Category Archives: South Africa

South Africa: Nelson Mandela: The world’s last icon

From: This is Africa

Greetings friends,

It surely comes as no surprise to anyone that the world is holding its breath for Nelson Mandela. He is the our last icon, viewed in the same light as Gandhi, Mother Teresa and Martin Luther King. He represents the triumph of goodness and justice, and we need people like Mandela to help us keep our faith in the value of being good and principled. But beyond the warm glow of love, does the father of the nation and the man who kept South Africa together after apartheid mean the same thing to all South Africans?

Peace.

Siji Jabbar (Editor, This is Africa)

Shame about South Africa

From: African Views Information Exchange

I went to bed at 3 am last night, which was early for me. I had to drive Karin-my beloved spouse to the JFK airport from Hoboken, New Jersey at 7:30 in morning. Karin is going to South Africa for a press freedom conference for two weeks since that is her specialty and I will be taking care of Maya, our 6 months old precious-precious for the next two weeks. I sound like a stay home dad, but I am really more like a robo-dad.

I got back to Hoboken just in time for the Migrant worker on Millennium Development Goals radio program, which I produce and direct. We had added a news segment and none of the hosts would dare read any negative news on Israel, base on its treatment of the Eritrean refugees. I was thinking to myself Israel my beloved country and people, how did it happen that you have become a threat in the heart of societies that help establish your security and legitimacy. Even, I have have fought live threatening battles on behalf of Israel growing up in a German culture. But I quickly resolved that by thinking that is evolution as my busy schedule kicked in. Phone calls from Malaysia, India, Senegal, Nepal, Botswana, UK, US, South Africa, just as I was about to grab a breath…

http://www.africanviews.org/pundits/2012/09/08/shame-about-south-africa/
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Ugandans living in South Africa have petitioned President Zuma to stop selling arms to Museveni

Writes Leo Odera Omolo

A group of Ugandans living in South Africa have petitioned their host country’s President Jacob Zuma, urging him to, among many other things, end South Africa’s arms exports to Uganda.

The message is contained in the latest news posted to the website by the Uganda Correspondent website quoting its sources in South Africa

In the memorandum dated June 8, 2012, which Uganda Correspondent has seen, the signatories William Kyazze and Timothy Mugerwa, who represent an organisation called ‘Human Rights Voice International’ said they wanted to bring what they called “the brutality of the Ugandan regime” to the attention of the South African government and urge it to “reconsider” its relations with President Yoweri Museveni.

The memorandum reads: “…The prevailing human rights abuses by the government of Uganda have worsened since the 11th April 2011, when Ugandans embarked on the walk-to-work campaign to express their demands for respect of human rights.

The response by Uganda government has been that of systematic and consistent brutality on unarmed vulnerable citizens, with the help of some of the arms and armoured vehicles purchased from South Africa.

Arbitrary arrests, torture and death of opposition supporters, harassment of opposition leaders and intimidation of the general population by the police and military forces are daily occurrences. Media groups, both the local and international, have been at the receiving end too.

All this state brutality using the police and military forces has been widely covered by both the Ugandan and international media as well as many human rights organisations. This was also brought to your attention in a petition handed to your office in May last year by the Uganda Civil Alliance Network (UCAN).

Furthermore, this brutality has had the consequence of increased influx of Ugandan refugees into South Africa, thereby having a ripple effect on this country’s residents, politically, socially and economically. Sometimes the Department of Home Affairs officials have tended to misread the Ugandan situation when dealing with Ugandan asylum seekers but the reality is that the situation in the country is forcing many Ugandans to flee their country.

Though the country holds elections, Ugandans have lost faith in them under the current arrangement as they are mainly an exercise to put a face to the country’s dictatorship and do not express the true will of the people as has been shown by instability following the previous elections.”

The memorandum, issued to coincide with President Museveni’s visit to South Africa, then ends with a request to President Jacob Zuma to take action on a number of issues and says:

“…Your Excellency, as the leader of South Africa, a modern democratic and human rights respecting country, whose democratic principles are underpinned by Human Dignity, Equality and Freedom, we Ugandans wish to emulate these principles in our country, Uganda.

3.1. Your Excellency, we would appreciate if you would address the issue of human rights abuses carried out by the Uganda police and military forces, with President Museveni.

3.2. We request the South African government through you to urgently reconsider/revise its foreign policy and approach when dealing with the government.

3.3. We request that you put a stop to the sale of arms from this country to Uganda because of the misery these arms visit on ordinary Ugandans through the havoc they wreck.

3.4. We request that you review the training of the current Ugandan military personnel in this country.

3.5. We request that under the prevailing situation in Uganda, Ugandan political asylum seekers should be dealt with in relation to the existing brutal political situation in the country.”

END.

6th Africa Economic Forum 2012, Cape Town, South Africa: Shaping Africa’s Future

From: News Release – African Press Organization
PRESS RELEASE

6th Africa Economic Forum 2012, Cape Town, South Africa: Shaping Africa’s Future

JOHANNESBURG, South-Africa, February 6, 2012/ — Global Pacific & Partners (http://www.glopac-partners.com) announce the Program for the 6th Africa Economic Forum in Cape Town, South Africa, 5-7 March 2012.
Logo: http://www.apo-mail.org/aef-2012.jpg

5-7 March 2012
BMW Pavilion, Cape Town, South Africa

Dr Duncan Clarke, Chairman & CEO, Global Pacific & Partners, says: “Our focus is on Shaping Africa’s Future, as Africa holds great commercial promise, its destiny to be unlocked by local and foreign investment, enhanced trade and development partnerships, along with competitive business strategies across its landscapes”.

“Africa is not poor, but poorly managed: It needs more growth and investment”

Dr Clarke continues: “The Forum will address leading-edge shifts in Africa’s evolving economies, critical investment and business concerns, and the Continent’s emerging role and strategic position within a highly competitive and rapidly globalising world”.

The 6th Annual Africa Economic Forum will bring together Africa’s leading industries, companies, state players, senior executives, and government officials to interface in a content-rich meeting, including players from countries outside Africa, and so connect fast-growth core industries inside and outside Africa’s economies.

Global Pacific & Partners is delighted to announce CNN International as the Exclusive International Broadcast Partner for the 2012 program.

The 6th Annual Africa Economic Forum will include the 13th Southern Africa Oil, Gas & Energy Conference, as three intensive break-away sessions. These will focus on oil/gas exploration/development both offshore and onshore, shale gas/oil resources, power projects, renewable energy and energy efficiency, downstream oil markets and Southern Africa’s future fuels mix.

The Conference features Keynote Ministerial Addresses from Hon Dr Rob Davies, Minister of Trade & Industry (South Africa) and Hon Elizabeth Dipuo Peters, Minister of Energy (South Africa).

Featuring 40+ senior-level presentations from across industry and the Continent including presenters from: Comesa, Brenthurst Foundation, GE Corporate, Ecobank, DHL Global Forwarding, Agricultural Buisness Chamber, Dupont, Industrial Development Corporation, Gordan Institute of Business Science, Petroleum Agency SA, PetroSA, Shell, Engen, Galana Petroleum, Forest Exploration SA and many others.

This high-level gathering will discuss Africa’s Economic Future over an intensive three-day programme (including the 5th Sub-Saharan Africa: Strategy Briefing) based on the following issues and agenda:

• Corporate Strategies & Investments,

• Economic Growth: Business & Governments

• Africa’s Changing Economic World To 2050

• Giant Economies & Newly-Emerging “Next Five”

• Investments & Financing Africa’s Industries

• Economic Drivers & Future Growth Locomotives

• Natural Resources, Africa’s Trade & Corporate Projects

• Development Challenges & Future Economic Shape

• Africa’s Fast-Growth Economies & Emerging Markets

• Resources, Industries & Business Drivers

• Corporate Africa: Portfolio & Investment Strategies

• African Governments & State Owned Firms

• Great Powers, Emerging Foreign State Players

In addition, the 5th Sub-Saharan Africa Business Briefing takes place one day prior the 6th Africa Economic Forum, on Monday 5th March 2012, with unique insights provided on the prospects, potential and future economic outlook for business and investment across the Continent. Presented by Dr Duncan Clarke, Chairman & CEO, Global Pacific & Partners, a leading economic strategist on Africa.

Dr Duncan Clarke has been an Advisor to African governments and oil companies while the Company runs the Continent’s largest annual oil and gas management meeting, the landmark Africa Oil Week, now in its 19th year, held in Cape Town.

Global Pacific & Partners has had more than 35 years’ experience in African advisory practice and 20 years-plus in high-level event management, with a special focus on the world oil and gas industries. The company has hosted key oil and gas events, including Strategy Briefings, around Africa (Cape Town, Nairobi, Johannesburg, Lagos, Marrakech, Tunis) and in Asia, Latin America and Europe.

Distribued by the African Press Organization for Global Pacific & Partners.

For further details, registration and booking, please visit: http://www.petro21.com or contact: amanda@glopac-partners.com

Notes to Editors:

Global Pacific & Partners (http://www.glopac-partners.com) conducts a wide range of Conferences and Strategy Briefings, including Africa analysis and global oil and gas research, with periodic contributions to oil-gas and corporate media and companies involved in Africa: business, governments, institutions and private clients.

With 40 years’ background in economics in Africa and the developing world, including 30 years within the world exploration industry, Duncan Clarke is a leading thinker, speaker and writer on oil, geopolitics and economics in Africa, as well as on strategy for the world upstream industry.

Founder of Global Pacific & Partners, an advisory firm in world oil/gas, and an Advisor to Governments, National Oil Companies, Licensing Agencies, Multilateral Institutions and Companies, he conducts annual Strategy Briefings on Africa, Asia, Latin America, MidEast, and the world oil future.

Books include Africa’s Future: Darkness to Destiny (Profile Books, London, 2012), Crude Continent: The Struggle for Africa’s Oil Prize (Profile, 2010), Empires of Oil (Profile, 2007), and The Battle For Barrels (Profile, 2007).

Born in Zimbabwe, based in Johannesburg, B.Comm. (Hons) Economics, Rhodes University (South Africa, 1969); Ph.D (Economics), University of St. Andrews (Scotland, 1975).

SOURCE
Global Pacific & Partners

S. Africa & World: Durban climate talks ending: Polluters won, people lost (Greenpeace Africa)

From: News Release – African Press Organization

PRESS RELEASE

Durban climate talks ending: Polluters won, people lost (Greenpeace Africa)

DURBAN, South-Africa, December 11, 2011/African Press Organization (APO)/ — On the closing of the latest round of UN climate talks in Durban Greenpeace today declared that it was clear that our Governments this past two weeks listened to the carbon-intensive polluting corporations instead of listening to the people who want an end to our dependence on fossil fuels and real and immediate action on climate change.

“The grim news is that the blockers lead by the US have succeeded in inserting a vital get-out clause that could easily prevent the next big climate deal being legally binding. If that loophole is exploited it could be a disaster. And the deal is due to be implemented ‘from 2020’ leaving almost no room for increasing the depth of carbon cuts in this decade when scientists say we need emissions to peak,” said Kumi Naidoo, Greenpeace International Executive Director.

“Right now the global climate regime amounts to nothing more than a voluntary deal that’s put off for a decade. This could take us over the two degree threshold where we pass from danger to potential catastrophe.”

“Our atmosphere has been loaded with a carbon debt and the bill, carrying a Durban postmark, has been posted to the world’s poorest countries especially here in Africa. The chance of averting catastrophic climate change is slipping through our hands with every passing year that nations fail to agree on a rescue plan for the planet.”

According to Greenpeace Africa the South Africa, as host of the COP 17 tried to ensure a meaningful deal.

“The type of deal that has been reached has been strongly influenced by the blockers led by US”, said Ferrial Adam, Climate and Energy Campaigner for Greenpeace Africa.

Distributed by the African Press Organization for Greenpeace Africa.

Contacts:

Media: Fiona Musana +27 79 8940495 for interviews with Ferrrial Adam and Melita Steele.

For more information contact http://www.greenpeace.org

SOURCE

Greenpeace Africa

AU Ad-hock committee on Libya crisis meeting in South Africa as French and British arrives in Tripoli

Reports Compiled By Leo Odera Omolo {From several African news sources}

The one-day AU high level Ad hock committee on Libya that took place in Pretoria, South Africa on Wednesday has committed itself to working with the National Transitional Council (NTC) and other Libyan stakeholders towards the goal of the early establishment of an all-inclusive national unity government in Libya.

The French and British leaders arrived in Libya on Thursday to congratulate the new rulers they helped install, but families fleeing besieged bastions of ousted strongman Muammar Gaddafi are a reminder that peace is still far off.

The visit is a victory lap for Nicolas Sarkozy and David Cameron, who defied doubters at home to lead a NATO bombing campaign that succeeded in ushering in a victory by forces who swept away Gaddafi’s 42-year rule last month.

The Committee also encouraged the African Union Commission to do the same.

This is contained a 3-page communique that was issued at the end of the AU high level committee meeting on Libya that was held at the Government Guest House in Pretoria.

It was attended by Presidents’ Yoweri Museveni of Uganda, Jacob Zuma of South Africa and host of the meeting as well as President Dennis Sassou Nguesso of Congo Brazaville.

Mauritania, whose President is the Chairman of the Committee was represented by its Ambassador to South Africa and Mali, another member, was also represented by its envoy in Pretoria.

The meeting was also attended by the Chairman of the African Union Commission Dr. Jean Ping and the Commissioner for Peace and Security, Ambassador Ramtane Lamamra.

In the communiqué that was read by Ambassador Lamamra, the members of the ad hoc committee welcomed the assurances provided by NTC leadership in Libya, including a the letter addressed to the Chairperson of the African Union Commission on September 5, 2011 in which the new authorities in Tripoli stressed the strategic commitment to the African continent by NTC, the commitment to give priority to national unity in Libya and to bring together all Libyan stakeholders without any exception as well as to rebuild Libya and the commitment to protect all foreign workers within Libya, including the African migrant workers.

The AU high level committee meeting requested the Chairperson of the African Union Commission to convene an urgent meeting of the African Union Peace and Security Council on the margins of the 66th Ordinary Session of the United Nations General Assembly in New York, to review developments in Libya and take appropriate positions to reinforce efforts to bring peace, democracy and development in Libya including ensuring a united African position.

The AU High Level Committee, having reiterated the relevance of many positions of the AU roadmap and of the proposals adopted in Malabo last July, for the long term stability of Libya and the fulfillment of the legitimate aspirations of its people, recommended to the AU Peace and Security Council to encourage the NTC to spare no efforts in ensuring its effective follow-up to living up its pledge to formally institute an all-inclusive transitional government in Libya.

The AU high level committee requested the Chairperson of the AU Commission to submit, as early as possible, a report to the Peace and Security Council covering all relevant developments in order to enable the Commission authorize the all-inclusive transitional government in Libya soon to be formed by the current authorities in Tripoli to occupy the seat of Libya in the AU, as soon as it is established.

The AU high level committee meeting stressed that such a decision should be based on the exceptional circumstances in and the uniqueness of the situation of Libya, and without prejudice to the relevant instruments of the AU, particularly those on unconstitutional changes of Governments.

The ad hoc committee reiterated its readiness to work with the United Nations, the League of the Arab States, and the Organization of the Islamic Cooperation, the European Union and NATO to ensure a coordinated support to the Libyan people.

The ad hoc Committee pledged the AU’s readiness to extend full support in this respect and to the overall efforts to stabilize the situation, promote democracy and reconstruction in Libya and to this end encouraged the Chairperson of the AU Commission to expeditiously take all steps required for the AU to play an active role in the ongoing efforts in Libya in line with relevant Peace and Security Council (PSC) decisions.

The ad hoc committee reiterated the AU’s call for an immediate cessation of all hostilities in Libya

Ends

S.Africa: Archbishop Desmond Tutu – Time for ‘haves’ to help rebuild SA

from Yona Maro

South Africa is a spectacular country, richly endowed with natural resources, breath-taking scenery and talented, generous and diverse people. There are enough of the good things that come from God’s bounty, enough for everyone.

In the 1990s we emerged from centuries of racial conflict, dispossession and segregation to forge a democratic nation. There was no retribution sought or taken.

No land grabs, and aside from BEE policies and land restitution process, no legislated physical redistribution of wealth.

Some termed the fact that we managed to transfer power as peacefully as we did a “miracle”. That is how divided we were.

Almost overnight, we became very high achievers. In 1994, we voted in great numbers to install our beloved Madiba as president, and set about forging a new nation on a set of fundamental values and principles that underscored our dignity and common humanity.

Do you remember the reconstruction and development programme, the RDP? Signboards sprouted in townships across the land, speaking of water delivery, new electricity connections and new communities.

We could see and feel and taste ourselves rebuilding, restoring, transforming.

Then, in 1995 we won the Rugby World Cup. In 1996, we unveiled our brand new constitution and Bill of Rights with rightful pride, our Truth and Reconciliation Commission got under way, and Bafana Bafana won the African Cup of Nations. The sky was the limit, and we knew it. We were living it.

Then we sat back to bask in our glory – and have allowed ourselves to be blown a little off course. We sat back and thought all was forgiven and was on track. We had set a good and righteous course… the rest would happen organically.

Of course, much has improved over the intervening years. We have reconnected to the world, on the sports fields, culturally, academically and economically. We have hosted rugby, cricket and the finest soccer world cup in history. Our government has built nearly 3 million homes and given them away to poor people. Millions more people have access to water, sewerage, electricity, roads, medical facilities and schools.

But the quality of life for many of the people who occupy these homes, who have benefited from a new electricity or water connection, or attend a new clinic or school, has insufficiently improved. Crime is rampant, babies are dying of preventable diseases, children are going to sleep on empty stomachs, and the standard of education at many of our schools is worrisome, indeed.

On the one hand, millions of people continue to lead poor quality lives, while on the other, we are a society of fantastic wines and restaurants, and expensive tastes in automobiles, wrist watches and real estate. Those who can afford it, have access to the best medical care in the world, and among the best schools.

As we have sat back and basked, we have become an increasingly skewed society, a society of more inequality instead of less. That is the first point I raised in my remarks at a book launch in Stellenbosch last week. The old haves continue to have, and they have been joined by some new haves. But most of our people remain have-nots. And, most of them are black.

The second point related to simple social values that we seem to have lost. In the old days, for example, no matter how poor we were, we kept our communities tidy. Today, there is litter all over the place. Why? Why do we drive so selfishly and recklessly, that we boast among the highest road accident rates in the world? Why is it necessary to exacerbate property crimes by torturing and killing the victims? Why do we brutalise our women to the extent we do? Why, when our unions go on strike, do they trash the streets and traumatise the people?

Are these all purely functions of poverty? I would say, no. Poverty does not make us callous and uncaring.

We are a deeply wounded people, all of us, black and white together. Some are crippled by poverty and shame, others by shame and guilt. We tend to respond with self-justification or indifference, when we should be responding with compassion and love.

Perhaps some of us are guilty of hoping that the euphoria of the 1990s would be sufficient to blow away our deep societal memories – scars – of generations of divisiveness, mistrust, fear, enforced impoverishment and legislated indignity. But the truth is, no human being emerges from such a furnace unmoved by the heat – just ask the people of Germany how difficult it has been to find one another after the fall of the Berlin Wall, and they were all more or less the same colour, spoke the same language and had been divided for less than 50 years.

As a society, we are guilty of taking each other for granted. In particular, I think richer South Africans are failing their poorer brothers and sisters. I think richer South Africans have failed to acknowledge the pain and the patience of poorer South Africans, who have for too long endured what pretty much amounts to a continuation of the socio-economic status quo that prevailed before the political change. And I think white South Africans have failed to acknowledge or respond to the magnanimity expressed in black South Africans’ willingness to forgive in the 1990s, to reconcile, to heal.

We speak about ubuntu, while failing to believe that we really are dependent on each other – not the government – to create the world we all want, a world in which we live and prosper together as the one family that we are.

Of course, the government could help very significantly. And I have suggested that one of the ways it could demonstrate it cares would be for cabinet ministers to sell their expensive cars.

But surely, we (the people) cannot just continue to sit back and blame the government for all of our woes. Yes, we pay our taxes and have every right to demand good and clean governance. But should we not all be alarmed by the widening wealth gap in our country? What does this mean for our children? At what point does the chasm grow so wide that the elastic band snaps?

We cannot ignore the fact that the overwhelming number of poor people in our country are black. Sure, we have some very wealthy black business people these days, but it is equally a fact that our stock exchange remains overwhelmingly in white hands. Most of our country’s productive land remains in white hands. Most white people stay in suburbs, while most black people continue to stay in inferior townships, informal settlements, or underdeveloped rural areas. Surely this is not sustainable?

In 1998, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission compiled a set of recommendations to set down strong roots for the united nation we sought to become. Among the recommendations, as a form or reparation, was the creation of a wealth tax. At the time, the vast majority of people who would have fallen into the “wealthy” category were white, and a number of our white brothers and sisters were very supportive of the idea as a vehicle for the “haves” to demonstrate their support for our new, better society. Thus was the idea of a tax for whites, as a form of reparation raised.

What a magnificent gesture it would be, now, in the context of a global financial recession and widening wealth gap at home, were relatively wealthy South Africans to contribute to a central fund aiming to contribute to the national effort to uplift the poor. This could, in particular, create a mechanism for those individuals and companies who acquired their wealth during the years of apartheid, to pay one-off reparations.

This fund could be collected by the Receiver of Revenue, as a percentage of individual and/or company income tax. Or, perhaps, given the perceived levels of corruption in government, the people would be more confident were the fund administered privately. It could be statutory or it could be voluntary.

Imagine if a group of eminent South African bankers and business people came together with a plan for the administration of a national wealth fund – to be managed by captains of industry, not government. I have no doubt there are many South Africans who would want to contribute generously.

Imagine if we were creative enough to establish a system in which companies and individuals could receive formal recognition for contributing to such a fund to re-build our society? Where contributions could perhaps even be taken into consideration in BBBEE scorecards.

The value of the exercise extends way beyond the physical exchange of cash. It is a gesture in restoration and reconciliation; a vehicle to assuage pent-up guilt, to share, to show that we care; an opportunity to lay another brick in our road to a better society.

We are a generous people imbued with extraordinary magnanimity. We have basked in the glory of our 1990s achievements for too long. – The Star


Kwa Nafasi za Kazi kila siku www.kazibongo.blogspot.com

http://worldngojobs.blogspot.com/ Nafasi za Kazi Kimataifa

Leadership perspectives Visa-vis South Africa

The entire world was glued on television watching the world cup for the first time from the African Continent. Our two leaders in the coalition government President Kibaki and PM Raila Odinga travelled to Johannesburg for the tournaments’ opening ceremony. I wonder if they learnt any lesson while in a country which has enjoyed majority rule for only 15 years but has comfortably positioned itself in the global stage surpassing the Continent’s power houses like Nigeria and Egypt.

When South Africa won the votes to host the 2010 World cup, it sent a very strong message to Africa and the world that the post apartheid nation was prepared for greatness globally. It was impressive during the matches … security, infrastructure and logistics to safeguard the comfort of fans who thronged the rainbow nation was well coordinated; a reminiscent of a developed country.

South Africa’s economic grid and governance practices are phenomenal; a sharp contrast with Countries which attained self rule more than a half a century a go like Ghana, Nigeria, Ethiopia, Sudan, Morocco, and Guinea. In fact, the Country’s GDP is 10 times that of Kenya despite being 3 years away to celebrate a half a century since we attained independence from Britain.

I don’t want to sound disrespectful to African leaders who took over after independence; but it appears like they were not ready for majority rule. May be things would be better today if the colonialists stayed longer the way they did in South Africa. The challenges we see in the DRC, Zimbabwe, Somalia, Sudan, Rwanda, or Kenya, are all homegrown as a result of poor leadership foundation laid upon by the founding fathers.

It must be remembered that if Neslson Mandela could have followed the path that most African leaders took after independence, South Africa would not have gotten the opportunity to host the World cup. Despite the horror of the apartheid regime and Mandela’s incarceration, the white minority rule laid a firm foundation that they passed to the freedom hero and this has continued to define country’s current stature.

Mandela inherited an economically viable Country from the minority predecessor, Fredrick De Klerk and ruled for one term; passing the baton to Tabo Mbeki who perpetuated the same ideals passing it to Jacob Tsuma. Mr. Tsuma recently shepherded the World cup to a successful end.

It’s paradoxical that Kenya, Nigeria, Ghana, Zimbabwe and Zambia, despite sharing the same colonial heritage with South Africa, cannot measure up to the rainbow nation on good governance, democratic practices, infrastructure, and respect to the Country’s constitution. I’m not implying that South Africans are free from daily challenges but their Country stands on a better platform compared with many African nations.

Shall we conclude that African nations currently bedeviled by civil strife, corruption, governance malpractices and injustices achieved liberation from the colonialists too soon, or post independence leaders were caught off guard before they could set their minds on self rule?

In Zimbabwe, Robert Mugabe inherited a robust economy from the British, but today the Country is a shell. The citizens cannot even feed themselves, yet the Zimbabwean strongman keeps whining; blaming the West for his Country’s problems. Just recently, the DRC celebrated 50 years of independence from Belgium but there was nothing to celebrate when the country is riddled with poverty, illiteracy, violence, injustices and many other human rights violations.

If Nelson Mandela, suffered for over a quarter a century but after his release and ascendancy to the Presidency proved that political cronyism, tyranny, autocracy, corruption, ethnicity was not in his vocabulary, how come our own Jomo Kenyatta who equally suffered never nurtured the same ideals when he took over from the colonial leadership ?

Nobody thought Kenyatta will renege the spirit of the independence struggle. Nobody thought his reign will be compounded with land grabbing, political assassinations, detaining government dissenters especially those he fought with during the freedom struggle. The first President cynically and tragically aligned himself on ethnic identification through a cartel of tribesmen who misadvised him on key national decisions which is the genesis of Kenya’s present predicaments.

He passed on a devastating legacy to Moi, which has continued to roil our country making it hard to agree on issues that affect the nations especially getting a new constitution. How come former President Neslson Mandela was able to get a new constitution for his people in a span of two years after he became president when it has take Kenya more than 20 years to achieve the same?

My final challenge is for African leaders is to take stock of where they went wrong and devise home grown solutions if they expect to be at par with South Africa.

As we move to see our Country’s rebirth on 4th August, let us not be engulfed by utopia because our great success is dependent upon a transformative leader who will take over our nation under the new constitution. The future is bleak but very hopeful.

Joseph Lister Nyaringo-NJ-USA
http://listernyaringo.blogspot.com/

South Africa: Doctor invents female condoms with ‘teeth’ to fight rape

From: Kuria-Mwangi

Oh my God! This is the best invention for women. For 2 dollar a piece, a woman can go to a blind date or walk at night anywhere without the fear of being raped. How does it work? She inserts the condom in her private parts and welcome the rapist. The condoms bites him and sticks into his ninio. The removal from then on can only be done by a doctor or else he will not be able to pee or use his ninio until the doctor assists him. The days when women feared rapists are going to be over, thanks to the SA doctor. I don’t see why some people are opposed to the Rape-Axe condom. This axe will scare the hell out of rapists! This can also be used against a misbehaving boyfriend or husband, just him be axed and next time he will talk to his wife or girlfriend nicely, requesting to know whether shoka liko:)

Kuria

– – – – – – – – – – –

South African doctor invents female condoms with ‘teeth’ to fight rape

(CNN) — South African Dr. Sonnet Ehlers was on call one night four decades ago when a devastated rape victim walked in. Her eyes were lifeless; she was like a breathing corpse.

“She looked at me and said, ‘If only had teeth down there,'” recalled Ehlers, who was a 20-year-old medical researcher at the time. “I promised her I’d do something to help people like her one day.”

Forty years later, Rape-aXe was born.

Ehlers is distributing the female condoms in the various South African cities where the World Cup soccer games are taking place.

The woman inserts the latex condom like a tampon. Jagged rows of teeth-like hooks line its inside and attach on a man’s penis during penetration, Ehlers said.

Once it lodges, only a doctor can remove it — a procedure Ehlers hopes will be done with authorities on standby to make an arrest.

“It hurts, he cannot pee and walk when it’s on,” she said. “If he tries to remove it, it will clasp even tighter… however, it doesn’t break the skin, and there’s no danger of fluid exposure.”

Ehlers said she sold her house and car to launch the project, and she planned to distribute 30,000 free devices under supervision during the World Cup period.

“I consulted engineers, gynecologists and psychologists to help in the design and make sure it was safe,” she said.

After the trial period, they’ll be available for about $2 a piece. She hopes the women will report back to her.

It hurts, he cannot pee and walk when it’s on. If he tries to remove it, it will clasp even tighter
“The ideal situation would be for a woman to wear this when she’s going out on some kind of blind date … or to an area she’s not comfortable with,” she said.

The mother of two daughters said she visited prisons and talked to convicted rapists to find out whether such a device would have made them rethink their actions.

Some said it would have, Ehlers said.

Critics say the female condom is not a long-term solution and makes women vulnerable to more violence from men trapped by the device.

It’s also a form of “enslavement,” said Victoria Kajja, a fellow for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in the east African country of Uganda. “The fears surrounding the victim, the act of wearing the condom in anticipation of being assaulted all represent enslavement that no woman should be subjected to.”

Kajja said the device constantly reminds women of their vulnerability.

“It not only presents the victim with a false sense of security, but psychological trauma,” she added. “It also does not help with the psychological problems that manifest after assaults.”

However, its one advantage is it allows justice to be served, she said.

Various rights organizations that work in South Africa declined to comment, including Human Rights Watch and Care International.

South Africa has one of the highest rape rates in the world, Human Rights Watch says on its website. A 2009 report by the nation’s Medical Research Council found that 28 percent of men surveyed had raped a woman or girl, with one in 20 saying they had raped in the past year, according to Human Rights Watch.

In most African countries, rape convictions are not common. Affected women don’t get immediate access to medical care, and DNA tests to provide evidence are unaffordable.

“Women and girls who experience these violations are denied justice, factors that contribute to the normalization of rape and violence in South African society,” Human Rights Watch says.

Women take drastic measures to prevent rape in South Africa, Ehlers said, with some wearing extra tight biker shorts and others inserting razor blades in their private parts.

Critics have accused her of developing a medieval device to fight rape.

“Yes, my device may be a medieval, but it’s for a medieval deed that has been around for decades,” she said. “I believe something’s got to be done … and this will make some men rethink before they assault a woman.”


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TANZANIA: NYERERE’S VISION STILL LIVES WITH US

Colleagues Home & Abroad Regional News

BY JOSEPH ADERO NGALA
ARUSHA-TANZANIA

Former South Africa President Nelson Mandela acknowledges that even after former President of the Republic of Tanzania and founder Julius Kambarage Nyerere had stepped down from public office in his own country, we still benefit from his leadership and wise counsel, in pursuit of development, peace and justice not only in our countries, our region and our continent, but throughout the world.

As the Africa wise men say, when elders sit under a tree there must be a new good thing coming on the way. This happened recently in Arusha, Tanzania when a team of experts gathered for a workshop that brought a number of renowned writers, professors, lecturers and human right activists from Rwanda, Kenya Burundi, Uganda and Tanzania.

The deliberation took three days from May 6 -8 at Kibo hotel place. The workshop was convened pursuant to the East Africa Calendar of Activities covering January-June 2010. The purpose of the workshop was to develop a research Agenda for the Centre through a consultative and collaborative approach.

The think tank discussed and generated consensus amongst the participants on the general direction of the policy-oriented research; determine research topic /focal areas under three thematic areas; and determine a set of research questions for the different research topics.

The Deputy Secretary General Political Federation Hon Beatrice Kiraso in her opening remarks welcomed the participants drowned from the East African countries. In her maiden speech she informed the workshops participants that the vision of East Africa Community is to have a peaceful, secure and politically united East Africa.

She noted further that the Treaty underscores peace and security as pre-requisites to social and economic development within East Africa community and vital to the achievement of the objective of the community.

She underlined the importance and relevance of peace and stability to all the four stages of integration and emphasized that without peace and stability, all the remarkable achievements of regional integration cannot be sustained.

Kiraso informed the workshop that the overall objective of Nyerere centre for Peace Research (NCPR) is to provide the East African Community with relevant and timely research, training and information that contribute to deepening and widening of integration in areas of Peace and security, good Governance and foreign policy coordination.

She made it very clear that the centre will carry out its mandate through empirical and policy-oriented research and capacity building in key areas that will enhance deepening and widening of the East Africa Community integration in general and peace and security, good governance and common foreign policy pursuits in particular.

The author was one of the experts attending the workshops. During the discussion there were a number of debates that generated issues raised from cattle’s rustling, transport, child soldiers, prostitution, war lords, constitution reviews.

Present were among eminent professor Makumi Mwagiru, the guru of peace and security from the University of Nairobi, Professor Beregu from St Augustine University, and a well known Kenyan Professor Gilbert Khadiagala who chaired the meeting.

The Nyerere Centre for Peace Research started as a joint effort of the East African Community (EAC) and Arcadia University that provides an academic resource to the member states of EAC. Engaging in policy research and analysis, data collection and training, the centre supports decision makers, civil society organizations and the community whose aim is to build capacity and promote the peaceful settlement of conflict in the region.

The Nyerere Centre for Peace Research is located at the site of the EAC Headquarters in Arusha. Housed in the Princes Margaret of the former State House Compound (barara ya afrika Masharitiki) the centre will preserve and celebrate the heritage of this site and draw on the distinct cultures of Eastern Africa as a means to promote peace.

Julius Kabarage Nyerere was born on April 13, 1922 in Butiama, Tanganyika, to local Zanaki Chief. Nyerere Burito. At age of 12 he began his education at the Government Primary School in Musoma, walking 26 miles each day to attend classes.

He completed his schooling in a year early. He was then transferred to the Tabora Boys government Secondary School in 1943 he moved on to Makerere university for certificate in education, and then returned to Tabora to teach at St Mary’s Mission school. In 1949 he became the first Tanganyika to study in Britain when he obtained a Masters of Arts in history and economics at the University of Edinburgh.

On his return to Tanganyika, he took a teaching position at St Francis College in Dar-es-salaam, where in 1954 he developed the Tanganyika Africa national union (TANU) which grouped together nationalist factions towards an agenda of independence and self-reliance for the country.

Nyerere then entered the colonial legislative council in 1958 and in 1961.Tanganyika was granted self-governance and Nyerere was elected its Prime minister. When Tanganyika received full independence in 1962, Nyerere was elected president, a post he held until his retirement in 1985.

During his political career, Nyerere grew to become one of the most respected and beloved African leaders through his messages of peace, Unity and liberation for the Africa people. He was instrumental in the creation of the organization of Africa unity (OAU) and acted as the keystone of several liberation moments across the continent as well as the union between Zanzibar and Tanganyika to form the united republic of Tanzania. His work continued beyond his retirement, acting as the chair of the intergovernmental south centre and a mediator in Burundi. He died on October 14, 1999, in London.

The workshop was organized by Pamela Atakunda and Ethel Sirengo. At the end of the workshop the way forward was reached -that East Africa community to strengthen the human resource capacity of NCPR in order to be able to undertake the proposed research activities; resource mobilization to effectively implement the research activities; have a timeframe for the research activities and updates the existing database of research institutions and individual researchers.

People for Peace in Africa (PPA)
P O Box 14877
Nairobi
00800, Westlands
Kenya

E-Mail news@ppa.or.ke
Tel 254-20-4441372
Website : www.peopleforpeaceafrica.org

Libya & S. Africa: Plane from South Africa crashes at Libya’s Tripoli airport, killing 105 people

From: Theus Owicho

A plane has crashed at Libya’s Tripoli airport, killing 105 people, but there are reports a child has survived the disaster.

The accident happened as the Afriqiyah Airways plane, which had flown from Johannesburg in South Africa, tried to land in the Libyan capital.

A Libyan security official said 94 passengers and 11 crew were among the dead.

“All passengers and crew members on board were killed,” he said.

Another report claimed an eight-year-old Dutch child had survived the crash.

The cause of the crash remains unclear.

South Africa’s foreign ministry has confirmed a plane went missing while travelling from Johannesburg to Libya.

“All we know is that a plane went missing en route from Johannesburg to Tripoli,” said foreign ministry spokesman Nomfanelo Kota.

“At this stage we cannot confirm whether the plane crashed.

“We are talking to civil authorities from South Africa and Tripoli,” she added.

Afriqiyah Airways, which runs a fleet of Airbus planes, was founded in April 2001 and at first fully owned by the Libyan state.

The company’s capital was later divided into shares to be managed by the Libya-Africa Investment Portfolio.

PRESIDENT JACOB ZUMA; IN SOUTH AFRICA WITH LOVE!

ZUMA; IN SOUTH AFRICA WITH LOVE!
From: Evans MACHERA

Dear,
 
Rather than hide mistresses, concubines alias kachungwa or mpango wa kando, just marry in the open like Jacob Zuma and Milton Mbhele.
 
Ladies deny that they can’t stand to be counted as second wives, nor see eye to eye with the other woman. Yet during funerals, we see ladies showcasing children alleged to have been sired by the late  Mr……………
 
The south African His Excellency has made it five times and the sixth is on the way.
Milton Mbhele, also from south Africa wedded four at a time, just to save money!
 
Men, why hide, yet the other women/mistresses/concubines or kachungwa ( whatever name you wish to baptize them) exits, only to appear when you are “past tense or expired”, to borrow Wisper’s vocs?
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Song and dance at Zuma wedding

1/5/2010 8:25:54 AM

Nkandla – Politicians, celebrities and former president Nelson Mandela’s grandson, inkosi Mandla Mandela, were among those who attended President Jacob Zuma’s wedding to Thobeka Madiba at his home in Nkandla on Monday.

Guests were treated to Zulu and Xhosa traditional dance, and Zuma danced with his new wife.

Security was tight and journalists were barred from getting close to the president’s home.

However, media who had been camping near Zuma’s home since the early morning were later allowed to attend the ceremony.

Extra security

In a statement on Sunday, the presidency urged the media to stay away, saying the wedding was “a private family ceremony”.

SA Police Service Director Phindile Radebe said they deployed more police officers “to make sure that the event goes smoothly as planned”.

A large marquee was erected to accommodate guests, which included people from the surrounding area.

Several goats and sheep were slaughtered for the feast.

The marriage ceremony was conducted by a local induna.

Trademark song

The sounds of Zuma’s trademark song, Awuleth’ umshini wami, rang out during the day as his in-laws performed it at the end of the ceremony.

“See how things have changed. Then we cried and now we are laughing,” commented Emmah Mthembu of Soweto, referring to Zuma’s court cases, where the song was sung in the past.

Guests arrived from early morning in luxury buses and cars. One party flew in by helicopter.

In preparation for the dancing, Zuma himself helped pick up glass shards from the field, so that barefoot performers would not get hurt.

Madiba and seven women in her entourage draped Zuma in a string of white beads to complete the ceremony before the dancing got under way in a misty drizzle.

The president’s other current wives are Sizakele Khumalo, whom he married in 1973, and Nompumelelo MaNtuli-Zuma, whom he married in 2007.

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