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Thursday, 29 October 2009
FRANCE HALTS AFRICAN LEADERS CASE !

 

(From left) Equatorial Guinea's President Teodoro Obiang, Congo's President Denis Sassou-Nguesso and Gabon's late President Omar Bongo
The leaders of the three countries had all denied the charges

A French appeals court has halted a lawsuit against three African leaders accused of embezzlement.

Anti-corruption group Transparency International had accused the leaders of using African public funds to buy luxury homes and cars in France.

But the court ruled the activists could not act against foreign heads of state.

Denis Sassou-Nguesso of Republic of Congo, Teodoro Obiang Nguema of Equatorial Guinea and the late Omar Bongo of Gabon denied any wrongdoing.

The court's ruling was welcomed by lawyers for Mr Nguema, who were quoted by Reuters news agency as saying it showed that "attempts to use the French justice system for obscure purposes are doomed to fail".

A lawyer for President Ali Bongo of Gabon - Mr Bongo's son, who was elected following his father's death earlier this year - said he was "satisfied" by the ruling.

"We are not hostile to the idea of transparency," he told the Associated Press news agency.

 

The case followed a 2007 French police investigation which found the leaders and their relatives owned homes in upmarket areas of Paris and on the Riviera, along with luxury cars, including Bugattis, Ferraris and Maseratis.

Transparency International, along with rights group Sherpa, had argued that it was not possible that the men and their entourages had bought the assets through their legitimate salaries.

Last May, a French magistrate had ruled that the case, which became known as the "ill-gotten gains" case, was admissible in a French court.

But representatives of the leaders had contested that ruling, saying that as civil society activists, Transparency International had no right to act as plaintiffs against heads of state.

Transparency International said it would appeal against Thursday's ruling.

Nice harbour (generic image)
Police found the leaders owned luxury properties on the French Riviera

"Those in France and Africa who organise and take advantage of the looting of African public money will be celebrating with champagne," said William Bourdon, a lawyer for Transparency International.

The organisation said it regretted what it called the court's "legally questionable" decision to throw out its case.

In a statement, it said the move was "all the more regrettable because it prevents the opening of a case even though there is no doubt that the holdings identified by the police could not have been made solely with the salaries and fees of the targeted heads of state".

The ruling showed that French law "still needs to evolve" to allow groups such as itself to take legal action, it said.

"Without that, we will continue to deprive victims of corruption of an indispensible means to guarantee their rights."

Maud Perdriel-Vaissiere of Sherpa told AP the news was "a big blow" but was "just one step in a legal battle that will be long".

Gabon and Republic of Congo are former French colonies, while Equatorial Guinea is a growing oil exporter.

Omar Bongo - who was Africa's longest-serving leader - died in June, but members of his family were also named in Transparency International's case.

BBC NEWS REPORT.

Posted by: Mara at October 29, 2009 17:51 | link | comments |
politics, africa, human rights, crime and corruption

Cathy Buckle's Letter from Zimbabwe !

10th October, 2009

Dear Family and Friends,

Every window and door is open, shoes are abandoned, blankets are back
in cupboards and now we wait, every day looking upwards, waiting for
the rains to come. It's a blistering hot October and yet shortly
after dawn every morning silhouettes appear in the vleis, along the
railway lines and even on roadsides in residential areas. Bent in
half, hacking away at baked earth, men and women are preparing a
place in which to drop a few maize pips. Little children sit on their
mother's wraps under the few trees that have been spared the firewood
axe, and they play in the dust.

The irony of a decade of propaganda about "our land and our
sovereignty" accompanied by a decade of agricultural destruction is
never more apparent than now. The very people who are prepared to
toil on the dusty roadsides at dawn in order to grow food, still have
no land. One man I spoke to said that four times he has filled in the
paperwork necessary to receive land from the Zimbabwe government. He
says he meets all the requirements but each time he has been turned
down. He collects leaves, makes compost and now trundles backwards
and forwards depositing his precious black gold onto the roadside
where he will plant maize when the rains come.

"There's no better fertilizer than the farmer's footsteps," my friend
says, and the man smiles and nods as he sets off again, with his
squeaking wheelbarrow, to collect another load.

Land is one of a raft of contradictions obstructing progress here.
Every day the state propaganda burbles on about developing tourism
and how we're apparently set to benefit massively from the 2010
football games to be held in South Africa. And yet Beitbridge, the
main entry point into the country from South Africa remains a mafia
headquarters where even the most hardened visitors are harassed by
touts, forced to pay bribes and made to wait hours in queues in order
to get into the country. One recent visitor told me how every official
at Beitbridge was in on the scams and backhanders and said she was
ashamed to watch border officials treating people in buses like
livestock, reducing old ladies to tears.

Then there's the contradiction of investment. We desperately need
people to come back, old and new businesses to open, factories and
industries to get the country going, and yet the ground rules remain
murky and the boundaries unclear. Law and order, property rights and
Title Deeds are some of the problems. Double standards are another.
This week during the opening of parliament Mr Mugabe talked about how
Zimbabwe would be following SADC protocols on environmental
protection, wild fires, water, women, gender equality and others and
yet just a month ago Zimbabwe refused to accept a SADC tribunal
ruling on land.

The final contradiction this week came when a BBC reporter said the
Minister of Youth was happy the BBC were back in Zimbabwe and that we
had nothing to hide. Oops, this coming from the Ministry that spawned
the Youth Brigade, green bombers we called them. Youngsters notorious
for intimidating, beating, raping, and re-educating people -
particularly before and after elections. Indeed Zimbabwe has nothing
to hide, so long as you don't look under the carpet or behind the
door. Until next week, thanks for reading,

love cathy

Posted by: Mara at October 29, 2009 17:34 | link | comments |
politics, africa, environment, human rights, crime and corruption, zimbabwe, cathy buckle

KENYA TO LAUNCH HOMOSEXUAL CENSUS !

 

Men holding hands
Homosexuality is punishable by 14 years in jail in Kenya

Kenya is to carry out a census of its gay population in an effort to bolster the fight against HIV/Aids - despite homosexuality being against the law.

Nicholas Muraguri, head of Kenya's Aids prevention programme Nascop, told the BBC it was vital that the government reached out to the gay community.

He said gay people suffered from a lack of information about the disease.

But analysts say many gay people will be afraid to come forward in a country where homosexuality can result in jail.

Mr Muraguri conceded that an accurate count was unlikely.

 

 

But he told the BBC's Network Africa programme that getting a clearer idea of the number of gay people would be a huge help with targeted interventions such as provision of condoms.

He said the survey would involve gay men identifying each other, and officials carrying out HIV tests and providing along with information on safe sexual practice.

"Kenyans cannot actually afford to say that the gay community are isolated somewhere in the corner - they are part of our lives," he said.

"This group must be reached with information and services so they know how to protect themselves from getting infected."

Analysts say Kenya has made progress in its fight against HIV/Aids - one-in-10 people had the virus in the late 1990s, a rate that has now fallen to 6%.

 

 

 

The BBC's Gladys Njoroge in Nairobi says the census, which will begin in June next year, will be the first of its kind in Africa.

Gay rights activist Peter Njane told the BBC he was optimistic that the survey would play a key role in the fight against HIV.

"Most of the gay community think that having sex with men is safe. There's no information here about safety measures," he said.

But Kenyans are divided over the survey's impact, with some Nairobi residents saying they did not believe it would help control the spread of Aids.

Gay Kenyans told the BBC they would be willing to be counted - but only if their identities were protected.

Homosexual activity is punishable by up to 14 years in jail in Kenya.


BBC NEWS REPORT.


 

Posted by: Mara at October 29, 2009 17:20 | link | comments |
health, africa, human rights, conflicts

ANGER AT ZIMBABWE UN ENVOY SNUB !

 

The UN's torture investigator has made an angry return to South Africa after being refused entry to Zimbabwe.

Manfred Nowak was detained by officials in Harare who said he had no clearance to visit, despite his insistence he had an invite from the prime minister.

"I have never in any other country been treated in such a manner," Mr Nowak, who had planned a week-long fact-finding mission, told the BBC.

He blamed his treatment on the divisions within the unity government.

"This is a major incident because you can't on the one hand invite a special rapporteur to meet the prime minister and on the other hand somebody gives an order to the immigration police not to let me in," he told the BBC's World Today programme.

His said his treatment showed there were clearly parts of the government who did not want him to assess "the current conditions of torture", and promised to file a strongly worded complaint.

The trouble comes as the IMF announced that the unity government's "improved policies" were benefitting the economy.

Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai and his MDC party stopped co-operating with the unity government two weeks ago, accusing President Robert Mugabe's Zanu-PF party of failing to live up to its commitments in the power-sharing deal.

 

OUTSTANDING DISAGREEMENTS
Harassment
MDC accuses Zanu-PF of campaign of violence, Zanu-PF dismisses claims as 'outrageous'
Senior officials
MDC says central bank governor and attorney general must be replaced, Zanu-PF disagrees
Roy Bennett
MDC says terrorism charges against him should be dropped, Zanu-PF says courts must decide
Provincial governors
MDC has named candidates, Mr Mugabe refuses to swear them in
White-owned farms
MDC says farm seizures must stop, Zanu-PF disagrees

 

Earlier this week, the MDC warned that Zanu-PF militia had launched a campaign of violence against it, reminiscent of last year's post-election violence.

Human rights group Amnesty International has warned the country is on the brink of sliding back into violence.

The BBC's southern Africa correspondent Karen Allen says this diplomatic snub reveals the tussle for power between two sides in an increasingly unhappy marriage.

Mr Nowak's original invitation to come and investigate allegations of torture and mistreatment came from Zimbabwe's justice minister, who is a member of Zanu-PF.

But it was withdrawn at the last minute, with officials citing a clash with a visit by a mediation team from the Southern African Development Community (Sadc).

Sadc Secretary-General Tomaz Salomao said he was in Zimbabwe to listen to all sides and compile "clear recommendations" on what has to be done.

Despite the Sadc visit, Mr Tsvangirai intervened and authorised the UN investigator to proceed with his visit.

Earlier, the UN said in a statement that Mr Nowak welcomed regional efforts "to resolve the political crisis" in Zimabwe, but that the Sadc meeting was not a valid reason to cancel his visit.

"Recent allegations that MDC supporters and human rights defenders have been arrested, harassed and intimidated during the past few days highlight the urgency of objective fact-finding by an independent UN expert," the UN said.

Zanu-PF has described comments about allegations of violent attacks on MDC members as "cheap propaganda".

BBC NEWS REPORT.
 

Posted by: Mara at October 29, 2009 17:14 | link | comments |
politics, africa, human rights, crime and corruption, zimbabwe

Wednesday, 28 October 2009
CATHY BUCKLE'S LETTER FROM ZIMBABWE !

Moral compass

Saturday 3rd October 2009

Dear Family and Friends,
Its hot and purple in Zimbabwe: Jacaranda trees adorned in purple flowers; skies heavy with purple rain clouds, bougainvillea creepers ablaze with carpets of purple blooms and Mulberry trees dripping with sweet, sticky, staining berries. Overhead the flycatchers are back, the long russet tails of the males flicking through the trees as they chase their mates. Underfoot, emerging from the ash of a million fires that have again devastated so much habitat, the wild flowers are on defiant display: yellow heads, violet gentians, orange pimpernels and exquisite salmon pink gladioli.

Zimbabwe needs this beauty more than ever now to soften the ugliness of what's going on around us. Tragically its not just political and economic ugliness we're dealing with, its a basic loss of compassion and empathy that seems to have engulfed us as a nation. We've lost our moral compass, someone said this week and how true that is.

Recently asked to assist in finding help for people in need I heard stories that are cause for deep shame. A doctor described being ushered into a small dark house in a high density township where he examined a 43 year old woman. The patient, Mrs M, has no regular income and is dependant on donations made by scattered relatives. The doctor easily diagnosed a large cauliflower growth as advanced breast cancer. He was amazed Mrs M had not sought help before and felt despair as he heard how she had tried and failed, again and again, to get help. Referred to a government hospital 6 months earlier when her problem began, Mrs M's first attendance yielded nothing because the nurses and doctors were on strike. Weeks later she tried again and was referred to the Chitungwiza Hospital in Harare where she was seen by a junior doctor and given a date to return to see the surgeon on duty. More struggle and begging for help to get bus fares for another trip to Harare. On the specified date the surgeon ordered a chest X ray and some blood tests and told Mrs M to return with her results. To her dismay Mrs M found she had to pay cash for the tests but she had nothing left. The hospital would not waive the fees and so again she returned home without having been helped. On her third attempt and with money for transport, X rays and blood tests, Mrs M returned to Chitungwiza but the surgeon did not arrive to conduct his clinic and so she was sent back home again.

The doctor said that when he saw Mrs.M.again recently her tumour has doubled in size and she was in considerable pain. Deep down, he said, he knows Mrs M has missed all chance of a cure but hopes for some compassion, empathy and palliative care.

Such anguish for the price of an X ray, the cost of a blood test or just the hand of compassion - our poor Zimbabwe.

Until next time, thanks for reading, love cathy.

Posted by: Mara at October 28, 2009 19:14 | link | comments |
politics, health, africa, environment, human rights, zimbabwe, cathy buckle

'NO CONSENT' FOR MANDELA AUCTION !

 

Nelson Mandela and Charlize  Theron
Charlize Theron met Mr Mandela after her Oscar win in 2004

Hollywood actress Charlize Theron did not have the consent of South Africa's Nelson Mandela to auction off a meeting with him, his office says.

She reportedly sold a trip to the 2010 World Cup, a meeting with the anti-apartheid icon, and a kiss from her for $140,000 (£85,000) at a charity event.

But the Nelson Mandela Foundation told the BBC it has yet to receive a request from the South African-born actress.

A meeting with Mr Mandela required "a rigorous process", the foundation said.

"Not even the charity foundations Mandela himself established are allowed to auction off time with him," the NMF's chief executive Achmat Dangor Dangor said in a statemenT,

The 34-year-old Oscar-winning star is reported to have taken part in the live auction during a fundraiser for charity in San Francisco on 22 October.

She was initially selling a trip to South Africa, which included World Cup tickets as well as a safari and a meet-and-greet with the 91-year-old former South African president.

Ms Theron upped the stakes when bidding stopped at $37,000 by adding the offer of a seven-second kiss to the highest bidder.

This raised the bids to $130,000 - then a woman offered $140,000 to make it a 20-second kiss from the actress.

Ms Theron agreed, sealing the bid by kissing her in front of the gathered audience.

BBC NEWS REPORT.

Posted by: Mara at October 28, 2009 18:50 | link | comments |
sport, politics, africa, football

ZIMBABWE BLOCKS UN TORTURE EXPERT !

 

Manfred Nowak, UN Special Rapporteur on torture  (file image)
Manfred Nowak initially said the invitation was a welcome sign

Zimbabwe's government has withdrawn an invitation to the UN's investigator on torture, Manfred Nowak, hours before he was due to land in the country.

Mr Nowak said he would travel to Zimbabwe despite the snub.

It comes amid claims that supporters of President Robert Mugabe's Zanu-PF party have launched a campaign of violence on MDC members - their coalition partners.

Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai, the MDC leader, withdrew co-operation with the unity government two weeks ago.

He was angry at perceived failure of Zanu-PF to implement measures agreed to as a part of the power-sharing deal and the jailing of a senior Movement for Democratic Change member on terrorism charges that he says are trumped up.

The BBC's Karen Allen, in neighbouring South Africa, says the decision to cancel the trip is bound to be seen by some as a battle of wills between the two major parties.

And ahead of a regional meeting on the crisis, human rights group Amnesty International has warned the country is on the brink of sliding back into last year's post-election violence.

Mr Nowak said he had received "two completely different messages" from the Zimbabwean government - but he said he would meet Mr Tsvangirai on Thursday.

 

 

"I got the clear message from the prime minister that it is his understanding that the mission is going on," he said.  "That leads me to the conclusion that there must be some kind of misunderstanding between the different cabinet members."

The United Nations says Mr Nowak - the special rapporteur on torture - was informed of the cancellation only when he was in South Africa on his way to Zimbabwe.

He had been invited by Justice Minister Patrick Chinamasa - a Zanu-PF member - to meet officials and rights activists, inspect prisons and police stations and compile a report for the Security Council.

But the UN said Harare had called off the visit because of an unanticipated meeting with the southern African regional group, Sadc.

A Sadc team is due in Harare on Thursday to try to resolve the political crisis.

The UN said in a statement that Mr Nowak welcomed "all efforts to resolve the political crisis", but that the Sadc meeting was not a valid reason to cancel his visit.

"Recent allegations that MDC supporters and human rights defenders have been arrested, harassed and intimidated during the past few days, highlight the urgency of objective fact-finding by an independent UN expert," the UN said.

On Tuesday, Mr Tsvangirai's MDC party said there had been an increase in violent attacks on its members.

Party spokesman Nelson Chamisa said a senior official had been stopped and beaten by Zanu-PF supporters on Tuesday morning. Days earlier, an MDC residence was raided by police.

Zanu-PF has described the comments as "cheap propaganda".


BBC NEWS REPORT.

Posted by: Mara at October 28, 2009 18:46 | link | comments |
politics, africa, human rights, crime and corruption, zimbabwe

Tuesday, 27 October 2009
S.A FARMERS TO RENT LAND IN CONGO !

 

map

The Republic of Congo has signed an agreement to lease 200,000 hectares of land to South African farmers.

Congo's agriculture minister said it would bring expertise to the country and reduce its dependence on imports.

South African farmers' union Agri SA, which signed the deal, said the ANC government's land policy was forcing white farmers to seek land abroad.

The ANC is seeking to transfer some farms, overwhelmingly white-owned, to the black majority population.

Under the terms of the agreement, South African farmers will lease the land in Congo for 30 years to produce food and fibre mainly for the domestic market.

 

 

Congolese officials say the land is made up of abandoned farms that the state used to operate.

"We import lots and it's not normal that with the resources at our disposal we remain food insecure," said Congo's Agricultural Minister Rigobert Mabundu.

"That's why we are doing programmes to mobilise Congolese to work in agriculture and... to complete this effort we need international co-operation - it's that which justifies the agreement."

Agri SA says so far nearly 2,000 farmers have expressed interest in going to Congo - most as an expansion of their South African operations.

The BBC's Jonah Fisher in Johannesburg says leasing land to foreigners to farm is a growing phenomenon across Africa.

But this is thought to be one of the biggest deals involving Africans investing in each other's countries, he says.

BBC NEWS REPORT.

Posted by: Mara at October 27, 2009 09:40 | link | comments |
africa, environment, aid and development

Monday, 26 October 2009
MADONNA GOES TO SCHOOL IN MALAWI !

 
Madonna and David
Madonna adopted four-year-old David in 2006

Pop star Madonna has arrived in Malawi to visit the girls school she is building in the African country.

The 51-year-old was accompanied by her four children - two of whom, Mercy, 3, and David, 4, were born in Malawi.

She will take part in a ground breaking ceremony on the future site of the school on Monday afternoon.

"It's an honour for me to be able to help as many of these girls as I can achieve their dreams," the pop star said in a statement on her website.

Madonna's charity, Raising Malawi, aims to provide accommodation, food, education and other support to orphans in the country.

The school, which will be named Raising Malawi Academy for Girls, is on the outskirts of the country's capital, Lilongwe.

It will prepare girls from poor backgrounds for careers in medicine, education or law.

"Research proves that young girls throughout the developing world are often left without opportunities to receive a comprehensive education and the benefits that education can provide," Madonna said in her statement.

"Our goal is to teach them to challenge themselves, serve their local communities and develop their country."

"Madonna believes that given opportunities, these girls will become scientists, lawyers and doctors," added Anjimile Mtila Oponyo, a local academic who has been hired to head the academy.

"She believes in them. Having someone believe in you is important to a girl," she said.

During her trip, Madonna is also expected to meet with President Bingu wa Mutharika and visit some of the orphanages her charity supports.

BBC NEWS REPORT.

Posted by: Mara at October 26, 2009 16:47 | link | comments |
africa, aid and development

ZIMBABWE POLICE 'RAID MDC OFFICE' !

 

Tsvangirai in Harare, 16 October
Morgan Tsvangirai has temporarily pulled out of the ruling coalition

Police in Zimbabwe have raided a house belonging to PM Morgan Tsvangirai's MDC party, saying they were searching for weapons, a top party official says.

Tendai Biti, the MDC's secretary-general, said that more than 50 officers "ransacked every room" of the house on Friday night.

Mr Biti said they took "valuable party material" from a room occupied by the organising secretary, Morgan Komichi.

Last week, Mr Tsvangirai suspended MDC participation in the unity government.

The Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) accuses President Robert Mugabe of oppressing political opponents and failing to implement last year's unity deal.

But President Mugabe has described the split as a "non-event", and said his party will not bow to pressure.

Last week, Mr Tsvangirai went on a regional tour to appeal to southern African countries to mediate for him.

But he told reporters in Angola on Friday that his dispute with Mr Mugabe was a temporary setback that would not lead to the collapse of the pact.


BBC NEWS REPORT.

Posted by: Mara at October 26, 2009 16:31 | link | comments |
politics, africa, human rights, crime and corruption, zimbabwe

Friday, 23 October 2009
CONVICTED KENYA ARISTOCRAT FREED !

 

Thomas Cholmondeley (L), son of the fifth Baron Delamere and descendant of Kenya's most prominent early settler, in Nairobi High Court on Thursday 14 May 2009
Thomas Cholmondeley has been in jail since the shooting in 2006

A white Kenyan aristocrat convicted of the manslaughter of a black poacher on his estate has been freed five months into an eight-month prison sentence.

Thomas Cholmondeley was convicted in May for shooting Robert Njoya in 2006, having spent the previous three years in jail awaiting trial.

He was released for good behaviour and because he had less than six months to serve, prison officials said.

Mr Njoya's widow was reported as saying said she could not believe he was free.

At the trial, the judge cut the murder charge to manslaughter, saying Cholmondeley did not show "malice aforethought".

The Eton-educated 40-year-old shot Mr Njoya who had been hunting on Cholmondeley's 55,000-acre Soysambu ranch near Lake Naivasha in Kenya's Great Rift Valley.

Widow Serah Njoya said: "I can't believe that he is free. There is nothing I can do. This is beyond me," AFP news agency reported her as saying.

The case, involving the great-grandson of the third Baron Delamere, one of Kenya's first major white settlers more than a century ago, attracted huge media attention.

The killing was the second time in just over a year that Cholmondeley had fatally shot a black man.

In 2005 Cholmondeley admitted shooting a Maasai ranger, but the case was dropped owing to insufficient evidence.

That decision provoked outrage and mass protests among the Maasai community.

BBC NEWS REPORT.

Posted by: Mara at October 23, 2009 15:53 | link | comments |
africa, crime and corruption

NIGERIA IN BIG SCAMSTER CRACKDOWN !

 
Internet cafe in West Africa
Many of the fraudsters use internet cafes

Nigeria's anti-corruption agency says it has shut down some 800 fraudster e-mailers and arrested those behind 18 high-profile "cyber crime syndicates".

The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission said it has been working with the computer giant Microsoft to crack down on the scammers.

EFCC head Farida Waziri said her agency was now using "smart technology" rather than raids on internet cafes.

Correspondents say Nigeria is seen as a centre for web scams and spam e-mails.

 

Cyber crime has remained a big challenge to Nigeria's security agencies despite efforts made in recent years to counter it.

The con tricks - known as "419 scams" after the penal code that outlaws them in Nigeria - are often run by well-organised gangs.

According to an EFCC statement, Ms Waziri said the new operation, called "eagle claw", would be fully operational within six months.

"It will take Nigeria out of the top 10 list of countries with the highest incidence of fraudulent e-mails," she said.

BBC NEWS REPORT.

Posted by: Mara at October 23, 2009 15:50 | link | comments |
africa, crime and corruption