Monday, October 14, 2024

ICC prosecutor to renew Congo investigation, focusing on North Kivu

By Charlotte Van Campenhout, AMSTERDAM Netherlands

International Criminal Court (ICC) Prosecutor Karim Khan said on Monday his office will renew an investigation into Democratic Republic of Congo, focusing on alleged crimes committed in the North Kivu province since January 2022.

The renewed efforts will aim to address allegations including potential war crimes and crimes against humanity, and it will assess the responsibility of all parties involved, without targeting specific groups, Khan added.

He linked recent violence in the area to regional patterns of conflict dating back to 2002, when the ICC's jurisdiction in the DRC began.

The decision followed a second referral from the DRC government in May 2023, which requested an investigation into what the country called the systematic pillaging of its natural resources in eastern Congo by the Rwanda Defence Forces (RDF) and the M23 rebel group.

Duchess of Edinburgh hears of sexual exploitation of refugees

OUADDAÏ, Chad

The Duchess of Edinburgh has described distressing scenes of sexual exploitation, after meeting refugees from Sudan's civil war who had fled to neighbouring Chad.

Sophie heard the stories of women who had escaped the war in Sudan

"People are having to exchange food and water for sex, for rape. That is violence that is being enacted through conflict. It is being used as a bargaining tool," said Sophie, after a visit to this conflict-hit region of Africa.

She spoke to women who had travelled into Chad to escape the conflict across the border in Sudan.

"These women have no option but to leave. And, even then, they're lucky if some of them can get away, because... if they leave their houses they get killed," said Sophie, who was moved to tears by the harrowing testimonies.

This was the first royal visit to Chad and the three-day trip, carried out at the request of the UK's Foreign Office, was not officially announced until it was over on Monday.

The purpose of the visit, says Buckingham Palace, was to draw attention to the deteriorating humanitarian crisis caused by the war in Sudan, which was now producing challenges for neighbouring Chad.

More than 10 million people have been forced to flee their homes by the conflict in Sudan, says the Palace, with women and children a high proportion of those now arriving as refugees in Chad.

"This is a human catastrophe that is vast and Chad is having to pick up the pieces when it can ill afford to do so," said Sophie.

At a medical centre in Adre, near the border with Sudan, Sophie told the Press Association about the "devastating" experiences that had been described to her and how it had upset her.

"What they do to the children is... I can't even use the words," she said.

Sophie had spoken to a woman who had fled from a town in the west Darfur region of Sudan, with the population facing threats and violence.

Her son and brothers had been rounded up and taken away and Sophie said the woman had seen bodies piled up in the street "like a wall".

 

The duchess, 59, had travelled to this part of Chad with Unicef representatives and visited a refugee camp where almost a quarter of a million people had gathered, with many more still arriving from Sudan.

She spoke to the mother of a small child who had travelled for 10 days to reach safety and did not know what had happened to her husband in the fighting.

"Whilst the world and its attention is being focused very much on other conflicts around the world, the humanitarian crisis being faced by the people of Sudan, which is landing on Chad's shores, cannot be ignored," said the Duchess of Edinburgh.

This is the latest visit by Sophie to highlight the issue of violence against women at times of armed conflict.

Earlier this year she became the first royal to visit Ukraine since the Russian invasion.

Her trips have often been to the type of destinations not usually on royal tours, including South Sudan, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Iraq and Sierra Leone.

African nations race to put satellites in space

NAIROBI, Kenya

One by one, the satellites – each of them encrusted with a hodge-podge of solar panels and other gizmos – detached from their mothership.

They had blasted off from Earth just an hour earlier, on 16 August. The 116 satellites onboard the launch vehicle were mostly designed and built by Western nations and businesses – but one of them was different.

It was the first such spacecraft ever developed by the African country of Senegal.

A small CubeSat called GaindeSAT-1A, it will provide earth observation and telecommunications services. Senegal’s president called it a big step towards “technological sovereignty”.

The cost of launching a satellite has fallen significantly in recent years, says Kwaku Sumah, founder and managing director at Spacehubs Africa, a space consultancy.

“That reduction in cost has opened the market up,” he adds. “These smaller nations… now have the opportunity to get involved.”

To date, a total of 17 African countries have put more than 60 satellites into orbit and, along with Senegal, both Djibouti and Zimbabwe have also watched their first satellites become operational during the past 12 months. Dozens more African satellites are expected to go into orbit in the coming years.

And yet, the continent currently has no space launch facilities of its own.

Plus, powerful countries elsewhere in the world are arguably using nascent African space programmes as a means of building relationships and asserting their geopolitical dominance more broadly.

Can more African nations chart their own way into orbit – and beyond?

“It’s important for African countries to have their own satellites,” says Mr Sumah. He argues that it means better control over the technology and easier access to satellite data.

This information could help Africans monitor crops, detect threats posed by extreme weather such as floods, or improve telecommunications in remote areas, he adds.

But boldly going to space is still seen as “something for the elite” in Africa, says Jessie Ndaba, co-founder and managing director at Astrofica Technologies, a space tech firm in South Africa that designs satellites. Business at her firm remains “very slow” overall, she adds.

Senegal's first satellite hitched a lift on a SpaceX launcher in August

Given the massive threat posed to the continent by climate change, space tech should be used to monitor food and resources, she suggests. An African space race to reach the moon or Mars, in contrast, wouldn’t be helpful: “We’ve got to look at the challenges that we have in Africa and find ways of solving those.”

For Sarah Kimani, of the Kenyan Meteorological Department, satellites have proved invaluable in helping her and her colleagues track dangerous weather conditions. She recalls using earth observation data provided by Eumetsat, a European satellite agency, to monitor a major dust storm in March. “We were able to tell the direction of this dust storm,” she says.

Later this year, she and her colleagues will begin receiving data from the latest generation of Eumetsat spacecraft, which will provide wildfire and lightning monitoring tools among other benefits. “It will help us improve our early warning systems,” adds Ms Kimani, noting that the collaboration with Eumetsat has been “very efficient and effective”.

Climate change brings meteorological threats that can emerge rapidly – from major storms to extreme drought. “The intensity of these hazards… is changing,” says Ms Kimani, noting that satellite data that could be updated as frequently as every five minutes, or less, would help meteorologists track such phenomena.

She also argues that Kenya – which put its first operational earth observation satellite into orbit last year – would benefit from having more of its own meteorological spacecraft in the future. As would other African countries in general. “Only Africa understands her own needs,” says Ms Kimani.

Currently, many African nations with young space programmes are dependent on foreign technology and experts, says Temidayo Oniosun, managing director of Space in Africa, a market research and consulting company.

Some countries have sent students and engineers abroad to pick up space tech know-how. “The problem is, when these guys come back, there is no laboratory, no facility for them,” says Mr Oniosun.

Senegal’s new satellite was built by Senegalese technicians. While not wanting to detract from their significant achievement, it is worth noting that development of the satellite was made possible through a partnership with a French university, and that the spacecraft was launched on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from California.

Europe, China and the US have all involved themselves in numerous African space programmes. This has helped boost African technology into orbit, for sure, but it has also served as a “critical diplomatic tool”, says Mr Oniosun. It makes him “a little worried”, he admits.

Observers have suggested that African space programmes are not just about getting African nations into space – they are also, to some extent, arenas where some of the world’s most powerful countries compete with one another.

Mr Sumah is positive about the situation. “We can… play these different powers against each other to get the best deals,” he says.

Officials in both the US and China have considered the “strategic” implications of involving themselves in African space endeavours, says Julie Klinger, at the University of Delaware.

“That does bring with it an intensifying need for updating global treaties and strategies around maintaining a peaceful and manageable space environment,” she adds.

But there are opportunities, too. Dr Klinger notes that space launches from equatorial regions – which may not require as much fuel – could mean that African space ports have an important role to play in the coming decades.

The Luigi Broglio Space Center, an old Italian-built space port including a sea platform off the coast of Kenya, could be brought back into service one day, for example. The last launches there took place in the 1980s.

Ultimately, we can expect to see rising activity in space from African nations. “We’ve got close to 80 satellites that are currently in development,” says Mr Oniosun, “I think the future of the industry is very bright.”

Nile River Pact enters into force despite Egypt objections

ENTEBBE, Uganda

A landmark multinational agreement on managing the waters of the Nile River has entered into force -- over the vehement objections of Egypt.

The Nile River Basin Cooperative Framework Agreement (CFA) took effect on Sunday after more than a decade of negotiations among countries that share the mighty river.

The Nile Basin Initiative -- a partnership of 10 Nile riparian countries based in the Ugandan town of Entebbe -- described the CFA as a "defining moment" in the history of the Nile Basin.

"(The agreement) is a testament to our collective determination to harness the Nile River for the benefit of all, ensuring its equitable and sustainable use for generations to come," it said in a statement.

But the treaty was signed and ratified by only five Nile nations -- notably Ethiopia -- but not Egypt or Sudan.

The latter two have been locked in a long-running dispute with Ethiopia over the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD), a mega hydropower project on the Blue Nile.

Ethiopia considers the $4 billion dam vital to its development and the supply of electricity to its 120 million-strong population.

But Egypt has long viewed it as an existential threat, as the north African country relies on the Nile for 97 percent of its water needs.

"Egypt will not compromise even a metre of Nile water, and rejects totally the Entebbe agreement," its irrigation minister Hani Sewilam said Sunday, according to state-linked media.

A summit of Nile nations was due to be held in Uganda on October 17 but has been postponed until early next year, Vincent Bagiire, permanent secretary at Uganda's foreign ministry told AFP on Monday.

He declined to give a reason amid speculations it was due to disagreements among member countries.

The Nile Basin Initiative says the CFA aims to "rectify historical imbalances in access to the Nile's waters and ensure that all Nile Basin countries -- whether upstream or downstream -- can benefit from this shared resource".

It said the Nile, which stretches over 11 countries, sustains more than half a billion people.

The Nile Basin Initiative groups Burundi, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Egypt, Ethiopia, Kenya, Rwanda, South Sudan, Sudan, Tanzania and Uganda, while Eritrea has the role of observer.

EAST AFRICA NEWSPAPERS 15/10/2024





Sunday, October 13, 2024

Ukraine denounces Russia's reported execution of captured troops

LONDON, England 

Ukraine's human rights ombudsman has denounced the alleged execution of nine captured Ukrainian troops by Russian forces in the Kursk border region.

Dmytro Lubinets said he had written to the United Nations and the Red Cross about the allegations, accusing Moscow of breaching "all the rules and customs of war".

The intervention follows reporting by Ukrainian battlefield analysis site DeepState, which published drone footage purporting to show the dead troops who it said were drone operators. Officials in Russia have yet to comment on the allegations.

Kyiv is believed to have deployed thousands of troops into the Russian border region since it launched its shock incursion earlier this summer.

The images published by DeepState showed the dead Ukrainian troops stripped to their underwear and lying face down in what appeared to be farmland in Kursk. Our blog cannot indepenelty verify the images.

The outlet said the drone operators had been overrun by a rapid Russian advance.

"These actions must not go unpunished, and the enemy must bear full responsibility," Mr Lubinets wrote in a message to Telegram. "The international community should not turn a blind eye to such crimes!"

Kyiv has frequently accused Russian of executing captured Ukrainian troops - a war crime under the Geneva Convention. Earlier this month the prosecutor general's office alleged that Russian forces had executed 93 Ukrainian soldiers since the beginning of the conflict.

It added that an official investigation had been opened into reports that 16 Ukrainian soldiers were executed in the eastern Donetsk region near the city of Pokrovsk - where fighting has raged for months. Officials said the reports would mark the "largest mass execution" of Ukrainian prisoners of war by Russian troops since Moscow launched its invasion in February 2022.

The Kremlin denies that its soldiers have been committing war crimes in Ukraine.

The reports come as Russian forces continue to attack Ukrainian positions in Kursk. President Volodymyr Zelensky said in his nightly address from Kyiv on Saturday that Ukrainian troops had fought off a renewed Russian advance in the region.

Analysts say that Kyiv launched the offensive to try and force Russia to redirect some of its troops from its offensive in eastern Ukraine. The Institute for the Study of War (ISW) has estimated that around 40,000 Russian forces are now active in Kursk - up from 11,000 when Ukrainian troops first crossed the border.

But the offensive has failed to slow Russian momentum in the eastern Donbas region, where relentless attacks has slowly pushed Ukrainian forces backwards.

The Ukrainian leader acknowledged that "there are very difficult conditions, with harsh enemy actions" in both Donetsk and Zaporizhzhia in his address on Saturday.

On Sunday morning, the Russian defence ministry said its forces had seized the village of Mykhailivka, which sits along a highway near the key city of Pokrovsk.

Russian forces have been advancing towards Pokrovsk - which is a key logistics hub - for months. Experts say if Russia can seize the city Ukraine's ability to resupply units in other crucial towns would become far more difficult.

Meanwhile, Russian aerial attacks on Ukraine continued overnight. Air force officials in Kyiv said Moscow launched 68 drones and four missiles towards Ukrainian territory.

Friday, October 11, 2024

Former China bank vice-governor gets death sentence for corruption

By Cao Yin, HUBEI China 

Fan Yifei, the former vice-governor of the People's Bank of China, was sentenced to death with a two-year reprieve for accepting bribes worth more than 386 million yuan ($53.3 million) by a court in Huanggang, Hubei province, on Thursday.

Fan was also deprived of his political rights for life, and all of his personal assets were confiscated, according to the ruling made by the Huanggang Intermediate People's Court.

In China, if an inmate given a suspended death sentence commits no new offense during probation, his or her sentence will usually be reduced to life imprisonment. 

If the inmate behaves well in prison, their sentences may be further commutated, or they may become eligible for parole.

In Fan's case, if he behaves well during the reprieve, his sentence will be reduced to life imprisonment, but there will be no possibility of commutation or parole, the court said. 

He will spend the rest of his life behind bars.

In addition, the court added that Fan's illicit gains will be recovered and turned over to the state treasury.

According to the investigation conducted by the court, from 1993 to 2022, Fan was found to have taken advantage of his positions — including as deputy head of China Construction Bank's fund planning division, chairman of the Bank of Shanghai, vice-president of China Investment Corporation and vice-governor of the PBOC, the country's central bank — to seek profits for individuals and departments in various matters such as loan financing, business contracting and job transfers. In return, he accepted bribes of over 386 million yuan.

"But considering he confessed to the offense, voluntarily shared some of the bribery facts unknown to investigators and returned his illicit gains, we leniently punished him, giving him a suspended death sentence," it said.

Fan, a 60-year-old native of Jiangsu province, graduated with a doctorate in finance from the Renmin University of China. 

He joined the Communist Party of China in 1991 and worked in the nation's banking system for decades. He served as vice-governor of the central bank in February 2015.

Fan was placed under disciplinary and supervisory investigation in November 2022, becoming the first high-ranking official known to have been investigated after the 20th National Congress of the CPC, which was held in October that year.

EAST AFRICA NEWSPAPERS 12/10/2024

 










Haiti Prime Minister arrives in Kenya for high-level bilateral talks

NAIROBI, Kenya

Acting Haitian Prime Minister Garry Conille has landed in Kenya for a four-day state visit.

Kenya’s Prime Cabinet Secretary, Musalia Mudavadi who is also the foreign affairs Cabinet Secretary welcomed Conille at the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport (JKIA) on Thursday.

According to Mudavadi, Conille is expected to hold high-level bilateral talks with President William Ruto surrounding strengthening security cooperation and fostering partnerships that promote regional stability between Kenya and Haiti.

“This visit by H.E. Dr. Conille represents a significant moment in the deepening of diplomatic relations between our two countries, with both Kenya and Haiti eager to explore new avenues for collaboration in economic development and security partnerships,” Mudavadi stated.

The CS was accompanied by his Labour and Social Protection counterpart Dr Alfred Mutua, National Security Advisor, Dr. Monica Juma and Butere MP Tindi Mwale.

The visit by the Haitian prime minister comes days after the Caribbean nation's apparent massacre northwest of Port-au-Prince that left at least 70 people dead.

The attack, carried out early Thursday in the town of Pont Sonde, some 100 kilometres (60 miles) from the capital, also saw scores of houses and vehicles torched after gang members opened fire.