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Archive for April 26th, 2012

Former Liberian President Charles Taylor found guilty by the International criminal court

Posted by African Press International on April 26, 2012

Taylor is the first former head of State to have been found guilty and will be sentenced and placed in a British Prison if his appeal does not succeed.

He is accused of crimes against humanity during the civil war in Sierra Leone. Taylor is said to have supported the rebels in Sierra Leone who committed atrocities.

He was found criminally guilty of aiding, abetting and planning crimes against humanity. According to the Judges, the prosecution failed to prove that he was directly commanding the events.

The sentencing will take place on the 30th of May, after the hearing will have taken place two weeks earlier on the 16th of the same month.

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Kenyan Judges of the Court of Appeal sacked due to incompetence etc….

Posted by African Press International on April 26, 2012

Mr Justice Riaga Omollo- President of the Court of Appeal, and Justices Emmanuel O’Kubasu, Samuel Bosire and Joseph Nyamu, were found to be unfit to hold office by the Vetting Board led by Mr Sharad Rao.

The board is to vett Judges and Magistrates in the country due to the new dispensation..

Justice Riaga Omollo, Justice Bosire and Justice O’Kubasu have been in the Judiciary for over 30 years.

Three of the sacked Justices wanted to be appointed Chief Justice of the Supreme Court last year, but failed to get through the needle hole.
Their removal is shocking having been accused of lacking independence, being incompetent, taking bribes, lacking professionalism and Riaga Omollo being authoritarian in court.

Two of the sacked Justices Justice Omollo and Justice Bosire were sitting in Kisumu court of Appeal when they heard of the news while in court having been confronted by an advocate.

They may appeal the board’s ruling but observers say the Justices had better packed and gone because they stand no chance.

End

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Only 10 percent of women in Ethiopia give birth within health facilities

Posted by African Press International on April 26, 2012

Only 10 percent of women in Ethiopia give birth within health facilities

ADDIS ABABA,  – A lack of awareness of the importance of skilled hospital deliveries in Ethiopia, cultural beliefs, and transport challenges in rural areas are causing a high number of deaths during childbirth, say officials.

Only 10 percent of deliveries take place within health facilities, according to the Ethiopia’s latest (April) Demographic Health Survey results. Nevertheless, the figure is a significant improvement on 6 percent in the previous 2005 survey.

Commenting on the results, Health Minister Kesetebirhan Admasu said: “About 60 percent of mothers who did not attend health facilities while giving birth do not see the benefit of delivering in health facilities, while the remaining 30 percent abstain from going there by giving culture and beliefs as their reason.

“That [the] majority of women did not appreciate the value of institutional delivery, calls for a concerted effort to educate women and families about the importance of skilled birth attendance and postnatal care.”

Many women prefer delivering at home in the company of known and trusted relatives and friends, where customs and traditions can be observed, according to a 2011 study published in the Ethiopian Journal of Health.

“Even though communities are aware of the dangers around childbirth, contingencies for potential complications are rarely discussed or made, such that most families hope or pray that things will turn out well. When things go wrong precious time is lost in finding resources and manpower to assist in the transfer to a health facility,” the study said.

About 80 percent of all maternal deaths in Ethiopia, are due to haemorrhage, infection, unsafe abortion, hypertensive disorders, and obstructed labour, along with HIV/AIDS and malaria, said a senior Health Ministry maternal health expert, Frewoine Gebrehiwot.

The maternal mortality ratio in Ethiopia is 676 for every 100,000 births. This compares to an average of 290 per 100,000 births in developing countries, and 14 per 100,000 in developed countries, according to the UN World Health Organization.

Besides death, at least 500,000 Ethiopian women and girls who miss out on skilled health care during delivery, end up suffering other complications including obstetric fistula.

Behaviour change needed

The Health Ministry is working on behaviour change through health extension programmes and is providing each of Ethiopia’s550 districts with an ambulance to facilitate transport for pregnant mothers who want to deliver in health facilities free of charge.

But some of the hospitals are lacking in equipment, skills or policy guidance to enable them to provide basic emergency obstetric and newborn care, according to a study by the Health Ministry and its partners, who, using 2008 data, found that only 51 percent of hospitals qualified as offering comprehensive care.

“Most of the health facilities which are far from Addis Ababa are either not fully staffed with skilled service providers or fully equipped with the necessary supplies and equipment that can provide quality services related to complications during pregnancy and childbirth,” said the UN Population Fund (UNFPA).

“Limited human resources, especially midwives, hamper efforts to provide adequate services, especially in rural areas. Gaps in training and remuneration have led to attrition and turnover among public sector health care professionals.”

According to UNFPA, public facilities routinely suffer stockouts and obstetric care equipment shortages due to budget deficits and poor management.

Free services provided at health centres are to blame for the shortages, according to the Health Ministry which hopes a new health insurance scheme, to be piloted in 13 rural districts, will help to provide more funding.

At present, the ministry is seeking to increase the number of women delivering in hospitals by tapping into those seeking antenatal care and providing sustained family planning services at the district level.

“We are particularly trying to decrease mothers’ deaths by retaining the significant numbers of pregnant women who come to receive antenatal care from hospitals but [go] missing [during] delivery,” said Frewoine.

At least 34 percent of pregnant women aged 15-49 receive antenatal care from a skilled health provider such as a doctor, nurse or midwife, but only 10 percent give birth there.

“The same can be said about the high unmet need for family planning in couples and also among young people,” she said, adding that plans are under way to assign two midwives to every health centre in every district in the next three years.

So far, close to 1,630 nurses have been trained as midwives in a one-year accelerated training programme. Their number is expected to reach 4,674 by 2015.

bt/aw/cb
source www.irinnews.org

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Norway deplores new settlements in the West Bank

Posted by African Press International on April 26, 2012

“Norway deplores the Israeli Government’s decision to recognise the status of three illegal outposts in the West Bank as settlements. The building and expansion of settlements on occupied land is a violation of international law and the most serious obstacle to a two-state solution,” said Foreign Minister Jonas Gahr Støre.

On Monday 23 April, the Israeli Government decided to legalise the three outposts Rehalim, Sansana og Bruchin as settlements. This means that these outposts will be three separate new settlements in the West Bank.

“This is the first time in more than 20 years that the Israeli Government has legalised outposts as settlements. I am concerned that this may be a shift in Israeli settlement policy that could set a precedent for other outposts. Expansion of the settlements in the West Bank  damages the prospects of a two-state solution and undermines the international community’s efforts to get the parties to resume the peace negotiations.

It is very unfortunate that Israel continues to expand the settlements despite the fact that they are a violation of international law and despite the strong reactions from the international community over a number of years,” said Mr Støre.

“I urge the Israeli authorities to reverse their decision to recognise the status of these three outposts as settlements,” Foreign Minister Støre.

 

end

source mfa.norway

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Closing statements in the trial against Katanga and Ngudjolo Chui scheduled from 15 to 23 May

Posted by African Press International on April 26, 2012

 Situation: The Democratic Republic of the Congo
Case: The Prosecutor v. Germain Katanga and Mathieu Ngudjolo Chui

On 20 April 2012, Trial Chamber II of the International Criminal Court (ICC) issued the order on procedures for the presentation of closing statements in the case The Prosecutor v. Germain Katanga and Mathieu Ngudjolo Chui. The closing statements are scheduled to take place in ICC Courtroom I from 15 to 23 May 2012.

The link to the order on procedures for the presentation of closing statements can be found below (in French). A summary of the schedule is as follows:

Date

Time

Schedule for presentations

Tuesday, 15 May 2012

9:00-11:00; 11:30-13:00

Closing statement of the Prosecution

Wednesday, 16 May 2012

9:00-11:00; 11:30-13:30

Questions posed to Prosecution; Closing statement of Legal representative of victims

Monday, 21 May 2012

9:00-11:00; 11:30-13:00

Closing statement of the Defence

Tuesday, 22 May 2012

9:00-11:00; 11:30-13:00

Closing statement of the Defence

Wednesday, 23 May 2012

9:00-11:00; 11:30-13:30

Questions posed to the Defence; Prosecution and Defense have the opportunity to respond.

As indicated in the Trial Chamber’s order setting the timetable, the parties and participants should be prepared at the closing hearings to entertain questions from Trial Chamber II composed of Judges Bruno Cotte (presiding), Fatoumata Dembele Diarra and Christine Van den Wyngaert, when their closing statements are delivered orally.

Germain Katanga and Mathieu Ngudjolo Chui, Congolese nationals, are charged with three counts of crimes against humanity and seven counts of war crimes allegedly committed in the context of an armed conflict in Ituri which began in Djugu territory and in the town of Mongbwalu, and in particular during the joint attack by combatants allegedly led by Mathieu Ngudjolo Chui and Germain Katanga on Bogoro village on 24 February 2003, which was part of a widespread attack and was allegedly directed not only against a military camp located in that village, but also against the civilian population of the village. The trial started on 24 November 2009.

 

End

source. ICC-Hague

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