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Archive for February 14th, 2011

Nigeria-Deaths: Eleven killed at election rally

Posted by African Press International on February 14, 2011

<By Terence Sesay

Monrovia, Liberia, Feb 13-Eleven people died on Saturday in a stampede at an election rally in the southern Nigerian city of Port Harcourt.

The rally was part of President Goodluck Jonathan’s election campaign ahead of the April general and presidential elections in that country.

According to media reports, at least 29 others are said to have been injured at the rally held in a crowded sports stadium.

President Jonathan who has described the incident as “sad, unfortunate and regrettable”, has ordered an investigation adding: “I mourn with those who mourn.”

The crowd panicked after a policeman fired in the air to try to disperse crowds at the gates as people left the rally, according to witnesses.

President Jonathan, whose People’s Democratic Party have won every presidential vote since the return to civilian rule in 1999, has been touted as the favourite to win April’s election.

This is yet another pointer that the April presidential and general elections in Nigeria will be bloody.

In 2010,  several persons lost their lives in the capital Abuja during the unveiling of President Jonathan as a candidate in this year’s poll .

Northerners are dissatisfied with President Jonathan’s decision to contest the presidency. They argue that the next president, under to an agreement reached, should be a northerner and not a southerner.

President Umaru Yar’Adu, a northerner, who died in the middle of his first term as president of Nigeria, had an opportunity to serve two terms before the presidency should have reverted to a southerner.

End

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Liberia: Ghanaian government offers seven scholarships to AFL

Posted by African Press International on February 14, 2011

< By Terence Sesay

Monrovia (Liberia)-Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf Friday disclosed that the Ghanaian government has offered seven scholarships to the Armed Forces of Liberia (AFL) to help train its personnel.

She also recognized the efforts of African countries like Nigeria, Benin and Rwanda for the assistance they have rendered the Liberian military since she assumed leadership of the country.

Addressing the 54th anniversary celebration of the Armed Forces of Liberia, President Johnson Sirleaf said this level of assistance to the AFL “coupled with the mentorship provided by active United States military personnel, will enable the AFL to be proficient and positively contribute to the socio-economic development of the country.”

She said as the country enters its transition period with the United Nations Mission in Liberia , the “goal of the government is to strengthen the capability of the AFL, moving into a manageable force with the resource constraints, to effectively carry its mission.”

She spoke of the need to increase the size of the engineering company to battalion level and the size of the reactivated coast guard to half a company.

The Liberian leader then expressed the hope that the AFL will be capable to carry out various missions by 2014 at which time a Liberian could be appointed Chief of staff of the national army. The current Chief of Staff of the AFL is a Nigerian who was appointed about four years ago upon the reactivation of the AFL.

The AFL was dissolved following the conflict because it took sides during the conflict and needed to be restructured.

Following ceremonies marking the anniversary celebration held at the Barclay Training Center Military Barracks in central Monrovia, President Johnson Sirleaf bestowed honors on the Defense Minister of Nigeria, the former president of the Liberian transitional government Gyude Bryant and the Commander of the U.S Africa Command Lieutenant William Keith and commissioned two boats donated by the U.S government to the Liberian.

End

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Food prices have increased after the floods

Posted by African Press International on February 14, 2011

SRI LANKA: Floods destroy over a third of rice harvest

Food prices have increased after the floods

COLOMBO, 11 February 2011 (IRIN) – Sri Lanka will lose over one million tons from its upcoming paddy harvest due to recent flooding, officials say.

“We expected a yield of around 2.75 million metric tons from the harvest due in March to April,” Kulugammanne Karunathileke, secretary to the Ministry of Agriculture, told IRIN. “After the heavy rains we will only get around 1.75 million.”

Karunathileke, the highest ranking official at the ministry, said the country had expected a bumper crop – until flooding, which began in January, left some paddy fields under water for up to 11 days. The worst-hit areas are in the eastern districts of Ampara, Batticaloa, Polonnaruwa, Trincomalee and the north-central district of Anuradhapura.

Together they account for over 1.2m tons of the harvest.

Of the over 700,000 hectares cultivated this season, more than 200,000 have been destroyed, Karunathileke said.

Rice experts warn that yields will probably also be low in areas not directly affected by the flooding.

“The indirect damage is the spread of fungal diseases that will cause the harvest to drop even in areas outside the flood zones,” Nimal Dissanayake, director of the Rice Research and Development Institute (RRDI), said.

Meanwhile, the impact on rice stocks and prices is already being felt, with the UN World Food Programme (WFP) now having to buy supplies at higher prices due to lack of stocks, and flooded mills.

Rice, a staple part of the Sri Lankan diet, is included in rations being delivered to 500,000 flood victims by WFP as immediate assistance.

“We have made a request to the government to import rice for WFP rations,” Devesh Shankhdhar, WFP’s head of procurement in Sri Lanka, said.

WFP has warned that vegetable prices could also rise.

Hoarding

On 10 February the government warned that traders selling rice at above government-determined prices would be prosecuted, and at the same time it released a buffer stock of 25,000 tons onto the market.

Agriculture Ministry Secretary Kulathileke said the government was keen to stop bulk suppliers hoarding rice. “When stocks are low, we have seen that happening. This is something that we will have to keep a keen eye on.”

According to the RRDI, there were around 400,000 tons of 2010 rice stocks in the country.

“If those stocks are made available, we can keep prices in check till June or even July without shortages,” Dissanayake said.

The government is also planning to bring forward the secondary `yala’ harvesting season, which usually falls between March and September.

In recent years the `yala’ harvest has brought in high yields. `Yala’ is cultivated using irrigated water and Dissanayake warned that success would depend heavily on how fast damaged irrigation networks can be repaired.

ap/ds/cb

source http://www.irinnews.org

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Ex-Child Soldiers in DRC Drawn Back Into Military Ranks: Youngsters struggling to adapt to civilian life feel they have little option but to return to fighting.

Posted by African Press International on February 14, 2011

Story by Erick Kenzo – International Justice – ICC
8 Feb 11

A lack of community support and persistent discrimination is being blamed for the re-recruitment of former child soldiers by the army and militias in Masisi territory, in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, DRC.

Former child soldiers are being especially targeted in Kitchanga, 80 kilometres north-west of Goma. The town used to be a stronghold of the National Congress for the Defence of the People, CNDP, a rebel group which has now been officially integrated into the armed forces.

Observers say that a factor behind this phenomenon is the frustration that many former CNDP soldiers feel about the ranks they have been offered as part of their incorporation into the national army.

Since January 2009, when the national army signed a peace deal with the CNDP, former rebel soldiers have been offered positions within the Forces Armées de la République Démocratique du Congo, FARDC, the national army – but often at a lower rank than they enjoyed previously.

The government argues that such downgrading of rank is justified on the grounds that many of the original military grades were obtained without any formal training.

Former rebel commanders who feel their authority has been reduced are said to be re-recruiting child soldiers as a way of boosting their influence within army units and as a means of protecting themselves in the event of the peace process unravelling.

“It is likely that former CNDP commanders inside the FARDC continue to recruit child soldiers into their own units in order to strengthen their position in case there is a return to conflict,” said Isabelle Guitard, a researcher with the NGO Coalition to Stop the Use of Child Soldiers.

Militia units are also keen to get their hands on former child combatants because of their previous fighting experience.

The national army as well as other armed groups have a long history of using child soldiers in DRC’s various wars. Thanks to international efforts in the past few years, thousands of child soldiers have been demobilised and reintegrated into the community.

But according to the Coalition to Stop the Use of Child Soldiers, as many as 7,000 children may still be serving in the national army and militia groups.

Those that have managed to leave face discrimination from their family and friends, which makes it easier for army and militia commanders to re-recruit them.

“Our parents see us as barbarians and thieves,” Kalondji, one former child soldier who now lives in Goma, said.

Kahindo Alphonsine, the mother of a former child soldier from Mabanga in south Goma, explained how difficult it is for children who have been used to fighting to readjust to civilian life.

“Since my child left the army, he doesn’t listen to anything,” she said. “He became an alcoholic. He doesn’t want to work. He goes out every morning in good shape but always comes back drunk. I did everything for him but he doesn’t want to change. I gave him money to start a fishing business in Vitchumbi, but he drank all the money away.”

Mwisha Kitsa, a local trader who owns a clothes shop in the centre of Goma, told IWPR that many people in the community view child soldiers with distrust.

“These children are normal children when they are still in the family, but after serving in the army they have a very different and strange behaviour when they come back,” he said. “I consider them like Maibobo (street children): dangerous, bandits. I do not trust them, and I cannot hire them since they could run away with my belongings.”

He concluded by referring to a Swahili saying, “If a domestic chicken goes into the forest, it becomes immediately wild.”

For their part, children who have served as soldiers say that they often feel abandoned and neglected when they cease to be part of the military life that they have grown accustomed to.

“I live with my family, but they do not trust me. They treat me as if I was a barbarian. But it’s not just my family. People do not trust us because they regard children who entered the army to be undisciplined people,” Kalondji said.

“Sometimes, when I go out to look for a job, people tell me that they cannot hire a former soldier since we are thieves. Instead of suffering like this, among civilians, I prefer to be back in the army.”

Kalondij says that while he was serving as a child soldier, he was shot and wounded in the leg, which makes it even more difficult for him to find employment and survive on his own.

To prevent child soldiers rejoining military groups, orientation and transit centres have been set up to provide support to those that are having difficulty adjusting to civilian life.

Ndikumani Celestin, who runs one such centre in Goma, spoke about the importance of rehabilitating child soldiers.

“Our centre is a transit point for preparing the return of these children to their respective families,” he said. “It is a counselling centre that helps them adapt to the conditions of daily life. We are trying to make them understand that the army is not their place and how they should behave when they are with their families.”

Celestin says that a child usually stays with the centre for between two days and three months, before being returned to the community, depending on their particular situation.

But he admitted that sometimes, in cases where former child soldiers’ safety could be threatened if they went home, the duration of the stay can be even longer.

“Sometimes, children might stay a year or a year-and-a-half, and that’s where we have a problem,” he said.

Children who are forced to stay in the centre for extended periods of time say they are frustrated that they can’t start building a future for themselves.

Adellard Kasereka, who comes from Kibirizi, some 200 km north of Goma, says he was forced to fight in a Mai Mai militia group. When he was decommissioned in 2009, the United Nations mission in DRC, MONUSCO, brought him to Goma.

“I have been in the centre since 2009, but I’d rather go back to my village where I can farm,” he said. “Here, I only eat and do the laundry and learn the Ntore dance (a traditional Rwandan dance). We are like prisoners. Why are we locked in here at the centre? I want to be sent back to Kibirizi.”

Erick Nzaisenga, from neighbouring Burundi, takes a similar view. He fought for the CNDP in Katale, 100 km outside of Goma, before being brought, with the help of the International Committee of the Red Cross, ICRC, to the Goma transit centre.

“I found out that many of my relatives had died,” he said. “I have no family in Goma. The ICRC says they will send me back to Burundi, where I still have a brother, but I don’t know when that will happen. We learn how to behave once we’re back in our families and how to dance and how to draw. I do not want to go back to the army since I did not like it, but I suffer here. I want to go home and to see my family again.”

Observers say that the reintegration of former child soldiers is fundamental to keeping them out of the military and, for its part, the Congolese military claims to be taking the question of child soldiers seriously.

Lieutenant Gratien Nshagali, from the 8th Military Region in Goma, who is in charge of demobilisation and reintegration, recognises that there is still a problem, particularly in areas outside the city.

Nshagali said the enlistment of child soldiers started again when ex-militiamen absorbed into the army found that the ranks they had previously held were downgraded.

“[They] felt dissatisfied, and expressed this by recruiting child soldiers. This situation is getting more and more complicated. Even though people are concerned, they don’t know what to do. Children are used as if they were puppets because they are so vulnerable,” he said.

Muhima, who is in charge of morale and discipline within the 8th Military Region, says that the military is stepping up efforts to curb the use of child soldiers in the army.

“Since the situation of child soldiers and their reintegration is becoming more visible, mechanisms to eradicate this practice of using children are being examined,” he said.

End
Erick Kenzo is an IWPR-trained journalist.


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Thousands of Rohingya have fled to neighbouring countries

Posted by African Press International on February 14, 2011

MYANMAR: UNHCR concerned over treatment of Rohingya boat people

Thousands of Rohingya have fled to neighbouring countries

MYANMAR/THAILAND, 11 February 2011 (IRIN) – Allegations of the ill-treatment of Rohingya boat people by the Thai authorities are worrying the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR).

“We are gravely concerned by the media reports about an alleged push-back and are investigating,” Kitty McKinsey, a spokeswoman for the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR), told IRIN on 11 February in Bangkok, noting, however, that it was too early to speculate any further.

Her comments follow media reports in India this week that a group of 91 Rohingya had been found in the Indian administered Nicobar islands – about 640km west of Myanmar’s Tenasserim coast – on 6 February.

The refugees reportedly told police they had been set adrift without adequate food and water, in a boat without an engine, by the Thai navy; a charge the Thai authorities have rejected.

The Rohingya, a persecuted Muslim minority unrecognized as citizens by the Burmese government, have been fleeing their native Myanmar for decades – many of them making their way to Bangladesh, Thailand, Malaysia or Indonesia.

At least three boatloads of Rohingya have found their way to Thailand in the past month, activists say.

The first boat carrying 91 men of varying ages arrived in Trang Province on 22 January; a second boat with 67 men arrived in Satun Province on 23 January; and a third boat arrived in Phuket Province on 1 February carrying 68 men.

UNHCR has recently been granted access to those who were on the second and third boats, including nine teenagers who were interviewed on 11 February by a UNHCR lawyer and community services officer. The remaining 126 men would probably be interviewed next week, McKinsey said.

UNHCR, however, still does not know where the men from the first boat are.

On 23 January, Thailand’s official news agency, MCOT, reported that the men from the first boat had been sent back to Myanmar by the Thai authorities.

In 2009 Thailand was strongly criticized over its handling of a group of Rohingya boat people who turned up on its shores. There were allegations that hundreds were towed out to sea and left to die without adequate supplies.

According to UNHCR, there are some 200,000 Rohingya in Bangladesh of whom only 28,000 are documented refugees. The documented refugees live in two government camps which receive UNHCR support.

The Thai authorities view Rohingya as illegal labour migrants and estimate there are already some 20,000 in the country.

ds/cb

source http://www.irinnews.org

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