Blog

  • Explosion in Syria Injures Three

    Three people have been injured in a deadly explosion that struck a truck close to a military compound in Damascus,Syria near a hotel used by the UN’s observer mission.

    Syrian state TV reported that three people had been injured in the blast, but that none of them were UN monitors.

    The intended target of the explosion was not immediately clear.

    The UN humanitarian chief Valerie Amos, currently visiting Syria, has said it should be made easier for aid to be delivered to civilians who need it.

    Later on Wednesday, the Organisation of Islamic Co-operation (OIC) is expected to suspend Syria’s membership over the ongoing violence.

    The 57-member organisation, meeting in the Saudi city of Mecca, is expected to endorse a statement put forward by its members’ foreign ministers, despite objections from Iran, Syria’s last regional ally.

    Syria’s Deputy Foreign Minister Faisal Mekdad visited the scene and told state media it was “a criminal act aimed at distorting Syria’s image”.

    He called on the international community to “work hand-in-hand against terrorism”.

    “Our primary goal is to secure the observer mission team and thank God no one from this mission has been hurt since it arrived in Syria,” he said.

  • Ethiopia Stops Forex Trade

    As the whereabouts of Ethiopia’s Prime minister Meles Zenawi remains unknown, Ethiopian government has suspended the provision of foreign currency in a decision that has been linked to the political uncertainties surrounding prime minister Zenawi’s deteriorating health.

    A notice to this effect has been issued by the regulator, the National Bank of Ethiopia, to the country’s commercial banks as Addis Ababa also appealed for food aid.

    The country’s foreign currency reserves are running alarmingly low and can only cover the importation of basic goods such as petroleum, medicine and food.

    The measure is likely to lead to a black market boom that would further weaken the country’s import-export trade, observers say, with shortages already being experienced.

    The country’s leading commercial bank has stopped issuing letters of credit–essentially a promise to pay–with fears of a rise in the cost of living.

    Banking in the Horn of Africa nation of about 85 million people is highly centrally regulated.

    Industry insiders argue that massive capital flight and illegal transactions are the main reasons for the rapid depletion of forex reserves.

    One of the fastest growing sub-Saharan Africa countries, Ethiopia’s growth has touched seven per cent annually for the last nine years, according to the IMF.

    Big businesses owned by Mr Meles’ ruling Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF) play a key role in the daily operation of the economy.

  • Banjul Capital Sinking

    Sea level rise due to climate change could submerge Gambian capital city Banjul, the country’s minister for works Francis Leity Mboge has warned.

    The minister was addressing a UNDP workshop held in Banjul on enhancing adaptive capacities and defences of coastal settlements.

    Gambia is one of Africa’s most vulnerable countries to climate change.

    “Gambia’s climate change vulnerability is likely to increase. Droughts, floods and storms are likely to increase in frequency and intensity.

    In coastal areas, sea level rise and rising sea temperatures will lead to saltwater intrusion, floods and coastal erosion,’’ the minister said.

    The minister said a one-meter sea level rise might wipe out Gambia’s human settlements, 60 per cent of mangrove forest cover, 33 per cent swampy areas and 20 per cent of rice fields.

    According to him, unfavourable climatic conditions will lead to a decrease in rice production impeding the county’s objective of producing 70,000 metric tonnes of rice annually.

    He added that climate change presents a serious threat to the country’s economic life-line such as tourism and fishing.

    “Studies both in Gambia and abroad show that climate change will have significant consequences on coastal regions, especially low-lying coasts with their mangrove ecosystems,” said Izumi Morota-Alakija, a UNDP representative.

  • Zuma to Mediate Zimbabwe Political Crisis Talks

    South African President Jacob Zuma is expected in Zimbabwe on Wednesday to mediate between warring political factions in Zimbabwe responsible for widening divisions and rising tensions.

    Zuma will meet the leaders of the three leading political parties to press for political reforms and new elections under a recently completed draft constitution.

    South Africa’s mediation efforts helped pave the way for the Global Political Agreement, which was agreed upon by the Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front (Zanu-PF) led by President Robert Mugabe and the then opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) led by the current Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai.

    Analysts say the agreement, which led to the formation in February 2009 of the current power-sharing government, was intended to help diffuse the post-election impasse that threatened to bring the country to a standstill at the time.

    South Africa has played the role of chief mediator since the violent and disputed elections of 2008, with President Zuma taking over from his predecessor Thabo Mbeki after taking over the presidency in 2009.

    The agreement, which led to the formation in February 2009 of the current power-sharing government, aimed at helping diffuse post-election stalemate that threatened to bring the country to a standstill at the time.

    The current government’s term of office is set to come to an end soon and fresh elections due to take place on a yet-to-be-specified date in the near future, little progress has been made on some of the most contentious issues.

  • Mai Mai Militia Burn Seven Villages

    Insurgency reports from Eastern DRC indicate that notorious Mai-Mai militia August 10 attacked fifteen villages about 80 km west of Goma, Masisi in North Kivu.

    At least five people were killed, three others injured, and seven villages burnt. Congolese forces in the region are said to have deployed since Saturday to secure the area.

    The Raïa Mutomboki attacked Nkokwe market to Remeka and the surrounding villages in pursuit of the rebel Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR).

    During the attack on the market, a woman, two men, a girl and a boy were killed.

    The Mai-Mai are a vigilante group which performs popular recurring raids on the positions of the FDLR, considered in the area as a foreign occupation force.

    In the villages, these militiamen wounded elderly and children with machetes. Two seriously injured were transported Sunday to a hospital in Goma.

    The victims reported that Raïa Mutomboki burned at least seven villages and the people were left to die in burning houses.

    Hundreds of people fled Remeka by Friday to take refuge in Bukumbiri.
    Military sources in Ngungu, near Remeka have said a team of the Armed Forces of the Democratic Republic of Congo (FARDC) has been dispatched.

    Masisi Member of Parliament Jean-Bosco Sebishimbo, also confirmed the attacks. He asked the area authorities to investigate to determine responsibilities, but also to secure the local population.

  • Fidel Castro Turns 86

    Communist leader Fidel Castro, who led Cuba for a half century and became known worldwide for decades of Cold War-era clashing with the United States, has celebrated his 86th birthday.

    Officially, there have been no plans to publicly honour Cuba’s one-time “commander-in-chief,” who tightly orchestrated public life there from January 1959 until he suffered a health crisis in 2006 and delegated his duties to his brother Raul Castro.

    Youth organizations marked not the anniversary of Castro’s birth but rather that of Rene Gonzalez, one of five Cuban secret service agents imprisoned in the United States considered “heroes of the war on terror” in their homeland.

    Fidel Castro has kept a low profile for months. The father of the Cuban revolution last appeared in public in March, when he met Pope Benedict XVI on the pontiff’s visit to the Caribbean country.

    The longtime leader has also fallen behind in his once prolific publications.

    His long “reflections” — totaling 398 to date — were once regularly published in state media. Now, he pens just several lines every few months on topics that leave even his most loyal supporters perplexed.

  • Congolese Olympic Judo Team Missing

    A Congolese judo competitor and three other members of the Congolese Olympic delegation have gone missing in London since the weekend, local media reported on Monday.

    This adds to a list of seven other African athletes who vanished during the Games.

    Democratic Republic of Congo’s Cedric Mandembo, who lost his only judo match in 49 seconds to Russian Alexander Mikhaylin in the 100 kg category, disappeared shortly after Sunday’s closing ceremony and was not answering his mobile phone, U.N.-sponsored Radio Okapi reported, citing the Congolese Olympic Committee.

    Congo judo coach Ibula Masengo, boxing trainer Blaise Bekwa, and national technical director of athletics Guy Nkita had also gone missing, according to the report, which said all four had left the Olympic village with their luggage.

    No further details were immediately available in London and a government spokesman said the Home Office did not comment on individual cases.

    Olympic officials are also looking for seven Cameroonian athletes who went missing during the Games.

    Cameroon officials asked for help tracking down five boxers, a swimmer and a soccer player, and said they were probably seeking to stay in Europe for economic reasons.

    The London Olympic organising committee said it had notified British police about the missing Cameroonians, but added that the athletes would not be infringing immigration laws until their visas expired in November.

  • U.S. Holding Poor Nations to Ransom

    AFRICA last week reacted angrily to statements by the United States that seek to undermine global climate negotiations.

    Addressing students at Dartmoth College recently, US special envoy on climate change Mr Todd Stern questioned the two degrees Celsius temperature limit as a functional global target.

    Mr Stern said agreeing to a framework to achieve the two degrees Celsius goal would “only lead to deadlock” and that a new agreement should give countries “flexibility”.

    The African Group, a coalition of 54 African countries speaking with one voice at international climate talks, described the US statement as reckless and disappointing, one certain to set back global targets in a huge way.

    Seyfi Nafo, spokesperson of the African Group, said: “That (temperature increases) means the destruction of crops on a huge scale, as has occurred in the heatwave that the US is experiencing today. But in Africa these crops belong to subsistence farmers and the result is devastation and famine.

    “This is not a game with numbers; it is a question of people’s lives, and so I am not sure there is much space for the ‘flexibility’ Mr Stern has spoken of.”

    Africa is at the forefront of climate impacts. Science shows that temperature increases here is approximately 150 percent the global average, so even a 1,5 degrees Celsius global target could mean over 2 degrees Celsius for Africa.

    Scientists believe a warming of 2 degrees Celsius would be manageable. And this is where global climate negotiations have mostly centred around, pursuing actions that limit unsustainable increases in world temperatures.

    However, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change warns that at the current rate of greenhouse gases production — estimated at 30 billion tonnes annually — the world risked a warming of up to 6 degrees Celsius by 2100.

    Mr Nafo said Africa was concerned with the US always shifting goalposts, and that even after pushing for a global goal, which it has agreed to on numerous occasions internationally, it now questions the same targets.

    “It is disappointing that the Obama administration has said it ‘supports’ the goal but does not support an approach that guarantees achieving it. It is like they agree they want to have their cake, but they cannot agree not to eat it.

    It is increasingly hard for us facing the impacts of climate change today to take a progressively weakening US position seriously.

    This is why Africa continues to push for a comprehensive global agreement based on what the science is telling us is required.

    “For every day of delay in changing the global emissions profile the costs of adaptation to climate change mount.

    Those costs are currently being paid by some of the world’s poorest and most vulnerable people: farmers, fisherfolk and the rural poor in Africa.

    The less that Mr Obama does today, the more he will owe these people tomorrow.”

    The US has refused to be bound by the Kyoto Protocol, the only legally binding global agreement committing nations to reduce emissions in an effective manner. Yet, together with China, the US produces more than 50 percent of all world emissions.

    Instead, the US wants developing countries to enter the fray, even those whose emission levels are certain not to cause any noticeable changes in the world climate system.

    Since Copenhagen in 2009, politics appear to have overtaken the climate agenda with embedded north-south rivalries threatening to derail the entire negotiating process.

    At Durban last December, after many hours of talks that appeared headed for a deadlock, negotiators managed to establish, among other things, the Durban Platform, a plan of action, which would result in the crafting of a new “Kyoto” effective only in 2020.

    The Durban outcome has been largely viewed as weak and lacking ambition.

    Climate change is arguably the biggest story of the 21st century, bearing strong ramifications on livelihoods, biodiversity and the natural environment.

    God is faithful.

    first published in the Zimbabwe Herald

  • Kigali First Africa city To Host Dîner en Blanc

    On August 11th 2012, the city of Kigali was the first in Africa to host the prestigious Dîner en Blanc® event, bringing together people from different walks of life for an elegant pop-up picnic in the middle of the city.

    Launched with just a handful of friends more than 20 years ago, Paris’ Dîner en Blanc® brings together nearly 15,000 people each year in some of the most prestigious locations throughout the French capital.

    Now coordinated by Aymeric Pasquier and Sandy Safi, the Dîner en Blanc® events are hosted in over a dozen cities around the world. This year, Kigali was the first city in Africa to host the event.

    Hosted by Illume Creative Studio, in partnership with Events Africa, Dîner en Blanc® -Kigali boasted over 375 guests all dining under the stars in the Vision 2020 estates in Gaculiro.

    Guests for Dîner en Blanc® were specifically invited by the organizers to attend this unique event, and they recommended their friends to be invited as well.

    Guests were required to follow the Dîner en Blanc® rules in order to ensure a seamless and wonderful evening and all participants were required to wear all white and bring their own table settings and table décor.

    Participants were told to meet at one of six different pick-up points around the city and were taken by KBS buses to the main venue. The location remained a secret to ensure all guests arrived at the same time.

    Once there, guests descended from the buses onto a field of all white where they were greeted with French music and welcoming hosts.

    They then went to their selected tables, and immediately began decorating them and laying out their food which they brought themselves or purchased in advance from participating restaurants and food service providers Shokola Lite, Food and Stuff, Sakae, and Lalibela.

    On the evening of the event, RDB CEO Clare Akamanzi tweeted “Dîner en Blanc is in line with Rwanda’s tourism strategy of being a city of choice for international events, meetings and conferences.”

    Indeed, according to Joan Mazimhaka of Illume Creative Studio: “One of Illume’s goals is to change what the world sees when you Google Rwanda, and we hope this is one of the events that will accomplish that.

    We also wanted to put together a fun event for Kigali’s residents, regional guests and tourists and also put Kigali on the map as an events destination.”

    The highlights of the evening included a live performance by Mike Kayihura, music by DJ Eric Soul, prizes for best table and best dressed (sponsored by Serena Hotels, Canal Plus, and RDB), dancing, and the opportunity for participants to make new friends Broadcast live online by Radio 10, the event not only entertained the guests present, but members of the Diaspora were also able to tune in to the festivities live.

    In addition to Tele10, other major sponsors and partners included KK Security, Positive Productions, SECAM, EABL , and Skol.

    The organizers would also like to especially thank the Rwandan National Police, the Kigali City Council , and the Gaculiro Vision 2020 midugudu for their support.

  • Rwanda’s Governance Model Discussed at Atlantic Council

    Strengthening governance and democracy is critical to the cause of social and economic advancement in any country.

    The Government of Rwanda as a result views good governance as one of the key flagship programs which ensures essential condition for development and peace.

    It is widely acknowledged that Rwanda’s post-genocide reconstruction, reconciliation and economic development have been marked by fundamental improvements in governance.

    President Paul Kagame notes, “from experience that peace, security, and equal opportunities for all –including gender equality – are important pillars of good governance, and a strong basis for socio-economic development”.

    In order to echo Rwandan’s unique model, ProfessorAnastase Shyaka, CEO of the Rwandan Governance Board was invited by The Atlantic Council and the International Republican Instituteand spoke at the “Democratic Governance Speakers Series”, in Washington D.C.,ongovernance in Rwanda.

    Along with the Professor Shyaka was, Dr. J. Peter Pham, the Director of the Michael S. Ansari Africa Center at the AtlanticCouncil and Mr. Paul Fagan, Regional Director of Africa at the International Republic Institute.

    During his remark, Prof. Shyaka provided a retrospective assessment of democratization and political governance in Rwanda.

    Moreover, he analyzed the progress and challenges as well as identified strategic options used to reach the optimum goal of the present Rwanda’s model which is“citizen centered governance.”

    Professor Shyaka also discussedRwanda’s Joint Governance Assessment program (JGA) which seeks to develop a common understanding of governance issues, various homegrown solutions and media reforms that contribute to the overall success of governance in Rwanda.

    He also highlighted the Rwandan Governance Board being used as “one stop center” for governance in the country.

    In concluding his remarks, Professor Shyaka also reiterated that building solid relationships amongst governments should go beyond “just aid” and therefore iskey in harboring positive governance between nations.

    Over the next few days, Prof. Shayaka will also be part of the first “International Conference on Democratic Governance, Challenges in Africa and Asia” at the University of Pennsylvania and Cheyney University which is co-hosted by the Rwandan Governance Board.

    The ultimate goal of this conference is to provide a platform to discuss multiple dimensions of democratic governance and corruption and help devise strategies to improve governance practices and anti-corruption strategies for the countries in the developing world.

    The conference will also feature roundtable discussions with Ambassadors of Burkina Faso, Rwanda, Sierra Leone, Ghana, Nigeria and Botswana. Over 60 scholars and practitioners from Asia, Africa, Europe and the United States will make presentations and share their theoretical and practical insights on the challenges for democratic governance.