human to human through direct contact with the blood or secretions of an infected person, or objects that have been contaminated with infected secretions. Bereaved relatives can also contract the virus when coming into contact with the victims' bodies at communal funerals, health officials say.


___


Larson reported from Dakar, Senegal.






South Africa president faces corruption allegations

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Ugandan president dismisses aid cuts at rally against gays

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KAMPALA Mon Mar 31, 2014 11:50am EDT



Uganda's President Yoweri Museveni speaks at a thanksgiving prayer held on his behalf by different religious groups backing the signing of an anti-gay bill into law, in Uganda's capital Kampala March 31, 2014. REUTERS/Edward Echwalu

Uganda's President Yoweri Museveni speaks at a thanksgiving prayer held on his behalf by different religious groups backing the signing of an anti-gay bill into law, in Uganda's capital Kampala March 31, 2014.


Credit: Reuters/Edward Echwalu





KAMPALA (Reuters) - President Yoweri Museveni told a rally of religious leaders, politicians and thousands of supporters on Monday that Uganda could live without aid that Western donors suspended or diverted in protest at an anti-gay bill that became law in February.



Western donors have halted or re-directed about $118 million in aid since Museveni signed the law, which toughened existing rules against gays and prescribed life in jail for what it called "aggravated homosexuality", such as sex with a minor.



Despite the Western outcry, the thousands who turned out at Monday's rally in a square in Kampala underlined public support for the law. Uganda now has of some of the toughest codes, yet it is only one of 37 African nations that outlaw homosexuality.



Museveni may have in part been prompted to back the law to shore up support, analysts say. He is widely expected to seek another presidential term in 2016. He has ruled since 1986.



"When you hear these Europeans saying they are going to cut aid ... we don't need aid in the first place," Museveni said. "A country like Uganda is one of the richest on earth."



Uganda still relies heavily on aid, including some direct support to the budget. But it has lived with aid disruptions before. In 2013, aid flows were cut over a corruption scandal. Growth slipped, but the economy still expanded about 6 percent.



With an annual per capita income of $440 a year according to the World Bank, Uganda has found commercial quantities of oil. But it remains at least two or three years away from production although initial finds were made in 2006.



Supporters applauded when Museveni declared homosexuality "unhealthy".



Schoolchildren at the rally raised placards with the word "Sodomy" crossed out. Speeches by religious and political figures also received cheers and applause.



"The Lord has the power to help us Ugandans to overcome the battle against homosexuality," said Stanley Ntagali, head of Uganda's Anglican Church, the second biggest Christian group in the east African nation of 36 million people.



The anti-gay bill was initially drawn up in 2009, when it proposed the death penalty for those offences deemed most serious, such as having gay sex when HIV positive.



Museveni sent the bill back to parliament once and Western diplomats said they had received assurances from officials that the government would bury the law. When he signed, the United States called the law "atrocious" and said it would review ties.



The World Bank suspended a loan and nations such as Denmark, Norway and the Netherlands said they were halting or diverting aid away from the government.



Those at the rally brushed off Western attitudes.



"If you're a homosexual you can't give birth to children," Steven Kabindi, 30, at the rally. "I am here to show support to our leaders in their fight against this evil."



(Writing by Edmund Blair; Editing by Alison Williams)









Timbuktu hosts reconciliation meetings for Mali

africatodayonline.blogspot.com -
By BABA AHMED

Associated Press

TIMBUKTU, Mali (AP) - Hundreds of Malians are gathering in the northern desert town of Timbuktu this week in an attempt to reconcile wounds in this country, which was divided in two for nearly a year by Islamic extremists who amputated the hands of suspected thieves and whipped women for going out in public without veils.


After the militants were chased from the cities by French troops, Malian soldiers killed civilians suspected of having links to the jihadists on the mere basis of their ethnicity, prompting a mass exodus of Arab and Tuareg residents who fled for their lives. More than a year later, some 200,000 have yet to return from refugee camps in neighboring Mauritania, Niger and Burkina Faso.


The talks in Timbuktu are being held to try to get all Malians to reconcile.


"There will be representatives from all the communities in the region, and we will be highlighting the reasons for the crisis and what can be done to advance reconciliation and the return to peace to Mali," said Oumou Sall Seck, the mayor of Goundam, who is attending this week's talks. "But it's a long process of reconciliation that starts today."


The fabled town of Timbuktu fell under the control of al-Qaida militants and other jihadists in early 2012, who soon began imposing a harsh interpretation of Islamic Shariah law. A French-led military operation ousted the militants from power in January 2013, though the area has remained roiled by insecurity. Remnants of the radical Islamic groups have attempted suicide bombings and other attacks in recent months.


And amid the insecurity, there has been little movement made toward seeking justice for the Arab and Tuareg victims who were killed in reprisal attacks after the Islamic militants fled.


"Malian refugees are still afraid of coming back because of the insecurity and the Malian army thinks they are rebels," said Hamata El Ansary, who is representing the Malians still in Burkina Faso. "The state should understand there is no problem between the communities, but there is a problem between them and the government, and between the communities and armed groups in the area."


In addition to talks on reconciliation, this week's conference also will discuss ways to promote development in northern Mali, where a lack of economic opportunity over generations helped foment the rebellion. And organizers hope the talks will allow communities to share their opinions with the federal government on how to proceed with reconciliation.


The top issue remains stalled negotiations with the ethnic Tuareg rebels who have long sought independence for northern Mali, which they call Azawad. In January, the rebels withdrew from peace talks with Mali's government, saying they were intended to emphasize reconciliation without addressing the group's political grievances including their push for autonomy.


"The state is going to listen to local groups and take their requests into consideration. It's on this basis that the government is going to sign agreements with the armed groups who claim to represent Azawad," said Chirfi Moulaye Haidara, who is representing the Malian government at this week's meetings.


The conference will give people a chance to talk, said Silvia Chiarelli from the Center For Civilians in Conflict, which is taking part in the discussions.


"It's a good starting point for a discussion," Chiarelli said, "but putting it into action will be another thing."


___


Follow Baba Ahmed on Twitter at http://ift.tt/1jqnNov .


Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.






Timbuktu hosts reconciliation meetings for Mali

africatodayonline.blogspot.com -
By BABA AHMED

Associated Press

TIMBUKTU, Mali (AP) - Hundreds of Malians are gathering in the northern desert town of Timbuktu this week in an attempt to reconcile wounds in this country, which was divided in two for nearly a year by Islamic extremists who amputated the hands of suspected thieves and whipped women for going out in public without veils.


After the militants were chased from the cities by French troops, Malian soldiers killed civilians suspected of having links to the jihadists on the mere basis of their ethnicity, prompting a mass exodus of Arab and Tuareg residents who fled for their lives. More than a year later, some 200,000 have yet to return from refugee camps in neighboring Mauritania, Niger and Burkina Faso.


The talks in Timbuktu are being held to try to get all Malians to reconcile.


"There will be representatives from all the communities in the region, and we will be highlighting the reasons for the crisis and what can be done to advance reconciliation and the return to peace to Mali," said Oumou Sall Seck, the mayor of Goundam, who is attending this week's talks. "But it's a long process of reconciliation that starts today."


The fabled town of Timbuktu fell under the control of al-Qaida militants and other jihadists in early 2012, who soon began imposing a harsh interpretation of Islamic Shariah law. A French-led military operation ousted the militants from power in January 2013, though the area has remained roiled by insecurity. Remnants of the radical Islamic groups have attempted suicide bombings and other attacks in recent months.


And amid the insecurity, there has been little movement made toward seeking justice for the Arab and Tuareg victims who were killed in reprisal attacks after the Islamic militants fled.


"Malian refugees are still afraid of coming back because of the insecurity and the Malian army thinks they are rebels," said Hamata El Ansary, who is representing the Malians still in Burkina Faso. "The state should understand there is no problem between the communities, but there is a problem between them and the government, and between the communities and armed groups in the area."


In addition to talks on reconciliation, this week's conference also will discuss ways to promote development in northern Mali, where a lack of economic opportunity over generations helped foment the rebellion. And organizers hope the talks will allow communities to share their opinions with the federal government on how to proceed with reconciliation.


The top issue remains stalled negotiations with the ethnic Tuareg rebels who have long sought independence for northern Mali, which they call Azawad. In January, the rebels withdrew from peace talks with Mali's government, saying they were intended to emphasize reconciliation without addressing the group's political grievances including their push for autonomy.


"The state is going to listen to local groups and take their requests into consideration. It's on this basis that the government is going to sign agreements with the armed groups who claim to represent Azawad," said Chirfi Moulaye Haidara, who is representing the Malian government at this week's meetings.


The conference will give people a chance to talk, said Silvia Chiarelli from the Center For Civilians in Conflict, which is taking part in the discussions.


"It's a good starting point for a discussion," Chiarelli said, "but putting it into action will be another thing."


___


Follow Baba Ahmed on Twitter at http://ift.tt/1jqnNov .


Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.






Ethiopian barred from travelling to US

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Chad troops defend actions in C. African Republic

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A general with the African peacekeeping mission in Central African Republic is defending Chadian soldiers who are accused of killing scores of civilians when they fired into crowds.


Gen. Martin Tumenta Chomu said Monday that the Chadian troops were only fighting back an attack that had been launched by Christian militiamen in the area.


Local authorities say more than 20 people were killed in the PK12 neighborhood, and at least 12 others died elsewhere in Saturday's violence.


Chomu told reporters that the shooting was a "non-event" for the African peacekeeping mission, though it has prompted outrage in the streets of Bangui.


Chadian soldiers said that two of their peacekeepers had been wounded, and they also showed what they said was damage to their vehicle from grenades and gunfire.






Kotoko to face AshantiGold in quarter finals of MTN Fa Cup contest

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Posted On Monday, 31st March 2014



Asante Kotoko to face AshGold once more again in the FA Cup Asante Kotoko to face AshGold once more again in the FA Cup

By Ameenu Shardow


Follow on Twitter @alooameenu


Asante Kotoko have been drawn against regional rivals AshantiGold in the quarter finals of the FA Cup competition.


The Premier League champions who are chasing a double this term were pitted against the Miners in the draw held at the Ghana FA headquarters in Accra on Monday.


Kotoko will play hosts to their regional rivals at the Baba Yara Sports Stadium in the fixture slated to take place from April 16-20.


The quarter final draw also sees Inter Allies take on Hasaacas in an all-Premier League clash.


Holders Medeama SC will be facing Fetteh Feyenoord once they are able to beat Okwawu United in their outstanding Round of 16 clash while King Faisal will take on either Aduana Stars or Dawhenya United.







Timbuktu hosts reconciliation meetings for Mali

africatodayonline.blogspot.com -
By BABA AHMED

Associated Press

TIMBUKTU, Mali (AP) - Hundreds of Malians are gathering in the northern desert town of Timbuktu this week in an attempt to reconcile wounds in this country, which was divided in two for nearly a year by Islamic extremists who amputated the hands of suspected thieves and whipped women for going out in public without veils.


After the militants were chased from the cities by French troops, Malian soldiers killed civilians suspected of having links to the jihadists on the mere basis of their ethnicity, prompting a mass exodus of Arab and Tuareg residents who fled for their lives. More than a year later, some 200,000 have yet to return from refugee camps in neighboring Mauritania, Niger and Burkina Faso.


The talks in Timbuktu are being held to try to get all Malians to reconcile.


"There will be representatives from all the communities in the region, and we will be highlighting the reasons for the crisis and what can be done to advance reconciliation and the return to peace to Mali," said Oumou Sall Seck, the mayor of Goundam, who is attending this week's talks. "But it's a long process of reconciliation that starts today."


The fabled town of Timbuktu fell under the control of al-Qaida militants and other jihadists in early 2012, who soon began imposing a harsh interpretation of Islamic Shariah law. A French-led military operation ousted the militants from power in January 2013, though the area has remained roiled by insecurity. Remnants of the radical Islamic groups have attempted suicide bombings and other attacks in recent months.


And amid the insecurity, there has been little movement made toward seeking justice for the Arab and Tuareg victims who were killed in reprisal attacks after the Islamic militants fled.


"Malian refugees are still afraid of coming back because of the insecurity and the Malian army thinks they are rebels," said Hamata El Ansary, who is representing the Malians still in Burkina Faso. "The state should understand there is no problem between the communities, but there is a problem between them and the government, and between the communities and armed groups in the area."


In addition to talks on reconciliation, this week's conference also will discuss ways to promote development in northern Mali, where a lack of economic opportunity over generations helped foment the rebellion. And organizers hope the talks will allow communities to share their opinions with the federal government on how to proceed with reconciliation.


The top issue remains stalled negotiations with the ethnic Tuareg rebels who have long sought independence for northern Mali, which they call Azawad. In January, the rebels withdrew from peace talks with Mali's government, saying they were intended to emphasize reconciliation without addressing the group's political grievances including their push for autonomy.


"The state is going to listen to local groups and take their requests into consideration. It's on this basis that the government is going to sign agreements with the armed groups who claim to represent Azawad," said Chirfi Moulaye Haidara, who is representing the Malian government at this week's meetings.


The conference will give people a chance to talk, said Silvia Chiarelli from the Center For Civilians in Conflict, which is taking part in the discussions.


"It's a good starting point for a discussion," Chiarelli said, "but putting it into action will be another thing."


___


Follow Baba Ahmed on Twitter at http://ift.tt/1jqnNov .


Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.






Uganda holds 'thanksgiving' event for anti-gay law

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— President Yoweri Museveni of Uganda has launched fresh condemnation of gays, saying they deserve punishment because homosexuality "is criminal and it is so cruel."


Museveni, who last month signed a bill strengthening criminal penalties against homosexuals, said Monday that he is "now mobilizing to fight" Western gays he accuses of promoting homosexuality in Africa.


Museveni spoke at a "thanksgiving service" organized by a coalition of Ugandan religious leaders and government officials who said the president deserves credit for defying Western pressure.


Thousands of Ugandans attended the raucous event in the Ugandan capital, Kampala, many of them schoolchildren who sang and danced to anti-gay tunes that also railed against the West.


Some European countries and the U.S. have cut, delayed or reviewed aid to Uganda over the law.






UPDATE 1-Libya releases three rebels who boarded tanker at rebel port -official

africatodayonline.blogspot.com -


Mon Mar 31, 2014 11:21am EDT




(Adds details, background)



By Feras Bosalum



TRIPOLI, March 31 (Reuters) - Libya has released three rebel fighters who had boarded a tanker loading oil at a rebel-held port before it was returned to Tripoli by the U.S. navy, an official said on Monday.



The attorney general ordered the release following comments by some lawmakers that this would help solve the blockage of oil ports by the rebels, Sadiq al-Sour, head of the attorney's investigations department, told Reuters.



The eastern rebels, who have seized three major ports to press for a greater share of oil revenue and regional autonomy, had demanded the release of the fighters before starting any talks about lifting the blockage.



Three weeks ago, the rebel militia managed to load crude onto the Morning Glory tanker at the Es Sider port, which is under their control. U.S. special forces later stormed the ship and returned it to Libya.



Sour said he regretted the release which had been made on political grounds. "These are people who committed crimes," he said. "Now justice is entering political conflicts."



The government and parliament had told the militia to negotiate an end to their port blockade or face a military offensive. The rebels had demanded the release of their men, the tanker returned and the threat of an army offensive dropped.



Tripoli has been trying to end the port blockage because the government badly needs oil revenue. The three ports previously accounted for more than 600,000 barrels a day of exports, adding to the effects of oilfield closures in the west.



The port blockade is one of many challenges facing the government which has failed to secure the country three years after the fall of Muammar Gaddafi.



Former anti-Gaddafi rebels and militias refuse to surrender their weapons and often use force or control of oil facilities to make demands on a state whose army is still in training with Western governments.



Those governments, which backed NATO air strikes to help the 2011 anti-Gaddafi revolt, are pressing the factions to reach a political settlement.



Libya's oil production has fallen to a trickle due to the port seizures and protests at major oil fields. (Reporting by Feras Bosalum; Writing by Ulf Laessing, editing by David Evans)









Liberia confirms deadly Ebola virus

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iol pic afr Guinea Ebola~1

AP


In this photo provide by MSF, Medecins Sans Frontieres (Doctors without Borders) healthcare workers from the organisation, react, as they prepare isolation and treatment areas for their Ebola, hemorrhagic fever operations, in Gueckedou, Guinea. Picture: Kjell Gunnar Beraas, MSF




Monrovia - Liberia has confirmed two cases of the deadly Ebola virus that is suspected to have killed at least 78 people in neighbouring Guinea, according to the World Health Organisation.


The WHO said in a statement released on Sunday the cases were among seven samples tested from the northern Foya district, which shares a border with southern Guinea.


“Two of those samples have tested positive for the Ebola virus. There have been two deaths among the suspected cases, a 35-year-old woman who died on March 21 tested positive for Ebola virus while a male patient who died on March 27 tested negative,” it said.


Ebola has killed almost 1 600 people since it was first observed in 1976 in what is now Democratic Republic of Congo but this is the first fatal outbreak in west Africa.


The tropical virus leads to haemorrhagic fever, causing muscle pain, weakness, vomiting, diarrhoea and, in severe cases, organ failure and unstoppable bleeding.


Guinea's health ministry said on Sunday that 122 “suspicious cases” of viral haemorrhagic fever, including 78 deaths, had been registered.


Samples taken from a number of the suspect cases include 24 that tested positive for Ebola, according to the latest official figures - 11 in Conakry and the rest in the south.


The WHO said Sierra Leone has also identified two suspected cases, both of whom died, but neither has been confirmed to be Ebola.


No treatment or vaccine is available for Ebola, and the Zaire strain detected in Guinea has a historic death rate of up to 90 percent.


It can be transmitted to humans from wild animals, and between humans through direct contact with another's blood, faeces or sweat, as well as sexual contact or the unprotected handling of contaminated corpses.


The WHO said in the statement, seen by AFP reporters in Dakar, it was not recommending travel or trade restrictions to Liberia, Guinea or Sierra Leone based on the current information available about the outbreak.


But Senegal has closed border crossings to Guinea “until further notice”. - AFP






Eritrea withdraw from Africa Cup - Monday, 31 March 2014 13:48

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Addis Ababa, 31 March 2014 (WIC) - Eritrea withdrew from the 2015 Africa Cup of Nations qualifying competition Sunday, the organizers said in a statement.

The 'Red Sea Camels' were due to play fellow east Africans South Sudan during April in a two-leg preliminary tie.

No explanation was given for the pull-out, but it could be linked to continuous defections when Eritrean football teams visit other countries.

Nine players and a coach disappeared in Kenya last December when Eritrea were eliminated after the group stage of the East and Central Africa Senior Challenge Cup.

President Isaias Afewerki has ruled the one-party Horn of Africa country since independence from Ethiopia 21 years ago. (globalpost.com)






Nigeria under pressure over 'jailbreak' deaths

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iol news pic prison gate nov 25

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Abuja - Nigeria's secret police faced questions on Monday about how 21 detainees were killed during an attempted jailbreak from their headquarters, with claims of a cover-up about exactly what happened.


The detainees, reportedly suspected Boko Haram insurgents, died on Sunday after the Department of State Services said that one inmate overpowered a guard and seized his weapon.


The DSS, which is Nigeria's intelligence agency, has not revealed the charges the suspects faced or exactly how they came to be killed.


But the agency's spokeswoman Marilyn Ogar said in an interview: “All of the 21 were killed by... operatives of the DSS.


“The investigation is still ongoing. We will determine who shot who and at what point and how many were shot by whom and for what reason,” she told the Raypower 100.5 FM radio station.


Ogar said the gun seized by the inmate had more than 90 rounds of live ammunition and that he had fired it sporadically.


Gunfire heard for several hours in and around the headquarters were simply warning shots in case the detainees had outside help, she added.


Nigeria's presidency played down the incident but several media outlets questioned the official version of events.


A report on the widely read Premium Times website questioned why so much heavy weaponry was required to subdue one inmate.


Any security breach at DSS headquarters would be an embarrassment for the government but even more so if it involved Boko Haram, which has been waging a violent insurgency in Nigeria's north since 2009.


Nigeria's military has been under pressure about the effectiveness of its strategy to tackle the insurgents in the face of an upsurge in violence that is estimated to have left more than 1 500 dead so far this year.


Amnesty International on Monday claimed that some 600 Boko Haram suspects may have been killed after a jailbreak at a military detention facility in Maiduguri, the state capital of Borno, on March 14.


The human rights monitor quoted witnesses as saying that the military summarily executed hundreds of escapees.


The military had said dozens escaped. - AFP






HIV/AIDS infection rate drops in Ethiopia - Monday, 31 March 2014 13:48

africatodayonline.blogspot.com -

Addis Ababa, 31 March 2014 (WIC) - The HIV/AIDS prevalence rate has drastically dropped in Ethiopia in 2013, an Ethiopian official said Saturday.

"Currently, 734,000 people are living with HIV in the country," Asfaw Degefu, the public relation chief of the federal HIV/AIDS Prevention and Control Office (HAPCO), told Anadolu Agency.

Asfaw said that HIV prevalence rate in Ethiopia dropped from 2.1 percent to 1.3 percent in 2013.

"The fall in prevalence resulted from the government-led multi-sectoral HIV/AIDS prevention activities," he said.

Over 316,000 Ethiopians living with HIV benefit from anti-retroviral therapy (ART), which the government provides free of charge.

The HAPCO official said that Ethiopia had the highest number of HIV/AIDS infection a decade ago.

"But the rate of HIV infection among adults has been reduced by 90 percent between 2001 and 2011," he added.

Asfaw said Voluntary Counseling and Testing (VCT) and ART services are expanding across the country.

"There were only three ART centers in 2001 but the number has now increased to 838 and VCT rose to 2896 from 638," he added.

Over 90 million condoms are sold annually across the Horn of Africa nation.

A recent government document has found that comprehensive knowledge of AIDS is uncommon in Ethiopia.

According to the document, some 90 percent of women and 32 percent of men have comprehensive knowledge of transmission and prevention methods of HIV.

According to Asfaw, Ethiopia employs over 38,000 health agents in rural areas to prevent HIV, Malaria and TB.

"Harmful traditional practices, multiple sex partners, unsafe sex and mother- to- child HIV transmission are the main causes for the spread of HIV," he said.

HIV was first reported in Ethiopia in 1984. (worldbulletin.net)






South Africa president denies wrongdoing

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JOHANNESBURG (AP) — South Africa's president says he has done nothing wrong despite a scandal surrounding costly state upgrades to his private home that have ignited a debate about alleged corruption ahead of May 7 elections.


The New Age newspaper on Monday quoted President Jacob Zuma as saying opposition parties seeking to bring criminal charges against him for alleged misuse of state money will fail because, "there is no case."


On March 19, South Africa's state watchdog agency released a report concluding that Zuma inappropriately benefited from state funding and should pay back some money.


More than $20 million was spent for alleged security upgrades at Zuma's rural Nkandla residence. The watchdog report says some of the spending had nothing to do with security.






DR Congo city gets traffic cop robot

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Traffic cop robotTwo robots have already been installed in capital city Kinshasa


An “intelligent” traffic cop robot has been installed in the city of Lubumbashi in the Democratic Republic of Congo, it appears.


Local residents seem enthusiastic about the robot, which replaces Lubumbashi’s traffic police and also has surveillance cameras to observe traffic offences, regional broadcaster Nyota says. It comes the year after two similar solar-powered robots were set up at intersections in the capital city Kinshasa, attracting attention at the time.


However, there are some worries about whether the robots will be maintained properly, given that many of Lubumbashi’s traffic lights have fallen into disrepair, UN-sponsored Radio Okapi reports.


The structure was developed by the organisation Women Technologies, which aims to encourage female engineers in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Head of the group, Therese Izay Kirongozi, now hopes other countries will follow suit. She would, for example, like to see these “robots Made in Congo” in New York. “That’s my dream. I dream big,” she recently told Radio Okapi.


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