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Afran : Gambia designers storm the United States
on 2010/4/13 15:27:03
Afran

20100412
AFRICA NEWS

Thirty Gambian fashion designers and apparel producers are planning on attending a major textile expo in the United States of America in May.

The delegation of Textile and sewn products Industry week (TASPIW) in Atlanta, Georgia would be in The Gambia, led by a representative of the US Embassy and an official of the ministry of Trade and Employment.

The show will expose visitors to the latest equipment and technology in textile making and apparel production as well as to the high quality fabrics in the United States.

The visit to the expo in Atlanta would help develop the Gambian fashion industry and in turn help the country maximize benefits under the Africa growth and opportunity Act (AGOA).

In addition to the expo in Atlanta, many of the apparel producers will be attending the “Africa in April” Festival in Memphis, Tennessee, where they will have the opportunity to show case their products.

In June, some of the women will proceed to Baltimore, Maryland, to attend an investment conference designed to connect them with US businesses seeking to invest in Africa in general and The Gambia in particular. This would-be expo is felicitated by the US Embassy in The Gambia.

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Afran : Malawi: Bank pumps $17.5m to fight poverty
on 2010/4/13 15:26:21
Afran

20100412
AFRICA NEWS

Malawi has received a grant of $17.5 million from African Development Bank (AfDB) to help implement one of its projects of fighting poverty. The southern African country with a population of 13.1 million has been haunted by poverty.

Media reports in the country said that AfDB which has been assisting Malawi in several projects approved the grant at its headquarters in Tunis, Tunisia.

According to a statement the bank said through the country’s Governance and Poverty Reduction Support Grant (GPRSG II) the grant will help plans to improve efficiency, transparency and accountability in the use of public resources while providing resources to protect social expenditures and improve public service delivery.

“The programme will support policy and institutional reforms to strengthen economic governance and public financial management, through improvement in the budget process, external auditing, and public procurement,” said the bank.

AfDB said the grant is part of a broader package of support both from the bank and from other development partners to support the country’s plans to strengthen governance and reduce poverty.

“The operation is expected to generate several results through improved government performance and spending on pro-poor services, like health and education, to benefit Malawian citizens,” said AfDB.

Currently AfDB chairs the Common Approach to Budget Support (Cabs) donor group in Malawi.

The bank’s resident representative for the country Frank Kufakwandi said the collaborative working of the bank with Malawi government and development partners has helped to strengthen the design of the project.

Apart from helping Malawi in several other projects including agriculture, AfDB is also working with other countries in Africa among them Zambia.

Malawi depends on agriculture for its income however, it has solely relied on donor funding to run several of its projects.

Recently the country’s president Bingu Wa Mutharika who is also African Union (AU) chairman criticized donors, urging them to stop imposing their policies on African countries.

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Afran : Nigeria’s Goodluck Jonathan meets Obama
on 2010/4/13 15:25:48
Afran

20100412
AFRICA NEWS

The acting President of Nigeria Goodluck Jonathan met with the United States President, Barack Obama, at the White House on Sunday.

The two leaders discussed the west African nation’s weakening security especially in the north and electoral reforms among others.

Jonathan is among more than 40 Heads of State invited by Obama to attend a two-day summit on preventing the spread of nuclear weapons.

According to the Times of Nigeria, the two leaders met for about 15 minutes, but no official statement was issued after.

However, sources said the status of Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, the Nigerian on trial in the U.S. for attempting to blow up a U.S. airliner in December last year was brought up.

Jonathan also reportedly pressed Obama to remove Nigeria from the list of terror nations after disclosing that Abuja has met and exceeded American airport security requirements by installing scanners and approving the use of armed air marshals on all Nigeria-U.S. bound planes.

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Afran : Anger over Zambian death in Russia
on 2010/4/13 15:25:14
Afran

20100412
AFRICA NEWS

The Zambian government has expressed outrage over the recent killing of their compatriot student in Russia. Lance Mate went missing on November 6, 2009 after a quarrel with some Russians and his body was this week retrieved from Kazanka River in Kazan City of that country.

A Zambian legislator, Mwenya Musenge, last week called on the government to independently investigate Mate’s killing since it was not the first time a Zambian was killed in Russia.

"Russian government provided scholarships to Zambians, it should not be the reason why we cannot condemn what happens to our people that study in Russia”, Musenge said as he spoke with anger.

“I know of a family that had no option but to withdraw their child from there (Russia),” said Musenge again.

University of Zambia Students’ Union (Unzasu) leader Timothy Lumba said: “As students’ movement, we condemn the killing of the Zambian in Russia.”

The Zambian Government has remained tight-lipped over the killing.

Russian Ambassador to Zambia Boris Malakhov regretted the death of Mate.

Malakhov said, “The first examination of the body showed that there are no signs of physical violence, but a criminal case has been opened with suspicion that it was killing”.

The Russian Government is providing 103 scholarships to Zambians to study in Russia this year. At least 1,500 had applied for the scholarships.

Racially motivated
He, however, underplayed racism against African students in Russia and said all foreign students were safe in Russia and such cases were very rare.

Annually, between 25 and 30 self-sponsored students from Zambia study in Russia.

According to sources at Zambian embassy in Moscow, at least four students from the southern African state had died in racial killing in Russia before Mate.

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Afran : Ethiopia: British oil worker shot dead
on 2010/4/13 15:24:14
Afran

20100412
AFRICA NEWS

Unknown gun men have shot dead a foreign oil worker in southren Ethiopia, reports said. British oil worker Jason Read was killed during an attack near Danot in the war-torn Ogaden region on Monday.

The 39-year-old worked for IMC Geophysics International which was formed under Malaysian oil giant Petronas. The company said in a statement "it was shocked and saddened by the killing".

Read, who was from the Portsmouth area, was with a driver and a military escort as they were ambushed. The others were believed to be injured after returning fire, BBC reported.

"Jason was working on our crew 894 which was undertaking a seismic survey on behalf of Petronas Carigali when Jason, his driver and military escort came under unprovoked attack from armed persons unknown”, the statement added.

The company said a full investigation is underway into the incident.

Read, who also spent time in Uganda, had been working with the company since 2004.

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Afran : Malawi: Mercy family angry with Madonna
on 2010/4/13 15:23:21
Afran

20100412
AFRICA NEWS

The family of Chifundo (Mercy) James, a girl US Pop star Madonna adopted in Malawi, said they are angry with the singer because they were not informed that she was coming with the child. John Banda, a distant uncle to the child, said they heard the news in the media.

He said Mercy was not given a chance to re-unite with her relatives.

“We still take the four-year-old Mercy as part of our community. She is our daughter and child. When we said yes to the adoption, we did not mean that she is completely sold off. She still needs to know where she belongs and our culture should be instilled in her,” he said.

He said this is not what Madonna said when adopting the child.

“She promised to be bringing them back so that they understand their roots. But today we are just hearing from you that she was in the country last week with the child. May be she wants her to forget where her parents are,” said an emotional Banda.

Banda claims that an existing understanding stipulates that the family would be informed each time Mercy was coming to Malawi and that they will be given a chance to see the child.

“Now she is doing to the contrary. We gave her Mercy not that we did not want her, we were concerned of her future. It is our hope that next time she comes we will be able to meet our child,” he said.

The Pop singer adopted Mercy in 2009 at Kondanani orphanage center.

Mercy’s adoption faced resistance from James Kambewa, who claimed to be the girl’s father. Madonna was in the country last week with her two daughters Mercy and Loudes.

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Afran : South Africa: Scouting Wal-Mart Could End Up in SA
on 2010/4/13 15:20:30
Afran

20100412
ALLAFRICA

Johannesburg — IT CAN only be a matter of time before Wal-Mart lands on these shores. Sooner or later the world's largest retailer will extend its reach to Africa.

It makes sense. The company that in the year to January posted revenue of 408,2bn and net profit of 14,2bn needs to grow. With the post-recession US consumer still in intensive care, Wal-Mart, with operations in 15 overseas territories already, will expand further outwards.

SA would be a handy base for expansion into the growing, if fragmented, African market, especially if Wal-Mart bought an existing player for an automatic regional footprint.

"The US market that has been the driver of growth for Wal-Mart over the years has really slowed down," says Francisco Chevez, a retail analyst at HSBC in New York. "To generate the kind of growth they have had in the past, they need an additional focus on their international business."

The normally tight-lipped Wal-Mart, which had been looking at Russia, was surprisingly candid last year when it told analysts it had not found a suitable purchase in that market.

"In my view that's indicating Russia's been put on the back burner. It raises the profile of other countries," Chevez says. "Turkey, Colombia and SA are all likely areas for expansion ."

Wal-Mart declined to comment last week.

From a local point of view, Wal-Mart's arrival could be a bonanza. "Wal-mart will pay big time," says Chris Gilmour, an analyst at Absa Investments.

The locals play it down, however. Shoprite chairman Christo Wiese was coy last week. "It is on the same level as the contact we have with the guys from Pick n Pay or Woolworths because we' re all in the same business," he said.

In October, Pick n Pay CEO Nick Badminton said his company had met Wal-Mart staff "out of courtesy", during a recent visit by that company.

Still, it is a possibility. "If a global player pitches up at some point, things are going to get very exciting," Massmart CEO Grant Pattison said in February.

So which company would be the best fit? Shoprite, with 106 stores between SA and Ghana, is one option. "The best footprint by far is Shoprite," Gilmour says.

Shoprite dismisses such talk - perhaps a bit too vehemently. "It would be rather silly for a foreign investor to come into a country like SA with 40-million people," Shoprite CE Whitey Basson said in February. "If I was Wal-Mart I would not waste my time here. I would play in China. The 1,6-billion people should keep them busy for a long time."

Massmart, with retail stores, hardware stores and food retailers in 14 countries, "isn't that far behind", Gilmour says.

Ackerman family-controlled Pick n Pay, with 117 stores, keeps an open mind. "Any approach or offer would be evaluated on its strategic value," chairman Gareth Ackerman said on Friday.

Any dating may be quick. Wal-Mart plays a waiting game but pounces quickly, Chevez says. "They are very opportunistic, when something is right, they will do it."

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Afran : North Darfur State's election committee decides re-polling in two stations
on 2010/4/13 15:20:24
Afran



EL FASHER, Sudan, April 12 (Xinhua) - The higher elections committee in Sudan's North Darfur State in western Sudan on Monday acknowledged technical errors at two polling stations in the state and decided a re-polling in the two stations, but just among National Assembly (parliament) constituencies.

"Errors occurred at two polling stations, one in Mellit area and one in El Fasher. The errors included missing symbols of the national assembly candidates from polling cards, which caused the polling to be ceased," al-Sir al-Meck, chairman of the state's higher elections committee told reporters here on Monday.

"The committee tackled the technical error, and after consultations with the candidates, party representatives and the observers, it has been decided that a re-polling will be held at the two centers, but just for the national assembly votes only", he added.

He further revealed that the polling delayed at the station of Abu Shouk camp for internally displaced persons, saying that "the delay occurred due to logistical difficulties, but the problem has been tackled and the center started to receive the voters."

Al-Meck affirmed that the security arrangements at the polling stations were progressing as planned without any violations, pointing out that it was 100 percent safe at all parts of the state.

The polling stations in the North Darfur State amount to 420 with 630 electoral committees. Some 691,871 voters in the state are to cast their votes to select their representatives for the presidency, state governors, national assembly and state legislative councils.

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Afran : Sudan's NEC agrees to extend polling period for two days
on 2010/4/13 15:19:57
Afran




Sudan's NEC agrees to extend polling period for two days
English.news.cn 2010-04-12 23:56:30 FeedbackPrintRSS

KHARTOUM, April 12 (Xinhua) -- Sudan's National Elections Commission (NEC) on Monday agreed to extend the polling period of the current general elections for two more days to last till Thursday.

"The NEC, following an emergency meeting, decided to extend the voting period for two days to end on Thursday April 15," NEC spokesman Salah Habib told Xinhua.

"The NEC will issue a statement later to cite the reasons behind the extension", he added.

The decision came after a lot of technical and administrative mistakes were found during the first two days of the general elections, the first multi-party election held in this African country in more than two decades.

In a statement issued on Sunday evening, the independent NEC acknowledged administrative and technical mistakes during the first day of the voting process in Sudan's general elections.

"Administrative and technical mistakes have accompanied the distribution of the ballots in 26 out of 821 polling stations in Khartoum State", said the NEC in the statement.

Meanwhile, the dominant Sudan People's Liberation Movement (SPLM) in southern Sudan asked on Sunday an extension for three polling days.

Jambo Susan, a senior official responsible for the SPLM election campaigns, told Xinhua in Juba, the capital of the semi- autonomous southern Sudan, that the SPLM had asked the NEC for the extension without specifying the time it needed.

"We have noticed a lot of mistakes since the polling process started on Sunday morning, including names of candidates were wrongly printed on the ballots, and we need more time to correct these mistakes," the SPLM official noted.

Former U.S. President Jimmy Carter on Monday described the beginning of the polling process in Sudan's elections as difficult.

Speaking to reporters at the Juba airport, Carter said that the elections were supposed to begin on Monday instead of Sunday to allow the NEC to complete its logistical preparations.

The Carter Center, which was founded by the former U.S. president, is the only U.S. non-governmental organization authorized by the Sudanese government to monitor the general elections, and has sent 65 observers to Sudan.

In a report released on March 17, the Carter Center warned that the poor preparation could impact negatively the process and suggested to delay briefly the electoral process.

Sudan's media reported that the first day of Sudan's general election was marred by delay, confusion of candidates' names and symbols as well as withdrawal of some candidates for the national parliament while the opposition parties decry the failure of the process.

Among the errors the Sudan state media reported were voters mutilating the ballots by over-marking their choices and delay in receiving voting boxes.

In many parts of the country voting began in the afternoon because the polling stations have not yet received the ballots denying thousands of voters the opportunity to cast their votes.

Eight candidates have announced their withdrawal from the race including three journalists running as independents protesting the omission of their symbols in the ballots at many voting centers.

Others said that there was widespread discrepancy in voter records with many names missing or moved to different locations.

But the way things proceeded on the first day of the elections came to no one's surprise given the complexity of the elections that is meant to pick a president and a head of the government of the semi-autonomous southern Sudan, 24 governors as well as members of the state and national assemblies, using three different voting systems and up to 12 ballots.

Many among more than 16 million Sudanese voters are also voting for the first time

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Afran : South Africa: Medupi Loan 'Will Not Benefit Siemens'
on 2010/4/13 15:19:39
Afran

20100412
BUSINESS DAY

Johannesburg — ESKOM said on Friday Siemens would not benefit from new contracts financed through the World Bank loan for the Medupi power station because of a settlement agreement between the bank and Siemens following the company's admission of corruption in some of its businesses.

The exclusion of Siemens contracts from the World Bank funds is the result of a corruption and bribery scandal that rocked the engineering giant in several countries. In the past few years, Siemens has faced various corruption and bribery allegations, and has subsequently been hit with fines for its transgressions.

Siemens southern African energy division is a major supplier to Eskom's power stations.

A settlement agreement between the bank and Siemens, reached in July last year, includes a "voluntary restraint" in which Siemens undertook to refrain from bidding on World Bankfinanced activities or projects for two years, beginning January last year until December this year. In that period, Siemens will not be a supplier or manufacturer of goods or be a supplier or subcontractor for works and services.

The agreement, however, allows Siemens to continue with the implementation of existing contracts concluded before January last year.

Eskom finance director Paul O'Flaherty on Friday confirmed that Siemens would not benefit from contracts financed from the World Bank loan.

O'Flaherty said, prior to the approval of the loan, the international bank reviewed Eskom's processes. "The bank did a full review of all the contracts we have placed. Remember we applied for the loan when work on Medupi had already started," he said.

In the agreement, Siemens undertook to fight fraud and corruption. "Siemens will also continue to provide information on any additional cases of wrongdoing related to past, present and future (World) Bank projects in which Siemens is involved to the bank's institutional integrity vice-presidency, which investigates fraud and corruption in (World) Bank group-financed activities," it said.

In the settlement the company also agreed to pay 100m over the next 15 years "to support anticorruption work".

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Afran : Cameroon expects 15 leaders in Yaounde to mark 50th independence anniversary
on 2010/4/13 15:19:27
Afran



YAOUNDE, April 12 (Xinhua) -- Fifteen foreign leaders will converge in Yaounde to mark Cameroon's National Day on May 20, also the 50th anniversary of the Central African country's independence, the government said on Monday.

Among the leaders invited by Cameroonian President Paul Biya are Liberia's Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, South Africa's Jacob Zuma, Senegal's Abdoulaye Wade, Burkina Faso's Blaise Compaore and the presidents of the five other countries of the Economic and Monetary Community of Central Africa, or CEEAC.

In addition, there will be President of the African Union Commission (AU) Jean Ping, former UN secretary general Kofi Annan and former French minister for culture and justice Jacques Toubon, who was named by French President Nicolas Sarkozy as the secretary general of the committee organizing Africa's jubilee independence celebrations.

On the sidelines of these festivities, the eminent scholars from Cameroon, Africa and other parts of the world will hold an international conference on May 18-20, with a theme of "Africa, an opportunity for the world. Realities and challenges".

Cameroon was the first of the 14 former French colonies to win independence in 1960, following an armed uprising by nationalists. The Cameroonian president created a national committee in February to organize the anniversary.

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Afran : South Africa: Telkom in Zimbabwe Venture but Denies Acquisition
on 2010/4/13 15:18:53
Afran

20100412
BUSINESS DAY

Johannesburg — FIXED-line telephone provider Telkom is in discussions to sign a contract with Zimbabwe's TelOne to provide the state-owned entity with a wide range of management services such as engineering expertise.

Telkom was reported to have been in discussions to buy a 49% stake in the fixed-line operator TelOne but last week Telkom denied those claims.

Telkom is embarking on an expansion drive across the continent to increase its revenue base following the sale of its shares in Vodacom, which contributed substantially to Telkom's earnings. It is also positioning itself to provide integrated services including IT, management services and a wide range of telecommunications products and services including mobile, which it expects to launch this year.

Charlotte Mokoena, the CE of Telkom Management Services, said last week Telkom "is not in any discussion to purchase equity in TelOne. However, the company has been discussing, and is close to concluding an agreement, to provide management services (such as professional engineering and other functional services) to assist TelOne to prepare and build for the future."

The Zimbabwean Herald newspaper reported last week that the negotiations between the parties were under way. It quoted TelOne's spokesman Collin Wilbesi saying the negotiations "are under way, but we signed a nondisclosure agreement".

According to the Herald, its sources from TelOne said the cash that would be received if a deal was struck through the partial privatisation would be used for refurbishment of equipment. Equipment at the country's sole provider of fixed-line telephone services has been vandalised and some of it worn out by age.

Telkom has operations in Zimbabwe through its internet service provider subsidiaries Africa Online and MWeb Africa.

It also owns telecommunications group Multi-Links, which gave it a presence in Africa's most populous country, Nigeria.

Although Telkom has a presence in 33 countries in Africa, the performance of those businesses, especially Multi- Links, which it bought for more than R2bn three years ago, have been sluggish.

Telkom was forced to write off about R2bn after losses from Multi-Links in its interim results for the six months to September last year.

The Nigerian subsidiaries remained a focus area for Telkom, which is restructuring the business to return it to profitability as it believes the Nigerian market had significant growth opportunities.

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Afran : Securing of Sudan elections progress as planned: police
on 2010/4/13 15:18:49
Afran



KHARTOUM, April 12 (Xinhua) -- Sudanese police authorities in Khartoum on Monday said that their plan for securing the polling process in the country's general elections was progressing as planned, reported official news agency SUNA.

The police forces have affirmed their ability to secure the polling process, the voters and the candidates.

"All the received reports affirmed that the process was progressing well", said police officer lieutenant general Mohamed al-Hafez Hassan Attiya, director of Khartoum State police, according to the report.

He praised the positive role of the citizens and their contribution to securing the electoral process and urged them to provide further cooperation to bring the process to safety.

al-Tayeb Babikir, chairman of the executive chamber for securing the elections in Khartoum State, said that the police forces were securing and protecting the polling stations which amounted to 820 all over the state.

He affirmed that the security situation was calm, saying that " the security situation in the state is in its best condition due to the wide presence of the police forces. The citizens play an essential part in the process of securing the elections at all stages", according to the report.

The Sudanese police has deployed around 100,000 soldiers nation- wide to secure the polling process in which over 16 million Sudanese voters cast their votes.

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Afran : Carter says beginning of Sudan's polling process difficult
on 2010/4/13 15:18:25
Afran



JUBA, Sudan, April 12 (Xinhua) -- Former U.S. President Jimmy Carter on Monday described the beginning of the polling process in Sudan's elections as difficult.

Speaking to reporters at the Juba airport, Carter said the elections were supposed to begin on Monday instead of Sunday to allow the Sudanese National Elections Commission (NEC) to complete its logistical preparations.

Carter arrived in south Sudan on Monday to get acquainted with progress of the polling process in the region.

He visited the Attla Barra polling station in Juba and expressed hope that the voters would be able to vote under natural circumstances.

Carter is expected to visit polling stations outside Juba to get acquainted with progress of the polling process.

He said he would meet President of southern Sudan government, Salva Kiir Mayardit and Chairman of the national elections commission in the south and listen to reports of his center's observers in the region.

The Sudan People's Liberation Movement (SPLM) on Sunday criticized what it termed as mistakes during the first day of the polling in the south and demanded extension of the polling days to enable around 4 million southern Sudanese voters to cast their votes.

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Afran : Africa: Conference Examines Job Creation in Africa
on 2010/4/13 15:18:24
Afran

20100412
BUSINESS DAY

Johannesburg — SOCIAL dialogue was at the centre of employment creation for economies that were recovering from the global recession, Labour Minister Membathisi Mdladlana said at the African Employers conference in Johannesburg on Friday.

The conference, attended by labour employer representatives across Africa, was supposed to develop an action plan for job creation and employment in Africa to be presented to a Group of Twenty (G-20) labour ministers' summit on April 19.

Delegates recognised faults in their labour markets and said there was a need for greater productivity, but few concrete measures were declared that could rectify the problems. "If there is one lesson I want to take to the G-20 summit it is the importance of social dialogue in policy formulation and therefore the recovery of our economies from the recession," Mdladlana said.

Despite this call for social dialogue between all labour players, unions were severely underrepresented at the conference, even if it was primarily organised to be a business-government event. Unions had declined invitations to attend, said Business Unity SA (Busa) vice-president Mthunzi Mdwaba, who is also deputy CEO of Kelly Group.

The event was organised by the International Organisation of Employers, the Pan-African Employers' Confederation, the International Labour Organisation and Busa.

Delegates concluded they should follow seven drivers of economic growth that, according to the CEO of Business New Zealand, Phil O'Reilly, New Zealand had "used for decades with general success".

These included building leadership and management skills, creating productive workplace cultures, promoting innovation and technology, investing in people and skills, organising workers, creating networks and collaborations between labour, government and business, and "measuring what matters".

More than R5bn had been set aside to help workers who lost their jobs during the recession, Mdladlana said. Unemployment Insurance Fund contributions of R42bn and R23bn from the Compensation Fund would be invested with the Public Investment Corporation (PIC) in private sector and government projects. The PIC would report back to the Department of Labour on the number of jobs it created.

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Afran : South Africa: Samwu Members On Nationwide Strike
on 2010/4/13 15:17:51
Afran

20100412
ALLAFRICA

Pretoria — At least 130 000 South Africa Municipal Workers Union (Samwu) members are expected to embark on a nationwide strike today.

Members in Johannesburg are expected to hand over a memorandum to the SA Local Government Association's (Salga) office.

The workers' demands include amongst other things market related wages.

The union is also calling for changes to be made to the way employees are evaluated and the disciplinary code that municipalities use.

The union has also accused Salga of firing workers, thereby undermining service delivery and wasting money on expensive lawyers to handle labour related cases.

Samwu Deputy General Secretary Walter Theledi told BuaNews that the strike will continue until their demands are met.

"We are open for negotiations with Salga, but until such time, the strike continues. We will continue to fight for quality service delivery. Municipalities must use their resources correctly, to fund service delivery and not waste it," he said.

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Afran : Congo Republic says Zain-Bharti deal breaks law
on 2010/4/13 15:17:31
Afran



2010-04-12
BRAZZAVILLE (Reuters) - Congo Republic complained on Monday it had not been informed of Bharti Airtel's $9 billion deal to buy Kuwaiti telco Zain's African assets in what it said was a contravention of Zain's licence.

Telecoms Minister Thierry Moungalla said the parties had 30 days to remedy the situation or face sanctions that including fines or ultimately the withdrawal of the local licence.

"This is a clear violation of the law in our country," Moungalla said, adding that the government "had within its legal arsenal the right to be informed and to give its agreement in principle" to such deals.

A Bharti Airtel spokesman in New Delhi declined comment when contacted by Reuters, as did Zain's Congo unit.

Congo is at least the second country to object to the deal after Gabon voiced similar complaints on March 29 -- something which did not stop the accord being signed two days later.

Bharti is currently in the process of getting regulatory approval for the accord.

Zain is the dominant mobile operator in Congo with an estimated 1.5 million subscribers, Congolese officials said.

Fines could run to one percentage point of local turnover with other sanctions being a reduction in the duration of the operating licence, a suspension or outright withdrawal of the licence.

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Afran : South Africa: Hitachi Deal is Still Corrupt - Wrong for Party to Benefit From Loan to Eskom
on 2010/4/13 15:17:24
Afran

20100412
BUSINESS DAY

Johannesburg — THERE are obviously some important "positives" in the fact that the World Bank has agreed to SA's request for a $3,75bn loan to help Eskom build its power stations. There were powerful environmental doubts expressed - by the US and UK and Netherlands because the new Eskom plants are to be coal-fired - so the fact that the loan has been granted is a relief, in a way.

It is not that the money for the Medupi plant now under construction could not have been found some other way (as Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan said recently). But it would have come at higher cost, to taxpayers or electricity consumers or both. There's a limit to how much Eskom can borrow on the market in any one year (and it is planning to borrow up to R40bn annually). So without the World Bank loan it is possible the government would have had to do the borrowing instead - in which case taxpayers would have paid in higher taxes or higher borrowing costs.

Or perhaps Eskom could have borrowed more - but at higher interest rates and less attractive repayment terms. And of course even with the loans and recent tariff increase there is still a funding gap on the power stations which Eskom and the government must make a plan to close.

We wish Eskom and the government well. We opposed the World Bank loan not because we don't want the electricity, but because we want it to be politically clean power when it comes on stream. Sadly, the loan helps virtually to guarantee a huge financial reward to the ruling African National Congress (ANC), through its ownership of an investment trust called Chancellor House which, in turn, owns 25% of Hitachi Power Africa, which has a R38bn contract to supply boilers to Medupi. A profit margin of a mere 13% for Hitachi on the Medupi project would steer more than a thousand million rand into the ANC's bank accounts.

That would make it one of the richest political parties in the world and make the job of creating a genuine multi party democracy here almost impossible. The World Bank had an opportunity to make its loan on condition that Chancellor House pulled out of Hitachi but it chose not to. It was and is a shameful decision, and the ANC is in an untenable situation while it stands to benefit from the Hitachi link.

That does not mean, sadly, that it will not press ahead and defend its holding. There have already been all sorts of attempts to justify it. Hitachi won the contract while a member of the ANC finance committee, Mohammed Valli Moosa, was chairman of Eskom, but he insists that audits have shown the contract was clean.

But that's just it! The ANC funds itself (starting with the arms deal) by leeching off government contracts over which it has undue influence. This time though, no actual cheating was necessary. All Hitachi had to do was win the contract fair and square and Chancellor House, through its insightful investment decision, would make a fortune. It is impossible to put that win down to chance, given the circumstances. That may be one of tragedies of the ANC's involvement. It will sully everything it touches.

The affair will do little for SA's growing reputation as a corrupt country and the ANC should quickly dismantle Chancellor House (as its treasurer Mathews Phosa promised more than two years ago) or get Chancellor House out of Hitachi. There were reports at the weekend that this would now be done, hints that the World Bank had made its loan on a sort of unwritten understanding that the ANC would not pocket the money.

We will not hold our breath. There's clearly an argument inside the ANC about whether to take the money or not. Secretary-general Gwede Mantashe sandbags the issue every time he is asked about it. He can't see the problem.

But the problem is clear. The ANC made much, at the Polokwane conference that felled Thabo Mbeki , of the fact that the party was "taking back" control of the government. It cannot claim now that it has that control and not take responsibility for the decisions it takes - including the awarding of a contract to Hitachi from which it will benefit.

If the ANC does not do the right thing and get out of Hitachi, the inheritors of the Medupi billions when they are paid in four or five years' time will be the current leadership of the ANC Youth League. Perhaps someone should send World Bank boss Robert Zoellick some video clips illustrating the leadership qualities of Julius Malema and let him chew on what he has done.

Secretary-general Gwede Mantashe sandbags the issue every time he is asked about it. He can't see the problem.

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Afran : Violence in Somali capital kills 19: rescuers
on 2010/4/13 15:16:56
Afran



2010-04-12
MOGADISHU (Reuters) - At least 13 civilians were killed in fighting between Somali government forces and hardline Islamist militants in the capital Mogadishu on Monday and bomb blasts killed six people, rescue services and the police said.

The insurgents fired mortars at the city's airport from their stronghold in the crowded Bakara market, triggering return shellfire from African Union (AU) peacekeepers based at and near the airport.

"We have so far carried out 13 dead civilians and over 30 who were injured. The death toll is higher and we are busy collecting casualties," ambulance service coordinator Ali Muse told Reuters. The death toll is likely to rise, he said.

Police and residents of Somalia's war-weary capital said two remotely controlled roadside bombs aimed at an AU convoy killed four civilians and two police officers.

"The first bomb nearly hit the AU's last car. Some policemen and residents ran to the scene, and then the next bomb exploded killing these people," police officer Nur Salad told Reuters.

Somalia's fragile government controls just a few blocks in the capital and al Shabaab rebels, who want to impose a harsh version of sharia law on the anarchic nation, control large swathes of southern and central Somalia.

The government has said for several months it will launch a major offensive against al Shabaab rebels, who have professed loyalty to al Qaeda, and Hizbul Islam militants.

Shells also landed around a strategic road junction known as K4 that links the airport to the residence of President Sheikh Sharif Ahmed.

The chaos onshore has allowed pirate gangs to flourish and make millions of dollars from hijacking ships in the Gulf of Aden and the Indian Ocean.

Andrew Mwangura, head of the East African Seafarers' Assistance Programme, said the crew of a Saint Vincent and the Grenadines flagged merchant vessel hijacked early on Sunday comprised 11 Indians, 10 Tanzanians, and five Pakistanis.

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Afran : Zimbabwe/South Africa: North Korea's Soccer Team Brings Bad Memories
on 2010/4/13 15:16:35
Afran

20100412
IRIN

Harare — Zimbabwe's plan to host a North Korean soccer side for the June 2010 FIFA World Cup in neighbouring South Africa is rekindling memories of the Matabeleland massacres in the 1980s, amid a current climate of political intolerance.

Soon after independence from Britain in 1980, President Robert Mugabe's ZANU-PF launched Operation Gukhurundi - a Shona phrase for "the early rain which washes away the chaff before the spring rains" - on the pretext of tackling insurgents and counter-revolutionaries sponsored by apartheid South Africa.

He unleashed the Zimbabwean army's North Korean-trained 5th Brigade in the provinces of Matabeleland North and South, and Midlands in southwestern Zimbabwe, strongholds of the rival ZAPU party, led by Joshua Nkomo. More than 20,000 people were killed in Operation Gukhurundi.

Now, the planned visit by the soccer side is leading to a resurfacing of emotions and vows of protests against the "unwanted visitors".

Political temperatures have also been ratcheted up recently by disagreement within the unity government - a fragile coalition between Mugabe's ZANU-PF, Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai's Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) and an MDC splinter party led by Deputy Prime Minister Arthur Mutambura - over a new constitution.

ZANU-PF favours the adoption of a constitution drafted ahead of the violent March 2008 elections - known as the Kariba Draft - which concentrates power on an incumbent president, while the MDC favours a people-driven constitution, and argues that such a provision was made in the September 2008 Global Political Agreement, which paved the way for the unity government formed in February 2009.

Outreach teams have been trained to gather and compile information from Zimbabweans about what they expect in a new constitution, and will be deployed once funding is available.

Tariro Makumbe, a member of the MDC youth wing in the ZANU-PF rural stronghold of Muzarabani, in Mashonaland Central Province, in the north, fled to the capital, Harare, after her home was razed. She had objected to a ZANU-PF aligned chief's decree that not everybody would be permitted to contribute their views when the constitutional outreach team visited the area.

Censoring the constitution

"We were told that only selected ZANU-PF officials, youth and war veterans would be allowed to speak - anybody who spoke without authority would be beaten up after the constitutional outreach teams had left," she told IRIN.

We were told that only selected ZANU-PF officials, youth and war veterans would be allowed to speak - anybody who spoke without authority would be beaten up after the constitutional outreach teams had left

Those selected to speak at the consultative meetings would favour the Kariba Draft, which includes the position that the fast-track land reform process launched in 2000 is irreversible, and that Zimbabwe will never again be a colony.

In recent weeks ZANU-PF and its youth wing has apparently launched Operation Hapana Anotaura (Nobody Speaks) to allow only the views of Mugabe's ZANU-PF party to be expressed to the constitution evaluation teams during meetings in rural areas.

"We have it on good authority that ZANU-PF has launched Operation Hapana Anotaura to stop grassroots people from freely airing their views during the constitutional outreach programme to be done by the Parliamentary Select Committee," the Centre for Community Development in Zimbabwe (CCDZ), an NGO working with traumatised communities, said in a statement.

"CCDZ is working in deeply polarised communities where Zimbabweans live in fear, and violence and intimidation is a living reality that haunts them on a daily basis," the statement said.

Elias Mudzuri, energy minister in the unity government and organising secretary of Tsvangirai's MDC, said he encountered increasing levels of political intolerance while travelling recently to the opening of a clinic in the Mashonaland Central Province.

"ZANU-PF youth militia set up roadblocks and threatened villagers from attending the function. We should not be allowing such acts of brutality to be taking place in modern Zimbabwe. I shudder to imagine what villagers in the remote parts of the country, who support the MDC, have to go through at the hands of marauding ZANU-PF militia who take the law into their hands at will."

Secretary-general of the MDC's youth wing, Solomon Madzore, told IRIN his organization was planning to visit rural areas to "conscientise" people, so that they should actively and openly participate in the constitution-making process.

"We want to remove the element of fear by talking to our parents and the general populace in the countryside," he said. "There is nothing illegal about the constitution-making process, which is a product of the inclusive [unity] government."

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