Author: b_igi_adm1n

  • Somalia Celebrates 52nd Independence Anniversary

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    Liberated provinces in Somalia have today taken to the streets to celebrate the country’s 52 Independence from Italian rule.

    Abdi Jinow Alasso, the Governor for the Transitional Federal Government of Somalia in charge of Middle Shabelle region, joined residents of Balad town, 30 km north of Mogadishu, in unprecedented festivities.

    Celebrations at Balad town was unimaginable only a week before as the place was a stronghold of Al-Shabaab, the radical Islamist group that oppose any commemorations of non-religious days.

    “I congratulate all of you for being free to celebrate important national days,” Alasso told the residents of Balad district.

    In 2010, the fanatical Islamists ordered the residents in areas under their control to refrain from celebrating non-religious landmarks.

    The instructions abolished the marking of the Independence Day and other national days as the National Tree Day, the National Teachers Day and the World Food Day.

    “Only Idd days (at the end of Ramadan and during Al-Hajj) are allowed,” instructed the Islamist leaders. The Islamists also ordered all broadcasters in areas under their control to stop playing music and other lyrics.

    Other areas liberated from Al-Shabaab militants with the help of Ethiopian and Kenyan troops also marked the day.

    Regional capitals such as Beledweyne and Baidoa, respectively 335 km and 240 north and southwest of Mogadishu, and Afmadow town in Jubaland joined the celebrations.

    Meanwhile, in Afgoye, a town seized in May from Al-Shabaab by pro-government forces and the Ugandan and Burundian peacekeepers marked the grand occasion.

    “Celebration of the 52nd Anniversary in Afgoye district is a symbol of the stabilisation of security in Somalia,” announced Abdulkadir Mohamed Nur Sidee, the TFG Governor in charge of Lower Juba region who spoke to a multitude before the national flag was raised to full mast at mid-night, welcoming 1st of July.

    TFG President Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed and other government officials graced the occasion at Villa Somalia, the state house in the Somali capital Mogadishu.

  • Congolese Army, M23 Rebels Resume Fighting

    Fighting has resumed 20km from Rutshuru-center in Eastern DRCongo after more than a week of calm.

    However, no precise assessment of the situation has been provided, but the Congolese Army and traditional leaders of the region have confirmed renewed fighting.

    Fresh gunfire resumed June 30 on Saturday afternoon between Armed Forces of the Democratic Republic of Congo (FARDC) and rebels of the Movement of March 23 (M23) in the group Bweza, Rutshuru territory in North Kivu.

    Fire and heavy weapons detonations have created an atmosphere of panic among peoples living Ntamugenga, emphasized the same accountable.

    He said the fighting took place near the hill of Mbuzi, on the edge of Virunga National Park, which is occupied by rebels.

    FARDC said they used machine guns and tanks “responding to the assault by the rebels.” Local sources, however, stressed that each of these two parties still held its positions.

  • Single Fertility Hormone Shot Can Replace Daily Doses

    Women preparing for fertility treatment typically get a series of daily, sometimes uncomfortable hormone shots to kick their ovaries into over-drive — but a new review of previous studies suggests one long-acting shot may work just as well.

    For in vitro fertilization, extra follicle-stimulating hormone, or FSH, is used to trigger the ovaries to grow and release multiple eggs, which are then fertilized outside the body and re-implanted in the uterus.

    In an analysis of four past studies including over 2,300 women with infertility, researchers found the women were just as likely to get pregnant — and didn’t have any more complications — when they got a single, long-acting dose of FSH rather than daily shots.

    “Long-acting FSH (weekly injection) is a good and safe alternative to daily injections in the first week of ovarian stimulation for IVF,” Dr. Jan Kremer from Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Center in the Netherlands, who worked on the review, told Reuters Health in an email.

    However, he said there is still limited data on how the weekly hormone shots work in certain groups of women, including older women with less of an ovarian response and those with fertility problems because of polycystic ovary syndrome, whose ovaries might over-respond.

    The long-acting shot is used in Europe but not currently available in the United States, because it hasn’t been approved by the Food and Drug Administration.

    The new findings are published in The Cochrane Library and include all high-quality data Kremer and his colleagues could find on the shots.

    Out of 2,335 women included in the analysis, 987 got usual daily FSH shots for a week and 1,348 had one long-acting shot at a range of doses, along with the usual course of other IVF hormone injections.

    In studies that used the lowest dose of the long-acting hormone — between 60 and 120 micrograms — fewer women in the one-shot group got pregnant than in the daily FSH comparison group.

    However, at slightly higher doses (150 to 180 micrograms), pregnancy and birth rates didn’t suffer: 343 out of every 1,000 women getting one long-acting shot had a baby, compared to 336 out of 1,000 in the daily-shot group.

    And the long-acting shot didn’t seem to come with a higher risk of miscarriage, having twins or developing a pregnancy-related complication, including swollen ovaries.

    IVF typically runs for about $15,000 a cycle. Kremer said the cost of the two types of injections is “more or less comparable.”

    Dr. Samuel Pang, medical director at the Reproductive Science Center of New England in Lexington, Massachusetts, said the main advantage of the single shot is convenience.

    FSH shots are simple injections that women can give themselves, similar to insulin, he said, but the process can still be a hassle for some.

    “In my mind, based on the studies that have been done and based on my own experience, it is a safe and effective product,” Pang, who wasn’t involved in the new review, told Reuters Health.

    “The only caveat is it really needs to be used in well-selected patients.”
    Like Kremer, he cautioned against using the long-acting shot in women who are unlikely to respond to the hormone — or those who may over-respond.

    A week after getting the long-acting shot, many women still need a few daily injections of FSH before they’re ready to have their eggs harvested, he added.

    Pang worked on research that has been submitted to the FDA on the hormone shot, but says it’s at least a year or two away from being available in the U.S.

    “At this point in time, while it’s very promising based on the studies that have been done and the experience in Europe, it’s not anywhere near market here.”

    So-called post-marketing studies in Europe and Australia continue to suggest the drug is safe and works well, according to Dr. Arthur Leader, from the University of Ottawa and Ottawa Fertility Centre who also didn’t participate in the review.

    “It simplifies the whole process, makes it easier for the woman while not compromising her health or the health of the children that are born,” he told Reuters Health.

    Source: The Cochrane Library

  • World Bank Aid to Developing Countries Hits $53Bn in 2012

    In the fiscal year that ended June 30, the World Bank Group(WB) reported that it had provided $52.6 billion in form of loans, grants, equity investments, and guarantees to help promote economic growth, overcome poverty, and promote economic enterprise in developing countries.

    The bank noted that developing country budgets and central banks are not as well placed as they were in 2008/09 to address slowing economies.

    Their ability to respond may be constrained if international finance dries up and global conditions deteriorate sharply.

    WB recently lowered its growth forecast for 2012 to 5.3% for developing countries, down from its January estimate of 5.4%.

    As developing countries face strong economic headwinds, the Bank Group supported an estimated 884 operations to promote opportunity and get needed services to the poor– for example, by improving education and health services, promoting the private sector, building infrastructure, and strengthening governance and institutions.

    WB Group institutions contributing to this financial outcome are: the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD), which provides financing, risk management products, and other financial services to members;

    the International Development Association (IDA), which provides interest-free loans and grants to the poorest countries; the International Finance Corporation (IFC), which makes equity investments, and provides loans, guarantees and advisory services to private-sector business in developing countries; and the Bank Group’s political risk insurance agency, the Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency (MIGA).

    “The Bank is well positioned for future challenges,” said the 11th president of World Bank Group Robert Zoellick, whose term as President ends at the close of the FY12 fiscal year.

    “Since I joined the institution, the Bank Group has committed over $300 billion – most of it to help countries overcome food and economic crises. But just as important as the finance is our ability to work with countries—both the public and private sectors—as clients and to customize our services to address their problems.

    I would like to thank WB Group staff for their hard work in rising to the challenge during my term and express my gratitude for their ability to respond quickly and flexibly to the needs of our partner countries and companies.”

    According to preliminary and unaudited numbers as of June 29, IDA commitments in FY12 were $14.7 billion, down from $16.3 billion in FY11.

    The largest share of resources was committed to Africa, which received around 50% of total IDA lending in FY12, followed by South Asia at around 36% of total.

    IBRD commitments totaled $20.6 billion—significantly higher than the historical average ($13.5 billion in fiscal 2005–08), but less than the record $44.2 billion in fiscal 2010, when the crisis peaked.

    Europe and Central Asia and Latin America and the Caribbean received the largest shares of IBRD lending, each receiving $6.2 billion in new commitments.

    New Bank Group commitments to agriculture and related sectors in FY12 are expected to reach $9.1 billion. This exceeds projected lending in the Bank’s Agriculture Action Plan, which foresaw an increase in assistance from an average of $4.1 billion annually in FY06-08 to $6.2-$8.3 billion annually in FY10-12.

    Over the life of the Action Plan, assistance averaged $7 billion. IBRD/IDA assistance in FY12 is the highest in 20 years (in nominal terms).

    IFC, the largest global development institution focused exclusively on the private sector, again provided a record amount of financing to businesses in developing countries—leveraging the power of the private sector to create jobs, spark innovation, and tackle the world’s most pressing development challenges.

    Preliminary and unaudited data as of June 28 indicate that IFC investments totaled more than $20 billion, including funds mobilized from other investors.

    That marked an increase from $18.7 billion in FY11. It included an estimated record of more than $15 billion in commitments made on IFC’s own account—an increase of more than 25% over FY11.

    It also included almost $5 billion mobilized from other investors. These investments supported approximately 580 projects, creating opportunity wherever it was needed most.

    IFC maintained its strategic focus on the poorest countries and regions—especially sub-Saharan Africa, where estimated IFC investments climbed to a record of more than $4 billion as of June 28. Nearly half of all IFC investment projects were in the poorest countries eligible to borrow from IDA.

    “In a time of rapid economic change, IFC established a significant record of growth, innovation, and development impact,” said IFC EVP and CEO Lars Thunell, who over the past six years presided over a doubling of IFC’s investments and a heightened focus on the world’s poorest countries and regions.

    “We did so by leveraging all of our strengths as a leader in private sector development, and by focusing our efforts wherever they could achieve the greatest good.”

    The Bank Group’s political risk insurance arm, the Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency (MIGA) issued $2.3 billion in guarantees—an increase from the previous year. The agency supported 51 projects across the globe and issued $637 million in guarantees for sub-Saharan Africa in particular.

    Financial commitments provided by the World Bank Group to the countries of sub-Saharan Africa, a major priority for the institution, increased by $2.8 billion in FY12 to $12.2 billion and included $7.4 billion in IDA credits, grants, and guarantees to sub-Saharan Africa, (up from $7 billion from the previous year); $4 billion from IFC for private sector development projects; $147 million in IBRD lending; and $637 million in MIGA guarantees for projects in the region.

  • KAGAME: ‘We Must Pass On a Better Rwanda Than We Inherited’

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    President Paul Kagame has said Rwanda’s determination to build an independent country should not be compromised saying, “We also recognize we can guarantee our independence better with cooperation based on mutual benefit”.

    “For many years our people were taught and made to believe lies and myths manufactured from within and outside distorting what we were, who we should be and what we should do for the health development of Africa and Rwanda in particular.”

    The Head of state was speaking to tens of thousands attending the 50th Independence anniversary and 18th Liberation celebrations at Amahoro National Stadium in Kigali.

    The weather has been great, with clear skies and sun shine. The President’s speech was also brief.

    Kagame said, “50 years is short in a life of a nation but very big in transforming the lives of citizens. Africa lost immense opportunity due to unbalanced relationships within the global community often predatory and even abusive in nature.”

    “These relations built on injustice and prejudices were possible because some among our citizens and leaders accepted and accommodated such bad practices thus undermining what should have been our independence,” Kagame explained.

    Kagame added that some of these weaknesses are within “our means to correct but shall succeed if we are brave enough to accept responsibility. Being brave and honest are qualities that seem to have lost value and meaning these days.”

    “The victim attitude prevents us from seeking our own solutions to challenges we face…We must confront our problems directly, Kagame noted amidst applause.

    “ ijya kurisha ihera kurugo. Akimuhana kaza imvra ihise” we are also conscious that along the way external factors have affected Africa’s progress.

    “If we are to learn from experience of 50yrs. We for too long surrendered responsibility to transform our countries to non state actors that have no accountability. We should seize this moment as turning point,” Kagame emphasized.

    He said that as Rwandans look to the future they must recognize that independence like liberation is a process and with it there are obligations and responsibilities across the board. “We must build on lessons of our forebears the value of sacrifice and courage during their quest for independence.”

    Kagame reiterated that to ensure prosperity of Rwandan people there must be increased citizen participation, “Our countries liberties and prosperity are very closely linked and mutually reinforced. In Rwanda we begin the next stage of our journey. We shall entrench values that have brought us this far.”

    As responsible citizens, Rwandans are committed to contributing to regional and global stability. We can travel safely faster and further in the company of others.

    The President added that over the next 50 yrs, “We must acknowledge the role of young people as drivers of the nation. We must pass on a better Rwanda and Africa than we inherited.”

    However, “the Young must also understand that they have a responsibility to take our country to the next level,” he cautioned adding that “Our independence will be guaranteed by our own efforts but will always cooperate with others..The primarily responsibility is in our hands.”
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  • Rwanda Celebrates 50 Years of Self Rule

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    Rwanda today July 1 celebrated the 50th independence anniversary which has also been combined with the 18th liberation anniversary.

    The celebrations are taking place and the highly packed Amahoro National stadium.

    The celebrations are being attended by regional and international leaders and representatives of international organizations.

    The President of Tanzania Jakaya Kikwete and the first lady of Tanzania are attending the celebrations.

    Also the Vice President of Uganda, Edward Ssekandi accompanied by a high-level delegation have also joined Rwandans to celebrate the country’s 50th Independence anniversary.

    The Vice President of Burundi Therence Sinunguruza of the Republic of Burund and Mrs. Sinunguruza and Burundi government delegation are in Rwanda attending the 50th Independence celebrations.

    Also Minister of Justice of Federal Republic of Ethiopia, Foreign affairs minister Congo Brazaville, Trade Minister of Republic of Kenya, and The Sirilanka vice Minister of Foreign Affairs and the United States Ambassador to Rwanda.

    Representatives of International and regional organizations attending the 50th Independence anniversary celebrations include; AU commission chairman Jean Ping.

    Also present is the East African Legistilative Assembly Speaker Margaret Zziwa, Deputy secretary General CommonWealth Masire-Mwamba, Secretary general of East African Community Dr. Richard Sezibera, Director East Africa AfDB, Deputy Executive Secretary CPGL, Executive Secretary International conference on Great lakes Region and the European Union representative.

    Also present at the celebrations include the Nobel Laureate and the man dubbed the conscience of Nigeria.

    President Paul Kagame is about to give a historical speech to tens of thousands attending clebrations at the stadium and millions following the event Live on television and online.

  • Denmark to Extradite Genocide Suspect

    Denmark has cleared extradition to Rwanda a 50-year-old Emmanuel Mbarushimana suspected of involvement in the 1994 Tutsi genocide.

    Mbarushimana had been granted asylum in Denmark under the false name of Emmanuel Kunda.

    They reported that he was suspected of being one of the ringleaders in the 1994 massacre, when over a million ethnic Tutsi’s were killed.

  • George Bush in Zambia for Community Service

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    George walker Bush, Former US president is in Zambia to check on the Bush Institute projects of breast and cancer diseases launched in Lusaka last year.

    Bush, his wife Laura and Pink Ribbon Red Ribbon executive director Doyin Oluwole arrived Saturday morning and was welcomed by that country’s Vice-President Guy Scott.

    “It is important to recognise that this [visit] is part of the Pink Ribbon Red Ribbon alliance which includes the United States government, the Bush Institute, Unaids as well as several different private organisations including different pharmaceuticals,” United States diplomat to Zambia Mark Storella told journalists at Kenneth Kaunda International Airport.

    “The total money that is being put in is certainly in millions of dollars and on this particular visit president Bush and Bush are providing $50,000 themselves to upgrade a specific facility technologically at the University Teaching Hospital,” Ambassador Storella told journalists yesterday.

    Ambassador Storella said Bush, who did not speak to reporters, was expected to do some voluntary work in the outskirts of the capital Lusaka. The voluntary work by the Americans is at a “very personal level”, he said.

    Ambassador Storella said Bush was expected to be in Zambia “for just about less than a week”.

    On his previous visit to Africa, Bush toured Tanzania, Ethiopia and Zambia.

  • Kenyan Church Explosion Kills 17, Injures 50

    In Kenya 17 people have been killed and at least 50 more injured in separate grenade attacks at Catholic’s Central Cathedral and AIC churches in Garissa.

    The Kenyan police has confirmed the terror attack .

    According to North Eastern Deputy PPO, Philip Ndulu, the nine people killed were from the AIC church while Central Cathedral accounts for the three injured.
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    An eye witness Felix Kimanzi said four masked gunmen wearing blue uniforms sprayed bullets at the congregation of the AIC church resulting in the deaths and the high number of casualties.

    “I was 100 metres away from the church when I saw two gunmen at the entrance spray bullets at the congregation. I hid from their sight,” he said.

    “They were joined by two more gunmen in blue uniforms who hurled grenades and they all fled on foot,” he added.

    He also said two grenades were hurled but only one exploded.

    The dead include two police officers, four men, nine women and two children.

    Casualties have been admitted at Garissa Provincial General Hospital.

    Paul Mwalali, 52, who was at the AIC church recounted similar event.

    “I had a front row seat in the church. I heard something fall on the roof. Then there was a huge explosion. I dived on the ground and went under the seat. Then there was shooting and people were screaming all over. When the shooting stopped, I felt a sharp pain on my leg.”

    Seven victims have been airlifted to Nairobi for specialised treatment. Three people were airlifted by Amref Flying Doctors, two by the Kenya Army and two more by the Intensive Care Air Ambulance. All patients were taken to Kenyatta National Hospital (KNH).

  • Tanzania Risks US Sanctions For Reflagging Iranian Oil Tankers

    A few days ago it was reported that about 10 Iranian Oil tankers had been repainted with the Tanzanian flag aimed at evading the US sanctions.

    However, a U.S. lawmaker Howard Berman has warned that Tanzania will face the threat of US sanctions and damage its ties with the Washington if it does not stop the practice of “re-flagging” Iranian oil tankers.

    Berman a member of the House Committee on Foreign Affairs, accused Tanzania of reflagging at least six and possibly as many at 10 tankers owned by the National Iranian Tanker Company.

    “This action by your government has the effect of assisting the Iranian regime in evading US and EU sanctions and generating additional revenues for its nuclear enrichment and weapons research programme and its support for international terrorism,” Berman said in a letter to President Jakaya Kikwete.

    Berman said Tanzania could face the sanctions that President Barack Obama signed into law if the tankers were allowed to continue sailing under the Tanzanian flag.

    He said Congress would also have “no choice” but to consider whether to continue the range of bilateral US programmes with Tanzania.

    Officials at Tanzania’s embassy in Washington were not immediately available to comment on Berman’s letter.

    A reliable sourcesaid in Dar es Salaam yesterday that President Kikwete had summoned Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation minister Bernard Membe over the matter.

    “The threat of US sanctions is likely to feature prominently in the discussions at State House between President Kikwete and Membe,” the source said.

    Reached for comment, Membe told The Citizen on Sunday that the US government had not yet communicated directly with the Tanzanian government.

    “Such weighty statements are usually supposed to be issued by foreign ministries, not lawmakers. If it’s not from the US Department of State, then it should not be regarded as a threat by the US government. Even here in Tanzania what MPs say is not necessarily the government’s official position,” he said.

    However, Membe said he was not aware of the letter sent to President Kikwete by Berman, but added that he would meet the US ambassador, Alfonso Lenhardt, tomorrow.

    “The government has been doing all in its power to resolve the matter… let me meet first meet the American ambassador on Monday and my ministry will give the government’s position on the issue,” Membe said.

    Chief Secretary Ombeni Sefue also said he had not seen the letter reportedly sent to President Kikwete by the American lawmaker.

    “I haven’t received any such a communication. If it’s true that such a letter has been sent, then it must have been addressed to the Foreign Affairs Ministry or the authority responsible for ship registration in Zanzibar,” he said.

    The Zanzibar government confirmed on Friday that it had granted registration to 11 oil tankers formerly registered in Malta and Cyprus, and accused the media of misleading the public.

    Zanzibar’s minister for Infrastructure and Communication, Hamad Masoud Hamad, told the House of Representatives that the vessels were operated by firms owned by nationals of British Virgin Islands and Seychelles.

    He named the ships as Daisy with a gross register tonnage (GRT) of 81479 registered in Malta, Justice (GRT 164241) registered in Cyprus, Magnolia (GRT 81479) also formerly registered in Malta.

    Other ships are Courage (GRT 163660) owned by Courage Shipping Co. Ltd, Freedom (GRT 163660) also owned by Freedom shipping Co. Ltd, Valor (GRT 160930) owned by Valor Shipping Co. Ltd and Leadership (GRT 164241) owned by Leadership Shipping Co. Ltd. All these were formerly registered in Cyprus.

    Hamad also named Companion (GRT 164241) owned by Companion Shipping Co. Ltd, Camellia (GRT 81479) owned by Camellia Shipping Co. Ltd, Clove (GRT 81479) owned by Clove Shipping Co. Ltd and Lantana (GRT 81479) owned by Lantana Shipping Co. Ltd, all were formerly registered in Malta.

    On Wednesday, The Citizen reported that an Iranian oil-tanker company has renamed at least 10 of its vessels and switched them to Tanzania’s flag to get round international sanctions, sending shockwaves through the country’s leadership.

    Government ministers and public officials went into overdrive following reports that the company had changed the registration of several of its ships and was now passing itself off as a Tanzanian firm. The vessels were apparently registered in Zanzibar.

    The Minister for Transportation, Dr Harrison Mwakyembe, said he was aware of the development and had taken action. But his Foreign Affairs counterpart, Bernard Membe, was in the dark about the saga.

    The international news agency Bloomberg reported yesterday that the oil tanker company known as NITC, which is owned by the Iranian Pension Fund, has renamed at least 10 of its vessels and switched to the Tanzanian flag.

    Membe, who described the news as “shocking, strange and irregular according to the governing laws”, said thorough investigations would be conducted to establish the truth.

    Bloomberg reported that NITC renamed five of its very large crude carriers, each holding about two million barrels of oil, and five Suezmaxes with a capacity for one million barrels.

    Quoting the Equasis shipping database maintained by the European Commission, the reports pointed out that ownership of the ships was switched from NITC to new companies operating from the same address in Tehran. NITC remains the operator, though. All the ships were previously registered in Malta or Cyprus.

    This development comes a few days before the full European embargo on Iranian crude exports, which starts tomorrow, is extended to insuring vessels that carry the oil. Some 25 NITC tankers are being used to store crude, the Paris-based International Energy Agency said.