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Former Israeli PM Peres dead

DEAD: Former Israel Prime Minister Shimon Peres died early today. Photo/wikipedia.com

Shimon Peres, who served twice as Israel’s prime minister and once as president, has died at the age of 93.

Mr Peres suffered a stroke two weeks ago and he died in a hospital near Tel Aviv early on Wednesday, with his family at his bedside.

Mr Peres had been in the intensive care unit of the Sheba Medical Centre after suffering a major stroke on September 13. His son Chemi led tributes to ‘one of the founding fathers of the state of Israel’ who ‘worked tirelessly’ for it.

World figures are expected to attend his funeral in Jerusalem on Friday, including US President Barack Obama, Prince Charles and Pope Francis. The Clintons, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and UK Prime Minister Theresa May have also all confirmed they will attend, Israel’s Foreign Ministry said.

Mr Peres was one of the last of a generation of Israeli politicians present at the new nation’s birth in 1948.

NOBEL WINNER: Former Israel Prime Minister Shimon Peres won the Nobel Prize with former Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat. Photo /Getty Images
NOBEL WINNER: Former Israel Prime Minister Shimon Peres won the Nobel Prize with former Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat. Photo /Getty Images

He won the Nobel Peace prize in 1994 for his role negotiating peace accords with the Palestinians a year earlier.

He once said the Palestinians were Israel’s ‘closest neighbours’ and might become its ‘closest friends’.

Mr Peres’ funeral will be held at Mount Herzl, Israel’s national cemetery in Jerusalem.

Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu expressed his ‘deep sorrow’ over Mr Peres’ death.

Meanwhile US President Barack Obama called Mr Peres his ‘dear friend’ in a statement, and said: “He was guided by a vision of the human dignity and progress that he knew people of goodwill could advance together.”

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England FA manager ‘Big Sam’ resigns

RESIGNED: Former England FA manager Sam Allardyce aka 'Big Sam'.

Sam Allardyce has left his post as England manager by mutual agreement with the Football Association after one match and 67 days in charge.

It follows a newspaper investigation claiming he offered advice on how to “get around” rules on player transfers.

Allardyce, 61, is also alleged to have used his role to negotiate a deal worth £400,000 to represent a Far East firm.

An FA statement said Allardyce’s conduct ‘was inappropriate’ and Gareth Southgate will take temporary charge.

“He accepts he made a significant error of judgement and has apologised,” the FA said.

“This is not a decision that was taken lightly but the FA’s priority is to protect the wider interests of the game and maintain the highest standards of conduct in football.

“The manager of the England men’s senior team is a position which must demonstrate strong leadership and show respect for the integrity of the game at all times.”

Allardyce succeeded Roy Hodgson in July following England’s disastrous performance at Euro 2016 in France and becomes the national side’s shortest-serving full-time manager.

The Daily Telegraph said Allardyce had a meeting with undercover reporters posing as businessmen before he took charge of his first England training session.

During the meeting, which was recorded on camera, it is alleged Allardyce said it was ‘not a problem’ to bypass rules on third-party player ownership and claimed he knew of agents who were ‘doing it all the time’.

It was further alleged that a £400,000 deal was struck for him to represent the company to Far East investors and to be a keynote speaker at events. Allardyce met FA chairman Greg Clarke and chief executive Martin Glenn on Tuesday to offer what he called a ‘sincere and wholehearted apology for my actions’.

He explained it had been ‘a great honour’ to be appointed England manager in July and that he was ‘deeply disappointed at this outcome’.

“Although it was made clear during the recorded conversations that any proposed arrangements would need the FA’s full approval, I recognise I made some comments which have caused embarrassment,” he added.

“As part of the meeting, I was asked to clarify what I said and the context in which the conversations took place. I have co-operated fully in this regard.

“I also regret my comments with regard to other individuals.”

Clarke told the BBC he had not been sacked, but they had agreed his position was ‘untenable’.

In an interview on the FA website, Glenn said Allardyce was ‘distraught’ but that ‘discussing a range of issues from potential contraventions of FA rules through to personal comments frankly just don’t work when you’re the manager of England’.

However, Glenn did add that it was a “really painful decision” as the FA believed Allardyce was “a great fit for England manager and we think could have been extremely successful”.

Former Blackpool, Notts County, Bolton, Newcastle, Blackburn, West Ham and Sunderland boss Allardyce won his only game in charge of the national team last month.

An injury-time goal from Liverpool’s Adam Lallana gave England a 1-0 win over Slovakia in the first of their 2018 World Cup qualifiers.

Allardyce was due to announce his squad for the next round of qualifiers on Sunday but now Southgate will be in charge for four matches against Malta at Wembley (8 October), Slovenia away (11 October), Scotland at home (11 November) and Spain in a friendly (15 November) as the FA searches for a successor.

Southgate ruled himself out of running for the England manager job prior to Allardyce’s appointment but the current bookmakers’ favourite may become a contender, depending on results in his caretaker spell.

Bournemouth’s Eddie Howe, Crystal Palace manager Alan Pardew and former Hull City boss Steve Bruce are also among the possible candidates.

What is ‘third party’ ownership?

Third-party ownership occurs when investment companies take a stake in the economic rights of players.

It was described as a form of “slavery” by Michel Platini, the former president of European football’s governing body Uefa.

The practice was banned by the FA in 2008 and by Fifa in May last year.

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Besigye suspends homecoming

Forum for Democratic Change strongman, Kizza Besigye has cancelled his scheduled Thursday return and instead opted for Monday, October 3.
According to the FDC, Besigye was slated to return home from a one month long diaspora engagement with several groups whom he addressed in North America and United Kingdom, including an address at Chatham House.
The FDC had arranged for his return and had reportedly written to police notifying the force about the impending homecoming of the strongest opposition leader.
However, the latest information from party headquarters at Najjanankumbi indicate that Besigye will return on Monday.
“The people’s president Dr.Wrn Kizza Besigye will not be coming back on Thursday September 29. He will however be coming back on Monday October 3, at 8.15 am” Harold Kaija, FDC Deputy Secretary General, announced.
However, reacting to the announcements that Besigye was to return on Thursday September 29, police spokesperson Andrew Felix Kaweesi said the force will not allow anyone to act contrary to the law.
“We can’t allow anybody assemble along Entebbe highway to disrupt peace. Whoever continues with the alleged procession will not be allowed to see the light of the day,” Kaweesi warned early Monday.

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Lupita Nyong’o’s village elders furious after she committed abomination

A storm is brewing in Seme, the village of Oscar award winning actress Lupita Nyong’o after she was pictured climbing a tree while donning a dress in the presence of her father.

The elders have apparently raised issue with the act which they said went overboard and is taboo in the community.

A section of the elders have reportedly called for a ‘cleansing ceremony’ terming it an abomination to their community.

In the video by Vogue, Lupita goes back to her roots, takes a walk with her father Senator Anyang Nyong’o  in Seme and cooks Ugali with her mother, Dorothy Nyong’o.

The sensational reaction on social media has been diverse,

“It is a behavior which our society does not embrace. A father is supposed to be a family role model and the head of the house and under no circumstance is a grown up woman allowed to do that,” said Leah Adhiambo.

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Anne Kansiime to receive an award in Canada

Anne Kansiime

Celebrated Ugandan comedian Anne Kansiime has been lined up among the recipients of a Canadian award that was previously won by Olympic medalists and Africa’s legends.

According to the comedian, she is set to receive the prestigious excellence award In Canada.

“We are pleased to announce your Ninja is to receive the prestigious Afroglobal Excellence Award for Entertainment. The event will be held in Toronto, Canada. Thank you Ninjaz for loving your Ninja gal Kansiime”
Adding “Thank you Anne for your unbent will and determination to continue to grow. You are in exquisite company! God is awesome,” she broke the news to her fans through social media.

Kansiime says she was nominated for the award by members of the public, and selected by a panel under the direction of Silver trust Communications, the parent company of Afroglobal Television.

 

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Since 2004, Planet Africa Awards program now the Afroglobal Excellence Awards has identified and recognized hard work, excellence and professionalism, which produce role models, especially for our young people.

Past recipients include Olympic Gold Medalist, Daniel Igali; entrepreneur and businessman, Nobel Prize Winner, Professor Wole Soyinka; former Chairman of Grace Kennedy, Douglas Orane; movie and television star, Isaiah Washington; Nuclear Scientist, Dr. Sylvester Osamusali; YWCA International President, Dr. Musimbi Kanyoro; Biotechnologist, Dr. Florence Wambugu and William H. Osborne, President & CEO of Ford Motor Company of Canada; Legendary Singer, Yvonne Chaka Chaka, among other highly accomplished individuals and organizations.

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Kikiga dance excels at Victoria University Cultural Day

Victoria University held its cultural day last weekend with students showcasing their cultures. The university which has students from across East Africa region and beyond, performed excellently with the Bakiga from Uganda emerging the best.

As one of the top Universities in Uganda, Victoria University stands out as a pivot of academic excellence, offering a fresh and intellectually thriving environment that nurtures critical and progressive thinkers and pushes pedagogical boundaries.

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The University is committed to the advancement of higher education in the country and the East African region by establishing exemplary, specialized and employment-oriented education.

Funded by Mr Sudhir Ruparelia, whose backbone is solid, Victoria Univesity is backed by the Ruparelia Group which is notable in the education sector in Uganda and has under its portfolio the renowned Kampala International School Uganda and Kampala Parents’ School.

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In defence of journalists: there is more than just informing the public!

AWARD-WINNING JOURNALIST: Herbert Benon Oluka

By Herbert Benon Oluka

Criticism of the respective decisions by Chris Obore and Don Wanyama – among others – to swap journalism for government of Uganda service continues to dominate social media and beyond.
After observing this for a while, I want to offer an unsolicited view from the vantage point of someone who practices journalism. Initially, I didn’t study journalism. I studied human resource management (so don’t get surprised to see me swap media for HR one day). But I was drawn into print journalism by my passion for the written word.
However, after 12 years of practising journalism, and putting yourself in the firing line yo break some big stories, the reaction of your readership sometimes makes you wonder if its worth.
Its a question that I believe Chris and Don, both of who were in the media trenches before me, must have grappled with at some point.
As the investigations editor at Daily Monitor, Chris broke some of the biggest stories in the land on corruption, abuse of office, name it. But beyond the tweets and facebook shares, those stories were almost always forgotten by the next week – or even the next day.
So before you criticise Obore or Wanyama (today’s poster children of the many journalists who have moved on from the vocation), you have to ask yourself this very important question, “what civic action did I take on any of the many issues that these journalists investigated and exposed during their time?”
If you did not take any civic action to make government accountable for the many wrongs that these journalists exposed, then don’t you think these journalists would at some point get fatigued of doing the same things without getting any reaction from the public that they wrote for?
So the next time you read a story that I have investigated, please think of a way of following up the matter and bringing those accused of wrongdoing to account. Otherwise, we are all going around in circles and at some point either journalist or the passive reader gets fatigued of the same things.
The other criticism is that these journalists have betrayed their readers and followers of their work to go after money. Of course we conveniently forget that media practitioners are professionals who studied their vocations so that they could earn a living.
So if you want these professionals to continue earning a living by informing you through the media, then you had better support them by buying their products.
Dear reader of this opinion, if you were to be honest to yourself, how regularly do you buy a newspaper? When was the last time you bought a newspaper from Monday to Sunday? If you are not supporting the media by buying its products, then you might understand why some of the industry’s best eventually move on to do other things, including taking up jobs in government.
Although journalists often join the profession fuelled by passion, the reality is that they eventually grow up to have children, families and the demands of being providers. And if the media does not support them to do this, they may move on to other jobs that offer them the capacity to fulfill their obligations to their dependants.
Those are the realities we often don’t talk about.
So if you want your country’s best journalists to remain motivated to do their best, at least do these two things, if nothing else:-
(1) When you read a story they publish or broadcast, organise groups to demand action from those responsible – until action is taken. Don’t just put a link of the story to your fb page and write, “LOL.”
(2) Buy those newspapers off the stands so that we can pay our bills and so that we can finance good journalism. Good journalism costs money. It doesn’t happen in a vacuum.

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Top South Sudan journalist found dead

 

Veteran South Sudanese journalist Isaac Vuni has been found dead alongside a road, some three months after he was abducted from his home by unknown gunmen, the privately owned Radio Tamazuj reports on its news site.

It quotes his wife, Lucy Jua, as saying: “On Thursday we were informed that he was killed, but there is no information. Two youth or three found him dead, so they buried him.

“We don’t even know where he was buried. No information up to now.”

Lucy Jua said that her husband Isaac Vuni was kidnapped in June but she did not learn about the death of her husband until last week. She believes he was killed shortly after his abduction last June.

One of the sons of the late Vuni informed his wife of his death last Thursday. “We don’t know whether it was the government or who because everybody is quiet, there is no information, his son came and informed us that he was killed shortly after being kidnapped in June,” she said.

“We did not know, but we received information that a group of six men in uniform came, they had guns, so they took him together with his cousin brother, so this is the information we got, it is unclear whether they are government or SPLA-IO, he was taken from home at Kerepi area, he was found dumped in somebody’s farm there,” she explained.

“On Thursday we were informed that he was killed, but there is no information, two youth or three found him dead, so they buried him; we don’t even know where he was buried, no information up to now,” she added.

Isaac Vuni had been a contributor to Sudan Tribune online daily but he had stopped several years ago, according to his wife. Lucy Jua said that he had had some kind of land dispute but she did not know whether this was connected to his death in any way.

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South Sudan rallies neighbours against Machar rebellion

FAMILY NOT HAPPY: South Sudan rebel leader Riek Machar

South Sudan government has started soliciting for support from countries in the region not to host and provide military support to rebel groups with ambitions to oust the Juba regime through unconstitutional means.

The presidential advisor on security affairs Tut Kew Gatluak disclosed that officials from the world’s youngest nation have approached regional leaders, particularly countries with interest in the country, over the matter.

“These countries [in the region] now need to continue to support the implementation of peace and isolate those who are against it. They should (not) host and provide any kind of support, whether be it political and military support to those against the implementation of peace agreement,” he added.

According to the official, South Sudan is now appealing to countries within the region immediately expel rebel groups within their territories.

Gatluak is the first senior government official to react to a report in which the leadership of armed opposition under the ousted first vice president and leader, Riek Machar, announced resumption of armed struggle after holding a consultative meeting in Khartoum.

Machar, who is currently in Khartoum after fleeing Juba on July 11, has been denied asylum in Ethiopia where he had hoped to take refuge after completing treatment from a Khartoum-based hospital.

Last week, the Ethiopian Prime Minister, Hailemariam Desalegn, told reporters on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly meeting in New York, that Addis Ababa ‘does not need someone who is leading an armed struggle on its soil’.

Ethiopia, after the civil war broke out in Juba in December 2013, played an important role in mediating peace to end conflict in South Sudan and also hosted Machar for most of the two-and-a-half years of the peace negotiations led by the regional bloc (IGAD). However, Addis Ababa is now bowing to pressure from Juba and the dynamics of the deployment of the UN-backed regional protection force.

Ethiopia was supposed to provide the bulk of the 4,000 troops and this was going to complicate their participation, if the country gives asylum to Machar, who is still determined to wage armed struggle.

South Sudan President Salva Kiir removed Machar from his position and replaced him with his former lead negotiator, Taban Deng Gai, as the country’s first vice president, citing his prolonged absence.

Machar is also experiencing difficulties with his political activities in Sudan after authorities stopped him from holding a press conference in Khartoum following a week-long leadership meeting that explored the ongoing political crisis in South Sudan.

Sudan’s information minister, Ahmed Bilal Osman said Machar was in Khartoum for treatment and would not be permitted to conduct political activities.

He, however, said Khartoum was waiting for the implementation of the security arrangements so that Machar returns to South Sudan.

Machar vowed he would only to return to the South Sudanese capital, after the deployment of the regional protection force, which Juba appears to be reluctant to accept as a boost to the 12,000-strong UN peacekeeping force in the young nation.

According to a UN Security Council resolution, the protection force is supposed to act as a buffer between President Kiir’s soldiers and those of Machar as well as secure humanitarian supply lines and key installations.

 

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Somali elections postponed

Somalia President Hassan Sheikh Mohamoud is one of those vying for the country's presidency.

The electoral commission in Somalia has announced that the presidential election that was supposed to take place at the end of October has been delayed for a month.

The process, which is to last a few weeks, was expected to begin this past weekend with the election of upper and lower house members.

The latter are to be elected by some 14,000 delegates while the upper house is to be designated by regional states. Both houses will elect the new president.

But voting did not take place due to various disputes regarding the process.

Meanwhile, former Somali President Sharif Sheikh Ahmed announced his candidacy in the presidential election.

“I will run for the presidency, I want to make Somalia great and make sure the security of our people those who live in the country or out of the country,” said the former president in a press conference in Mogadishu.

Sheikh Sharif returned in Somalia last Thursday for the first time in four years. He was president between 2009 and 2012.

Currently, there are 10 presidential candidates.

 

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