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Friday, 20 November 2009
FOOTBALL TURNS VIOLENT IN CAIRO !

 

Riot police in the Egyptian capital, Cairo, quelled a violent demonstration near the Algerian embassy in the early hours of Friday.

Egyptian protesters reportedly hurled firebombs at police protecting the embassy and overturned a police van.

Egypt's Interior Ministry said 35 people were injured.

The clashes stem from Egypt's defeat by Algeria in a World Cup qualifying match on Wednesday, securing Algeria the last African place for next year's finals.

On Friday Alaa Mubarak, the son of Egypt's president Hosni Mubarak, made a rare public statement calling for a "tough stance" to be taken against Algeria.

"When you insult my dignity... I will beat you on the head," the businessman, who had attended the game in Khartoum, told a TV news programme.

 

On Thursday night around 1,000 Egyptians burned Algerian flags in a street near the Algerian embassy.

The protests continued into the morning, with 15 cars reported damaged, along with a number of shops. The ministry said 11 police officers were among the injured.

On Friday afternoon, worshippers leaving a mosque in the neighbouring Mohandisseen district gathered after prayers to again burn Algerian flags and chant anti-Algerian slogans.

Algeria beat Egypt 1-0 in a play-off in Sudan on Wednesday.

FOOTBALL FALL-OUT
1978: Egyptian team recalled part-way through All Africa Games in Algeria after brawl following win over Libya. Algerian spectators joined in on Libyan side
1989: Egypt beat Algeria to reach Italia 90. After the match, midfielder Lakhdar Belloumi blinded the Egyptian team doctor with a bottle
1990: Egypt refused to send its team to African Nations Cup in Algeria
2009: Striker Hossam Hassan and brother Ibrahim Hassan banned indefinitely by Fifa after a brawl following a club game in Algeria

Protesters were incensed by reports that Egyptian fans at the match had been attacked as they left the stadium.

"We should treat Algeria like any country that has declared war on us," university student Amr Higazi told Agence France Presse.

The BBC's Christian Fraser in Cairo says demonstrations like this are normally broken up well before they begin.

Meanwhile, Egypt has threatened to quit international football for two years after complaining to World football governing body Fifa over Algerian fans' behaviour in Khartoum.

The statement by Egypt's Football Federation added: "Egyptian fans, officials and players put their lives at risk before and after the game, under threat from weapons, knives, swords and flares".

Egypt's foreign ministry had summoned the Algerian Ambassador to hear complaints about reports of attacks on Egyptian fans in Khartoum and on Egyptian businesses in Algeria.

The Egyptian ambassador in Algiers was than recalled "for consultations".

Sudan has also summoned the Egyptian envoy in Khartoum, angry at Egyptian media coverage of the game's aftermath.

The Egyptian government alleges 21 of its citizens were attacked after the match, but Sudan says many fewer were injured.

The teams needed the play-off in a neutral country to decide on qualification after the final group match between them on Saturday saw Egypt win 2-0, meaning the two teams finished tied at the top of the group with equal points and identical goal difference.

Fifa has opened disciplinary proceedings against Egypt after the Algerian team bus was pelted with stones in Cairo before the match.

Three Algerian players were injured by rocks thrown as they arrived.

Violence between Egypt and Algeria fans flared up across four countries.

BBC NEWS REPORT.

Posted by: Mara at November 20, 2009 16:50 | link | comments |
sport, africa, football

Tuesday, 17 November 2009
SOMALI PIRATES FREE SPANISH BOAT !

 

The Spanish trawler Alakrana (undated photo from before the hijacking)
The fate of the Alakrana was watched closely by the Spanish public

Somali pirates have released a Spanish trawler and its crew after holding it for six weeks, Spain's prime minister has confirmed.

Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero said the pirates had abandoned the Alakrana tuna boat and that all 36 crew on board were "safe and sound".

The pirates earlier told reporters they were leaving the ship after being promised a ransom of $3.5m (£2.1m).

There was no immediate government confirmation of money having been paid.

The case took on greater urgency after the Spanish navy captured two pirates and took them to Spain to face trial - prompting threats from the remaining pirates to kill the Alakrana's crew.

Addressing a news conference in Madrid, a smiling Mr Zapatero said that he had "very good news" for the entire country.

 

Zapatero: All crew members are safe

"I can confirm that the Alakrana fishing trawler is sailing freely towards safer waters and that all of its crew members are safe and sound," he said.

The Spanish prime minister did not comment on the reported ransom, saying only that the "government did what it had to do".

By late on Tuesday, the Alakrana had made its way to the open sea accompanied by two Spanish warships, the EU naval force, Navfor, said in a statement.

Argi Galbarriatu, the sister of the vessel's second-in-command, said she had spoken to her brother after the boat's release.

"He told me the word to describe it is that they are relieved, and eager to get to port and come home," she said.

BBC map

In other developments:

• Pirates seized the MV Theresa VIII, a chemical tanker with a crew of 28 North news agencies earlier on Tuesday said they were receiving a ransom of between $3.5m and $4m from the Spanish government.

Contacted beforKoreans in waters off Somalia on Monday, Navfor said

• Navfor guards aboard a Ukrainian cargo ship, the MV Lady Juliet, successfully fought off pirates in the Gulf of Aden, also on Monday

The Alakrana was hijacked last month along with its crew of 36, including 16 Spaniards, eight Indonesians and others from Ghana, the Ivory Coast, Madagascar, Senegal and the Seychelles.

The trawler, which is based in the Spanish Basque Country, was seized 400 nautical miles (740km) north-west of the Seychelles island of Mahe, according to coastguards.

Pirate spokesmen who spoke by telephone to e the vessel was released, Alakrana skipper Ricardo Blach told Spanish radio that 63 pirates were aboard the trawler at one stage, including the leaders of the clan behind the hijacking.

Negotiations over the trawler were complicated by the capture of two of the alleged pirates by the Spanish navy just days after the Alakrana was hijacked, the BBC's Steve Kingstone reports from Madrid.

 

Families and friends of the Alakrana's crew rally in Bermeo, Spain, 7 November   
Families and friends of the Alakrana's crew held a demonstration this month to demand their return

When the suspects were brought to Madrid to stand trial, the pirates threatened to start killing hostages unless their compatriots were returned to Somalia.

On Monday, the two Somali men were formally accused in Madrid of armed robbery and kidnapping - but the charges are such that if convicted they could be sent home to serve their sentence.

Somali pirates, using "mother ships" to launch their small-boat attacks on vessels, have extended their range to an area off the Seychelles in recent months in order to evade the navies patrolling the Horn of Africa.

More than 10 ships and 200 hostages are currently being held by pirates operating in waters off Somalia.

Many of the pirates began as fishermen and say they are stopping illegal foreign fishing boats stealing Somali fish, BBC international development correspondent Mark Doyle reports.

The upsurge in piracy in the region is a consequence of the failure to find a solution to Somalia's political disputes, our correspondent notes.

The weak central government faces an Islamist insurgency and parts of the country have broken away to form autonomous regions.

BBC NEWS REPORT.

Posted by: Mara at November 17, 2009 17:23 | link | comments |
politics, africa, crime and corruption

Monday, 16 November 2009
CHILUBA TRAIL 'COST ZAMBIA $13m' !

 

Frederick Chiluba
Ex-President Chiluba has recently been in poor health

Zambian President Rupia Banda has said the government spent $13m (£7.8m)prosecuting President Frederick Chiluba.

The former president was accused of embezzling $500,000 of public funds.

Speaking at a rally, President Banda said the money would have been far better spent on schools, medicines and hospitals.

Mr Chiluba, who has famously extravagant tastes, was acquitted of the charges in August.

In a separate case in 2007, London's High Court ruled that Mr Chiluba had defrauded the Zambian government of more than $40m using UK-based bank accounts.

BBC NEWS REPORT.

Posted by: Mara at November 16, 2009 14:43 | link | comments |
africa, crime and corruption

S.A. WOMAN SURVIVES HIJACK FALL !

 

Map

South Africa police say a woman is lucky to be alive after she was pushed off a 60m bridge by car hijackers.

Her near-death experience in the coastal city of Durban has left her with several fractured ribs, pelvis and lower spine injuries, police said.

The 26-year-old woman was rescued by a passer-by who spotted her on the sand bank below the bridge.

South Africa has one of the highest crime rates in the world with fears of an increase before the festive season.

In the last year there has been a 5% increase in car hijackings. The latest statistics show 14,915 incidents between April 2008 and March 2009.

Durban is one of the cities to host the 2010 football World Cup, but officials insist that security will not a problem.

Kavisha Seevnarain is recovering at a Durban hospital after three men threw her off a bridge before making off with her car, police told the BBC.

She told her parents that she was followed by a car on Friday evening between 2100 and 2200 local time.

When she stopped at an intersection, a man jumped out of the car, smashed her driver's door window and pulled her out.

She was forced into their car at gunpoint and the robbers took her to various ATMs to make withdrawals from her bank cards, police said.

Ms Seevnarain was thrown off the bridge at 0200 on Saturday morning and rescued several hours later.

Police said a case of car hijacking and attempted murder is being investigated.

BBC NEWS REPORT.

Posted by: Mara at November 16, 2009 14:39 | link | comments |
africa, crime and corruption

Tuesday, 03 November 2009
ZIMBABWE DIAMOND SALES BAN URGED !

 

Diamond miners in Zimbabwe
Until the military moved in illegal diggers were seeking their fortune

Zimbabwe is facing calls to be suspended from the international diamond trade following allegations of brutality by its soldiers.

Rights groups are lobbying members of the Kimberley Process, the body which regulates the trade in rough diamonds, to halt exports from Zimbabwe.

Activists say soldiers killed about 200 people at a diamond field. The government denies the claims.

Kimberley Process members are holding a four-day meeting in Namibia.

Namibia's government is a close ally of Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe's Zanu-PF party, which is accused of profiting from the diamonds.

 

 I

The Kimberley Process, which has 70 members, was set up in 2003 to assure consumers that by purchasing diamonds they were not financing war or human rights abuses.

Campaigners are warning that its credibility will be undermined if it fails to act against Zimbabwe.

The country's Marange diamond fields were once used by local prospectors to gather diamonds to sell on the black market.

But troops moved in late last year, and rights groups say they massacred about 200 people.

 

Zimbabwe map

One witness told the BBC how tear gas was thrown from helicopters and policemen opened fire at the diamond field.

Another told how she was attacked by security forces during the crackdown.

"I thought they wanted to beat me but they said: 'Today you're going to be our wife'," she said.

"That's when I realised I was going to be raped."

Human Rights Watch said the police and army have turned what was a peaceful area into a "nightmare of lawlessness and horrific violence".

Activists say local people are now being forced to search for diamonds, with all the profit being taken by Zanu-PF.

HRW insists the Kimberley Process should ensure diamonds are not mined in areas where human rights are being abused.

But Mugabe sympathisers argue that the Kimberley Process is meant only to ensure diamond profits are not used to fund conflict, and therefore Zimbabwe should not be banned.

Namibian MP Bernhard Esau, the current chairman of the Kimberley Process, told the BBC's Network Africa programme that Zimbabwe had "really serious problems" and needed help to remain "part of the family".

He said there were problems with transporting the diamonds and fencing off the fields - suggesting that some "leakage" of the gems could occur.

But he said he had been shown no evidence of killings when he had visited the Marange field.

Some analysts argue that even if Zimbabwe were suspended, it would be almost impossible to prevent all the diamonds which are mined illegally from reaching the international market.

BBC NEWS REPORT.

Posted by: Mara at November 03, 2009 14:37 | link | comments |
africa, environment, crime and corruption, zimbabwe

SPRINTER BOLT ADOPTS A CHEETAH !

 

Usain Bolt and Lightning Bolt the cheetah
Usain Bolt said he wanted to see the challenges facing Africa first-hand

The fastest man on Earth, Usain Bolt, has adopted the fastest animal on four legs, a cheetah, and has given it the only suitable name - Lightning Bolt.

The champion sprinter, on a four-day trip to Kenya, looked nervous as he was handed the three-month-old cub - which is about the size of a household cat.

But he soon recovered his composure to name the cub in his honour.

The Jamaican sprinter is helping to launch a conservation campaign run by German charity the Zeitz Foundation.

During his trip, he has already impressed local children with his football skills, and become an honorary Maasai warrior.

Bolt, the world record holder at both 100m and 200m, told reporters at the weekend he was excited about his first meeting with a cheetah.

But the BBC's Caroline Karobia in Nairobi says he appeared to be knocked out of his stride as he toured the Nairobi animal sanctuary - coming face-to-face with fully grown creatures.

"I am glad it wasn't a lion - the cheetah is much more calm," he said earlier.

He is helping to launch a campaign called the Long Run, which aims to promote ecologically sound practices.

"I was attracted to the initiative because of its objectives on the conservation of the environment and co-existence of different cultures," Bolt said.

"I do a lot of charity work in Jamaica. But I would like to see first-hand the challenges facing Africa in environment."

The Zeitz Foundation was set up by Jochen Zeitz, the boss of sportswear manufacturer Puma.

Our reporter says another small animal was also being adopted by a person of importance at Nairobi's animal orphanage.

Kenyan Prime Minister Raila Odinga adopted a lion cub and, not to be outdone, named it Agwambo - his own nickname, which means "king" in the Luo language.

BBC NEWS REPORT.

Posted by: Mara at November 03, 2009 14:34 | link | comments |
africa, environment