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Photo: Laudes Martial Mbon/IRIN |
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Refugee children from the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) learn in a forest clearing near the village of Gangania in the extreme north of the Republic of Congo
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Archive for March 24th, 2010
CONGO: School among the snakes
Posted by African Press International on March 24, 2010
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DRC-CONGO: Insecurity hampers relief, prevents return of refugees
Posted by African Press International on March 24, 2010
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Photo: UNHCR/F. Noy |
| In Betou, refugee families live side-by-side in an abandoned factory, many stretching their mosquito nets over broken machinery
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IMPFONDO, – Most fled the fighting with little more than the clothes on their backs. Now, insecurity and poor access are hampering efforts to address the most basic needs of more than 114,000 refugees in northern Republic of Congo.
Currently theres a heavy militia and insurgent presence on the Ubangui river, which is complicating aid worker movements, because you dont know who to trust, Daniel Roger Tam, of the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) told IRIN in Impfondo, 900km north of Brazzaville and capital of Likouala department, among the poorest and least-developed regions in the country.
On the river, insurgents and soldiers [from neighbouring Democratic Republic of Congo, DRC] are spreading fear. For weeks, our boats have been stuck in [the riverside town of] Btou because of the insecurity, said Jonathan Balou, another UNCHR official.
According to a local government official in Impfondo: From time to time, DRC soldiers come to our side of the river to, as they put it, pursue the insurgents. You can see them on the river and some fishermen have stopped fishing as a result.
Btou sub-prefect Col Jean-Dominique Engamba told IRIN the situation was no better on the other side of the river. Some people who sought refuge with us, having thought things had calmed down, tried to leave again either to retrieve some of their belongings or to see if their fields have been ruined. But they were simply sent back by soldiers controlling Dongo [the epicentre of the crisis in DRCs Equateur Province]. The soldiers prefer the villages empty so they can get down to plundering them, he said.
The Congo government has deployed additional troops along the river to protect the refugees and humanitarian workers from armed groups active in DRC. More than 114,000 people, mostly women and children, have fled Equateur province in DRC since October 2009 because of inter-communal clashes.
However, despite this deployment, insecurity on parts of the river has left some refugee sites beyond the reach of humanitarian assistance.
![]() Photo: Laudes Martial Mbon/IRIN ![]() |
| Health services in Congos Likouala province cannot even meet the needs of the local population let alone those of the refugees |
The influx has almost doubled the overall population of Likouala, where social services such as medical centres, schools and markets, barely even meet the needs of the host population.
We dont have sufficient resources to conduct the relief operation and complete it on schedule, said Tam.
The refugees are now located at around 100 sites dotted along a 500km stretch of the Ubangui, which marks the border between the two Congos.
Their needs range across the whole spectrum of basic services, such as protection, food, health, non-food items, clean water and sanitation, livelihood support and education, according to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) and UNHCR, which have jointly appealed for US$60m to help the refugees.
These needs persist due to the fact that the social service structures in the zones where refugees settled have either been overwhelmed by the inflow of refugees, or simply never existed to begin with, states the appeal document. A robust response is needed to prevent a full-blown crisis.
Aid workers face various logistical constraints. Without roads, the Ubangui is the main access route to the refugees, but many boats are in disrepair and fuel is scarce and costly. In addition, the rivers waters are so low now that only small craft can navigate it. While one WFP barge laden with relief supplies made it from Brazzaville to the Likouala town of Ndjoundou, another was grounded downstream. In an effort to overcome these logistical setbacks, WFP has begun to airlift supplies to the north.
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Dire conditions
Despite a mass vaccination campaign in Likouala and significant deliveries of food and non-food items – such as plastic sheeting for shelter, sleeping mats, blankets, kitchen sets, jerry cans, buckets and mosquito nets – conditions for most of the refugees are dire.
Once, WFP brought us some peas, a little salt and rice. Our food stocks have been depleted for a long time now. Cassava leaves have become our daily meal, Jonas Babomba Mango, a refugee supervisor in the Likouala town of Btou, told IRIN.
Most of the refugees fled before harvest time so food stocks in Congo are depleted. Prices of staples in urban markets doubled between September and November 2009. Previously vibrant food trade on the river has been suspended. Lack of nets and the rivers low water level make it hard to fish.
Cases of malnutrition have been recorded among children. Although they have diminished, these malnutrition cases persist, said Philippe Pebila, a nurse working with the NGO Mdecins d’Afrique in Gnamoba, upstream from Btou.
We have a big problem with sexually transmitted infections, which account for 10-30 percent of external consultations, said Herv le Guillouzic, a UNHCR health official.
Aid workers are also worried about access to clean water. Refugees use the river for drinking, washing, and defecating. The swelling of the population has considerably increased the risk of water contamination, noted the OCHA/UNCHR appeal, which pointed out that about two-thirds of refugee sites lacked wells.
lmm/cb/am/mw source.irinnews
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Suing for Gold that never was – Were they really Customs Officers or criminals-turned-Custom officials, he met in Nairobi?
Posted by African Press International on March 24, 2010
Russian seeks Sh4bn from Kenya over gold

A goldsmith displays gold bars at his shop. The Russian said he met officials of a Kenyan firm that claimed to have gold. Photo/FILE
PostedWednesday, March 242010at22:31
A Russian has sued Kenya, seeking Sh3.9 billion ($50 million) over lost profits in a gold sale.
Mr Andrew Vilenchik, an immigrant in the US, has sued the Republic of Kenya in a Minneapolis court.
He says he wanted to buy gold and hired Mr John Saina, a Minneapolis-based consultant from Kenya in 2009 to help him do so.
In May 2009, a group that claimed to own a gold mine in the Democratic Republic of Congo approached Mr Saina claiming that they had 3,700 kilos of gold for sale at a cost of $70 million (Sh5.4 billion).
Mr Vilenchik, 31, who manages Community Finance Group, authorised Mr Saina to buy 300 kilos at a cost of $5.7 million.
Mr Saina met officials of the firm that claimed to have the gold, together with a customs agent and G4S security guards at Hazina Towers in Nairobi, where he saw the gold and had it verified.
Mr Vilenchik wired $350,000 (Sh27 million) for customs fees, but the gold was not given to him, on claims that additional documents were needed from Customs and the UN, claims that were false.
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Dismissing claims that Kenya’s Deputy Provincial Commissioner Kaunya is a potential witness
Posted by African Press International on March 24, 2010
“ICC has no witness in Kenya’

The International Criminal Court’s (ICC) chief prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo addresses the European Parliament Foreign Affairs Committee in Brussels March 23, 2010. Photo/REUTERS
PostedWednesday, March 242010at22:30
In Summary
Safety of those who saw crimes committed cannot be assured just yet, says Ocampo
Potential witnesses of the post-election violence will have to wait a while before they are accorded any official protection from the International Criminal Court.
ICC chief prosecutor Louis Moreno-Ocampo says they do not have any witnesses in Kenya until the court staff has interviewed them.
Mr Moreno-Ocampo was giving a briefing to visiting Kenyan journalists at the European Policy Centre in Brussels, Belgium.
The journalists had on Wednesday sought his response to safety fears expressed by potential witnesses who say that post-election violence (PEV) suspects have been intimidating them.
I have no witnesses in Kenya. Until such a time as I have come over and interviewed anyone, I cannot say I have any. The protection of witnesses is the work of the Kenyan Government, he added.
During the briefing, the special prosecutor said the ICC was also investigating human rights atrocities from Georgia to the Middle East.
Quite daunting
He stressed that the success of the ICC rested in the commitment of states to the Rome statute, and the observation of peace and justice.
Mr Moreno-Ocampo spoke of the two cases in Africa Sudanese president Omar al-Bashir and Ugandan rebel leader Joseph Kony. He conceded that arresting a sitting head of State in any part of the world was a daunting task.
But it matters little whether they were arrested tomorrow or 10 years down the line, he said. Milosevic was arrested when he was out of the office.
Admitting that Kenya was the first independent case he intended to prosecute, he was optimistic that he would convince the pre-trial chamber judges that he had a case against the PEV suspects.
In an interview on the sidelines of the policy briefing, the prosecutor said the work of arresting people lay with governments. My job is to prosecute, period.
He said that the ICC would meet in Kampala in June to deal mainly with defining crimes of aggression and stock-taking. Mr Moreno-Ocampo was unanimously elected in New York as the first prosecutor of the ICC.
His mandate is to select and trigger investigations and prosecutions of the most serious crimes of concern to the international community genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes.
source.nation.ke
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A hazard – GLOBAL: Slums in crisis
Posted by African Press International on March 24, 2010
———— JOHANNESBURG, – A lack of clean water and sanitation in burgeoning slums could trigger a complex set of humanitarian crises says a new paper, Urban Catastrophes: The Wat/San Dimension, by the Humanitarian Futures Programme (HFP) of King’s College London, which keeps an eye on possible crises that could emerge in the not too distant future. Using plausible but fictitious scenarios set in the slums of Dhaka, capital of Bangladesh, and the city of Sao Paulo, Brazil, the paper shows how water scarcity brought on by climate change and large numbers of people in urban areas could lead to water stress, especially in slums, where shortages can stoke conflicts and an outbreak of a new and virulent influenza. Simultaneously, the new biennial report by UN-HABITAT, the State of the World Cities 2010/2011: Bridging the Urban Divide, notes that around 3.49 billion people – more than half the world’s population – now live in urban areas, of which 827.6 million are slum-dwellers. The global slum population will probably grow by six million each year, pushing the total number to 889 million in another 10 years. Urbanization can also provoke water-quality problems, leading to outbreaks of waterborne diseases like cholera. An outbreak that began in the slums of Luanda, the Angolan capital, killed over 2,800 people in 2006, when only 66 percent of Angola’s urban population has access to safe drinking water, according to the UN. Water shortages in slums could open the door to corruption, conflict and an increased risk of disease, setting off a range of complex humanitarian crises. Many of these factors are already evident and operating in slums across the world, the authors of the HFP report note. Corruption “As with any valuable good, the provision of clean water and sanitation facilities in slums is an attractive target for corruption, greed, collusion and exploitation,” the HFP researchers pointed out. In areas where there is a lack of accountability and political oversight, “resulting in collusion between government officials and private-sector water providers”, slum dwellers have to pay a very high price for water, and sanitation falls by the wayside. The result is that the civil society is weakened and ability of slum dwellers and external players to change the system and help the residents out of poverty is curtailed, the HFP report commented. Conflict There is also evidence that water shortages threaten increased violence and conflict, especially in “high-density, multi-ethnic, politically unequal environments of concentrated poverty, as is often found in many slums,” the HFP report said, citing reports of water-related protests and conflicts in Bolivia, Pakistan and India. Risk of disease As larger numbers of people move into already crowded areas, they are often forced to live in unacceptably poor sanitary conditions, sometimes even at close quarters with animals, giving rise to opportunities for new disease vectors, noted the report. In slums located in tropical climates, the chances of new forms of diseases evolving are high. What to do Randolph Kent, who heads HFP, pointed out that the projections were for 20 to 30 years in the future, “but the idea is to provide enough time to countries to plan ahead”. He suggested setting up low-tech, cheap service delivery systems – for instance, to provide water, use segmented flexible rubber hoses that can be easily connected and disconnected. The hoses are produced by several independent companies, can be serviced and maintained by unskilled technicians, and offer plenty of design options. For waste removal, the report suggested an improvement on the traditional chamber pot – use antibacterial plastic buckets that can be fitted with mechanically sealing covers, as on commercial compost bins. The bucket can be carried either by hand or taken by cart to a dumping point like a municipal sewer, then cleaned by hand or at a semi-automatic hot water and bleach station, and delivered to the family for re-use. jk/he source.irinnews |
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