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Afran : Protesters seek change in Egypt, scuffle with police
on 2010/4/7 11:21:24
Afran



2010-04-06
CAIRO (Reuters) - Egyptian protesters demanding an end to President Hosni Mubarak's 30-year rule scuffled with security forces on Tuesday and scores were detained, witnesses and security sources said.

"Down, down, Hosni Mubarak," a group of more than 200 chanted as they tried to gather in central Cairo's Tahrir Square. Police hauled away a group of about a dozen protesters, shouting "freedom, freedom" near parliament.

The pro-reform group behind the protest, the Sixth of April Youth, is seeking constitutional amendments and an end to an emergency law that sanctions indefinite detentions. Egypt holds a parliament election this year and a presidential vote in 2011.

Hundreds of riot police were stationed across the capital, encircling small groups of protesters.

Police beat some people with sticks and dragged dozens away, witnesses said. They also chased off reporters and seized cameras being used by media.

Such demonstrations are rare in Egypt, an important U.S. ally in the region, and are usually swiftly quashed by security forces.

"We are seeking to do away with injustice and other bad things," screamed Meena Samir, a student at Cairo University.

The Sixth of April group was formed after April 2008 clashes in the Nile Delta between police and workers demanding more pay. Three people were killed.

Rights group Amnesty International condemned what it called the state's violent response to Tuesday's protests.

"The Egyptian authorities should demonstrate their commitment to human rights by allowing and protecting peaceful protests," Amnesty's regional head Malcolm Smart said.

A security source said about 60 people had been detained in central Cairo for demonstrating without a permit, while Amnesty and April 6 said more than 90 were held.

Men in plain clothes with holstered guns hauled some demonstrators away.

ELECTIONS

Mubarak's National Democratic Party is expected to win an overwhelming majority in parliament. But human rights groups, which have long complained of manipulation of Egyptian voting, are calling for international oversight of the elections.

Mubarak, 81, has not said whether he will run for a sixth presidential term but, if he does not, many Egyptians believe he will try to hand power to his politican son, Gamal, 46.

Rules outlined in the constitution make it almost impossible for any candidate to mount a realistic challenge for the presidency without the backing of Mubarak's ruling party.

"What we are calling for is political freedom for Egyptians through peaceful means. Our aim is to instigate political movement among the people to demand their rights," Omar Ali, a April 6 movement organiser, told Reuters before the protest.

One group of more than 20 protesters that included opposition politician Ayman Nour, who came a distant second in the 2005 presidential race, was blocked by security from reaching the square, witnesses said.

After the protest, April 6 leader Ahmed Maher said the group would file a lawsuit against the Interior Ministry. "This shows the fear of the ruling (party) of any opposition -- despite its claims that it allows democracy," he said.

The Arabic satellite channel Al-Jazeera reported that Egyptian police confiscated tapes from one of its TV crew covering the demonstrations in Cairo.

The April 6 group and another group called Kefaya (Enough) are Egypt's two active anti-government movements. The main political opposition group, the Muslim Brotherhood, has a minority in parliament but has tended to avoid street protests.

Tuesday's march was supported by Nour's liberal Ghad (Tomorrow) opposition party.

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Afran : SAfrica council workers to strike over pay next week
on 2010/4/7 11:19:26
Afran



2010-04-06
OHANNESBURG (Reuters) - South African council workers plan to strike next week, raising fears of a repeat, two months before the World Cup, of last year's industrial action that left city streets littered with trash and burning tyres.

Leaders of the South African Municipal Workers Union (SAMWU), which has 130,000 members, said on Tuesday their main grievance was a lack of equal pay for employees doing the same job in different towns.

"We want all employees in the same category to be paid equally," National Bargaining Officer Dale Fobes said.

Several hundred council workers went on the rampage during wage negotiations in July last year, trashing city centres across South Africa as the country's leaders started the one-year count-down to the 2010 soccer World Cup.

The month-long soccer tournament kicks off on June 11.

Besides hitting basic services such as street sweeping, rubbish collection and vehicle licensing, a SAMWU strike has little economic impact.

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Afran : Nigeria's acting leader appoints new cabinet
on 2010/4/7 11:18:34
Afran



ABUJA (Reuters) - Nigeria's Acting President Goodluck Jonathan installed a new cabinet on Tuesday, a move his supporters hope will herald a period of stronger government and ease months of political uncertainty.

Jonathan assigned portfolios to 38 new cabinet ministers, including senior Goldman Sachs executive <GS.N Olusegun Aganga and former mines minister Deziani Allison-Madueke who were appointed finance and petroleum ministers.

With his own team now in place, Jonathan can assert his authority and revive key reforms that have stalled since ailing President Umaru Yar'Adua stepped away from the public eye last November.

"I have confidence in this team, which I believe reflects on the federal government's commitment to take bold steps in solving the nation's problems," Jonathan told reporters after a swearing-in ceremony.

With only 13 months of the presidential term left, the acting president has focused the OPEC member's political agenda to include electoral reforms, security in the oil-producing Niger Delta, providing more reliable electricity and fighting corruption.

The new ministers, which include 13 returnees from the outgoing cabinet, will be critical in achieving these goals in Africa's most populous country.

FINANCE, OIL MINISTRIES

Analysts welcomed the choice of Aganga as finance minister, saying he had enough experience to help develop sub-Saharan Africa's second biggest economy.

"He will ensure that Nigeria embarks on fiscal discipline," said Bismarck Rewane, head of Financial Derivatives. "The downside is that he is going to be under intense pressure to disburse funds this year with the elections so close."

Presidential elections are expected to take place early next year.

There is an unwritten agreement among the political elite that the presidency should alternate between north and south after every two presidential terms. Yar'Adua, a northener, has is currently in his first term.

Jonathan's choice for petroleum minister, Deziani Allison-Madueke, was more controversial.

"What is worrying is (Madueke's) performance in the past was not inspiring. She couldn't make any impact both at the works ministry and solid minerals ministry," said Reuben Abati, chairman of the editorial board for Nigeria's Guardian newspapers.

Nigeria's parliament is working on legislation to overhaul Africa's biggest oil and gas sector that would turn state-run Nigerian National Petroleum Corp. (NNPC) into a profit-driven firm, like those in Brazil, Malaysia and Saudi Arabia.

Madueke would be in charge of implementing the legislation once its signed into law by the president.

She will also be working closely with the new head of NNPC, Shehu Ladan, who was appointed by Jonathan earlier on Tuesday.

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Afran : Equatorial Guinea jails Nigerians for palace attack
on 2010/4/7 11:17:38
Afran



2010-04-06
MALABO (Reuters) - Seven Nigerians have been sentenced by a court in Equatorial Guinea to 12 years in jail for their role in a seaborne attack last year on the presidential palace in the oil-producing nation.

Carried out on February 17, 2009, the attack against the palace on Equatorial Guinea's island capital Malabo was blamed on gunmen from Nigeria's Niger Delta, and underscored security threats across the Gulf of Guinea region.

The gunmen shot their way into the palace but were repelled by security forces backed by helicopter gunships.

The sentence was announced in a statement on the website of Equatorial Guinea's government. A group of locals who were suspected of guiding the Nigerian gunmen via mobile phones were acquitted due to lack of proof, said the statement, which was dated April 5.

Gunmen operating out of the nearby the Niger Delta have become increasingly bold, launching seaborne raids on towns, banks and boats in the region. Delta militants have denied any role in the Equatorial Guinea attack.

The statement said that the government would pay for damages resulting from the attack. Costs linked to damaged infrastructure were put at nearly 80 billion CFA francs and an additional $143,100 would be paid to compensate those wounded in the attack.

Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo has ruled the former Spanish colony, which pumps around 250,000 barrels of oil per day, since he toppled his uncle in a palace coup in 1979.

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Afran : Tempers flare at Terre'blanche murder hearing
on 2010/4/7 11:17:01
Afran



2010-04-06
VENTERSDORP, South Africa (Reuters) - Tempers flared outside a South African court on Tuesday when two black farm workers were charged with murdering white supremacist leader Eugene Terre'blanche.

Police kept apart a crowd of 200 supporters of Terre'blanche's Afrikaner Resistance Movement (AWB) and a group of black workers outside the court in Ventersdorp, 100 km (60 miles) west of Johannesburg.

As AWB loyalists sang South Africa's apartheid-era national anthem, the opposing side responded with Nkosi Sikelel' iAfrica (God Bless Africa), the anthem introduced after the country's first multi-racial elections in 1994.

South African leaders, including President Jacob Zuma, have urged calm since Saturday's killing, and police reacted quickly to separate the two groups when a white woman threw a bottle of water.

Inside the court, the farm workers, aged 15 and 21, were charged with murder in a case that has fanned fears of racial tension in Africa's biggest economy two months before it is due to host the soccer World Cup.

They were also charged with theft, robbery and crimen injuria -- an assault on the dignity of the victim.

"After they assaulted the deceased, they pulled down his pants and exposed his private parts," said the head of the National Prosecuting Authority, Menzi Simelane.

ADJOURNED

The case was adjourned to April 14, when the pair will have a chance to give their plea and request bail. The trial is being held behind closed doors because the youngest accused is a minor and the two have to be tried together.

The lawyer for the 15-year-old denied media reports that he had confessed to the crime.

Police believe Terre'blanche, who had pushed to preserve white minority rule in the 1990s, was killed over a pay dispute.

Even though analysts are not predicting any wider political repercussions, the killing has exposed the racial divide that remains 16 years after the end of apartheid.

"Whites still have all the power here. Since 1994, we have a black president but nothing has changed," said a 68-year-old woman who did not wish to be named because she was missing work.

"What those men did to Terre'blanche will show other farmers that we will not be oppressed."

The AWB has promised not to seek revenge for the death of their 69-year-old leader, who had become increasingly marginal in politics and had a tiny following among the whites who make up 10 percent of South Africa's 48 million people.

However, the murder has heightened a sense among its supporters that they are being targeted by the African National Congress (ANC), the party of Nelson Mandela that has ruled South Africa since 1994.

Julius Malema, leader of the militant ANC Youth League, caused controversy last month when he sang a black liberation struggle song that includes the words "Kill the Boer" -- now banned by the courts as hate speech.

"Before the 1994 elections, I was afraid and thought there was no place for an Afrikaner in a black country," said 73-year-old Sarie Visser, dressed in combat fatigues and bearing the AWB's swastika-like symbol on her armbands.

"Mandela assured us and made us feel better, but the government has changed now. If Malema can't be stopped, we know where we stand," she said.

The AWB chose Steyn van Ronge, a senior party member, on Tuesday to replace Terre'blanche.

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Afran : S.Africa raids airlines offices in price-fixing probe
on 2010/4/7 11:16:06
Afran



2010-04-06
JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) - South Africa's antitrust watchdog said it raided the offices of South African Airways and another airline, as part of an ongoing probe into price fixing related to the soccer World Cup.

The Competition Commission said in a statement on Tuesday that it had searched the offices of South African Airways , budget airline Mango and an industry group last week, seizing documents and electronic data.

The investigation comes as demand for flights and accomodation during the FIFA 2010 World Cup has so far failed to meet expectations.

The probe -- which is also targeting airlines British Airways, Comair (COMJ.J) and 1Time (1TMJ.J) -- was first announced in January. At that time the commission said SAA had promised to cooperate with the investigation, provided it was excluded from prosecution.

The searches last week were prompted by suspicion that SAA and Mango may have withheld information from the investigation, the commission said.

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Afran : Africa's banking laws shut out the poor: Yunus
on 2010/4/7 11:14:32
Afran



2010-04-06
NAIROBI (Reuters) - Lack of microcredit laws in many African countries is denying millions of the continent's poor access to loans, a Nobel Prize winner Mohammad Yunus, said on Tuesday.

Yunus, who won a Nobel Prize in 2006 for championing Microcredit, tiny loans to the poor in Bangladesh, is now pioneering an idea he calls "social business" as a way to fight poverty around the world -- business not for profit but to solve social problems.

"To create a new kind of bank, which works with the poor people, we need new legislation but in most of the countries in Africa that legislation has not taken place, so we have left microcredit scenario to the NGOs," Yunus told Reuters in an interview.

Nicknamed the "banker to the poor," Yunus started his movement 30 years ago with a $27 loan to women in Chittagong, Bangladesh.

It has mushroomed and delivered millions of tiny loans to poor people who do not have access to mainstream banking.

"People are ready in Africa there is no problem with the people it's a question of institutional and conceptual arrangement and microcredit could be wonderful social business," he said.

Yunus is attending an annual microcredit summit in Kenya, where Africa's microfinance institutions hope to emulate the success and growth of the industry in Asia, which hosts more than 80 percent of the world's 150 million microfinance beneficiaries.

"African women are very active compared to any women anywhere in the world and micro credits have the best chance of succeeding in Africa particularly in women but the financing is never brought to them," he said.

Most African governments are still heavily dependent on donor aid from the west and some microfinance institutions are run by NGO's. Yunus warned against continued channelling of donor aid through governments.

"Since you focus aid through the government, it encourages bureaucracy, it encourages corruption it encourages inefficiency and we still have the African and Asian development banks doing the same repetitive thing," said Yunus.

Since winning the Nobel Peace Prize in 2006 jointly with Grameen Bank, the microcredit organization he founded, he has committed his portion of the $1 million prize money to developing social businesses and is trying to change the way the world views helping the poor.

He said the global financial crisis that hit western economies hardest, showed that the world needed to embrace social business as well.

"Let's make it two models, profit maximising business and also social business, business to change the world. If we don't redesign the global economy, we risk to fall in that trap again," he said.

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Afran : S.Africa's Marcus says not time for rate hike: paper
on 2010/4/7 11:13:37
Afran



2010-04-06
JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) - South Africa's central bank Governor Gill Marcus said it was not time to raise interest rates yet to deal with the impact of high power price increases on inflation.

Marcus told the Sunday Times newspaper "We're not there yet," when asked whether the central bank will be forced to raise interest rates after Eskom was given permission to raise its tariffs by a nominal 24.8 percent this year.

The central bank cut the repo rate by 50 basis points to 6.5 percent two weeks ago, adding to 500 basis points worth of cuts since December 2008.

Union and communist allies of the ruling ANC have been calling for deeper interest rate cuts.

Marcus told the Sunday Times the central bank was facing pressure to cut but she would not be influenced by it.

"Perhaps there should be a recognition that pressure is something I'm used to. I've been used to it all my life. So I'm not going to buckle. The heat is always there, it's the nature of the job," she said.

Marcus said the central bank's decision two weeks ago -- which surprised the market that expected rates to be left steady -- was not due to pressure.

"If the data had not enabled us to do it we would not have done it. There was certainly no pressure in the sense of, 'this is what is expected of you to do and therefore you must do it'."

The South African economy came out of its first recession in almost two decades in the third quarter and the pace of the recovery accelerated in the fourth quarter. Growth is expected at 2.3 percent this year, after a 1.8 percent decline in 2009.

But consumer demand, which drove growth to an average 5 percent between 2003 and 2007, was expected to be weak.

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Afran : Guinea threatens RUSAL workers as strike continues
on 2010/4/7 10:54:39
Afran



2010-04-06
CONAKRY (Reuters) - Workers at RUSAL's Friguia alumina refinery in Guinea blocked production for the sixth day in a row on Tuesday after initial negotiation efforts failed and the government threatened to send in security forces.

The plant, the largest industrial project in the fractious West African nation, has a capacity to produce around 640,000 tonnes of alumina per year, which the Russian firm then ships around the world to be refined further into aluminum.

"The entrance to the plant is still blocked by heavy machines. Production is still shut," said a RUSAL official on Tuesday on condition of anonymity.

Guinea sent two government ministers late on Monday to negotiate with members of the union, who are seeking a 50 percent pay hike to compensate for rising fuel prices, and Prime Minister Jean Marie Dore said he would call in security forces if the blockade did not end soon.

"It is imperative that those occupying the refinery leave without delay before I call on security forces to go in carefully and to liberate workers and ensure the security of the plant's equipment," he said late Monday on state television.

The RUSAL official said on Tuesday the workers' union had sent delegates to the capital Conakry to resume talks.

The Friguia refinery employs about 1,080 people.

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Afran : Ex-Nigeria anti-graft chief may return from exile
on 2010/4/7 10:53:59
Afran


2010-04-05
ABUJA (Reuters) - Nigeria's respected former anti-corruption chief Nuhu Ribadu said he is ready to return home after over a year in voluntary exile, and would be willing to serve under Acting President Goodluck Jonathan if asked.

Nigerian authorities dropped a legal case against Ribadu last week, potentially paving the way for his return to help Jonathan fight graft in one of the world's most tainted countries.

"Of course I would like to come back, but it was difficult because my life was threatened," Ribadu told Reuters. "The threat is now gone. I believe it is time for me to come back," he in a telephone interview from Washington, D.C. on Monday.

Ribadu won international praise for his arrests of suspects and seizures of assets as the first chief of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).

But he also made enemies for pursuing cases against powerful state governors and was fired in late 2007 soon after President Umaru Yar'Adua took power. He fled Nigeria for Britain and the United States in January 2009, saying his life was in danger.

Ribadu said he has not spoken directly with Jonathan, who assumed executive powers from ailing President Yar'Adua two months ago, and has not been offered a specific government position.

NO TO EFCC, POLICE

He said he would not return to the EFCC or the police as he believed he had been unfairly dismissed by both agencies. But he remained open to other job opportunities, especially those that would help to get Nigeria's anti-graft efforts back on track.

"Nothing took place in the last two years in the fight against corruption," Ribadu said. "The respect we gained with the rest of the world has been eroded. It will take time to rebuild it."

Local newspapers have reported that Jonathan was considering Ribadu as his special adviser on fighting corruption.

Ribadu said he could be back in Nigeria within weeks as his fellowship at the Centre for Global Development, a Washington-based think tank, was winding down.

Endemic corruption in Africa's most populous nation is a major disincentive to foreign investors, who view it as an indicator of inefficient public spending and therefore a major brake on economic growth.

Yar'Adua came to power in May 2007 promising zero tolerance for graft. But the removal of Ribadu and lack of progress in prosecuting politically sensitive cases have done little to boost confidence, not least among European donors who have poured $35 million into the EFCC.

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Afran : Madonna returns to Malawi on charity trip
on 2010/4/7 10:50:50
Afran



2010-04-06
NEW YORK, April 5 (Reuters Life!) - Pop star Madonna has returned to Malawi where she adopted two children to see construction of a school for orphaned girls she funded and launch a new education campaign using mobile technology, her spokeswoman said on Monday.

The singer is on a trip with her Raising Malawi charity she began in 2006, and will watch the first bricks laid down at her school, The Raising Malawi Academy for Girls, located in Chinkhota village about 15 kilometers outside the capital, Lilongwe, according to the charity's website.

Madonna also will visit the Millennium Village -- a United Nations-backed project to fight poverty -- along with economist Jeffrey Sachs and CEO of consumer electronics firm Ericsson Hans Vestberg. She and Vestberg will formally announce an education campaign on Tuesday.

"I look forward to seeing the amazing progress being made in that community as well as several other projects that are currently underway including the creation of a Girl's Academy," Madonna said in a statement.

In 2006, Madonna adopted a son, David, from the nation, and faced an outcry of public opinion when she was accused of getting special treatment from the Malawi government for skirting laws that ban nonresidents from adopting children.

Her 2009 adoption of a daughter also raised eyebrows, and last November the school became the subject of controversy in Malawi when villagers demanded more money for the land the government has leased to Madonna's charity.

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Afran : Judge named in Jackson doctor's Los Angeles trial
on 2010/4/7 10:49:26
Afran



2010-04-06
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - A California court on Monday assigned a judge to preside over the trial of Michael Jackson's doctor on an involuntary manslaughter charge relating to the pop singer's death last year.

Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Michael Pastor, named as the judge in the trial, set a June 14 date to determine when to hold a preliminary hearing in the case against Dr. Conrad Murray, who has pleaded not guilty.

At the June 14 hearing, Pastor also is expected to rule on a request by California's attorney general to suspend Murray's medical license. Murray, who resides in Las Vegas and Houston, is a cardiologist, and his lawyers have argued that if he were to lose his California license, Nevada and Texas may follow.

The preliminary hearing will determine if there is enough evidence against Murray to proceed to a criminal trial.

Fans of Jackson waved signs and chanted slogans outside the courthouse in Los Angeles. Several Jackson family members appeared in the courtroom, including his mother and father and his sister Janet Jackson.

Murray was charged on February 8 with involuntary manslaughter related to Jackson's death on June 25, 2009, from an overdose of prescription drugs, principally the anesthetic propofol. By charging him with involuntary manslaughter, prosecutors asserted that the doctor killed Jackson but without malice.

Murray, who faces up to four years in prison if convicted, was hired in May 2009 to care for Jackson as he prepared for a series of comeback concerts.

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Afran : Eskom, BHP agree on changes to power agreements
on 2010/4/7 10:46:11
Afran



JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) - South African state power firm Eskom and BHP Billiton have agreed to amend pricing agreements for power supplies to BHP aluminium smelters in South Africa and Mozambique, Eskom said.

Eskom seeks to raise more than $60 billion for investments to prevent a repeat of crippling blackouts in 2008. It is increasing power prices and renegotiating supply deals signed when it was able to charge much less for electricity.

Eskom said it would sign the final power agreements with BHP Billiton during the third quarter of 2010 and that they would require the approval of state power regulator, Nersa.

"This is a significant milestone that results in a new pricing path which will not be linked to commodity pricing and foreign currency," Eskom said on Monday, without giving precise details.

It said the agreements would affect the Mozal aluminium smelter in Mozambique and two others, the Hillside and Bayside smelters in South Africa, the continent's largest economy and a major mining hub.

Eskom, which has separate power supply agreements with other mining companies operating in South Africa, was granted an average of 25 percent in power tariff increases by Nersa for the next three years starting in 2010. .

South Africa's electricity is among the cheapest in the world, partly due to a government policy of underpricing power to attract industry.

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Afran : 22 die in accidents during Easter holiday in South Africa
on 2010/4/7 10:35:25
Afran



JOHANNESBURG, April 4 (Xinhua) -- Twenty two people have been killed in road accidents in South Africa over the Easter holiday, the country's Ministry of Transport said on Sunday.

According to South African Press Association, the ministry's Spokesman Logan Maistry said six people were killed on the R63 between Pearston and Somerset East in the Eastern Cape, five people were killed between Warden and Roadside in the Free State and seven others were killed on Moloto Road in Pretoria in Gauteng. All of these accidents happened on Thursday.

Another four people were killed on the N1 near Colesburg in the Northern Cape on Friday.

"We want to convey our condolences to the families and relatives of all those killed in road crashes over the past few days. We wish those injured a speedy recovery," Minister Sibusiso Ndebele said in the statement.

He said hundreds of motorists have been arrested and more than a thousand unroadworthy vehicles have been removed from the countries roads over the weekend.

"214 drivers were arrested for drinking and driving and 29 drivers for other offences," said Maistry.

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Afran : Somaliland: Child trafficking rises
on 2010/4/7 10:30:09
Afran

20100405
AFRICANEWS

The administration in Somalia's breakaway region of Somaliland is worried about increase in human trafficking in the region. Officials said children are mostly trafficking from south-central Somalia, because of the lack of effective government.
somalia refugees
Fadumo Sudi, the Minister for Family and Social Affairs said: “Before, no one believed that human/child trafficking existed in Somaliland but such kinds of crimes occur here.”

She was speaking at the reunification of a young girl with her family. She was trafficked from Qardho, northeast region in Putland to Hargeisa, Somaliland, in February.

“One day, my sister went to school as usual, but she disappeared. We searched for her everywhere but we didn’t find her,” her brother Najib Jama Abdi said in an IRIN report.

“By Allah’s mercy she was saved. We are happy to have her back,” Abdi added.

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Afran : Senegal mark 50yrs of independence
on 2010/4/7 10:29:41
Afran

20100405
africanews

A combination of military forces from about eight African nations took part in celebrations marking Senegal's Golden Jubilee celebrations, on Sunday.
senegal at 50
The inter-African military parade served as a perfect physical demonstration by President Abdoulaye Wade of the endless call for continental unity, a domineering subject in the entire celebrations of his country’s 50th Independence anniversary. Other forces came from Cape Verde, Gabon, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Mali, Morocco and Mauritania.

France, Senegal’s former colonial master; Italy and Spain were also represented at the parade ground in the capital Dakar.

Also present at the high profile ceremony were about 20 other African heads of states who, alongside their host, saw an impressive performance ranging from cultural, artistic to military exhibitions.

The theme of Senegal’s 50th anniversary has been all about a free and historically meaningful Africa. President Wade used his independence message to the nation to announce the completion of a “dream” by the country’s ‘elders’.

“By breaking away, fifty years ago, the dependencies imposed by the colonial power, our country accomplished the dream of our elders for the total liberation of our soil, a dream completed today by the resumption of our bases formerly granted to France,” the president said in a televised statement on the eve of the celebrations proper.

“Therefore, I solemnly declare that Senegal reassumed, from today, April 4, 2010, at midnight, all the bases on our soil previously held by France.”

He added: “The specificity of our historical relations, based on history, language and some basic common values, leads us to develop, with France, a new area of cooperation.”

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Afran : Mozambique: 29 Somali migrants arrested
on 2010/4/7 10:29:05
Afran

20100405
AFRICANEWS

Mozambique immigration officials have arrested 29 Somali migrants who were heading to South Africa to escape the escalating violence in their homeland. Police officers said the fleeing party who claimed to be refugees was seized on Sunday in two minibuses.
south africa
Ernesto Serote, police spokesman in Zambezia province, said one of the vehicles was driven by an off-duty police officer.

Mozambique is increasingly becoming a transit point for illegal immigrants to gain entry into South Africa, said Serote.

At least 17,000 illegal migrants from the Horn of Africa flee to South Africa annually. Most of them transit through Kenya, according to the International Organization for Migration’s report in February.

The organization said crisis and poverty were forcing Somalis and Ethiopians to carry out dangerous journeys to better places. South Africa has deported a total of 678,697 illegal immigrants between 2002 and 2005.

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Afran : Somalia: Pirates release two boats
on 2010/4/7 10:28:34
Afran

20100405
africanews

Somali pirates have released two Indian boats with 26-crew seized last week but have hijacked a South Korea tanker.
Prisoners of Somalian pirates in Eyl. Photo by Sheekh Aduun
Pirates hijacked the two India boats which were leaving from a port in Kismayo, where Al-Qaeda linked group of Al-Shabaab controls, to Dubai.

"One vessel with 15 sailors on board was released by the pirates yesterday (Saturday), while another one was freed early this morning (Sunday) along with 11 sailors," AFP news agency quoted Kasam Ali, president of the Kutch Vahanvati Association in Gujarat.

The bandits group also seized a South Korean oil tanker with 24 sailors on Sunday off the coast of lawless and war-torn nation, Somalia.

Seoul’s foreign ministry has said that the Samho Dream tanker was carrying 300,000-ton of goods and heading to the US state of Louisiana from Iraq.

"The ship is presumed to have been hijacked by Somali pirates," a statement released by the foreign ministry said.

The government also said it will do its best for safety of the 24 crew, five South Koreans and 19 Filipinos.

Somali bandits have made tens of millions of dollars for ransom payment. Only last year, pirates made over $60 million for a ransom payment after they took nearly 47 vessels and 300 crews.

They currently have over 80 Indian crew with six ships hijacked near the Seychelles. Somalia has not had an effective government since warlords overthrew longtime dictator Mohamed Siad Barre in 1991.

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Afran : Pop star Madonna 'sneaked' into Malawi
on 2010/4/7 10:28:02
Afran

20100405
africanews

Pop Star Madonna arrived in Malawi aboard a private jet with registration number HB-IHQ which landed at Kamuzu International Airport in Lilongwe, Malawi at around 8:20am on Monday. She came off through the cargo outlet - a move calculated to swerve the lenses of prying paparazzi.

Wearing a dark blue jeans and T-Shirt, the pop star came with a crew of about 10 people including the Sony Ericsson boss.

AfricaNews reporter said Madonna came with all her children including David Banda and Mercy James whom she adopted in the country.

She is expected to go to Mchinji Millennium project - a United Nations initiative in the central border district west of Lilongwe - on Monday and then on Tuesday she will inspect the Raising Malawi Academy for Gils in Lilongwe.

Madonna will be joined by economist Jeffrey Sachs, a development affairs expert and mentor of the initiative. She is expected to lay the first brick of her Raising Malawi Academy for Girls, signaling the official commencement of construction of the $15 million academy, set to open in 2011.

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Afran : Sudan JEM accuses army of shelling Darfur positions
on 2010/4/7 10:27:28
Afran

20100405
ALALAM

Sudan's Justice and Equality Movement (JEM) says the army bombed its positions in Darfur on Monday, but the army rejected the accusation.

Sudan's army denied launching any attacks on JEM and a senior government official accused the movement of seizing new territory in the remote western region, against the terms of the same agreement.

Sudan's president Omar Hassan al-Bashir declared the seven- year Darfur conflict over after his government signed a ceasefire and initial peace deal with JEM in the Qatari capital Doha in February.

But further talks quickly stalled after JEM objected to Khartoum starting parallel discussions with another group.

"The bombing started at midnight and continued this morning ... These people (the government) are not interested in finding a political solution to the problem," said JEM spokesman Ahmed Hussein Adam, speaking from Qatar by phone.

Adam said government planes bombed JEM positions around the North Darfur areas of Abu Hamra, Furawiya and Jabel Moun.

But Sudan government dismissed JEM's accusations. "The Sudanese Army is committed to the ceasefire it has signed with JEM. It has not bombed any JEM positions," an army spokesman said.

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