Monday, 25 August 2014

Boko Haram declares 'Islamic state' in northern Nigeria

A screengrab taken on August 24, 2014 from a video released by the Nigerian Islamist extremist group Boko Haram and obtained by AFP shows the leader of the Nigerian Islamist extremist group Boko Haram, Abubakar Shekau, delivering a speech at an undisclosed location. In his previous video, Abubakar Shekau congratulated Islamic State in Iraq and Syria
Militant group Boko Haram has said it has set up an Islamic state in the towns and villages it has seized in north-eastern Nigeria.
Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau was speaking in a video released to congratulate his fighters for seizing the town of Gwoza earlier this month.
It is not clear if Mr Shekau has pledged allegiance to Islamic State, which controls parts of Iraq and Syria.
Nigeria's army has rejected the claim as "empty".
Thousands of people have been killed, mostly in north-eastern Nigeria, since 2009 when Boko Haram began its insurgency.
Gwoza, which had 265,000 residents in the last census, is the biggest town under Boko Haram control.
A picture taken on August 21, 2014 shows Internally Displaced People (IDP) standing outside a classroom they found shelter in, at Gulak camp in Nigeria"s northeastern Adamawa State.Thousands have fled Gwoza - these people are now living in a school
It has raised its flags over the palace of the Emir of Gwoza, the town's traditional ruler, residents say.
"Thanks be to Allah who gave victory to our brethren in Gwoza and made it part of the Islamic state," Mr Shekau said in the 52-minute video.
It controls several areas, mostly in Borno state where the group was launched, but also in neighbouring Yobe state.
The video also shows about 20 men in civilian clothes apparently being shot dead.
Nigeria's military spokesman Chris Olukolade responded with a statement dismissing the declaration.
"The sovereignty and territorial integrity of the Nigerian state is still intact," he said.
In his previous video, released in July, Mr Shekau congratulated the Islamic State (IS) for its advances in Iraq and Syria but did not say whether they were allies - there is no evidence that the two groups have been working together.
IS has seized much of northern Iraq in recent months, leading the US to launch air strikes.
Last week, the militants sparked global outrage by beheading US journalist James Foley.
Gwoza is not far from Chibok, where Boko Haram kidnapped more than 200 schoolgirls in April.
Nigeria's police say it is still looking for 35 police officers who went missing after Boko Haram attacked a police academy in Liman Kara, near Gwoza last week.
Residents say the militants seized the college but it is unclear who now controls it.
Nigeria declared a state of emergency in three north-eastern states in 2013 but the insurgency has continued and even intensified.


Nigerian troops cross border after Boko Haram clashes

 In this file photo taken Thursday, Aug. 8, 2013, a Nigerian soldier patrols in an armoured car, during Eid al-Fitr celebrations, in Maiduguri, Nigeria. Thousands of extra soldiers have failed to quell the five-year insurgency
Some 480 Nigerian soldiers have crossed into Cameroon following fierce fighting with Boko Haram militants.
Reports claimed that the troops had joined thousands of citizens fleeing the fighting, but Nigeria said they were conducting a "tactical manoeuvre".
Clashes are said to be continuing in the border town of Gamboru Ngala.
Boko Haram on Sunday released a video claiming that it had established an Islamic state in the towns and villages it controls in north-eastern Nigeria.
The group's five-year insurgency has intensified in recent months despite the deployment of thousands of extra troops to the worst-affected areas.
Last week, a group of soldiers refused to follow orders to go and fight Boko Haram, saying the militants were better equipped.
Insurgents also seized one of Nigeria's two main police training academies, which is near the town of Gwoza, captured earlier this month.
A picture taken on August 21, 2014 shows Internally Displaced People (IDP) standing outside a classroom they found shelter in, at Gulak camp in Nigeria"s northeastern Adamawa State.Thousands have fled recent fighting - these people are now living in a school
The Nigerian soldiers were accommodated in the Cameroonian town of Maroua, about 80km (50 miles) from the Nigerian border, Cameroon army spokesman Lt Col Didier Badjek told the BBC.
The Nigerian defence ministry said in a statement that the soldiers found themselves "charging through the borders in a tactical manoeuvre" after a sustained battle.
The statement said it was standard practice for them to hand over their weapons and the soldiers are now returning home.
Thousands of civilians are also said to have fled across the border.
Cameroon has officially closed its 1,600 km border with Nigeria to help contain the spread of the deadly Ebola virus.
But correspondents say this is impossible to enforce in remote areas near the fighting.
map
line
Analysis: Tomi Oladipo, BBC News, Lagos
This is the largest reported case of Nigerian troops fleeing from battle so far and it is even more telling that they have crossed the border into Cameroon. It is not clear whether these soldiers intend to return to the Nigerian army or if they have deserted altogether.
It raises the question whether the continuing violence in north-east Nigeria is a result of the failures of the Nigerian military as opposed to the strength of Boko Haram, considering there have been glaring problems in the equipping and deploying soldiers on the frontline.
There have been reports of mutinies within the army ranks and recently soldiers' wives protested at the deployment of their husbands, saying they were ill-equipped to fight the insurgents.
The Nigerian military has insisted its forces are up to the task but the fact that Boko Haram has been able to keep hold of Gwoza for some weeks now means residents of towns and villages across the north-east fear they could be next.
line
Boko Haram launched an attack on the police station and a military base in Gamboru Ngala at 05:30 local time (04:30 GMT), the AFP news agency reports.
In May, some 300 people were killed in an attack which left much of the town in ruins.
It is near Gwoza, the largest town under control of Boko Haram. In the most recent census, in 2006, it had a population of more than 265,000 people.
In the 52-minute video released on Sunday, Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau said Gwoza was now "part of the Islamic state".
He did not specify whether his group now had any links to the Islamic State (IS) group, which has seized much of northern Iraq in recent months, prompting the US to respond with air strikes.
There is no evidence for such links but in July, Mr Shekau congratulated IS on its territorial gains.
line
A screengrab taken on August 24, 2014 from a video released by the Nigerian Islamist extremist group Boko Haram and obtained by AFP shows the leader of the Nigerian Islamist extremist group Boko Haram, Abubakar Shekau, delivering a speech at an undisclosed location.

line
Boko Haram controls several areas, mostly in Borno state where the group was launched, but also in neighbouring Yobe state.
Nigeria's military spokesman Chris Olukolade responded with a statement dismissing the declaration of an Islamic state as "empty".
The video also shows about 20 men in civilian clothes apparently being shot dead.
The BBC's Nathalie Wakam in Cameroon says the situation is worrying for the country's officials, who have called on the international community to help them tackle the threat from Boko Haram.
China, France, the US and UK all sent some military assistance - advisors and help with intelligence - to Nigeria after some 200 schoolgirls were seized from Chibok, near Gwoza, in April.

Tuesday, 12 August 2014

Ethical to use untested Ebola drugs, says WHO

Liberian nurses remove a victim of Ebola near Monrovia, Liberia, 8 August 2014
Untested drugs can be used to treat patients infected with the Ebola virus, the World Health Organization says.
The WHO said it was ethical in light of the scale of the outbreak and high number of deaths - over 1,000 people have died in west Africa..
The statement was made after its medical experts met in Switzerland on Monday to discuss the issue.
The move came as Liberia said it was getting an experimental drug, Zmapp, after requests to the US government.
The WHO said where experimental treatments are used there must be informed consent and the results of the treatment collected and shared.
In a statement, it said: "In the particular circumstances of this outbreak, and provided certain conditions are met, the panel reached consensus that it is ethical to offer unproven interventions with as yet unknown efficacy and adverse effects, as potential treatment or prevention."
But the organisation conceded there were still many questions to be answered including how data could be gathered effectively while the focus remained on providing good medical care.
It was also unclear where the funding for the treatment would come from.
Last week the WHO declared the Ebola outbreak was a global health emergency.

Saturday, 9 August 2014

South Sudan crisis: 'Horrific conditions' in flooded UN camp


Flooded UN camp in BentiuMSF says conditions in the camp were already difficult before the rain set in 
At least 40,000 people who fled fighting in South Sudan are staying in horrific conditions at a UN camp, Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) says.
Many were living in knee-deep, sewage-contaminated floodwater with some sleeping standing up with children in their arms, the medical charity said.
MSF urged the UN to move the worst-affected to drier land in Bentiu.
Fighting between government and rebel troops has displaced at least 1.5 million people since December.
The UN is yet to respond to MSF's criticism.
Bentiu has changed hands several times since the crisis began and thousands of people have sought refuge in the UN camp in the town, situated in oil-rich Unity State.
With the onset of rains, MSF says the already harsh and overcrowded conditions in the camp have now become deplorable.
"With few possibilities for drainage, current living conditions in the camp are horrifying and an affront to human dignity," MSF's emergency co-ordinator Ivan Gayton said in a statement.
What began as a political dispute between President Salva Kiir and his former deputy, Riek Machar, has escalated into ethnic violence.
Regional mediators have set a 10 August deadline for both sides to agree on a transitional government and implement a ceasefire.
The BBC's Ethiopia correspondent Emmanuel Igunza says a new round of talks in Addis Ababa this week initially stalled, but restarted on Friday afternoon.

Zimbabwe: SA Approves New Special Permits for Zimbabweans

South Africa has approved new special permits for Zimbabweans, authorities there announced on Thursday.
"Cabinet approved the new Zimbabwean Dispensation process. The Minister of Home Affairs will conduct a separate media briefing to announce details of this process," acting SA Cabinet spokesman Phumla Williams said in a statement.
The approval follows intense lobbying by Zim nationals, many of whom had regularised their stay in that country through the 2009 special dispensation project.
All permits issued under that scheme are due to expire in December while some have already expired and there had been concern that Zimbabweans would be required to travel to their home country to renew them.
Although SA indicated in May that it did not intend "to reverse the benefits of the dispensation", Zimbabweans were still worried about returning to a country from which they fled without any guarantee that their permits would be renewed.
Close to 250,000 permits were issued to Zimbabweans as SA moved to document those who were in South Africa illegally as a result of the political and socio-economic situation in Zimbabwe.
The Zim Community in SA said they are delighted. "While we celebrate the decision of the South African government we call upon all Zimbabweans to await the details from Home Affairs Minister Malusi Gigaba. Let us not rush to Home Affairs offices or to permit agents," the group said Thursday.
The warning on permit agents comes in the wake of reports that Zimbabweans were being conned out of amounts of up to R19,000 by individuals promising to facilitate the renewal of their papers.
Ngqabutho Mabhena, head of the Zim Community in SA which was instrumental in the negotiation process, said there were also cases in which permit-seekers had been given fake documents by unscrupulous agents.
"We expect the minister to tell us how the process will be rolled out by the 15th August as they promised. As part of our negotiations we asked that the dispensation process be extended, and that Zimbabweans be able to renew without having to leave South Africa.
"We also asked the SA authorities to extend the permits to those that remain undocumented, and for our own Zim government to allow Zimbabweans to renew their passports while in South Africa.
"We therefore hope that when Honourable Gigaba makes his announcement, our requests will be granted," Mabhena said.
Mabhena said they will try to engage the SA authorities on behalf of some Zimbabweans whose permits were issued under the Documentation Zim Project and were finding it difficult to renew.
"The DZP is different. It is a general work permit and applicants have to prove that they have special skills that SA nationals do not have and that the job was advertised.
"What happened was that some Zimbabweans obtained them but are finding it difficult to provide the required proof and documents and are being turned down," Mabhena said.

Thursday, 7 August 2014

Ghana's Currency Slump Spurs Increase in Cocoa Smuggling


Washington — Cocoa beans have been smuggled between Ivory Coast and neighboring Ghana for years. Until recently, Ivorian growers most often illegally sent their cocoa beans into Ghana where the prices were higher and more stable. A recent slump in the Ghanaian currency and political stabilization in Ivory Coast, however, have tipped the balance. Ghanaian farmers are now the ones who smuggle their beans into Ivory Coast, where they get more money for them.
During recent political turmoil in Ivory Coast, Ghana's stability and fixed cocoa prices made it an attractive market to Ivorian growers. But the situation in Ivory Coast is now settled and the government has established a minimum price to be paid to cocoa farmers to keep Ivorian cocoa beans at home. Meanwhile, Ghana's currency, the cedi, has declined by more than 40 percent against the dollar this year. For the cocoa growers, this means a loss of income. They can make a bigger profit by smuggling their output to Ivory Coast and selling it at a higher price.
"The farmers are compelled to give most of their produce to the buyers from Ivory Coast so they can get enough money for their children; it is not that they are willing. It is the situation that is compelling them to do so," said Alfred Allotey, a cocoa depot manager.
Ghanaian farmers who do not send their cocoa beans to Ivory Coast are urging the government to stop the practice.
"Ghana is our country. We use the cocoa to pay our men, to build our hospitals and all kinds of roads. If we don't stop them, our country is going to go down," said one Ghanaian farmer.
One way to discourage the smuggling would be to increase the price of cocoa in Ghana, but the government has accumulated a budget deficit and can hardly afford that. As long as there are buyers in Ivory Coast who will pay more for Ghana's better quality beans, the smuggling is likely to continue. And some Ivorians see nothing wrong with that.
"It's not the cooperatives who will help them out, because they are the ones who will be paying for their own fuel in order to sell their cocoa and I for one will buy it from them. That's the way it is," said Adoni Nkanza, a member of a cooperative.
Ivory Coast is the world's largest producer and exporter of the cocoa bean, an essential ingredient in producing chocolate. Ivory Coast, Ghana and other West African countries together produce two-thirds of the world's cocoa crop. Industry sources estimate that since last October, up to 100,000 tons of beans have been trafficked across the border into Ivory Coast. Industry officials say they will open discussions on how the two countries can work together to combat the smuggling.

Wednesday, 6 August 2014

Barack Obama hails 'new Africa emerging'

US President Barack Obama speaks during a session on "Investing in Africa's Future" of the US-Africa Leaders Summit 6 August 2014
Obama said it was time to transform the US relationship with Africa to a more equal footing
US President Barack Obama has said "a new Africa is emerging" as he opened the last day of a summit in Washington DC with 40 African leaders.
Wednesday's talks will cover both security concerns and corruption - two areas the US administration says is holding back growth in Africa.
US firms have pledged $14bn (£8.3bn) in investments during the summit.
Such investment will fight extremism across the region, US Secretary of State John Kerry has told the BBC.
In an interview with BBC's HARDtalk on Tuesday, Mr Kerry said stability from business projects was countering extremist ideologies and militant movements.
Ghana President John Dramani Mahama(Rear L), and US Secretary of State John Kerry(Rear R) applaud as Ghana Finance Minister Seth Terkper(Front L) and Dana Hyde, CEO of the Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC), shake hands after signing the Ghana Compact during ceremonies at the State Department August 6, 2014Ghana signed a new compact with the Millennium Challenge Corporation to improve its energy sector
"There will be less Boko Harams, less al-Shababs. There will be less cause for people to have their minds filled with extremist ideology rather than to engage in the broader benefits of society."
In opening remarks at the state department on Wednesday, Mr Obama said Africa was a stronger continent despite challenges it faces, including the recent outbreak of Ebola.
"A new Africa is emerging - some of the world's fastest-growing economies and a growing middle class, the youngest and fastest growing population on Earth," Mr Obama said.
"Africa will help shape the world like never before," he said, adding: "Africa's progress is being led by Africans".
Leaders will discuss economic growth, security co-operation and improved governance in private talks during the day, ending the summit with an afternoon press conference.
Elsewhere in Washington DC, First Lady Michelle Obama and former First Lady Laura Bush are hosting a conference for spouses of the African leaders focused on education and health.
Dr. Jill Biden (C) greets Cabio Verde first lady Ligia Dias Fonseca (L) and Cameroon first lady Chantal Biya (2nd L) along with former U.S. President George W. Bush (R) at the "Investing in Our Future" forum at the US-Africa Leaders Summit in Washington August 6, 2014.Cape Verde first lady Ligia Dias Fonseca greets Dr Jill Biden at a spouse's conference
In an open letter in Seventeen magazine, Mrs Obama described a lack of educational opportunity for young women around the world, and urged US teenagers to not take their educational opportunities for granted.
"As you get yourself on track for higher education, I hope you'll work to give girls around the world opportunities to attend school too," she wrote.
The Obamas also hosted the leaders during a group dinner at the White House on Tuesday evening.
In a brief toast, Mr Obama reminisced about his family's trips to Ghana, South Africa and to his father's hometown in Kenya.
"I stand before you as the president of the United States and a proud American. I also stand before you as the son of a man from Africa," Mr Obama said, adding "the bonds between our countries, our continents, are deeply personal".
Burkina Faso President Blaise Compaore arrives at the White House for a group dinner during the US Africa Leaders Summit 5 August 2014Burkina Faso President Blaise Compaore (left) and wife Chantal arrive at the White House for a summit dinner
Equatorial Guinea President Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo and spouse Constancia Mangue De Obiang arrive at the North Portico of the White House for a State Dinner on the occasion of the U.S. Africa Leaders Summit, August 5, 2014 in Washington, DCEquatorial Guinea President Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo and spouse Constancia
Gambian President Yahya Jammeh arrives at the White House for a group dinner during the US Africa Leaders Summit August 5, 2014 in Washington, DCGambian President Yahya Jammeh and wife Zineb
The three-day event is the first of its kind in the US, although similar summits have been held in China and Europe.
The presidents of Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone cancelled their plans to attend amid an Ebola outbreak, and sent delegates instead.

Africa Activists Urge Obama to Act On Extractive Industries Law

ANALYSIS
Washington — As the three-day U.S.-Africa Leaders Summit got underway here Monday, anti-corruption activists urged President Barack Obama to prod a key U.S. agency to issue long-awaited regulations requiring oil, gas, and mining companies to publish all payments they make in countries where they operate.
"The companies need to be held accountable, and we would ask President Obama to also support us in this message," said Ali Idrissa, the national co-ordinator of Publiez Ce Que Vous Payez (Publish What You Pay, or PWYP), in Niger, a country rich in uranium and iron deposits.
Anti-corruption activists are losing patience with what they see as pressure by the extractive industries to prevent the emergence of tough new disclosure requirements.
"We need to look at the entire production chain of these extractive industries; we need to continue putting pressure on this industry ... so we can fight poverty and corruption and ensure we have a better development," he added.
Idrissa, one of scores of African activists who have descended on Washington for this week's unprecedented gathering, was speaking at a forum sponsored by the Open Society Foundations (OSF), Global Witness, Human Rights Watch, and Oxfam America, among other groups, on civil society efforts to promote government and corporate transparency and accountability on the continent.
The activists, whose numbers are dwarfed by the size of official government delegations, most of which are led by heads of state, as well as U.S. and African corporate chiefs eager to explore business prospects, nonetheless claimed at least part of the spotlight Monday.
At what was billed as a "Civil Society Forum Global Town Hall" meeting at the National Academy of Sciences, both Vice President Joe Biden and Secretary of State John Kerry echoed Idrissa's concerns in general remarks.
"Widespread corruption is an affront to the dignity of your people and direct threat to each of your nations," Biden declared. "It stifles economic growth and scares away investment and siphons off resources that should be used to lift people out of poverty."
Kerry also stressed the importance of "transparency and accountability" not only in attracting more investment but also in "creat(ing) a more competitive marketplace, one where ideas and products are judged by the market and their merits, and not by a backroom deal or a bribe."
While their words gained applause, it was clear from the OSF forum that anti-corruption activists are losing patience with what they see as pressure by the extractive industries to prevent the emergence of tough new disclosure requirements from the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), the federal agency that regulates U.S. stock and related markets.
At issue is section 1504 of the 2010 Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, an anti-corruption provision that requires all extractive companies listed on U.S. stock exchanges to publish each year all payments they make to the U.S. and foreign governments in the countries where they operate.
According to the legislation, which is designed to counter the so-called "resource curse" that afflict many developing countries, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa, taxes, royalties, fees, production entitlements and bonuses should all be reported down to the project level.
Eight of the world's 10 largest mining companies and 29 of the 32 largest active international oil companies would be covered by the Act, which requires the SEC to develop specific regulations to implement its intent.
After nearly two years of consultations with businesses, activists, and other interested parties, the SEC issued draft regulations, but they were immediately challenged in a lawsuit filed by the American Petroleum Institute (API), a lobby group that represents the powerful oil and gas industry here.
The SEC has since reported that it does not plan to resume the rule-making process until March, 2015, a source of considerable frustration for the anti-corruption activists.
In the meantime, the European Union (EU), whose member countries have historically shown much less willingness than Washington to enact legislation to deter bribery and corruption by its companies operating abroad, has adopted and begun to enforce its own tough disclosure measures that go beyond the energy and mining industries to include timber companies as well.
"Until 2000, corruption and bribery by European [companies] was not only legal; it was tax-deductible," Mo Ibrahim, a Sudanese-British telecommunications entrepreneur and prominent philanthropist for good governance in Africa, told the OSF Forum. "The United States, which has been a leading light on corruption, is now dragging its feet. Do you have a backbone, or what?"
He echoed the concerns of an open letter sent to Obama and signed by the heads of the national chapters of PWYP, an OSF-backed international anti-corruption group, in Guinea, Niger, Tanzania, the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), Chad, Ghana, and Nigeria, on the eve of this week's Summit.
"It has been more than four years since you signed the Dodd-Frank Act, section 1504 of which obliges all U.S. listed extractive companies to publish the payments they make," the letter, which was also signed by the African representatives on the PWYP global steering committee. "The law will yield crucial data that can help us hold our governments to account, but it has yet to come into effect.
"We ask you to urge the SEC for a swift publication of the rules governing section 1504 to ensure that they are in line with recent EU legislation and the emerging global standard for extractive transparency," it said, adding that more also needs to be done to strengthen multilateral rules on taxation and creating a public registry of corporate beneficial ownership information as other critical parts of the anti-corruption struggle in Africa.
Harmonising the SEC regulations with those of the EU is particularly critical, according to Simon Taylor, co-founder and director of London-based Global Witness. "If the SEC gets it wrong, we will then have a double standard," he noted, suggesting that some European companies could move to the U.S. if the latter's requirements are less stringent.
API and other critics of the section 1504 have argued that strict rules will put U.S. companies at a disadvantage in bidding for mining or drilling rights, especially vis-à-vis China whose trade investment in Africa, particularly in the continent's extractive resources, have exploded over the past decade and now far exceeds the U.S.
Beijing has failed so far to join the 12-year-old Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI), an Oslo-based international organisation that promotes transparency and currently includes 44 governments, as well as extractive companies, civil-society groups, international development banks, and institutional investors.
But Ibrahim said it was "not acceptable for Europeans or Americans to say, 'We want to be moral and ethical, but we can't until this guy'" joins. "China is learning; it can understand and can change. They're trying to find their feet [in Africa]."
George Soros, the billionaire philanthropist who created OSF, as well as a number of other foundations, said it was important to get China on board because "otherwise they are the spoilers. It is so important that I think we have to be willing to reconsider the whole structure of the [EITI which] they consider [to be] a post-colonial invention.
"They have to be involved in the creation of the system that they will abide by. That's where civil society in Africa can be influential," he added.