Saturday, December 26, 2020

Bill Gates wonders why number of COVID-19 cases, deaths are not high in Africa



 

Bill Gates, a co-founder of Microsoft and Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (BMGF), has said that he does not understand why coronavirus numbers have not been as high as predicted in Africa.

Recall that Gates and his wife, Melinda had in more than one occasion, warned that there will be dead bodies all over the streets of Africa if the world does not act fast enough.

Melinda said her heart was in Africa, adding that she is worried that the continent might not be able to handle the devastating effect of the virus.

But in his end of the year note, Bill said he was happy his prediction about Africa has not happened, “One thing I’m happy to have been wrong about—at least, I hope I was wrong—is my fear that COVID-19 would run rampant in low-income countries. So far, this hasn’t been true,” he wrote.

In most of sub-Saharan Africa, for example, case rates and death rates remain much lower than in the U.S. or Europe and on par with New Zealand, which has received so much attention for its handling of the virus.

“The hardest-hit country on the continent is South Africa—but even there, the case rate is 40 percent lower than in the U.S., and the death rate is nearly 50 percent lower.

“We don’t have enough data yet to understand why the numbers aren’t as high as I worried they would get — but gave probable reasons Africa was not as affected as expected.”

Meanwhile, Nigeria is currently fighting the second wave of the coronavirus.

The Presidential Task Force on COVID-19 had last week announced a second wave of the dreaded virus.

The Federal Government on Tuesday directed civil servants from grade level 12 and below to stay at home.

They are to remain at home for five weeks following the second wave of the COVID-19 disease in Nigeria.

Nigeria Centre for Disease Control, NCDC, on Friday stated that COVID-19 related deaths now stands at 1,246.

Nigeria currently has a total of 82,747 confirmed cases in the country.

 


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2 killed in Tanzania's Zanzibar historic building collapse



At least two people were killed and four others injured after Friday's collapse of The House of Wonders in Tanzania's Zanzibar, an official said on Saturday.

Khalid Salum Muhammed, Zanzibar's Minister of State in the Office of the Second Vice-President responsible for Policy, Coordination and the House of Representatives, said the two were killed after they were trapped in the rubble.

He told a news conference that two of the four injured people were in critical condition and doctors at the Mnazi Mmoja government hospital were working around the clock to save their lives.

"The bodies of the two persons were recovered by rescuers on Friday night," said Muhammed.

He appealed to members of the public to be patient as rescue work continued to comb the area and find out whether there were more people trapped in the rubble of the collapsed building.

Zanzibar's President Hussein Ali Mwinyi visited the four injured persons admitted to the hospital and ordered relevant authorities to probe the cause of the collapse of the building, said Muhammed.

The deceased and the injured were part of a team renovating The House of Wonders located in Stone Town.

The House of Wonders, built in 1883, is currently closed due to disrepair, with large sections of the veranda and roof collapsing in 2012 and 2015, respectively, threatening the structural integrity of the rest of the building.

The House of Wonders is the largest and tallest building in Stone Town and occupies a prominent place facing the Forodhani Gardens on the old town's seafront.

The construction materials of the building consisted of an original combination of coral rag, concrete slabs, mangrove shoots, and steel beams. Enditem

 


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Turkey condemns Boko Haram terrorist attack in Nigeria


Dec. 24 terrorist attack killed 7 people in Nigeria’s northeastern Borno state

 


Turkey on Saturday condemned the terrorist attack carried out by Boko Haram terrorists on Dec. 24 in the town of Pemi in Nigeria’s northeastern Borno state, killing seven people.

“We are deeply saddened by the news that at least seven people lost their lives in a terrorist attack organized by the terrorist organization Boko Haram,” the Turkish Foreign Ministry said.

Describing the attack as “heinous”, the ministry said: “We extend our sincere condolences to the families of those who lost their lives, friendly and brotherly people and Government of Nigeria and wish a speedy recovery to the injured.”

More than 30,000 people have been killed and nearly 3 million displaced in a decade of Boko Haram violence in Nigeria, according to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.

According to the UN Refugee Agency, violence by Boko Haram has affected 26 million people in the Lake Chad region and displaced 2.6 million others.

 


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Saturday, December 19, 2020

Sudan Sends Troops to Ethiopian Border as Tensions Rise



 


Saturday sees tensions rise between Sudan and neighbor Ethiopia as Khartoum deployed significant military reinforcements along its eastern border days after an ambush attributed to Ethiopian forces.

Incidents regularly occur on this agricultural border between Ethiopian farmers who come to cultivate on this territory claimed by Sudan.

An area now amid a humanitarian crisis with the arrival of 50,000 refugees who have fled Tigray conflict — as per the United Nations

 


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SOMALI: Chaos at a Stadium in Galkayon City over suicide bombing


The attack in Galkayo, Somalia, targeted the country’s new prime minister, Mohamed Hussein Roble, the government said.Credit...Feisal Omar/Reuters

Several people were left dead and wounded Friday in a suicide bombing at the entrance of a crowded stadium in the southern part of Galkayon city Somalia, where Prime Minister Rooble Mohammed Hussein had been expected.

The attack has taken at least 16 lives — including a dozen civilians and several three high-ranking army officers

According to a local resident, Mumin Adan, "The city is in mourning and many bodies are buried in the main cemetery. I saw more than ten people brought there to be buried."

The extremist Islamist group al-Shabaab, linked to al-Qaeda, has claimed the attack targeting the prime minister — who had not yet arrived at the time of the explosion and citing the now -deceased commanders of two local military units.

The centrally located city of Galkayo at about 600 km north of Mogadishu, has been the scene for deadly violence in recent years between troops from the two semi-autonomous states of Somalia — Galmudug to its south and Puntland to its north> As well as and between their respective rival clans

Al-Shabaab controlled the Somali capital before being ousted in 2011 by African Union (AU) troops supporting the fragile Somali government. They still control vast rural areas from where they conduct their operations.

Somalia has plunged into chaos since the fall of President Siad Barre's military regime in 1991, followed by a war of clan leaders and the rise of al-Shabaab.

 


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NIGERIA: Nigeria’s Abducted Schoolboys Meet President


Capitalizing on a rare victory, the Nigerian government publicly displayed the more than 300 boys who had been released, and insisted it had not paid ransom.

After being freed from their captors, the schoolboys were taken to the governor’s house to meet with the news media in Katsina, Nigeria, on Friday.Credit...Sunday Alamba/Associated Press

Hundreds of boys kidnapped last week from their boarding school in northwest Nigeria were freed on Thursday night after six days in captivity. But they had some public relations to do for the government before they could go home.

Cameras rolled on Friday as they were led barefoot by soldiers carrying rifles and wearing balaclavas through the manicured grounds of the governor’s house in Katsina, 80 miles south of Kankara, the town where they had been studying.

Looking dazed, and still wearing their dusty clothes, they were packed into a conference room, some crouching on the floor, others dwarfed by big leather chairs. Television reporters thrust microphones at them.

Then they were given new clothes to change into and taken to meet Nigeria’s president, Muhammadu Buhari.

“You children are very lucky,” he told them.

Kidnapped by gunmen in a Dec. 11 attack on the Government Science Secondary School in Kankara, a town in the country’s northwest, the students had been through a terrifying, exhausting ordeal.

The kidnappers beat them, marched them for days through thickets and gave them very little to eat and drink, they told local journalists. They were petrified by military jets circling overhead.

Boko Haram, the Islamist group that has terrorized Nigeria’s northeast, had claimed to be behind the Kankara mass abduction, raising the worrying prospect that their reach had expanded far beyond their home territory. Though hundreds of miles away, the attack last week bore a striking resemblance to the mass kidnappings of schoolgirls carried out by the group in Chibok in 2014 and Dapchi in 2018.

 

Some of the rescued boys on a bus that took them to Katsina on Friday. Credit...Afolabi Sotunde/Reuters 

One Kankara student was even forced to record a video message saying that they were being held by “a gang of Abu Shekau” — referring to Boko Haram’s longtime leader.

But the government and many of the parents described the kidnappers not as terrorists but as “bandits,” the local term for gangs of criminals that stage frequent attacks in the country’s northwest.

And on Friday, so did the boy who had in the video, under duress, described the kidnappers as Boko Haram members.

“Sincerely speaking, they are not Boko Haram,” the boy, identified by a family member as Sani Abdulhamid, told a Nigerian television channel after the release, looking shaken and distracted in a roomful of his classmates as reporters and officials jostled him.

He said that each day they were fed only once, and given water twice, but they were constantly beaten. He said gang members beat some of the smallest boys with big guns. “Tiny, tiny boys,” he said, shaking his head. “I don’t know how to explain.”

The government insisted it had paid no ransom for the boys’ release. Aminu Masari, the governor of Katsina State, where they were kidnapped, said: “It was purely negotiation.” His counterpart, the governor in Zamfara State, where they were released, claimed that he personally persuaded the kidnappers to release them unharmed.

Some commentators asked caustically whether this meant the kidnappers had suddenly discovered reserves of magnanimity.

Kidnapping is a growing concern in Nigeria, where gang violence, armed robbery, terrorism and piracy are rife. More than $18 million was paid out to kidnappers between 2011 and 2020, according to a report by the Nigerian consulting firm SB Morgen, which said that kidnap for ransom had accelerated sharply in the past four years.

And kidnappers no longer target just the rich. Poor villagers are increasingly kidnapped, too, with ransoms ranging between $1,000 and $150,000. Mass kidnappings are most common in the north, where the number of victims killed per incident is also much higher.

As the West African country’s overstretched, underpaid and often abusive police force has failed to protect many of its citizens, gangs have increasingly been able to operate unchecked. And vigilante groups have formed to protect communities, often exacerbating tension and leading to even greater insecurity.

The government maintains that it is tackling this.

“Our children should not have to go to school in trepidation,” said Nigeria’s minister of information, Lai Mohammed, at a news conference on Friday in Abuja, the capital. “And we will not relent until all Nigerians can go to bed at night with their two eyes closed.”

Residents of Kankara, and the country’s entire northwest, likely have more sleepless nights ahead, however. Conflict over land and grazing rights, fueled by arms flowing across borders, has caused death, disability and displacement there in recent years.

But for the schoolboys’ parents, their release is a welcome reprieve.

Many of the parents did not answer calls on Friday evening. Desperate to see their sons, they had rushed to Government House, the governor’s official residence in Katsina, where the boys were being marshaled from one photo op to the next.

But Abdulkadir Musbau, whose 12-year-old son, Abdullahi, was among the children taken, picked up the phone. He had not been allowed to see his son, he said. That had to wait until the president was finished talking to them, and until medical checks had been done. But he had been given a few minutes with Abdullahi on the phone.

“I was so happy when I spoke to him,” Mr. Musbau said. “It’s a huge relief for me.”

 


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Thursday, December 17, 2020

RWANDA: Hotel Rwanda 'hero' sues Greek airline for 'aiding kidnap'



Paul Rusesabagina is now in detention facing terrorism charges in Rwanda

 

The man portrayed as a hero in a Hollywood movie about the Rwandan genocide, Hotel Rwanda, says he is suing a Greek charter flight company for aiding his alleged kidnap.

Paul Rusesabagina says that in August he intended to visit Burundi but after he boarded a private flight in Dubai he was instead flown to Rwanda.

He was arrested for leading "terrorist movements", Rwandan officials said at the time.

His lawyers denied the charges.

An ethnic Hutu, Mr Rusesabagina became well known after the 2004 film Hotel Rwanda depicted his efforts a decade earlier during the genocide to save hundreds of Tutsis at a hotel where he was a manager.

He is a fierce critic of President Paul Kagame and is the leader of the opposition MRCD group.

It is said to have an armed wing, the National Liberation Front (FLN), which stages attacks on Rwanda.

He had been living in exile and has Belgian citizenship and a US green card.

But he says he was tricked by a pastor into taking a trip to Burundi for speaking engagements.

Rwanda has charged him with terrorism, financing terrorism, recruiting child soldiers, kidnapping, arson, and forming terror groups.

In September, a Rwandan court heard allegations that the FLN had received help from Zambia's President Edgar Lungu because of his close friendship with Mr Rusesabagina.

His lawyers denied the charges against him and Mr Lungu's spokesman denied the allegation in a BBC interview.

Mr Rusesabagina is currently in prison in Rwanda awaiting trial.

'Bound and gagged'

He has filed a lawsuit in Texas, where he has been living, against the charter company GainJet, alleging the company agreed to facilitate the plane journey because of its close relationship with officials in Rwanda.

"Paul was bound and gagged before the plane landed in Rwanda," said his lawyer Robert Hilliard.

"The pilots have an international responsibility to every single one of the people on the plane. They cannot be complicit with kidnappers and say go ahead and tie him up, go ahead and drug him, go ahead and bind him, go ahead and bind his feet and his hands and we'll get you to Rwanda where you can then pretend he's going to get a fair trial," he added.

A similar case is expected be lodged in Belgium where Mr Rusesabagina holds citizenship, reports the BBC's Africa correspondent Catherine Byaruhanga.

GainJet has not responded to the BBC's requests for comment.

Rwanda's Justice Minister Johnston Busingye has denied that Mr Rusesabagina was kidnapped and insisted he will get a fair trial on 26 January.

What is Hotel Rwanda about?

 

Don Cheadle (L) played Mr Rusesabagina (R) in the film

The 2004 film Hotel Rwanda told the story of how Mr Rusesabagina, a middle-class Hutu married to a Tutsi woman, used his influence - and bribes - to convince military officials to secure a safe escape for an estimated 1,200 people who sought shelter at the Mille Collines Hotel in Kigali.

Don Cheadle played Mr Rusesabagina in the film.

Rwandan genocide survivors' group Ibuka has in the past said that he exaggerated his own role in helping hotel refugees escape the 100-day slaughter.


SOURCE: BBC 


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Wednesday, December 16, 2020

Nigerian states close schools after students kidnapped in Katsina


Police at the school in Kankara. Many students tried to flee when gunmen stormed it

More states in northern Nigeria have ordered all schools to close following last week's kidnapping of hundreds of pupils in Katsina state.

Kano, Kaduna, Zamfara and Jigawa have followed Katsina in closing schools following Friday's attack.

The Islamist militant group Boko Haram has said it was behind the raid.

More than 300 children are still missing, raising fears for the safety of other schools, especially those in remote areas.

Meanwhile, the Nigerian Union of Teachers has threatened a nationwide strike unless the government urgently improves the security situation.

The union said pupils and teachers were now being actively targeted by gunmen and kidnappers. It said the attack was a sad reminder of previous raids - dozens of girls from Chibok, in northern Borno state, are still missing six years after they were abducted by jihadists.

Nigerian authorities say have been in contact with the kidnappers in the latest incident, but there are no details of the discussions.

The governor of Katsina state, Aminu Bello Masari, said on Twitter late on Monday: "Talks are ongoing to ensure [the pupils'] safety and return to their respective families."

The jihadist group issued its claim of responsibility in a four-minute recording.

 

Kankara town is in a remote area in north-western Nigeria

However, security and local sources cited by AFP news agency said Boko Haram had recruited three local gangs to carry out the attack.

One source said the children had been taken across the border into Zamfara state and divided among different gangs "for safe keeping". Some of the gangs had since been in touch with authorities over the release of the students.

Boko Haram has previously targeted schools because of its opposition to Western education, which it believes corrupts the values of Muslims. The group's name translates as "Western education is forbidden".


Witnesses said the armed men came to the Government Science Secondary School in Kankara town at about 21:30 on Friday and that many students jumped the school fence and fled when they heard gunshots.

Many were tracked by the gunmen who tricked them into believing that they were security personnel, students who escaped said. Once the students were rounded up they were marched into the forest by the armed men.

 


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NIGERIA: Boko Haram claims abduction of students in northern Nigeria


Parents of the missing Government Science secondary school students wait for news on their children in Kankara , Nigeria, Tuesday, Dec. 15, 2020. Rebels from the Boko Haram extremist group claimed responsibility Tuesday for abducting hundreds of boys from a school in Nigeria's northern Katsina State last week in one of the largest such attacks in years, raising fears of a growing wave of violence in the region. (AP Photo/Sunday Alamba)

 

Rebels from the Boko Haram extremist group claimed responsibility Tuesday for abducting hundreds of boys from a school in Nigeria’s northern Katsina State last week in one of the largest such attacks in years, raising fears of a growing wave of violence in the region.

More than 330 students remain missing from the Government Science Secondary School in Kankara after gunmen with assault rifles attacked their school Friday night, although scores of others managed to escape.

People inspect a wall and metal door broken by rebels from Boko Haram who kidnapped Government Science Secondary School students in Kankara, Nigeria, Tuesday, Dec. 15, 2020. Rebels from the Boko Haram extremist group claimed responsibility Tuesday for abducting hundreds of boys from a school in Nigeria's northern Katsina State last week in one of the largest such attacks in years, raising fears of a growing wave of violence in the region. (AP Photo/Sunday Alamba)


The government and the attackers are negotiating the fate of the boys, according to Garba Shehu, a spokesman for Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari.

“The kidnappers had made contact and discussions were already on, pertaining to the safety and return” of the children to their homes, said Shehu on Twitter during talks with Katsina Gov. Aminu Masari. Neither official said whether the negotiations are with Boko Haram or another group.

Parents of the missing Government Science secondary school students wait for news on their children in Kankara , Nigeria, Tuesday, Dec. 15, 2020. Rebels from the Boko Haram extremist group claimed responsibility Tuesday for abducting hundreds of boys from a school in Nigeria's northern Katsina State last week in one of the largest such attacks in years, raising fears of a growing wave of violence in the region. (AP Photo/Sunday Alamba)


Masari said security agencies “deployed for rescue operations have also informed us that they have located their position.”

The Daily Nigerian said it received an audio message from Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau claiming the abduction, although there has been no independent verification of its authenticity.

People work past an empty hostel of missing Government Science Secondary School students in Kankara, Nigeria, Tuesday, Dec. 15, 2020. Rebels from the Boko Haram extremist group claimed responsibility Tuesday for abducting hundreds of boys from a school in Nigeria's northern Katsina State last week in one of the largest such attacks in years, raising fears of a growing wave of violence in the region. (AP Photo/Sunday Alamba)


The Islamic extremist group has carried out mass abduction of students before. The most serious took place in April 2014, when more than 270 schoolgirls were taken from their dormitory at the Government Secondary School in Chibok in northeastern Borno State. About 100 of the girls are still missing.

In February 2014, 59 boys were killed during a Boko Haram attack on the Federal Government College Buni Yadi in Yobe State.

In the audio message about Friday’s attack, Shekau said his group abducted the schoolboys because Western education is against the tenets of Islam.

Parents of the missing Government Science secondary school students wait for news on their children in Kankara , Nigeria, Tuesday, Dec. 15, 2020. Rebels from the Boko Haram extremist group claimed responsibility Tuesday for abducting hundreds of boys from a school in Nigeria's northern Katsina State last week in one of the largest such attacks in years, raising fears of a growing wave of violence in the region. (AP Photo/Sunday Alamba)


More than 600 students attend the school. Many were able to escape during a gunfight between the attackers and the police, according to state police spokesman Gambo Isah.

Students corroborated this account with various news agencies, saying many of them were also rounded up and forced to walk to a nearby forest, where some were also able to flee.

Several armed groups operate in northern Nigeria, where Katsina State is located. It was originally believed that the attackers were bandits, who sometimes work with Boko Haram.

People travel past Government Science Secondary School in Kankara, Nigeria, Tuesday, Dec. 15, 2020. Rebels from the Boko Haram extremist group claimed responsibility Tuesday for abducting hundreds of boys from the school in Nigeria's northern Katsina State last week in one of the largest such attacks in years, raising fears of a growing wave of violence in the region. (AP Photo/Sunday Alamba)


Bandits have operated in the northwest region for some time, and kidnappings have increased in recent years. Amnesty International says that more than 1,100 people were killed in the first six months of 2020 in violence related to attacks by bandits.

A joint rescue operation was launched Saturday by Nigeria’s police, air force and army after the military engaged in gunfights with bandits after locating their hideout in the Zango/Paula forest.

Police officers drive past the Government Science Secondary School in Kankara, Nigeria, Tuesday, Dec. 15, 2020. Rebels from the Boko Haram extremist group claimed responsibility Tuesday for abducting hundreds of boys from a school in Nigeria's northern Katsina State last week in one of the largest such attacks in years, raising fears of a growing wave of violence in the region. (AP Photo/Sunday Alamba)


If Boko Haram is proven to be behind the abduction, it could mean a new wave of religious extremism is on the rise in Nigeria. For more than 10 years, the group has engaged in a bloody campaign for introducing strict Islamic rule, but it has been mainly active in northeast Nigeria, not in the northwest, where Katsina State is located. Thousands have been killed and more than a million people displaced by the violence.

Nnamdi Obasi of the International Crisis Group said a shift of Boko Haram’s activities to the northwest would have serious security implications because it could partner with other armed criminal groups known to carry out attacks and collect payments from households and markets.

Parents of the missing Government Science secondary school students wait for news on their children in Kankara , Nigeria, Tuesday, Dec. 15, 2020. Rebels from the Boko Haram extremist group claimed responsibility Tuesday for abducting hundreds of boys from a school in Nigeria's northern Katsina State last week in one of the largest such attacks in years, raising fears of a growing wave of violence in the region. (AP Photo/Sunday Alamba)


“They are Iike mini-armies that are able to carry out operations in defiance of the security forces, and it is worrisome,” Obasi told The Associated Press.

The local armed groups have no religious ideology, however, and Obasi said Boko Haram’s movement into the northwest would create “a risk of convergence between criminal groups and jihadist groups. The trajectories are very disturbing.”

Because the northwest is more homogeneously Islam than the northeast, there are more potential recruits for radicalism.

Two women walk past the Government Science Secondary School in Kankara, Nigeria, Tuesday, Dec. 15, 2020. Rebels from the Boko Haram extremist group claimed responsibility Tuesday for abducting hundreds of boys from a school in Nigeria's northern Katsina State last week in one of the largest such attacks in years, raising fears of a growing wave of violence in the region. (AP Photo/Sunday Alamba)


Friday’s abduction has become a rallying cry for Nigerians fed up with growing violence, with #BringBackOurBoys trending on Twitter as people express their frustrations. A similar #BringBackOurGirls became an international rallying cry for the Chibok girls.

“Before now, it has been bandits and kidnappers terrorizing our state, but little has been done to address the situation,” said Mallam Saidu Funtua, a member of a local civil society organization in Katsina State.

He added that “the abduction of students was the height of it all. It is unacceptable and the government has to do more” to protect students and residents.

The attack was a major setback for education in Katsina, which was beginning to make progress in enrollment, he said, adding: “Our people will be discouraged in sending their kids to school.”

Kankara villager Lawal Muhammed said the attack left most residents terrified and traumatized.

“We have never experienced this kind of thing before,” he said. “We want the government to do more in protecting our children, especially now that schools would be resuming after the COVID-19 break.”

The abductions also come as Boko Haram and the Nigerian military may be investigated for war crimes in the rebels’ insurgency, which has lasted more than a decade.

The International Criminal Court’s chief prosecutor last week said a probe has found enough evidence to merit opening a full-scale inquiry into allegations of war crimes and crimes against humanity by Boko Haram extremists as well as into charges that Nigerian government forces have also perpetrated abuses.

Prosecutor Fatou Bensouda said there is a “reasonable basis to believe” Boko Haram and splinter groups linked to it committed crimes including murder, rape, sexual slavery and torture, as well as intentionally targeting schools and places of worship and using child soldiers. While a vast majority of the criminality in the conflict has been carried out by Boko Haram, prosecutors also found grounds to believe members of Nigeria’s security forces had committed crimes, she said.

Amnesty International last week released a report saying at least 10,000 civilians have died in Nigerian military custody since 2011 after being detained in connection with the Boko Haram insurgency in northern Nigeria.

 


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Regional military chiefs meet in Kigali



Eastern Africa Standby Force (EASF) member states are meeting in Kigali to among other tasks draft a concept on countering security threats that have regional and international dimensions.

The 28th Ordinary Policy Organs Meetings, which started earlier this week with a meeting of experts, has attracted defence chiefs and later convene the Council of Ministers of Defence and Security.

Opening the session of Chiefs of Defence and Security, on Wednesday, December 16, Lt Gen Jean Jacques Mupenzi, the Chief of Staff of Rwanda Defence Force (RDF), admitted that the region continues to face challenges of conflict that impact peace and stability in some of our member states.

Acts of violence, terrorism, and violent extremism, especially in the horn of Africa region and the Democratic Republic of the Congo, he said, continue impacting the region and call for concerted effort.

"The EASF had made several achievements during the last thirteen years, including attaining full operational capability and contributing to capacity building of our forces in terms of training. It is important that these achievements are maintained and consolidated," Mupenzi said.

 The EASF is a regional organisation whose mandate is to enhance peace and security in the Eastern Africa region. It comprises 10 active member states:  Burundi, Comoros, Djibouti, Ethiopia, Kenya, Rwanda, Seychelles, Somalia, Sudan and Uganda.

All partner states are represented at the meeting apart from Burundi and Seychelles.

"It is therefore in our interest that we move forward speedily but in a pragmatic and professional manner in order to reinforce the larger efforts of our continental organisation, the AU," Mupenzi said.

In the spirit of shared responsibility and in recognition of the fact that the security of one state is inextricably linked to that of the other, Mupenzi said, "we must spare no effort to collectively address the problems" related to peace and security.

The regional Standby Force is one of the five regional multidimensional forces of the African Standby Force (ASF) comprising military, police and civilian components. The components stay on standby for rapid deployment at appropriate notice as provided for in the peace support operations scenarios of the ASF.

 In an August 2014 pledging conference, held in Kigali, countries committed to raise a military fighting force of 5,000 troops.

 EASF declared full operational capability in December 2014 with an equipped multidimensional and multinational force of 5,200 personnel - military, police and civilian components.

 Wednesday's session was the start of the CDFs' policy organ meeting.

 Ministers will meet on Friday.

 

Financial constraints

 According to Brig Gen Fayisa Getachew, the EASF Director said they have been able to achieve several objectives including maintaining force readiness for deployment, but "the financial status of the organisation is currently poor."

 

Each member state is required to contribute an annual assessed contribution. Lately, Rwanda’s assessed contribution is 9.3 percent of the total annual assessed contribution by all countries.

"Only two member states have so far submitted their annual assessed contributions for 2020. However, I am glad to have received information that the Republic of Rwanda has dispatched their contribution and is expected in our accounts soon," Getachew said.

"We understand the effect of the Covid-19 pandemic on our economies. However, as we allocate the little resources we have, I kindly request that we also consider EASF."

 According to the EASF's 2019 annual report, the approved budget for the financial year 2019 was $7.4 million.

But member states' actual remittances for the same financial year totalled $4.5 million.

On September 25, military, police and civilian personnel from seven member states completed a two-week training course that integrated mission planning at the Rwanda Peace Academy in Musanze District.


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Tuesday, December 15, 2020

ZIMBABWE: Problem of water ravages the country’s "City of Kings"



A woman carrying a bucket of water walk past one fetching water from a hand-dug well on November 22, 2020.

Women carry the burden of collecting water for households in the shadow of deadly diseases.

In November every year, Zimbabwe’s second-largest city, Bulawayo, explodes into a magnificent riot of colour as the majestic purple jacaranda and the flame-red flamboyant trees bloom, transforming the wide tree-lined streets into a glorious spectacle.

But beneath this blissful veneer of blossoms is a troubled city struggling to come to terms with a devastating shortage of water and the resultant loss of life.

In June, three months into a Covid-19 lockdown, Bulawayo was blindsided by a totally different disease — diarrhoea.

The gastro-intestinal malady, which spreads through the ingestion of contaminated water and food, had killed 13 people by July and infected more than 2 000 others. Some of the survivors suffered mysterious skin disfigurement. And many are yet to settle their hefty medical bills.

The Bulawayo Municipality said eight suburbs were affected. In September, city clinics were attending to more than 240 cases of diarrhoea every two days. In comparison, Covid-19, at that time, had claimed six lives.

“The diarrhoea outbreak caught many of us by surprise. We were bracing for a Covid-19 emergency, like everywhere else in the world. I can’t adequately describe the terrifying sense of fear and shock caused by the diarrhoea outbreak under the shadow of the Covid-19 crisis,” recounted Mthokozisi Sibanda, a city resident.

[Diarrhoea killed 13 people by July and infected more than 2 000 others.]

The sprawling townships of Luveve and Cowdray Park were the epicentre of the diarrhoea outbreak. Local residents recounted the ordeal of having to constantly dice with death, as the twin perils of Covid-19 and water-borne disease stalked the area.

The diarrhoea-related deaths have since subsided, but emotional scars remain fresh, worsened by a water shortage that threatens to spiral out of control. 

But even as that threat lessened, deaths in the city attributed to the coronavirus have increased in October and November. The increased toll from the virus comes amid warnings from Solwayo Ngwenya, a local professor of medicine and clinical director of Bulawayo’s largest hospital, that the reluctance of residents to wear face masks has increased the risk of a “second wave” of infections.

Climate change is real

Three out of six water-supply dams have dried up owing to dwindling rain, forcing the municipality to introduce drastic rationing which has seen most suburbs receiving water for only 12 hours over an entire week.

The director of the Bulawayo City Council’s department of engineering services, Simela Dube, made the chilling revelation that Criterion Water Works, a giant reservoir holding 10 days’ buffer storage, has now completely dried up.

“It’s the first time in history,” Dube said. “The issues of climate change are starting to show. The inflows into our dams continue to decline almost every season.”

The city’s 650 000 residents need at least 150 megalitres (150 million litres) of water a day, but the municipality can supply only 89 megalitres, using five bowsers – tankers – for transporting water. 

The huge disparity between supply and demand means people are forced to resort to unsafe sources of water, such as unprotected wells, contaminated streams and boreholes whose water quality is questionable.

Linda Mushekwi, 15, balances a 20-litre bucket of water on November 22, 2020, near Luveve in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe. Linda bemoans the water crisis’s negative impact on her school studies as she spends half of her day searching for water for a household of five people. (Photo: Zinyange Auntony)

Bulawayo City Council (BCC) says laboratory tests have ruled out fears that the diarrhoea is caused by serious notifiable diseases such as cholera, typhoid and dysentery. Municipal health officials attribute the outbreak to residents’ poor hygiene practices, particularly the use of dirty water-storage containers. 

Civic groupings have challenged this narrative, accusing the city council of supplying “tainted” water.

In the face of the mounting crisis, the municipality has sought permission from the central government to conduct a study to establish whether it would be feasible to allocate each household the first 5 000 litres of water for free every month, according to Dube. It is an ambitious “pro-poor” plan.

He says the study—which will also look into the viability of the water-tariff structure — will cost US$600 000.

“The study will also look into the ring-fencing of the water services so that water can account for its own expenditure and income without getting subsidies from other (municipal) accounts.”

Finding clean water is tough

Mother-of-two Anna Nduna, 21, said it has become very difficult to juggle the tasks of tending to her three-month-old twins while also frantically hunting for water.

“I am staying in Cowdray Park and the water situation there is very dire. Sometimes we spend three weeks without (municipal) water. Due to that, we ended up resorting to fetching water from unprotected wells near the [spilt] sewage,” she said. 

A girl is reflected as she leaps into a hand-dug well to draw water on November 22, 2020, near Luveve in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe. Several people have had minor injuries while drawing water from the wells. (Photo: Zinyange Auntony)

“To make matters worse, I have three-month-old twins. So, I struggle to get water for washing their nappies and for cooking. I come here (looking for water) every day, two or three times a day. Today, I have been here since 1pm and now it’s already 4pm,” she said while attending to her crying babies.

The distance between her home in Cowdray Park and where she fetches water is about a kilometre.

When asked how she manages to carry a 20-litre bucket of water plus her twin babies, she said: “I strap one of my babies to my back and the other one in front. There is nothing I can do. The situation is horrible and unbearable.”

Anna Nduna and her children, including her three-month-old twins. (Photo: Darlington Mwashita)

Her husband works as an illegal artisanal gold miner in Inyathi, 68 kilometres from Bulawayo and the family’s modest income does not afford her the luxury of buying borehole water from private suppliers.

Tormented by a running stomach

Sikhathele Ncube, 43, a mother-of-three and resident of New Luveve township, said diarrhoea is terrorising her family.

The water situation in Luveve is unbearable for residents, made worse by a burst pipe that was spewing untreated effluent close to where many residents collect water when I visited the area. 

“We fetch water near the sewage because we don’t have options,” Ncube said, referring to a nearby broken pipe that was spewing raw effluent when I visited the area. 

Flies seen on November 22, 2020, rest on the grass next faecal matter beside one of several unprotected hand-dug wells from where some residents draw water near Luveve in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe. In July, 13 people died while hundreds suffered stomach ailments resulting from drinking contaminated water. Cases of diarrhoeal-related disease continue to be recorded in the city as water shortages persist. (Photo: Zinyange Auntony)

“We wake up at 2am to queue for water at the wells here,” said Ncube. “I use this water for cooking, drinking and washing. Just look at that,” she gestured, pointing at a nearby pile of human waste.

“People are sick with diarrhea and other water-borne diseases. As I speak, I have a running tummy, and so do my children. We don’t care whether the water is safe or not,” she said.

It takes her an agonising 40 minutes to fill up a 20-litre bucket.

[“We fetch water near the sewage because we don’t have options.”]

“What we need is water for drinking and cooking. We wonder what will happen now the schools have opened. My children last had a bath a week ago. With the outbreak of Covid-19, we don’t know how we can protect ourselves from it since we don’t have water to wash our hands regularly. Toilets are not being flushed. Everything is just messed up,” Ncube lamented.

Fistfights routinely break out when desperate residents jostle to fetch water at unprotected wells, she added. “Sometimes we fight over water, something which is very terrible.”

Women live in fear of sexual violence

Women are also fearful of being mugged or raped while hunting for water in the dark, according to Ncube. But it was “better to be mugged than to die of thirst,” she said.

A woman carries a water bucket from a well in the early morning hours of November 22, 2020, Luveve township in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe. It has become very difficult for most women to balance the time for work, household chores and searching for water. (Photo: Zinyange Auntony)

“Yes, we can be raped, but what is more important to me is to provide water for my children. We are between a rock and a hard place.”

Sibonokuhle Nyoni, 38, a mother-of-two from Old Luveve township, also believes that the dire water shortage was exposing women and girls to sexual violence.

Nyoni travels six kilometres from Old Luveve to another suburb, Emakhandeni, to access water from a borehole.

“Water is life and if you don’t get it, then it means there is no life. We are afraid of disease outbreaks. We wake up at 4am looking for water. We come here twice a day,” Nyoni said.

Magwegwe residents line up to fetch water from a Bulawayo City Council bowser as shortages of water increase in the city. (Photo: Darlington Mwashita)

To protect themselves from knife-wielding muggers, women walk in groups.

“The situation is terrible, especially for women. For instance, some women are nursing babies and they need water for washing nappies and cooking for their children,” said Nyoni. “But with this water situation in Bulawayo, it becomes very difficult for them.” 

Nyoni said they spend most of their productive time looking for water.

“We always think about water, nothing else, and this is affecting our day-to-day lives. You can’t do other things,” she said.

Magwegwe and Lobengula residents fetch water flowing from the Magwegwe reservoir in Bulawayo. (Photo: Darlington Mwashita)

Muggings, fistfights and rape are not the only perils encountered in the hunt for water. Sikhangezile Ndlovu, 37, a mother-of-three from New Luveve township, who has dug a well in her backyard, lives in constant fear that her children may accidentally fall in and drown.

In a bid to solve her water challenges, Ndlovu dug the three-metre-deep well in August. But it is not covered, exposing her children to danger.

“Since I came here in August from South Africa, I have never received water from the city council. So, we decided to dig a well at our house. The well has been very helpful and my neighbours also come and fetch water from here,” she said.

Tackling crisis through advocacy

Following the diarrhoea outbreak, which has so far claimed 13 lives, residents of Luveve township formed a “water crisis committee.” It includes their local councillor, Member of Parliament, and residents. The aim is to urgently find solutions to the water crisis.

One of the committee members, Chrispin Ngulube, 62, a survivor of the devastating diarrhoea, said they teamed up with other stakeholders and approached the high court in Bulawayo. They were seeking an order directing the city council to release laboratory samples of tap water and other vital information pertaining to the disease outbreak.

Women traveling along a railway line carrying water buckets to fetch water from hand-dug wells in the bush area along Cowdray Park in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe. (Photo: Darlington Mwashita)

However, the residents withdrew the lawsuit after the municipality indicated willingness to release the information.

The initial intention of the residents was to invite a private laboratory in Harare to subject Bulawayo’s municipal water samples and pipes to stringent tests.

“When the diarrhoea outbreak began, the council did not take it seriously. In fact, they accused residents of using dirty water containers for storing water. Things got worse and people started dying in [significant] numbers, prompting the residents to take action,” Ngulube said.

“Due to the water crisis, we lost lives, both young and old, in Luveve. We still have people who are having problems even after the outbreak. My wife and I were also affected by diarrhoea. We nearly died. I had a running tummy and stomach cramps and I had to go to Luveve Clinic.”

In a separate lawsuit four months ago, some Bulawayo residents filed a class-action lawsuit at the high court, suing the city council and central government for failing to fulfil their constitutional obligation to supply adequate water.

Council spokesperson Nesisa Mpofu refused to comment on the case, describing the matter as sub judice (before a court).

Speaking out

Ishmael Mkandla, another member of the residents’ committee, said advocacy could make a difference in communities by raising awareness and mobilising assistance.

“We appealed for assistance in different organisations, both legal organisations as well as residents’ organisations. We received a lot of donations and distributed them to the affected residents. There is also another organisation which has drilled a borehole with the help of the local Member of Parliament, Stella Ndlovu, to assist the communities.”

Advance Tshuma, 21, washes clothes at his family home on November 22, 2020, in Luveve, Bulawayo, Zimbabwe. Advance complains about the discolouration of his pricey clothes due to dirty water while others use it for household consumption. (Photo: Zinyange Auntony)

Recently, 1 374 residents of Bulawayo`s Luveve township signed a petition addressed to their councillor, Febbie Msipa, demanding an urgent solution to the water shortage. They also complained that many houses no longer receive piped water even when supplies are restored during the 12-hours-per-week window.

Semukele Mnkandla, vice-chairperson of the Bulawayo United Residents’ Association in Luveve township, said she suffered from a running stomach for almost a month after drinking contaminated tap water.

“I spent the whole month not feeling well after being affected by diarrhoea. Diarrhoea affected both children and old people. What I can tell you is that some of these people who were affected are still sick even today,” she said.

“They are having skin diseases. There is a young man aged 21 whose intestines got twisted and, as a result, he is now using a tube when he wants to relieve himself. His system got damaged. This has even forced him to change diet,” she said.

Those who were ferried to hospital by ambulance are also personally responsible for hefty bills which are accumulating interest, she said. 

How safe is municipal water?

Bulawayo mayor, Solomon Mguni, said the city’s municipal water is clean. 

“Every effort is made to supply the residents with clean safe water at all times. Despite the initial quality of water after treatment, it from time to time gets contaminated during distribution, transportation and storage due to unhygienic storage and handling practices,” he said.

The city council has encouraged residents to ensure the storage containers are clean and to boil the water before consumption.

Recently drilled sinkholes for a pegged borehole, photographed on November 22 2020, in Luveve in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe. (Photo: Zinyange Auntony)

The municipality’s director of health services, Edwin Sibanda, said the piped water is safe for consumption, even though it emits an unpleasant odour and has an unusual colour—especially soon after supplies are restored following the drastic rationing measures.

Sibanda argued that the strange smell is not a danger to human health, but some residents have refused to accept this official explanation.

Waterpreneurs cash in

The city’s deputy mayor, Mlandu Ncube, said the municipality has no solution to the crippling shortage of water and is now pinning its hopes on early and bountiful summer rains.

The city council has tried to lessen the suffering by delivering water by bowser. There are five bowsers, four of which have a volume of 18 000 litres each and the fifth one carries 10 000 litres. Community leaders say this is woefully inadequate to cater for 650 000 residents.

Enterprising “waterpreneurs” are cashing in and selling water. They use tanks and browsers to fetch water, often from boreholes located on private property, and sell it to desperate residents. To run such a water-supply business, one must have authorisation from the Environmental Management Agency, but most “waterpreneurs” operate illegally. The borehole water is being sold for up to US$43 for 5 000 litres. In a country where the United Nations says 60% of the entire population faces starvation and extreme poverty is on the rise, most people in Bulawayo — many who earn less than US$100 per month — simply cannot afford to buy water at those prices.

Triple whammy hits Bulawayo

Residents are grappling with a triple whammy that has made it extremely difficult to access potable water: dwindling rainfall as drought and climate change take their toll; decaying water supply infrastructure; and a sharp increase in cases of water-borne diseases. 

The loss of lives to such a primitive ailment has brought untold humiliation upon Bulawayo, once regarded Zimbabwe’s best-run city. 

People draw water from a well on November 22, 2020, near Luveve in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe. The city council water browsers, which sometimes provide clean water haven’t made delivery in days. (Photo: Zinyange Auntony)

A neatly designed metropolis with ornate colonial architecture, its iconic avenues were built wide enough to allow a span of 16 oxen and a cart to make a full turn. It was established by the King of the Northern Ndebele, Mzilikazi Khumalo, King Shaka’s military general who famously fled Zululand and founded the Mthwakazi kingdom. Mzilikazi’s son and successor, King Lobengula, would later be defeated by British imperial invaders.

By June 1894, a modern town was taking shape. The country’s first stock exchange was built in Bulawayo. Economic historians attest to the fact that Bulawayo had electric lighting in 1897, way before London did — a remarkable feat. Bulawayo’s nickname is “City of Kings”. 

The water crisis is a sore point for local residents, who see it as a blemish on this proud heritage.

An ancient crisis implodes

The perennial shortage of water dates back to 1912 when the British colonial settlers first mooted the ambitious idea of laying a 400-kilometre pipeline to draw water from the Zambezi, Africa’s fourth-longest river.

The tantalising idea has enchanted generations but remains a pipe dream. The Zambezi — the longest east-flowing river on the continent and the largest African river emptying into the Indian Ocean — is viewed as the only lasting solution to arid Matabeleland’s water woes.

But for decades, politicians have used the water crisis as bait to persuade gullible voters while paying lip service to the proposed Zambezi pipeline project.

Zimbabwe’s collapsing economy, described by Johns Hopkins University economist Steve Hanke as the first country to suffer hyperinflation in the 21st century, has meant that the national government lacks the financial resources to provide new sources of raw water to Bulawayo. It has also seen a rapid deterioration in the crumbling network of outdated water supply pipes.

Gwayi-Shangani Dam project

Discarded empty bottles that are used to collect water when it comes out from the tap are in the dried garden at Gogo Kasuka’s household on November 22, 2020, in Luveve, Bulawayo, Zimbabwe. (Photo: Zinyange Auntony)

Construction of the 634-million-cubic-metre reservoir, located 245 kilometres from the city, is described by officials as the first phase of central government’s flagship solution to Bulawayo’s perennial water crisis. Its volume is almost double the combined capacity of Bulawayo’s existing dams.

After a long delay in the commencement of construction, some progress has been registered in the engineering works, amid disruptions caused by the Covid-19 pandemic.

Judith Ncube, the Minister of State for Bulawayo, said the dam is now expected to be commissioned in December 2022, rather than the initially planned December 2021.

Construction of the US$120-million dam is being undertaken by China International Water & Electric Corporation (CWE), a subsidiary of China Three Gorges Corporation (CTE). 

When the dam is built, one pipeline will link it to the Zambezi River, while another pipeline will channel the water to Bulawayo. The total cost is estimated at US$864-million, a massive financial outlay for a broke government whose total annual national budget has rarely exceeded US$4-billion in recent years.

The government has also allocated 205 million Zimbabwean dollars (US$2.5-million) for the drilling and rehabilitation of a network of boreholes which currently supply water to residents as a stop-gap measure.

The Bulawayo City Council also took out a US$33-million loan from the African Development Bank to finance a Water and Sewerage Services Improvement Project.

The money will fund the rehabilitation and upgrading of water purification facilities, water distribution, sewer drainage network and the wastewater treatment disposal system.

Real risk of new disease outbreaks

new report by Zimbabwe’s Auditor-General Mildred Chiri warns that Bulawayo is at risk of more water-borne disease outbreaks resulting from a failure by the municipality to manage the sewer reticulation system.

Decades of inadequate spending on public infrastructure have ensured that even when water is available a lot of it is lost as the ageing pipes are prone to frequent bursts.

Municipal finances are in shambles and my investigation revealed that the city council will increasingly find it difficult to access similar funding in future.

An analysis by a civil society organisation, the Bulawayo Progressive Residents’ Association, of council books for the seven months to July 2020 shows that the municipality’s wage bill now constitutes a massive 58% of total council expenditure, almost double the state-recommended 30% threshold.

The local authority’s governance shortcomings have come under scrutiny. Investigations by Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Commission investigators recently led to the arrest of the city’s director of housing, Dictor Khumalo, on charges of flouting tender and procurement procedures.

Passing the buck

Councillors and municipal officials blame the central government for failing to ensure an adequate supply of bulk water to the local authority. 

According to the Water Act, it is the responsibility of the central government to build dams and supply raw water to municipalities. It is the responsibility of municipalities to treat and distribute the bulk water.

We obtained video footage showing that some desperate Bulawayo residents are resorting to vandalising council water pipes. They argue it is the only way they can get water in certain suburbs. 

But, from a governance perspective, it creates a vicious cycle as the municipality must spend scarce financial resources to repair vandalised pipes.

Ultimately, Bulawayo’s devastating water shortage can only be solved through the concerted efforts of the central government, the municipality, residents and other stakeholders. 

Diarrhoea has already claimed 13 lives. Covid-19, whose effective prevention is also dependent on access to clean water, had killed 66 people in the city by mid-November. 

So, lives are at stake and urgent action is necessary before more people die from what is an avoidable disease. DM

This investigation was developed with the support of  Wits University.

 


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