Unity State community in Juba donates money, boats to flood victims

The members of the Unity State community in Juba have donated SSP 35 million, USD 14,600, and four boats to help flood victims back home.

Unity State is among the states that have been hard hit by unprecedented and devastating flooding which has displaced large sections of the population and predisposed them to hunger and waterborne diseases.

Peter Makuoth Malual, the spokesperson of the Bentiu Flood Response Committee, told Radio Tamazuj Monday that the money was raised at a fundraising event last month at the Freedom Hall in Juba which was attended by First Vice President Dr. Riek Machar, Presidential Security Advisor Tut Gatluak, and Defense Minister Angelina Teny among others.

“The money we raised that day (21 October) was SSP 35,037,000 and USD 14,600 in cash. There were also pledges to the tune of SSP 24,458,000 and USD 24,720,” he said. “The First Vice President donated two boats and Tut Gatluak also donated another two boats. Other items like clothes and blankets were also donated and they are with us right now.”

According to Malual, his committee will deliberate on how best to allocate the resources and items realized from the fundraising to the flood-affected communities in Unity State.

“Maybe we will buy materials or food items but as a committee, we are going to sit and design what method we are going to use to hand that money to the people in need,” Malual said.

Meanwhile, Samaan Gatnyang Tap, a flood victim in Unity State urged the committee to use the funds to contract a construction company to build dykes.

Torrential rains and resultant floods have destroyed farmlands plantations, buildings, education centers, health facilities, and boreholes among others, and killed scores of people and livestock in the oil-rich state.

Source: Radio Tamazuj

Anti-junta Marches of the Millions continue across Sudan

Thousands of demonstrators across Sudan joined the Marches of the Millions called by the resistance committees in the country on Tuesday, to denounce the crimes against demonstrators by the ruling junta in November last year.

In the capital Khartoum, protesters set off from 10 separate muster points. The marchers were confronted with a barrage of tear gas, particularly at the Sharwani bus station near El Gasr street leading to the Republican Palace, to obstruct their progress.

One of the demonstrators was knocked down by a police vehicle, while others were injured to varying degrees.

Demonstrators in Khartoum North attempting to cross the Jereif East bridge to Khartoum were also subjected to excessive violence and tear gas by the police.

El Fateh Hussein, a member of the resistance committees in southern Khartoum told Radio Dabanga that the killing, detentions, and repression did not deter the resistance committees from opposing the coup.

Similar demonstrations took place in Wad Madani, capital of El Gezira, El Gedaref, and other cities in the states.

In El Gezira, the body of a 16-year-old protester who was reported missing from Wad Madani three days ago, was found in the White Nile.

On Monday, the authorities launched a massive detention campaign against a number of members of the resistance committees in Khartoum.

On Tuesday, the authorities released activist Mohamed Salih Maher on bail after two days in detention in the Special Unit known as Khartoum State Investigation.

In a statement, Emergency Lawyers said that Maher was held on the basis of a complaint lodged last year.

Lawyer Mishaal El Zein, a member of the Emergency Lawyers defence team for activist Hosam El Zayad and his companions, accused of killing a military intelligence member on March 9, that last Monday’s session, which was held in the buildings of the Judicial Training Centre in Khartoum, east, continued to hear the report from policemen.

He told Radio Dabanga that the defence questioned all the policemen, pointing out that the dead body had not been accurately identified, and warned that the police or the family of the deceased had not identified the body, which left the court and the audience in a big question.

The court postponed deciding the matter until more evidence is heard in the next session, for which it decided next Monday to continue hearing and questioning the detective.

Source: Radio Dabanga

Farm murder prompts anger in South Darfur capital

The South Darfur capital of Nyala saw road closures and widespread public protests after a farmer and his wife were killed on their farm on Monday evening. The Omda of Dengdereis in El Salam locality, Mohamed Bahreldin, reported that five armed men shot farmer Adam Marjallah (43) and his wife Khadija Khamees (38) while they were transporting their crops from their farm.

Marjallah was killed instantly. His wife was critically injured and transported to Nyala where she succumbed to her wounds. The couple are survived by 18-month-old baby girl.

People from the area carried the bodies to Nyala Teaching Hospital. A large number of angry relatives of the victims gathered in front of the mortuary and closed the roads leading to the Mekka bridge in the city and blocked the road west of the South Darfur government secretariat. They demanded that authorities intervene and arrest the perpetrators.

The Nyala police issued a statement saying that a joint team to gather forensic evidence, central investigation officers, and the security police, headed by an officer with the rank of lieutenant colonel and working under the supervision of the director of the South Darfur Criminal Investigation department, moved to the scene of the incident in three vehicles.

An official compliant was lodged at the Dengdereis police unit.

West Darfur market

Two traders were wounded by gunshots in an attack on the market of Douga, west of Sirba, in West Darfur, on Sunday.

Mohamed Abakar told Radio Dabanga that a large group of gunmen riding motorcycles raided the market while firing gunshots, which led to the injury of two merchants. They were taken to the El Geneina Teaching Hospital.

Abakar also reported that gunmen robbed the passengers of a vehicle on its way from El Geneina to Kulbus on Monday.

“A group of armed men in a Land Cruiser and others on a motorcycle intercepted the passenger vehicle near the Kendebe camp for the displaced in Sirba,” he said.

“They robbed the passengers of all their belongings, and fled in the Land Cruiser.”

Source: Radio Dabanga

North Darfur clans sign reconciliation in El Fasher

At ceremony at the Presidential House Hall in El Fasher, capital of North Darfur, leaders of two Mahriya clans, the Hajaya and Beni Hussein, signed a reconciliation agreement on Monday afternoon, with a view to ending a long-standing era of conflict.

In the document, the two parties agreed to the necessity of turning a new page of peaceful coexistence and unity between the two tribes.

The signing ceremony was attended by the Deputy Secretary-General of the North Darfur government, Eisa Zaroug, the commander of the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) in the state, Maj Gen Jeddo Ibnshook, under the supervision of the head of the RSF Peace and Reconciliation Committee, Col Mousa Ambelo, and a number of other officials.

In August, the RSF held at least 197 people in a campaign that targeted tribal leaders who refused to partake in RSF-led reconciliation efforts and other activists, teachers, students, and farmers. Several people disappeared.

The reconciliation agreements brokered by Sudan’s junta co-leader and RSF commander Gen Mohamed ‘Hemeti’ Dagalo, in Darfur by have been criticised as being ‘superficial’ and as not representing the interests of the people.

Source: Radio Dabanga

Uganda to close schools early to curb Ebola

Uganda will shorten the school term by two weeks to reduce daily contact among students and help curb the spread of Ebola, the education minister said on Tuesday.

The decision comes after 23 Ebola cases were confirmed among pupils, including eight children who died.

Education Minister Janet Kataha Museveni said that the cabinet had taken the decision to close preschools, primary schools and secondary schools on November 25 because densely packed classrooms were making students highly vulnerable to infection.

“Closing schools earlier will reduce areas of concentration where children are in daily close contact with fellow children, teachers and other staff who could potentially spread the virus,” the minister, who is also the wife of longtime President Yoweri Museveni, said in a statement.

Students in Uganda are currently in their third and final term of the calendar year.

On Saturday, the government extended a three-week lockdown on the districts of Mubende and Kassanda, which have been the centre of the Ebola outbreak.

The measures include a dusk-to-dawn curfew, a ban on personal travel, and the closure of markets, bars and churches.

Since the outbreak was declared in Mubende on September 20, the disease has spread across the country, including to the capital, Kampala, but the president has said nationwide restrictions are not needed.

According to government figures from Sunday, 135 people have been infected with Ebola and 53 have died.

The World Health Organization (WHO) last week said Uganda had registered more than 150 confirmed and probable cases, including 64 fatalities. Uganda’s last recorded death from a previous Ebola outbreak was in 2019.

The virus circulating in Uganda is the Sudan strain of Ebola, for which there is no proven vaccine, unlike the more common Zaire strain, which spread during recent outbreaks in neighbouring Democratic Republic of the Congo.

Ebola is spread through bodily fluids, with common symptoms being fever, vomiting, bleeding and diarrhoea.

Source: Radio Tamazuj

African Nations Closely Watch US Midterm Results

With control of Congress still undecided a day after the U.S. midterm elections, African leaders and political analysts are closely watching for signs of what impact the outcome could have on the continent.

African analysts say their biggest concern is how this contentious poll could affect U.S. standing around the world — especially in African nations that have seen democratic backsliding.

There are also economic concerns over how the U.S. responds to rising inflation around the world. Wednesday trading showed that African markets were closely watching the impact on the most popular U.S. export: the dollar.

On a more personal level, communities in the U.S. and in Africa celebrated wins by American candidates of African origin, and bid goodbye to two retiring senators who took a deep interest in the continent.

U.S. democracy matters abroad

African political analyst Ebenezer Obadare told VOA that policymakers on the continent were most focused on possible fallout that could affect Washington’s global standing.

“Political polarization in the U.S. — and the subsequent ripples — has deepened anxiety about the prospects of democracy globally,” said Obadare, an analyst from the Council on Foreign Relations. “For one thing, many African policymakers are worried that, depending on the outcome, the U.S. may not be in a situation to pursue the goals outlined in the recently launched U.S. strategy towards sub-Saharan Africa.”

In August, the Biden administration launched that strategy saying it “welcomes and affirms African agency and seeks to include and elevate African voices in the most consequential global conversations.”

Obadare says he’s more worried about the U.S. losing its own voice amid divisive political rhetoric or politically motivated unrest.

“Right now, much more than material support for transitioning countries, Africa needs the U.S. itself to remain democratic,” Obadare said. “There is genuine worry that if the elections get messy or are inconclusive, the U.S. might lose its gravitas and the moral authority to intervene in the political process in Africa and other developing regions.”

African wins

The midterms saw wins by multiple candidates of African origin, which were welcomed in both the diaspora community and on the continent.

Those include at least eight female Somali-American candidates who, along with one Somali-American man, won national and local-level races in Minnesota, North Dakota, Ohio and Maine; at least eight Nigerian-American candidates who won in Georgia and the District of Columbia; and others with close ties to the continent, such as Democratic Rep. Joe Neguse of Colorado, who is the son of Eritrean immigrants.

The most prominent of those victors is Somalia-born Democratic Rep. Ilhan Omar, who was handily re-elected to her seat in Minnesota’s 5th district.

Her success abroad stands in stark contrast to her counterparts in Somalia, such as Fawzia Yusuf Haji Adam, the only female presidential candidate who contested the nation’s May 15 election. She got only one vote — her own.

“This is a victory for Somali women in the diaspora,” Adam said. “I congratulate them, I encourage them, and we are proud of them.”

Goodbye to some Africa hands

The midterms also saw the departure of two retiring Republican senators who have taken an interest in Africa: Senators Jim Inhofe, of Oklahoma, and Rob Portman of Ohio.

Inhofe recently concluded his final congressional trip to the continent, in which he visited Ethiopia, Kenya and Rwanda. He said he was confident that the continent would continue to receive attention from U.S. lawmakers.

“It is bittersweet to visit Africa one last time before my departure from the U.S. Senate,”Inhofe said, urging continued U.S. military presence in East Africa.

“The presence of U.S. military across Africa, while small, means a great deal to our friends and is a worthwhile investment for the United States. In each country, it was clear that a strong and robust relationship with the United States has helped spur economic growth and regional stability across the continent. I have faith that my colleagues in the House and Senate will continue the U.S.-Africa friendship long after I have retired from the Senate.”

Overall, said Mvemba Phezo Dizolele, director of the Africa Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, this election won’t negatively affect U.S. engagement. He cited what he described as “strong supporters of Africa” in the committees on Foreign Relations and Appropriations, such as Sens. Chris Coons, James Risch and Lindsey Graham.

“Overall, the midterms will not change much with regard to U.S. engagement with Africa,” he said. “Africa will continue to command a bipartisan engagement in the foreseeable future both in the lower chamber and the Senate.”

Source: Voice of America