Friday, April 29, 2022

Nearly 50% of Zimbabwean youth not in school - UNICEF

NEW YORK, United States

The United Nations Children’s Fund and Zimbabwe have released a report saying nearly half the country’s youth are not in school due to poverty exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic. The report says the percentage has more than doubled in the last three years.

Still, the UNICEF representative in Zimbabwe, Tajudeen Oyewale, has praised the government for adapting well to the COVID-19 pandemic, and getting tens of thousands of children into remote learning programs during the lockdowns.

The new UNICEF report, however, found that nearly half the country’s youth are not in school due to chronic poverty aggravated by the pandemic.

Before the pandemic, 21% of Zimbabwean youth were not in school. Now the number stands at 47%.

Taungana Ndoro, the spokesman for Zimbabwe’s ministry of education, told VOA he needed time to confirm the figures in the UNICEF report.

Thabo Dube is a 48-year-old unemployed man with nine-year-old twins and a 16-year-old. He used to run an informal farm produce shop before the start of the pandemic.

Dube said police confiscated his supplies when he tried to reopen his shop during a government-ordered lockdown.

When lockdown measures were eventually relaxed, Dube said he had no stock to sell or capital to restart – yet his children wanted to go to school. Dube said he moved them from private schools to a government school, but still can’t afford the fees.

In Zimbabwe, families pay less than $100 per year to send their children to an elementary school, and about $300 for a secondary school. The fees may sound low but are a lot for people who sometimes get by on one dollar per day.

Oyewale said UNICEF is trying to keep children in school through several means, including the provision of learning materials.

“Lastly, by the introduction of what we call school improvement grants, we are able to support households who are finding it difficult to bring their children to school,” he said.

UNICEF says Zimbabwe is spending 13% of its budget on education instead of 20%, which was agreed to at a conference years ago in Dakar, Senegal. - VoA

African leaders in Kenya for ex-president’s funeral

South Africa’s President, Cyril Ramaphosa (Courtesy)

NAIROBI, Kenya

A state funeral service is being held on Friday for former Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki who died a week ago at the age of 90.

Several African presidents and other global dignitaries will be attending, with South Africa’s Cyril Ramaphosa, Salva Kiir of South Sudan and Ethiopia’s Sahle-Work Zewde already confirming their attendance.

President Salva Kiir of South Sudan

Others leaders who represented their Presidents are: Dr Isdor Mpango - Vice President of Tanzania, Jessica Alupo - Vice president of Uganda, General Constantino Chiwenga – Vice President of Zimbabwe and  Ă‰douard Ngirente - Prime minister of Rwanda.

The event is being held at the Nyayo National Stadium in the capital Nairobi. Major roads in the city have been closed to facilitate movement to the venue.

Kenyans have been queuing to pay their last respects to the late president for the past several days, viewing his body at parliament where it lay in state.

The country has set aside Friday as a public holiday to allow Kenyans to mourn and attend the service.

Dr Isdor Mpango - Vice President of Tanzania

Neighbouring Tanzania has declared two days of mourning from Friday in solidarity with Kenyans.

Mr Kibaki was sworn in as the third president of Kenya near the end of 2002, and served until 2013.

Jessica Alupo - Vice president of Uganda

The former president will be buried on Saturday at his home in central Kenya. - Africa

General Constantino Chiwenga – Vice President of Zimbabwe

Mozambique: Corruption cost state 4.7 million US dollars last year

MAPUTO, South Africa

Corruption cost the Mozambican state about 300 million meticais (4.7 million US dollars, at the current exchange rate), according to Attorney-General Beatriz Buchili.

Giving her annual report on the state of the justice system to the country’s parliament, the Assembly of the Republic, on Wednesday, Buchili said that the police force (PRM) topped the list of most corrupt state institutions.

1.913 cases of alleged corruption were processed last year – a 1.6 per cent increase on the 1,882 cases processed in 2020. There were 73 cases of corruption involving the police, 42 in the institutions of justice, 39 in the education services, 24 in the health service, 17 involving immigration officers, and 14 discovered in the Tax Authority (AT).

Buchili said she was concerned at the growing number of judges, prosecutors and other law officers involved in acts of corruption, “since these are officials who are granted powers by the law that supposedly guarantee integrity”.

In 2021, criminal proceedings were initiated against 25 judges and prosecutors, compared with 22 the previous years. All were accused of corruption and embezzlement.

Corruption in the immigration service could also be extremely serious. Buchili pointed to a scheme involving officials in the Foreign Ministry and in the Mozambican High Commission in Pretoria, and the consulates in Johannesburg, Durban and Nelspruit, who were paid to issue entry visas without the necessary documentation.

“This behaviour may contribute to individuals linked to organized crime entering the country”, Buchili warned. Those taking advantage of corruption in immigration could include drugs and gun traffickers and terrorists.

The illegal entry of such people into Mozambique. Buchili said, “compromises peace, national sovereignty and socio-economic development”.

She also confirmed the accusation made frequently in the Mozambican media that members of the police force are involved in the wave of kidnappings that has plagued Mozambican cities. This was a truly transnational crime with the kidnap gangs inside Mozambique working closely with criminals outside the country.

Buchili said the kidnappings had driven some business people to leave Mozambique altogether. Even when they were released from captivity, more money was demanded from the victims as a “freedom tax”.

But some of those who should be on the front line combatting the kidnappers are in league with them. “The involvement of some members of the police, lawyers, magistrates and other figures in the judiciary creates fragilities in investigating these cases”, said Buchili, “and endangers the safety of those public servants who are committed to fighting against crime”.

State agents, she added, are also involved in organized crime inside the country’s prisons, allowing mobile phones and computers to be smuggled to inmates. Some of these prisoners, she accused, had been involved in kidnappings, and continued to command kidnap gangs from behind bars.

Africa seeing uptick in COVID cases driven by S.Africa - WHO

JOHANNESBURG/NAIROBI/DAKAR

Africa is seeing an uptick in COVID-19 infections, largely driven by a doubling in cases reported in South Africa, the World Health Organization said on Thursday, urging people across the continent to continue to get vaccinated.

Narok, Kenya

Africa had been experiencing a lull in COVID cases, with the WHO earlier this month pointing to the longest-running decline in weekly infections on the continent since the start of the pandemic. 

But last week cases started to pick up in South Africa -- the country that has recorded the most infections and deaths in Africa to date -- and health authorities there are monitoring for signs of a fifth infection wave.

"This week new COVID-19 cases and deaths on the continent increased for the first time after a decline of more than two months for cases and one month for deaths," Benido Impouma, director for communicable and non-communicable diseases at the WHO's Africa office, told an online news conference.

Impouma said there was no evidence as yet to suggest the rise in cases was linked to any new sub-lineages or a new coronavirus variant.

Helen Rees, executive director of the University of the Witwatersrand's Reproductive Health and HIV Institute in Johannesburg, told the same news conference that an increasing share of South Africa's COVID cases were the BA.4 and BA.5 sub-lineages of the Omicron variant.

But she said the country had so far not seen a huge increase in mortality or intensive care admissions.

Separately, the WHO also said on Thursday that Africa was witnessing a surge in outbreaks of vaccine-preventable diseases including measles, polio and yellow fever.

"The rise in outbreaks of other vaccine-preventable diseases is a warning sign. As Africa works hard to defeat COVID-19, we must not forget other health threats," WHO Africa director Matshidiso Moeti said in a statement.

Central African Republic adopts bitcoin as an official currency

BANGUI, Central African Republic

Central African Republic has adopted bitcoin as an official currency, the presidency said on Wednesday, becoming the first country in Africa and only the second in the world to do so.

Despite rich reserves of gold and diamonds, Central African Republic is one of the world's poorest and least-developed countries and has been gripped by rebel violence for years.

A bill governing the use of cryptocurrency was adopted unanimously by parliament last week, said a statement signed by Obed Namsio, chief of staff of President Faustin-Archange Touadera.

"The president supports this bill because it will improve the conditions of Central African citizens," Namsio told Reuters, without elaborating.

In the statement, he called it "a decisive step toward opening up new opportunities for our country".

Central African Republic is one of six nations that use the Central African CFA franc, a regional currency governed by the Bank of Central African States (BEAC).

Two of the country's former prime ministers last week signed a letter expressing concern about the adoption of bitcoin without guidance from the BEAC, calling it a "serious offence".

"The BEAC learned at the same time as the public of the enactment of a new law on cryptocurrency in Central African Republic," a BEAC spokesman told Reuters, adding that the bank did not have an official response yet.

El Salvador became the first country in the world to adopt bitcoin as legal tender last year, but the rollout was hampered by scepticism and it postponed a proposed bitcoin bond in March amid global market turmoil.

African governments have taken a varied approach to regulating cryptocurrencies and blockchain technology.

Nigeria's central bank barred local banks from working with cryptocurrencies last year before launching its own digital currency, the eNaira.

South African regulators have been exploring the potential regulation of cryptocurrencies and other blockchain technology, and Tanzania's central bank said last year it was working on a presidential directive to prepare for cryptocurrencies.

French army rejects Mali's accusations of espionage, violation of airspace

The last French armed forces convoy from Operation Barkhane leaves Gossi, Mali on April 18, 2022.
PARIS, France

The French army on Thursday rejected accusations by Mali of espionage and violation of the West African nation's airspace.

Mali had on Tuesday accused the French army of "spying" and "subversion" when it used a drone to film what France alleged were mercenaries burying bodies near a military base.

The drone "illegally" flew over the Gossi base on April 20, the day after French forces handed the site back to Mali, the ruling junta said in a statement.

The following day, the French army shared a video it said showed Russian mercenaries covering bodies with sand to falsely accuse the departing troops of war crimes. Two soldiers could be seen filming the half-buried corpses.

French army spokesman Pascal Ianni told reporters in Paris on Thursday that "we were in our right since Gossi was not in the temporary prohibition zone," for overflying.

Ianni noted that the temporary no-fly zone had been extended to include Gossi on Wednesday.

France, Mali's former colonial power, is winding down its almost decade-long, anti-jihadist military operation in the West African state.

But in February, it decided to pull out its troops after falling out with the military junta, especially over its rapprochement with the Kremlin.

France officially handed control of Gossi to Mali last week as part of the staggered withdrawal.

But under the existing agreement to station French forces in Mali, concluded in March 2013, they "have total freedom of movement and action in the fight against armed terrorist groups," Colonel Ianni stressed.

Responding to the espionage accusation, the army spokesman said the French action had "avoided a major informational attack". 

"If we had not managed to capture these images, French forces would have been accused of war crimes," he said.

France and the United States have accused mercenaries from the Kremlin-linked security firm Wagner of deploying in Mali, where the junta claims the Russians are just military instructors helping to restore order.

Vast swathes of Mali lie beyond government control because of the jihadist insurgency, which began in 2012 before spreading three years later to neighbouring Burkina Faso and Niger. 

The impoverished and landlocked Sahel state has been ruled by a military junta since an August 2020 coup that was propelled by protests against the government's handling of the war against the jihadists.

The conflict was said to have led to thousands of military and civilian deaths and forced hundreds of thousands of people to flee their homes.

The junta initially promised to restore civilian rule, but it failed to meet an earlier commitment to West African bloc ECOWAS to hold elections in February this year, prompting regional sanctions. - AFP

Kenya mediates Congo peace talks, but breakthrough elusive

KAMPALA, Uganda

Some Congolese armed groups in peace talks in Kenya asked for more time before laying down their weapons, Kenyan authorities said Thursday, signalling the talks had not yet made a breakthrough.

“A few” of more than 30 armed groups with representatives at the talks “requested to be given more time to appraise themselves with the set conditions but expressed willingness to join hands in building their country,” a statement from Kenya’s presidency said.

Many other groups at the talks accepted efforts by Congo’s government to demobilize former rebels and integrate them into the national army, it said.

The statement gave no details on which groups had not committed to the peace process, which Kenya is trying to mediate under the banner of the seven-nation East African Community trade bloc. It cited Congolese President Felix Tshisekedi urging the rebels to accept demobilization and integration into the national force as part of efforts to build a strong army.

Even as talks proceeded in the Kenyan capital, Nairobi, fighting erupted in eastern Congo near the Uganda border as government troops battled the M23 rebel group.

Fleeing gunfire, hundreds of Congolese civilians regularly seek shelter in Uganda.

Representatives of M23 attended some meetings during ongoing talks in Kenya. It was not immediately possible to get a comment from the group.

M23 launched its rebellion in April 2012 as a group of ethnic Tutsi fighters battling Congo’s government. Rwanda’s Tutsi-led government has been accused by U.N. experts and others of backing the M23 and using it as a proxy force to secure access to eastern Congo’s lucrative mining trade — an allegation Rwandan authorities strongly deny.

Previous efforts to negotiate with M23 leaders have produced mixed results, with some members picking up arms again.

Congo recently became a member of the East African Community, joining neighbors such as Rwanda and Uganda.

East African leaders said last week that they would proceed with a plan to urgently deploy a regional force in Congo. That force would be equipped to “contain and, where necessary, fight the negative forces” in Congo, they said in a statement at the end of a summit.

Despite its vast size and wealth of natural resources, Congo remains one of the poorest countries in the world.

Eastern Congo is particularly plagued by rebel violence as several armed groups vie for control of its mineral-rich lands.

Thursday, April 28, 2022

African heads of State to attend the late Kenyan president funeral

NAIROBI, Kenya

South Africa’s President Cyril Ramaphosa and his South Sudan counterpart Salva Kiir will lead foreign leaders in paying their last respects to late Kenya’s President Mwai Kibaki at his State funeral in the Nyayo National Stadium on Friday.

A list provided by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs shows that other expected dignitaries include Ethiopia’s President Sahle-Work Zewde and former Malawi President Joyce Banda.

Others are Rwanda Prime Minister Edouard Ngirente, Zimbabwe’s Vice-President Constantino Chiwenga, Tanzania’s Vice-President Philip Mpango, Uganda’s Vice-President Jessica Alupo, Commonwealth Secretary-General Patricia Scotland, and Sri Lanka’s Special Envoy Jayathma Wickramanayake.

In his condolence message, President Ramaphosa said Kibaki championed the cause of democracy and unity in Kenya and beyond.

President Kiir, who declared three days of national mourning with flags flying at half-mast across South Sudan in honor of Kibaki, described him as a courageous statesman who earned the respect of his peers because of his work on regional stability.

"President Kibaki took a principled stance in his pursuit of dignified and practical politics throughout his political career. In opposition, his practical approach to politics kept the torch of accountability on Kenyan institutions,” President Kiir said.

Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni, who will be represented by Ms. Alupo, described Kibaki as a transformational leader and a true Pan-Africanist.

,"While at the helm of Kenya’s leadership, he played a fundamental role in achieving socio-economic transformation and prosperity for the Kenyan people. He was active in deepening the roots of African unity and cooperation for peace, development, and security,” President Museveni said.

Rwandan President Paul Kagame, who will be represented by PM Ngirente, said: “His dedication to the economic transformation of Kenya and his work towards regional integration will be remembered for many generations. The people of Rwanda stand with Kenya during this time.”

Tanzania’s Samia Hassan, for her part, said Kibaki was “one of Africa’s finest sons,” President Hassan will be represented by her deputy, Mr. Mpango.President Kibaki took power as the third President of Kenya on December 30, 2002, and served until April 9, 2013.

He will be remembered for spearheading free primary education, infrastructure developments in transport and energy, and increasing the availability of and access to healthcare.

He died on April 22 aged 90 and will be laid to rest on Saturday at his home in Central Kenya.

Tanzania's Julius Nyerere hydropower project completion in blur

By Osoro Nyawangah, MWANZA, Tanzania

The Tanzania’s Julius Nyerere Hydropower project will now be completed in 2024 and not in 2022 as earlier anticipated due to ‘challenges’, the power agency has said.

Courtesy 

According to the Director General of the country’s power agency, Tanzania Electric Supply Company (TANESCO), Maharage Chande, the grand power project’s completion will delay due to challenges facing its construction.

The controversial Julius Nyerere Hydropower which is being constructed in the Stiegler's Gorge area across the Rufiji river in eastern Tanzania started in 2019 and was expected to be completed in 2022 with an installed capacity of 2,115 megawatts (2,836,000 hp) and produce 5,920GWh of power annually.

In October 2018, after diplomatic negotiations between the late Tanzania's President John Magufuli and Egypt’s President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi the government of Tanzania awarded the design and construction contract for this power project to the Egyptian company Arab Contractors together with the Egyptian manufacturing company El SewedyElectric, at a budgeted cost of US$2.9 billion (TSh6.558 trillion).

The Arab Contractors planned to complete the construction of Julius Nyerere Hydropower Plant and Dam in 42 months’ time including 6 months' for mobilization.

Presenting the company’s strategic plan and service provision strategies before TANESCO stakeholders and without naming the challenges, Chande said that the project is very big and all citizens are eager to witness its completion.

“This project is very big and everybody is eager to see its completion so instead of blaming or expressing dissatisfaction, you should support us in finding solutions for the challenges so that we complete the project immediately possible.” He said.

In May 2021, the former Minister of Energy, Dr. Madard Kalemani, said that filling up of the dam was officially expected to start in November 2021.

“In the circumstances, trial operations for the project’s turbines will start in May, next year (2022) and by June 14 the handing over of the project would have to be finalised to enable Tanzanians enjoy reliable electricity supply.” He said after inspecting project construction work in company of Egyptian Works Minister, Assem Gazzer and other building experts.

On 12 September 2021 Kalemani was replaced by January Makamba as Minister of Energy following cabinet reshuffle made by President Samia Hassan.

In August 2021, El Sewedy Electric Company Chief Executive, Ahmed El Sewedy, travelled to Tanzania to lobby President Hassan for a possible extension of the June 2022 completion date for the Julius Nyerere Hydropower Project. The Egyptian entrepreneur also mooted possible investments elsewhere in the country.

However, experts’ arguments name two fundamental challenges facing the Julius Nyerere Hydropower project; chief of these concerns finance.

The Tanzania administration claims that it will finance the supposedly US$2.9 billion Hydropower project domestically through tax revenue; even at this figure, the state’s tax income would be severely stretched, not least given Tanzania’s rising debt.

Moreover, if compared to a record of similarly sized dams, costs should reach between $6 -10 billion.

A second major issue concerns the choice of contractors; Magufuli’s administration selected Egyptian firms with no experience of undertaking a major dam of this scale.

Furthermore, mega-dams have a long history of overrunning, usually taking between 8-10 years. That would give the Julius Nyerere Dam another six years till completion.

With these challenges, questions remain about the dam’s current status as the number one electricity-generation project in the country.  - Africa

Kenyan Police linked to 187 murders, 32 abductions - Report

NAIROBI, Kenya

Civil society organizations under the umbrella ‘Missing Voices Coalition’ have sounded the alarm over a sharp upward trend in cases of extrajudicial murders and missing persons in the country over the last 3 years.

The civil society groups including Amnesty International and Kenya National Human Rights Commission, want extrajudicial cases pending in court to be expedited and enforced disappearance laws enacted.

In a report dubbed ‘Delayed Justice’ launched by Missing Voices, a human rights activists coalition, 219 cases of police killings and forced disappearances were documented across the country in 161 incidents reported in the year 2021.

The report revealed that 187 murders were linked to the police while 32 others were about abduction.

Four victims of the forced disappearance cases were discovered dead more than 24 hours after their disappearance from police custody, two were lucky to be alive while 30 people remain missing to date.

“We are seeing more cases of police being arrested over extrajudicial killings, the criminal justice system is slow in dispensing justice, the gap in the law has a significant bearing on the outcome of the case…,” said Kamau Ngugi, Executive Director, Defenders Coalition

Cases of police killings have been on a steady increase in the last 3 years. In 2019, missing voices documented 145 cases of police killings, and 158 cases in 2020.

Cases of ExtraJudicial Killings have gone up by 51 between 2020-2021 and 74 cases between 2021 and 2019, a trend that has human rights groups worried.

The report put Pangani Police Station on the spot as 30 cases of police killings out of 219 were documented at station in 2021. The report indicates that at least 2 cases caught on camera in 2017 and 2022 revealed police officers engaging in a shootout with civilians outside the precincts.

Some of the notable cases documented include the Willy Kimani Murder case that has remained in courts for close to 6 years.

The civil society groups are imploring the relevant authorities to enact laws on forced disappearances that should provide a clear roadmap for victims and their families who have suffered at the hands of police. - CitizenTV

Denmark to ‘outsource’ inmates

COPENHAGEN, Denmark

Denmark will be sending foreign nationals convicted in the country to serve their sentences in a Kosovan prison, the countries’ respective justice ministers agreed on Wednesday. Should both sides' parliaments give the accord the green light, the first inmates could be transferred to the Balkans as early as next year.

A view of the Detention Centre in Gjilan. 

Danish Justice Minister Nick Haekkerup and his Kosovan colleague Albulena Haxhiu have signed off on a deal that reserves some 300 cells in a Kosovan prison for Danish migrant convicts. According to the scheme, inmates who are not Danish nationals will be serving sentences meted out by Danish courts in a prison located in the Kosovan city of Gjilan. The penitentiary facility will, however, first have to be refurbished so that conditions in there are in line with those found in Danish jails.

After the inmates have served their time, they will be deported back to their countries of origin.

The accord signed on Wednesday was preceded by a preliminary agreement between Copenhagen and Pristina in December 2021. The BBC reported at the time that Denmark would shell out €15 million annually for an initial period of five years. On top of that, Copenhagen will reportedly help Pristina develop green energy in the Balkan region in exchange.

The Danish justice minister hailed the deal as “ground-breaking,” adding that it would help the kingdom better manage its own “overcrowded prisons and will ease the pressure on our prison officers.”

Haekkerup also noted that the agreement “sends a clear signal to foreigners from third-party countries who have been sentenced to deportation” that their “future is not in Denmark and therefore you won't serve your sentence here.”

Commenting on the news to Denmark’s Ritzau media outlet, the official expressed hope that the “practical side of things can be ready in the first quarter of 2023.”

According to official data cited by the media, the number of inmates in Denmark has ballooned by almost 20% since 2015, reaching over 4,000 in early 2021, and the Scandinavian country’s prison system has been operating at capacity.

The deal struck between Denmark and Kosovo comes weeks after the UK government revealed plans to send asylum seekers arriving in that country to Rwanda, where they would await as their applications are processed by British authorities. The Times reported at the time that only male migrants would be flown to the central African nation.

In early April, British Home Secretary Priti Patel traveled to the African country which had finalized a “migration and economic development partnership” with the UK. It followed previous failed attempts to strike similar deals with Albania and Ghana.

It is, however, not clear at this point if the holding facilities in Rwanda will be under UK jurisdiction.

The Labour opposition slammed the scheme as an “unworkable, unethical and extortionate policy that would cost the UK taxpayer billions of pounds during a cost-of-living crisis and would make it harder, not easier, to get fast and fair asylum decisions.”

The United Nations refugee agency, the UNHCR, too, expressed concern over London’s plans.

In 2020, Human Rights Watch issued a report claiming that detainees in Rwanda suffer from arbitrary detention, ill-treatment, and torture in official and unofficial facilities. - RT

Woman buries two-month-old baby alive in Uganda

KAMPALA, Uganda

Police at Ibuje Police Station in Apac District, Uganda is investigating circumstances under which a 23-year-old woman allegedly attempted to kill her 2-month-old child by burying the baby alive.

Uganda IGP, Martin Ochola

The suspect identified as Brenda Akello, a resident of Omulakere Village, Aketo Parish, Ibuje in Ibuje Sub- County allegedly buried her son in a cassava garden on Monday after a domestic misunderstanding with her father.

However, the child was rescued by the residents and is said to be in good health.

Mr Patrick Okello, a neighbor to the accused, said there had been a long-standing conflict between the woman and some of her family members.

“This lady dropped out of school when she was in Primary Four and since that time she has not been in a good relationship with her father,” he said.

Mr Geoffrey Oduk, the woman’s father, claimed his daughter assaulted him before she allegedly attempted to kill her son.

“She returned from drinking alcohol and started quarrelling with her mother over food. When I intervened, she beat me up and disappeared from home. Later, I was told that she was caught burying her son alive,” he said in a telephone interview with this reporter on Tuesday.

Mr Bonny Ojaka, the chairman of the Child and Family Protection Committee in Ibuje Sub- County said the suspect confessed that she wanted to kill her child and later kill herself.

“After arresting her from her hideout on Tuesday morning, she told us that she was so disappointed with her father and wanted to kill all her family members and also kill herself and the child because she never wanted her child to remain behind and suffer,” he said.

Apac district, Uganda

Mr Nelson Olwa, the officer in-charge of Ibuje Police Station said police have commenced investigations into the matter.

“We received the report and went to the scene and recorded statements from people on the ground. We are receiving mixed reports,” he noted.

In 2019, a two-month-old boy died at Awiri Cell, Adok Ward, Arocha Division, Apac Municipality after his 19-year-old mother buried him alive following a misunderstanding with her family members over food.

How the widening war in Ukraine will cost the world

WASHINGTON, USA

Many wars, from World War I to the conflict in Iraq, at first seem certain to end quickly with a short, violent shock. But often they confound such predictions, degenerating into protracted slogs with domino effects that cause distant and far-reaching political, economic and humanitarian effects.

Russia's war on Ukraine is following this pattern. After starting with predictions of a blitzkrieg to seize Kyiv two months ago, the war is set to drag on for weeks and months, if not longer.

The consequences of a war that last even that long are grave. Given Russian President Vladimir Putin's vicious assault on civilians it will mean many more Ukrainian dead and almost inevitably more atrocities and war crimes. There will be an ever present danger of the war spilling over and causing a wider conflagration -- both militarily and in a growing showdown over Russia's energy exports, which Europe badly needs.

Any time two nuclear powers as large as Russia and the US are locked in even an indirect conflict, as is the case given Washington's massive injection of arms into Ukraine, the possibility of a direct confrontation remains.

And a longer war means more uncertainty for Western leaders.

Global food insecurity is likely to worsen from a ruined Ukrainian harvest, potentially adding to destabilization and unrest around the world.

In the US, it will also cost people already struggling with inflation, soaring grocery bills and ballooning costs of filling up their gas tanks, which could spell huge political problems for President Joe Biden in a midterm election year.

There is one core reason why the war will drag on.

The strategic picture in Ukraine, with the country far from defeat and the invader not yet vanquished, means neither side has a burning incentive to pursue urgent diplomacy to end the war.

Ukraine has no trust for Putin following his unprovoked invasion, which was meant to crush its independence and national identity, and the carnage he has visited on the country. The heroism of its citizen army and the accelerating flow of offensive western arms is encouraging hopes of victory in Kyiv.

Putin, meanwhile, has not yet achieved any of his goals after a humiliating pull back from the outskirts of Kyiv. Despite reported heavy losses of men and materiel, his generals have laid out new war aims for their troops to grind out -- the seizure of the entire southern Ukrainian coast -- to strangle the country by cutting off its access to the Black Sea.

The United States has recognized these developments with a shift in strategy laid out this week that seeks to use an effective proxy war to weaken Russia so severely it can no longer threaten Europe.

But Ukraine fears a widening of the battlefield. Officials warned Wednesday of a possible new front in the south-west along the Moldovan border, involving the pro-Russian enclave of Transnistria.

And the threat of a full-blown energy war that could trigger a recession and severe hardship in Europe -- and knock-on effects in the US -- became more likely Wednesday when Russia cut off gas supplies to Poland and Bulgaria, two NATO members that were once in the Soviet Union's orbit.

The primary result of a longer war -- one that has already featured some of the worst atrocities in Europe since the Nazi era -- will tragically mean many more Ukrainians will be killed or forced from their homes. But the deprivation and threat to life will not be contained within the country's borders.

Indications that war will go on for months will worsen increasingly dire economic shock waves. The World Bank, for instance, warned on Wednesday that the conflict had already caused the worst spike in commodity prices in 50 years. In the US, this means more expensive grocery bills for Americans -- and deeper political headaches for Biden.

But it's worse in the developing world. Rising grain prices in nations afflicted by poverty and already poor nutrition are a life-and-death issue for millions of people.

Fast-moving indications of a widening footprint of the Ukrainian war on Wednesday coincided with more nuclear saber rattling by Putin, who warned that Russian foes who interfered in Ukraine would face a heavy price.

"We have all the tools for this. Ones that no one can brag about. And we won't brag. We will use them if needed," Putin said.

The frightening rhetoric may be a sign Russia is feeling pressure because its goals for the invasion have so far fallen short of its expectations. But his words are a worrying reminder of the constant danger of an escalation of the conflict, especially since the US is testing Russia's red lines with its gusher of weapons systems flowing into Ukraine.

In Washington and Moscow, there is now a common acknowledgment that this war is about far more than Ukraine, and may be the opening engagement in a prolonged and wider geopolitical struggle.

"If Russia gets away with this cost-free, then so goes the so-called international order, and if that happens, then we're entering into an era of seriously increased instability," Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Mark Milley told CNN Tuesday.

Russia's top brass also appreciates the wider dimensions of a conflict that has destroyed the certainties of the post-Cold War world, and turned their country into an international pariah.

"Now, we are at war with the whole world," said top Russian Gen. Rustam Minnekaev in comments cited by the Financial Times and the B.Z. newspaper in Berlin. - CNN

Mali authorities permanently withdraw French media licenses

BAMAKO, Mali

The High Authority for Communication of Mali announced Wednesday it is permanently suspending French media outlets Radio France International and France 24, two of the most listened to news outlets in the West African country.

This is the first time that Mali’s government has withdrawn the operating license of foreign media.

“The Radio France International, RFI, and France 24 channels are definitively withdrawn from the subscriptions of all audiovisual program distributors and from the platforms and sites of online media bodies and cell phone operators,” the body’s statement said.

The High Authority for Communication of Mali called on the government to implement the decision.

On March 17, the Malian government had announced a temporary suspension for the two media outlets, which it accused of reporting “false allegations of abuses committed by the Malian Armed Forces against civilians, and violations of human rights and international humanitarian law.”

France MĂ©dias Monde strongly contested the removal of its license and said it will use all other possible means to distribute news.

“We will continue to cover news in Mali which is of interest to all of Africa and the rest of the world. All technical solutions will be implemented to make our media accessible to Malians who wish to continue to receive free, expert information that is open to the world,” the media organization said.

It reiterated its “attachment to independence and freedom of information.”

A crisis in relations between Mali and France is escalating as the European nation has begun withdrawing soldiers it has stationed there since 2013, when they helped drive Islamic extremists from strongholds in the north.

On Monday, Mali’s government accused the French army of violating the country’s airspace and denounced what it said was the unauthorized use of surveillance drones.

The accusation came after France released videos appearing to show Russian mercenaries burying bodies near an army base in northern Mali, which had been handed over by the French to Malian forces.

Putin warns West of lightning retaliation as sanctions batter Russian economy

MOSCOW, Russia

Any country trying to intervene in the Ukraine war will face a "lightning-fast" response, Russian President Vladimir Putin has warned.

"We have all the tools no-one can boast of... we will use them if necessary", he said, in what is seen as a reference to ballistic missiles and nuclear arms.

Ukraine's allies have stepped up the supply of weapons, with the US vowing to make sure Ukraine defeats Russia.

Western officials say Russia is being hampered in its efforts in the east.

Last week, Russia launched a major offensive to seize the Donbas region after withdrawing from areas around the capital Kyiv.

But according to one official, Russian forces are "finding it difficult to overcome the staunch Ukrainian resistance and they are suffering losses".

In another development, the European Commission has accused Russia of blackmail after Moscow cut off gas exports to Poland and Bulgaria.

The Commission's President, Ursula von der Leyen said it showed Russia's "unreliability" as a supplier.

The Kremlin said Russia had been forced into the action by the "unfriendly steps" of Western nations.

Gazprom's cut-off follows Poland and Bulgaria's refusal to pay for gas in Russian roubles - a demand made by President Vladimir Putin in March, which was designed to shore up the faltering currency battered by Western sanctions.

Mr Putin made his comments speaking to Russian lawmakers in the northern city of St Petersburg on Wednesday.

"If someone from the outside tries to intervene in Ukraine and create strategic threats for Russia, our response will be lightning fast," he said.

"We have all the tools [to respond] that no one can boast of. And we will not be bragging about them, we will use them if necessary."

The Russian leader added that all decisions on what that response would include had already been made - without providing any further details.

Russia invaded Ukraine on 24 February, and within days President Putin ordered his military to put Russia's nuclear deterrence forces on high alert.

Analysts suggest such threats are an attempt by Mr Putin to warn Ukraine's allies not to intervene more in the conflict.

President Putin was speaking a day after Western nations held a summit in Germany, promising to ramp up military support for Ukraine.

US Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin pledged to move "heaven and earth" to make sure Ukraine won the war.

There has recently been an increasing number of pledges to increase military support to Ukraine, including Germany's announcement that it will send 50 anti-aircraft tanks, in a sharp U-turn in policy.

Western officials have been briefing on the latest in the war and they say Russia has continued to build up forces in and around the Donbas and are making minor gains.

"But when they come up against genuine military objectives, they are finding it difficult to overcome the staunch Ukrainian resistance and they are suffering losses," an official said.

Heavy rain is also hampering Russian progress. "Russians don't like to fight in the rain," an official said, adding that the Russians have poor tactical awareness and continue to suffer from logistical difficulties.

They have the ability to operate off road, but officials say it's surprising that they still choose not to do so.

Even in places where Ukrainian forces have found themselves encircled; they have managed to resupply their forces "for a surprising length of time". (Mariupol being the most obvious example).

Officials noted that even in places where Russia has taken ground, Ukrainian forces have shown a "remarkable" ability to counter-attack - sometimes doing it so fast that the Russians quickly find themselves on the back foot.

Ukrainian special forces, operating behind Russian lines, are exploiting the vulnerability of long supply lines, which helps to buy time for Ukraine.