Uber, Electric Vehicle Group Partner to Deploy Electric Motorcycles Across Africa in 2022

NAIROBI —

Just as in most cities across Africa, motorcycle taxi drivers are in almost every corner of Nairobi. Josephat Mutiso is among the first drivers here to make the switch from fossil fuel to electric motorcycles, thanks to a partnership between Uber and Opibus.

“This is way efficient,” he said. “It is even way easier to ride than the other one. You see, this one you don’t have so ma”ny controls, you just have the throttle, no clutch. The only thing you are focusing on is just the front brake and the rear brake. That way it gives you even more control of the bike. And it is pretty light, it does not vibrate. So even clients like this one better.”

Motorcycle taxis have become increasingly common as public transportation in cities across Africa.

Joyce Msuya, the deputy executive director of UNEP, the U.N. Environmental Program, notes that motorcycle taxis have become increasingly common as public transportation in cities across Africa.

“The number of newly registered motorcycles, commonly used as taxis or boda boda, was estimated in 2018 at 1.5 million and will likely grow to five million by 2030,” she said. “Most are inefficient, poorly maintained and heavily polluting. UNEP’s study shows that boda boda drivers can more than double their income if they make the switch.”

In March, the U.N. Environment Program launched the first electric bikes project in Kenya, creating the momentum for Africa’s shift to electric mobility. The partnership between Uber and Opibus seeks to accelerate that shift.

“We are just excited to get as many people exposed to the new technology that we built as possible so they know there is an option,” said Alex Pitkin, the chief technology officer at Opibus. “Uber provides, obviously, a lot of boda boda riders, that’s our target client. They often don’t know how beneficial electric motorcycles can be in terms of money-saving, safety, fuel savings, maintenance savings, you know that kind of thing. And longevity of the product as well, they don’t know that.”

Across the world, there is a shift toward electric vehicles due to rising pollution and climate-damaging emissions from vehicles.

The African continent has not been left behind in that movement.

“Targeting Africa and African countries is also part of that movement and as Opibus, that is where we are targeting,” said Lucy Mugala, an engineer at Opibus. “We want all of us to move together. We all move towards a greener energy, a greener economy. And we can only do that if we all come together and empower and build capacity locally.”

Mutiso says he is earning more money now.

“Everything I used to earn and save for the maintenance of the bike,” he said. “Right now I’m saving it. So right now, I’m making more.”

Experts say that a global move to electric mobility is essential to the future and that drivers like Mutiso will benefit.

Source: Voice of America

38 Killed In Gold Mine Collapse In Southern Sudan

At least 38 people have been killed, after a gold mine collapsed in West Kordofan State in southern Sudan, a government company announced in a statement yesterday.

“The General Manager of the Sudanese Mineral Resources Company Limited, eulogises the death of 38 miners, who died as a result of the collapse of Umm Draisaya mine,” the statement read.

The collapsed gold mine lies near El Nuhud town in West Kordofan State, some 500 km west of Sudan’s capital, Khartoum.

The government of West Kordofan State and the state’s security committee, previously issued a decision to close the mine, citing that it was not suitable for mining, according to the company.

However, the miners infiltrated into and worked in the mine again despite the decision, it said.

About two million Sudanese employees are working in the traditional mining industry across Sudan, including the states of Red Sea, Nahr al-Neel, South Kordofan, West Kordofan and Northern.

According to official statistics, traditional mining contributes about 75 percent of the total gold production in Sudan, which exceeds 93 tonnes a year.

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK

Tutu’s Advocacy for LGBTQ Rights Did Not Sway Most of Africa

Desmond Tutu is being remembered for his passionate advocacy on behalf of LGBTQ people as well as his fight for racial justice. But the South African archbishop’s campaign against homophobia had limited impact in the rest of Africa, where same-sex marriage remains illegal and most countries criminalize gay sex.

Even within his own denomination, the Anglican Communion, there has been no continentwide embrace of LGBTQ rights. Leaders of Ghana’s Anglican Church, for example, have joined other religious leaders there in endorsing a bill that would impose prison sentences on people who identify as LGBTQ or support that community.

Before Tutu died Sunday at age 90, most African religious leaders rejected his LGBTQ positions, and those who agreed with him often were cautious, said Kenya-based researcher Yvonne Wamari of Outright Action International, a global LGBTQ-rights organization.

“Most of them are unwilling to offer their contrary views due to fear of reprisal and backlash for not conforming with ‘African values,'” Wamari said via email. “As long as the religious leaders are unwilling to interpret the Bible from the lens of love for all, as Tutu did, homophobia and transphobia will remain a part of our lives.”

Homosexual activity remains outlawed in more than 30 of Africa’s 54 countries; in a few, it is punishable by death. Many LGBTQ Africans are subject to stigma and abuse, facing unemployment, homelessness and estrangement from their families.

Stephen Brown, a professor at the University of Ottawa’s School of Political Studies, described Tutu as “a moral giant” who held to his convictions — including support for LGBTQ people — no matter how risky or unpopular it could be.

For example, Tutu was mocked in 2013 by Robert Mugabe, then the repressive leader of Zimbabwe.

“Tutu should just step down because he supports gays, something that is evil,” Mugabe told a political rally.

That same year, Tutu uttered one of his most memorable comments about LGBTQ inclusion.

“I would not worship a God who is homophobic,” he said. “I would refuse to go to a homophobic heaven. No, I would say, ‘Sorry, I would much rather go to the other place.'”

South Africa is the only African country that has legalized same-sex marriage, and its constitution protects against anti-LGBTQ discrimination. Yet even there, violence against LGBTQ people remains common.

In Cape Town, where Tutu was the Anglican archbishop, members of the LGBTQ community reacted to his death with tributes.

Throughout his life, Tutu stuck “to the ideas of promoting absolute love, absolute acceptance and absolute kindness, no matter who you are, no matter your sexuality or race,” activist Saya Pierce-Jones said.

Daniel Jay, who works in the medical industry, said Tutu’s support for LGBTQ people was pivotal in South Africa’s decision to make HIV drugs available at no cost.

“I love him to bits,” Jay said.

Beyond South Africa’s borders, a few recent developments have encouraged LGBTQ-rights supporters.

— In Botswana, the Court of Appeal last month unanimously upheld a 2019 ruling that decriminalized consensual same-sex activities. Previously, gay sex was outlawed and offenders faced up to seven years in prison. A few other African countries also have decriminalized same-sex relationships in recent years, including Angola, Mozambique and the Seychelles.

— In Namibia, the LGBTQ community recently held its biggest Pride event — a weeklong celebration in Windhoek, the capital, that began Nov. 27. During the parade at the end of the week, some marchers urged repeal of a Namibian anti-sodomy law that remains on the books though is not enforced.

The winner of the 2021 Mr. Gay World pageant – Louw Breytenbach of South Africa – was the parade’s grand marshal. He later posted a tribute to Tutu on Facebook: “RIP to one of the most amazing humans to ever walk this earth! A champion for human rights. A warrior for gay rights.”

In many African countries, anti-LGBTQ violence is a persistent threat.

A prominent LGBTQ activist in Tunisia reported that two men, one in a police uniform, beat and kicked him during an assault in October they said was punishment for his attempts to file complaints against officers for previous mistreatment. The attack left Badr Baabou, president of the Tunisian Association for Justice and Equality, with extensive welts and bruises.

Last month, according to Human Rights Watch, a mob in Cameroon beat and sexually assaulted a 27-year-old intersex person. The perpetrators made videos of the prolonged attack that circulated on social media.

At the government level, Senegal and Ghana are under scrutiny from LGBTQ-rights supporters.

In Senegal, 13 opposition legislators recently introduced a bill to toughen penalties against homosexuality, doubling the maximum sentence to 10 years. Parliament members from the governing coalition say such a measure is unnecessary since homosexual acts are already illegal.

In Ghana, parliament members continue to work on a bill that has been condemned by LGBTQ-rights supporters in the West African country and abroad. Among other things, the bill seeks to criminalize the promotion and funding of LGBTQ activities, and disseminating information about LGBTQ people.

Alex Kofi Donkor, director of LGBT+ Rights Ghana, expressed regret that relatively few African faith leaders shared Tutu’s outlook.

“A lot of African preachers hold a lot of prejudice, hate and disgust for the LGBTQ community,” he said.

Controversy over the Ghana bill has highlighted the challenges facing the global Anglican Communion, which has taken LGBTQ-friendly positions not embraced by many Anglican leaders in Africa.

In October, Justin Welby, the Church of England’s archbishop of Canterbury and the symbolic head of Anglicans worldwide, said he was “gravely concerned” about the bill and would discuss the Anglican Church of Ghana’s response to the bill with Ghana’s archbishop.

He issued a statement reminding Ghana’s Anglican leaders that the global body of Anglican leaders had committed itself to opposing anti-LGBTQ discrimination and the criminalization of same-sex activity.

But in mid-November, Welby apologized for failing to speak to the Ghanaian church before issuing his statement of concern.

“I have no authority over the Church of Ghana, nor would I want any,” he said.

A few days later, he issued another ambivalent statement, referring to ongoing “private conversations” that would become “useless or harmful” if made public.

The Rev. Susan Russell, who is on the staff of All Saints Episcopal Church in Pasadena, California, recalled a visit by Tutu to the church in 2005, shortly after the Episcopal Church’s ordination of its first openly gay bishop, Gene Robinson of New Hampshire, touched off a controversy that still roils the Anglican Communion.

She recalled that Tutu talked about how all people are embraced by God, regardless of gender or race — and when he also included gays and lesbians in that list, “there really was an audible gasp in the room of amazement and relief and delight.”

“When you’re struggling on the margins, and the powers seem to be galvanizing against you, and you have Desmond Tutu on your side, almost anything seems possible,” she said.

Source: Voice of America

Sudan Gunmen Loot UN Food Aid Warehouse in Darfur

KHARTOUM, SUDAN —

Sudanese gunmen have looted a World Food Program (WFP) warehouse containing about 1,900 metric tons of food aid in Darfur amid a surge of violence in the western region, officials said Wednesday.

Residents of El Fasher, the capital of North Darfur state, reported heavy gunfire near the warehouse late Tuesday, and the local authorities imposed a nighttime curfew on the town after the attack, state news agency SUNA reported.

“We heard intense gunfire,” local resident Mohamed Salem told AFP.

A WFP official said the organization was “conducting an audit into what was stolen from the warehouse, which contained some 1,900 [metric tons] of food products” intended to be lifesaving supplies for some of the most vulnerable people.

“One in three people in Sudan needs humanitarian assistance,” said Khardiata Lo N’diaye, the United Nations humanitarian coordinator for Sudan. “Humanitarian assistance should never be a target.”

On Twitter, Darfur Governor Mini Minawi denounced the raid as a “barbaric act” and said those responsible “will face justice.”

The vast, arid and impoverished region awash with guns is still reeling from a conflict that broke out under former President Omar al-Bashir in 2003, leaving hundreds of thousands of people dead.

While the main conflict in Darfur has subsided under a peace deal struck with key rebel groups last year, violence continues to erupt.

The region has seen a spike in conflict since October triggered by disputes over land, livestock and access to water and grazing, with around 250 people killed in fighting between herders and farmers.

Tens of thousands have been forced to flee their homes, according to the International Organization for Migration (IOM).

The violence has occurred while Sudan reels from political turbulence in the wake of a coup led by military chief General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan on October 25.

Last week, United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres condemned looting and reported violence near a former U.N. logistics base in El Fasher that had been handed over to the local authorities days earlier.

A joint U.N. and African Union mission, UNAMID, ended 13 years of peacekeeping operations in December last year, but Guterres said “substantial amounts of equipment and supplies” from the looted base were intended to be used by Sudanese communities.

More than 14 million Sudanese will need humanitarian aid next year, according to the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, the highest level for a decade.

Source: Voice of America

N. Bahr el Ghazal State halts youth convention over gender representation

The Northern Bahr el Ghazal State has suspended ongoing arrangements for a planned youth convention over gender representation and other irregularities, a government official said on Tuesday evening.

The state ministry of culture, youth, and sports said the steering committee arranging the convention failed to consider gender representation and other queries from county commissioners.

Deng Wek Wekdit, the state minister of culture, youth, and sports, told Radio Tamazuj that his ministry has sent back the nomination lists with instructions to include five female delegates per county.

“After we got this problem, we sat and decided to send all the lists of delegates back to the various counties so that the county commissioners can consider gender balance because these lists from various counties had weak gender representation,” Minister Wek said. “Each county has sent around one to three female representatives out of fifteen delegates. They are supposed to be five per county.”

The minister also said he will soon establish a commission to discuss the amount of money to be paid by those contesting leadership positions.

Velantino Makuei Deng who chairs the Northern Bahr el Ghazal youth steering committee said the youth ministry was making unfounded allegations and that his committee is waiting for the governor to fix a date for the convention.

“That is an allegation from the ministry and we are currently waiting for Governor Tong Akeen Ngor to fix the date for the convention where the youth leaders will be elected,” Makuei said.

A youth, Bona Bak, accused the leader of the steering committee of not collaborating with the ministry.

“What Makuei is doing now in my own opinion is not right because every youth activity is handled by the ministry of youth as the line ministry,” Bak said. “Makuei is the chairperson of the steering committee but whenever there is a move, he can inform the minister and director-general in the ministry. But he used to submit all reports to the National Youth Union without consulting the state youth minister.”

Source: Radio Tamazuj

Machar’s SPLA-IO admit losing base to Kit Gwang faction

The SPLA-IO component loyal to Vice President Dr. Riek Machar has admitted that the breakaway faction commanded by Gen. Simon Gatwich Dual took over one of their bases after heavy fighting in the northern part of northern Upper Nile State on 27 December.

Dr. Machar’s SPLA-IO military spokesperson, Col. Lam Paul Gabriel, told Radio Tamazuj on Tuesday night that the Kit Gwang forces of Gen. Gatwich took over their Amoud base on Boxing Day after they tactically withdrew from the area.

“On 26 December, clashes occurred between ours and their forces on patrol and they were repulsed back to their base in Magenis,” Col. Lam explained. “They imagined that we had attacked them and they attacked our base in Amoud on 27 December and took it over because our forces had tactically withdrawn from there because we are at peace and it is a festive season.”

He added: “We did not think there would be heavy fighting and did not prepare for it so we withdrew outside of Amoud. So, up to now, the Kit Gwang forces are in Amoud.”

Asked who started the fighting, Col. Lam blamed the Kit Gwang SPLA-IO faction for sparking the clashes.

“They are the ones who attacked us and took over our base in Amoud. During the fighting they deployed an armored vehicle which killed many people and forced us to withdraw,” Lam said. “Again, yesterday (Tuesday) at around 1 pm, they left Amoud and wanted to attack the place we withdrew to but we repulsed them back to Amoud.”

He said there has not been any fighting since Tuesday because Dr. Machar ordered his forces not to go attack the breakaway SPLA-IO faction.

“We are not attacking. Our Commander-in-Chief, Dr. Riek Machar ordered us not to attack Gatwich Dual’s forces again because this is a time of peace and if there is an issue it should be resolved using dialogue,” Col. Lam said. “South Sudanese should not kill each other because this is a time of peace. Our forces are observing the orders not to engage in combat. So, we are now telling the Kit Gwang group that the people now want peace and not war. Whatever they want can be discussed and does not require war. War takes us backward.”

On the number of soldiers they lost, he said the fighting was heavy and many people died for nothing.

“It was very heavy fighting and they lost a lot and we also lost. On our side, we might have lost 10 soldiers but they lost more I am sure,” Col. Lam said. “What have they benefited from the fighting? Now the families of the dead soldiers will suffer.”

Source: Radio Tamazuj