Category: Africa

  • Uganda Minister Says People Dying Of Hunger Are ‘Idiots’

    Uganda Minister Says People Dying Of Hunger Are ‘Idiots’

    A Ugandan government minister is facing criticism after calling those who have died of hunger in his country “idiots”.

    Many have deemed Henry Okello Oryem’s comments tone-deaf.

    In 2022, more than 2,200 people died of starvation and related illnesses in north-east Uganda, a report by an official human rights body said.

    But Mr Oryem argued that given Uganda’s favourable climate and fertile land, people should be able to grow food for themselves.

    “It’s only an idiot, a real idiot, that can die of hunger in Uganda,” the state minister for foreign affairs told the NTV Uganda television channel.

    “If you work hard, there is land in Uganda. The climate is right in spite [of] climate change. If you make a double effort to make sure that you go out in the morning, you till your land, you plant the seeds, you maintain your plantation, surely, how do you fail then to get food?”

    As well as killing many people, the food shortage in the north-east left nearly half-a-million people in “acute hunger”, said the report by the Uganda Human Rights Commission, which was established by the constitution.

    The minister’s comments have sparked outrage.

    Moses Aleper, a legislator for Chekwii county, which is part of the affected Karamoja region, told the BBC that Mr Oryem’s views were “not right” and “unfortunate coming from a minister who knows what goes on in this country”.

    “I’m from one of the most productive parts of Karamoja where there is adequate rain and we produce food. But in situations where weather fails us, the weather vagaries set in, we definitely fail to get food. And normally people definitely get famine and eventually hunger strikes.”

    Mr Aleper also said that hunger in the region is often caused by “other issues beyond even human control”, such as the way that the climate is changing.

    Prominent Ugandan author and journalist Charles Onyango-Obbo also hit out at Mr Oryem, saying that the minister failed to grasp “that hunger in a country like Uganda is a distribution/market problem”.

    Official data on the current food situation in Karamoja is unavailable, but it often experiences hunger during dry seasons due to the region’s semi-arid climatic conditions.

  • Rare Transparency: Namibian President Makes Public His Health Status

    Rare Transparency: Namibian President Makes Public His Health Status

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    * 82-year-old Geingob says he has been diagnosed with cancer and will fly to the U.S. for treatment

    * In another rarity for Africa, the Namibian President said he will pay for his own travel, medical and accommodation expenses during the treatment.

    While some African countries hide and even deny the illness of their national leaders, Namibia has shown that the health of their President is an issue of public interest by deciding to be fully transparent about the situation.

    In a rare move for African leaders, the Namibian Presidency announced on January 19 that the 82-year-old Geingob was diagnosed with cancer during a medical check-up earlier this month and will undergo treatment.

    The Namibian President’s Office issued an update today that Geingob will fly to the United States for a 7-day medical treatment.

    The following is a media statement released today by the Namibian Presidency:

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    Consistent with his commitment to transparency and accountability in Effective Governance, President Hage G. Geingob informed the Namibian people on 19 January 2024 about cancerous cells that had been detected by his medical team following biopsy exams.

    The President also communicated that he would commence immediate medical treatment following advice from the medical team.

    An unintended, but welcome consequence of the transparency with which the President communicated about the cancerous cells has been the outpouring of prayers, well-wishes, including offers of medical support from Namibians, friends, leading specialist physicians and scientists from across the globe.

    In that vein, the President has accepted the medical offer by leading scientists and medical professionals in Los Angeles, California to undergo novel therapy for the cancerous cells in the United States of America.

    The travel, medical and accommodation expenses of the President will not be incurred by the Government.

    Whilst 95% of the treatment for the cancerous cells will be carried out in Namibia, the Presidency wishes to confirm that the treatment the President will undergo in the United States of America is limited to seven days.

    Crucially, the medical technology will be transferred to Namibia and President Geingob will travel with his medical team and this will also result in the necessary transfer of advanced medical skills, which will be used for the treatment of other patients in Namibia.

    The Presidency wishes to once again reassure Namibians that President Geingob is in good spirits and continues to discharge of his duties as Head of State.

    During the President’s short medical leave of absence from 25 January 2024 to 2 February 2024, the Vice President of the Republic of Namibia, H.E. Nangolo Mbumba shall be the Acting President.

    President Geingob will depart this evening, Wednesday 24 January 2024 and shall return on 2 February 2024.

    President Geingob would like to thank Namibians and friends from across the globe for their support, prayers and messages of best wishes.

  • Kenya Affirms Its Commitment To Work With Tanzania And All EAC States To Foster Regional Prosperity

    Kenya Affirms Its Commitment To Work With Tanzania And All EAC States To Foster Regional Prosperity

    Prime Cabinet Secretary Musalia Mudavadi has affirmed Kenya’s commitment to work with all member states in strengthening the East African Community’s (EAC) integration and prosperity.

    Mudavadi, the Foreign and Diaspora Affairs Cabinet Secretary, has said that all member states must rally together and envision the EAC’s vision. The vision is for a prosperous, competitive, secure, stable, and politically united East Africa. Regional unity can only happen if everyone works together.

    Mudavadi spoke while meeting Tanzania’s January Makamba. They met on the sidelines of the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) Member States Summit in Kampala, Uganda.

    The two ministers agreed to pursue extensive bilateral engagements. They want to strengthen and advance the foreign diplomatic policies of Kenya and Tanzania.

    “Kenya and Tanzania enjoy long-standing historical ties with close cooperation in key sectors of economic and cultural advancements. Being one of our key trading partners within the region, this collaboration extends beyond EAC and Africa as Kenya is known to have continuously improved its on foreign relations and diplomatic engagements globally,” said Mudavadi.

    The meeting comes a day after the aviation restrictions controversy between Kenya and Tanzania was resolved. This followed diplomatic engagements between Mudavadi and Makamba, with aid from the Transport Ministries of both countries.

    Mudavadi says collaborative efforts should achieve key resolutions to emerging diplomatic spats. These efforts should be encouraged within the East African Community region.

    He said the EAC mission aims at widening and deepening economic, political, social, and cultural integration. The goal is to improve people’s quality of life through increased competitiveness, value-added production, trade, and investments.

     “We are like conjoined twins and when one of us is hurt, we both feel the pain. We must be cognizant of the fact that within the contemporary globalized environment, there are emerging challenges some of which have deep diplomatic ramifications. But how we address the situation at hand and work collectively towards getting common solutions to the problems is what will move the integration forward and help our people,” Makamba explained.

    The two leaders indicated that the two countries have also agreed to give their respective support toward efforts to restore peace and normalcy in the conflict-hit Eastern DRC. The region has continuously witnessed fragile calm and threats to humanity.

    The conflict in Somalia is escalating from the territorial stand-off with Somaliland. The Ministers said they will seek more interventions to restore peace in the Horn of Africa.

  • Africa’s Forgotten Genocide: Namibia

    Africa’s Forgotten Genocide: Namibia

    – Germany’s pledge to intervene on Israel’s behalf at ICJ ‘a textbook case of racism playing out in the international criminal justice arena,’ says South African academic Everisto Benyera

    – ‘Interpretation that arises is the Nama, Herero and Palestinians are not human in the eyes of Germany. Only Jews and other Caucasians are humans,’ Benyera tells Anadolu

    – Germany’s support for Israel can be seen as ‘privileging the suffering of European Jews over that of indigenous Africans,’ says politics professor Ahmed Jazbhay

    – Colonizers like Germany used ‘scorched earth policies as an expression of their power to treat natives as sub-humans,’ according to analyst Iqbal Jassat

    By Hassan Isilow

    An evident fallout of South Africa’s genocide case against Israel at the International Court of Justice (ICJ) has been clearer divisions on the global front.

    Since the hearings at The Hague last week, countries from the Global South, particularly African, Latin American and Muslim-majority nations, have rallied behind South Africa.

    On the other side is the Global North, led by Western nations like the US, Canada and Germany, who stand firm in their support of Israel.

    One particular instance that caught international attention was the exchange between Namibia and Germany after the latter pledged to intervene at the ICJ on Israel’s behalf.

    Namibia was quick to put out a statement condemning Germany’s “shocking decision.”

    “On Namibian soil, Germany committed the first genocide of the 20th century in 1904-1908, in which tens of thousands of innocent Namibians died in the most inhumane and brutal conditions,” read a statement from the Namibian Presidency, referring to the atrocities carried out by German colonial forces against the Indigenous Herero and Nama groups.

    “The German government is yet to fully atone for the genocide it committed on Namibian soil … Germany cannot morally express commitment to the United Nations convention against genocide, including atonement for the genocide in Namibia, whilst supporting the equivalent of a holocaust and genocide in Gaza.”

    Experts view Germany’s stance on the issue as an implication of sorts for the European power, saying it shows how it perceives Palestinians and the genocide victims of Namibia as “not human.”

    “The interpretation that arises is that the Nama, the Herero and Palestinians are not human in the eyes of Germany. Only Jews and other Caucasians are humans, hence, worthy of a German apology and support,” Everisto Benyera, a politics professor at the University of South Africa, told Anadolu.

    ‘Textbook case of racism’

    According to estimates, some 60,000 Herero and 10,000 Nama people were murdered by German troops in southwestern Africa between 1904 and 1908.

    In 2021, after over five years of negotiations, Germany formally recognized its actions as a “genocide,” agreeing to fund projects in Namibia worth €1.1 billion ($1.3 billion) over 30 years for its role in mass killings and property seizures in its former colony over a century ago.

    Given its history, Germany’s stance in favor of Israel is “absurd,” according to Ahmed Jazbhay, a professor of international politics in South Africa.

    Its decision to support Israel in the ICJ case “can be interpreted as privileging the suffering of European Jews over that of indigenous Africans,” he said.

    “Though the genocide in Namibia may be 100 years apart with that in Palestine, it evokes the same pain and suffering,” he told Anadolu.

    For Benyera, the entire episode is “a textbook case of racism playing out in the international criminal justice arena, where other races are superior to others.”

    “There is selectivity, not only in the application of international criminal justice, but also selectivity on who is a human and who is worthy of being defined and defended by international norms, justice and principals,” he said.

    ‘Impunity and utter callousness’

    No matter how it tries to justify it, Germany’s decision to defend Israel at the ICJ is “immoral and a despicable act of cowardice” that should be condemned, according to Iqbal Jassat, an executive member of the Johannesburg-based Media Review Network.

    “The irony is that it comes exactly 120 years since Germany perpetrated Africa’s first genocide,” he said.

    The German atrocities against the Herero and Nama were in line with how colonial powers have historically acted, viewing “scorched earth policies as an expression of their power to treat natives as sub-humans,” said Jassat.

    “Germany, by siding with Israel’s current genocide, has demonstrated impunity and utter callousness,” he said, urging the ICJ to dismiss its application for intervention.

    Regarding the ICJ case, Benyera said it will be “an evaluation of the international justice system itself.”

    “This being a case brought by a country from the Global South indicates a power shift in international power dynamics, in that countries of the Global South are now not only able but also willing to publicly stand up to the most powerful Western nations and their alliances,” he said.

    The case against Israel sets a huge precedent and the ICJ and International Criminal Court (ICC) have to prove themselves as “impartial” or run the risk of “finding themselves redundant,” he warned.

    “This is not only good news for the Palestinians, but also for other marginalized people like the Rohingya,” said Benyera.

    “Whatever judgment comes from the ICJ case will set a precedent that is going to live with us for a very long time.”

    The article was first published in Anadolu Agency

  • Tanzania Lifts Ban On KQ Flights

    Tanzania Lifts Ban On KQ Flights

    Tanzania has rescinded its decision to suspend all passenger flights operated by Kenya Airways (KQ) between Nairobi and Dar es Salaam.

    The reversal comes after Kenya granted the Fifth Freedom Traffic Right to Air Tanzania Company Limited specifically for all-cargo service.

    Tanzania Civil Aviation Authority Director General Hamza Johari announced the resumption of all cargo services, effective 16th January, 2024.

    “Following the development the auronautical authorities of the United Republic of Tanzania hereby withdraw its decison of 15 January 2024 and therefore approval of Kenya Airways to operate Third and Fourth Freedom Traffic Rights between Nairobi and Dar es Salaam is hereby restored with immediate effect,” he said.

    On Monday, Tanzania suspended all Kenya Airways passenger flights after Kenya rejected Tanzania’s request for all-cargo flight operations by Air Tanzania Company Limited under the Fifth Freedom Traffic Rights between Nairobi and third countries.

    “This is to reciprocate the decision by the aeronautical authorities of Kenya to refuse the Tanzanian request for all-cargo flight operations by Air Tanzania Company Limited under Fifth Freedom Traffic Rights between Nairobi and Third countries, contrary to Section 4 of the Memorandum of Understanding on Air Services between Tanzania and Kenya signed on 24th November 2016 in Nairobi.” Noted Johari.

    The International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) identifies the following freedoms for airlines:

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    ????? ??????? ?? ??? ??? – the right or privilege, in respect of scheduled international air services, granted by one state to another state or states to fly across its territory without landing (also known as a First Freedom Right).

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    ????? ??????? ?? ??? ??? – the right or privilege, in respect of scheduled international air services, granted by one state to another state to put down, in the territory of the first state, traffic coming from the home state of the carrier (also known as a Third Freedom Right).

    ?????? ??????? ?? ??? ??? – the right or privilege, in respect of scheduled international air services, granted by one state to another state to take on, in the territory of the first state, traffic destined for the home state of the carrier (also known as a Fourth Freedom Right).

    ????? ??????? ?? ??? ??? – the right or privilege, in respect of scheduled international air services, granted by one state to another state to put down and to take on, in the territory of the first state, traffic coming from or destined to a third state (also known as a Fifth Freedom Right).

  • Uganda: The Muhoozi Project Is A Hoax

    Uganda: The Muhoozi Project Is A Hoax

    By Andrew Karamagi

    After some contemplation and observation, I have come to the conclusion that the MK Project (a hodgepodge ensemble that aspires to install so called First Son, Muhoozi Kainerugaba, as successor to Yoweri Museveni) is a hoax and major diversion, orchestrated by the latter, with the former as an excited spoilt kid, buoyed by a brazen cast of unsophisticated fortune hunters, brazen wheeler dealers, ignorant sycophants, and callous felons.

    My three brief reasons:

    First, I hold the view that Museveni quietly but thoroughly despises Muhoozi for his lack of discipline, rigour, and intellectual depth. He doesn’t see him as a guarantor of the family’s bloodline and loot.

    Why do I think so? In my conversations with elders and bush war veterans, they have invariably underscored Museveni’s sheer determination, willpower, thirst for knowledge (even for nefarious motives), and spartan discipline (including his disdain for alcohol and penchant for physical fitness), all of which were part of his formative youthful years. When Museveni was Kainerugaba’s age, he was already considerably published on Marxist philosophy, Pan Africanism, public policy, guerrilla warfare, and politics as a whole. It is a different question whether he has lived up to his writings, but the same cannot be said, even remotely, of his son who can neither compose nor deliver a simple speech at a wedding ceremony, his own birthday party, or a public rally, off-the-cuff. Instead, Kainerugaba relies on what appears to be hastily scribbled, incoherent notes on sticky notes or shabby pieces of paper.

    Now in his eighties, the Old Man has evidently lost his shine and verve, but remains a polar opposite of his wayward son in terms of mental acuity and discipline. It doesn’t make sense to me that Museveni would take the gamble of entrusting his life’s work to a lazy, self-absorbed kid born with a silver spoon in his mouth.

    Second, Museveni’s pathological love for power, in its rawest and finest forms, makes it impossible for him to tolerate, much less support the notion of a successor. In his kingdom Uganda, there is no trinity or line of succession. He is the alpha and omega, the beginning and the end.

    Take a look at the fates of all those who were once thought to be potential replacements (many of whom he even cunningly whispered the idea of succession to), from James Wapakhabulo, Noble Mayombo, Amama Mbabazi, Gilbert Bukenya (don’t laugh!), to Rebecca Kadaga. Don’t let the father-son relationship mislead you; in Machiavellian equations of power, being his biological son doesn’t mean much to a despot.

    As with the rest of animal kingdom, so with humankind…lions, for example, are known to kill off young male offspring to guarantee their continued leadership of the pride. By the same logic, regardless of his state-of-mind, for as long as Museveni has the basic functions of body temperature, pulse rate, and respiration, it is not conceivable that he can entertain the idea of a replacement or successor, by whatever name called. It’s just not in him.

    Gen Muhoozi is the son of President Yoweri Museveni.

    Third and finally, Gen. Museveni’s career as a civil servant (i.e., intelligence operative and minister), guerrilla, and head of the ruling junta (so called NRM) has been characterised by countless smokescreens. Museveni trivialises or remains silent about serious issues and overplays the things he doesn’t really care about.

    (In)famous diversions include the ruse he sold regarding his commitment to cease fire and fully participate in the Nairobi Peace Talks (also known as the Nairobi Peace Jokes) yet his rebel forces were simultaneously advancing on (and later on captured) Kampala; his perennial mind games on the leadership of religions and kingdoms in Uganda; and the false alliance he made with MPs who zealously supported his bid for the removal of the presidential age limit, only for him to sacrifice them at the altar of the 2021 elections to appease an angry population.

    In the words of my friend Betty Nambooze, “if Museveni asks you to wait for him on the road that leads to Masaka, do yourself a favour and instead wait for him on the road that leads to Jinja.” Founding father Milton Obote who was his boss at a time designated him “a pathological liar who only tells the truth by accident.” One commentator whose name eludes me once hilariously quipped that if you shake hands with Museveni, check to see that you still have all five fingers. Against such a backdrop, why would anyone believe that for something as crucial as transition or succession, Museveni would play his cards so openly as to show us his heir apparent?

    Let me conclude this way:

    The only real utility that the MK Project possesses for Museveni is twofold:

    i. By deliberately hyping up a Kainerugaba presidency, Museveni forces the public to look favourably upon his continued rule because he is the Devil we know…and that Muhoozi would certainly be an unmitigated disaster. This reduces the spotlight on his forty-year-reign, as the “bewildered herd” gets distracted by the theatrics of the MK project.

    ii. Assuming that a real crown prince exists, the MK Project helps the ruling family to conceal the identity of that person, while we chase after shadows.

    In the end, the Ugandan public will be the ultimate loser in this long con. After all, Baalam Barugahara & Co., don’t care who takes power next or what happens to the country, as long as their stomachs are full.

    For these reasons, I hold the considered view that the MK Project is the latest in a series of hoaxes, not worth the undivided attention of Ugandans.

    Let’s focus on getting rid of Museveni and Musevenism—and the task of restoring our society to its past glory and dignity.

    Opinion is writer’s own.

    [email protected]

  • The CEO Inspire Africa Coffee, Tugume Nelson Accused By Farmers And Investors For Pocketing $20M Meant To Finance Coffee Export Trade

    The CEO Inspire Africa Coffee, Tugume Nelson Accused By Farmers And Investors For Pocketing $20M Meant To Finance Coffee Export Trade

    Coffee farmers and investors in Uganda have accused the CEO Inspire Africa Coffee, Tugume Nelson for pocketing US$20m meant to finance coffee export trade.

    They allege that on a political order, the money ended up in his private account, and he has since “disappeared”.

    According to a Ugandan lobby group AGORA, The Prime Minister’s office gave Tugume Nelson, the CEO of Inspire Africa, a staggering UGX 9,662,236,680 (approximately USD20M)– to help young people learn about coffee and run coffee shops. The goal also included how to teach them about managing money and financial skills.

    However, the money appears to have been misappropriated, 2021 Auditor General’s report revealed that, following a visit to Arua, where the construction of coffee shops was planned, the site had been abandoned with no ongoing activity. In Mbale, the coffee shop had shut down, and its equipment was stored at the Mbale District Offices.

    In Lira, coffee shops were notably absent, and in Gulu, anticipated facilities such as a Washing Bay and Multi-media deck were never put in place.


    According to Robert Kabushega, a coffee farmer and investor, the whole program was a scam and the money gone.

    Screenshot.

    Robert goes further to claim that in Nelson’s latest scheme is a media campaign in Russian media allied to Putin. Supposedly to grow imports of Ugandan coffee into Russia. That will need more money.

    He accuses Nelson of spending part of the taxpayers money to build his “factory for instant coffee” in Ntungamo. And that I n the unlikely event that he executes this, it will be his private business. “If you want to know how this will end, read what he did with the UGX 9.6bn he was given by Office of the Prime Minister in the Auditor General’s report. It is a public document.” He said.

    He goes further, “there is also the small matter of hundreds of thousands of dollars he obtained from Mastercard foundation through Private Sector Foundation Uganda that he has obdurately refused to pay back or even account for yet this is the person that was presented to Uganda’s Cabinet and to a meeting in South Africa of so called leading local exporters as the main local coffee exporter. It was here that the $20m request was tabled & passed as small money.”

    “He tried to use existing players in the sector for legitimacy. Those who were gullible were played & they have admitted in a public fall out with him. Those who refused have become targets of regulatory pressure.”

    https://x.com/rkabushenga/status/1745845885345427629?s=46&t=KazQmrLjpJYvkoNP81WxiA

    Nelson has already written a cease and desist letter to Robert and threatened to Sue him for USD280M should he persist with the claims that he stole $20M.

  • Software Firm SAP Agrees To Pay $220M Over Bribery Charges Involving Kenya Too

    Software Firm SAP Agrees To Pay $220M Over Bribery Charges Involving Kenya Too

    Global software giant SAP has agreed to pay more than $220 million to settle bribery charges involving government officials around the world.


    The money and gifts, typically routed via outside business consultants, were intended to help win business in Kenya, South Africa, Indonesia and elsewhere, according to US officials.

    The schemes allegedly operated from at least December 2014 until January 2022. SAP said it had cooperated with investigators and overhauled policies. “SAP remains vigilant in maintaining the highest standards of ethics and compliance,” the company said in a statement.

    SAP, which is headquartered in Germany and has shares listed in the US, is among the world’s largest software companies.

    According to US court documents, subsidiaries of the firm in operating in five countries in Africa, Azerbaijan and Indonesia engaged in bribery schemes, “repeatedly” breaking company policies that were intended to guard against corruption.

    Funded trips

    In South Africa, it allegedly paid millions in fees to consultants, despite no work being performed, and funded trips to New York for government officials, including golf outings.

    In Kenya, SAP Africa used GA intermediary to help it improperly influence a tender by Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA) in 2015. In the tender, KRA partnered with SAP to implement a core technology application called SAP Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP).

    In Indonesia, it also funded shopping excursions and dining, as well as making more explicit payments.

    The Securities and Exchange Commission order cites WhatsApp discussions including the instructions: “Seventy million, in fifty thousand bills…Bring empty envelope”.

    Officials said SAP – which was punished for violating US laws against bribery and corruption in Panama in 2016 – had failed to institute processes to address the high risk of such issues, inaccurately recording the bribes as legitimate business expenses.

    The settlement includes a $118.8m criminal fine, according to the Department of Justice and Securities and Exchange Commission, which worked with authorities in South Africa on the investigation and announced the deal.

    Penalties were reduced from the maximum possible after SAP cooperated with investigators and moved to punish and fire employees involved in the payments.

    “SAP has accepted responsibility for corrupt practices that hurt honest businesses engaging in global commerce,” said US Attorney Jessica D. Aber for the Eastern District of Virginia.

    “We will continue to vigorously prosecute bribery cases to protect domestic companies that follow the law while participating in the international marketplace.” The US said it would drop the criminal charges against the firm after three years if SAP complies with the announced agreement.

    Four years ago, Goldman Sachs agreed to pay nearly $3 billion to end a probe of its role in the 1MDB corruption scandal.

    The bank’s Malaysian subsidiary also admitted in US court that it had paid more than $1 billion in bribes to win work raising money for the Malaysian State-owned wealth fund. US officials said the record settlement reflected Goldman’s “central” role in a “massive corruption scheme”.

    Goldman admitted it had fallen “short”, calling it an “institutional failure”.

    In all, the investment bank is due to pay about $5 billion in penalties – about two thirds of its 2019 profits – to regulators around the world, including in the UK, to resolve cases that have severely tarnished the firm’s reputation.

  • TB Joshua: Nigerian Pastor Raped And Tortured Worshippers, BBC Reports

    TB Joshua: Nigerian Pastor Raped And Tortured Worshippers, BBC Reports

    Evidence of widespread abuse and torture by the founder of one of the world’s biggest Christian evangelical churches has been uncovered by the BBC.

    Dozens of ex-Synagogue Church of all Nations members – five British – allege atrocities, including rape and forced abortions, by Nigeria’s late TB Joshua.

    The allegations of abuse in a secretive Lagos compound span almost 20 years.

    The Synagogue Church of All Nations did not respond to the allegations but said previous claims have been unfounded.

    TB Joshua, who died in 2021, was a charismatic and hugely successful preacher and televangelist who had an immense global following.

    The BBC’s findings over a two-year investigation include:

    • Dozens of eyewitness accounts of physical violence or torture carried out by Joshua, including instances of child abuse and people being whipped and chained
    • Numerous women who say they were sexually assaulted by Joshua, with a number claiming they were repeatedly raped for years inside the compound
    • Multiple allegations of forced abortions inside the church following the alleged rapes by Joshua, including one woman who says she had five terminations
    • Multiple first-hand accounts detailing how Joshua faked his “miracle healings”, which were broadcast to millions of people around the world

    One of the victims, a British woman, called Rae, was 21 years old when she abandoned her degree at Brighton University in 2002 and was recruited into the church. She spent the next 12 years as one of Joshua’s so-called “disciples” inside his maze-like concrete compound in Lagos.

    “We all thought we were in heaven, but we were in hell, and in hell terrible things happen,” she told the BBC.

    Rae says she was sexually assaulted by Joshua and subjected to a form of solitary confinement for two years. The abuse was so severe, she says she attempted suicide multiple times inside the compound.

    The Synagogue Church of All Nations [Scoan] has a global following, operating a Christian TV channel called Emmanuel TV and social media networks with millions of viewers. Throughout the 1990s and early 2000s, tens of thousands of pilgrims from Europe, the Americas, South East Asia and Africa travelled to the church in Nigeria to witness Joshua performing “healing miracles”. At least 150 visitors lived with him as disciples inside his compound in Lagos, sometimes for decades.

    More than 25 former “disciples” spoke to the BBC – from the UK, Nigeria, US, South Africa, Ghana, Namibia and Germany – giving powerful corroborating testimony about their experiences within the church, with the most recent experiences in 2019. Many victims were in their teens when they first joined. In some of the British cases, their transport to Lagos was paid for by Joshua, in co-ordination with other UK churches.

    Rae and multiple other interviewees compared their experiences to being in a cult.

    Jessica Kaimu, from Namibia, says her ordeal lasted more than five years. She says she was 17 when Joshua first raped her, and that subsequent instances of rape by TB Joshua led to her having five forced abortions while there.

    “These were backdoor type… medical treatments that we were going through… it could have killed us,” she told the BBC.

    Other interviewees say they were stripped and beaten with electrical cables and horse whips, and routinely denied sleep.

    On his death in June 2021, TB Joshua was hailed as one of the most influential pastors in African history. Rising from poverty, he built an evangelical empire that counted dozens of political leaders, celebrities and international footballers among his associates.

    He did, however, attract some controversy during his lifetime when a guesthouse for church pilgrims collapsed in 2014, killing at least 116 people.

    The BBC’s investigation, which was carried out with international media platform Open Democracy, is the first time multiple former church insiders have come forward to speak on the record. They say they’ve spent years trying to raise the alarm, but have effectively been silenced.

    A number of our witnesses in Nigeria claim they were physically attacked, and in one case shot at, after previously speaking out against the abuse and posting videos containing allegations on YouTube.

    A BBC crew that attempted to record footage of the church’s Lagos compound from a public street in March 2022 was also fired at by the church’s security, and was detained for a number of hours.

    The BBC contacted Scoan with the allegations in our investigation. It did not respond to them, but denied previous claims against TB Joshua.

    “Making unfounded allegations against Prophet TB Joshua is not a new occurrence… None of the allegations was ever substantiated,” it wrote.

    Four of the British citizens who spoke to the BBC say they reported the abuse to the UK authorities after escaping the church. They say no further action was taken.

    In addition, a British man and his wife emailed eyewitness accounts of their ordeal and video evidence – including recordings of being held at gunpoint by men describing themselves as police who are also members of Scoan – to the British High Commission in Nigeria in March 2010 after fleeing the church. In his email, the man said his wife had been repeatedly sexually assaulted and raped by Joshua. He warned the commission that other British nationals were still inside the compound facing atrocities.

    He also says no action was taken.

    Scoan continues to thrive today, under the leadership of Joshua’s widow, Evelyn. In July 2023, she led a tour of Spain.

    Anneka, who left Derby in the UK to join Scoan at the age of 17, told the BBC she believes there are many other victims who have yet to speak out. She hopes further steps will be taken to uncover Joshua’s actions.

    “I believe the Synagogue Church of All Nations needs a thorough investigation into why this man was able to function for so long the way he did,” she said.-BBC

    Watch the three-part #BBCAfricaEye documentary series here: bbc.in/48oUoGE

  • WorldRemit Can Survive Without Somalia Money, Group’s Chairman Tells Off Boycott Campaigners

    WorldRemit Can Survive Without Somalia Money, Group’s Chairman Tells Off Boycott Campaigners

    In a bombshell statement by WorldRemit CEO Ismail Ahmed he tells paid agents and trolls from Somalia “you only contribute to 0.3% of my business so boycott away.”

    Over the past few days Somalia has waged a campaign against one of the most successful business men who hail from the Somaliland.

    Ismail the 2020 most influential person of African heritage in the UK condemned the targeted smear campaign which he says has been orchestrated and funded by politicians in Somalia after he publicly backed the historic deal with Ethiopia.

    He said that even if his entire business was funded through income from Somalia, it would not change his position on the deal.

    Ismail who’s also the director of Sahamiye Foundation and and an Somalilander, voiced his opinion on this deal that didn’t go well with Somalis leading to a charged online campaign dubbed #BoycottRemit

    Mr. Ismail however isn’t moved by the campaign targeting his business empire claiming the Somali make a minor market base for WorldRemit and his views cannot be changed by the campaign. He insists this is part of a wider scheme by politicians and businessmen from Somalia to vanquish Somaliland.

    “As you have seen on social media, there are meetings held by big politicians and businessmen from Somalia who are determined to widen the campaign against Somaliland and the business of Somaliland. This is the aim of arresting the Somaliland businessmen to participate in spreading fake news that is wanted to be against the Somaliland people.Among the targeted companies include WorldRemit, which the group has called for a stop of its use completely.” Said Ismail in a statement.

    He defiantly reiterates his stand further saying that Somalia makes a very small part of his business transactions while insinuating that a boycott wouldn’t hurt that much, “I want you to know that the money our company (WorldRemit) sends to Somalia is less than 0.3%. Even if all my business was dependent on Somalia, I would never change my views and what I see as the interests of Somaliland people.” He stamps.

    Ismail had welcomed the Ethiopia-Somaliland deal saying that the recognition by the Ethiopian government to Somaliland was a historical victory that will bring to Somaliland people. “The things Somaliland and Ethiopia understood together are of special importance to Somaliland. They will lead to financial benefits, some investment and business growth that will result from the use of Ethiopia in Berbera port.” He said in part.

    Ismail says that the agreement does not include the base to create a new container port which can compete with Berbera. Because, the DP World Agreement limits another similar port to be built in that area.

    While addressing the fears by Somalia that Ethiopia is going to use this to strengthen their naval capabilities and pose a threat to the region, he believes otherwise, “third world countries, economically, can’t afford to make war ships equivalent to the world’s major powers. So, the fear of Navy in our provinces is not a reality.”

    Ismail Ahmed, WorldRemit Chairman.

    And even if Ethiopia was to set up a naval base, it wouldn’t be of so much threat, Ismail believes, “If not left, the security situation in the Red Sea will cause Ethiopia to need an army base to protect its commercial shipments in Djibouti. But it’s not a power that will make them attack countries or cause other problems.”

    In exchange for 20 kilometre sea access for the Ethiopian naval forces, leased for a period of 50 years, Ethiopia will formally recognise the Republic of Somaliland, setting a precedent as the first nation to extend international recognition to our country.

    The arrangement has angered Somalia, whose government rejected the bilateral deal and warned that it was in violation of its sovereignty.

    Ethiopia, Somalia and Somaliland

    Somaliland broke away from Somalia in 1991 and became a self-declared republic in 2001 following a referendum.

    However, Somaliland’s statehood has not been recognised by Somalia, the United Nations or the African Union.

    Both Somalia and Somaliland share a border with landlocked Ethiopia and have ports on the Red Sea.

    Map showing border between Ethiopia, Somalia and Somaliland (Sophie RAMIS / AFP)

    However, the claim that Ethiopia now owns Somaliland’s port is misleading.

    Port access agreement 

    The Ethiopian government has been pressing neighbouring countries for negotiated access to the Red Sea.

    On January 1, 2024, Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed signed an agreement with Somaliland’s leader Muse Bihi Abdi in Addis Ababa allowing Ethiopia to use the breakaway territory’s port in Berbera.

    Abiy’s office released a statement saying that “the Memorandum of Understanding shall pave the way to realise the aspiration of Ethiopia to secure access to the sea”.

    A map locating the main ports on the African side of the Red Sea.

    According to Ethiopia’s National Security Adviser Redwan Hussien, the MoU allows Ethiopia to establish commercial maritime operations in the region by leasing a military base in Berbera on the southern coast of the Gulf of Aden, at the gateway to the Red Sea and further north to the Suez canal.

  • Ethiopia and Somaliland: A Deal with Domino Effects

    Ethiopia and Somaliland: A Deal with Domino Effects

    (Essayias Lesanu)

    Ethiopia’s recent agreement with the unrecognized state of Somaliland, granting it access to the Red Sea, is a move that has raised eyebrows across the international community. This controversial decision by Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed’s government, however, is just the tip of the iceberg in a series of domestic and economic crises plaguing Ethiopia.

    Domestically, the Abiy regime has been accused of exacerbating ethnic tensions, particularly targeting the Amhara community and other ethnic groups. Reports of human rights abuses and ethnic violence have marred Ethiopia’s international image and raised questions about the government’s commitment to a cohesive, peaceful, and inclusive national identity. This internal unrest not only destabilizes the nation but also undermines its social fabric, further complicating the task of nation-building. This move by the Abiy regime can be interpreted as an attempt to shift focus from domestic issues. Ethiopia is currently grappling with internal conflicts and economic challenges, including human rights allegations in Amhara and Tigray and a recent default on its debts. By engaging in this agreement, the Ethiopian government seems to be diverting public and international attention away from these pressing issues.

    The economic situation in Ethiopia is equally alarming. The country is currently in a state of default on its debts, a situation that reflects deep-seated economic challenges. The Ethiopian currency, the Birr, is facing the threat of devaluation amidst skyrocketing inflation rates. Such economic turmoil not only affects the day-to-day lives of Ethiopians but also casts doubt on the nation’s ability to meet its international obligations and maintain economic stability.

    Additionally, the Ethiopian economy’s heavy dependence on foreign aid and donations adds another layer of vulnerability. With the international community increasingly concerned about the government’s human rights record and its handling of internal conflicts, there is a real risk that this vital lifeline could diminish. This would further exacerbate the economic crisis, leading to a vicious cycle of poverty and instability.

    The decision to engage with Somaliland must be viewed within this broader context. While seeking access to the Red Sea is a strategic economic move for landlocked Ethiopia, aligning with an entity unrecognized by the international community adds to the nation’s growing list of geopolitical missteps. This not only provokes neighboring countries, particularly Somalia, but also risks alienating key international partners who are crucial for Ethiopia’s economic survival.

    Furthermore, aligning with Somaliland could be seen as Ethiopia implicitly supporting its claim of independence, a stance that directly challenges Somalia’s territorial integrity. Somalia, which views Somaliland as part of its sovereign territory, has reacted strongly against this agreement. This has the potential to escalate tensions between Ethiopia and Somalia, and could even draw in other regional players, increasing the risk of a wider conflict.

    The potential fallout from this agreement extends beyond diplomatic relations. The heightened tension could scare away foreign investors, wary of instability and unpredictability in the region. For Ethiopia, which is in dire need of foreign investment for its economic growth and development, this is a counterproductive outcome.

    Moreover, the possibility of a regional conflict, with countries like Eritrea possibly supporting Somalia against Somaliland and Ethiopia, adds to the already complex and volatile situation in the Horn of Africa. Such a conflict could have disastrous consequences, further destabilizing the region and leading to a humanitarian crisis.

    In conclusion, Ethiopia’s agreement with Somaliland, viewed against the backdrop of domestic ethnic strife, human rights concerns, and a precarious economic situation, reflects a risky gamble by the Abiy Ahmed regime. While the quest for Red Sea access is understandable, the method and timing raise serious questions about the government’s priorities and its understanding of regional dynamics. This move could exacerbate Ethiopia’s challenges, both domestically and internationally, potentially leading to further isolation, economic hardship, and instability. The government’s focus should instead be on addressing its internal issues, stabilizing the economy, and fostering a more inclusive and peaceful national environment.

    (The author can be contacted for further comments or inquiries :  [email protected])

    Opinion are author’s own.

  • USD 6M Fraud Probe At Center Of AfDB Staff Assault In  Addis

    USD 6M Fraud Probe At Center Of AfDB Staff Assault In Addis

    Premier lender African Development Bank (AfDB) on Wednesday announced that it was pulling out international staff from Ethiopia, after a “serious diplomatic incident” in which its employees were attacked by security officers.

    The Abidjan-headquartered lender said existing Ethiopian staff would continue working under its employment contracts, and the Ethiopian office manned by an officer-in-charge.

    International staff will work remotely, in the meantime.

    The AfDB’s decision followed a “breach of diplomatic protocol and assault” by Ethiopian security officers on two of its international members of staff who have diplomatic immunity in capital Addis Ababa on October 31, 2023

    In addition to the assault, they were arrested and detained for hours without charge or official explanation, the Bank said in a statement.

    Security officers are accused of assaulting and detaining AfDB’s Deputy Director-General of the East Africa region and Country Manager, Abdul Kamara, and another bank staffer, John Bosco Bukenya, who was principal country programme officer.

    Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed had to intervene to have the pair freed.

    Reports say the attacks were engineered by a senior government official, who was annoyed with the nagging of the AfDB employees over accountability for some disbursed funds.

    Many aspects of the incident remain shrouded in mystery, but some details are beginning to emerge.

    One of the accounts of the incident was by a user on X – formerly Twitter – who uses the handle @neby_G:“The arrest and attack was by the security guards of the @MoF_Ethiopia after the $5.2 million of Ethiopia’s yearly contribution to the bank was never deposited to the bank, instead ended up in a bank account in Panama.

    When the Ethiopian director of @AfDB_Group made it clear that the bank still had not received the funds, he was arrested and physically attacked. When he decided to take all his foreign staff and leave the country out of safety concerns, @AbiyAhmedAli and finance minister Ahmed Shide showed up at his house to convince him to stay… He has left the country.

    An “investigation” has been opened by the @MoF_Ethiopia to find the whereabouts of the $5.2 million.”

    New information suggests that Kamara and Bukenya had been sending regular reminders to the Ethiopian Ministry of Finance to pay capital share contributions that the country pledged in 2019.

    But the ministry had been making the payments, except not to the AfDB but to an account listed in an e-mail purported to be from the bank.

    It had wired $6 million (not $5.2 million) to that account.

    It turns out, according to these claims, that the account was in Mexico, not Panama.

    The beating of Kamara and Bukenya, therefore, was not a result of an argument in the lift at the Ministry of Finance.

    It was premeditated. The two had stepped on some big people’s plates, and needed to be discouraged from pursuing the matter.

    The latest accounts also allege that the incident did not happen at the Ministry of Finance. Kamara was reportedly waylaid at his gate at dusk as he arrived home from work.

    He was roughed up, blindfolded and thrown into a car that was full of armed men.

    They drove away with him and, after about 30 minutes, dumped him in a dungeon.

    Shortly after, Bukenya, who had been subjected to similar treatment, was also brought to the dungeon.

    Bukenya was later taken home, where his captors carried out a thorough search and confiscated laptops and phones.

    Because the two AfDB employees were at some police station in Addis Ababa, there was alarm once they could not be traced.

    The beleaguered AfDB staff called Bank president Akinwumi Adesina, who called Prime Minister Abiy, and the two were freed.

    They were taken to a United Nations clinic in Addis Ababa for treatment and days later evacuated from the capital city.

    The incident gives a glimpse into Prime Minister Abiy’s fragility.

    That something like that could happen, and he could only intervene after the fact, suggests that he might not be the undisputed king of the Ethiopian hill.

  • Rwanda Sets July Election Daye For Presidential Poll As Kagame Seeks 4th Term In Office

    Rwanda Sets July Election Daye For Presidential Poll As Kagame Seeks 4th Term In Office

    Rwanda will hold presidential and parliamentary elections in July next year, when President Paul Kagame will seek to extend his roughly three decades in control of the East African country.

    A presidential order in the official gazette said voting for president and 53 deputies in the lower house of parliament would happen across the country on July 15, and the remaining 27 deputies would be elected on July 16.

    Kagame has been president since 2000 but effectively in control since his rebel force marched into Kigali in 1994 to end a genocide.

    In September he told the Jeune Afrique magazine he would seek re-election, adding he was happy with Rwandans’ confidence in him.

    He is eligible to continue in office for another decade, after a constitutional amendment in 2015 changed term limits.

    A proposal by Kagame to allow the presidential and parliamentary elections to be held together was approved by the cabinet in March.

    Kagame has won international acclaim for presiding over peace and economic growth since the end of the 1994 genocide, in which an estimated 800,000 ethnic Tutsis and moderate Hutus were killed.

    But he has faced mounting criticism for what human rights groups say are the suppression of political opposition and the muzzling of independent media.

    Kagame rejects those accusations.

    The United States in 2015 criticised the constitutional change, saying Kagame should step down when his term ended and allow a new generation of leaders to come through.

    In the interview with Jeune Afrique, Kagame said he was not bothered by criticism from Western countries.

  • How The Central Bank Of Ghana Lost $5B In One Year

    How The Central Bank Of Ghana Lost $5B In One Year

    (BBC)- Ghana – once touted as a trailblazing African economic success story – is facing an unprecedented financial crisis.

    This week, hundreds of protestors took to the streets in the capital Accra, calling on the governor of the Bank of Ghana and his two deputies to resign over the loss of about 60bn Ghanaian cedis ($5.2bn; £4.3bn) in the 2022 financial year.

    The demonstration, dubbed #OccupyBoG, was led by the opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC) party. The protestors, dressed in red shirts, scarves and berets, chanted songs and held banners – some reading “stop the looting, we are suffering”.

    The opposition claims the bank printed money illegally to lend to the government, leading to the depreciation of the currency and crippling inflation.

    It has also criticised the bank for spending more than $762,000 on domestic and foreign travel, an 87% increase on the previous year, and $250m on a new office building. The opposition says these figures are recorded in an internal audit.

    The NDC has accused the central bank governor, Dr Ernest Addison, of recklessness and mismanagement. And while the bank has been accused of mismanagement in the past, a loss of this magnitude is unprecedented.

    “We have never seen anything like this in our history. If the Bank of Ghana wants to recover from this loss… it will take them more than 45 years,” says economist Professor Godfred Bokpin, from the University of Ghana.

    The bank denies charges of mismanagement and says the losses were a result of a fluctuating exchange rate and because of non-payment of loans by state institutions.

    It also says the government’s decision to borrow $700m from it and not pay it back in full has contributed to the crisis.

    The bank’s governors have also been accused of fanning rampant inflation and economic hardship by their actions. “The time when they were printing billions for the government, didn’t they know that it will have repercussions?” asks lawyer Martin Kepbu.

    Why has this happened?

    Ghana is currently going through its worst economic crisis in a generation. Last year, the inflation rate hit a record high of 54% – and is still running at more than 40%. Multiple credit rating agencies have downgraded the nation, preventing it from borrowing money internationally.

    By September 2022, Ghana’s total debt had surged to $55bn. This meant the government needed in excess of 70% of its income to service the debt, something it was unable to do. It subsequently defaulted on much of its debt payments.

    The government was forced to approach the International Monetary Fund (IMF) for assistance. To secure a $3bn bailout earlier this year, the government had to agree to fulfil a number of requirements.

    The most important of these was to reduce the nation’s debt interest payments to a manageable level by 2028. This would leave them with enough funds to run the economy.

    To achieve this, Ghana’s government began debt restructuring by renegotiating terms with its creditors, proposing lower interest rates on their loans and longer repayment terms to relieve pressure on public finances.

    However, some creditors refused to take part in this debt exchange programme.

    On 9 August the Bank of Ghana issued a statement saying the government had told it that it didn’t have enough money to meet the IMF’s requirements and consequently would not repay half of the $700m it had borrowed from the bank.

    Instead the money would go towards the debt restructuring. It also said it would not pay any interest due to the bank.

    Opposition politicians have accused central bank boss Ernest Addison, pictured, of mismanagement.

    The bank is the lender of last resort and experts say its status has been abused by the government, led by President Nana Akufo-Addo, and the rules of the bank have been broken.

    “The Bank of Ghana Act is very clear that printing money or financing the government is limited to 5% of the previous year’s fiscal revenue, which means that in principle supporting the government is not a crime but don’t go beyond 5%,” says Professor Bokpin.

    The bank’s officials are mandated by law to report to parliament if the 5% threshold is exceeded. A failure to report could lead to a fine or a term of imprisonment not exceeding two years.

    Implications for the bank

    None of this means the Bank of Ghana has gone broke. It is not a commercial bank that has to make a profit, so the loss should not affect its routine operations and as the lender of last resort it can always create its own money.

    But according to experts, the central bank’s loss has significant ramifications.

    It undermines the moral authority of the bank to supervise Ghana’s commercial banks. It also damages confidence in the country’s financial system.

    Although other central banks around the world have faced similar challenges, the difference in Ghana is the amount of money lost compared with the size of the economy.

    In the UK, the Bank of England will be making a net loss of about $180bn over the next 10 years which will be funded by the UK government. But the size of the UK economy is in the trillions of dollars.

    Inflation in Ghana is still running at more than 40%

    Bright Simons, a Ghanaian social innovator and writer, says that the bank cannot compare its losses with those of other countries. “Their attempt to deflect blame and point to losses by other central banks doesn’t make sense as the scale of their losses far outstrips those of other peer banks.

    “A lot of the mess is down to the bank’s accommodative stance on the government’s loose fiscal policy,” he says.

    In other words, by creating money the bank has allowed the government to live beyond its means.

    Human Impact

    A World Bank report last month estimated that 850,000 Ghanaians have drifted into poverty because of high inflation.

    Ghanaians’ incomes have been eroded, affecting their purchasing power. The prices of food, fuels and utilities remain high, and many households are struggling to make ends meet.

    And on top of all that, the central bank is now under scrutiny from both within the country and the IMF.

    Under the terms of the IMF loan, if the government demands more bailouts, the bank will have no choice but to refuse.

  • DP World’s Past Port Operation Deals Makes It A Risky Gamble

    DP World’s Past Port Operation Deals Makes It A Risky Gamble

    In the recent past, atleast 22 people have been threatened or detained for criticising a deal between Tanzania and Dubai that covers the management of a Tanzanian port by Emirati logistics company DP World, according to Human Rights Watch.

    Amnesty International said a number of dissents have been detained after speaking out publicly against the ports deal signed last October by President Samia Suluhu Hassan.

    The agreement paves the way for DP World, a logistics company controlled by the emirate of Dubai in the UAE, to manage all the ports in Tanzania in consultation with the government.

    The agreement was signed after a visit to Dubai by Tanzania’s president Samia Suluhu Hassan at which 37 memoranda of understanding were concluded. Hassan has sought to portray Tanzania as open for investment since becoming president in 2021 following the death of John Magufuli. It was ratified by parliament in June.

    Critics of the deal say it poses a threat to Tanzanian sovereignty and security,

    The agreement contained several unusual clauses that weakened Tanzania’s ability to change laws, annul contracts or seek competitive bids, said lawyers.

    Clauses that have raised concern include one that prevents withdrawal from the deal “in any circumstances, including in the event of material breach, fundamental change of circumstances, severance of diplomatic or consular relations”.

    However, the government has defended the accord, arguing that it will improve efficiency, cut costs and increase revenues.

    “The Tanzanian authorities’ crackdown of critics of the UAE port deal reveals their growing intolerance to dissent,” Amnesty’s east and southern Africa director, Tigere Chagutah, said.

    The accused could face treason charges — a non-bailable offence that carries a death penalty — Amnesty said, citing the defence lawyers.

    President Samia Suluhu Hassan.

    Hassan came to power in March 2021 after the sudden death of her autocratic predecessor John Magufuli.

    Although she has reversed some of Magufuli’s most controversial policies, critics labelled her a “dictator” after Freeman Mbowe, leader of the Chadema opposition party, was arrested on terrorism charges in July 2021 before being released.

    Chadema is among those opposing the deal, which gives DP World exclusive rights for a period of 12 months to negotiate with the government on how best to manage the country’s 80 ports.

    Kenya Deal

    Dubai Port World, the UAE-based firm is also seeking to develop, operate and manage four Kenyan ports, has a controversial record.

    In February, 2006, an announcement by DP World that it was taking over management of six US ports in a $3.7 billion (Sh436 billion) deal kicked up controversy in Congress, mainly on security considerations. Under pressure and public scrutiny, Dubai Ports dropped the deal.

    In 2012, Djibouti filed an arbitration case in London against DP World, claiming that the firm bribed an official to secure concession to run Dolareh – the largest container terminal in Africa.

    Though Djibouti lost, the case revealed insights into dealings between corrupt elites and global concession operators.

    Former Treasury CS Ukur Yatani had invited DP World during the past regime of President Uhuru Kenyatta to submit commercial proposals for four projects. They include deploying its money to build three berths at Mombasa port, develop cold storage supply chains in Kisumu and Naivasha and to build a special economic zone in Lamu.

    Treasury had also extended an invitation to submit a commercial proposal to equip and operate the three completed berths in Lamu.

    By stating that the government has signed a contract to sell three ports to DP World, Kenya Kwanza leaders got it wrong. What is on the table is an offer to an investor to develop a project, and not sell the ports.

    Questions, however, arose. Why is the government of the day was offering such sweet deals to DP World? Were procurement regulations breached?

    Mr Yatani ought to have prepared a prospectus for these projects and put it out there for investors to come up with expressions of interest.

    The flip side of this, however, is that having prior  introduced an amendment to the PPP Act that allows investors to present and engage the government on unsolicited project proposals and without subjecting such projects to open tenders, the fact that the competitive bidding has been breached in gifting the projects to DP World may be a moot point.

    Dubai World has displayed dubious tactics since first expressing interest in a port concession in Kenya in 2006.

    Political fortunes
    American economic historian Fred Cooper described the African state as the “gate keeper” where elites are perpetually fighting to earn corruptly acquired money through control of ports, customs centres and other interfaces between their countries and the rest of the world.

    The DP World saga appears to be the latest in the scramble by corrupt elites to control the gate. The scramble has assumed global dimensions in Kenya in the past one year.

    International ports and transport logistics operators are involved in battles over ownership and control of port concessions or control over profitable projects involving development and building storage and logistics facilities along main transport corridors. It is a vicious fight where only players enjoying patronage of powerful godfathers succeed.

    Public litigation actors have already – at the behest of a global shipping group – lodged a legal battle where they have injuncted a plan by the government to shift control and ownership of the Japanese-built ultra-modern second container terminal to a consortium compromising the state-owned Kenya National Shipping Lines (KNSL) and Portuguese player – Mediterranean Shipping Lines (MSL).

    The timing of the case, came just as the government had concluded plans to hand over management of the terminal to an entity effectively under the control of MSL, would appear to suggest shipping lines opposed to this deal calculated that they would rather have the deal postponed until after the elections.

    Political undercurrents

    They hedged their bets on the possibility that the new government will be inclined to block the deal.

    Dubai Ports first entered the Kenyan fray in 2014 when the government floated an international competitive tender to concession the second container terminal in Mombasa.

    Port operators from China, Japan, Singapore, Netherlands and several other countries participated in the tender.

    The Chinese group, PSA International, which had partnered with local firm, Multiple Hauliers, had the highest marks, with DP World emerging second.

    The process was then cancelled amid political undercurrents. Having lost in the open tender, DP World devised another approach.

    In October 2016, the UAE quietly signed a bilateral agreement where it committed to lend Kenya $275 million (Sh32.4 billion) for expansion of the second container terminal on condition that Kenya allowed DP World to take control of the terminal.

    Two months later, the UAE ambassador wrote to the National Treasury.

    What happened next is still difficult to decipher. It seems political fortunes of DP World and its backers took a nosedive. Transferring the second terminal to DP World no longer enjoyed the support of the political elite.

    In August 2018, the Cabinet decided to transfer the operations and management to the State-owned and almost moribund KSNL in a deal that included a new shareholding arrangement between that parastatal with MSL.

    Effectively, the power and control of the terminal had been transferred to the Portuguese firm.

     

  • France To Start Evacuating Its Citizen From Niger

    France To Start Evacuating Its Citizen From Niger

    (Reuters) – France will evacuate French and European citizens from Niger starting on Tuesday, its foreign ministry said, days after a junta seized power in the west African country.

    Italy also said on Tuesday it would offer a special flight to repatriate its nationals from the capital Niamey. Niger’s borders have been closed to commercial flights since military officers ousted President Mohamed Bazoum last Wednesday.

    The overthrow of Niger’s democratically elected government – the seventh military takeover in less than three years in West and Central Africa – has sent shockwaves across the region, where Niger’s Western allies fear losing influence to Russia.

    Former colonial power France has had troops in the region for a decade helping to fight an Islamist insurgency, but some locals say they want the former colonial ruler to stop intervening in their affairs.

    The United States, Germany, and Italy also have troops in Niger on counter-insurgency and training missions. There has been no announcement of troops being evacuated so far.

    On Sunday, supporters of the junta burned French flags and attacked the French embassy in Niger’s capital, Niamey, prompting police to fire volleys of tear gas in response.

    “Considering the situation in Niamey, the violence against our embassy the day before yesterday and the fact that the air space is shut and our citizens cannot leave by their own means, France is preparing the evacuation of its citizens and (other) European citizens who want to leave the country,” the foreign ministry said in a statement.

    “The evacuation will start today,” it said.

    French Foreign Minister Catherine Colonna told BFM TV late on Monday that the protest in front of the embassy and the ensuing accusations that France shot at the crowd – which it denies – “have all the usual ingredients of destabilisation, the Russian-African way”.

    Yevgeny Prigozhin, the head of Russia’s Wagner mercenary group, last week welcomed the coup in Niger, and said his forces were available to restore order.

    The Kremlin said that the situation in Niger was “cause for serious concern” and called for a swift return to constitutional order.

    According to the French foreign ministry website, there were just under 1,200 French nationals in Niger in 2022.

    The coup has raised fears for the security of the Sahel region, where groups linked to Islamic State and al Qaeda have been gaining ground for years.

    Niger is the world’s seventh-biggest producer of uranium, the radioactive metal widely used for nuclear energy and treating cancer.

    Regional bloc ECOWAS has imposed sanctions, including border closure, a halt in all financial transactions and a national assets freeze, and said it could authorise force to reinstate Bazoum, who is still locked in his palace.

    But the juntas of neighbouring Burkina Faso, Mali and Guinea all voiced their support for the coup’s leaders on Monday.

  • Russia’s Wagner Group Led Central Africa Massacres: Sentry

    Russia’s Wagner Group Led Central Africa Massacres: Sentry

    Bloomberg: Russia’s Wagner Group has played a central role in a campaign of killings, torture and rape in the Central African Republic and has driven civilians away from areas where its affiliated companies have been awarded mining rights, US nonprofit the Sentry said in a report.

    Wagner, which had close ties to the Kremlin until last weekend’s short-lived rebellion led by the group’s founder Yevgeny Prigozhin, was hired by CAR President Faustin-Archange Touadéra in 2018 to help fend off rebels, according to the Sentry. It’s one of several African countries where Wagner has established a presence in recent years, offering its services often in return for mineral resources, as a way to indirectly bolster the Kremlin’s geopolitical reach, according to the Sentry and the US Treasury.

    The Treasury has described Wagner’s operations in Africa as “an interplay between Russia’s paramilitary operations, support for preserving authoritarian regimes and exploitation of natural resources.”

    Wagner’s activities have drawn increased scrutiny since the Russian invasion of Ukraine, with the US accusing it of exacerbating instability in some African nations and using them to run weapons to the war. It remains unclear what Wagner’s game plan in Africa will be following Prigozhin’s insurrection that ended abruptly with a murky deal that allowed the Wagner leader and his troops to leave seemingly without consequences.

    ‘Killing, Torture’

    “Wagner, Touadéra, and his inner circle have perpetrated widespread, systematic, and well-planned campaigns of mass killing, torture, and rape,” the Sentry, which was set up in 2016 to probe the links between conflict and money in Africa, said in the report published on Tuesday.

    Wagner did not respond to requests for comment. Touadéra’s senior adviser, Fidele Gouandjika, confirmed Wagner’s presence in CAR but told Bloomberg it was not involved in any military offensives or torture.

    The Sentry cited interviews with more than 45 people including 11 members of CAR’s armed forces, militiamen, documents and satellite images.

    “In CAR, Wagner has perfected a blueprint for state capture, supporting a criminalized state hijacked by the Central African president and his inner circle, amassing military power, securing access to and plundering precious minerals,” the Sentry said.

    The Sentry was co-founded in 2016 by the actor George Clooney and John Prendergast, a human rights activist who has worked for the US government. Its funders include the Carnegie Foundation of New York, The Ford Foundation and a fund sponsored by the Rockefeller Philanthropy Advisors Inc.

    Russia “built a monster for geostrategic expansion but also for economic gain,” said Nathalia Dukhan, a senior investigator for the Sentry, in an interview. “It’s very likely that this monster will evolve and will survive.”

    The report documented a number of massacres including the killing of ethnic Fulani in a series of attacks in the village of Boyo between Dec. 6 and 13, 2021, which the United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights said were perpetrated as punishment for local Muslims assumed to support the rebels. Participants in the attack told the Sentry that it was orchestrated by Wagner and they were told to kill all the men.

    The Boyo attacks were replicated elsewhere at diamond and gold mining sites where Wagner-affiliated companies operated, according to the Sentry.

    Wagner fighters took part in the attacks and gave the orders, people interviewed by the Sentry said. They also trained the CAR military and affiliated militia on how to cut and strangle rebels and “burn people alive.”

    Gouandjika denied that government forces and Wagner had carried out the attacks in Boyo, blaming it instead on rebel groups fighting each other.

    ‘No Prisoners’

    “The Russian soldiers that are called Wagner in our country are never on the offensive. They don’t attack,” he said.

    Gouandjika also denied that the armed forces use torture or had been trained in such techniques, but confirmed the army’s policy was to take “no prisoners” in its fight against what he described as “bandits and terrorists.”

    He confirmed that Russia is supplying his country with weapons, specifically tanks.

    “We have a defense agreement with one of the biggest nuclear powers in the world,” he said.

  • Ugandan Activists Call For Sanctions After Tough Anti-Gay Law Passed

    Ugandan Activists Call For Sanctions After Tough Anti-Gay Law Passed

    (AFP)-Ugandan activists called on foreign donors to impose sanctions on rights abusers after President Yoweri Museveni signed an anti-gay law described as among the world’s harshest.

    The veteran leader defied warnings that approving the much-criticised bill against homosexuality would strain ties between Kampala and key international partners and aid donors, including Washington.

    Among other harsh measures, the new law prescribes a death penalty for “aggravated homosexuality” in certain circumstances, although Uganda has not carried out capital punishment for many years.

    The move has trigged outcry and calls for a tough response from Uganda’s diplomatic and financial backers.

    “This is a key time for stakeholders, such as the US and the EU, to move forward with sanctions against Ugandans implicated in human rights abuses,” a coalition of Ugandan activist groups said in a statement late Monday.

    They warned that the “dangerous and discriminatory” law would further shrink space for civil society under Museveni, whose rule has become increasingly authoritarian since he took power in 1986.

    “Creating new crimes like these are a well-know way to engineer a legal basis to throw those with divergent views behind bars,” said Clare Byarugaba from Chapter Four Uganda, one of the groups calling for sanctions.

    She said the law would also discourage members of the LQBTQ community from seeking treatment for HIV and would “devastate the fight” against the disease in Uganda.

    – ‘Undermine relationships‘ –

    Ugandan lawmakers have stood firm against western criticism over the bill since it was first introduced to parliament in March, even if it meant cuts to foreign aid or other repercussions.

    US President Joe Biden on Monday said it was “a tragic violation of universal human rights” and threatened to cut aid and investment if the bill was not repealed.

    Biden said he had asked his National Security Council to assess what the law means for “all aspects of US engagement with Uganda”, including services providing AIDS relief and other assistance and investments.

    He said the administration would also consider sanctions against Uganda and the restriction of entry into the United States for people engaging in human rights abuses or corruption there.

    EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said the Ugandan government was obligated to uphold the rights of all its citizens and “failure to do so will undermine relationships with international partners”.

    In 2014, donors slashed aid to Uganda after Museveni approved a bill that sought to impose life imprisonment for homosexual relations, but was later overturned.

    The Netherlands froze a seven-million-euro subsidy to Uganda’s legal system, while Denmark and Norway redirected around six million euros each towards private sector initiatives, aid agencies and rights organisations.

    The US — under President Barrack Obama — also cut aid and trading rights.

    Though criticised abroad, the latest anti-gay bill has enjoyed broad support in the conservative country, where lawmakers defended the measures as a necessary bulwark against Western immorality.

    Homosexuality was criminalised in Uganda under colonial laws, but there has never been a conviction for consensual same-sex activity since independence from Britain in 1962.

  • Bola Tinubu Sworn In As Nigeria’s 16th President

    Bola Tinubu Sworn In As Nigeria’s 16th President

    Nigeria swore in a new president on Monday during an elaborate ceremony that was attended by dignitaries from around the world.

    Bola Ahmed Tinubu, 71, took the oath of office and allegiance administered by the country’s Chief Justice, Olukayode Ariwoola, before a mammoth crowd in the capital city of Abuja.

    He now assumes the position as the 16th president of Africa’s largest democracy.

    Tinubu succeeded President Muhammadu Buhari, who completed two terms of eight years in office.

    Nearly 5,000 guests, including presidents, heads of state and governments from various nations, foreign ministers, diplomats, and friends of Nigeria, were in attendance.

    Delegations from the UK, US, and Canada were led by their respective foreign ministers and heads of missions.

    Heavy security personnel from the police and military were deployed to strategic locations within the country’s capital to prevent potential terror attacks and maintain law and order, particularly in light of intelligence released by the secret police on Friday regarding plans to disrupt the inauguration.

    “The aim is to undermine security agencies’ efforts at ensuring peaceful ceremonies as well as creating panic and fear among members of the public,” said the Department of State Service, the country’s secret service in a statement Friday.

    Nigeria gained independence from British colonialists on Oct.1, 1960. However, May 29 has become a significant date for the inauguration of a new government and the government calendar. It marks the day when the military junta returned the nation to democracy, handing over power to civilians after three decades.

  • Al-Shabaab Militants Claim To Have Overrun Uganda Military Base In Somalia Killing 137 Soldiers

    Al-Shabaab Militants Claim To Have Overrun Uganda Military Base In Somalia Killing 137 Soldiers

    Armed with explosives, Somalia-based Al-Shabaab militants overrun an African Union military base in Somalia on Friday morning, eyewitnesses said, causing massive destruction of infrastructure and possible deaths, but the number is yet to be confirmed by either AU forces or the government of Somalia.

    The militants used a series of explosives to storm the Bulo Marer base which is located about 110 kilometers South of Mogadishu, the Somali capital, which is manned by Uganda People’s Defense Forces [UPDF], witnesses said. The group, using its usual media sites, said it “completely overrun the base”.

    Al-Shabaab claimed to have overrun the base and killed 137 Ugandan soldiers serving under the AU mission in Somalia [ATMIS]. There were no indepenedt sources confirming the claim.

    In a tweet, the African Union Transition Mission in Somalia [ATMIS] confirmed the deadly attack, noting that the forces are “currently assessing the situation”. The peacekeepers did not give the number of casualties from the dawn attack, which comes against the backdrop of sustained operations against the group.

    “This morning, ATMIS Forward Operating Bases [FOB] in Bulo Marer came under Al-Shabab attack,” the mission troops said in a statement without giving many details. “ATMIS forces are currently assessing the security situation. More information will be issued later.”

    According to locals, the troops under attack called for reinforcement, and drones “could be heard everywhere”. The Ugandan troops man Sector I of ATMIS which covers Mogadishu and her environs and has been operating in the country since 2007 when Al-Shabaab first struck in Somalia.

    Friday morning raid is the first serious assault in a military base in as many months and it comes amid reports of “relative stability ” within Mogadishu, informed by the recent first phase operation against the militants which left at least 3,000 Al-Shabaab members dead according to the government.

    Somalia has also asked for reinforcement of non-ATMIS soldiers as it prepares for the second phase of operations against Al-Shabaab in Jubaland and Southwest. “We need your support to crush these militants and we are almost there,” President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud said while confirming that the new contingent from Kenya, Djibouti, and Ethiopia will serve for three months only.

    Early this month, stakeholders including Troops Contributing Countries agreed on a systematic and strategic drawdown of ATMIS troops in Somalia effective June this year. The peacemakers will facilitate scaling down of the first batch of 2000 soldiers and in coming weeks, another 3000 soldiers will leave.

    The attack also comes a few days after the US launched a serious attack against Al-Shabaab in Jilib town, their only known headquarters, injuring Osman Mohamed Abdi, the head of external operations in Al-Shabaab. State media reports that the commander is in a “critical condition”.

    Also, the US sanctioned five Al-Shabaab commanders on Tuesday, with the Treasury Department also designating 26 operatives and individuals who have allegedly been supporting Al-Shabaab militants. This comes days after Al-Shabaab released a video allegedly of its leader Abu Ubaidah, who insisted that the group has not lost territory.

    Recently, the African Union confessed that the war in Somalia has left over 3,500 peacekeepers dead and several injured since they reported to Somalia. The union has used over $200 million for compensation, with a quarter of the money going to injured soldiers, the report notes.

    Cases of raids against peacekeepers are common in Somalia, with the worst raid coming in 2016 when the militants attacked the Kenya Defence Forces FOB in El-Adde, killing over 200 soldiers. The attack, which neither Kenya nor AU has ever released a report on, is the worst in history according to security analysts.