Sierra Leone's 'special forces' Ebola nurses | ||
Surviving medical workers developed immunity to the deadly disease and are now caring for abandoned child victims.
Tommy TrenchardLast updated: 19 Dec 2014 12:36
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http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/features/2014/12/sierra-leone-special-forces-ebola-nurses-20141217885310914.htmlFatima's family and neighbours rejected her after her parents were infected with Ebola [Tommy Trenchard]
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Kenema, Sierra Leone - When the Ebola ambulance team arrived to pick up the parents of eight-year-old Fatima Bockarie last month, they faced a tough decision. What to do with the child? Fatima showed no symptoms of Ebola, but having lived in close proximity with her parents, the risk was huge that she, too, had contracted the disease. Family and friends in the village were also aware of this and, as is common across the country, nobody was willing to take her in. Now she grins widely from behind a wire mesh fence in the eastern Sierra Leone town of Kenema, where the Red Cross is running a trial of a new system that employs Ebola survivors to care for high-risk children whose parents are being treated for the disease. 'Warriors' to the rescue One such survivor is Mohamed Yillah, a former nurse at the Government Hospital in Kenema. Along with dozens of other staff at the hospital, he contracted Ebola in late July and spent two weeks battling the disease. "Everyone thinks they will die when they get Ebola. We know there is no cure," said Yillah, who was vomiting and had blood in his urine when he checked into the treatment centre. His elder sister was also infected, and she died days later. When he was eventually discharged, no one would go near him. Even though Ebola survivors are not contagious, widespread fear among the community leads to many being cut off by their friends and family. "They are my special forces," said Joachim Gardemann, head of the Red Cross Ebola treatment centre in Kenema. "I tell them, 'You survived and you have this immunity. This is your shield. You are warriors.'" It is believed the antibodies that develop in the blood of Ebola survivors remain with them for up to 10 years. Crucially, this means they do not need to wear full protective equipment, or PPE, when dealing with the children.
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Mr. Bailey's 4th Block IR-GSI Class blog focused on the current events of Sub-Saharan Africa
Thursday, January 15, 2015
Uganda's LRA commander to be tried by ICC | ||
Army spokesman says Dominic Ongwen, captured in Central African Republic, to face trial at Hague court over war crimes.
Last updated: 13 Jan 2015 19:21
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L
RA chief Joseph Kony, left, remains at large and is believed to be constantly on the move across Central Africa [AP]
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A Lord's Resistance Army rebel commander who surrendered to US troops last week will be taken to The Hague for trial, Uganda's military has said. Dominic Ongwen is now in US custody in Obo, a town in eastern Central African Republic, the country where he surrendered on January 6, said Uganda's army spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Paddy Ankunda. "It has been finally decided that Dominic Ongwen will be tried at The Hague. Victims will get justice as much as Ongwen," Ankunda told the Reuters news agency. The capture of Ongwen, 34, marks a major success in the Africa-US military campaign to crush the Lord's Resistance Army led by Joseph Kony, which according to the United Nations has killed more than a 100,000 people and kidnapped mor than 60,000 children. The United Nations, African Union, Uganda, a critic of the ICC, and United States consulted on the decision, Nkunda said, the Associated Press news agency reported. |
Nigerian forces launch assault on Boko Haram in Baga
Text by NEWS WIRES
Latest update : 2015-01-09
Nigerian forces backed by air strikes were fighting Friday for the town of Baga, seized by Boko Haram last weekend in what Amnesty International suggested is the “deadliest massacre” in the Islamist militant group’s history.
Hundreds of bodies –– too many to count –– remain strewn in the bush in Nigeria from an Islamic extremist attack that Amnesty International suggested Friday is the "deadliest massacre'' in the history of Boko Haram.
Mike Omeri, the government spokesman on the insurgency, said fighting continued Friday for Baga, a town on the border with Chad where insurgents seized a key military base on Jan. 3 and attacked again on Wednesday.
“Security forces have responded rapidly, and have deployed significant military assets and conducted airstrikes against militant targets,” Omeri said in a statement.
District head Baba Abba Hassan said most victims are children, women and elderly people who could not run fast enough when insurgents drove into Baga, firing rocket-propelled grenades and assault rifles on town residents.
“The human carnage perpetrated by Boko Haram terrorists in Baga was enormous,” Muhammad Abba Gava, a spokesman for poorly armed civilians in a defense group that fights Boko Haram, told The Associated Press.
He said the civilian fighters gave up on trying to count all the bodies. “No one could attend to the corpses and even the seriously injured ones who may have died by now,” Gava said.
An Amnesty International statement said there are reports the town was razed and as many as 2,000 people killed.
If true, “this marks a disturbing and bloody escalation of Boko Haram’s ongoing onslaught,” said Daniel Eyre, Nigeria researcher for Amnesty International.
Abdelaziz Bouteflika win presidential election for the 4th term
Abdelaziz Bouteflika won a fourth term with 81.53 percent of the vote in the presidential election conducted on 17 April 2014, (Bouteflika won 90,24 percent of the vote in 2009 and 85 percent in 2004).
Abdelaziz Bouteflika is the president of Algeria since 1999.
Ali Benflis, who came second with 12.18 percent of votes cast, and he he refused to recognize the incumbent reelection.
The interior minister Tayeb Belaiz said that voter turnout stood at 51.3 percent of the country's 23 million registered voters, and the election was taking place in good conditions in the 50,000 voting centres.
Information about the presidential elections of April 17, 2014
Number of registered voters: 22.880.678
Number of voters: 11.307.487
Voter turnout: 51,70%
Nember of valid voters: 10.220.029
Number of votes canceled: 1.087.449
Participation rates by wilaya
Participation rates by wilaya
Results of the presidential elections of April 17, 2014
Abdelaziz Bouteflika: 8 332 598 votes (81.53%)
Ali Benflis: 1 244 918 votes (12,18%)
Abdelaziz Belaid: 343 624 votes (3,36%)
Louiza Hanoune: 140 253 votes (1,37%)
Ali Fawzi Rebaine: 101 046 votes (0,99%)
Moussa Touati: 75 590 votes (0,56%)
Ebola crisis: New cases declining in West Africa
New Ebola cases in the three West African countries worst affected by the deadly outbreak of the virus are declining, weekly UN figures show.
Sierra Leone and Guinea both recorded the lowest weekly total of confirmed Ebola cases since August.
Liberia, which reported no new cases on two days last week, had its lowest weekly total since June.
The death toll from the world's worst Ebola outbreak has reached 8,429 with 21,296 cases so far.
Police probe murder of witness in Kenyan vice president's
ICC trial
Kenyan prosecutors have ordered an investigation into the murder of a witness in the International Criminal Court trial of Kenyan Vice President William Ruto, who is accused of masterminding post-election killings in 2007-2008.
Meshack Yebei, described by Ruto's lawyer as a "critical" witness for the politician's defence case, was found dead – and badly mutilated according to some reports – on January 4 in western Kenya's Nandi district.Kenya's Director of Public Prosecutions Keriako Tobiko ordered the probe, calling for a "speedy and thorough investigation to be conducted into the murder with a view of bringing those responsible to justice." Yebei, a local businessman, disappeared on December 28 and a week later his decomposed body was found in a river.The Hague-based ICC (http://www.icc-cpi.int/en_menus/icc/Pages/default.aspx) said it was "deeply concerned" by the death and was ready to assist the Kenyan probe."The family of Mr Yebei has confirmed the identity of his body," the ICC said in a statement. "We express our profound condolences to the family."
The ICC stressed that Yebei was not on its prosecution witness list, but that he had been offered "security measures, including a safe residency".Despite the offer, Yebei "returned to Eldoret (in Nandi) where the incident reportedly took place," the ICC said in a statement."Ensuring the safety and security of witnesses is a cornerstone of fair trials," said ICC registrar Herman von Hebel.Ruto has been on trial at the ICC since September 2013 on charges of organising post-election violence in the east African country in 2007-2008. More than 1,200 people died and 600,000 were displaced in the chaos.But both Ruto and co-defendant Joshua Arap Sang, a radio presenter, have denied all charges.Mass allegations of witness intimidationRuto's lawyer, Karim Khan, had branded Yebei a "critical witness to the defence," resulting in Yebei being referred to the ICC witness protection unit.In a letter, he said the "news of his apparent abduction and murder is both shocking to us and a matter of grave concern."Khan also called for DNA tests to confirm the identity of the corpse, saying it was "important for us that the facts and circumstances of his alleged killing be fully investigated."
Kenya's ICC investigations have been littered with allegations of witness intimidation, bribery and false testimony.Several witnesses have pulled out of Ruto’s trial since it began.Last month, charges against President Uhuru Kenyatta were dropped (http://www.france24.com/en/20141205- kenya-icc-drops-crimes-agaist-humanity-charges-kenyatta/)after the ICC prosecutor was ordered to either strengthen or abandon the case.Kenyatta maintained his innocence throughout the proceedings and has vowed to fight on until charges are also dropped against Ruto and Arap Sang.
The 2007-2008 post-election violence laid bare simmering ethnic tensions in the country. The violence was mainly directed at members of Kenya's largest Kikuyu tribe, who were perceived as supporters of then president Mwai Kibaki's Party of National Unity (PNU).The post-election killings are considered to be the worst in Kenya's history since winning independence from Britain in 1963.
Shell reaches $83.5 million settlement over Nigeria oil spill
Oil giant Shell has agreed to pay a Nigerian fishing community 55 million pounds (about $83.5 million) for the worst oil spill ever suffered in Nigeria. Wednesday’s agreement ends a three-year legal battle in Britain over two spills in 2008 that destroyed thousands of hectares (acres) of mangroves and the fish and shellfish that sustained villagers of the Bodo community in Nigeria (http://www.france24.com/en/tag/nigeria/)’s southern Niger Delta. It “is thought to be one of the largest payouts to an entire community following environmental damage,” the claimants’ London lawyers, Leigh Day, said. Shell (http://www.france24.com/en/tag/shell/)said it is paying 35 million pounds ($53.1 million) to 15,600 fishermen and farmers and 20 million pounds ($30.4 million) to their Bodo community. “We’ve always wanted to compensate the community fairly,” said Mutiu Sunmonu, managing director of Shell Nigeria, which is 55 percent owned by the Nigerian government. |
Boko Haram destroys at least 16 towns, villages in Nigeria
Boko Haram razed at least 16 towns and villages in a renewed assault after capturing a key military base in restive northeast Nigeria at the weekend, local officials said on Thursday.
Heavy casualties were feared in the attacks on Wednesday in the remote north of Borno state, according to local sources, but there was no independent corroboration of the figures cited.
Musa Bukar, head of the Kukawa local government area, said: "They (Boko Haram) burnt to the ground all the 16 towns and villages, including Baga, Doron-Baga, Mile 4, Mile 3, Kauyen Kuros and Bunduram."
Abubakar Gamandi, head of Borno's fish traders union and a Baga native, also confirmed the attacks, adding that hundreds of people who fled were trapped on islands on Lake Chad.
News of the latest attacks came as Nigeria's President Goodluck Jonathan, who has been criticised for his inability to end the insurgency, formally launched his re-election campaign.
Nigeria's military -- West Africa's largest -- has come under scrutiny for its inability to fight the militants after reports of a lack of adequate weaponry and even bullets.
Boko Haram, in contrast, has been seen with advanced weapons, including rocket-propelled grenades, heavy machine guns and even a tank.
Jonathan's opponent at next month's elections, former military ruler Muhammadu Buhari, has blamed government corruption for the lack of firepower.
But the head of state appeared to blame his predecessors for not investing enough in defence in a speech at a rally in Lagos on Thursday.
Control of border
Boko Haram fighters on Saturday captured Baga and the headquarters of the Multinational Joint Task Force (MNJTF), which is made of troops from Nigeria, Niger and Chad.
Security analysts this week said that Baga was of strategic importance for Boko Haram, as it was thought to be the last town in northern Borno under federal government control.
The militants, who have seized more than two dozen towns in northeast Nigeria in the last six months, now control all three of Borno's borders with Niger, Chad and Cameroon.
Bukar said the Islamists used petrol bombs and explosives to destroy Baga, a key fishing and commercial hub, and surrounding villages on the shores of Lake Chad.
"We have over 20,000 people displaced from Baga and surrounding villages in a camp in Maiduguri and we are making arrangements to convey another 10,000 from Monguno where they ran to," he added.
Gamandi said a head count would have to be conducted to determine the number of dead and missing but that could pose difficulties as residents fled both towards Maiduguri and also into Chad.
Some 560 villagers have been stranded on an island on Lake Chad since Saturday without food, he added.
"They told me that some of them are dying from lack of food, cold and malaria on the mosquito-infested island," he said.
"I was in constant touch with them until this morning when the phone they were using went off which I assume was due to dead battery."
Child suicide bomber sets off deadly explosion in Nigeria
A bomb worn by a girl aged about 10 exploded in a busy marketplace in the northeastern city of Maiduguri on Saturday, killing at least 16 people and injuring more than 20, security sources said.
“The explosive devices were wrapped around her body and the girl looked no more than 10 years old,” a police source said.
Maiduguri, the capital of Borno state, lies in the heartland of an insurgency by Sunni Muslim militant group Boko Haram, and is often hit by bomb attacks.
A Nigerian security source said the bomb went off at 12:15 p.m. (1115 GMT). The bodies of at least 16 bomb victims were counted in one hospital by mid-afternoon, civilian joint task force member Zakariya Mohammed told Reuters.
“Right now, there are 27 injured people in Borno Medical Hospital, while more were taken to other hospitals,” he said.
The northeast states of Borno, Yobe and Adamawa are bearing the brunt of a five-year-old insurgency by the Boko Haram, which wants to revive a medieval caliphate in Nigeria—Africa’s most populous country and its biggest energy producer.
Last year more than 10,000 people died in the bloodshed.
About 130 km (80 miles) away in the Yobe state capital Damaturu, the army managed to repel an Islamist militant attack on Friday evening, but not before considerable damage was wreaked in the area, a Reuters reporter in the city and witnesses said.
The Reuters witness saw a number of burnt buildings, including the police area command station and a mosque in the Abacha market, along with several shops.
No casualty figures were immediately available and the militants took their dead away with them. Damaturu was last attacked in early December when air strikes were needed to halt advancing militants.
On Saturday afternoon, two suicide bombers, arrested by police in a vehicle, blew themselves up when they were taken to the main police station in the town of Potiskum in Yobe state, residents who witnessed the scene said.
There was no immediate word on casualties.
The Boko Haram revolt is seen as the gravest security threat facing Nigeria, a country of 170 million people, and a headache for President Goodluck Jonathan, who is seeking re-election in a national ballot set for Feb. 14.
(REUTERS)
Wednesday, January 14, 2015
The twilight of the resource curse?
The twilight of the resource curse?
Africa’s growth is being powered by things other than commodities
FOR decades commodity prices have shaped Africa’s economic growth. The continent is home to a third of the planet’s mineral reserves, a tenth of the oil and it produces two-thirds of the diamonds. Little wonder then that, as a rule, when prices for natural resources and export crops have been high, growth has been good; when they have dipped, so has the continent’s economy (see chart 1).
Over the past decade Africa was among the world’s fastest-growing continents—its average annual rate was more than 5%—buoyed in part by improved governance and economic reforms. Commodity prices were also high. In previous cycles African economies have crashed when the prices of minerals, oil and other commodities have fallen. In 1998-99, during an oil-price fall, Nigeria’s naira lost 80% of its value. African currencies again took a beating during a period of turmoil in commodity markets in 2009.
Tanzania says ready to take on Rwandan rebels in Congo
Tanzania says ready to take on Rwandan rebels in Congo
2:48pm EST
By Fumbuka Ng'Wanakilala and Aaron Ross
DAR ES SALAAM/KINSHASA (Reuters) - Tanzania is ready to take on Rwandan Hutu rebels in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), President Jakaya Kikwete said, suggesting a joint offensive with U.N.-backed, South African forces is imminent.
The U.N. mission in Congo said government troops and peacekeepers were intensifying deployments towards rebel positions but insurgents were also mobilizing and mixing with civilians, raising the risk of them being used as human shields.
Congo's army and a 3,000-strong South African, Tanzanian and Malawian U.N. intervention force is due to launch an offensive against Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR) rebels, which have been at the heart of years of conflict in central Africa's Great Lakes region.
In a statement issued late on Tuesday after talks with South African Defense Minister Nosiviwe Mapisa-Nqakula, Kikwete dismissed talk he was reluctant to tackle the FDLR.
"There are people who pretend to read Tanzania's mind," Kikwete said. "They claim that Tanzania has no intention of taking on rebel groups in the DRC. These are bizarre people because Tanzania, like South Africa and Malawi, has troops in the DRC with a firm United Nations mandate."
UN Military Action in DRC 'Inevitable'
UN Military Action in DRC 'Inevitable'
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In a terse statement released this week, South Africa’s foreign ministry said it had no remaining options against the Forces Démocratiques pour la Libération du Rwanda (FDLR), a Rwanda-backed militia that has sown havoc in the mineral-rich eastern region of the DRC.
“South Africa reiterates that the FDLR has failed to comply with the 2 January 2015 deadline set by the Heads of State and Government of Southern African Development Community and the International Conference on the Great Lakes Region for the FDLR to disarm voluntarily or face military action, and has therefore rendered military option inevitable,” the statement read.
Boko Haram seizes military base on Nigerian border
Boko Haram seizes military base on Nigerian border
Text by NEWS WIRES
Latest update : 2015-01-05
Boko Haram killed dozens of civilians and at least 11 soldiers when the militants took control of a Nigerian town and army base on the shores of Lake Chad at the weekend, a military source and witnesses said on Monday.
The Islamists attacked the northeastern town of Baga and the barracks on its outskirts on Saturday, potentially providing a launchpad for more attacks in Nigeria and neighbouring countries.
Lying at the end of a semi-desert road, Baga is the headquarters of a multinational force comprising troops from Niger, Nigeria, Chad and Cameroon, all of touch which Lake Chad, though only Nigerian troops are usually stationed in the town.
Troops fled the area after Boko Haram took over the base.
The group’s five year insurgency to establish an Islamic state has killed many thousands in Africa’s top economy and most populous nation. More than 10,000 died in the violence last year, the Council on Foreign Relations says.
Witnesses who escaped to the bush ran past the bodies of soldiers and civilians along the way.
“I was hiding on a tree top since that Saturday night until this morning at 3 a.m.,” Abubakar Usman, a Baga resident, told Reuters by telephone.
“Women in a nearby house brought us water and food ... We snuck out and on our way, we saw lots of dead soldiers and 10 bodies of women.”
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