Author: b_igi_adm1n

  • Japanese Minister Hangs Dead Over Article

    Tadahiro Matsushita, the Japanese Minister of Financial Services commited suicide over an article that was about to be published in a magazine.

    According to Jiji News and other sources, the weekly magazine Shukan Shincho, was getting ready to print a story involving Matsushita and an affair involving a woman. Shukan Shincho editors were not available to comment.

    The Minister was found dead september 10, on World Suicide Prevention Day in what police are investigating as a suicide. He allegedly hung himself in his own home.

    He would not be the first Japanese government minister to kill himself and he won’t be the last. It was reported that he was struggling with the pressures of his job.

    The last time a cabinet minister committed suicide was in 2007, when agriculture minister Toshikatsu Matsuoka hung himself after allegations of fiscal misconduct.

    The timing of Matsushita’s death underlines the scale of Japan’s suicide problem. Japan has one of the highest suicide rates in the world, according to the World Health Organization.

    Despite laws and outlines adopted by the government to tackle Japan’s high suicide rate, the number of suicides has remained over 30,000 per year for 14 years.

    While there have been rises and ebbs, the numbers stay high even as Japan’s population continues to shrink.

    The Japanese word for the act is remarkably straight-forward: 自殺 (ji-satsu). It literally means “kill” (殺) “oneself“(自)”.

    Suicide in Japan has a long tradition of being a means of apology, protest, means of taking revenge, and dealing with illness.

  • Smoking Marijuana Doubles risk of Testicular Cancer

    Young men who smoke Marijuana (locally known as urumoji) are twice more likely to be diagnosed with testicular cancer than men who have never consumed the narcotic—says a U.S. study.

    Researchers whose findings published in journal Cancer said the link appeared to be specific to a type of tumor known as nonseminoma.

    “This is the third study consistently demonstrating a greater than doubling of risk of this particularly undesirable subtype of testicular cancer among young men with marijuana use,” said Victoria Cortessis of the University of Southern California, Los Angeles, who led the study.

    According to the American Cancer Society, a man’s lifetime risk of getting testicular cancer is about one in 270 – and because effective treatment is available, the risk of dying from the disease is just one in 5,000.

    Little is known about what causes it. In cases where testes remain in the abdomen beyond the age of a year, are a risk factor. Both pesticide and hormone exposure have also been associated with the tumors.

    163 young men who had been diagnosed with testicular cancer and nearly 300 men in a comparison group without the disease.
    Both groups had been interviewed about their health and drug use between 1987 and 1994.

    Among the men with cancer, 81% had used marijuana at some point, whereas that was the case for 70 percent of the comparison group.

  • Tanzania New Defense College Targets Region

    Tanzania has inaugurated a National Defence College-NDC. The country will save on foreign exchange that would otherwise be spent on overseas training for military personnel.

    Advanced studies at the NDC are aimed at ensuring the Great Lakes Region enjoys peace that has been elusive in some countries for years.

    President Jakaya Kikwete said that NDC courses will include security planning, both internal and external. In the near future, the college will, in collaboration with the University of Dar es Salaam, offer MA in Strategic and Peace studies.

    The college, which has the capacity to accommodate 40 students, has already admitted 20.

    President Kikwete said, “We made it at the Tanzania Military Academy (TMA), we can make it here as well. This is a quality institution which will offer studies to soldiers from other Great Lakes Region while we also cut costs which we had been incurring in sending our senior officers abroad for courses that are now available here.”

    Challenging the college management to maintain and even push up the quality of training, Kikwete said, “Security is a cross-cutting issue that requires participation and commitment of all stakeholders.

    As our contribution to this noble endeavour, Tanzania decided to put up a college to cater, not only for our security personnel, but also for high level public servants.”

    When asked why the college has been built at this particular time, he said: “We have well equipped training camps on which we built as a foundation for our army. Now it is high time we shifted our attention to senior-most officers.”

    NDC launch comes only a few days after great lakes region heads of state concluded a summit in Kampala that deliberated on the peace and security in the region, with special focus on the troubled Democratic Republic of Congo.

    At the closed door meeting of the ICGLR heads of state in Kampala, Tanzania was the only country that committed troops to form the neutral force to deal with the M23 rebels and patrol DRC Eastern Border.

    Additional Info. NMG

  • Police Appeals to Public to Surrender Firearms

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    Rwanda National Police has made fresh appeal to the public to surrender any firearms in their possession.

    According to ACP Sam Karemera, the National Focal Point Coordinator on small arms and light weapons, there is still need for timely sharing of information on the whereabouts of firearms and those that still keep them.

    Community Policing Committees have also been urged to take such campaigns seriously.

    A 12-year old Maldoche Dusingizimana died September 5, following a grenade explosion at their home in Nyarurama cell, Ntongwe sector, Ruhango District.

    The blast took place right in their store- an indication that there are still firearms and weapons scattered or held illegally despite repeated calls to voluntarily surrender these dangerous weapons.

    Although illegal possession of firearms has tremendously reduced, police information shows that firearms are still scattered in different parts of the country following the 1990-1994 war and the 1997 insurgency which affected most the northern part of the country.

    Most of the weapons are said to have been distributed to the population by the genocidal government of Prime Minister Jean Kambanda in 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi, especially in the Southern Province.

    Subject to provisions of the Rwandan law, Article 671 of the penal code stipulates that ‘any person who illegally possesses, lends or gives an arm, or falsifies its identification marks, is liable to a term of imprisonment of six (6) months to one (1) year and a fine of three hundred thousand (300,000) to three million (3,000,000) Rwandan francs or one of these penalties.’

  • Kabuye Bamboo Forest a Growing Security Threat

    Residents in Kabuye sector in the outskirts of Kigali are calling for immediate strengthening of security in a bamboo forest located between the boundaries at Kabuye in Jabana sector and kagugu I in Kinyinya sector.

    The thick bamboo forest has been a center of mysterious killings, rape and theft cases.

    Residents of the area told IGIHE that the area is impassable especially in evening hours when such incidences are high because the thugs are said to hide in the forest to way lay passersby.

    Just a few weeks ago, a pregnant woman was found dead in the forest after she was attacked by thugs.

    The only safe way to pass through the bamboo forest in the area is by walking in a large group as a means of improving safety for one another.

    It’s said in the area there is no sign of Police deployment and thus the thugs take advantage of this open window and take the law in their hands.

    The Kabuye area leader Muhire Mashami Roger told IGIHE that security in the area has been increased to deal with the growing threats.
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  • EAC Forum of Electoral Commissions Meet in Nairobi

    The EAC Deputy Secretary General in charge of Political Federation Dr. Julius Tangus Rotich said EAC was committed to promoting democratic governance in the integration process.

    He added that good governance was a crosscutting issue essential to all stages of the EAC integration process.

    Dr.Tangus was addressing the Chairpersons of Electoral Commissions from Rwanda, Kenya, Burundi, Uganda and the United Republic of Tanzania at the 4th Meeting of EAC Forum of National Electoral Commissions opened Monday in Nairobi, Kenya.

    “Elections and democratization processes are a fundamental sector, given our political integration agenda.

    We cannot possibly hope to have one political authority without a harmonized electoral system and in this agenda, the Electoral Management Bodies have a central role to play”, said Dr. Rotich.

    Dr. Rotich noted that Chairpersons of Electoral Commissions had an emotive and sensitive assignment, that concerns both high and low politics and that by coming together as the EAC Forum of Electoral Commissions, participants would support each other in the efforts to conduct elections efficiently and fairly to meet expectations of electorates.

    He said EAC was developing regional standards as well as harnessing best practices from within in respect of promoting democratic governance and that the draft Protocol on Good Governance had specific pillars on democracy and democratization with comprehensive strategies.

    Dr. Rotich said once the Protocol is adopted, it would form a major milestone in consolidation of democracy in the region and urged the Chairpersons to support and advocate for its adoption by the respective governments.

    The EAC official noted that the bloc was at an advanced stage of developing and negotiating the EAC Principles on Election Observation and Evaluation as a policy instrument to support the Electoral Commissions’ work.

    Dr. Rotich disclosed that elections were becoming more and more contested than ever before and that it were becoming instruments of political tension and conflict triggers.

    “The level of participation, engagement and contestation is even higher, the fact that Citizens have become more aware of their rights and are holding their governments accountable, calls for integrity and professionalism on the part of Electoral Commissions”.

    He said democracy was expensive, “but we need to think harder in devising strategies that help in reducing the costs of elections in our respective Partner States”.

    The Deputy Secretary General disclosed that the EAC will deploy both short term and long term Election Observation Missions to the March 2013 Kenya General elections.

    The deployment will help the Mission to appreciate and understand the dynamics on the ground and facilitate credible assessment of the elections.

    The Nairobi meeting will, among others, consider implementation of previous decisions of the Council in the sector; consider the report of the workshop on “Peer- Learning in Election Management – Exploring opportunities for EMBs in East Africa”; consider a brief by IEBC – Kenya on the preparedness and challenges relating to the upcoming general elections; and consider planned activities towards the EAC Election Observation Mission to the Kenyan Elections in March 2013.

  • Malawian To Hang Zimbabweans on Death Row

    A Malawian national has taken the job of Hangman for the Zimbabwe government ending an eight-year search for a hangman.

    There are about 71 executions in Zimbabwe waiting to be implemented but there has been no hangman for a long time.

    Zimbabwe government started advertising for the job last year but locals were reluctant to apply despite the high rate of unemployment estimated at over 80%.

    Justice and Legal Affairs ministry permanent secretary, David Mangota, confirmed at the weekend that the vacancy had finally been filled.

    But he said executions were not due to start anytime soon because there were proposals to scrap the death penalty in the country’s new draft constitution.

    “We now have a hangman who is raring to go but because there are indications that the issue of the death sentence might be dealt with in the new constitution, for now the government has embraced a moratorium in anticipation of abolishing it altogether,” Mangota said at a workshop on human rights.

    He refused to divulge the identity of the hangman or his working conditions but said the salary would be “substantial.”

    However, Zimbabwe’s proposed new constitution would abolish the death penalty except in cases of “aggravated murder.”

  • Hassan Sheikh Mohamoud is New Somalia President

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    Academic Hassan Sheikh Mohamoud was chosen late monday by Somali Members of parliament as the country’s new President.

    The choice of Hassan has upset the pre-election favourite and turning a major page in the search for a peace that has proved elusive for two decades.

    MPs marked their ballot papers behind a curtain before casting them in a clear box in front of foreign envoys and hundreds of Somali men and women. In a surprise result, Mohamud won a runoff by 190 votes to 79 after the first round failed to produce a clear winner.

    Mohamud, 57, is a professor and activist who has worked for several national and international peace and development organisations including the UN children’s agency Unicef.

    Last year, frustrated by Somalia’s dominant clan system, he founded what he claimed was the first political party in Mogadishu, the Peace and Development party.

    Touching a Qur’an with his right hand, Mohamud was sworn in as president within minutes of his poll victory. Ahmed, the outgoing president, conceded defeat after the onlookers in the hall spontaneously stood up and sang the national anthem.

    “I am happy to see the first free and fair election happen in Somalia after 40 years,” he said. “I want to congratulate the new president for the fair election, and I want to declare that I am fully satisfied with the results.”

    Outgoing prime minister Abdiweli Mohamed Ali, who threw his weight behind Mohamud’s candidacy, said the result heralded a new era for Somali politics. “Somalia voted for change,” he told Reuters, adding it was too early to say if he would take part in the new administration.

    Among the countless issues in the new president’s intray will be piracy off the Somali coast, which has led to millions of pounds worth of armed defences for international shipping. In an interview with Press in Mogadishu last month, Mohamud accused foreign powers of hypocrisy.

    “Somalis are confused,” he said. “The international community is putting a lot of resources towards it. Why not address the illegal fishing in Somali seas? People are getting the notion that international forces are there to protect the illegal fishing. The Somali fisherman cannot go to the sea because he will be considered a pirate.”

    Referring to allegations that European firms dump toxic waste off the Somali coast, he added: “Why the international community not say anything? It’s delicate.”

    But Mohamud rejected the idea of offering pirates an amnesty. “That will only encourage more. They have to be given some incentive but not that. Give them skills and rehabilitation and the opportunity to learn a better life.

    Although Islamist militant group al-Shabaab has been driven out of Mogadishu, assassinations and suicide bombings remain a constant threat. As president, Mohamud will now be a prime target.

    He admitted: “Anybody who lives here in Mogadishu always lives under enormous risk. We have a coping mechanism but it doesn’t always work.

    “The fear factor is very strong. It makes the people quiet, it makes people behave differently. If we let the fear factor control us, we will never move ahead.”

    Mohamud has received threats from al-Shabaab in the past. “Someone called my wife to say, ‘You’ll have to take care of your orphan soon.’ Al-Shabaab targets everybody who is doing something against them– a woman in civil society, a traditional elder, a businessman, a religious leader.

    “Al-Shabaab is not an ordinary militia like a clan militia. It is an ideology. You cannot fight an ideology only. That is what the government is doing. Military al-Shabaab is defeated; the areas they control are because nobody wants them, but still the ideology is there. We need a multi-faceted war against them. If we continue like this, the suicide bombings will continue.”

    Continued peace in Mogadishu is far from assured, he said. “If Amisom [African Union forces] left the state house, the president will not be there. Somalia doesn’t have 100 trained soldiers capable of defending it. They are killing machines, trained in militia camps. They do not see themselves as servants of the people.

    “If you go through Mogadishu, you can see it is different from 18 months ago. But the question is, how sustainable is this? It’s still very fragile. Amisom cannot be here forever. We Somalis need to have our own security forces.”

    During the interview, Mohamud presented himself as a political outsider untainted by the UN-backed transitional federal government (TFG) and its “failure of leadership”. In July, a UN report said it had found that out of every $10 in revenue raised between 2009-10, $7 had never made it into state coffers.

    Graft had become endemic, Mohamud said. “The leaders see the state as a money-making machine. They don’t want to confine their power. Corruption was an important factor that contributed and still does today.”

    He said the selection of MPs was flawed but his party had backed the process and a new constitution. Little guessing that he would emerge the victor, he added: “It is a defining time in Somalia. I’m not saying Somalia will get what it deserves but it will be better than the status quo.”

    Mohamud graduated from the Somali National University in 1981 and went on to study in India, where he obtained a master’s degree from Bhopal University in 1988.

    He returned home and taught as a professor, including at the Somali Institute of Management and Administration Development, which he helped found in 1999. Its goal is to train administrators and technicians who can help rebuild the country.

    The vote was seen as a culmination of a regionally brokered and UN-backed roadmap. There has been no effective central government control over most of the largely lawless country since the outbreak of civil war in 1991.

  • Global Telecom Body ITU Plans Talks On Global Patent Litigation

    The International Telecommunication Union said Monday it plans to hold a roundtable session on patent litigation next month to include discourse on the ongoing dispute staged between Samsung Electronics and Apple Inc.

    “(Patent litigation) is a worrisome trend for us and we’d like this issue to become a discussion so that we can give a set of recommendations,” said Hamadoun Toure(check photo), secretary-general of the ITU, during a press conference in Seoul.

    “This will enable us to understand the complexity of patent litigations and consider possible actions that could be taken by the stakeholders.”

    The roundtable, which will take place at ITU headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland, on Oct. 10, will assess the effectiveness of reasonable and non-discriminatory patent policies.

    The session is also designed to offer a neutral venue for industry and standards bodies and regulators from around the world, according to ITU officials.

    Participants who have registered so far include firms like Apple, Samsung, Intel, Microsoft, Nokia, Qualcomm and Cisco Systems, as well as the European Commission, U.S. Department of Justice and the U.S. Federal Trade Commission.

    “We have to bring this to a conclusion so that we can promote more innovation in the industry,” Toure said. “I believe the firms should spend less time in courts and work on new, innovative ideas.”

    While elaborating that intellectual property needs to be respected, the chief of the United Nations’ specialized unit for information and communication technologies stressed that a firm with a certain patent should apply the same rules to all other companies.

    Toure’s three-day visit to Korea comes as the Korea Communications Commission is hosting the ITU plenipotentiary conference, also dubbed the ICT Olympics, in Busan in 2014.

    He visited the KCC’s chairman Lee Kye-cheol and signed an agreement to work together on the successful launch of the ITU plenipotentiary conference in downtown Seoul on Monday.

    The three-week event, which will launch on Oct. 20, 2014, is scheduled to bring together about 3,000 people that include representatives from government, international organizations and businesses in 193 countries.

    “Korea, a world leader in ICT, will be hosting this global conference,” he said. “Korea is a major contributor to ITU. Korea is also participating in very important projects regarding wireless broadband and digital broadcasting.”

    Indicating that 2014 is the year before ITU’s deadline for a worldwide switchover to digital broadcasting, he said the event launched in Busan will be a “new turning point” for those involved.

    He said the participating bodies will revise the ITU Constitution to devise a “new, stable one” and that

  • Brazil Football Player Kills Lover Feeds Body to Dog

    A star football player for Brazilian club CR Flamengo allegedly killed his mistress and fed her remains to his dog after she told him about their love child, according to news reports.

    To preserve his honor, 27-year-old Bruno Fernandes de Souza planned the kidnap and murder of his mistress Eliza Samudio, 25, with eight others, including his wife, family members, and former detective Luiz Santos.

    The famous goalkeeper took action when the model told him she would take legal actions to prove the paternity of their newborn child.

    They kidnapped Samudio from a hotel and drove her to Souza’s property to kill her, according to a family member’s confession to the police. The group played loud music to drown out her screams from being tortured by Santos.

    Souza watched the torture before helping Santos dismember her. Some parts of the body were fed to Souza’s Rottweiler while others were buried in concrete.

    Souza then ordered his wife to tell people that they had adopted his 4-month-old love child from poor relatives.

    “An idol like Bruno, from such a major team, has turned out to be a monster. We have witnesses who will testify that he turned his girl into a human sacrifice merely to try to protect his reputation,” said Edson Moreira, a detective investigating the case.

    Souza and all members related to the incident are awaiting trial. Souza has maintained his innocence by claiming a “clear conscience.”