Sunday, January 22, 2012
Cote d'Ivoire: Several Hurt in Clash At Rally
At least 45 people were injured, two seriously, as supporters of former Ivory Coast leader Laurent Gbagbo clashed with rivals Saturday and police fired tear gas to keep the two sides apart.
The Gbagbo loyalists were forced to call off their meeting, intended to mark a "political comeback" for the former ruling Ivorian Popular Front (FPI), after they came under a hail of stones from opponents.
They had gathered in a square in Gbagbo's stronghold district of Yopougon in the economic capital when they came under attack by a group of youths.
Medics at the scene tended to 45 injured people, said Leonard Nieoule, the secretary general of the Red Cross in Ivory Coast.
They took 10 people to medical centres of whom two were seriously wounded, he said.
As the Gbagbo supporters tried to retaliate, the police, who were backed by troops of the Ivory Coast UN mission, fired several volleys of tear gas.
And when FPI leader Miaka Oureto began speaking, the stoning redoubled and the opponents stormed the square, sweeping up chairs and obliging a party official to abandon the meeting, advising people to go home in small groups.
FPI youth leader Justin Koua blamed young activists loyal to President Alassane Ouattara for the violence.
"In terms of security, the state didn't do its job," he said.
Gbagbo's refusal to quit after his defeat in a November 2010 election triggered a conflict that left around 3,000 people dead before Ouattara took power with the support of UN and French peacekeeping forces.
Gbagbo was arrested in April 2011 and is now in The Hague awaiting trial by the International Criminal Court, accused of crimes against humanity for having his alleged role in the unrest. - ANP/AFP
Sudan: Ambush Leaves One Unamid Peacekeeper Dead, Three Wounded
El Daein — An African Union-United Nations Mission in Darfur (UNAMID) patrol was ambushed today by unidentified armed persons in East Darfur. As a result, one peacekeeper was killed and three others wounded.
An African Union-United Nations Mission in Darfur (UNAMID) patrol was ambushed today by unidentified armed persons in East Darfur. As a result, one peacekeeper was killed and three others wounded.
The patrol was attacked at approximately 12:15 while en route from El Daein to Saleah, located about 60 kilometres northwest of El Daein.
Joint Special Representative Ibrahim Gambari strongly condemned this attack which, he stressed, constituted a war crime. He committed the Mission to work closely with the Government of Sudan authorities in order that the perpetrators are apprehended as fast as possible and brought to justice.
Since the initial deployment of UNAMID on 31 December 2007, 35 peacekeepers have been killed as a result of hostile action.
Friday, January 6, 2012
South Africa ‘Operation Miniskirt’ targets taxi rank

REUTERS
A woman wearing a miniskirt takes part in a protest against the idea that provocatively dressed women are to blame for sexual assaultsrape.
The message is clear: Gauteng will not tolerate sexual harassment.
On Thursday morning it felt as if a big section of the province’s police force was concentrated at the Noord Street taxi rank in Johannesburg CBD, as what some officers called “Operation Miniskirt” began.
The presence of the Joburg metro police, Gauteng provincial traffic police, and the Tactical Response Team at the province’s biggest taxi rank followed the harassment by men near the rank of two teenage girls on December 30, reportedly because of their revealing clothing. One girl aged 18 wore a miniskirt while the other, 19, had on tight-fitting clothes.
The incident is being investigated by the police.
The Tactical Response Team conducted random body searches on men. Metro police officers checked that taxis were roadworthy. Gauteng traffic police checked driving licences and taxi registrations. And the SAPS studied the CCTV footage from the incident to try to find the culprits.
“Since the incident, the premier has asked us to intensify our operations to clean up the taxi rank,” said Gauteng traffic police spokeswoman Busaphi Nxumalo.
“The taxi association must give us all the details. We are sure they know the culprits. We will continue with this operation until the perpetrators are arrested.”
Taxi driver Alais Mkwanyana, 47, had his keys in his hand and a mob of taxi drivers around him as he confronted the police.
“The people you are looking for are the ones that sell fruit and sweets here; they harassed the women. We see them but we can’t take the law into our own hands,” said Mkwanyana.
“Now the police have taken our registration disks for no reason.”
Meanwhile, the two girls who were harassed have opened a case with the police.
Warrant Officer Xoli Mbele said the girls had opened a case of sexual assault, indecent assault and crimen injuria at the Johannesburg central police station on Wednesday night.
Nigeria seeks to barn Monday national strike as anger builds
Abuja court issued an order seeking to bar a national strike planned for next week as police blocked protesters on Friday in the capital over soaring fuel prices which have sparked nationwide outrage.
The labour movement has threatened to stage open-ended general strikes, mass rallies and street protests across the country starting Monday if the government does not backtrack on its new policy to remove subsidies on petrol.
Judge Babatunde Adejuwon of the country’s industrial court ruled in favour of the government in an interim order restraining the unions from “embarking and/or inciting the general public …to embark on a general strike.”
He said the government argues that economic activities in Africa’s leading oil producer would be “adversely affected as will the health and safety of the citizenry if the impending strike is allowed to hold.”
The unions, which have threatened to shut down Africa’s most populous country, were not at the court and have vowed to go ahead with the strike.
They laughed over the order saying the government “has purchased a black market injunction.”
“There is no going back on next week’s protests and shutdown,” said Owei Lakemfa, secretary general of the Nigerian Labour Congress.
About 40 protesters tried to march to Eagle Square in Abuja when police blocked the road and prevented them, an AFP correspondent reported.
The police move was one of the latest attempt to stop increasingly volatile protests over the removal of fuel subsidies on January 1, which caused petrol prices to more than double.
On Thursday, protesters in Kano said police fired tear gas and beat demonstrators. They also claim one protester was crushed to death by a police van that ran into the group, an allegation authorities deny.
The protesters are now suing the government for brutally putting down their sleep-in rallies at a downtown square.
“We are demanding 500 million naira (about $3 million) in compensation from the Kano state and the federal government for the injuries sustained by protestors and the killing of one,” spokesman Jubril Suleiman told AFP.
They also want the court to restrain the police and the government from interfering with future protests.
The price hike also fuelled protests in other parts of the country.
Nigeria’s police chief Hafiz Ringim said he met with other security services chiefs on Friday to review the threats posed by the protests and to “re-tune the modalities so far put in place”. He did not give details.
Rights group Amnesty International has called on Nigerian authorities to end what it called excessive use of force against protesters.
Police on Monday fired tear gas to disperse a protest in Abuja and were accused of shooting dead a demonstrator on Tuesday in Kwara state, which authorities denied, saying a mob killed him.
The lower house of parliament has summoned an emergency session for Sunday to discuss the crisis facing one of sub-Saharan Africa’s powerhouses.
Economists and government officials in Africa’s largest oil producer view removing the subsidy as essential to allow for more spending on the country’s woefully inadequate infrastructure and to ease pressure on its foreign reserves.
The government says more than $8 billion was spent in 2011 on fuel subsidies.
Nigerians however see the subsidy as their only benefit from the nation’s oil wealth, and years of deeply rooted corruption have resulted in profound distrust of government officials.
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Shehu Sani Warns President Jonathan for more Dead Bodies
No amount of intimidation will stop Nigerians from protesting the scrapping of petrol subsidybecause it is inhuman, callous, insensitive and destructive, President of the Civil Right Congress Shehu Sani said yesterday.
Sani in a statement in Kaduna said the removal of the subsidy was irrational, illogical, immoral and barbaric, and that it would lead to loss of lives. He said President Jonathan should be prepared to carry dead bodies of people who would starve to death because of his action.
“The Federal Government has literary sent all Nigerians to the gallows and incinerator. His government has entrenched poverty and misery and hunger. President Goodluck has sacrificed the lives and livelihood of millions of Nigerians in order to save more money to share to state governors and defence contractors.
“Diezani Allison-Madueke, Okonjo-Iweala and Lamido Sanusi, the gang of three who advise Jonathan to remove petroleum subsidy, should be ready to help him count the numbers of dead bodies and ribs of hunger his inhuman decision will cause. The removal of petroleum subsidy is a condemnable act aimed at annihilating Nigerians to appease the economic interest of neo liberal cartels,” he said.
He called on all Nigerians to unite and join the nationwide civil disobedience campaign starting Monday.
Africa’s battles with capital flight and unjust debt
THE global financial turmoil has dominated the international agenda for a couple of years now and there is hardly a clear way out of the crisis.
The fact that most developed economies especially in Europe are experiencing these financial meltdowns creates a whole new dynamic in international money-flow, be it debt or investment.
The obvious conclusion would be that the developing countries would in the end suffer more as the big donors/financiers have somewhat become basket cases themselves. Or is it the case that Africa will suffer more if its outmanoeuvred again as the developed world desperately seeks new means of plundering the world’s poorest continent.
However, the economic meltdown in developed countries may well be creating a new opportunity for developing countries as they suddenly look not so risky after all.
Indeed, the key question now is whether the global economic crisis ushers a new era of reverse capital flight, reduced indebtedness and brain gain. Will Africa ever a have a better chance to reform and achieve good governance, transparency, accountability and political stability that can, not only, retain but also attract new financial and human capital?
Still, Africa needs to achieve democratisation that attracts professionals into politics. The idea of politics being a risky adventure is not sustainable and Africa cannot afford it anymore. African politics needs to move from a violent discourse to a being market for ideas and engagement where professionals feel safe to partake.
The poorest countries of the world have for too long been on the on the receiving end of a skewed world order designed to milk them while giving an impression of support and help.
The world’s poorest continent is by far the world’s richest in terms of natural resources and this will probably remain the case for generations partly because of poor governance and induced destabilisation which creates a conducive environment for natural resources looting by the developed world as well as facilitating capital flight and brain drain.
In November 2011 a research by Canadian scientists, led by Edward Mills, chair of Global Health at the University of Ottawa, revealed that Sub-Saharan African countries that invest in training doctors end up losing US$2billion as the expert clinicians leave home to find work in more prosperous developed nations. The findings suggested the benefit to Britain was around $2.7 billion, USA US$846 million, Australia US$621 million and Canada about US$384 million.
Whilst Africa’s problems cannot be entirely blamed on an unjust world order it should be noted that while African suffers under the yoke of extortionate debts it has and continues to advance free capital to the developed world.
As noted by L. Ndikumana and J. Boyce, in their new book Africa’s Odious Debts, “The magnitude of African capital flight is staggering both in absolute monetary values and relative to GDP. For the thirty-three sub-Saharan African countries for which we have data, we find that more than $700 billion fled the continent between 1970 and 2008.
“If this capital was invested abroad and earned interest at the going market rates, the accumulated capital loss for these countries over the thirty-nine-year period was $944 billion. By comparison, total GDP for all of sub-Saharan Africa in 2008 stood at $997 billion.”
This means that the cumulative stock of capital flight from the thirty-three Sub-Saharan countries stood at $944 billion in 2008, compared to external debts of $177 billion. By this measure, these countries had positive net external assets to the tune of $767 billion. In other words, the rest of the world owes more to these African countries than they owe to the rest of the world.
This suggests that Africa could expunge its entire stock of foreign debt if it could recover only a fraction of the wealth held by Africans in foreign financial centres around the world. Sub-Saharan Africa, location of the poorest countries in the world, has generated net capital outflows for decades. One could, with small a exaggeration, say that for a generation Africa has provided aid to the United States and Western Europe.
The $944 billion estimate of the cumulative stock of African capital flight closely matches the total wealth of Africa’s high net worth individuals (HNWIs) as reported in World Wealth Report, an annual publication of the financial services firms Capgemini and Merrill Lynch Global Wealth Management which tracks the holdings of HNWIs around the globe.
The report defines HNWIs as people with investable personal assets of $1 million or more. The total wealth of Africa’s HNWIs peaked, according to this source, at $1 trillion in 2007 before slipping to $800 billion in 2008 as a result of the global financial crisis.
The sickening reality for Africa is that the assets accumulated by means of capital flight are private, while the external debts are public liabilities owed to the creditors by the people of Africa through ‘their’ governments.
Millions of Africans are desperately poor. But the continent is rich. According to the World Wealth Report, the continent had roughly 100,000 high net-worth individuals in 2008, twice as many as a decade before. Of these, about 1,800 were ‘ultra-high net-worth individuals’, with at least $30 million each in investable assets.
Together these rich Sub-Sahara Africans held about $800 billion in investable assets in 2008. Nigeria tops the list at US$296 billion followed by Angola US$72 billion. South Africa is fourth at US$36 billion and Zimbabwean is ninth at US$23 billion. In the case of Zimbabwe, total capital flight over the period was equivalent to 807 per cent of 2008 GDP.
Compared to other regions, African private wealth holders exhibit a stronger preference for foreign assets as opposed to domestic assets. If you can officially make your money in Africa how does it become unsafe to keep it invested in the same continent, one may ask?
According to a study by researchers at the World Bank and IMF, an astonishing 40 per cent of Africa’s total private wealth was held abroad as flight capital in 1990. The corresponding figure for South Asia was 5 per cent. For East Asia it was 6 per cent, and for Latin America 10 per cent.
Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia had similar levels of total private wealth per worker, but in sub-Saharan Africa capital flight amounted to $696 per worker whereas in South Asia it was only $90 per worker. As a result, private domestic capital per worker in Africa was less than 60 per cent of what it was in South Asia.
The preference for foreign assets and aversion to domestic investment comes at a high opportunity cost to African economies. In the case of legally acquired assets, the continent is deprived of the gains that would accrue from investment at home, not only losing income and jobs, but also forgoing government revenue that could fund public services.
In the case of illegally acquired assets, African countries lose twice: first, they are robbed through fraud and embezzlement; then they are further deprived of any benefits that would trickle down if the loot were invested at home.
Whilst Africa’s elite externalise national capital, national governments increasingly borrow at extortionate rates to sustain public services. Interestingly, according to Jubilee Debt Campaign, since1980 Zimbabwe has been lent US$7.7 billion, has repaid US$11.4 billion yet the country is still said today to have a debt in excess of US$7 billion.
Africa is bleeding money, as capital flows into the private accounts of African elites and their accomplices in Western financial centres. At the same time, the continent is in dire need of financing.
For Africa to overcome widespread and extreme poverty, it needs sustained and sustainable economic growth. This will require very large increases in the levels of domestic investment, especially in infrastructure.
The Millennium Development Goal (MDG) of halving extreme poverty by 2015 remains elusive for much of Africa. The MDG Africa Steering Group estimated in 2008 that for Africa to achieve this and related development goals, public external financing would have to increase by $72 billion per year in the medium term Were Africa able to recoup only a fraction of what it has lost in capital flight, this would go a long way towards filling this gap.
Whilst the world undergoes a massive economic turmoil maybe this is a window opportunity for Africa to clean up its act and present itself a safe destination of world capital. For capital flight is just but a symptom of the continent’s multitude of problems stemming from political instability, greedy, poor governance to lack of accountability. God save Africa!
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With effect from 1st October, 2007Tanzania National Parks started using electronic payment systems at its revenue collection centres in parallel run with the old system. Phase I of this system has covered Serengeti, Lake Manyara, Tarangire, Kilimanjaro and Arusha National Parks through CRDB and EXIM Banks who designed the systems.














President of the Republic of Tanzania, His Excellence, Dr. Jakaya Kikwete, said there are several investment opportunities in Tanzania which awaits eligible businessmen to invest.
All 45 members of the group of celebrities and professionals who are in the campaign on the Global Clean Water Crisis – Summit on the Summit made it to the top of the African highest Mountain – Kilimanjaro.