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Do away with sectarian talk

Recently, while addressing delegates at the launch of the Global and Uganda Human Development Report 2015 the Third Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Easrt African Affairs Kirunda Kivejinja, castigated Ugandans who claim that ‘westerners’ have benefitted fro government ‘on account of favouritism and patronage’.

He instead told those in attendance that the westerners were hard working and were selling the fruits of their sweat to earn a decent living.

There is a lot of wisdom in Mr Kivejinja’s comments, mostly coming at a time when the country is bracing for elections next year.

It is important to note that Uganda, as constituted under the law, is a multi-lingual and multi-cultural society, whose citizens have over the years enjoyed a largely harmonious co-existence. This therefore, means that Ugandans have been able to manage their unity in diversity.

In fact it is the co-existence and ability to manage a unified diversity that is responsible for the development the country has witnessed, irrespective of the enormity or otherwise.

Indeed, at this point in our country’s history, pragmatism coupled with patriotic valour are important ingredients that will take us to the next level and any form of disruption in that positive direction should be denounced with the fierceness it deserves.

Lastly, as Ugandans we need to inculcate a sense of nationalism in our minds if we are to determine the future of our motherland Uganda, the Pearl of Africa.

We have few options!

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EA to deploy peacekeeping force in Burundi – AU

 

The African Union’s (AU) Peace and Security Council has proposed sending 5,000 peacekeepers to Burundi, invoking for the first time a rule which allows it to deploy a force without a country’s consent, a diplomat said.

Burundi, which U.N. officials say is on the brink of civil war, has said there was no need for a peacekeeping mission dubbed the African Prevention and Protection Mission in Burundi,  which an AU diplomat said will comprise the East African Standby Force (EASF).

The AU decision, drawn up late yesterday, needs approval from the UN Security Council, which has been considering options to resolve the crisis including sending peacekeepers who would seek to protect civilians and create conditions for dialogue.

“We have authorised the deployment of a 5,000-man force for Burundi whose mandate includes the protection of civilians,” a diplomat from a member country of the council told Reuters.

“This (AU) resolution marks the first time the African Union decided to invoke its charter’s Article 4,” the diplomat said.

According to Chapter 4, the AU has the right to intervene in a member state “in respect of grave circumstances, namely: war crimes, genocide and crimes against humanity.”

UN officials and Western envoys have expressed alarm at the escalating violence in Burundi, which only emerged from an ethnically charged civil war in 2005 after 12 years of fighting.

The United Nations said at least 400 people have been killed since April, when unrest erupted after President Pierre Nkurunziza said he would seek a third term in office. The crisis pits opponents of the president’s re-election against loyalists.

The violence has unnerved a region that remains volatile two decades after a genocide in neighbouring Rwanda. Unrest has mostly centred on capital Bujumbura, where insurgents attacked military bases on Friday. Almost 90 people died in the clashes.

Diplomats fear a prolonged conflict in Burundi could reopen old ethnic rifts. The civil war had pitted the army, which was at the time led by minority Tutsis, against rebel groups of the Hutu majority, including one led by Nkurunziza.

Burundi’s presidency said yesterday it was open to “broad-based inclusive dialogue” bur opponents have dismissed similar pledges in the past, saying the government has not been willing to discuss core issues such as the president’s new term.

Meanwhile, the AU council asked the AU Commission’s chairwoman, Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, to submit within a week a list of individuals who would face sanctions.

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Jose Mourinho: Chelsea sack boss after Premier League slump

DEFENDED SELF: Manchester United Manager Jose Mourinho
  • The 52-year-old Portuguese had been in his second spell at the club,taking charge in June 2013.

  • Chelsea finished eight points clear last season and won the League Cup, but have lost nine of their 16 league games so far and are 16th in the table, one point above the relegation places.

  • Mourinho’s final match was Monday’s 2-1 defeat at leaders Leicester City.

  • Pep Guardiola, Guus Hiddink, Brendan Rodgers and Juande Ramos have all been touted as possible successors as Blues owner Roman Abramovich begins another managerial search.

“Chelsea Football Club and Jose Mourinho have today parted company by mutual consent.

“All at Chelsea thank Jose for his immense contribution since he returned as manager in the summer of 2013.

“His three league titles, FA Cup, Community Shield and three League Cup wins over two spells make him the most successful manager in our 110-year history.

“But both Jose and the board agreed results have not been good enough this season and believe it is in the best interests of both parties to go our separate ways.

“The club wishes to make clear Jose leaves us on good terms and will always remain a much-loved, respected and significant figure at Chelsea.

“His legacy at Stamford Bridge and in England has long been guaranteed and he will always be warmly welcomed back to Stamford Bridge.

“The club’s focus is now on ensuring our talented squad reaches its potential.

“There will be no further comment until a new appointment is made.”

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Police should avoid the ‘most corrupt’ tag in 2016

A report by Transparency International in 2015 has once again the Uganda Police Force in the glare of publicity for being the most corrupt institution in Uganda.

Similarly, over the years there have been other reports by the Inspector General of Government (IGG) office and the Uganda Human Rights Commission, pinning the UPF on corruption.

And, just yesterday, retired Masaka High Court Judge Justice Vincent Kibuuka Musoke weighed in on the issue of corruption in the public service and advised those who feel they cant measure up to the standards, to resign.

“I think if people feel they cannot desist from corruption and soliciting bribes, they should help us and keep themselves away from civil service because the country cannot develop,” Justice Kibuuka Musoke was quoted as saying.

The police in Uganda are supposed to ‘serve and protect’ but unfortunately many have abdicated that role and instead chosen to torment the culpable citizens by demanding for bribes to carry out even the simplest investigation.

For instance, why should a complainant first part with money to ‘facilitate’ an investigating officer to ‘swear an affidavit’ to track a stolen phone or any property for that matter? Also, why must one buy a photocopy of a police form (normally from kiosks found around police stations) in order to record details of his/her stolen property?

This calls for serious intervention by the superiors.

Anyhow, somebody recently asked why the Police Standards Unit (PSU) is headed by a police officer, and suggested it would make more sense if the overseer was an eminent individual with no direct links to the UPF.

Enkima tesaala gwa kibira’ literary meaning that man’s closest relatives do not participate as judges in matters of their abode (forest), he said while giving an example of Kenya where they have the Independent Police Oversight Authority (IPOA), an impartial civilian oversight body which handles controversial issues arising from the behavior and actions of the police.

That said, a lot has been said about corruption in the Uganda Police Force but little seems to be done, leaving the perpetrators with free reign to denude the people of Uganda.

So, the immediate plea as we move into 2016 is for the Force to clean its image in regard to corruption.

 

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Protestors demand Zuma resignation over finance ministers debacle

SHHH: Embattled South Africa President Jacob Zuma

 

Thousands of protesters marched through South African cities early today demanding President Jacob Zuma’s resignation after he triggered economic turmoil by sacking his respected finance minister.

Zuma was left badly bruised when he fired Nhlanhla Nene last week in favour of little-known backbencher David van Rooyen, who was himself removed after only four days in office.

Zuma’s African National Congress (ANC) party, which has ruled since the end of apartheid in 1994, won the general election easily last year but could lose power in some major municipalities at local polls in 2016.

The debacle over finance ministers triggered a market rout and fuelled opposition to Zuma, who has been buffeted by corruption scandals, a dire economy and charges of tarnishing Nelson Mandela’s legacy.

Handing Van Rooyen the key finance portfolio fuelled fears that corrupt Zuma loyalists were calling the shots in government.

“This was another attempt to blunt the instruments of democracy,” said Zwelinzima Vavi, one of the march organisers.

“They were wanting to grab the treasury for the interests of (those) who are eating from the carcass of our state.

“Jacob Zuma has demonstrated beyond any reasonable doubt that he doesn’t have what it takes to be a leader of a sophisticated democracy and economy.”

Placards at the march in Johannesburg, which was held on the Day of Reconciliation, an annual holiday, read ’21 Years of Undemocratic Rule’ and ‘Recall Zuma Now’.

Other protests were held in Cape Town and Pretoria.

In one of the biggest crises of his rule, Zuma was forced into a dramatic U-turn, sacking Van Rooyen and re-appointing Pravin Gordhan, a steadying hand who was finance minister from 2009 to 2014.

During the debacle, the rand collapsed to historic lows as foreign investors pulled out and government bond yields jumped in a bout of pessimism over the future of Africa’s most advanced economy.

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UN calls for stop to ‘senseless killings’ in Burundi

Protests erupted in Burundi against President Pierre Nkurunziza's third-term bid.
Amid the deadly escalation of violence in Burundi, the United Nations human rights chief sounded the alarm at the unfolding crisis in the country and urged all actors in the current crisis to take every step possible to stop the growing violence and engage in a meaningful and inclusive dialogue.
“More than ever before, there is an urgent need for decisive action from the international community to stop this senseless violence. We cannot turn our backs on the people of Burundi at this turning point of their history,” spokesperson for the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Cécile Pouilly told reporters in Geneva during a regular press briefing.
The latest call comes following the attacks on December 11 against several military camps in Bujumbura, which killed dozens of people in the course of heavy fighting prompting the UN Secretary-General to condemn the attacks and add that “such acts of violence can lead to a further destabilization of the situation in crisis-torn Burundi.”
According to Ms Pouilly, the security forces carried out intensive house searches later in the Musaga and Nyakabiga neighbourhoods, where they arrested hundreds of young men, allegedly summarily executing a number of them and taking many others to unknown locations.
“With this latest series of bloody events, the country seems to have taken a new step towards outright civil war and tensions are now at bursting point in Bujumbura,” said Ms. Pouilly.
She added that the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein urged all stakeholders to start inclusive dialogue and added that there is an urgent need for decisive action from the international community to stop the senseless violence.
Burundi has been in the midst of a political crisis that has driven countless people fleeing to safety in neighbouring countries since President Pierre Nkurunziza decided to run for a controversial third term earlier this year. Mr. Zeid and a host of senior UN officials including Secretary General  Ban Ki-moon have repeatedly called for calm and the resumption of the national dialogue that was suspended in mid-July.
At a press conference in the UN headquarters, two UN Emergency Directors briefed the media about their recent visit to Burundi and warned that “urgent action is needed to prevent a descent into catastrophic violence in Burundi.”
“Burundi is facing a critical crossroads. The levels of displacement and food insecurity are already concerning, but we risk another full-blown humanitarian crisis without urgent progress on the political front,” John Ging, the Emergency Director of the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs OCHA told reporters.
At the same press conference, UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) Emergency Director, Afshan Khan stressed that children are bearing the brunt of the violence in Burundi, as many have been killed wounded and arbitrarily detained and many more are living with the constant sound of gunshots and grenades.
“These violations against the children of Burundi must end now. Children must be protected from all forms of violence and their rights must be respected,” warned Mr. Khan.
According to UNICEF and OCHA, intensified violence in the country is worsening the humanitarian plight of an already vulnerable population, with over 80 per cent of families below the poverty line, 7 per cent of the population severely food insecure, and 58 per cent of people chronically malnourished, placing Burundi at 184 out of 187 on the recently released Human Development Index.
 
The UN agencies also added that many areas of the country are suffering the ill-effects of El Niño, with widespread flooding having destroyed homes and livelihoods.
Before the crisis, donor funding accounted for over half of Burundi’s budget, however, several bilateral donors have suspended budget support in response to the political crisis, which is further straining the provision of essential public services like health and clean water, warned the UN Agencies.
Free healthcare for young children and mothers has just been suspended, a cut which is likely to have severe public health impacts, they added.
The UN agencies reported that in the past four days, about 100 people have been killed by violence in Bujumbura, and an estimated 340 people have been killed since April.
“Action is needed now to prevent a descent into catastrophic violence. Worsening tension in a country with a history of deep ethnic divisions must be urgently addressed to protect civilians from further harm,” warned Mr. Ging.
Further, the UN agencies noted that popular protests following the political crisis have been heavily repressed by security forces, resulting in significant human rights abuses and repression of the media.
Additionally, they also reported that nearly 220,000 people have fled Burundi and an additional 15,000 people have been displaced within the country since April.
The Emergency Directors of seven UN agencies, the International Organization for Migration and three international NGOs travelled to Burundi from December 2 -5 to assess the deteriorating humanitarian situation, according to the UN agencies.
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UN increases South Sudan peacekeepers by 1000

TO GO WITH: Philippines-UN-military,FOCUS by Joel Guinto In this photo taken on September 11, 2014, Filipino peacekeeper trainees, taking their positions during a drill simulating a hostile environment in a peacekeeping mission at the peackeepers training center in Capas town, Tarlac province, north of Manila. To help guard the world's war zones, the Philippines plucks soldiers from the frontlines against Al-Qaeda-linked militants and communist insurgents. But battle-hardened as these "warrior peacekeepers" are, they are also trained to turn on the charm when deployed to UN missions in Syria, Haiti and Liberia. AFP PHOTO/TED ALJIBE (Photo credit should read TED ALJIBE/AFP/Getty Images)

 

The Security Council has increased the United Nations peacekeeping force level in strife-torn South Sudan by over 1,000 to a ceiling of 15,000 troops and police, and extended its mandate for another six months, citing protection of civilians “by all necessary means” as its top priority.

In a resolution adopted just two weeks in the face of repeated ceasefire violations by both the Government and opposition, the 15-member body asked Secretary General Ban Ki-moon to prioritize the complete deployment at the new level, including tactical military helicopters and unarmed unmanned aerial systems.

The development follows a warning by the UN Under-Secretary-General for Peacekeeping Operations Hervé Ladsous to the Council earlier this month, that South Sudan is at a critical juncture, necessitating an increase in UNMISS forces.

The UN Mission in South Sudan (UNMISS) was originally set up on the eve of the country’s independence in July, 2009, with an initial ceiling of 7,000 and a mandate to support the Government in peace consolidation by fostering state building and economic development.

But both ceiling and mandate changed radically two years ago when a conflict erupted between President Salva Kiir and his former Vice-President Riek Machar, killing thousands, displacing over 2.4 million people, tens of thousands of whom have sought refuge at UNMISS bases, and impacting the food security of 4.6 million.

UNMISS currently has some 12,500 uniformed personnel on the ground.

The UN resolution voiced grave concern that according to reports “there are reasonable grounds to believe that war crimes and crimes against humanity, including those involving extrajudicial killings, rape and other acts of sexual violence, enforced disappearances, the use of children in armed conflict, arbitrary arrests and detention, and attacks on schools and hospitals have been committed by both Government and opposition forces.”

It asked Mr. Ban to develop a plan for UNMISS “to take appropriate action to deter and respond to any escalation of violence in and around Juba (the capital), in order to effectively protect civilians, and to protect critical infrastructure.”

To deter violence against civilians, it called for “proactive deployment, active patrolling with particular attention to IDPs (internally displaced persons), including but not limited to those in protection sites and refugee camps, humanitarian personnel and human rights defenders, and identification of threats and attacks against civilians.”

It also urged a mission-wide early warning strategy, including information gathering and monitoring, to counter threats and attacks against civilians, as well as full investigation of abuses against children and women, including all forms of sexual and gender-based violence.

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EAC set for US$8.5m intra-African deal

The International Trade Centre (ITC) and the East African Community (EAC) are to launch a new US$8.5 million joint project to boost intra-African trade.
 
The Trade and Regional Integration Project (TRIP) to be initially financed by Finland was announced by the EAC Secretary-General Amb Dr Richard Sezibera and ITC Executive Director Arancha González on the sidelines of the World Trade Organization’s Ministerial Conference taking place in Nairobi, Kenya fromDecember 15-18.
 
The new initiative aims to strengthen existing efforts by East African Partner States for closer economic integration, including the East African Customs Union and the EAC Common Market, and the ITC and the EAC will intervene at three levels:  enterprise, institutional and at the trade policy level ‘to provide integrated solutions to problems of SME competitiveness’.
The TRIP for EAC project set for implementation in January 2016 also sets out to support the African Union’s Action Plan for Boosting Intra-African Trade and the recently agreed tripartite free-trade agreement among the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (COMESA), the EAC and the Southern African Development Community (SADC).
Specifically, the project aims to boost the competitiveness of EAC-based small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), enabling them to step up intra-and inter-regional trade. The project will have a strong focus on women’s economic empowerment, and will also support wider private-sector development in the EAC to spur deeper economic integration, including in agriculture, information and communication technologies (ICT), and tourism.
 
According to Ms Gonzalez, regional integration led by the private sector is a powerful vehicle for boosting growth, creating jobs and promoting economic development.
 “Enabling the private sector and policymakers to take advantage of trade opportunities is at the heart of what ITC does. We are looking forward to doing this in collaboration with the EAC, and to ensuring sustainable growth for East African countries and their SMEs,” Ms González added.
EAC Secretary General Ambassador Sezibera said the cooperation will contribute to improve the global competitiveness of the EAC region and to trigger sustainable economic growth.

 

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Two years since the South Sudan war broke out

A policeman walks past the smouldering remains of a market in Rubkona near Bentiu in South Sudan Monday, April 23, 2012. A boy was killed and at least two people were wounded Monday when Sudanese aircraft bombed an area near the town of Bentiu in South Sudan, an official and witness said, increasing the threat of a full-scale war breaking out between the two nations. (AP Photo/Michael Onyiego)
The 15th of December 2015, marked the second anniversary of the outbreak of war in South Sudan.  In a mere two years, thousands of people have been killed, including 1,457 children, millions displaced, including 1,550,000 children, 16,000 children recruited by armed groups, 413,000 children forced out of school, and almost 10,000 vulnerable children have been separated from the protection and loving care of their parents and extended families.
Statistics such as these can sometimes appear to be faceless – often shielding the fact that there is a human face behind every figure – including that of children who are least able to defend themselves in times of conflict.  To mark this second anniversary, Save the Children reached out to and recorded testimonies of ordinary people whose lives were badly affected by the war.
 Marina is the Aunt of 9year old Joseph* and his 14year old brother Jonathan* who were separated from their mother when fighting started in Bor, in Jonglei state.  Here-below, she talks about war, survival, separation, and reunification:
 I have three children of my own, and I am also looking after my sister’s children.  They were separated from their mother in Bor when the fighting started. They were living in the camp (UN Protection of Civilians Camp – aka PoC) but it wasn’t safe. The camp was often attacked by soldiers and many people were killed.
Then the rebel army took over the town and started transporting the children out to safety. There was no space for their mother in the vehicle, so she sent them first. But then the rebels were pushed out of Bor and the vehicle couldn’t return. She was stuck there.
 I don’t know where she is now. The last time I heard from her she was in Juba, but I haven’t managed to communicate with her for over a year.
 When the children arrived here, they were scared and really sad that they had to leave their mother behind. They were very withdrawn and would not speak to anyone or eat their food. It took them a long time to adapt.
 It’s a strange place to them and they didn’t know anyone. Even me, they hadn’t seen me for over two years – and they were very young.
 The older one, (Jonathan*) he understood why they had to leave, but Joseph* was still young and didn’t really understand why they had to leave their mother and come to Waat.
 
He used to tell me that when they were leaving the camp, (PoC) he saw all the dead bodies on the side of the road, and that people chased them with big guns and tanks, and that they were firing at them when they were running away.
 He was really traumatised – he wouldn’t talk to anyone. But after a while he started going to the play area (‘Child Friendly Spaces’ set up by Save the Children) and each time he returned, I could see an improvement. It really helped him forget what he experienced there.
 He is always asking for his mother. If someone arrives from Juba, he asks: “have you seen my mother?”
 The biggest challenge I have is that I can’t provide them with enough food to eat, clothes to wear, or even soap to wash.  Save the Children has given us sleeping mats, blankets, mosquito nets, shoes, buckets and soap. It made a big difference for us – especially the mosquito nets.
 They used to get malaria all the time, but not anymore. And the blankets stop them from getting sick during the cold nights in the dry season.
 Save the Children has also helped them at school with books and pens, and the play area (Child Friendly Space) has helped them to integrate better here. They didn’t know anyone here before but now they have many friends.
 “…The thing I want most is to see my mum again and go to a good school,” says nine year-old *Joseph*.
 
The writer is a Media & Communications Manager, Save the Children South Sudan
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Europe can do a lot in tackling corrupt Africa leaders

Prosecution in France is following up on some African leaders and their relatives who have plundered their countries’ wealth and stashed the loot in France.
Top on the list is Teodorin Obiang, son of Dictator Teodoro Obiang, and also one of Equatorial Guinea’s vice presidents, who has allegedly stolen millions of dollars and is facing embezzlement charges. The others being investigated by France for stealing and stashing their countries’ wealth include Congo’s Dennis Sassou Ngweso and Gabon’s Omar Bongo.
It is an open secret that the looters of African wealth, passing off as leaders, stash their ill-gotten wealth in some European countries, while millions at home suffer from containable maladies like disease, poverty and lack of education among others.
Last year the younger Obiang was indicted in the US on accusations of stealing about US$300 million, and the shameless ‘leader’, whose desire for lavishness is unprecedented, was forced to spew out US$30 million in ill-gotten wealth.
Similarly, the French authorities have seized the younger Obiang’s six-story mansion, several luxury cars and other ill-gotten valuables after charging him with money-laundering.
The Obiang story is being replicated all over Africa, but there are few exceptions like that of Botswana President Ian Khama and the maverick John Pombe Magufuli, the new Tanzanian president who has set a record in fighting corruption and injustices.
The few exceptional African leaders who abhor corruption need to be recognized and their efforts complemented by moves such as that of France and the US, wresting the loot from the plunderers, prosecuting them and returning the loot to the rightful owners, the citizens of the respective Africa countries.
Indeed, Europe can do a lot to help curb corruption in Africa!
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