Blog

  • Bashir Wont Meet Gen. Kiir Unless Pending Issues are Sorted

    Sudan President Omar El Bashir has ruled out holding a summit meeting with President Salva Kiir Mayardit of South Sudan before security dossiers between the two countries are tackled and common understandings are reached.

    The head of government negotiation team Idriss Mohammed Abdulgadir announced the readiness of the delegation to embark on negotiations on the pending issues on Tuesday.

    He pointed out in an interview with Sudan Radio on Saturday 26 May to the discussion of the main points which come at the top of the negotiation table.

    He stressed the importance of deciding upon the security dossier and the related arrangements first, indicating that the political, security and military committee headed by the Minister of Defense Lt. General Abdelrahim Mohammed Hussein will look into the issues of security dossier in an accurate manner in order to decide upon them and finally settle them in order to move to other dossiers.

    Undersecretary of Ministry of Foreign Affairs Ambassador Rahmtallah Osman Ahmed ruled out holding of a summit between President Al-Bashir and President Salva Kiir before understandings are reached on the contentious issues particularly the security dossier.

  • Displaced Congolese Get First Relief Assistance

    Internally displaced Congolese refugees have begun receiving their food assistance from the Congolese government. The distribution began at Mugunga 3, at the outskirts of Goma on Sunday.

    The relief assistance is expected to benefit about 36,000 displaced Congolese that fled fighting between rebel factions and the FARDC in the territory of Masisi in North Kivu.

    Supplied items including hundreds of tons of food and non-food items for IDPs living in the seven sites identified in North Kivu will cater for 3225 displaced families.

    “We agree to humanitarian assistance, but we want peace to return to our villages,” said some of the beneficiaries.

    Congolese government Minister for Humanitarian Affairs and National Solidarity, Charles Nawej Mundele says that government policy is not to maintain the displaced in camps.

    “There was the water problem that arose including the problem of hygiene latrines, there are food problems. The ultimate goal is to help all our people to regain their places of origin. We have it all: the government will assist all displaced people.”

  • Do You Know Why Married Women Cheat?

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    If only all extra-marital affairs had such happy endings as those I’ve recently read about.

    But the truth is, there are varied ways in which these trysts play out and affect a marriage and there are plenty of unfaithful husbands and wives floating around.

    According to my research, wives are as engaged in these extra marital affairs as are husbands — even if in our society, we like to think otherwise.

    Female infidelity is a topic that I have been researching since the early nineties. In my ongoing study, I’ve found that more affairs are happening later in a woman’s marriage and a woman’s reasons for having an affair both concur with and are distinct from a man’s reasons. According to my research:

    *Wives say their sex lives have dwindled

    *Women are out in the workplace and have the opportunity to meet other men

    *Wives feel neglected by their husbands and their lovers makes them feel special

    *Women have access to men through the Internet (old boyfriends as well as new acquaintances)

    *Women unexpectedly fall in love with someone else

    Of the wives with whom I’ve spoken, close to half believe that the ‘other man’ can actually help them to stay in an unhappy or suboptimal marriage because they find their happiness with the lover.

    This group of wives who remain with their husbands feels more in touch with their desires in this extra curricular relationship than in their marriages and they no longer feel that life is passing them by.

    There are wives who tell me that the affair is the one part of their lives that they can control and in this way they are empowered. And then there are wives who report that they feel more balanced in their marriage because of the affair.

    This faction of women, approximately a third of my interviewee pool, describe themselves as a good wife, a good mother, a successful career woman and a good lover. These relationships with the ‘other man’ satisfy some wives for years and become a way of life.

    More than half the wives I’ve interviewed describe the lover as a vehicle through which to understand what is missing in the marriage — and wives in this situation may give up the affair with a renewed commitment to the marriage.

    Others use the lover as a bridge to leave the marriage, although not necessarily for this person.

    My study indicates that:

    *70 percent of wives say the ‘other man’ is the opposite of their husbands

    *40 percent view the lover as an escape

    *Over 60 percent of women will engage in an extra marital affair (including an affair of the mind and a cyberspace affair) at some point in their marriage

    *65 percent of interviewees report that sex is better with the lover

    *90 percent of wives say they never imagined that they would have an affair

    What remains so striking to me about women who choose to engage in affairs is how they use the affair to better understand themselves and their marriages.

    These women may be convention-bound, dedicated wives and mothers, but they seek the affair nonetheless. In this way, the affair represents a form of exploration, and the consequences seem of less concern than the chance to have the experience.

  • Nairobi Bomb Injures 30

    At least 30 people have been injured in a Lunch hour- 1:10pm East African time explosion that rocked Assanands House next to Mt Kenya University Campus in Nairobi city.

    “There was a huge bang followed by people screaming and shouting,” said one witness who declined to be named.

    However, Kenya’s Police Commissioner Mathew Iteere said it was too early to determine the cause of the blast. He said blackened wires inside the trading centre indicated a possible electrical fault but did not rule out a bomb.

    Dense black smoke billowed from the badly damaged building and sirens blared as emergency service crews rushed to Moi Avenue, a major road running through the city centre.
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  • Youth Jobs Key To Economic Growth, Social Cohesion

    Countries across Africa should boost job creation and help young people acquire new skills, according to the African Economic Outlook 2012 -the number of youths in Africa set to double by 2045.

    “Creating productive employment for Africa’s rapidly growing young population is an immense challenge but also the key to future prosperity”, say the authors in the foreword.

    Co-written by the African Development Bank, the OECD Development Centre, the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA) and the UN Development Programme (UNDP), the report says youth are an opportunity for future economic growth.

    Between 2000 and 2008, despite world-topping economic growth rates, and a better educated youth, Africa created only 16 million jobs for young people aged between 15 and 24.

    Today, youth represent 60 percent of the continent’s unemployed, and of these 40 million youths, 22 million have given up on finding a job, many of them women.

    “The continent is experiencing jobless growth”, said Mthuli Ncube, Chief Economist and Vice-President of the African Development Bank (AfDB). “That is an unacceptable reality on a continent with such an impressive pool of youth, talent and creativity”.

    The report argues youth unemployment figures will increase unless Africa moves swiftly to make youth employment a priority, turning its human capital into economic opportunity.

    Youths can present a significant threat to social cohesion and political stability if they do not secure decent living conditions.

    High growth alone is not sufficient to guarantee productive employment. Youth employment is largely a problem of quality in low-income countries and one of quantity in middle-income countries, the report says.

    “In low-income countries, most young people work but are poor nevertheless. In African middle-income countries, on the other hand, such as South Africa or the Northern African countries, despite better education, more youth are inactive than working”, said Mario Pezzini, Director at the OECD Development Centre.

    The report recommends that African countries design better coordinated strategies to effectively tackle youth employment, focusing on job creation in the private sector while providing the right conditions for businesses of all sizes to grow and expand their work force.

    In addition, given the small size of the formal sector in many African countries, the report finds that a government focus on the informal sector and rural areas, which contain immense entrepreneurial talent, can serve as engines for inclusive growth since they can absorb higher numbers of unemployed youths.

    It also advocates for policies focused on creating the skills that are necessary for youths to compete in the job market, for instance by improving the quality of education in agriculture and new technologies.

    Increased policy focus on youth employment must be coupled with measures to boost investments in social and economic infrastructure and diversify the continent’s economy.

    “Export diversification beyond raw material and private sector development are important to mitigate the continent’s susceptibility to external shocks, but that takes time”, said Emmanuel Nnadozie, Director of Economic Development at UNECA.

    With the right policies in place, the continent could capitalize on its recent economic growth to achieve a development breakthrough.

    “Youth employment is an investment in the future. It contributes to reducing poverty, wealth creation, well-being and social cohesion,” said Pedro Conceição, Chief Economist at UNDP’s Regional Bureau for Africa.

    The African Economic Outlook presents a comprehensive analysis of the economic, social and political developments in the region. The report includes in-depth country notes on 53 of the continent’s 54 economies, a macroeconomic overview.

    The document also offers a chapter on human development which focuses this year on the importance of reversing capital flight to achieve sustainable human development.

  • AfDB Annual Meeting Opens Today

    The African Development Bank (AfDB) annual meetings kick off in Arusha, Tannzania today with a host of activities, including the launching of the 2012 African Economic Outlook.

    According to the meeting programme a report about the private sector development in the continent will be inaugurated.

    AfDB President Dr Donald Kaberuka, was expected to visit the recently repaved 105-kilometre Arusha-Namanga road.

    Economic experts and financial analysts from across Africa and other parts of the world are already in Arusha for the event to discuss the opportunities and challenges of the financial crisis in the continent.

    The heads of state segment of the annual meeting of Africa’s premier bank will take place on Thursday and Friday and will be opened by President Jakaya Kikwete on Thursday.

    At least six heads of state from a number of African states have confirmed to attend the meeting.

    Among the delegates would be central bank governors, ministers, economic experts and CEOs of regional banks and financial institutions.

    Main speakers today will include the AfDB chief economist and Vice President Mthuli Ncube, Marrio Pezzini, director of the OECD development centre, the director of the regonal integration and trade division of the UN Economic .

  • EAC States Urged to Secure Health Related MDGs

    Legislation on maternal and children health should be enacted in all EAC member states in order to help curb child mortality and morbidity rates in the region.

    The regional leaders have been urged to show political will and ensure enforcement of such laws as the region strives to realise the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).

    The appeal was made by the Speaker of the East African Legislative Assembly (Eala), Abdirahin Haithar Abdi, on Saturday while addressing Parliamentarians during a two-day seminar on improving information to secure women and children’s health and health related MDGs.

    The Speaker noted that there was huge information gap on mother and children health and called on stakeholders to put the issue on their agenda.

    He further remarked that information on women and children issues remained core and at the centre of development and urged the East African Inter-Parliamentary Forum on Health to double its effort in advocacy around the same.

    Abdi called for more endeavour to ensure information and data collection strategies were in place.

    The seminar organised by Eala, the East African Inter-Parliamentary Forum (IPF) and the Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU) attended by Eala MPs and parliamentarians from the National Assemblies of the partner states.

    The meeting hopes to ensure revival of the Maternal New Born and Child Health (MNCH) activities of the IPF and update them by incorporating certain considerations from the recently adopted IPU resolution on the role of parliaments in ensuring MNCH.

    It further wants to safeguard previous efforts by Eala/IPF to improve MNCH by developing an action plan for consideration by the incoming third assembly of the regional Parliament.

    In his remarks, the director of programmes at IPU, Martin Chugong, said the IPU would continue to work with all Parliaments in the region.

    “We hope that Parliaments would be able to access more resources, and ensure accountability so that access of health services by women and children is fully achieved,” Chugong said.

  • Rwanda National Police to Mark 12 Years

    Rwanda National Police will celebrate its birthday this June to mark 12years since the establishment of the institution.

    Police week celebrations will focus on strengthening partnership between Police and the public and to promote transparency and accountability.

    This year’s celebrations whose theme is fighting against drug abuse to end gender based violence. The commemoration also highlights Police annual activities over the past year and its plans for the future.

    Celebrations will focus on special activities that will be conducted in five districts including Burera, Gatsibo, Kicukiro, Nyamasheke and Nyanza.

    The districts signed a Memorandum of Understanding with Rwanda National Police on crime reduction and human security initiatives.

    During the sixteen-day celebrations, Rwanda National Police will participate in community oriented work including crime prevention strategies such as anti drug abuse campaign and sensitize on HIV/Aids awareness.

    The celebrations will also look forward to engage families in the fight against Gender Based Violence (GBV).

    According to Chief Inspector of Police Lynder Nkuranga, the acting director of community policing noted that Police will focus on sensitizing the Public on crime prevention by conducting several campaigns.

    The annual event will commence at Nyamasheke district on June 1, and end on June 16 at the Police headquarters where outstanding Police units as well as members of the public will be rewarded for their crime prevention initiatives.

  • Congo War Threatens Peace of Mountain Gorillas

    Mountain gorillas at Virunga Mountains are at risk following the current war in eastern DR Congo.

    According to Emmanuel de Merode the director of the Virunga Park, the mountain gorillas are the star tourist attractions “but since the fighting broke out on May 15, the tourists stopped coming”.

    The virunga mountain park is shared between Rwanda, Uganda and the DRCongo. This place is a natural habitat for the mountain gorillas.

    Most affected is the area of the Virunga mountains overlooking the towns of Jomba and Bunagana close to the Uganda border which are home to 200 of the endangered primates.

    The ongoing fighting is reportedly between DRC forces and rebels of the M23 rebel movement. Thousands of Congolese have been displaced, especially in the Rutshuru district of North Kivu province.

    The park director said three out of five patrol sectors affected by the fighting have been evacuated leaving the gorillas without care and exposed to the crossfire of the belligerents.

    The Virunga Park – formerly known as Albert national park – was created in 1925 during colonial rule and is famous worldwide as one of the very few remaining refuges of the mountain gorilla.

    However, since 1996, the park has also been home to various armed groups behind the instability in eastern DR Congo.

    Some of the human intruders have not shied off from killing the apes for commercial purposes.

  • Africa: Free Trade Zone To Be Operational in 2018

    The Chairperson of the African Union Commission Jean Ping has noted that Africa’s free trade zone is expected to become operational by the end of 2017 through the merger of all African regional trade blocks.

    “The heads of the states and government have committed to the realisation of a continent wide free trade zone.”

    Ping said in a speech read on his behalf by the AU Commission Chairperson Special Representative to Somalia Boubacar Diarra during the commemoration of the 49th anniversary of the Africa Day on Friday.

    The day celebrates the day that the Organisation of African Unity that transformed to the African Union in 2002 was founded.