Category Archives: Minerals

“Plundering of Africa Through Secret Mining Deals,” Kofi Annan

From: Judy Miriga

Good People,

When a problem of multitude involving “Land Grabbing” is looming about to endanger life it is fundamentally right for people to stand up and demand that problem be fixed. In a haste, leaders must be taken to task and they must take full responsibilities and immediately accept to engage people to help in finding ways and means for resolution and recovery. Good people must unite to get to the bottom and root-cause of the problem for any reasonable good results. Those who are found to have participated and stolen public wealth and resources must be made to pay back.

We must never run away from the problem leaving only a few people who most likely were the reason for the problem to fix the problem will never work.

Africa has the resource needed to feed the world’s economic engine, a driver needed for progressive development. Africa is where the Emerging Economy all eyes in the Global Economic success depend on, but without Africa being put on a secured plan where the Chinese and the BRICS will not find room to mess Africa in a worse-case-scenario than what Africa has been exposed to ….. and where we all shall regret finding ourselves in deeper troubles to a point of no return.

Wake up good people so we all can unite to work with Africa to our mutual advantage secured under fair and balanced Partnership Development where all shall benefit equitably.

Again I say, Wake-Up !!!

Judy Miriga
Diaspora Spokesperson
Executive Director
Confederation Council Foundation for Africa Inc.,
USA
http://socioeconomicforum50.blogspot.com

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How to Rob Africa -People Power- Al Jazeera English

Published on Nov 8, 2012
A film by Stanley Kwenda, Clive Patterson and Anas Aremeyaw Anas
The world’s wealthy countries often criticise African nations for corruption – especially that perpetrated by those among the continent’s government and business leaders who abuse their positions by looting tens of billions of dollars in national assets or the profits from state-owned enterprises that could otherwise be used to relieve the plight of some of the world’s poorest peoples.

Yet the West is culpable too in that it often looks the other way when that same dirty money is channelled into bank accounts in Europe and the US.

International money laundering regulations are supposed to stop the proceeds of corruption being moved around the world in this way, but it seems the developed world’s financial system is far more tempted by the prospect of large cash injections than it should be.

Indeed the West even provides the getaway vehicles for this theft, in the shape of anonymous off-shore companies and investment entities, whose disguised ownership makes it too easy for the corrupt and dishonest to squirrel away stolen funds in bank accounts overseas.

This makes them nigh on impossible for investigators to trace, let alone recover.

It is something that has long bothered Zimbabwean journalist Stanley Kwenda – who cites the troubling case of the Marange diamond fields in the east of his country.

A few years ago rich deposits were discovered there which held out the promise of billions of dollars of revenue that could have filled the public purse and from there have been spent on much needed improvements to roads, schools and hospitals.

The surrounding region is one of the most impoverished in the country, desperate for the development that the profits from mining could bring. But as Kwenda found out from local community leader Malvern Mudiwa, this much anticipated bounty never appeared.

“When these diamonds came, they came as a God-given gift. So we thought now we are going to benefit from jobs, infrastructure, we thought maybe our roads were going to improve, so that generations and generations will benefit from this, not one individual. But what is happening, honestly, honestly it’s a shame!”

What is happening is actually something of a mystery because though the mines are clearly in operation and producing billions of dollars worth of gems every year, little if any of it has ever been put into Zimbabwe’s state coffers.

Local and international non-governmental organisations say they believe this is because the money is actually being used to maintain President Robert Mugabe’s ruling Zimbabwe African National Union – Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF) in power.

True or not, it is clear that the country’s finance minister, Tendai Biti, has seen none of it. A representative of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change, which sits in uneasy coalition with ZANU-PF, he says he has no idea where it is going.

“We have got evidence of the quantities that are being mined, the quantities that are being exported but nothing is coming to the fiscus …. All I know is that it’s not coming to the treasury. So that is a self-evident question. It is not coming to us. That means someone is getting it. The person who is getting it is not getting it legally. Therefore, he’s a thief, therefore she’s a thief.”

Sadly, as Stanley Kwenda has realised, it is typical of a problem found all over Africa.

The continent is rich is natural resources that are being exploited for big profits, but the money is rarely used for the benefit of the people. Instead it goes to line the pockets of corrupt officials who then often smuggle it out to be deposited in secret offshore bank accounts in the developed world.

So who facilitates these transactions? And how and why does the developed world make it so easy to launder this dirty cash?

In this revealing investigation for People & Power, Kwenda and the Ghanaian undercover journalist Anas Aremeyaw Anas, set off to find out. Posing as a corrupt Zimbabwean official and his lawyer, their probe takes them deep into the murky world of ‘corporate service providers’ – experts in the formation of company structures that allow the corrupt to circumvent lax international money laundering rules.

It just so happens that the pair’s enquiries take place in the Seychelles but, as they discover to their horror, they could just as easily be in any one of a number of offshore locations (or even in the major cities of Europe and the US) where anonymous companies can be set up for the express purpose of secretly moving money and keeping its origins hidden from prying eyes.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TAO035…

Investors deny Africa land grab claims
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iuU31d3QVEQ
Published on Jul 12, 2012
http://www.youtube.com/WorldNewsPoint
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Investors interested in buying land in Africa, have denied accusations that they are involved in landgrabs, insisting their practice is the only way to feed growing populations. Land in Africa, often extremely fertile and absurdly cheap, is the current talk of the investment market. The wealth funds assess issues to do with political volatility, risk of extreme weather, bribery and corruption. One problem with the buyup of africa is that there is little oversight except from local governments and the investment funds themselves. Al Jazeera’s Laurence Lee reports from London.

“Blood diamonds”

Published on Jul 17, 2012
The Kimberley Process, set up under the auspices of the United Nations, aims to put an end to the traffic in so-called “blood diamonds” and the use of the proceeds to finance guerrilla wars.

Blood Diamonds – The True Story
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C7lmjjDlzp0
Published on May 3, 2012
This documentary examines the little-known truth about how the worldwide diamond trade has funded wars across western and central Africa, leading to the deaths of millions of people.

Update on the Kimberley Process

Uploaded on Apr 28, 2011
Elly Harrowell a Campaigner for Global Witness provided an update on the Kimberley Process at Objective Capital’s Precious Metals Diamonds & Gemstones Investment Summit.

To view full video, visit: http://www.objectivecapitalconference…

Final hearing of the Special Court for Sierra Leone in the war crimes trial of Charles

Uploaded on Feb 2, 2009
United Nations, 2 February 2009 – Stephen Rapp, Chief Prosecutor for the Special Court for Sierra Leone (SCSL), has heard on 30 January at The Hague the 91st and final prosecution witness in the war crimes trial of former Liberian president Charles Taylor. The Special Court for Sierra Leone was set up jointly by the Government of Sierra Leone and the United Nations. It is mandated to try those who bear the greatest responsibility for serious violations of international humanitarian law and Sierra Leonean law committed in the territory of Sierra Leone since 30 November 1996.

Blood Diamonds – Sierra Leone

Uploaded on Jan 31, 2008
February 2006
West Africa’s civil wars were almost exclusively funded by the trade in ‘blood diamonds’. But now, the UN and EU is tightening the trade in precious gems through the Kimberly Process.

The Truth Behind Africa’s Conflict Diamonds

Uploaded on Nov 24, 2008
This video was prepared for the WRIT 340 class at the University of Southern California. It is for educational purposes only and is covered by the Fair Use doctrine.

“Plundering of Africa Through Secret Mining Deals,” Kofi Annan

May 10, 2013 By admin Leave a Comment

Mr. Kofi Annan, former UN Secretary-General and Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, former Nigerian President

Tax avoidance, secret mining deals and financial transfers are depriving Africa of the benefits of its resources boom, ex-UN chief Kofi Annan has said.

Firms that shift profits to lower tax jurisdictions cost Africa $38bn (£25bn) a year, says a report produced by a panel he heads.

“Africa loses twice as much money through these loopholes as it gets from donors,” Mr Annan said.

It was like taking food off the tables of the poor, he said.

The Africa Progress Report is released every May – produced by a panel of 10 prominent figures, including former Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo and Graca Machel, the wife of South African ex-President Nelson Mandela.

‘Highly opaque’

African countries needed to improve governance and the world’s richest nations should help introduce global rules on transparency and taxation, Mr Annan said.

The report gave the Democratic Republic of Congo as an example, where between 2010 and 2012 five under-priced mining concessions were sold in “highly opaque and secretive deals”.

This cost the country, which the charity Save the Children said earlier this week was the world’s worst place to be a mother, $1.3bn in revenues.

This figure was equivalent to double DR Congo’s health and education budgets combined, the report said.

DR Congo’s mining minister disputed the findings, saying the country had “lost nothing”.

“These assets were ceded in total transparency,” Martin Kabwelulu told Reuters news agency.

The report added that many mineral-rich countries needed “urgently to review the design of their tax regimes”, which were designed to attract foreign investment when commodity prices were low.

It quotes a review in Zambia which found that between 2005 and 2009, 500,000 copper mine workers were paying a higher rate of tax than major multinational mining firms.

Africa loses more through what it calls “illicit outflows” than it gets in aid and foreign direct investment, it explains.

“We (Africans) are not getting the revenues we deserve often because of either corrupt practices, transfer pricing, tax evasion and all sorts of activities that deprive us of our due,” Mr Annan said.

“Transparency is a powerful tool,” he said, adding that the report was urging African leaders to put “accountability centre stage”.

Mr Annan said African governments needed to insist that local companies became involved in mining deals and manage them in “such a way that it also creates employment”.

“This Africa cannot do alone. The tax evasion, avoidance, secret bank accounts are problems for the world… so we all need to work together particularly the G8, as they meet next month, to work to ensure we have a multilateral solution to this crisis,” he said.

For richer nations “if a company avoids tax or transfers the money to offshore account what they lose is revenues”, Mr Annan said.

“Here on our continent, it affects the life of women and children – in effect in some situations it is like taking food off the table for the poor.”

Source: BBC

Africa’s “lift-off” held back by illicit finance drain: AfDB

By Pascal Fletcher | Reuters – Fri, May 10, 2013
By Pascal Fletcher

JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) – Africa’s economic development is being held back by a “hemorrhage” of illicit financial flows, which may be getting worse, the African Development Bank said on Friday, calling for reforms to stem the losses.

A draft report to be presented at the AfDB’s annual meeting in Morocco later this month shows net resource outflows from Africa totalling up to $1.4 trillion over the 30-year period to 2009, far exceeding inflows to the continent.

Illicit financial flows were “the main driving force” behind $1.2-1.3 trillion of the three-decade net drain, it said.

This is about four times Africa’s current external debt and almost equivalent to its current GDP.

“The trend is continuing, it could even be increasing,” AfDB Chief Economist Mthuli Ncube said in a phone interview. Figures for the period since 2009 were not yet fully available.

“We need to block the leakage … It is holding back Africa’s lift-off,” he added.

The report, by the AfDB and the Washington-based advocacy group Global Financial Integrity and made available to Reuters, called for anti-corruption agencies and laws, and mechanisms to combat money-laundering, to be reinforced and for government budget processes to be made more transparent.

The illicit outflows between 1980 and 2009 were often linked to the extraction of oil and minerals and covered criminal activities like money-laundering, tax evasion and transfers from corruption, kickbacks and contraband, the report said.

But they also included what the report called “mispricing of trade” – for example, opaque business deals negotiated with local authorities which flout or ignore existing legislation.

The study on illicit transfers comes as the world’s least developed continent experiences an economic growth surge, outpacing global averages. The World Bank and IMF see Sub-Saharan Africa’s GDP accelerating to over 5 percent in coming years, driven by investment and high commodity prices.

“This is the poorest region in the world and that is why we are shining a torch on this … Africa needs these resources more than any other region,” Ncube said, adding, “There is a lot to lose if nothing is done.”

Collaboration among African countries is A must in jobs infrastructures development and economic growth

From: Abdalah Hamis
From: Abdalah Hamis

Collaboration among African countries a must in the development of foundation infrastructures for jobs and economic growth on the Continent.

Author: Dr. Antipas Massawe/massaweantipas@hotmail.com

Despite of the huge revenues governments on the African continent are earning from the ongoing development and exploitation of nonrenewable natural resources like metals, coal, uranium, diamonds, gemstones other than diamonds, oil, natural gas and industrial minerals, economic growth is still very slow and joblessness escalating on the continent. The individual going African governments are on in the development of their economic growth potentials does not allow mobilizing enough from the revenues individuals are earning from the ongoing development and exploitation of nonrenewable natural resources within their jurisdictions for investing as the seed capital required to enable optimal development of the foundation economic infrastructures enabling stimulation of investments for economic growth and jobs creation where most in need on the continent.

Collaboration among African governments is the only way mobilization of enough could be achieved from the revenues individual governments are earning from the ongoing development and exploitation of nonrenewable natural resources within their jurisdictions for investing as the multinational African seed capital required to enable optimal development of foundation economic infrastructures like hydro, coal, natural gas and nuclear based power generation and transmission; interconnected railway networks, airports, water dams; and fresh water, oil and natural gas pipelines. These are required for the stimulation investments in the economic growth potentials Africa is gifted in its population of more than one billion, favourable climate throughout the year, agriculture, fisheries, forestry, manufacturing and in continental, as well as global trading to speed up economic growth and reduce joblessness on the continent.

Even though many governments on the African continent are already very well aware of the need to use the revenues they earn from the development and exploitation of nonrenewable natural resources in the development of the foundation economic infrastructures required to stimulate investments for jobs creation and economic growth in order to ensure benefit for generations, the intensive development and exploitation of nonrenewable natural resources going on the continent for many years now has failed to contribute significantly in the development of the foundation economic infrastructures required for the continent. Failed because African countries are yet to realize the importance of multinational African collaboration in the mobilization of the revenues African governments are earning from the development and exploitation of nonrenewable natural resources within their jurisdictions for investing as the multinational African seed capital required to enable optimal development of the huge and costly foundation economic infrastructures of scale needed to stimulate investments for jobs creation and economic growth on the continent.

Multinational collaboration is what enabled the small, and therefore unable to achieve by going individually, countries of European Union (EU) to mobilize enough of the huge seed capital they invested in the development of the foundation economic infrastructures of scale in all sectors of modern economy in all countries of EU and EU as whole, enabling EU to become one of the most attractive for investments and prosperous worldwide. They realized and picked on the right course so quickly because history gave them the harsh cold winters to grow in and without any opportunity to beg from others or live on their produce.

Like the EU, the African continent is also fragmented into small, and therefore unable to achieve by going individually, countries which are yet to realize the importance of collaboration in their mobilization of the seed capital required for the optimal development of the foundation economic infrastructures required to stimulate investments for jobs creation and economic growth in all countries of the continent and the continent as a whole by emulating the footsteps of countries in the EU on the same. As a consequence, it is not much of the huge wealth foreign multinationals are creating in their development and exploitation of nonrenewable natural resources on the continent is been invested back on the continent for jobs creation and economic growth in the sectors of economy other than the development and exploitation of nonrenewable natural resources because the individual going by African governments failed to deliver the foundation economic infrastructures which were required to stimulate the investing back.

The individual going practiced by countries on the African continent in the mobilization of seed capital for the development of their foundation economic infrastructures won’t deliver optimal stimulation of investments in the individual countries of the continent and the continent as a whole because practice does not allow to consider the economic growth potentials, the foundation economic infrastructure needs and the contributory potentials of individual countries in the multinational African mobilization of the seed capital required for optimal designing and development of the foundation economic infrastructures required for stimulation of investments in all countries and the continent as a whole. Also, individual going by countries on the African continent won’t deliver the best fit of the individually designed and developed foundation economic infrastructures of the individual countries on the would be collectively designed master plan of the optimal foundation economic infrastructures required for all African countries and the continent as a whole.

Collaboration among African countries in the optimal designing, financing and development of the foundation economic infrastructures required for the stimulation of investments for jobs creation and economic growth in all African countries and the African continent as a whole should consider the following:
Estimates of the potentials of nonrenewable mineral resources and the revenues contributed to the governments by their ongoing and would be future development and exploitation in all countries on the continent (one); Estimates of the already developed and yet to be developed economic growth potentials existing in all countries on the continent and their costs and benefits (two); Foundation economic infrastructures required to enable development of the economic growth potentials existing in all countries on the continent (already developed and yet to be developed), and their costs. (three); Designing of the continental master plan/layout of the continental foundation economic infrastructures required for optimal stimulation of investments in all countries on the African continent and the African continent as a whole and costs per element, based on one, two and three above (four).

Developed master plan (four) should be made available to all countries on the African continent to enable them to consider when designing their detailed national economic infrastructures to ensure best fit on the continental master plan and mutual benefit for all who are sharing the continental foundation economic infrastructures. For example, development of the continental railway system on the continental master plan of foundation economic infrastructures should focus on ensuring uniformity of technical specifications and connectivity among neighbouring national and/or regional sections of the continental railway system in order to enable maximization in the utilization and sharing of idle railway sections, locomotives and wagons among countries and regions on the continent.

Also, developed master plan (four) should be basis in the creation of specialized multinational African companies responsible for the mobilization of the seed capitals required in the development and operation of different economic foundation infrastructures featuring on the continental master plan. For example, a multinational African company could be established to specialize in the mobilization of the African multinational seed capital required to finance development of African nuclear power plant(s) or the Inga hydropower generation potential in the Democratic republic of Congo which feature on the continental master plan. Individual countries or group of several neighbouring countries on the African continent could handle mobilization of the seed capitals required and development of small foundation economic infrastructures whose implementation is not so costly.

Collaboration among African countries in the mobilization of seed capital for the development of foundation economic infrastructures could also include mobilization for investing in private sector lead strategic industries such as the Indian and Atlantic Oceans born large scale fishing and processing and the natural gas based fertilizers manufacturing which have major impact on downstream jobs creation and economic growth in several sectors of the continental economy.

Source:
http://www.wavuti.com/4/post/2013/02/collaboration-among-african-countries-is-a-must-in-jobs-infrastructures-development-and-economic-growth.html#ixzz2M1vmy0k8


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Africa: THREE YEARS DOWN THE LINE SINCE THE LUSAKA DECLARATION OF THE ICGLR SPECIAL SUMMIT ON THE FLIGHT OF ILLEGAL EXPLOITATION OF NATURAL RESOURCES IN THE GREAT LAKES REGION HAS YET TO BE IMPLEMENTED.

News Analysis By Leo Odera Omolo

The Great Lakes Region is one of Africa’s richest region in terms of natural and human resources. However, it remains largely impoverished and its political, social and economic development has been hindered by conflict and absence of the rule of law.

It was in response to the regional conflicts that countries in the region, under the auspices of the United Nations and then Organization of African Unity decided to form the International Conference on the Great Lakes Region {ICGLR} .

Last week, the regional leaders signed a deal aimed at bringing peace and stability to the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo with plans to reinforce a UN-led mission to combat rebels activities in the region after years of unrest.

Eleven countries in the Great Lakes region – including rebel groups – signed on to the accord at a ceremony in the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa in the presence of the UN Secretary General Psan Ki-Moon

The entire region is hoping that this time the accord such an accord will hold its waters, after many similar agreement brokered before collapsed even before the ink dried up. D. R. Congo has remained unstable nation in Africa ever since it attained its political independence from its former colonial masters the Belgium in June 1960.

On December 15th, 2010, Heads of State and governments of Member States of the International Conference on the Great Lakes Region {ICGLR} gather in the Zambian capital, Lusaka

The summit passed far-reaching 19 resolutions dabbed The Lusaka Declaration. However, these resolutions which formed the part of the Lusaka Declaration have remained ineffective and no signs of implementation Ha been put to practical work.

LEO OIDERA OMOLO, A veteran Kenyan journalist who attended the Lusaka summit in this two parts analytical article is examining what has since become of the Lusaka Declaration.

The main theme at the Lusaka Summit was “The Problem of illegal |Exploitation of the region’s natural resources.”

The problem of illegal exploitation of natural resources spans the mining sector and trade in valuable minerals of the region which perniciously deprives the region of vital resources of revenue so much required by social and economic development. These resources can create greater prosperity for the member countries, but ii used poorly, the wealth will cause economic instability, conflict and environmental degradation.

It was with these special challenges sand special opportunities in the mind of the leaders of the Great Lakes Region that they resolved at the Lusaka Summit to mobilize existing technical expertise, human resources and their political goodwill under the auspices of the ICGLR to fight against illegal exploitation of natural resources being one of the ways of transforming the region into a space of peace and stability and socio-economic development.

In attendance at the Lusaka Summit were President Jose Eduardo Dos Santos {Angola} Denis Sassou Nguesso {he Republic of Congo Brazzaville}.Pierre Nkrunzinza{Burundi}.Joseph Kabila Kabange {DR Congo} Jakaya Mrisho Kikweteb {anzania}, Rupiah B Banda {Zambia} oweri Kaguta Museveni {Uganda}, (mar Hassan Ahmed Bashir {Sudan} Mwai Kibaki {Kenya}, Francois Bozize {Central African Republic}.

The 19 resolutions were as follows: We, Heads of State and Member States of the International Conference on the Great Lakes Region [ICGLR} who gathered in Lusaka, are concerned about the persistent illegal exploitation of natural resources in the Great Lakes Region and its linkage to the proliferation of small arms and light weapons, financing of armed groups and perpetuation of crimes against humanity.

We, are aware of the need to streamline the activities of local, regional and multinational actors involved in the exploitation of natural resources.

We, are cognizant of the commitment, mutual trust and cooperation in the implementation of the Pact on Security, stability and development of the Great Lakes Region.

We are, recalling the decision of the Mini-Summit held in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia on 1 February 2010, in which the ICGLR Secretariat and the Democratic of the Congo [DRC}government are urged to organize a Special Summit to address the issues related to illegal exploitation of natural resources in the Great Lakes Region;

We, are deeply concerned about the negative impact of the illegal exploitation of natural resources which deprives states of resources needed to fight poverty and aggravates environmental degradation.

We are fully aware of the economic conflicts and persistent insecurity caused by armed groups and the Great Lakes Region financed through the illegal exploitation of natural resources and trade in minerals, in particular gold, Colombo-Tentalite, Woliranite and Cassiterite and concerned about the negative impact these armed groups have had on the population in the region including crimes against humanity, and massive violation of human rights such as sexual and gender based violence.

Please watch for the second instalment.

ends

Canadian gold mining firm is closing its operations in Mozambique to concentrate its activities of gold prospecting in Western Kenya

Reports Leo Odera Omolo

A Canadian owned gold prospecting firm, African Queen Mines Ltd is reported to be in the process of quitting Mozambique to focus on its gold exploration activities in Western Kenya after reviewing its portfolio of exploration properties in South West and East Africa.

The move is expected to reduce the company’s operational costs and prioritize projects for development in 2013.

The firm’s Chief Executive Irwin Olian was recently quoted as saying that African Queen Mines Limited will halt development of King Solomon project in Mozambique to concentrate its activities in Western Kenya regions of Rongo and Ugunja gold fields in Kenya and Noyem and Nyadonam in Ghana.

The discovery of large deposits of gold reserves in Western Kenya in the past five years continues to attract foreign interests with several international mining firms taking acreage.

Statistic show that in 2010, Kenya earned Kshs 6’3 billion {USD 72.9 million) from the sale of five tones of gold – three times mote than the year before, indicating how rapidly the commodity is growing down as the most important export product in the country. and especially focusing on the Western Kenyan regions.

More gold exploration companies such as Africa Barrixck,Linear Metals, Red Rocks Resopurves and Gold Plat are narrowing down on Kenya and especially focusing on the country’s Western regions.

Last November, London based African Barrick Gold plc acquired mineral prospecting area in Western Kenya from Aviva mining Limited,a firm which is wholly owned Cubstation of the Monorovia Stock Exchange quotes Aviva.

Recent survey by the government and private companies have revealed gold deposits around Migori and \Kakamega Counties in Western Kenya.

However, the gold prospecting ground in many parts of Western Kenya might not be the fertile ground for business following the recent rising in concerted agitation by the local miners, particularly the indignant Kenya, who felt that foreign companies were out to exploit the country’s minerals while not making any meaningful return to the |Kenya | Treasury.

There is discontent by local small scale miners in Migori area, which has recently led to the revocation of one company’s prospecting license. the firm, Mid Migori gold mines Limited, has been in conflict of interests between the local miners and politicians, who have been accusing them of dishonesty.

There were accusation that Mid-Migori, a firm which has been in exploration work in the area for the last ten years, was actually prospecting gold and exporting its product by road via the neighboring Tanzania without having gone through the country taxation system under the Kenya Revenue Authority. The conflict also is with the local Member of parliament Edick Omondi Anyanga, and in September last year a team of Parliamentary Select Committee on minerals and natural resources visited Migori area and held talks with the local and foreign miners. He committee had recommended the revocation of Mid-Migori Gold Mines, though one of its manager later wrote from London suggesting the change of names and accused the former area MP of under mining its activities in the area.

The local miners through the managing director of Migori Mining Company limited, a self-help group comprising local and small scale miners Mr Timon Oliewo Sure, a Kenyan mine engineer with the vast experience in gold mining gained after long service in South African gold mines came out in full support of the local MP insisting that the MP had their mandate to speak on behalf of the much exploited local miners.

Kenya is not benefiting from its abundant minerals because of illicit dealing and rackets of exporting the commodity secretly.

Ends

Can Transparency Transform Mineral Wealth into Wellbeing?

From: Yona Maro

This paper provides a critical assessment of the linkages between mineral governance and economic development.
Link:
http://www.revenuewatch.org/sites/default/files/MineralWealthintheMaghreb.pdf


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Kenya: Corrupt Presidents’ vacating their Comfort Zone Create Buffer for Cushion which later live to haunt them

From: Judy Miriga

My fellow Friends,

It has been observed that, corrupt outgoing Presidents leaving after the end of their term of Office, in most cases, would make outrageous appointments to secure both their immediate and future interests. It is because of fear of unknown when they have to leave their comfort zones being authority. This was clearly noted where in a show-case, President Kibaki unscrupulously used the current loopholes in the Judicial Service Commission, inclusively he did the same with the Electoral Commission, where he rushed to fill the vacancies in the High Court as well as the Court of Appeal, with his friends?

It must be noted that Public Opinion is fundamentally important for the success of any Democratic Society.

The fact remain that the Reform Accord Agenda was therefore not complied according to Oath of Office. In which case, the Coalition Leadership did not uphold their Oath of Office. The New constitution has been made toothless and inactive and it is the reason why there are extreme insecurity, mushrooming of explosive corruption with extreme poverty eating away the fabric of the society. In the absence of proper Legislative Bills for Land Reform, Devolution Reform Bill, The Finance Reform Bill, The Police Reform Bill and the Civil Society Bill which are the core value for the Reform Accord Agenda, little has been achieved in the Kibaki’s Regime. Kibaki is therefore leaving Kenya Government dysfunctional with the excesses and failures of why Kenya disintegrated to Civil Clashes of 2007/8 with an exception of the Supreme Court under Chief Justice Willy Mutunga who was nominated according to the Reform Accord.

Although the Judicial under Chief Justice Willy Mutunga was formed according to the Reform Accord Agenda, there are evidence that the Legislature with the Executives continuously intimidated and manipulated Judicial operations sending fears in the Judicial leadership from acting independently as it should, for which it has failed to assert its independence as a result.

Engaging in Free Business Trading

Trading in a Free Business Trading without bordering regulation in actual sense is robbing and infringing the public off from Revenues, Wealth and Resources and is unfair way to balance the economy. In reality it is a way to bankrupt the Country’s economy to favor the rich who avoid paying their fair share in Taxes that supplement Revenues for Government Budgeting. It is a wrong notion to think that Business can provides a trickle down for people’s livelihood and survival without a Government. If this is allowed to continue, then the unscrupulous business community takes advantage to create private organized security that they expect to protect their Special Interest but which eventually turn to become a terror gang when it gets out of control from growing interests superseding those who engage them and forcing them to break away from the business control to become independent. This Private Security in time grow in size and interest, proceed to connect with other international organized security companies with mercenaries, organized terror rebel groups and finally joins with drug and money exchange laundering with traffickers and pirates.

Organized Terror Gangs (The Notorious Educated and Professional Terrorist Grouping Networking for Special Interest Power Control)

Organized Terror Gang are successful in their Mission because they are Politically Correct aided Group by Politicians in collaboration with the Unscrupulous Free Trading Business Enterprises with NGOs both local and International but who collaborate to do business without complying with business Rules and Regulations as well as avoid paying Tax Revenues that support Government Function-ability to sustain Public mandated welfare. This is a conspiracy to fail the reliable Government facility system from delivering public services effectively and efficiently so they are able to frustrate, assume and command the Authority of Government activities through Terrorism, manipulating, meandering and by intimidation, making the Government weaker from being able to be active in what it is suppose to facilitate.

Show-Case Creating Jobs the Wrong Way – Special Interest Idiology that Expound Corruption and Poverty

It has become a common knowledge and information is all around the villages that the educated terror gangs of politically correct special interest aided by the Local Government Administration Representatives are targeting the local village community; stealing their cows and loading them into Government police Lorries who are given police escort to Kenya Meat Commission in Athi River. The Villagers Land are grabbed by force and Agricultural food are loaded into lorries and taken to Nairobi. Woods are cut and taken to Nairobi. I am a victim of circumstance and both my father’s home and my home is a target where my mother’s life with that of my brother is in serious danger as I speak.

Creating jobs the wrong way is unacceptable. The Elite Terror group come in shapes and design and are approaching victims as Civil Rights Groups or as volunteer NGOs providing free services. When cornered they claim they have created job opportunities and are hiring jobless people to earn a living. This idea in real sense is robbing public Wealth and Resources sinking the economy into serious economic instability and are advancing poverty to a dangerous level.

Creating jobs the wrong way in the guest of Free Trading is definitely not balancing the economy in any way. There is no GDP recorded in this manner nor the Tax Revenue is paid to the Government to be able to facilitate public programs. In return it sinks the community and the general public into deeper poverty, joblessness and no record is left behind to track their wrong doings. It is hurting the economy because there is no balance nor regulating legal procedure that moderates business activities. Law subjects have also joined the frey and they act as legal advisors to the educated, organized and informed elite terror groups. They are sophisticated with the International connection with whom they engage and collaborate their business. To curb this theory of conspiracy, there must be a Consumer Welfare Commission that must investigate these groupings, Kenya Meat Commission in Athi River to ascertain their source of Cow supply including their market of supply.

Bad method of job creation have resulted in Government aided or Government shielded thieving from the Community which in addition involves organized stealing of cows from the local community assisted by Chiefs in the local community; forcing the community in an awkward way to release of their land to be used by these Politically Correct Special Agents to Trade with Communities local land for their special interest and this is forcing the Community into extreme poverty.

Private and Government lorries found carrying cows with Agricultural commodities from the villages used by these organized gangs must be eliminated and charged. Proper Cooperative Organizations must be established to create genuine jobs for the local peasant agricultural local farmers, where there will be a balance to provide food left over to eliminate poverty and sustain livelihood from falling down to poverty situation. There must be laws protecting tree cutting and anyone found cutting trees without proper authorization must be charged.

Extreme poverty is more imminent from activities of organized groups of Special Interest who are politically correct educated gangsters who network to rob the community off meaningful and dignified livelihood and as a result, we have lost many prominent straight forward business men including many fishermen from Migingo and this behavior must be put to a stop. This collaboration involved Uganda political networking with Rwanda and is expanding from the COMESA to other UN NGOs from North to South of Africa.

This is unacceptable commercial terrorism that should face common law legal justice against Human Rights as they have committed crime of driving people off their homes and making them homeless, they intimidate, obstruct and terrorize the local community from living a decent dignified livelihood and survival and are manipulating, oppressing, intimidating and terrorizing local from advancing development agenda for progressive development. This is the reason why Millennium Development Agenda for meaningful survival and livelihood has failed to take off. These groups are in collaboration networking with organized securities of mercinaries, rebels from the bushes spreading from the North of Africa, East, Central and South of Africa. This behavior must end now……

Kindly connect the dots to understand what is at stake……….

Why it is wrong to commercialize Public Infrastructure (Non-Profit Making undertaking for Public Service) transferred to Commercial Business for Profit-Making

This idea goes towards a defeatist philosophy of the Unscrupulous Special Interest selfishness for Greed which does not provide the needed fair balance for Public Utility and Facility sharing platform……and is therefore failing the original purpose meant for progressive expansion of PPP i.e. (Public-Private Partnership). There is need to restructure and regulate the PPP program to provide sustained feasibility for public service mandate without conflicting destructive interest from the Unscrupulous Special Interest networking with Organized Terror Gangs which is now tearing apart well meaning fabric for Political, Social and Economic establishment and is failing and contradicting public mandated needs for Reform where Millennium Development Goals program is able eradicate corruption and poverty.

I am a victim of these sad and sorry soaring landscaping circumstances and with other voiceless who fear for dear life, it is our joint desire that we bring these terrorist behaviors that are dangerously expounding corruption and poverty to end. These behaviors’ are unacceptable and cannot be tolerated; they must be put to a stop. These activities from Special Interest collaborative Networking of International connection are engaged in Crimes, Violation and Abuse of Human Rights; they are killing human livelihood and survival and are terrorizing peaceful community from enjoying Peace, Unity and Love……..They force everyone to bend and give in to serve their way of interest with oppressive pressure instead of working towards Reforming for progressive development agenda.

These groupings must be investigated and prosecuted in the Just Rule of Law in a Functioning Government establishment or under a Transitional Caretaker Committee set up to prepare road for an improved Government Establishment.

Structures that support Progressive Development Agenda in a society include good roads, Clean water supply, well functioning sewers, Electricity energy and telecommunications. They can be defined as “physical systems providing commodities and services that are fundamentally essential to enable, sustain, or enhance societal living conditions.

The private sector is playing increasingly important roles in producing goods and providing services that were once considered “public” and therefore exclusively the responsibility of governments.

Public-private partnerships (PPPs) and other forms of business cooperation between the Public & private sector and local and national governments have now common amongs people in business around the world. It is clear the business community engage in the scrambling to own Welfare Community Program & Public Corporations including Public Infrastructure and instead of being independently creative or engage in building their own business from ground up, they involve in monopolizing and controlling Government facilities, utilities and operations for Special Interest. Their purpose is to diversify through Organized Terror Groups to protect and expand their business to International ties amongst the illicit Unscrupulous NGOs of Special business interests for the control of Public-Private Partnerships Initiatives. This is ultimately failing the purpose of PPP intended to improve efficiency to Government service delivery in all sectors of Government Departments including energy, Water, Environmental, Health, School,
Police Security, Public Community Land Ownership and also, including Public utility for Financial services, improve telecommunications and transportation systems, construct and operate water, sewer, and waste treatment facilities, and provide health service needed effectively within a minimum time-frame.

The True Civil Society must embrace and protect Public Mandate to Reform

Justified and True Civil Society groups must conform to Reform Accord reality and those whose dealings are contrary and are against public mandate, the reality to Reform Accord must face people’s threshold and rejection.

Responsibility with Integrity through Accountability with Transparency

Good people, connect the Dots and let us stand together to demand for leadership of Responsibility with Integrity and all contenders who are vying for public office must pass the test of Accountability with Transparency. This is the only way we can reform and achieve the Reform we struggled to bring this far.

Casualties of judiciary reforms

Kenya’s top judges fail vetting and were forced back to serve the Status Quo of Special Interest and this is worrisome as conspiracy wheel to excel Corruption and expound poverty will get a ticket to dangerous incorrigible level. This is unacceptable.

Four sacked judges fought hard and appealed ruling that allowed them to keep their jobs after failing the vetting test. The same judges will protect interests of the outgoing president Kibaki with its collaborative network terrorist gang of unscrupulous Special Business Interest while on the other side, Kenyans will continue to brave for a tag of war to put things right before the next Government is formed.

Casualties from Crime Against Human Rights, Abuse and Violation that affect People’s Dignity, Livelihood and Survival by the Elite Well Informed Organized Thugs

Over 40 Police were brutally killed and bodies left to rot. Extrajudicial killings of innocent people from Tana River, Isiolo, Madera, Garrisa, Turkana, Rift Valley, The Greater Nyanza, Migori and Siaya District; Trans Nzoia, fisher men from Lake Victoria and the Migingo island; Thuggery from Organized gangs; land grabbing by force with other sneaky illegal maneuvers from evicting people off their land and destroying hopes to their livelihood and survival; the destruction and pollution of the environment; push to excessive poverty with destruction of social fabric to responsible livelihood and survival has become a sore in everyone’s mind except those connected in the corrupt deals of the selfish and greedy leaders.

Lesson Leaned

The election gone wrong in 2007/8 taught us a big lesson and we are not about to take any political chances or situation that will challenge and destroy our Reform gains for granted. We must stand for our rights and Embracing Common Law advocacy for Human Rights with Chief Justice Willy Mugunga and as a Show-Case, will help Transform our Legislative policies requirement for Reform we have struggled for this far.

There is a sense of urgency to put Leaders to task and to account for Mandated Responsibilities with Integrity; in checks and balances, determine their participation on corruption, poverty with efforts they engaged to improve Environmental pollution.

Judy Miriga
Diaspora Spokesperson
Executive Director
Confederation Council Foundation for Africa Inc.,
USA
http://socioeconomicforum50.blogspot.com

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Attachments

Kenya’s Corruption breading Economic looming Crisis with extreme poverty

Corruption can refer to many different types of illegal acts, though they will usually all involve a person abusing their authority for their own benefit, or for the benefit of family and (political) friends. This can be government officials using public money for their own personal use, or corporate executives improperly awarding contracts or taking other decisions in exchange for bribes.

Incidents of corruption in Kenya are not limited to large corporations or government agencies. Bribe-taking is common among many lower-level officials, with the average city-dwelling Kenyan having to pay as many as 16 bribes each month just in the course of everyday life.

Africa’s development agenda remained a high priority business interest in the world. The group of Twenty (G20) reporting on African Development Bank (AfDB) does not present African Financial situation as is on the Ground. Action plan intended for consultations by African leadership benefit their politically correct network of the selfish greedy the benefit that does not fizzle down to the grassroots; instead the urban poor with grassroots community are robbed through tax evasion by the unscrupulous Special Interest collaborative networks to extreme poverty and extermination.; thereby failing and handicapping advancements of Africa’s progressive development Agenda.

African Development Bank initiatives, Equity etc., have gained and benefited from public funding through NEPAD the results to improve Millennium Development Agenda of people have not been realized because of the growing sophisticated corruption by the educated agents of the politically correct networking groups. The Infrastructure Consortium for Africa, through the PPP program (the Public-Private Partnership) will not succeed as intended from United Nations facilitation funds to replenishment Infrastructure for the New Partnership for African Development (NEPAD), which involves Sokoni interactive platform for financing African infrastructure projects.

Africa’s Showcased at the G20 as exemplary are secretly under-cover by politically correct and the information have not been made available as International Policy demands or put to public information to inform people of Africa the going ons. One such of these was the Inga dam hydropower project in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Hela Cheikhrouhou, the African Development Bank’s director for energy, the environment and climate change, which outlined what the AfDB is doing in helping to prepare this project.

With wrong ways to creating job opportunities fostering employment and social protection, building a more stable resilient international monetary system, in order to address food price and shortage instead is increasing Poverty, joblessness with organized terrorism and assassinations. This is not a legalized way to fostering green growth and sustain development. This is not the success story to open Free Trade for Africa in the Globalisation Free Trading Market for Africa people of Africa want for their Development Agenda.

In the absence of fair and just global Regulations and Rules, globalisation for Free Trading will cause worst-case-scenario the world will live to regret.

The major multilateral institutions, the UN Agenda for Democracy and Millenium development to eradicate poverty, extra judicial killings with corruption will never realize its goals and heavy casualties of economic collapse will follow. The World Bank, IMF and the WTO, have become major objects of attack by Reformist with other concerned International public interest Civil Society groups. They have instead perpetuation high rise of corruption with poverty on an unprecedented scale and they must begin to re-structure their activities to conform with the majority public mandate and needs.

The Seattle meeting of the WTO was disrupted in December 1999, followed by that of Quebec in Canada, Gotenborg in Sweden, and the latest was the mass rally, organized against a World Bank conference in Oslo, Norway, in June 2002. What ordinarily was an academic gathering of development experts to an annual development conference of the World Bank attracted the wrath of the Norwegian and other European civil society groups. A coalition group by the name ATTAC organized an unprecedented rally of twelve thousand people in the city of Oslo against the World Bank conference. In addition, ATTAC also organised a counter or alternative conference at the University of Oslo on the theme, “The World Bank: Reform, Revolution or Cosmetic Change?”

Growing anger against the World Bank with partners continue to build unfavorable disagreement and concerns with the World Bank, IMF, UN NGO Agencies because Economic crisis affecting the world is fueled by these International World Financial Institutions putting Africa on cross-roads and Africa’s livelihood and survival are on the verge of extinction with regard to unregulated Free Trading initiative for global development; more specifically considering specific areas of Free trade, unscrupulous investment, Equity Banking in finance trading, Hedge Funding etc., affecting Africa’s agenda to Millennium Development progress.

We have observed dismal performance of the African continent progressive development and we must engage to resolve the problems.

African leaders have put forward various development agendas in the last four decades of the continent’s post-colonial history with no good results and things must begin to change for better. The latest of it is the New Partnership for Africa’s Development (NEPAD) we must urgently resolve.

People, what this paper seeks to do is to underscore unscrupulous corrupt politics of the international Free trading that evade paying Tax Revenues as element to progress globalization trading with is unfair and has put Europe to economic collapse. It unravels the linkage collaborative special business interest network between the international Free trading but avoid paying Tax Revenues at any form of regulating institutions (General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT)/ the WTO). This must be put to end because this political science killing the Third World countries development agenda as the invasion of scramble to Africa by the illicit unregulated and unscrupulous special interest is crazy for Africa’s shoddy investments.

In conjuction to economic instability, political special interest and socio-cultural erosion, it has been realized that Africa’s dignity, value and virtue is under threat and the conspiracy is destroying Africa cultural values including Africa’s survival and livelihood and things must begin to be done differently to protect ways we know will work favorably in the right direction engaging public interest since peoples priorities have gone far out of order and we must engage Reform and be able to make this world a better place than we found it .…….which is why, things must change for the better.

Political class who are real to public mandate and peoples needs to balance must stand with us to protect the Reform Accord agenda. The reform will give us the change we have been struggling for. It is time that we join hands to improve our livelihood and survival to make life worth living with Responsibility and Dignity for the sake of Peace to thrive again under unity for common good of all which will be preserved under the generated Trust in love.

Before Kenya goes for election, let us make it our concern and make sure elections will be made free and fair, that the Reform Accord Agenda is complied with and that we must embrace ethics that underline reality for checks and balances that offer and determine threshold for Responsibility and integrity to those who wish to undertake public office service delivery.

Corruption and Kenya’s Presidents

Unfortunately, corruption played a role with all 3 Kenyan presidents up to now.

•Jomo Kenyatta

He was the first president of Kenya after independence in 1963. During colonialism, the European colonizers had stolen fertile lands from, among others, the Kalenjin tribe. After the independence (in 1963), Kenyatta did not return those lands to the former owners, but handed it over to members of his own clan and tribe (the Kikuyu). Kenyatta himself became one of the largest private land owners in the country.

•Daniel arap Moi

During Daniel arap Moi’s presidency – Kenya’s second president – corruption was widespread and involved Moi himself on many occasions. In the 1990s, he was part of the Goldenberg scandal, where smuggled gold was exported out of Kenya in exchange for high government subsidies. It’s one of the largest corruption scandals to date in Kenya, which involved nearly the entire Moi government. Many officials from the Central Bank, and more than 20 senior judges have also been implicated. As of 2008, only a small handful small people have been charged with related criminal offense leaving out the masters who financed, organized and engineered the crime, which some see as an example of the continuing problem of corruption and favoritism that has carried on till today.

•Mwai Kibaki

The third president, Mwai Kibaki, was elected in 2002 mainly on the promise to end corruption in Kenya once and for all. Admittedly, there have been quite some improvements in the country (among them press freedom, return of elections and introduction of free and compulsory primary education for all) but corruption had remained a big issue. To start with, his administration consists largely of Kikuyu, while this tribe is only 22 percent of the Kenyan population. From 2003 to 2006, Kibaki’s cabinet spent 14 million dollars on new Mercedes cars for themselves. In late 2008, several members of Kibaki’s parliament were found to have taken large “allowances”, which were not legally part of their official compensation. Kibaki is believed and suspected to have falsified the results of the 2007 election, leading to riots organized crimes who performed heinous act of extra-judicial killings.

The Kenya Anti-Corruption Commission

Though legislation against corruption in Kenya has existed since 1956, with the Prevention of Corruption Act, the current anti-corruption agency has only been operating since 2003.

Under the Anti-Corruption and Economic Crimes act, the KACC is mandated to fight and prevent corruption though all levels of government and industry. They publish a number of regular reports and newsletters, with the aim of promoting fair business practices and to expose those who engage in questionable operations.

Causes Of Poverty In Kenya

Despite some positive developments, poverty in Kenya has continued to be a huge problem. Even hunger in Kenya continues to rear it’s head from time to time. This page looks at the facts, the causes and the remedies.

Extent of Poverty in Kenya

The dry poverty statistics in Kenya sum it all up. Somewhere between one quarter and half of the population earn less than $1 US each day (the annual GDP per capita is around $360 US). It was estimated in 1992 that half of all rural Kenyans were living below the poverty line. That represents approximately 9 million people. The situation is not quite as bad in the urban centers, where such poverty only effects a third of the population.

Kenya’s World Ranking Regarding Poverty

A 2005 report by the United Nations ranked Kenya as 154th out of a list of 177 countries, in terms of life expectancy, literacy levels and overall gross domestic product. Just three years earlier, the country had ranked 134th. For comparison, Uganda was ranked at 144th, and Tanzania was 164th. Both are immediate neighbors of Kenya.

There are several factors contributing to the ongoing problem of poverty in Kenya, though the issue of Kenya’s economic state is far more complex than a simple list of causes.

Limited Economic Diversity

Around three quarters of Kenya’s population is dependent on the agriculture industry, but with its erratic weather patterns and vast regions of arid desert, it is a very unstable sector. Periods of drought can be crippling, not only in terms of food supply, but in jobs as well.

Even when crops have been sufficient, poor government policies and international trade terms hampered agricultural growth, leading to further declines in the industry through the 70s and 80s. Starting in 1991, further serious problems in the country’s GDP became evident, leading to extended government action which has not proven to be successful at stemming the tide of poverty in Kenya.

Lack of Opportunity

Weak overall infrastructure for the country means that nearly all the rural population are forced to rely on their own subsistence farming for their own food as well as monetary income. Jobs are scarce, leaving people with little opportunity for employment. There are considerable obstacles for starting a small business yourself in Kenya as well. Micro credits may be one way to foster small entrepeneurs. They will be important when eradicating poverty in Kenya.

Another factor is education. School fees are often out of reach for poor families, leaving each generation to continue trying to find work while lacking the education to advance. Cultural biases towards women create further limitations for the growing number of female-led households.

Government Corruption

According to Transparency International, Kenya is one of the most corrupt nations in the world. It is difficult for the majority of the population to escape the poverty in Kenya, when government money is used improperly.

Bribes, fraud and tribal favoritism are common within the all levels of government, which hampers any attempt to improve conditions across the country. In the early 2000s, the Kenyan government began taking steps to reduce the rampant corruption. These reforms have inspired some confidence, and brought additional foreign investment back to Kenya, but at the core of the system corruption remains.

Unfair Tariff Walls By Rich Countries

Protection of their own economies through tariff walls poses another problem. An increase of international trade has proven beneficial for many developing countries – look at China, India and countries in South America. But often, it’s useless for developing countries to export to rich countries because the latter have installed tariff walls. This way, products from developing countries are artificially made expensive for Western buyers. Rich countries (actually their governments) want to protect their own industries against competition this way.

For example, Kenya has a blossoming flower industry that’s exporting to Europe, but recently a number of European countries have installed high new tariffs. It’s obvious that they want to protect their own industries. Their citizens pay the price.

Often, progressive groups don’t mention this as a cause of Kenyan poverty, because they are ideologically opposed to free trade and free markets.

Kenya’s Notable Corruption

The longest-running is the Goldenberg scandal [2], where the Kenyan government subsidized exports of gold, paying exporters in Kenyan Shillings (Sh) 35% over their foreign currency earnings. In this case, the gold was smuggled from Congo. The Goldenberg scandal cost Kenya the equivalent of more than 10% of the country’s annual GDP.

In 1998, political scientist Mutahi Ngunyi’s NGO – Series for Alternative Research in East Africa (SAREAT) engaged John Githongo to edit a regional political economy magazine, East African Alternatives[3]. The magazine folded after an audit instigated by the lead donor Ford Foundation found suspected misappropriation and collusion on the part of Ngunyi, who was executive director of SAREAT and Dr Jonathan Moyo, who was the programme officer at the Ford Foundation in charge of disbursing the resources to the NGO. They have both been sued and the matter is still in court. It is known that the Ford Foundation has accepted Githongo’s offer to be a prosecution witness in the case.

A Sh360 million helicopter servicing contract in South Africa[4]. Military officers had argued that the contract was too extravagant and servicing the helicopters could be done locally. Kenya Air Force (KAF) went ahead to spend Sh108 million as a down payment for servicing the Puma helicopters, whose tail number is logged as 418 at Denel Aviation, a South African firm.

In 2003, the military was split over plans to buy new Czech fighter jets[4]. The plan to buy the jet fighters would have cost taxpayers Sh12.3 billion.

A Sh4.1 billion Navy ship deal [4]. A Navy project was given to Euromarine, a company associated with Anura Pereira, the tender awarded in a process that has been criticised as irregular. The tender was worth Sh4.1 billion. Military analysts say a similar vessel could have been built for Sh1.8 billion.

Chamanlal Kamani had been involved in a supply contract, as Kamsons Motors. [5] Kampsons tendered for the supply of Mahindra Jeeps to the Police Department in the mid 1990s for close to Sh1 million (US$13,000) each, at a time when showrooms would have charged customers a sixth of the price. Moreover, the vehicles were being bought for a government department and were therefore imported duty free. Few of the more than 1,000 units that were imported over several years are in service today.

The Kamanis were also involved in a deal to build a CID forensic laboratory. On June 7, 2004 an amount of $4.7 million was wired back. The payment was a refund against the money paid for the Criminal Investigations Department forensic laboratory. [6]. Another euro 5.2 million was paid back in respect of the E-cop project, which involved computerisation of the police force and the installation of spy cameras in Nairobi by Infotalent Systems Private Limited. [6]

The Prisons department lost $3 million after contracting Hallmark International, a company associated with Deepak Kamani of Kamsons Motors, for the supply of 30 boilers. [5] Only half of the boilers were delivered – from India and not the United States as had been agreed.

The construction of Nexus, a secret military communication centre in Karen, Nairobi [4]. The Government spent Sh2.6 billion (US$36.9 million) to construct the complex. Three years later, military personnel have not moved into the centre. A phantom company, Nedermar BV Technologies, which is said to have its headquarters in Holland, implemented the secret project situated along Karen South Road. Nedermar is linked to businessman Anura Pereira. However, Pereira has denied this. The tendering process for the Nexus project was circumvented as DoD’s Departmental Tender Committee. Funding for the project was made through the Ministry of Transport and Communications. The complex is currently headed by Colonel Philip Kameru. Nexus was first meant to be an ammunition dumpsite before it was turned into a military communication and operations centre. Construction continued without any site visits by either the DoD staff or Ministry of Public Works officials. The Nexus project was implemented during the tenure of General Joseph Kibwana.

In 2005 plans to buy a sophisticated £20 million passport equipment system from France [7] [8]. Here government wanted to replace its passport printing system. The transaction was originally quoted at 6 million euros from François Charles Oberthur of Paris – the world’s leading supplier of Visa and MasterCards, but was awarded to a British firm, the Anglo-Leasing and Finance Company Limited, at 30 million euros, who would have sub-contracted the same French firm to do the work. Despite the lack of competitive tendering Anglo Leasing was paid a “commitment fee” of more than £600,000. Anglo Leasing’s agent is a Liverpool-based firm, Saagar Associates, owned by a woman whose family has enjoyed close links with senior officials in the Moi regime. Company records show Saagar Associates is owned by Mrs Sudha Ruparell, a 47-year-old Kenyan woman. Ruparell is the daughter of Chamanlal Kamani, the multimillionaire patriarch of a business family that enjoyed close links with senior officials in the Moi regime. Anglo Leasing made a repayment of euro 956,700 through a telegraphic transfer from Schroeder & Co Bank AG, Switzerland on May 17, 2004.[6]

The local chapter of Transparency International and the Kenya National Commission on Human Rights (KNCHR), a government body released a report in February, 2006, stating that between January 2003 and September 2004, the National Rainbow Coalition government spent about $12-million on cars that were mostly for the personal use of senior government officials.[9] The vehicles included 57 Mercedes-Benz, as well as Land Cruisers, Mitsubishi Pajeros, Range Rovers, Nissan Terranos and Nissan Patrols. The $12-million substantially exceeded what the government spent over the 2003/04 financial year on controlling malaria — “the leading cause of morbidity and mortality in Kenya”, says the report.

In late February 2006, the leading newspaper The Standard ran a story claiming that president Mwai Kibaki and senior opposition figure Kalonzo Musyoka had been holding secret meetings. On March 2 at 1:00am local time (2200 UTC on the 1st), masked gunmen carrying AK-47s raided multiple editorial offices of The Standard, and of its television station KTN. They kicked and beat staff members, forcibly took computers and transmission equipment, burned all the copies of the March 2nd edition of the newspaper, and damaged the presses. At KTN, they shut down the power, putting the station off the air. Initially, the Kenyan information minister claimed no knowledge of the raid, but it has since revealed that Kenyan police were responsible. The Ministry of the Internal Security later stated that the incident was to safeguard state security. “If you rattle a snake you must be prepared to be bitten by it,” John Michuki said. Three journalists at The Standard, arrested after the critical story was printed, are still being held without charge. [10] [11] The story now also features the bizarre case of two Armenian businessmen, mocked in the press for their taste for heavy gold chains, watches and rings, referred to as Mercenaries, who the opposition says led the raid and had shady dealings with Kibaki’s government.[12] [13][14]

In November 2006, the government was accused of failing to act on a banking fraud scam worth $1.5bn involving money laundering and tax evasion, reported by whistle-blowers as early as 2004. Investigators believe sums worth 10% of Kenya’s national income are involved. A recent auditor’s report says the scale of the operations “threatens the stability of the Kenyan economy”.[15]

In November 2006, British Foreign Office minister Kim Howells warned, that corruption in Kenya is increasing the UK’s exposure to drug trafficking and terrorism. “People can be bought, right from the person who works at the docks in Mombasa up to the government. (…) This weakness has been recognised by drug-traffickers and probably by terrorists too.” Said Howells for the BBC.[16]

On 31 August 2007, The Guardian newspaper featured on its front page a story about more than GBP 1 billion transferred out of Kenya by the family and associates of former Kenyan leader Daniel arap Moi. The Guardian sourced the information from the Wikileaks article The looting of Kenya under President Moi and its analysis of a leaked investigative document (“the Kroll report”) prepared for the Kibaki government in 2004 in order to try to recover money stolen during Moi’s rule.[17]

On 2007-09-06 parliament passed the Statute Law (Miscellaneous Amendments) Bill, restricting investigations by the Kenya Anti-Corruption Commission to offenses committed prior to May 2003, excluding the Goldenberg and Anglo-Leasing scandals and other major cases. The move was condemned by anti-corruption campaigners; Mwalimu Mati, former chief executive of the Transparency International Kenya Chapter, declared that “grand corruption has swallowed the government and parliament that Kenyans elected to fight it in 2002”. [18]. In response to public outrage generated by the move, President Kibaki announced that he would veto the bill.

In September 2007, Wikileaks released documents exposing a 500 million Kenyan shilling payroll fraud at Egerton University] and subsequent cover up, now the subject of ongoing legal dispute in the High Court.[citation needed]

On the 28th of September 2007, Wikileaks released 28 investigative documents] exposing a US$1.5 billion dollar money laundering fraud by Charter House Bank Ltd. Re-reported in the Kenyan Standard newspaper.[citation needed]

In June 2008, the Grand Regency Scandal broke, wherein the Central Bank of Kenya is alleged to have secretly sold a luxury hotel in Nairobi to an unidentified group of Libyan investors for more than 4 billion Kenyan Shillings (approx US $60 million) below the appraised market value. Finance Minister Amos Kimunya negotiated the sale, and was censured in a near-unanimous motion by the Kenyan Parliament, though he vehemently denies the charges. This follows on the heels of the Safaricom IPO, overseen by Kimunya, which has been alternatively praised and questioned for possible corruption in the execution of the sale. Safaricom is the largest mobile phone service provider in Kenya, having operated with a near-government monopoly for many years. The government of Kenya sold its 50% stake in Safaricom in the IPO.

Kenya’s Wealth in a Conspiracy Threat

Most Counties to the west of the Rift Valley fall under an expansive Gold Belt that stretches from Turkana to Kuria. In most of these areas, medieval mining methods, especially along river beds, have been going on for decades.

Most of these efforts are, however, exploited by middlemen who snap up the gold at throwaway prices and end up making super profits in the international market.

The global decline of stock markets has pushed the price of gold to record levels as investors turn to the precious stone to hedge their wealth.

An ounce of gold is presently retailing at $1,586 (about Sh134,000) up from $972 (Sh82,000) in 2009. Financial analyst Aly Khan Satchu says the price of gold has been on an 11-year rally, turning the commodity into an international currency.

And with neighbouring Tanzania continuing to rake in billions of shillings by commercialising its gold resources, Nandi, Siaya, Kakamega, Vihiga, Migori, Trans-Mara, Turkana, Kuria and Bondo are among the areas that await a major economic transformation when the government moves to create a framework for such activity to thrive locally.

Coal

Only a few years ago, a 500 square kilometre region cutting through Kitui and Mutito called the Mui Basin was declared one of Africa’s most coal-rich areas.

Coal is a key component for the smelting of other minerals and is also used for generating power in most countries. Already, the Chinese have set base in Kitui, ready to extract the mineral whose quality has been passed as excellent.

As coal is a mass mineral, logistical arrangements are being sought to transport the product either to local ports or to areas where it can be used either in the mining of other minerals or for local power production.

While concerns have been raised over its environmental impact, coal remains a relatively very cheap power generation option, with countries like South Africa and China still heavily reliant on it.

Billions of tonnes lie buried in Eastern province, waiting to transform a largely laid back region into a vibrant economic zone.

Iron Ore

Iron ore is used in the manufacture of steel products and significant deposits have been discovered in Taita Taveta, Kitui, Meru, Kilifi and Samia.

In Taita Taveta District, extraction of the mineral has already commenced, while a local industrialist has declared intention to mine in the Mutomo area of Kitui.

With Kenya spending hundreds of billions of shillings every year to import steel for manufacturing, domestic as well as construction industries, exploitation of this local wealth would hugely boost the economy.

Conveniently, the discovery of coal, a major input in the mining of iron ore, in Kitui means a major industry is in the offing, with investors circling with intent.

Soda Ash

Kenya exports close to one million tonnes of soda ash, mined predominantly in the Lake Magadi area of Kajiado. But the potential to multiply that, according to the government, is massive.

The Magadi Soda Company is a perfect example of how minerals can be used as a major economic driver. The company employs about 500 people directly and is a major consumer of local production in the Lake Magadi area.

The company also drives development in the area with the awarding of scholarships and provision of water and other services to the local community.

Soda ash is used in the manufacture of glass, salt, preservatives, and dyes, among many other applications. The sad thing, however, is that most of the mined soda ash is exported raw, denying this country value added benefits.

Sad, also, is the fact that most of Kenya’s glassware is imported from countries like China that import their soda ash from Kenya.

Flourspar

Found in abundance in the Kerio Valley, this is one mineral whose immense value has never been capitalised.

Fluorspar, or fluorite, is an industrial mineral largely used in the manufacture of lenses for microscopes and telescopes, fluorescent bulbs and for smelting.

The mineral also has aesthetic uses as ornaments are carved out of it. With average prices of pure fluorite at a minimum of $1.2 a gramme (about Sh150), Kenya could be sitting on at least a trillion shillings of this very valuable rock.

Limestone

This is perhaps the one mineral that Kenya is synonymous with. Virtually every corner of the country has limestone whose uses touch every day life.

From the manufacture of portland cement, chalk, paper and glass to medicines, floorings and farm conditioners, this is one mineral that can earn this country a lot of foreign exchange if the capacity of its exploitation is greatly enhanced.

Demand for cement, for instance, has over the last few years of a burgeoning construction boom exposed the lack of capacity at cement manufacturing plants.

Kenya only produces below 5 million tonnes of cement compared to the between 66 to 150 million tonnes done by China, India, the United States and Turkey — by that order the four leading cement producers.

Most countries are net importers of cement, led by China, India and the United States. Evans Osano, an industry analyst, says Middle Eastern countries are leading consumers of cement, as are some African countries like Rwanda, Djibouti, Burundi, Gabon, Congo and Botswana. Osano says cement has the potential to become a leading foreign exchange earner for Kenya.

Titanium

In 2011, Tiomin finally set base to start extracting titanium from mines in Kwale. The mineral is widely used as a base compound. Aircrafts, space ships and missiles’ bodies are built with alloys that include titanium for corrosion resistance and tensile strength at low weight.

Most of titanium extracts, though, are used in the production of titanium oxide, which is used in the manufacture of cement, toothpaste, paper and plastics, among many other products.

Surgical equipment and body piercings are made with titanium as it is rust proof, while hip joints, ball joints and other human body internal bone interventions are done with titanium, which needs no replacement for 20 years.

Dental implants are also done with titanium, as are guns. If your laptop has a shiny top, or your phone, or car centre console, that is titanium as well. There are significant deposits of titanium in Malindi and Lamu as well.

Oil and Gas

Several months ago, Energy minister Kiraitu Murungi confidently claimed that oil would be struck in Isiolo in no time.

But later, miners hit a high-potential hydo-carbon belt, a drawback that nonetheless further confirmed the presence of oil in the area.

Energy specialist Eng Patrick Obath says all the ingredients for a major oil find are present in Kenya, adding that the presence of oil in western India shows that oil is available in plenty in Lamu, going by the similarity of the regions’ tectonic plates.

The southern coastal area most likely has natural gas, and with Tanzania making one big discovery after another in its coastal regions, Obath is convinced Kenya is most likely sitting on immense oil and gas wealth.

source: http://www.nation.co.ke/Features/DN2/Kenyas+trillions+of+buried+wealth+/-/957860/1299662/-/item/0/-/60twclz/-/index.html

Kenya: Fast-Growing Kenya Facing Ground Water Depletion
17 December 2012

As demand for water rises and rainfall becomes less dependable, fewer Kenyans can rely only on rivers, springs or – for the lucky minority – a piped water supply. Many instead are turning to borehole water.

But increasing urbanisation, combined with the effects of climate change and the growing popularity of tapping into underground aquifers, is proving an unsustainable combination, experts say.

Kenya’s traditional water sources are rapidly dwindling in volume due to overexploitation, erratic rains and the degradation of catchment areas. In response, the use of underground water is becoming widespread across this water-stressed east African country, whose population of 41 million has access to an annual renewable fresh water supply of only 647 cubic metres per person, according to government figures.

But some areas are already experiencing depletion of underground water as well. Kenya’s capital city, Nairobi, has a rapidly growing population of around three million, and several satellite towns emerging on its outskirts. With no piped water, many residents of these new communities have turned to borehole water, resulting in increasing pressure on groundwater resources.

Daniel Juma, of Joska Township on Nairobi’s outskirts, has dug a 30-metre (100-foot) borehole to supply his household with water. Already he worries about how long it will last.

“It was costly digging the borehole, yet many more are being (dug) in the neighbourhood and it might dry up in a few years,” he says.

LACK OF PIPED WATER

Boreholes are widely used in Nairobi, given that 40 percent of the city’s population is not directly supplied with piped water. Agatha Thuita, an official of the government’s Water Resources Management Authority (WRMA), said that even those with access to piped water often supplement their supply with borehole water or harvested rainwater because the piped supply is unreliable.

The Nairobi Water and Sewerage Company is among those drilling boreholes to improve the water supply to Nairobi residents and supplement the supply of water from dams on the outskirts of the city, Thuita said. Residents without piped water or a borehole buy water from the company’s water tankers.

The problem is not confined to Kenya. Groundwater reservoirs are rapidly being depleted around the world. In August 2012, researchers in Canada and the Netherlands found that 80 percent of the world’s aquifers were not being used sustainably, with heavy exploitation of water threatening livelihoods and lives of millions of people.

(Page 2 of 3)

Some 430 km (270 miles) west of Nairobi, in the Mundika area of Busia County, near Kenya’s border with Uganda, people already have seen their boreholes dry up. Jackline Ajiambo is one of many residents who dug a borehole to ensure reliable access to clean water because of lower water levels in rivers and the drying up of springs and streams.

“This borehole was initially 28 feet (deep) and drawing water was much easier, but the water level has grown low, compelling us to dig it deeper,” Ajiambo said.

DRYING BOREHOLES

Because drilling boreholes with machines is costly, the majority of borehole users rely on hand-dug holes, but they are not always reliable. Milton Onyango’s borehole is 50 feet (15 metres) deep and was once a source of water for both domestic use and the watering of livestock. But it dried up two years ago, and with no source of running water, he now relies on the Sio river, 7 km (4 miles) away.

In a culture where fetching water is a woman’s role, Onyango’s wife and two teenage daughters must endure the regular long trek.

Officials point to several factors leading to the depletion of traditional water supplies. According to Musembi Munyao, an official with the water ministry in Nairobi, pollution of rivers is partly to blame for the increasing switch to groundwater in Kenya.

“If the Nairobi River (had not) been polluted, its water would still be fit for consumption thus reducing the need for drilling boreholes in the city and its environs,” Munyao, a geologist, says.

Munyao also criticises the damage done to water catchment areas, such as the destruction of vegetation on mountains and hills. According to the WRMA’s Thuita, rapid urbanisation also increases the amount of land covered in impermeable surfaces such as roads, while deforestation can also lead to more surface-water runoff during the rainy seasons. These factors make it difficult for water to percolate into the ground and recharge aquifers.

Although the government has not undertaken detailed monitoring, Thuita believes that two further factors contributing to increasing water stress are low precipitation linked to climate change, and overexploitation of groundwater.

“At the coast, heavy extraction of groundwater has led to seawater intrusion causing salinity in borehole water,” she said.

Munyao notes that the country’s exact groundwater availability is unknown, making it hard to determine which areas have enough water to tolerate increased exploitation.

(Page 3 of 3)

SOLUTIONS?

Addressing the problem, experts say, will require a range of changes, including more harvesting of rainwater to boost supplies and recharge aquifers, and rules to prevent housing estates being developed in water catchment areas where aquifer recharge takes place.

What Kenya needs is “an integrated water resources management system,” Thuita says. “We need to develop wisely by not undoing what nature has provided us.”

Demand for water, however, is driving action. Speaking at the opening of a recent workshop on developing a master plan for Nairobi’s water resources, Kenya’s Prime Minister Raila Odinga said the government intended to meet the needs of the capital and its 13 satellite communities one way or another.

“The water available currently meets a mere 60 percent of the demands of the city and its satellite towns,” said Odinga. In response – for better or for worse – the government plans to sink more boreholes.

Justus Bahati Wanzala is a writer based in Nairobi.

Read more at AlertNet Climate, the Thomson Reuters Foundation’s daily news website on the human impacts of climate change.

Africa’s Natural Resources: Forum wraps Up with Suggestions for Sustainable Use of Africa’s Natural Resources

From: News Release – African Press Organization (APO)
PRESS RELEASE

Forum wraps Up with Suggestions for Sustainable Use of Africa’s Natural Resources

Africa accounts for 60 per cent of the world’s uncultivated arable land that need to be protected against rapacious speculation

ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia, October 29, 2012/ — The eighth African Development Forum (ADF VIII) wound up in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, on Thursday with the adoption of a Consensus Statement suggesting better ways in which African countries can use their natural resources to promote people-centered sustainable development.

The 11-page document is the tangible result of the October 23-25 forum on the theme “Governing and Harnessing Natural Resources for Africa’s Development.”

It focused on how to generate maximum benefits from the exploitation of Africa’s lands, minerals, fisheries and forests for the benefits of the people.

On land, which has come under intense speculative pressure from local and foreign investors, the document calls for scientific and methodical approaches to land issues that would guarantee transparency, equity and sustainability.

These include strengthening policy, access, property rights, and investment in large scale agriculture in line with the existing Comprehensive African Agriculture Development Programme (CAADP).

Africa accounts for 60 per cent of the world’s uncultivated arable land that need to be protected against rapacious speculation.

In an open letter to Forum participants, OXFAM said some 50 million hectares had been acquired in 700 transactions in recent years.

However, the mining sector incarnates the paradox of Africa’s natural wealth, where bounty breeds penury. According to the Consensus Statement, Africa ranks first or second in known world reserves of bauxite, chromite, cobalt, industrial diamond, manganese, phosphate rock, platinum-group metals, soda ash, vermiculite and zirconium. The continent is home to one-fifth of global gold and uranium supplies, while over 30 countries produce oil and gas in commercial quantity.

To resolve this dilemma, the Forum, among other measures, called for the implementation of the African Mining Vision adopted by African leaders in 2009. The vision sets out how mining can be used to drive the development of their countries.

According to the document, “transparent, equitable and optimal exploitation of mineral resources to underpin broad-based sustainable growth and socio-economic development is the major challenge for African countries today.”

On fisheries and aquatic resources, the Forum called for the strengthening of policies, legislation, strategies, investment and collaboration among states in various areas to develop the sector. Greater attention also needed to be paid to the New Partnership for Africa’s Development (NEPAD) action plan on inland, coastal and marine fisheries and aquaculture at the national and regional levels. Africa loses a million tons of fishery resources estimated at over US $600 million annually to illegal and unreported fishing.

The forum dwelt at length on the need for the sustainable exploitation and preservation of Africa’s forests estimated at 675 million hectares or 17 per cent of global forests. The need for sustainable exploitation of the Congo Basin, the second largest forest in the world, was a recurrent theme at the gathering.

The Statement cited policy, legal, regulatory, economic, governance, equity, knowledge, institutional and environmental constraints as critical to the sustainable management of Africa’s forest resources with a developmental vision.

“Overcoming these constraints is key for attaining inter-sectoral linkages between agriculture, forest, industries and human settlement in Africa,” the document added.

The ADF, a United Nations Economic Commission for Africa biennial event is convened in collaboration with the African Union Commission, African Development Bank, and other partners to establish an African-driven development agenda that reflects consensus and leads to specific programmes for implementation. It is usually attended by some 1,000 participants including Heads of State and Government, African Member State policy-makers, development partners, other United Nations agencies, intergovernmental and non-governmental organizations (IGOs/NGOs), academia, practitioners, civil society organizations (CSOs), the private sector, eminent policy and opinion leaders, and the media.

Distributed by the African Press Organization on behalf of the African Development Bank.

Contact: Felix Njoku – n.njoku@afdb.org – +216 71 10 2612

SOURCE
African Development Bank (AfDB)

The Mega Bandits and Super Heavy-Duty Looters of Africa’s Wealth

From: Judy Miriga

Reason why Lack of Peace and Harmony is all around us:

Where there is no Peace and Harmony it has been noted that, Selfishness & Greed of the Rich and the Wealthy Corporate Special Interest took center stage to influence manipulation through monopolizing business and trade to benefit a few and is what has fueled Racial animosity, brought poverty, destroyed middle-class and which resulted to bad economy that now affects the whole region of the world. When special interest take control of everyone’s life, the wheel of life’s survival through the economic span grinds to a halt and this as a result throws people out of balance and thus weakens the Society. Hate, Selfishness and Greed make those who suffer from it fail to make constructive logistical fair judgement of equating and balancing principles of what makes a good life. Most of them believe that, pressurizing people into submission to fear-factor through pushing people into pain and suffering, poverty, careless killings, marginalization, discrimination and intimidation is the answer to wealth and power……..and as a result is the ticket to happiness. This they are all wrong.

Lack of Peace and Harmony puts us at loggerhead and we find ourselves to hate and be at war with each other. This situation is made worse from those characters who produce bad leadership and it is because of lack of ability to generate enough confidence, failure to build trust, lack of knowledge and understanding and failure to create environment for love.

Lack of Truth and Transparency comes from self-pride, selfish-ego and greediness……..with this one cannot avail checks and accountability but instead engage in Excessive lies that come from those who demand leadership by force to protect their bad deeds.

No Nation or society can flourishing or do well when there is no love amongst its citizens and with that it is not possible to generate peace and unity for all; and so happiness is left to only a few rich, of which the greater part of members of the society remain poor, unhappy and are miserable.

At this point and because of disparity the vibrant youth engage in bad groups in gangs or in drugs, others engage in child porno or prostitution, child abuse and neglect, or are simply wasted. This results in the destruction of the Society’s fabric, strength and stability.

If people of a Nation are satisfied, have affordable healthcare, can afford education even when one is from poor family, enjoy themselves in Social Diversity programs and have access to opportunities to creative arts, innovation technology and science; peace and unity abounds. Where there is no harmony, hate thrives and people plan bad things against each other all the times……..

There is really no need for war against each other if solutions can be found to harmonize our differences. This is why we all must go in search for good leadership. Good Leadership is able to provide a balance, where unity for common good of all can be found……..a good leader will strive to find ways and means to avoid excitement for violence. It is because, a good leader understands that frustrations comes as a result for lack of needs which generates sense of deprivation and which provide an opening for conflict. A good leader will provide a balance by creating opportunities for engagements; But organized crime can provide nothing good at the end of the day, except pain and sufferings with disunity that directs destructive channel to interfere with public peace and unity which is unacceptable and must be suppressed by good people who are after Peace and Unity for common good of all.

Good Leadership:

Leadership is a skilful talent needed to organize logistics from groups of people and direct Plan of Action to improve matters or level up programs that leads to achieving desired goals.

A good leader is in command to influence harmony and is able to generate conducive environment where Peace and Unity for common good of all is able to thrive. A good leader is guided by Wisdom and is defined by principles of character that shape his or her aspirations and passion for uprightness and in virtue. A good leader is always in command at any given time and when situation gets out of control, he or she is able to find collective solution and drive calmness in a short space of time. As an organizer, he or she plans with specifics laid down to achieve the desired goals. A leader should engage and direct logistics, theories and ideas into perspectives for sustainability in achieving both short-term for immediate or emergency and long term goals for sustainability in a diversified Plan of Action; and where opportunities for progressive agenda is open to all without animosity, hate, discrimination, biasness or marginalization or racial discrimination of any kind. A good leader is able to make solid foundation that lasts.

Good leaders can be trusted to offer good guidance, most favorably and in Truth have substances to which are laid on reliable Plan of Action with an aims to meet specific targets in a specified given time-frame where, at the end, the success story is listed in history of honors. Good leadership qualities are in-built characters that attracts likeability and Trust. If a leader cannot be liked or trusted, that spells danger of some sorts.

Building collective proposal that generates unity of purpose for Mutually common good of all is an ingredient mostly needed at a time of change and where Strategic Plan of Action is developed to accommodate diversity of interests that are acceptable and appeals to public mandate without discrimination.

Bad Leaders:

Unfavorable bad leaders are associated with meanness, selfish, greedy, hate, divide and rule elements, are ready to go for war even where there is no need for war….and a bad leader produces unfavorable bad results that can turn destructive or catastrophic endangering many lives.

When lawmakers engage in unfavorable behaviors and still have guts to tell bold lies repeatedly…….lie after lie after lies, there is an expansive problem looming and people must be ware……it is equally not wise to follow such leaders. It is because their judgments are questionable and they cannot be relied upon…….It has been tested before that, where there is too much lies, there are corrupt practices of intimidations, marginalization, bad secrets and fear spells that go with it and consequently there are pools of graft and impunity that go a long way in order that their plan s become successful under threats, fears and intimidation………..This is not right……….It is a backward way of life……….

In reality, there are no truth that can be found in such group of characters who 24/7 engage in lies, and in definition, they are hard product to sell. Their lives are surrounded with suspicious characters, their business are done in secrets, they make it difficult for people to get to know who they really are………most of them engage in syndicates of business that avoid paying taxes but overload public to pay their debts, and engages in conspiracy theories of prejudices dividing people against each other, approve and supports clandestine government plans to deprive their people through Intellectual Property Thieving of public wealth resources, elaborate murder plots to acquire public and community land, engage in suppression of secret plan with other organized criminals and schemes behind certain political powers that be………and these are all doomsday………These behavior cannot escape massive destruction and slaughter of human beings lives and livelihood, a Holocoust of Great destruction resulting in the extensive loss of human lives where people get burned alive, or are killed en mass. Where is the happiness or fun in all these…….???

Causes of War and how to Avoid Wars and Disharmony

Across the world, people are at pains and are extremely very angry for one reason or the other……to push the world into war because of selfishness and greedy for special interest would be a disaster. No one wants to go to war……..especially when people know what war entails with its repercussions………

If truly someone cares, no one will drive people to war to kill each other…….No…….We need each other and can plan better to improve each others lives in a shared plan for “Give and Take”…….Why must we kill……….shouldn’t we care to Love and enjoy the blessings of happiness….???

War interventions have been done time and again but Special Interest take people of the world for granted ……. ……United Nations international court to arbitrate disputes have not been taken seriously to produce the desired goals, ……..people get fed up ……. as these prescriptions have turned out ineffective, people’s anger grows……. Some governments freely ignore arbitration rulings that are against them…… but we still believe that, collective security idea can be reached when strict measures are imposed by good leaders of the world.

A good plan should be appealing and be adoptable to suit the majority of the Society fairly:

It is a pity and a shame that unscrupulous Special Interests with corrupt governments of the world continued to cause all manner of Violations and Abuse against Human Rights with outrageous Crime, destroying livelihood and survival and inflicting pain and sufferings all around, is by all means not acceptable and must be condemned by all good people of the world.

In focusing for the poor of Africa, may people of the world stand with Africa to bring normalcy and order for the goodness sake. With excessive corruption, graft and impunity in Africa, a demon that has eaten deep into the African fabric is now threatening Global livelihood and survival of all people of the world. This monster is threatening to devour livelihood of the poor victims in Africa while the corrupt leaders after stealing public wealth and resources, are given national honors at high places in the world by the wealthy and most powerful.

This is very sad, defies logics, is inhuman, must be condemned with the strongest words it deserves and good people of the world must unite to influence good measure of change and discourage this behavior for goodness sake……

Judy Miriga
Diaspora Spokesperson
Executive Director
Confederation Council Foundation for Africa Inc.,
USA
http://socioeconomicforum50.blogspot.com

– – – – – – – – – – –

— On Sat, 10/6/12, margaret gichuki wrote:

From: margaret gichuki
Subject: The Mega Bandits and Super Heavy-Duty Looters of Africa’s Wealth
Date: Saturday, October 6, 2012, 10:37 AM

Uncle G,

You make me laugh.All the time when I read you.

Did you say they memorize the act #’s………….?????…………..lol!!!!!!!!!!!

But seriously, this is a shocker.Can’t the Swiss banks give the money back to their countries after they die.? Shouldn’t there be some international law to this effect.?..Are you saying the Libyan Gov.(or what looks like a Gov) won’t get Gaddafi’s root back.?

And I thought all along Mubarak was a saint.Gwa!

Heavens G,….$ 10 is alot then.I mean alot of money if it can do all that.

I need you to smash the Kenyan coconut heads.They are too many.I will help you identify them.”))

On Fri, Oct 5, 2012 at 8:57 PM, George Ayittey wrote:
The “GODS” may hae gotten rid of them but we still haven’t receivered the loot. They keep the loot in SECRET NUMBERED Swiss bank accounts and, since the money is stolen and they don’t trust anybody, they keep the secret numbers in the heads. So when they die, they take the numbers with them. According to Swiss law, if the money in a numbered account is not claimed after a certain period, it is turned over to the bank. So the standing joke among Swiss bankers is this: “When is the next African tin-pot going to die?”

Now, here is what you can do with $10 billion, which is $10,000.000.000. You can:

Fix the entire dilapidated railway systems in BOTH Ghana and Nigeria combined. Fixing Kenya’s would cost say $3 billion.

Fixing the road from Nairobi to Mombasa would cost $500 million or half a billion. So imagine how many roads $10 billion can repair.

Build and stock 40,000 primary schools and 20,000 clinics for the people.

Hope this gives you some idea.

Had to give up the Cutlass. It was no match for hardened coconuts. Since they are stone0deaf and imervious to reason, you smash them!

George

On Fri, Oct 5, 2012 at 12:12 PM, margaret gichuki wrote:
Get me the SLEDGE-HAMMER!

GA,

Please, why do you need sledge hammer.? Haven’t the ”GODS” taken care of those leaders.BTW, you are a Prof. of #’s.Can you tell me what say $ 10 billion can do a country like yours ‘Ghana or Kenya.

Give me something to work with.Like your cutlass that you no longer use.:)))…I want to keep busy.

Wams

On Fri, Oct 5, 2012 at 11:24 AM, George Ayittey wrote:
Margaret,

The Mega Bandits and Super Heavy-Duty Looters of Africa’s Wealth

In 2004, the African Union claimed that corruption alone costs Africa $148 billion a year and “Africa experiences capital flight of up to $90 billion a year and the external stock of capital held by Africa’s political elites is $700 billion-800 billion” . http://bit.ly/Q178GX,
http://bit.ly/uc25jQ

Let’s place these figures in perspective. In 2009, Africa’s total foreign debt stood at around $300 billion. Back in the 1950s and 1960s, Africa not only fed itself but exported food as well. Not anymore. Today, it spends over $20 billion a year on food imports. [Nigeria is said to spend $120 billion annually (unsubstantiated) on food imports.] Africa also spends $20 billion a year on its military – importing weapons, maintaining equipment, paying soldiers and service personnel, etc.

The military is a colonial institution, introduced into Africa to suppress the aspirations of the people for freedom. Only few traditional African societies – such as Ashanti, Dahomey, Kanuri and Zulu – out of the over 2,000 ethnic societies had standing armies. In the vast majority of African societies, the people were the army. In the event of conflict, the chief would summon men of certain age grades and lead them into war. After the cessation of hostilities, the people’s army was disbanded so that it did not become a drain on the tribal economy. Therefore, military rule is as alien as colonial rule itself. What benefits have Africa derived from its military?

The military has now become a destabilizing and destructive force – a scourge – in Africa. Soldiers have ruined one African economy after another with reckless abandon and looted one treasury after another with brutal military efficiency. Though ALL dictators have stolen millions of Africa’s wealth, the mega bandits and super heavy duty looters have all been military officers.

Between 1970 and the early 2004, more than $450 billion in oil money flowed into Nigerian government coffers. But according to Mallam Nuhu Ribadu, the chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, set up in 2004, £220 billion ($412 billion) was “squandered” or looted by Nigeria’s military rulers – s slew of military generals. “We cannot be accurate down to the last figure but that is our projection,” Osita Nwajah, a commission spokesman (Telegraph, June 25, 2005). The stolen fortune tallies almost exactly with the £220 billion of western aid given to Africa between 1960 and 1997. That amounted to six times the American help given to post-war Europe under the Marshall Plan. Between 970 and 2008, $854 billion was removed from Africa by illicit financial flows
http://bit.ly/s1Zf9a

Here is the list individual cases of banditry:

Name Family Fortune

1. Col Muammar Khaddafi of Libya Over $60 billion
2. Hosni Mubarak of Egypt Over $2 billion
3. Ben Ali of Tunisia Over $13 billion
4. General Mobutu Sese Seko of Zaire Over $10 billion
5. General I.B. Babangida of Nigeria Over $9 billion
6. Lt. General Omar al-Bashir of Sudan Over $7 billion
7. General Sani Abacha of Nigeria Over $5 billion
8. General Gnassingbe Eyadema of Togo Over $3 billion

Notice the preponderance of “Generals.” Mubarak was a former officer
in Egyptian air force and so was Ben Ali.

Get me the SLEDGE-HAMMER!

Colonised and coloniser, empire’s poison infects us all

Ideas that underpinned Britain’s imperial project led not only to torture in Kenya, but war and catastrophe in Europe

o The Guardian, Monday 8 October 2012 20.30 BST

[image]‘The ideology that led to Hitler’s war and the Holocaust was developed by the colonial powers.’ Illustration by Daniel Pudles

Over the gates of Auschwitz were the words “Work Makes You Free”. Over the gates of the Solovetsky camp in Lenin’s gulag: “Through Labour – Freedom!”. Over the gates of the Ngenya detention camp, run by the British in Kenya: “Labour and Freedom”. Dehumanisation appears to follow an almost inexorable course.

Last week three elderly Kenyans established the right to sue the British government for the torture that they suffered – castration, beating and rape – in the Kikuyu detention camps it ran in the 1950s.

Many tens of thousands were detained and tortured in the camps. I won’t spare you the details: we have been sparing ourselves the details for far too long. Large numbers of men were castrated with pliers. Others were raped, sometimes with the use of knives, broken bottles, rifle barrels and scorpions. Women had similar instruments forced into their vaginas. The guards and officials sliced off ears and fingers, gouged out eyes, mutilated women’s breasts with pliers, poured paraffin over people and set them alight. Untold thousands died.

The government’s secret archive, revealed this April, shows that the attorney general, the colonial governor and the colonial secretary knew what was happening. The governor ensured that the perpetrators had legal immunity: including the British officers reported to him for roasting prisoners to death. In public the colonial secretary lied and kept lying.

Little distinguishes the British imperial project from any other. In all cases the purpose of empire was loot, land and labour. When people resisted (as some of the Kikuyu did during the Mau Mau rebellion), the response everywhere was the same: extreme and indiscriminate brutality, hidden from public view by distance and official lies.

Successive governments have sought to deny the Kikuyu justice: destroying most of the paperwork, lying about the existence of the rest, seeking to have the case dismissed on technicalities. Their handling of this issue, and the widespread British disavowal of what happened in Kenya, reflects the way this country has been brutalised by its colonial history. Empire did almost as much harm to the imperial nations as it did to their subject peoples.

In his book Exterminate All the Brutes, Sven Lindqvist shows how the ideology that led to Hitler’s war and the Holocaust was developed by the colonial powers. Imperialism required an exculpatory myth. It was supplied, primarily, by British theorists.

In 1799 Charles White began the process of identifying Europeans as inherently superior to other peoples. By 1850 the disgraced anatomist Robert Knox had developed the theme into fully fledged racism. His book The Races of Man asserted that dark-skinned people were destined to be enslaved and then annihilated by the “lighter races”. Dark meant almost everyone: “What a field of extermination lies before the Saxon, Celtic and Sarmatian races!”

Remarkable as it may sound, this view soon came to dominate British thought. In common with most of the political class, W Winwood Reade,Alfred Russell Wallace, Herbert Spencer, Frederick Farrar, Francis Galton, Benjamin Kidd and even Charles Darwin saw the extermination of dark-skinned people as an inevitable law of nature. Some of them argued that Europeans had a duty to speed it up: both to save the integrity of the species and to put the inferior “races” out of their misery.

These themes were picked up by German theorists. In 1893 Alexander Tille, drawing on British writers, claimed that “it is the right of the stronger race to annihilate the lower”. In 1901 Friedrich Ratzel argued in Der Lebensraum that Germany had a right and duty, like Europeans in the Americas, to displace “primitive peoples”. In Mein Kampf, Hitler explained that the German empire’s eastward expansion would mirror the western and southern extension of British interests. He systematised and industrialised what imperial nations had been doing for five centuries. The scale was greater, the location different, the ideology broadly the same.

I believe that the brutalisation of empire also made the pointless slaughter of the first world war possible. A ruling class that had shut down its feelings to the extent that it could engineer a famine in India in the 1870s in which between 12 million and 29 million people died was capable of almost anything. Empire had tested not only the long-range weaponry that would be deployed in northern France, but also the ideas.

Nor have we wholly abandoned them. Commenting on the Kikuyu case in the Daily Mail, Max Hastings charged that the plaintiffs had come to London “to exploit our feeble-minded justice system”. Hearing them “represents an exercise in state masochism”. I suspect that if members of Hastings’ club had been treated like the Kikuyu, he would be shouting from the rooftops for redress. But Kenyans remain, as colonial logic demanded, the other, bereft of the features and feelings that establish our common humanity.

So, in the eyes of much of the elite, do welfare recipients, “problem families”, Muslims and asylum seekers. The process of dehumanisation, so necessary to the colonial project, turns inwards. Until this nation is prepared to recognise what happened and how it was justified, Britain, like the countries it occupied, will remain blighted by imperialism.

• Twitter: @GeorgeMonbiot

• A fully referenced version of this article can be found atwww.monbiot.com

Top China delegate pulls out of IMF meet amid islands row
By Lesley Wroughton | Reuters –

[image]Reuters/Reuters – China’s Central Bank Governor Zhou Xiaochuan listens to a question at a news conference during the ongoing National People’s Congress (NPC), China’s parliament, in Beijing March 12, 2012. …more REUTERS/Jason Lee less

TOKYO (Reuters) – The International Monetary Fund said on Wednesday that China’s central bank governor will not lead the Chinese delegation at the IMF’s semi-annual meeting this week, in what appeared to be a snub to host Japan.

Zhou Xiaochuan’s failure to attend the meeting comes after relations between China and Japan have slumped to their worst in years over their competing claims to sovereignty of some islands in the East China Sea.

The row has been marked by violent protests and calls for boycotts of Japanese products in China. Japanese car makers, including Toyota Motor, later reported a tumble in auto sales in the world’s biggest car market.
“We were informed two days ago that Governor Zhou’s schedule might require him to cancel his lecture in Tokyo,” an IMF spokeswoman said. “It has now been confirmed that his deputy Yi Gang will represent him.”

Zhou had been set to deliver what amounted to a closing keynote lecture on Sunday.
“The Tokyo meeting is an extremely important international summit,” Japanese Finance Minister Koriki Jojima said at a press conference. “It is deeply regrettable that the representatives of the (Chinese) authorities are not participating.”

The IMF comments confirm a report on Tuesday by Chinese state news agency Xinhua that China’s delegation will not be led by its most senior finance officials.
According to Chinese protocol, only the most senior officials usually lead such trips. China’s delegation will be led by Yi Gang, vice head of the People’s Bank of China, and Vice Finance Minister Zhu Guangyao, Xinhua said.
The disputed group of islands, called Senkaku in Japan and Diaoyu in China, are located near rich fishing grounds and potentially huge oil-and-gas reserves. Taiwan also asserts its sovereignty over the uninhabited islets.

Japan is scheduled to host the IMF and World Bank annual meetings for the first time in nearly half a century. About 20,000 people are expected to attend the events, which end on Sunday, making it one of the world’s largest international conferences.

“If he (Zhou) is not coming, it is regrettable that a representative of the Chinese authorities does not participate in this important international meeting in Tokyo. At all events, Japan-China economic relationship is very important and Japan will continue to communicate with China from a broader standpoint,” said a Japanese government official.

World Bank President Jim Yong Kim said in Tokyo on Wednesday that he had great faith Japan and China would find a way to cooperate in the future.

“SYMBOLIC”

Earlier this week, Xinhua also reported that China’s state-owned banks Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC), Bank of China, China Construction Bank and Agricultural Bank of China, will not attend the IMF and the World Bank meetings.

Tim Condon, head of Asian research at ING, said Zhou’s absence was a way for Beijing to express its displeasure over the islands row and would not have a material impact on the country.

“It’s very symbolic and attention grabbing, but doesn’t really inflict any economic harm,” he said. “It would be very easy for China to escalate the matter if they wanted to and inflict economic damage.”

Tokyo and Beijing have traded increasingly sharp words in the dispute, which has seen both countries send patrol boats to waters near the disputed islands, raising concerns that an unintended collision or other incident could escalate into a broader clash.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton urged China and Japan to let “cool heads” prevail in the dispute.

Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda said in late September that his country will not compromise on the islands, saying they were “an inherent part of our territory in light of history and also under international law.”

Chinese state media say the islands have been “sacred territory since ancient times”.

The dispute has bubbled as several Asian governments have argued over sovereignty of islands in the South China Sea.

But the Senkaku/Diaoyu row escalated in September when Japan bought the islands from their private owner to prevent fiery nationalist politician from buying them.

(Additional reporting by Kaori Kaneka in TOKYO: Koh Gui Qing in BEIJING; Editing by Neil Fullick)

Africa: World Bank Refuses Call to Halt Land Deals
By Carey L. Biron, 5 October 2012

[image]Photo: P. Casier/CGIAR

Farming the land with the help of cattle.
Washington — The World Bank has rejected a call to suspend its involvement in large scale agricultural land acquisition following the release of a major report by the international aid agency Oxfam on the negative impact of international land speculation in developing countries.

“We share the concerns Oxfam raised in their report,” the bank stated in an unusually lengthy public rebuttal to the Oxfam Report. “However, we disagree with Oxfam’s call for a moratorium on World Bank Group…investments in land intensive large-scale agricultural enterprises, especially during a time of rapidly rising global food prices.”

“A moratorium focused on the Bank Group targets precisely those stakeholders doing the most to improve practices – progressive governments, investors, and us. Taking such a step would do nothing to help reduce the instances of abusive practices and would likely deter responsible investors willing to apply our high standards,” the rebuttal said.

Relevant Links

International Writers and Artists Warn Global Land Rush Is Hurting the Poorest

Land Sold Off in Last Decade Could Grow Enough Food to Feed a Billion People

Over the past year, aid agencies, local non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and development watchdogs have warned that international investors are increasingly engaging in massive and sometimes predatory land deals in the developing world, particularly in Africa. These acquisitions are partly to blame for rising food insecurity.

Food prices are once again nearing record highs. In late August, the World Bank warned that due to adverse weather in parts of Europe and the United States, the global cost of certain staple crops was approaching levels last seen in 2008.

Ironically, multinational companies interested in growing food crops to address this need have been doing much of the recent investing. According to Oxfam, however, two-thirds of the investments made between 2000 and 2010 were exclusively for export-oriented crops, while other lands are being used to meet the increasing international demand for biofuels.

“Already an area of land the size of London is being sold to foreign investors every six days in poor countries,” Oxfam stated, noting that in Liberia, land deals have “swallowed up” 30 percent of the country over the past five years.

The report did not reject what good can potentially result from private investment but warned that food-price spikes from 2008 to 2009 led to the tripling of land deals, as “land was increasingly viewed as a profitable investment” even though it largely failed to benefit local communities.

Slow the speculation

“The world is facing an unbridled land rush that is exposing poor people to hunger, violence and the threat of a lifetime in poverty. The World Bank is in a unique position to stop this,” Jeremy Hobbs, Oxfam’s executive director, said Thursday, noting that the bank both invests in land and advises developing countries.

Oxfam is calling on the World Bank to temporarily halt its investments in agricultural land to give it time to review the advice it offers developing countries, and to put in place stronger policies to slow or stop the speculation and “land-grabbing” projects in which it is said to be involved.

World Bank investment in agriculture has reportedly tripled in the past decade. Since 2008, however, local communities have also brought 21 formal complaints against bank-funded projects that they say have violated their rights.

In a way, the bank’s response to the call for a moratorium demonstrated outright denial: “The Bank Group does not support speculative land investments or acquisitions which take advantage of weak institutions in developing countries or which disregard principles of responsible agricultural investment.”

The bank also noted that 90 percent of its agricultural investment is focused on smallholders, and that the agricultural work of its private-sector arm, the International Finance Corporation (IFC), has provided 37,000 jobs. By 2050, it warned, the global population is set to grow by two billion people, requiring a 70 percent increase in global food production.

Still, the bank recognised that its massive systems are imperfect and highlighted an upcoming overhaul of related guidelines that would “review and update its environmental and social safeguards policies”.

“We agree that instances of abuse do exist, particularly in countries where governance is weak, and we share Oxfam’s belief that in many cases, practices need to ensure more transparent and inclusive participation in cases of land transfers,” the rebuttal stated.

Impetus from below

The degree to which these safeguards are followed nevertheless remains voluntary, said Anuradha Mittal, the executive director of the Oakland Institute, a U.S.-based think tank that has been at the forefront of recent civil society warnings about the effects of land speculation in the developing world.

“Back in 2009 and 2010, we were clearly identifying the role that the World Bank Group has been playing in promoting and facilitating these large-scale investments, completely ignoring the social and economic impact,” she told IPS, referring to two reports (available here and here) that the new Oxfam work builds upon.

“Oxfam is reiterating that this kind of investment is misinvestment in communities, in agriculture, and unfortunately the bank is choosing to ignore the clear evidence that has been brought forward.” Bank officials did not respond to requests for additional comment.

Mittal said that the development discussion needs to focus less on prescriptions handed down from multilaterals and more on the national implementation of internationally agreed rights including the rights to food and to free and prior informed consent.

“We’re not interested in voluntary guidelines coming from Washington or Geneva, but rather in strengthening local and national capacities that help communities work best themselves,” she said. “Each country in Africa, for instance, is in a unique situation. So what we need are real consultations at the local level to see what kind of development actually works for the local populations.”

While Oxfam had called on the World Bank to move to halt its involvement in land deals before the annual meetings between the bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF), in Tokyo next week, the bank’s new president is now suggesting that he will use the meetings to begin pushing substantial reforms aimed at holding the bank’s anti-poverty approaches more to account.

“If we are going to be really serious about ending poverty earlier than currently projected…there are going to have to be some changes in the way we run the institution,” World Bank President Jim Yong Kim, preparing to attend his first annual meetings, told journalists on Thursday.

Kim said he would be pushing for a model “where our board and our governors focus much more on holding us accountable for results on the ground in countries, rather than focusing so much on approval of large loans”.

World Bank Land Grab
POSTED: 10/07/2012
EDITOR: Juan Wilson
SOURCE: Elaine Dunbar (inunyabus@gmail.com)
SUBHEAD: World Bank involved with massive predatory land deals in developing world, particularly Africa.

By Carey L. Biron on 7 October 2012 for Nation of Change –
(http://www.nationofchange.org/world-bank-refuses-call-halt-land-deals-1349620014)

[image]: African women on a small farm serving local markets. From original article.

Source’s note: Note the push worldwide land speculation by First World on local indigenous Third World peoples. I think this is the big picture. PLDC is one of the small specks. And Agenda 21 is another one of the specks]

Over the past year, aid agencies, local non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and development watchdogs have warned that international investors are increasingly engaging in massive and sometimes predatory land deals in the developing world, particularly in Africa.

The World Bank has rejected a call to suspend its involvement in large scale agricultural land acquisition following the release of a major report by the international aid agency Oxfam on the negative impact of international land speculation in developing countries.

“We share the concerns Oxfam raised in their report,” the bank stated in an unusually lengthy public rebuttal to the Oxfam Report. “However, we disagree with Oxfam’s call for a moratorium on World Bank Group…investments in land intensive large-scale agricultural enterprises, especially during a time of rapidly rising global food prices.”

“A moratorium focused on the Bank Group targets precisely those stakeholders doing the most to improve practices – progressive governments, investors, and us. Taking such a step would do nothing to help reduce the instances of abusive practices and would likely deter responsible investors willing to apply our high standards,” the rebuttal said.

Over the past year, aid agencies, local non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and development watchdogs have warned that international investors are increasingly engaging in massive and sometimes predatory land deals in the developing world, particularly in Africa. These acquisitions are partly to blame for rising food insecurity.

Food prices are once again nearing record highs. In late August, the World Bank warned that due to adverse weather in parts of Europe and the United States, the global cost of certain staple crops was approaching levels last seen in 2008.

Ironically, multinational companies interested in growing food crops to address this need have been doing much of the recent investing. According to Oxfam, however, two-thirds of the investments made between 2000 and 2010 were exclusively for export-oriented crops, while other lands are being used to meet the increasing international demand for biofuels.

“Already an area of land the size of London is being sold to foreign investors every six days in poor countries,” Oxfam stated, noting that in Liberia, land deals have “swallowed up” 30 percent of the country over the past five years.

Most news sources are funded by corporations and investors. Their goal is to drive people to advertisers while pushing the corporate agenda. NationofChange is a 501(c)3 organization funded almost 100% from its readers–you! Our only accountability is to the public. Click here to make a generous donation.

The report did not reject what good can potentially result from private investment but warned that food-price spikes from 2008 to 2009 led to the tripling of land deals, as “land was increasingly viewed as a profitable investment” even though it largely failed to benefit local communities.

Slow the speculation

“The world is facing an unbridled land rush that is exposing poor people to hunger, violence and the threat of a lifetime in poverty. The World Bank is in a unique position to stop this,” Jeremy Hobbs, Oxfam’s executive director, said Thursday, noting that the bank both invests in land and advises developing countries.

Oxfam is calling on the World Bank to temporarily halt its investments in agricultural land to give it time to review the advice it offers developing countries, and to put in place stronger policies to slow or stop the speculation and “land-grabbing” projects in which it is said to be involved.

World Bank investment in agriculture has reportedly tripled in the past decade. Since 2008, however, local communities have also brought 21 formal complaints against bank-funded projects that they say have violated their rights.

In a way, the bank’s response to the call for a moratorium demonstrated outright denial: “The Bank Group does not support speculative land investments or acquisitions which take advantage of weak institutions in developing countries or which disregard principles of responsible agricultural investment.”

The bank also noted that 90 percent of its agricultural investment is focused on smallholders, and that the agricultural work of its private-sector arm, the International Finance Corporation (IFC), has provided 37,000 jobs. By 2050, it warned, the global population is set to grow by two billion people, requiring a 70 percent increase in global food production.

Still, the bank recognized that its massive systems are imperfect and highlighted an upcoming overhaul of related guidelines that would “review and update its environmental and social safeguards policies”.

“We agree that instances of abuse do exist, particularly in countries where governance is weak, and we share Oxfam’s belief that in many cases, practices need to ensure more transparent and inclusive participation in cases of land transfers,” the rebuttal stated.

Impetus from below

The degree to which these safeguards are followed nevertheless remains voluntary, said Anuradha Mittal, the executive director of the Oakland Institute, a U.S.-based think tank that has been at the forefront of recent civil society warnings about the effects of land speculation in the developing world.

“Back in 2009 and 2010, we were clearly identifying the role that the World Bank Group has been playing in promoting and facilitating these large-scale investments, completely ignoring the social and economic impact,” she told IPS, referring to two reports (available here and here) that the new Oxfam work builds upon.

“Oxfam is reiterating that this kind of investment is misinvestment in communities, in agriculture, and unfortunately the bank is choosing to ignore the clear evidence that has been brought forward.” Bank officials did not respond to requests for additional comment.

Mittal said that the development discussion needs to focus less on prescriptions handed down from multilaterals and more on the national implementation of internationally agreed rights including the rights to food and to free and prior informed consent.

“We’re not interested in voluntary guidelines coming from Washington or Geneva, but rather in strengthening local and national capacities that help communities work best themselves,” she said. “Each country in Africa, for instance, is in a unique situation. So what we need are real consultations at the local level to see what kind of development actually works for the local populations.”

While Oxfam had called on the World Bank to move to halt its involvement in land deals before the annual meetings between the bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF), in Tokyo next week, the bank’s new president is now suggesting that he will use the meetings to begin pushing substantial reforms aimed at holding the bank’s anti-poverty approaches more to account.

“If we are going to be really serious about ending poverty earlier than currently projected…there are going to have to be some changes in the way we run the institution,” World Bank President Jim Yong Kim, preparing to attend his first annual meetings, told journalists on Thursday.

Kim said he would be pushing for a model “where our board and our governors focus much more on holding us accountable for results on the ground in countries, rather than focusing so much on approval of large loans”.

Prospects for Shale Gas Development in Asia

From: Yona Maro

The development of unconventional gas resources, especially shale gas, in China and India—two of the world’s fastest-growing economies—warrants close observation because of the potential economic and energy security benefits that successful development could bring to the two nations. An April 2011 assessment of international shale gas resources by the U.S. Energy Information Administration cited technically recoverable shale gas resources (not reserves) in China at 1,275 trillion cubic feet (tcf) and in India at 63 tcf, compared with 1,250 tcf for the United States and Canada combined.

http://csis.org/files/publication/120824_Nakano_ProspectsShaleGas_Web.pdf


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Natural resource governance: New frontiers in transparency and accountability

From: Yona Maro

Natural resources – oil, gas, minerals, forests, fish, water and land – present a number of challenges to the transparency and accountability agenda. Much of the focus of donors engaged in transparency and accountability issues in the natural resources sector has been on improving governance systems at a national level. This report recommends that donors need to develop specific programmes focused on the transparency and accountability needs of communities, civil society groups and governments at this very local level – and that those needs should not be defined as being simply a watered-down version of existing national-level transparency programmes. The report recommends that Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI) programmes themselves should be strengthened by providing greater resources for audits that would focus not only on reporting what has been paid, but also on what might not have been paid. This recommendation focuses in particular on the role of commodity trading and transfer pricing practices that have the potential to significantly reduce revenues to resource-exporting developing countries.

http://www.transparency-initiative.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/05/natural_resources_final1.pdf


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Out of Control : Mining, Regulatory Failure, and Human Rights in India

From: Yona Maro

This 70-page report finds that deep-rooted shortcomings in the design and implementation of key policies have effectively left mine operators to supervise themselves. This has fueled pervasive lawlessness in India’s scandal-ridden mining industry and threatens serious harm to mining-affected communities. Human Rights Watch documented allegations that irresponsible mining operations have damaged the health, water, environment, and livelihoods of these communities.
Read the Press Release

ISBN: 1-56432-898-8
Get the Report
Download the full report (PDF, 569.63 KB)
http://www.hrw.org/sites/default/files/reports/india0612ForUpload_0.pdf

Out of Control
Summary

Key Recommendations

Methodology

I. Background: “Illegal Mining” in India
II. Goa Case Study: Regulatory Collapse and its Consequences
III. Regulatory Collapse in India’s Mining Sector
IV. Karnataka Case Study: Criminality and Mining
V. Mining and Human Rights: Government’s Duty to Regulate
VI. A Nationwide Problem
VII. Reining in the Abuse: Practical Steps Forward for India’s Government
Acknowledgments

Human Rights Watch is dedicated to protecting the human rights of people around the world. We stand with victims and activists to prevent discrimination, to uphold political freedom, to protect people from inhumane conduct in wartime, and to bring offenders to justice. We investigate and expose human rights violations and hold abusers accountable.

We challenge governments and those who hold power to end abusive practices and respect international human rights law. We enlist the public and the international community to support the cause of human rights for all.

. . .


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World: Sustainable Mining: Unearthing human rights challenges and opportunities

From: Yona Maro

Without adherence to human rights standards, mining can cause loss of land and livelihoods, degradation of land and waterways, and increased violence and conflict. The most marginalised members of communities – such as women, children and Indigenous Peoples – tend to both be excluded from the economic benefits of mining, and tend to bear the brunt of any negative social and environmental impacts.

Australian mining companies operating overseas face significant challenges in relation to human rights, especially those that operate in conflict and post – conflict zones, and where governance is weak. With so many Australian companies operating in the countries of Africa, and throughout the Asia-pacific region, a rights-based approach to managing business decisions and practice is necessary.

Putting human rights information in the public domain sends a very strong signal to all company staff that human rights is an issue of fundamental concern to the company. In doing so it can drive increased employee engagement on the issue and assist in delivering on human rights priorities. Despite the high cost of assurance, some participants explained that their Boards demanded this as it provides the best guarantee that sustainability reports are based on fact.

Sustainability reports without independent assurance were also noted as lacking credibility with investors. Increasingly businesses are demanding assurance from other businesses in their supply chains.

More http://www.mwanabidii.com/forumdisplay.php?56-Mining


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Gold Mining in Africa: Maximizing Economic Returns for Countries

From: Yona Maro

This paper investigates the maximization of economic returns from mining for African countries. We focus on gold mining, a significant sector in at least 34 African countries. Our point of departure in the paper is the well-documented reality that a large number of resource-rich African countries have benefited little from their resource endowments. This group includes many gold-producing countries. Part of the reason for this state of affairs is the fact that countries have received smaller shares of the rents generated from the sector. Furthermore, those shares have not always been efficiently utilized. We carry out some analysis to provide evidence showing that royalty rates (a major source of revenues from the gold mining sector) in the region can be increased to enable countries to better profit from the sector while allowing firms to realize reasonable returns on their investments. The paper also provides some policy recommendations to not only increase regional countries’ share of the resource rent from mining but also to ensure that the revenues received are better allocated.

http://www.afdb.org/fileadmin/uploads/afdb/Documents/Publications/WPS%20No%20147%20Gold%20Mining%20in%20Africa%20Maximizing%20Economic%20Returns%20for%20Countries%20120329.pdf

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USA, OH: Grow It Here, Make It Here

From: Senator Sherrod Brown
Date: Tue, Mar 13, 2012 at 9:32 AM
Subject: Grow It Here, Make It Here
To: itekramp@jaluo.com

Grow It Here, Make It Here

“Grow it here, make it here.”

That’s the driving message behind a new initiative to create jobs by linking two of Ohio’s most important industries: agriculture and manufacturing.

Ohio farmers put food on tables, grow feed for livestock, and develop new sources of energy for our cars and homes. And increasingly, Ohio farmers grow feedstocks that are being turned into plastics, lubricants, and chemicals.

Meanwhile, Ohio manufacturers are not only producing iron, steel, and auto parts, but are finding new business opportunities in emerging markets – like clean energy.

Agriculture and manufacturing are two of Ohio’s greatest industries – creating good-paying, middle class employment opportunities and the resources needed to build a stronger, more vibrant economy. Bio-based manufacturing – the marriage of manufacturing and agriculture – can produce America’s next great economic success story right here in Ohio.

Nutek Green, a bio-based manufacturer in Northeast Ohio is writing an early chapter. Nutek has launched 14 retail and 44 industrial products using corn and soy-based products manufactured in the Buckeye State.

This homegrown company uses aluminum cans made in Youngstown, cleaning wipes from Cleveland, and boxes created in Wooster. Product blending and filling happens in Macedonia, design takes place in Akron, and all logistics for Nutek are handled in Glenwillow, Ohio.

But one of the company’s most critical components is the soybeans grown on Ohio farms. Soybeans like those grown at Armstrong Farm in South Charleston, Ohio help make our state the nation’s 7th largest soybean producer. I recently spoke with a sixth-generation family farmer at Armstrong Farms who told me that “there’ s a huge void between development and commercialization” for Ohio farmers who are working with researchers to get bio-based products to the marketplace.

There are more than 130 bio-based manufacturers already operating in Ohio that make products ranging from natural pet foods, bio-based paint, to soy ink, and toner.

To find a bio-based manufacturer near where you live, visit my website at www.brown.senate.gov to view a county-by-county map.

In September at OSU, I held a roundtable with Ohio’s bio-based leaders to discuss the tremendous need – and potential – for an Ohio-led bio-based industry in the United States.

The “Grow it Here, Make it Here” initiative would facilitate more partnerships between agriculture and manufacturing to create jobs and promote economic development across Ohio. Our initiative would help our farmers and manufacturers do even more to meet our economic, environmental, and energy needs through bio-based manufacturing.

This bio-based manufacturing legislation would strengthen an existing program that certifies and labels products so consumers can better choose ones that are bio-based. It would also strengthen the bio-based market and help families make more-informed consumer choices.

Second, it helps bio-based manufacturers access loan assistance that could help expand operations and hire new workers.

Third, the Act would help bridge the gap between development and commercialization that is often the most difficult challenge for any emerging industry.

By streamlining existing U.S. Department of Agriculture resources, the Act would help the commercialization of bio-based products and technologies that are developed right here in America.

The bill is supported by a range of groups – from public health advocates and physicians to economic development leaders and businesses – like PolymerOhio and Battelle.

In many ways, this initiative is about using Ohio-grown crops to make Ohio-made products

Together, we can “grow it here, and make it here,” – creating new jobs while also strengthening our environment, supporting local economies, and ending America’s reliance on foreign energy sources.

Cleveland
1301 East Ninth Street
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Cleveland, Ohio 44114
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1-888-896-OHIO (6446)

Tanzania MPs are seeking the authority of the House Speaker to probe financial scam at the power supplying firm

Writes Leo Odera Omolo

Reports emerging from Dar Es Salaam says Tanzanian MPs are up in arms and seeking the mandate of the House Speaker to allow the House Committee on Energy and Minerals the authority to launch a full scale investigations into the alleged fraud and bribery involving the purchase of fuel for an independent power generating firm.

Sources alleged that millions of dollars paid to purchase fuel for the Independent Power Tanzania Limited {IPTL plant, which is located in Dar E Salaam could have been swindled,

Legislator Zito Kabwe the chairman of the Public Corporation Accounts Committee was quoted by the local media as saying that legislators want the committee to probe several oil supplying firms and government officials over the deal that forensic expert say could see the government losing more than USD 54 million for fuel that was never supplied to the plant.

According to Kabwe, there was allegations of fraud and corruption among officials of the Ministry of Energy and Mines.

The legislator said that there were also doubts regarding whether the tender procedure was followed according to the Public Procurement Act of 2004

The government in November2010 used the emergency tender system to allow two oil-supplying firms, Oryx Oil and Total, to import fuel for the generation of the IPTL plant, which is located on the outskirt of Dar Es Salaam.

The government was spending approximately Tshs 15 billion {USD 10 million} every month from November 2010 to February 2011 for the purchase of fuel meant for IPTL operations.

January Makamba, chairman of the Energy and Minerals Committee of Parliament who is an MP fro the ruling CCM party, said the committee is still waiting to hear from the Speaker. He said the committee would not be able to start investigations without the authorization of the House Speaker.

“There have been complaints concerning the tender, leading to suspicions of corruption among officials at the Ministry of Energy and Mineral, but we cant start investigation right now; as a procedure, we need to have permission fro the Speaker,” he added.

The government estimates that at least USD 54 million meant for the purchase of heavy fuel oil for IPTL may have been stolen.

The private firm’s multimillion-dollar 100MW power supplying contact with the Tanzania Electricity Supply Company, Tanesco, has dogged by controversy throughout.

A new audit report details wasteful procedures and overvaluation of supplies of heavy fuel from a local oil firm.

The Energy and Mineral Minister William Ngeleja said in parliament last that the government spent Tshs 46 billion {USD 28.7 million}to purchase oil for IPTL plant from November 2010 to February 2011.

The power crisis currently facing the country has compelled Tanesco to pay Tshs 19.2 billion {USD 12 million} to IPTL every month for production o 60mw instead of the initial production of 100mw.

In 1995,Tanesco signed agreement with IPTL, a joint venture between a Malaysian firm, Mechmar Corporation, and a local investor, VIP Engineering and Marketing Company Ltd for the purchase of 100mw of power from diesel generators for 20 years.

VIP Engineering owns 30 per cent equity while Mechmar Corporation of Malaysia owns 70 per cent.

Ends

USA, Va: Uranium Mining in VA: Scientific, Technical, Environmental, Human Health and Safety

from Yona Maro

This issue examines the scientific, technical, environmental, human health and safety, and regulatory aspects of uranium mining, milling, and processing as they relate to the Commonwealth of Virginia for the purpose of assisting the Commonwealth to determine whether uranium mining, milling, and processing can be undertaken in a manner that safeguards the environment, natural and historic resources, agricultural lands, and the health and well-being of its citizens.

Uranium mining in the Commonwealth of Virginia has been prohibited since 1982 by a state moratorium, although approval for restricted uranium exploration in the state was granted in 2007

According to this report, if Virginia lifts its moratorium, there are “steep hurdles to be surmounted” before mining and processing could take place within a regulatory setting that appropriately protects workers, the public, and the environment, especially given that the state has no experience regulating mining and processing of the radioactive element.

Click for More information
http://www.mwanabidii.com/showthread.php?tid=224


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Tanzania: IFC is to inject USD 5 million towards the nickel exploration project in Northern Tanzania

Reports Leo Odera Omolo

Reports emerging from Dar Es Salaam and Arusha says Tanzania will soon start exploiting its nickel deposits in Dutwa area in Northern part of the country, with the injection of USD 5 million IN TO PROJECT BY THE International Finance Corporation {IFC}.

The money will go towards concluding a feasibility study of the project. In turn IFC- the private sector arm of the World Bank Group – will take up a 10 per cent stake in African Eagle Resources, the mineral development firm behind it.

The study is scheduled for completion by the end of this year {2012}.The IFC has already signed an equity subscription agreement with African Eagle Resources, a UK incorporated company that discovered the nickel deposits in 2008.This will culminate in the issuing of 45,509,570 ordinary shares in the company to IFC.

In a statement issued late last week, the firm said, ”For every two new shares subscribed for, IFC will receive a warrant to purchase one further share at a price per share of 150 per cent of the placing price, exercisable for four years. Accordingly, on closing of the placing, IFC will hold 22,754,755 share purchase warrant.

The agreement also gives IFC a pre-emptive right to participate in any future equity or equity linked financings in order to allow it to maintain its 10 per cent ownership in the firm.

“Africa Eagle Resources has agreed publicly to disclose any material payments to the Tanzania government, as per IFC’s requirements,“ it added in the statement.

The ongoing feasibility study, which IFC has boosted and is slated for completion this year, is set to be used by the firm to secure financing for resource exploitation. Findings of an economic model that was developed through a study commissioned by the firm projected that up to USD 10.2 billion would be raked I its 26 years lifespan.

The head of mining at IFC, Tom Butler, said that the Dutw project has the potential to become “a major African nickel producer should the current feasibility study work continue to be successful.”

In the statement released Mr Butler said the IFC would help to implement environmental and social best practices for its mining activities.

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Congo: Elections, Democracy and The Diaspora Awakening

From: Judy Miriga

Folks,

I forward this email for information and action.

Congo people are thirsty and are in dire need for Democratic Rulership For the People and By the People….

Foreign Special Interest is deeply rooted and is conflicting with public interest, the reason why Congolese are paraded for slaughter houses whenever they request for democratic rights. It is sad that Abuse, Violation and Crime against Humanity is toll-order in Congo. This must stop urgently……

We demand that leaders of the world pay attention to the pool of blood and livelihood of Congolese flowing down the drain because of corruption and impunity and for the Special Interests “Intellectual Property Thieving” where Diamond, Gold and other Land & Natural Resource Industries for Special Interest are making illegal, corrupt and unconstitutional profits with modern-day pathetic slavery situation in Congo. Since Lumumba time, Congolese have been turned to special animals for slaughter by Special Interest Corporate Business Community who do not care for human rights. They invade and plunder mercilessly without due care because of greed for illegal wealth…….

This endless Pain and Suffering in Congo must end now and we demand true justice with Democratic Governance leadership be given a chance where support by all Leaders of the world must step in and come handy…….

I on behalf of the voiceless and many disadvantaged, join hands with friends of Congo call for Africans and Diaspora from all parts of the world to an Awakening intervention in Congo…….We also call on all good people of the world to stand together with Congolese and loud voices to call for this endless brutality of the Special Interest.

This matter cannot be left in the hands of Special Interest who have Special Interest to resolve and protect in Congo……….drinking from the pool of blood, poor souls and lives of vulnerable Congolese……….This is the reason why Lumumba was killed. We must not allow for another repeat. It is selfish, wicked and evil………It must be condemned by all good people of the world and we must unite to save perishing lives.

I call urgently and appeal to President Obama to take a lead on world leaders to intervene and help resolve this bad standoff so order can settle in Congo over this election skirmishes which is now leading to a blast of Civil War……..

I look forward to a quick and greater response which will bring peaceful conclusive resolve.

May God Bless us all,

Judy Miriga
Diaspora Spokesperson
Executive Director
Confederation Council Foundation for Africa Inc.,
USA
http://socioeconomicforum50.blogspot.com

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— On Thu, 12/29/11, Friends of the Congo wrote:

Congo: Elections, Democracy and The Diaspora Awakening

The November 28th Presidential and legislative elections were fraught with tremendous irregularities and widespread charges of fraud. The National Independent Electoral Commission (CENI in French) announced on December 8th that Joseph Kabila won the elections with 49 percent of the vote and long-time opposition, Etienne Tshisekedi garnered 32 percent.

The Supreme Court validated the results published by CENI and dismissed a challenge to the results by the opposition, led by presidential candidate Vital Kamerhe. The opposition categorically rejected the results as fraudulent. Nonetheless, Joseph Kabila was sworn into office on Tuesday, December 20th, where only one head of state (Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe) attended although 12 other African heads of states were expected to attend. Ambassadors from foreign nations, including the United States, were present for Kabila’s swearing-in.

Rejecting the results, Etienne Tshisekedi announced that he would have his own swearing-in among the people at the 80,000 capacity Martyrs Stadium on Friday, December 23rd. Being under virtual house arrest, Tshisekedi was confined to his residence by the Kabila regime. The government also prevented the population from entering the stadium with a heavy show of force from the police, armed forces, and presidential guard. The regime blocked routes leading to the stadium with heavy tanks and artillery. Instead of a swearing-in at the stadium in front of a large audience, Etienne Tshisekedi had to perform the ceremony at home in his garden. In addition to domestic pressure, the government is experiencing intense international pressure; the European Union has said it will re-evaluate its cooperation with the DRC and make judgments based on how the political crisis unfolds and Mme Christine Lagarde, head of the International Monetary Fund said she is following the situation in the Congo with a particular focus on the rule of law and the political climate, especially the pre and post-electoral periods.

The Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) is at a critical juncture in its tenuous march towards peace and stability. The Kabila regime suffers from a severe crisis of legitimacy and the future of the democratic project is in the balance. Stability will be fleeting without legitimacy. What is at stake in the Congo is not merely an election but respect for the will of a people and the future of democracy in the heart of Africa.

The Carter Center said the Presidential results announced by the CENI “lacked credibility,” while the Archbishop of Kinshasa, Cardinal Laurent Monsengwo, said that the results announced by the CENI reflects “neither the truth nor justice.” The European Union chimed in, noting that the process evinced a lack of transparency, with its missing polling stations and lost results totaling an estimated 1.6 million votes. South Africa noted that the elections were “generally OK,” while the Southern African Development Community (SADC) and the African Union (AU) found little wrong with the elections. Nonetheless, the CENI has ceased the counting of the legislative results and invited an international technical team from the United States and England to help with the counting of the legislative results, which are expected to be announced by January 13th – a constitutional deadline that will be difficult to meet.

Congolese in the diaspora have responded with universal outrage and have taken to the streets throughout the globe. Demonstrations have occurred in London, Brussels, Paris, Berlin, Rome, Johannesburg, Tel Aviv, Toronto, Montreal, Ottawa, New York, Washington and numerous other cities around the world. The central demand of the demonstrations is that the will of the Congolese people be respected. Click here to see videos of Congolese demonstrations!

Due to greater access to information combined with the freedom to express themselves, Congolese in the Diaspora have voiced the frustrations and concerns of their countrymen and women. The Congolese population inside the country has been under a military clamp-down with tanks in the streets, omnipresent security forces, SMS shut down (a major tool of communication for Congolese), and opposition television shuttered. Moreover, the Kabila regime has already demonstrated a willingness to use its armed and security forces to fire on unarmed civilians (see Human Rights Watch Report) and round-up and disappear civilians (see Amnesty International and Voix Sans Voix Statement).

The best option to rescue the country from a descent into a deeper crisis is the activation of a national mediation mechanism supported by the international community (Southern African Development Community (SADC), African Union (AU), European Union, United Nations and United States). However, political will on the part of the political class to prioritize the people’s interests over partisan interests is a necessary prerequisite for this option to be successful.

Continue to take action and support Congo’s pursuit of democracy:

“Our offices have gotten quite a bit of input from the Congolese Community in the US for which we are grateful.” U.S. Senator Christopher Coons

1. Contact key world leaders and demand that they refrain from recognizing Joseph Kabila as President of the DRC.

2. Demand that the technical team from the United States and England assess both the legislative and presidential results.

3. Participate in teach-ins to learn about what is at stake in the Congo and the nature of Congo’s democratic movement. (Click here for comprehensive list of actions!)

On January 17, 2012, the 51st anniversary of the assassination of Patrice Lumumba, Friends of the Congo and its allies will join in solidarity with the Congolese people by organizing a rally, teach-in and Lumumba Commemoration in Washington, DC and New York City. We call on our supporters and people of goodwill throughout the globe to join in solidarity with the people of the Congo as they continue the over 125 year pursuit to control and determine their own affairs.

Stay abreast of the latest developments on the elections by visiting our elections corner or follow us on Facebook or Twitter for regular updates.

Remember to support the work of Friends of the Congo!

Riot police use tear gas on Congo protesters

From: Judy Miriga

Folks,

There is need to urgently reignforce poll observers from European Nations as well to boost confidence, free and fair participation of fearful citizens.

Let us also Pray for Congo people and God to step in in a special way to save the oppressed.

Judy Miriga
Diaspora Spokesperson
Executive Director
Confederation Council Foundation for Africa Inc.,
USA
http://socioeconomicforum50.blogspot.com

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Riot police use tear gas on Congo protesters

Riot police used tear gas to disperse hundreds of protesters in the Congolese capital Kinshasa on Saturday November 26, as campaigning by rival groups drew to a close two days before presidential and parliamentary elections, Reuters reporters said.

There were bouts of rock-throwing between opposing supporters and brief bursts of gunfire, the reporters said. Citing local health and security officials, a United Nations source said at least one person had died but there was no official confirmation of the death or its circumstances.

President Joseph Kabila and two of his main challengers, Etienne Tshisekedi and Vital Kamerhe, were all due to hold campaign rallies within several hundred metres of each other later on Saturday.

The stand-off between riot police and protesters took place near the central Kinshasa stadium where Kabila was due to appear. There were no immediate reports of injuries.

It was the latest sign of tension in the run-up to Congo’s second presidential election since a 1998-2003 war, a poll which has been marked by opposition allegations of irregularities and concerns that voting arrangements will not be in place in time.

Despite a logistics operation supported by helicopters from South Africa and Angola, it is not clear whether all the ballot slips will have reached the 60,000 voting stations in the thickly-jungled country two-thirds the size of the European Union.

Commission Head

Veteran opposition leader Tshisekedi said he could accept a delay but only if the head of the national election commission, who he accused of having political ties with Kabila and turning a blind eye to alleged irregularities, was sacked.

“I would agree (to a delay) if that meant a more credible, democratic and transparent process,” the 78-year-old veteran opposition leader told French RFI radio.

“But one thing is clear: if we say there will be a delay, it is clear that the election commission cannot be led by Daniel Ngoy Mulunda,” he said, accusing him of having been a founding member of Kabila’s PPRD political party.

Mulunda, who will have the deciding vote if his commission is split on any election dispute, said this week he did not deny having been a member of the delegation that accompanies Kabila on foreign trips, but denied he was a founding PPRD member.

Tshisekedi alleged the existence on paper of fake polling stations to allow vote-rigging, an allegation which authorities have denied. His party also accuses Kabila of using state media and transport assets in the service of his campaign.

For many Congolese, there was a last-minute scramble to find out where they should be voting on Monday. Gervis Ilunga, a 44-year-old security guard, said he registered in one Kinshasa voting district but ultimately found his name elsewhere.

“In 2006, things were at least organised,” he said of the first post-war poll largely organised under the auspices of the United Nations. “It is not like that this time … There will be too many challenges this time.”

Under constitutional amendments signed off by Kabila this year the presidential vote will be decided in a single round, meaning the winner can claim victory without securing an absolute majority. Analysts say that favours Kabila against the split opposition.

Blessed with lucrative resources of copper, cobalt and precious metals, Congo remains plagued by poverty and insecurity, especially in its rebel-infested east where a simmering low-level conflict persists.

-Reuters

Kenya: Government ordered death trap disused gold mine pits in Migori/Nyatie closed down

Reports Leo Odera Omolo

The National Environmental Management Authority {NEMA} has ordered one of the companies prospecting for gold in Migori and Nyatike to close down its pit mines with immediate effect.

The NEMA action followed the recent series of deaths involving mine workers in the greater Southern Nyanza connection to unsafe condition of the mine pits and the safety of gold diggers.

A total of 9 people have died within one month, they included one foreign investor, a Whiteman gold prospector from Zimbabwe.

The three perished inside a gold pit at Nyahera in Central Kasipul Location, Oyugis Division of Rachuonyo South district in the County of Homa-Bay.

The investor is reported to have entered the 20feet deep mine pit in a bid to retrieve the bodies of two of his worker who had suffocated to death from exhaust fumes after the water pump engine they were using in pumping out water which had logged filled inside the pit developed mechanical problem.

The dead investor’s body has since been flown out for burial in his native Zimbabwe country. Th two Kenyan workers hail from within the local communities.

The first death of 3 miners, all members of one family, occurred earlier in the month at Kanyasrega village in North Sakwa Location, Awendo district within Migori County.The pit, a disused former gold mine which was in use in the late 195s and early 1960a. Another man who was rescued from the rubble and rushed to the Hospital later died bringing the number of total victims to four.

The police chiefs in the area later issued a stern warning to the local people to steer clear of the disused mine pits in the area, threatening to mobilize members of the local communities to have the mines sealed off.

It was previously part of Kitere Gold Mines Ltd, which was in later years run and managed by he Commonwealth Development Corporation {CDC} which closed shops in 1063 shortly before the country attained its political independence in 1963.

The white miners left the county in huff in anticipation that chaos and mayhem usually associate with African politics, particularly after or during the elections.

The abrasive Nyatike MP Edick Omondi Anyanga recently appealed to the government to reorganize the mining of minerals in his constituency and in the neighboring region in order toke up the proper account of gold being taken outside the country for exports, to avoid a situation whereby some unscrupulous foreign investor siphoning mineral and exporting them though neighboring counties to avoid taxation by the Kenya Revenue Authority {KRA.

The third death involving three mines diggers took place in Nyatike constituency where three gol miners were buried alive when the land around the pit paved the way hurling tons of soil and rock on the pit as a result of heavy rains which has incessantly pounded the region since October, weakening the ground which paved the way exposing miners to a great danger.

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