Sudan militia chief ‘rampaged’ across Darfur, court told

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A former Sudanese militia chief oversaw murder, rape and torture across Darfur, the International Criminal Court heard on Tuesday, as the first trial for war crimes in the region got underway. Ali Muhammad Ali Abd-Al-Rahman, an ally of deposed Sudanese strongman Omar al-Bashir, faces 31 counts of war crimes and crimes against humanity for his role in the conflict almost 20 years ago. His trial is the first before the Hague-based ICC for crimes in Darfur, in which 300,000 people were killed and two and a half million fled their homes, according to UN figures. It comes as the world’s eyes turn t… Continue reading “Sudan militia chief ‘rampaged’ across Darfur, court told”

World Health Day 2022 – Message from WHO Regional Director for Africa, Dr Matshidiso Moeti

World Health Day has been observed annually on 7 April, since 1950, to commemorate the anniversary of the founding of the World Health Organization (WHO) two years previously. This year’s theme, Our Planet, Our Health, serves as a timely reminder of the inextricable link between the planet and our health, as the burden of noncommunicable and infectious diseases rises alongside growing incidence of climate-related challenges.

Climate change is manifesting in increasing temperatures, rising sea levels, changing rainfall patterns, and more frequent and severe extreme weather conditions. WHO estimates that more than 13 million annual deaths globally are due to avoidable environmental causes, including the climate crisis.

With direct consequences for the key determinants of health, climate change is negatively impacting air and water quality, food security, and human habitat and shelter. The knock-on effect for the burden of heart and lung disease, stroke and cancer, among others, is evident from statistics that point to NCDs representing a growing proportion of Africa’s disease burden.

In the African Region, NCDs are set to overtake communicable diseases, maternal, neonatal, and nutritional conditions combined, to become the leading cause of death by 2030. COVID-19, along with spiraling obesity, diabetes and hypertension rates, compounds the challenge, highlighting the urgency of a multi-sectoral response.

During the past two decades, most public health events have been climate-related, whether they were vector- or water-borne, transmitted from animals to humans, or the result of natural disasters. For example, diarrhoeal diseases are the third leading cause of disease and death in children younger than five in Africa, a significant proportion of which is preventable through safe drinking water, and adequate sanitation and hygiene.

However, one in every three Africans faces water scarcity, while about 400 million people in Sub-Saharan Africa alone lack basic access to drinking water. About 45% of all child deaths are also associated with malnutrition, which is known to be linked to diarrhoea.

Meanwhile, a heating world is seeing mosquitos spread diseases further and faster than ever before, with serious consequences for African countries which reported 94% of the 229 million malaria cases recorded globally in 2019. Deaths due to malaria in Africa accounted for about 51% of all malaria deaths worldwide.

In 2018, African health and environment ministers endorsed the 10-year Libreville Declaration on Health and Environment in Africa, signed in 2008. This is a WHOsupported framework aimed at promoting government investment in addressing environmental problems that impact human health – such as air pollution, contamination of water sources, and ecosystem damage.

Under the auspices of this Declaration, we, as WHO in the African Region, support Member States to conduct vulnerability, situation and needs assessments, and to create Health National Adaptation Plans (H-NAPs). We also support countries to submit National Adaptation Plans (NAPs), comprising essential public health interventions, to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change.

Recent examples include the implementation of projects in Ethiopia, Ghana , Malawi, Mozambique, Tanzania and Zimbabwe . These focus on issues including climateresilient water and sanitation, assessing the capacity of health facilities to cope with climate-change induced drought, and strengthening health systems resilience.

Many countries have implemented Early Warning, Alerts and Response Systems (EWARS) to identify potential risks for climate-sensitive water- or vector-borne diseases. For example, a dashboard measuring cases exceeding the endemic level helped detect a malaria outbreak in Ethiopia in 2020. A malaria emergency preparedness and response plan was subsequently developed.

With Africa’s population projected to grow to 2.5 billion by 2050, we can expect burgeoning urbanization into areas exposed to natural hazards, and a concomitant increase in associated injuries, disease and deaths. As such, I urge our Member States to urgently initiate adaptation and mitigation actions.

Governments, civil society, nongovernment organizations and communities need to work together, empowering one another to ensure the continued delivery of essential health services during future extreme events, while containing the growing incidence of environment- and lifestyle-related diseases.

We cannot afford to lose sight of the fundamental truth that the climate crisis, the single biggest threat facing humanity today, is also very much a health crisis.

Source: World Health Organization

News Analysis: Gulf States’ Help Likely Averts Egypt’s Emerging Economic Crisis

CAIRO, Apr 6 (NNN-XINHUA) – Gulf Arab states pledged up to 22 billion U.S. dollars, to help Egypt make a balance in global foreign exchange markets, and compensate foreign investments fleeing from the Egyptian treasury markets, on the heels of the Russian-Ukrainian conflict.

“This is a difficult time for Egypt, as it’s suffering reduced tourism inflows, higher food prices, and greater financing challenges, as a result of the Russian-Ukrainian crisis,” said Hoda Al-Malah, chairwoman of the Cairo-based International Centre for Economic Consulting and Feasibility Studies.

The flurry of Gulf investments into Egypt will help in overcoming a currency crisis and shield the economy against imminent shocks, the economic expert told Xinhua.

The Central Bank of Egypt (CBE) allowed the local currency to drop by 14 percent on Mar 21, after being stable against the U.S. dollar since Nov, 2020, stressing “the importance of foreign exchange (FX) flexibility to act as a shock absorber.”

Al-Malah added, CBE’s move and the Gulf’s inflows will encourage foreign investors to return to Egypt’s high-interest and short-term treasuries, after many investors had withdrawn billions of dollars in Mar.

Last week, Saudi said, it had deposited five billion dollars with the CBE, in light of the kingdom’s efforts to boost Egypt’s economy. Meanwhile, Cairo and Riyadh have signed a deal, aiming to attract ten billion dollars in investments in cooperation with the Saudi Public Investment Fund.

Qatar has also pledged investment deals worth five billion dollars in Egypt, the first of its kind, since the two countries restored bilateral ties in Jan, 2021.

Local media reported that, Abu Dhabi sovereign fund AD, agreed to purchase two billion dollars’ worth of stakes in some Egypt’s state-owned businesses, including large listed banks.

The Gulf Arab states’ bolstering gestures come, as Egypt’s economic challenges were worsened by external factors, the economic expert said, referring to the U.S. Federal Reserve’s decision of raising interest rates by a quarter percentage point, for the first time since 2018, which has caused outflux of billions of dollars of hot money from Cairo to Washington.

“The Gulf help is a very good move for increasing the dollars influxes, preventing a deficit in the balance of payments and promoting economic stability in Egypt, while an inflation wave is hitting the world, sending commodities prices soaring,” Al-Malah added.

Waleed Gaballah, professor of financial and economic jurisdictions at Cairo University, noted that, Egypt and the Gulf states enjoy strong ties amid the existed strategic partnership between the two sides, terming it as a “win-win partnership.”

“Pumping the Gulf deposits; low-cost loans, with the CBE, will boost the reserve and bridge the financial gap confronting the Egyptian economy,” Gaballah said.

The timing of the Gulf support is important for Egypt, as it was seeking a loan from the International Monetary Fund (IMF), he said, adding that, the Gulf investments and loans will boost Egypt in meeting the IMF’s requirements for increasing the activities of the private sector.

On Mar 23, the Egyptian government requested the IMF’s support to implement their comprehensive economic programme, amid the rapidly changing global environment and spillovers related to the conflict in Ukraine.

Credit rating agency, Fitch Ratings, said in early Mar that, the Russia-Ukraine crisis was likely to raise the cost of external financing for emerging markets, such as Egypt, considering outflows of risk aversion investors.

Gaballah highlighted, Egypt’s economy faces big pressures, saying, “Its imports are nearly double of exports and the revenues of the Suez Canal, tourism, and remittances of expatriates are still not sufficient to cover the financial gap.”

Non-residential investment in Egypt’s local bond market stood at 28.8 billion dollars by the end of 2021, according to official statistics.

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK

Agreement Would Curb Explosive Weapons in Populated Areas

An international agreement under negotiation at the United Nations this week seeks to reduce harm to civilians by curbing the use of heavy explosive weapons in cities, towns and villages.

The Ukrainian city of Mariupol is one of the latest examples of a populated area that has been turned to rubble by the relentless use of heavy explosive weapons. Ongoing bombing and shelling of cities and towns in Yemen, Ethiopia, and Syria, among others, are devastating whole communities and causing irreparable harm to civilians and civilian infrastructure.

Data collected over the past decade show 123 countries have experienced a similar fate. The International Network on Explosive Weapons, a coalition of non-governmental activists, says tens of thousands of civilians are killed and wounded every year using explosive weapons in populated areas. It says civilians comprise 90 percent of the victims.

The coordinator of the network, Laura Boillot, says restrictions must be placed on the use of explosive weapons such as aircraft bombs, multi-barrel rocket systems, rocket launchers, and mortars.

Boillot says direct attacks on civilians and civilian objects are prohibited under the rules of armed conflict and international humanitarian law. She notes, however, the use of explosive weapons is not illegal per se.

“But what we are seeing, and finding is that too often warring parties are killing and injuring civilians with outdated, inaccurate and heavy explosive weapons systems in towns and cities and this is because of their wide area affects, which makes them particularly risky when used in urban environments,” she said.

The crisis and conflict researcher for Human Rights Watch, Richard Weir, is in the Ukrainian capital, Kyiv. Weir has seen for himself the havoc caused by explosive weapons on populated areas. He says they have a long-lasting, harmful impact on communities.

“They litter their impact areas with the remnants of their weapons and leave a deadly legacy in the form of unexploded ordnance… The effects of these weapons are devastating. They are present and they are continuing. And that is why these negotiations are important. That is why states need to commit now to avoiding their use in populated areas,” he said.

Activists are calling on negotiators to set new standards to reduce harm to civilians. They say the new international agreement also should contain commitments to assist the victims and families of those killed and injured, and to address the long-lasting humanitarian impact of explosive weapons.

Source: Voice of America

African Migrants Make New Lives in Atlantic Canada

Somali-born refugee Ali Duale has positive memories of his arrival in Canada’s Atlantic province of Nova Scotia, where he first entered his hotel room to find a welcoming note in his native language along with hygienic supplies and a check to pay for anything else that he needed.

Twenty-five years later, Duale is repaying the province with his service as an elected member of the provincial legislature representing a district in Halifax, the provincial capital. That service, he says, is all about his sense of community.

“The word community to me has many meanings,” Duale told VOA in a recent interview. “I’m a Muslim, I’m Black, I’m a refugee, I’m a newcomer, I’m a Nova Scotian, I’m a Haligonian. Each one has a meaning to me and that’s what brought me to what I am today.”

Duale has a message for any other Somalis hoping to make a new home in Nova Scotia, an often-overlooked part of Canada with a sparse population, an otherworldly landscape and a quaint ocean-faring lifestyle in the fishing towns that dot its coast.

“It doesn’t matter how much education you have, or experience,” Duale told VOA. “Quite honestly, most of the time the newcomers, irrespective of their profession … it will not take less than five or 10 years to establish here or settle down. It’s a great place to be but also people need to prepare for the reality of life here.”

In spite of the warm welcome he received, Duale said he would like to see Nova Scotians do an even better job of welcoming new refugees.

“When people come here, as you know, these refugees have gone through a lot of mental issues, a lot of difficulties. We need to be more kind. We need to treat them with respect, and we need to not be judgmental. … Other than that, I think that we’re doing OK.”

The province is perhaps an unlikely place for an African migrant to end up. Blacks account for only about 23,000 of the province’s roughly 1 million inhabitants, and of those, fewer than 2,000 are foreign-born.

But people of African origin have a long history in Nova Scotia, dating back to Mathieu de Costa, who served as a translator speaking to indigenous people when French explorer Samuel de Champlain visited the coastline in the early 1600s, according to a provincial government website.

During the American Revolution in the 1770s, hundreds of African slaves escaped behind British lines and were transported to Nova Scotia, where they were joined two decades later by a group of rebellious slaves deported from Jamaica, known as Maroons. Many were later transported to what is now Sierra Leone.

In subsequent years the province became a destination for escaped American slaves spirited north along what was known as the “Underground Railroad.” A thriving Black community known as Africville grew up near the Halifax harbor, where it remained until it was pushed out by industrial expansion in the 1960s.

Today, opportunities are available to Africans in Nova Scotia if they are persistent, according to Oluwaseyi Sanni, a lawyer from Nigeria who hopes to practice law in Halifax. While working toward his Canadian law degree, Sanni has been an editor and researcher for Afronomicslaw, a blog about African economics, politics and debt.

“Well, I guess I could say that finding a desirable job was not as easy as I imagined it would be when I moved here,” Sanni told VOA. “I learned that just like everywhere, there is a sense of resilience and diligence required to getting one’s desired career goals. The key is in being dedicated to whatever one finds their hands to do.”

Currently, Sanni is working on one of the most famous legal projects in Nova Scotian history, the inquiry into a 2020 mass shooting that started in Portapique, Nova Scotia, and left 22 people dead.

“I am not at liberty to go into details about my work at the Mass Casualty Commission as the proceedings are still ongoing,” Sanni told VOA. “However, I will say it has been a huge privilege being part of such important work. It has also been a learning curve for me as well.”

“Nova Scotia has lots of Africans and this potentially makes it easy to get settled when one arrives here,” Sanni added. “However, my advice would be to explore friendships and relationships that transcend race. Some of the deepest bonds I have established have been with people from other races.”

That sentiment is warmly welcomed by Canadian Minister of Immigration Sean Fraser, who represents a Nova Scotia district in the federal parliament in Ottawa.

“In Canada, diversity is one of our greatest strengths,” he said in a statement provided to VOA for this article. “Our government is committed to an immigration system that contributes to economic growth, supports diversity and helps build vibrant, dynamic and inclusive communities from coast to coast to coast, including right here in Nova Scotia.”

“Atlantic Canadians are known for their hospitality and welcoming nature, making us one of the world’s top destinations for international talent,” Fraser added.

“We all benefit from new energy and ideas brought here by people who choose our province to build careers and raise their families. We’ll continue to ensure that those of African descent equally and fully participate in the economic, social and political institutions in Canada.”

Source: Voice of America

Kushyab pleaded not guilty before ICC court

Ali Kushyab pleaded not guilty as the Trial Chamber of the International Criminal Court opened his trial for war crimes and crimes against humanity on Tuesday.

The militia leader is accused of 31 counts of war crimes and crimes against humanity allegedly committed in Darfur, Sudan, between August 2003 and at least April 2004.

After the reading of the charges, Ali Muhammad Ali Abd-Al-Rahman aka Kushyab told the court he understood the nature of the charges and plead not guilty to all the charges.

He said he voluntarily surrendered himself to the ICC to correct the misinformation against him.

The courts will start hearing the witnesses on Wednesday.

The Senior Trial Lawyer Julian Nicholls told reporters on Tuesday they have 124 witnesses.

The first team of ICC investigators arrived in Darfur in March 2021 after the signing of a cooperation agreement with the Sudanese civilian government in February 2021.

Before the fall of the al-Bachir regime, the ICC investigation teams worked among the refugees in Chad and other countries.

The ICC requested the handover of Ahmed Huron a former state minister for interior to try with Kushayb but the Sudanese government did not respond to their request.

The Court’s Prosecutor Karim Khan plans to travel to Sudan once again to discuss the handover of all the wanted former officials including Omer al-Bashir.

U.S. welcomes

The United States welcomed Kushyab’s trial in The Hague saying it marks the beginning of the first trial against any senior leader for crimes committed by the al-Bashir regime in Darfur

“In 2004, then-Secretary of State Colin Powell determined, based in part on evidence collected by the State Department, that a genocide was taking place. Since that day, the United States has steadfastly called for those responsible for genocide and other atrocities to be held accountable,” said Ned Price, U.S. Department Spokesperson.

Price added that this trial is a signal to those responsible for human rights violations and abuses in Darfur that impunity will not last in the face of the determination for justice to prevail.

Source: Sudan Tribune