Thursday, December 17, 2015

CAR votes 'yes' to constitutional reform, preliminary results show


© Residents of the PK5 district hold a banner reading "We want to vote" in front of the United Nations mission in Central African Republic in Bangui on December 13, 2015
Text by NEWS WIRES
Latest update : 2015-12-17

Nearly 90 percent of voters in the Central African Republic's capital Bangui voted for changes to the constitution in a referendum aimed at ending years of sectarian strife, though turnout was low at 30 percent, partial results showed Thursday.

The voting on Sunday was marred by violence triggered by armed factions opposed to the referendum,in a country that plunged into conflict after a mainly Muslim rebellion overthrew in 2013 the longtime Christian leader, Francois Bozize.
"The 'Yes' vote won 77,979, and the 'No' vote took 8,984 votes -- so 90 percent were 'Yes' votes, and 10 percent were 'No'," Julius Ngouade Baba of the National Electoral Authority (ANE) said, adding that turnout was low in Bangui at 30 percent.
Ballots from other areas of the country had still not all been counted, he added.
Five people were killed Sunday and 20 hurt in an attack in the majority-Muslim PK-5 district of Bangui during the referendum.
The attack involving rocket launchers and machine guns disrupted voting in the flashpoint PK-5 district. The violence has been attributed to a faction of the Muslim ex-Seleka rebellion that overthrew Bozize.
Hundreds of people headed to the UN peacekeeping headquarters on Wednesday to demand the expulsion of "enemies of peace" from the PK-5 neighbourhood.
The referendum was seen as a test run for presidential and parliamentary elections due to take place December 27.
But after Sunday's violence in the PK-5 area and other parts of the country, a second day of voting was held Monday.
(AFP)
Date created : 2015-12-17

Burundi’s worsening crisis ‘is political, not ethnic’

© Stringer, AFP | A military vehicle, carrying men tied up, drives through Burundi's capital Bujumbura on December 11, 2015
Text by FRANCE 24 
Latest update : 2015-12-14

A deadly burst of violence in troubled Burundi has stoked fears that the country’s political crisis could escalate into a full-blown conflict, barely a decade after the end of a civil war fought largely along ethnic lines.

Dozens of people were killed on Friday after coordinated attacks on three military sites prompted a fierce crackdown by security forces in and around the capital, Bujumbura.
The army said 87 people died during and after the attacks, including eight soldiers and 79 people it identified as "enemies" of the government. But other sources said the real toll was significantly higher.
Several witnesses quoted by AFP and REUTERS news agencies accused the security forces of extrajudicial killings, describing officers breaking down doors in search of young men and shooting them at close range.
Some of the victims had their arms tied behind their backs, they said.
“Figures are still unconfirmed, but credible local sources at the weekend were saying that more than 100 people had been killed – including people not involved in the attacks on the military,” said Carina Tertsakian, Burundi researcher for Human Rights Watch (HRW), in an interview with FRANCE 24.
Tertsakian called for “a serious, independent investigation to establish the exact circumstances of the killings”, noting that Burundi’s “politicised and corrupt judicial system” was not up to the task.
She pointed out that police and local authorities had swiftly removed bodies in the wake of the killings, thereby compromising the investigation.
‘Not like the 1990s’
The outburst of violence was the deadliest since President Pierre Nkurunziza announced in April he would seek a third term in office, a move his opponents described as unconstitutional.
Since then, the country has been through a botched coup, a boycotted election, a failed African mediation and waves of deadly violence.
Prior to Friday’s killings, the United Nations said at least 240 people had been killed in clashes between supporters and opponents of the 51-year-old president, and 200,000 people have fled to neighbouring countries.
Critics say Nkurunziza’s regime has seized on the opportunity to crack down on all forms of dissent, including prominent human rights activists.
The worsening violence has raised fears of a return to civil war and stirred the spectre of ethnic strife, a decade after the end of a 1993-2006 conflict between rebels from the country’s ethnic Hutu majority and an army dominated by minority Tutsis.
Some 300,000 people were killed in the war, which began just a few months before a genocide of mostly Tutsis in neighbouring Rwanda, home to a similar ethnic mix. “The latest killings definitely represent an escalation, but the violence has swung up and down throughout the crisis and the situation is still very unpredictable,” said HRW’s Tertsakian.
While stressing the urgency of the situation, she cautioned against drawing parallels with the ethnic bloodshed that once scarred the country.
“It’s a different situation from the 1990s,” she said. “This is not an ethnic conflict but a political one, pitting a president who is clinging on to power against a variety of opponents.”
Tertsakian said a handful of politicians had indulged in some sort of ethnic rhetoric to whip up support, but that they had largely failed to ethnicise the crisis.
She added that people targeted by security forces included both Tutsis and Hutus opposed to Nkurunziza.
Time for diplomacy
Friday’s killings raised alarm bells around the world, prompting the US State Department to urge all US citizens in the country to “leave as soon as it feasible to do so”.
But despite the growing alarm, HRW’s Tertsakian said Nkurunziza’s regime remained in denial about the volatile situation.
“Government officials have released statements that are quite shocking in their apparent indifference to the killings, suggesting the situation is calm and under control,” she said.
Florent Geel of the Paris-based International Human Rights Federation (FIDH) said the Burundian regime remained “stubbornly deaf” to both domestic and international pressure for a negotiated solution.
He also noted that the festering crisis had led to a “radicalisation of the opposition”, as evidenced by Friday’s coordinated attacks on military targets.
Geel said the United Nations and African Union had to step up the pressure on Burundi’s authorities and push for a government of national unity.
“The UN’s Human Rights body will hold a special session in Geneva on Thursday. We’re expecting them to unveil strong measures, such as sending a team of negotiators and deploying a police force to monitor the situation,” he told FRANCE 24.
Following Friday’s violence, the European Union urged Burundi's opposing sides to begin a political dialogue with Uganda acting as mediator.
As a sweetener, EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini said the bloc stood ready to provide a financial contribution to get the talks off to an "immediate start".
“We need a massive diplomatic push and we need it fast,” said Geel. “If not, we could end up in six months with UN peacekeepers stuck in yet another inextricable conflict.”
Coup plotters go on trial
The trial of 28 people accused in connection with a May attempt to overthrow President Pierre Nkurunziza began on Monday at the supreme court in the town of Gitega. The defendants include former defence minister Cyrille Ndayirukiye and 27 military and security officials. The botched coup occurred on May 13 while the president was out of the country, but collapsed two days later following stiff resistance from Nkurunziza loyalists.

Date created : 2015-12-14

It’s time to negotiate': Burundi activist appeals to leaders

© AFP file photo | Soldiers on guard in Bujumbura on July 21, 2015.
Latest update : 2015-12-17

A Burundian activist has called for dialogue to resolve the political crisis sparked by President Pierre Nkurunziza's bid to seek a third term in office, warning that it risks becoming an ethnic conflict.

Burundian grassroots activist Deogratias Niyonkuru stops to take a closer look at a work of art near the General Assembly Hall at the United Nations Headquarters in New York. He takes out his mobile phone to photograph the gun turned into a musical instrument.
“It’s a very good idea to transform a weapon into a guitar. That’s what should be done in Burundi,” Niyonkuru says.

Ghana: Cancer Ward

Of all the exports from the West to the developing world, breast cancer is one of the most unpleasant.
What was once described as a curse of the rich is now on the march through Africa and Asia - with increasing prosperity and a move away from traditional lifestyles believed to be the factors to blame.
Specialists say that a combination of richer diets, smaller families, delayed child-bearing and reduced breast-feeding have driven the increase in number of breast cancer cases. Rising obesity and increased alcohol consumption may also be factors.

Mugabe: Rivalries threaten to split ruling party

The annual conference of Zimbabwe's ruling Zanu-PF party is under way, with the disastrous state of the economy as a major talking point.
Another issue in focus is the growing question mark over who will succeed 91-year-old President Robert Mugabe.
He has not named a successor and there is a growing power battle behind the scenes.
The president said on Wednesday that the party was in danger of splitting and accused rival factions of stoking division as they position themselves to eventually succeed him.

Ahead of vote on term limits, Rwandans worry about presidential power grab

KIGALI, Rwanda — In her days as an active member of the Rwandan Patriotic Front, Eloise Umutoni did her best to show support for Rwanda’s ruling party and its leader, Paul Kagame.
As a district-level party cadre, Umutoni was responsible for mobilizing youth in line with the RPF’s development agenda, widely considered to be one of the most ambitious on the African continent. By helping lead various government initiatives, from the monthly communal work program, umuganda, to a campaign to eradicate traditional thatched roof houses, she was the face of the RPF for the young people of her village, a cog in a party machinery that penetrates deep into rural Rwandan life. Come local or national elections, she would dress in the RPF’s red, white and baby blue, extolling the party’s role in Rwanda’s progress, and reminding voters what was expected of them.
“I’m the one who told people, ‘You know who to choose,’ ” she said on a recent afternoon. “The RPF is like a family. And everyone understands they’re not supposed to vote against it.”

South Africa's ambassador to Australia Ndebele charged with corruption

  • 15 December 2015
  •  
  • From the sectionAfrica
South African Minister of transport Sbu Ndebele unveils a plaque on 30 August 2009 during the official launch of the new Johannesburg Bus Rapid Transit System Rea VayaImage copyrightAFP
Image captionSibusiso Ndebele spearheaded efforts to improve South Africa's transport network
South Africa's ambassador to Australia has appeared in court in South Africa on corruption charges.
Sibusiso Ndebele is accused of accepting more than $665,000 (£440,000) to facilitate tenders worth $133m while transport minister, local media reports.
The court did not ask him to plead and he was freed on bail.
Mr Ndebele is the latest in a string of senior South African officials to face corruption charges.
Mr Ndebele was freed on $670 bail by a magistrate at the commercial crimes court in KwaZulu-Natal province, National Prosecution Authority (NPA) spokesman Luvuyo Mfaku told the BBC.
The case had been postponed to July 2016 so that police investigations could continue, he added.
The diplomat was investigated by the Hawks, a police unit which focuses mainly on organised crime.
Mr Ndebele was transport minister from 2009 to 2011, and was also involved in South Africa's bid for the 2010 football World Cup.

Ghana arrests 'Burkina Faso arms dealer' in Kumasi

  • 15 December 2015
  •  
  • From the sectionAfrica
weaponsImage copyrightNANA KWAKU ABRAMPAH
Image captionSome of the weapons found were capable of firing for six hours continuously
A suspected arms dealer from Burkina Faso has been arrested in Ghana after officers found weapons capable of shooting down an aircraft in his bedroom, a police commander has said.
The 72-year-old man was detained in the city of Kumasi along with four other people suspected of buying weapons.
He confessed to smuggling in arms from Ivory Coast, Burkina Faso and Niger, police in Kumasi said.
Machine guns and anti-aircraft ammunition were among the arms found.
Ashanti Regional Police Commander Nathan Kofi Boakye said some of the weapons found could be fired for six hours continuously.
Some of them were like those found mounted on the back of a pick-up truck in rebel-held areas, he said.
The search for an arms dealer started in October after a number of bullets were discovered by police, the commander said.
Weapons found in Kumasi

Burundi crisis: African Union 'won't allow genocide'

  • 2 hours ago
  •  
  • From the sectionAfrica
Soldiers run from a house set afire by protestors opposed to the Burundian president's bid to stand for a third term in Butagazwa, Mugongomanga, some 30km east of Bujumbura, on June 5, 2015Image copyrightAFP
Image captionThe government denies there could be a genocide
The African Union, discussing the situation in Burundi, says Africa will "not allow another genocide to take place on its soil".
The UN said it would send a fact-finding mission to Burundi amid fears that violence could spiral into civil war and possible ethnic conflict.
Last Friday, 87 people were killed in clashes in the capital, Bujumbura.
Unrest began in April when President Pierre Nkurunziza announced he would seek a third term in office.
He survived a coup attempt in May, and secured a third term in disputed elections in July.
AU Peace and Security Commissioner Smail Chergui has tweeted that the "clear" message coming from the AU is that the "killings in Burundi must stop immediately".
The government has said there is no threat of genocide.
The AU's peace and security council has been discussing sending an AU force to Burundi.

Leading Rwandan genocide suspect arrested in DR Congo

One of nine top fugitive Rwandan genocide suspects, a former mayor accused of slaughtering thousands of people and organising mass rapes in 1994, has been arrested, the United Nations said.

Ladislas Ntaganzwa, who had a $5 million (4.6 million euro) US bounty on his head and has been indicted by a UN-backed court for genocide and crimes against humanity, was captured in Democratic Republic of Congo.
Around 800,000 people -- mostly members of the minority Tutsi community -- were slaughtered in the 100-day orgy of violence in 1994, largely by ethnic Hutus.
Ntaganzwa is accused of organising "the massacre of thousands of Tutsis at various locations," the UN-backed Mechanism for International Criminal Tribunals (MICT) said in a statement received Thursday.
"He was also alleged to have orchestrated the rape and sexual violence committed against many women," it said.
Ntaganzwa, 53, is expected to face trial in Rwanda on nine counts of genocide, crimes against humanity and violating the Geneva Conventions.
DR Congo army spokesman Guillaume Djike said Ntaganzwa was captured overnight Saturday by police, some 60 kilometres (40 miles) north of the eastern city of Goma, where he was brought on Wednesday.
$5 million reward
Djike said the fugitive was fleeing an army offensive launched the day before against Congo-based Rwandan FDLR rebels, a Hutu group seeking the overthrow of the Tutsi-led government in Kigali.
Congo's Minster of Justice Alexis Thambwe Mwamba said Ntaganzwa would be taken to Kinshasa for questioning, without confirming whether he would be extradited to Rwanda to face trial.
The US State Department, which offered the $5 million bounty for his arrest under its War Crimes Rewards Program, lists Ntaganzwa as "one of the main instigators of the genocide" in Rwanda's southern Butare district.
"Ntaganzwa is also accused of making speeches calling for the elimination of Tutsis in the region and facilitating the killing of Tutsi refugees," the US bounty notice reads.
Ntaganzwa was intially wanted for trial at the UN-backed International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda(ICTR), based in the northern Tanzanian town of Arusha.
But his case was transferred to Rwanda in 2012, and the MICT prosecutor Hassan Jallow has asked authorities in DR Congo to transfer him to Kigali.
According to a 44-page ICTR indictment, Ntaganzwa helped to establish, train and arm the local Interahamwe militia, the Hutu youth wing of the political party he ran in the Nyakizu area, "with the intent to exterminate the Tutsi population and eliminate its 'accomplices'."

Military sites attacked as Burundi violence escalates

Gunmen attacked military sites in Burundi’s capital on Friday and "many" assailants were killed or arrested after heavy fighting, officials and soldiers said, as Western powers fear the nation is sliding back into ethnic conflict.

Heavy gunfire and blasts erupted early on Friday and shots were still heard across the capital Bujumbura long after daybreak. Residents said the streets were empty at a time when people are normally heading to work. Police were out in force.
Kenya Airways and RwandAir cancelled their flights to the Burundian capital on Friday, officials said, after gunmen launched attacks on military bases in Bujumbura in the early hours of the morning.
“The reason we could not land is that there is no personnel,” said Kenya Airways Corporate Communications Manager Wanjiku Mugo, adding that all three of its daily flights were cancelled.
A RwandAir official said its flight to Bujumbura on Friday had also been cancelled. The airport had not officially been shut, a Burundi presidential adviser said.
Repeated attacks from anti-government forces
The violence in Burundi is unnerving for a volatile region which only two decades ago saw a genocide in next-door Rwanda.
Night-time gunfire and sporadic blasts have become common in Bujumbura during a crisis sparked in April by President Pierre Nkurunziza’s bid for a third term, which opponents - often known as ‘Sindumuja’ - said violated a deal that ended a civil war in 2005. Nkurunziza won a disputed election in July.
Residents said Friday’s flare-up was much more intense.
“Sindumuja tried to attack military camps but they failed,” presidential media adviser Willy Nyamitwe wrote on Twitter, describing the raids as “a diversion” to try to free prisoners.
“Situation is returning to normal as firearms are seized, many Sindumuja assailants killed or arrested,” he wrote.
A soldier who had spoken to colleagues inside one of the bases in Bujumbura’s Ngagara district, told Reuters at least two soldiers and five attackers had been killed.
A military spokesman could not be reached for comment.
Unrest continues months after attempted coup
Burundi’s political crisis led to a failed coup in May. One of the generals behind that coup said in July the group was still seeking to topple the president. Other plotters were caught and face trial.
Experts fear the army, which was restructured after the civil war to include both professional troops and rebel fighters, could fracture and further fuel the conflict.
A deputy presidential spokesman wrote on Twitter that the cabinet was holding a scheduled meeting on Monday and would discuss the 2016 budget, not any state of emergency. He also said the aim of the “armed gang” was to free prisoners.